6,485 research outputs found
Identity and Islamic Radicalization in Western Europe
This paper argues that both socio-economic disadvantage and political factors, such as the West’s foreign policy with regard to the Muslim world, along with historical grievances, play a part in the development of Islamic radicalized collective action in Western Europe. We emphasise the role of group identity based individual behaviour in organising collective action within radicalized Muslim groups. Inasmuch as culture plays any role at all in radicalization, it is because individuals feel an imperative to act on the basis of their Muslim identity, something to which different individuals will attach varying degrees of salience, depending on how they place their Muslim identity based actions in the scheme of their multiple identities. We also emphasize the role of the opportunistic politician, from the majority European community, in fomenting hatred for Muslims, which also produces a backlash from radicalized political Islam. We present comparative evidence on socio-economic, political and cultural disadvantage faced by Muslim minorities in five West European countries: Germany, the UK, France, Spain and the Netherlands.Peacekeeping; Identity, Radicalization, Clash of civilizations, Terrorism
Kerr effect as evidence of gyrotropic order in the cuprates
The Kerr effect can arise in a time-reversal invariant dissipative medium
that is "gyrotropic", i.e. one that breaks inversion () and all
mirror symmetries. Examples of such systems include electron analogs of
cholesteric liquid crystals, and their descendants, such as systems with chiral
charge ordering. We present arguments that the striking Kerr onset seen in the
pseudogap phase of a large number of cuprate high temperature superconductors
is evidence of chiral charge ordering. We discuss additional experimental
consequences of a phase transition to a gyrotropic state, including the
appearance of a zero field Nernst effect.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Modified SPLICE and its Extension to Non-Stereo Data for Noise Robust Speech Recognition
In this paper, a modification to the training process of the popular SPLICE
algorithm has been proposed for noise robust speech recognition. The
modification is based on feature correlations, and enables this stereo-based
algorithm to improve the performance in all noise conditions, especially in
unseen cases. Further, the modified framework is extended to work for
non-stereo datasets where clean and noisy training utterances, but not stereo
counterparts, are required. Finally, an MLLR-based computationally efficient
run-time noise adaptation method in SPLICE framework has been proposed. The
modified SPLICE shows 8.6% absolute improvement over SPLICE in Test C of
Aurora-2 database, and 2.93% overall. Non-stereo method shows 10.37% and 6.93%
absolute improvements over Aurora-2 and Aurora-4 baseline models respectively.
Run-time adaptation shows 9.89% absolute improvement in modified framework as
compared to SPLICE for Test C, and 4.96% overall w.r.t. standard MLLR
adaptation on HMMs.Comment: Submitted to Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding (ASRU)
2013 Worksho
Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis of the Brainstem as a Clinical Entity.
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare progressive neurological disorder of early adolescence caused by persistent infection of the measles virus, which remains prevalent worldwide despite an effective vaccine. SSPE is a devastating disease with a characteristic clinical course in subcortical white matter; however, atypical presentations of brainstem involvement may be seen in rare cases. This review summarizes reports to date on brainstem involvement in SSPE, including the clinical course of disease, neuroimaging presentations, and guidelines for treatment. A comprehensive literature search was performed for English-language publications with keywords "subacute sclerosing panencephalitis" and "brainstem" using the National Library of Medicine PubMed database (March 1981-September 2017). Eleven articles focusing on SSPE of the brainstem were included. Predominant brainstem involvement remains uncharacteristic of SSPE, which may lead to misdiagnosis and poor outcome. A number of case reports have demonstrated brainstem involvement associated with other intracranial lesions commonly presenting in later SSPE stages (III and IV). However, brainstem lesions can appear in all stages, independent of higher cortical structures. The varied clinical presentations complicate diagnosis from a neuroimaging perspective. SSPE of the brainstem is a rare but important clinical entity. It may present like canonical SSPE or with unique clinical features such as absence seizures and pronounced ataxia. While SSPE generally progresses to the brainstem, it can also begin with a primary focus of infection in the brainstem. Awareness of varied SSPE presentations can aid in early diagnosis as well as guide management and treatment
Majorana modes at the ends of superconductor vortices in doped topological insulators
Recent experiments have observed bulk superconductivity in doped topological
insulators. Here we ask whether vortex Majorana zero modes, previously
predicted to occur when superconductivity is induced on the surface of
topological insulators, survive even in these doped systems with metallic
normal states. Assuming inversion symmetry, we find that Majorana zero modes
indeed appear but only below a critical doping. The critical doping is
associated with a topological phase transition of the vortex line, where it
supports gapless excitations along its length. The critical point depends only
on the orientation of the vortex line, and a Berry phase property, the SU(2)
Berry phase of the Fermi surface in the metallic normal state. By calculating
this phase for available band structures we determine that materials candidates
like -doped BiTe under pressure supports vortex end Majorana
modes. Surprisingly, even superconductors derived from topologically trivial
band structures can support Majorana modes, providing a promising route to
realizing them.Comment: Article published in Phys. Rev. Lett. Viewpoint published in Physic
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