5,717 results
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52. Genealogical Trees of Scientific Papers.
- Author
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Waumans, Michaël Charles and Bersini, Hugues
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GENEALOGY , *SCIENCE databases , *CITATION analysis , *EVOLUTIONARY algorithms , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Many results have been obtained when studying scientific papers citations databases in a network perspective. Articles can be ranked according to their current in-degree and their future popularity or citation counts can even be predicted. The dynamical properties of such networks and the observation of the time evolution of their nodes started more recently. This work adopts an evolutionary perspective and proposes an original algorithm for the construction of genealogical trees of scientific papers on the basis of their citation count evolution in time. The fitness of a paper now amounts to its in-degree growing trend and a “dying” paper will suddenly see this trend declining in time. It will give birth and be taken over by some of its most prevalent citing “offspring”. Practically, this might be used to trace the successive published milestones of a research field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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53. A Reply to a Note on the Paper 'A Simplified Novel Technique for Solving Fully Fuzzy Linear Programming Problems'.
- Author
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Khan, Izaz, Ahmad, Tahir, and Maan, Normah
- Subjects
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LINEAR programming , *FUZZY algorithms , *ALGORITHMS , *MATHEMATICS , *MATHEMATICAL programming - Abstract
This note tries to answer issues raised in Bhardwaj and Kumar (J Optim Theory Appl 163(2): 685-696, 2014). The research summarizes that the results obtained in Khan et al. (J Optim Theory Appl 159: 536-546, 2013) are sound and correct and it fulfills all the necessary requirements of its scope and objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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54. Uniqueness of nodal radial solutions to nonlinear elliptic equations in the unit ball.
- Author
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Li, Fuyi, Li, Xiaoting, and Liang, Zhanping
- Subjects
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NONLINEAR equations , *UNIT ball (Mathematics) , *ELLIPTIC equations , *DIOPHANTINE equations , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we study the uniqueness of nodal radial solutions to nonlinear elliptic equations in the unit ball in ℝ3$$ {\mathrm{\mathbb{R}}}^3 $$. Under suitable conditions, we prove that, for any given positive integer k$$ k $$, the problem we considered has at most one solution possessing exactly k−1$$ k-1 $$ nodes. Together with the results presented by Nagasaki [J. Fac. Sci. Univ. Tokyo Sect. IA Math. 36 (2): 211–232, 1989] and Tanaka [Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh Sect. A. 138 (6): 1331–1343, 2008], we can prove that more types of nonlinear elliptic equations have the uniqueness of nodal radial solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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55. Parametrised auxiliary function-based integral inequality for time delay system.
- Author
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Mahto, Sharat Chandra
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INTEGRAL inequalities , *TIME delay systems , *STABILITY of linear systems , *TIME-varying systems - Abstract
This paper employs two scalar parameters to extend auxiliary function-based integral inequality into a new formulations, say a parametrised auxiliary function-based integral inequality. Using these formulations, the constituent signals are utilised more efficiently by exploiting the interaction between them to reduce conservatism. Numerical example for stability analysis of linear systems with time-varying delay shows the improved performance of the proposed new formulations in terms of maximum delay bounds and decision variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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56. When are Baer modules extending?
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Ebrahim, Fatma Azmy F., Rizvi, Syed Tariq, and Roman, Cosmin S.
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ENDOMORPHISM rings , *MODULES (Algebra) , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The well-known notion of an extending module is closely linked to that of a Baer module. A right R -module M is called extending if every submodule of M is essential in a direct summand. On the other hand, a right R -module M is called Baer if for all N ≤ M , l S (N) ≤ ⊕ S S where S = End R (M). In 2004, Rizvi and Roman generalized a result of [A. W. Chatters and S. M. Khuri, Endomorphism rings of modules over nonsingular CS rings, J. London Math. Soc. 21(2) (1980) 434–444.] in terms of modules and showed the connections between Baer and extending modules via the result: "a module M is -nonsingular extending if and only if M is -cononsingular Baer". M R is called -nonsingular if ∀ φ ∈ S such that Ker φ ≤ e M , φ = 0. Moreover, M R is called -cononsingular if for any N ≤ M with φ N ≠ 0 for all 0 ≠ φ ∈ S , implies N ≤ e M. In view of this result, every Baer module which happens to be -cononsingular will automatically become an extending module. In this paper, our main focus is the study of -cononsingularity of modules. Our investigations are also motivated by the fact that very little is known about the notion of -cononsingularity while sufficient knowledge exists about the other three remaining notions in the preceding result. Moreover, we introduce the notion of special extending (or sp-extending, for short) of a module and show that the class of -cononsingular modules properly contains the class of extending modules and the class of special extending modules. Among other results, we obtain a new analogous version for the Rizvi–Roman's result which illustrates the close connections between Baer and extending modules. Examples illustrating the notions and delimiting our results are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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57. High-order linearly implicit exponential integrators conserving quadratic invariants with application to scalar auxiliary variable approach.
