67,405 research outputs found
Polyculture trials involving red tilapia, armoured catfish (Hoplosternum littorale) and freshwater prawn (Macrobrachium rosenbergii) in earthen ponds in Trinidad
Apex predator and the cyclic competition in a rock-paper-scissors game of three species
This work deals with the effects of an apex predator on the cyclic
competition among three distinct species that follow the rules of the
rock-paper-scissors game. The investigation develops standard stochastic
simulations but is motivated by a novel procedure which is explained in the
work. We add the apex predator as the fourth species in the system that
contains three species that evolve following the standard rules of migration,
reproduction and predation, and study how the system evolves in this new
environment, in comparison with the case in the absence of the apex predator.
The results show that the apex predator engenders the tendency to spread
uniformly in the lattice, contributing to destroy the spiral patterns, keeping
biodiversity but diminishing the average size of the clusters of the species
that compete cyclically.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. To appear in PR
Poverty, Inequality and Social Policies in Brazil, 1995-2009
Since the mid-1990s, Brazil has undergone extensive reforms that have finally reversed the dismaying economic performance of the 1980s. In particular, poverty and inequality indicators have improved dramatically, especially since the late-2000s. This paper provides an overview of such recent trends and discusses the role played by four major government interventions: public education, the minimum wage law, Social Security pensions and Social Assistance transfers. Additionally, available data sets and methods for policy evaluation are also discussed. (?)Poverty, Inequality and Social Policies in Brazil, 1995-2009
Social Policies and the Fall in Inequality in Brazil: Achievements and Challenges
By the end of the first decade of the 21st century, the most usual international depiction of Brazil is that of a burgeoning, upcoming country. Although in many ways frankly exaggerated, this marks a stark contrast with a not-so-distant past. This turnaround has had a lot to do with favourable international circumstances, but it also owes a lot to extensive reforms that made possible something that was almost unprecedented in Brazil: pro-poor growth. (?)Social Policies and the Fall in Inequality in Brazil: Achievements and Challenges
Multikink solutions and deformed defects
At the present work we consider an application of the deformation procedure
that enable us to construct, systematically, scalar field models supporting
multikinks. We introduce a new deformation function in order to realize this
task. We exemplify the procedure with three different starting models already
known in the literature, and the resulting deformed models have rich vacua
structures which are responsible for the appearance of multikink
configurations
Energy efficiency of transmit diversity systems under a realistic power consumption model
We compare the downlink energy efficiency of spatial diversity multiple transmit antenna schemes. We determine the minimum required transmit power for a given outage probability. Our analysis shows that antenna selection is in general the most energy efficient option as it requires a single radio-frequency chain. We also investigate the limiting distances up to which the antenna selection technique outperforms the transmit beamforming scheme for different numbers of transmit antennas
Using geographical information systems for management of back-pain data
This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published version can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2002 MCB UP LtdIn the medical world, statistical visualisation has largely been confined to the realm of relatively simple geographical applications. This remains the case, even though hospitals have been collecting spatial data relating to patients. In particular, hospitals have a wealth of back pain information, which includes pain drawings, usually detailing the spatial distribution and type of pain suffered by back-pain patients. Proposes several technological solutions, which permit data within back-pain datasets to be digitally linked to the pain drawings in order to provide methods of computer-based data management and analysis. In particular, proposes the use of geographical information systems (GIS), up till now a tool used mainly in the geographic and cartographic domains, to provide novel and powerful ways of visualising and managing back-pain data. A comparative evaluation of the proposed solutions shows that, although adding complexity and cost, the GIS-based solution is the one most appropriate for visualisation and analysis of back-pain datasets
Continuous-variable phase-estimation with unitary and random linear disturbance
We address the problem of continuous-variable quantum phase estimation in the
presence of linear disturbance at the Hamiltonian level, by means of Gaussian
probe states. In particular we discuss both unitary and random disturbance, by
considering the parameter which characterizes the unwanted linear term present
in the Hamiltonian as fixed (unitary disturbance) or random with a given
probability distribution (random disturbance). We derive the optimal input
Gaussian states at fixed energy, maximizing the quantum Fisher information over
the squeezing angle and the squeezing energy fraction, and we discuss the
scaling of the quantum Fisher information in terms of the output number of
photons . We observe that in the case of unitary disturbance the
optimal state is a squeezed vacuum state and the quadratic scaling is
conserved. As regards the random disturbance, we observe that the optimal
squeezing fraction may not be equal to one, and, for any non-zero value of the
noise parameter, the quantum Fisher information scales linearly with the
average number of photons. We finally discuss the performance of homodyne
measurement, comparing the achievable precision with the ultimate limit posed
by the quantum Cram\'er-Rao bound.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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