- Author
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Sato, Shun
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MATHEMATICAL analysis , *MATRIX multiplications , *ORDINARY differential equations , *QUADRATIC forms , *MATHEMATICS , *NUMERICAL integration - Abstract
This paper proposes a framework for constructing high-order linearly implicit exponential integrators that conserve a quadratic invariant. This is then applied to the scalar auxiliary variable (SAV) approach. Quadratic invariants are significant objects that are present in various physical equations and also in computationally efficient conservative schemes for general invariants. For instance, the SAV approach converts the invariant into a quadratic form by introducing scalar auxiliary variables, which have been intensively studied in recent years. In this vein, Sato et al. (Appl. Numer. Math. 187, 71-88 2023) proposed high-order linearly implicit schemes that conserve a quadratic invariant. In this study, it is shown that their method can be effectively merged with the Lawson transformation, a technique commonly utilized in the construction of exponential integrators. It is also demonstrated that combining the constructed exponential integrators and the SAV approach yields schemes that are computationally less expensive. Specifically, the main part of the computational cost is the product of several matrix exponentials and vectors, which are parallelizable. Moreover, we conduct some mathematical analyses on the proposed schemes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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58. Telescopers for differential forms with one parameter.
- Author
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Chen, Shaoshi, Feng, Ruyong, Li, Ziming, Singer, Michael F., and Watt, Stephen M.
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DIFFERENTIAL forms , *GALOIS theory , *DEFINITE integrals , *MIRROR symmetry , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Telescopers for a function are linear differential (resp. difference) operators annihilating the definite integral (resp. definite sum) of this function. They play a key role in Wilf–Zeilberger theory and algorithms for computing them have been extensively studied in the past 30 years. In this paper, we introduce the notion of telescopers for differential forms with D-finite function coefficients. These telescopers appear in several areas of mathematics, for instance parametrized differential Galois theory and mirror symmetry. We give a sufficient and necessary condition for the existence of telescopers for a differential form and describe a method to compute them if they exist. Algorithms for verifying this condition are also given. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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59. Volume preserving mean curvature flow of L2-almost umbilical hypersurfaces in hyperbolic space.
- Author
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Li, Shiyang, Xu, Hongwei, and Zhao, Entao
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CURVATURE , *HYPERSURFACES , *HYPERBOLIC spaces , *SUBMANIFOLDS , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we study the stability of the volume preserving mean curvature flow of closed hypersurfaces in the hyperbolic space. We prove that an L 2 -almost umbilical hypersurface will be deformed to a totally umbilical hypersurface along the flow. Our result removes the assumption on the mean curvature in the theorems of Huang-Lin-Zhang [Peking J. Math. (2023)] and Leng-Xu-Zhao [Int. J. Math. (2014)]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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60. Felix Klein's early contributions to anschauliche Geometrie.
- Author
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Rowe, David E.
- Subjects
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CONTINUITY , *PHILOSOPHY of mathematics , *GEOMETRY , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Between 1873 and 1876, Felix Klein published a series of papers that he later placed under the rubric anschauliche Geometrie in the second volume of his collected works (1922). The present study attempts not only to follow the course of this work, but also to place it in a larger historical context. Methodologically, Klein's approach had roots in Poncelet's principle of continuity, though the more immediate influences on him came from his teachers, Plücker and Clebsch. In the 1860s, Clebsch reworked some of the central ideas in Riemann's theory of Abelian functions to obtain complicated results for systems of algebraic curves, most published earlier by Hesse and Steiner. These findings played a major role in enumerative geometry, whereas Plücker's work had a strongly qualitative character that imbued Klein's early studies. A leitmotif in these works can be seen in the interplay between real curves and surfaces as reflected by their transformational properties. During the early 1870s, Klein and Zeuthen began to explore the possibility of deriving all possible forms for real cubic surfaces as well as quartic curves. They did so using continuity methods reminiscent of Poncelet's earlier approach. Both authors also relied on visual arguments, which Klein would later advance under the banner of intuitive geometry (anschauliche Geometrie). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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61. A literature review: Mathematics vocabulary intervention for students with mathematics difficulty.
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Lariviere, Danielle O., Arsenault, Tessa L., and Payne, S. Blair
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LITERATURE reviews , *MATHEMATICS students , *INTEGERS , *VOCABULARY , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This paper details a literature review of mathematics vocabulary intervention studies for students with mathematics difficulty. The primary aim was to identify instructional practices that support mathematics vocabulary development. We conducted a database search to identify mathematics intervention studies either focused exclusively on vocabulary or with an embedded vocabulary component. Ultimately, 13 studies with participants from kindergarten to Grade 8 were included in the review. The majority of included studies had dual foci on vocabulary and other mathematics content, including whole number computation, word problem solving, fractions, algebra, or geometry. All studies that measured mathematics vocabulary performance indicated positive student outcomes. In addition, multiple studies indicated positive effects on measures of other mathematics content beyond mathematics vocabulary knowledge. We noted six instructional practices across studies that bolstered the mathematics vocabulary performance of students with mathematics difficulty. From most to least common, these practices included formal vocabulary use, explicit instruction, use of representations, repeated exposures, pre‐teaching, and graphic organizers. Implications are addressed for both researchers and practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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62. Norwegian teachers’ perspectives on inclusive practices in the mathematics classroom.
- Author
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Xenofontos, Constantinos, Solomon, Yvette, and Knudsmoen, Hege
- Abstract
In this paper, we explore Norwegian teachers’ perspectives on inclusive teaching practices in the mathematics classroom, defined as practices which maximise every pupil’s potential regardless of prior attainment. As previous research suggests, both mathematics teachers’ perspectives in general and the conceptualisation of inclusion, inclusive education, and inclusive practices are culturally situated, varying significantly across countries and educational systems. We draw on data from a large project in Norway focusing on the use of grouping by attainment and its relation to policy and pedagogical practices around inclusion in mathematics. Participants were 13 primary and lower-secondary mathematics teachers from six schools in the Oslo area. Analysis of semi-structured interviews focusing on strategies for inclusion of all pupils in mathematics classrooms reveals the cultural particularities of mathematics teachers’ perspectives on inclusive practices, highlighting the value of similar investigations in other cultural contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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63. Hausdorff dimension of plane sections and general intersections.
- Author
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Mattila, Pertti
- Subjects
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FRACTAL dimensions , *HAUSDORFF measures , *ORTHOGRAPHIC projection , *ROTATIONAL motion , *MATHEMATICS , *BOREL sets , *BOREL subsets - Abstract
This paper extends some results of Mattila (J. Fractal Geom. 66 (2021) 389–401 and Ann. Acad. Sci. Fenn. A Math. 42 (2017) 611–620), in particular, removing assumptions of positive lower density. We give conditions on a general family Pλ:Rn→Rm,λ∈Λ$P_{\lambda }:\mathbb {R}^n\rightarrow \mathbb {R}^m, \lambda \in \Lambda$, of orthogonal projections which guarantee that the Hausdorff dimension formula dimA∩Pλ−1{u}=s−m$\dim A\cap P_{\lambda }^{-1}\lbrace u\rbrace =s-m$ holds generically for measurable sets A⊂Rn$A\subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ with positive and finite s$s$‐dimensional Hausdorff measure, s>m$s>m$. As an application we prove for Borel sets A,B⊂Rn$A,B\subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ with positive s$s$‐ and t-dimensional$t{\text{-dimensional}}$ measures that if s+(n−1)t/n>n$s + (n-1)t/n > n$, then dimA∩(g(B)+z)⩾s+t−n$\dim A\cap (g(B)+z) \geqslant s+t - n$ for almost all rotations g$g$ and for positively many z∈Rn$z\in \mathbb {R}^{n}$. We shall also give an application to the estimates of the dimension of the set of exceptional rotations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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64. Smallest denominators.
- Author
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Marklof, Jens
- Subjects
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DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) , *NUMBER theory , *MATHEMATICS , *RATIONAL points (Geometry) , *STATISTICS - Abstract
We establish higher dimensional versions of a recent theorem by Chen and Haynes [Int. J. Number Theory 19 (2023), 1405–1413] on the expected value of the smallest denominator of rational points in a randomly shifted interval of small length, and of the closely related 1977 Kruyswijk–Meijer conjecture recently proved by Balazard and Martin [Bull. Sci. Math. 187 (2023), Paper No. 103305]. We express the distribution of smallest denominators in terms of the void statistics of multidimensional Farey fractions and prove convergence of the distribution function and certain finite moments. The latter was previously unknown even in the one‐dimensional setting. We furthermore obtain a higher dimensional extension of Kargaev and Zhigljavsky's work on moments of the distance function for the Farey sequence [J. Number Theory 65 (1997), 130–149] as well as new results on pigeonhole statistics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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65. Correction to "Anosov flows, growth rates on covers and group extensions of subshifts".
- Author
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Dougall, Rhiannon and Sharp, Richard
- Subjects
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GROUP extensions (Mathematics) , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This note corrects an error in our paper Anosov flows, growth rates on covers and group extensions of subshifts, Invent. Math. 223:445–483, 2021. This leaves our main results, Theorem 1.1, Corollary 1.2, Theorem 1.3 and Theorem 5.1, unchanged. We also fill a gap in the arguments presented in Sect. 9; this requires a small modification to the results in this section. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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66. Am I a math person? Linking math identity with students' motivation for mathematics and achievement.
- Author
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Radišić, Jelena, Krstić, Ksenija, Blažanin, Barbara, Mićić, Katarina, Baucal, Aleksandar, Peixoto, Francisco, and Schukajlow, Stanislaw
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ACADEMIC motivation , *EXPECTANCY-value theory , *MATHEMATICS students , *ACHIEVEMENT motivation , *MATHEMATICS , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
Based on the expectancy-value perspective on identity and identity formation, this paper explores the relationship between math identity (MI) and the dimensions of motivation (i.e. intrinsic value, attainment value, utility value and perceived competence) and math achievement in primary school. An additional aim of our research was to explore these relationships in different cultural contexts and investigate potential gender and grade differences concerning MI. The participants were 11,782 primary school students from Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Finland, Portugal and Serbia. All predictors from the motivation spectrum were significant for students' MI across the examined countries and had a stronger association with MI than math achievement. Among the motivational dimensions, intrinsic value had the strongest association with students' MI. Boys had significantly more positive math identities than girls in Estonia, Finland, Norway and Portugal. The results showed that the grade 4 students perceived themselves less as "math persons" than their grade 3 peers in all countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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67. A note on the parity of meromorphic functions.
- Author
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Changwen Peng, Huawei Huang, and Jianren Long
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MEROMORPHIC functions , *INTEGERS , *POLYNOMIALS , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Parity is an important and easy to recognise property for meromorphic functions. On the parity of meromorphic functions, Liu, Liu and Korhonen [J Math Anal Appl 512(2022):126129] obtained some meaningful results. In this paper, we investigate the parity of a meromorphic function y(z) under the hypothesis that y(z)2n-2y(z)n is even. In addition, we discuss the relationship on the parity of a meromorphic function with its q-difference polynomials and differential expressions. For instance, we consider the parity of a meromorphic function y(z) under the assumption that y'(z)/ y(z)n and y(qz)/y(z)n are odd or even functions, where n is a positive integer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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68. Adams operations on the twisted K-theory of compact Lie groups.
- Author
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Fok, Chi-Kwong
- Subjects
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COMPACT groups , *LIE groups , *K-theory , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, extending the results in Fok (Proc Am Math Soc 145:2799–2813, 2017), we compute Adams operations on the twisted K-theory of connected, simply-connected and simple compact Lie groups G, in both equivariant and nonequivariant settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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69. Collective or individual rationality in the Nash bargaining solution: efficiency-free characterizations.
- Author
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Nakamura, Kensei
- Subjects
- *
NEGOTIATION , *AXIOMS , *MATHEMATICS , *POSSIBILITY - Abstract
In the classical bargaining problem, we propose a very mild axiom of individual rationality, which we call possibility of utility gain. This requires that for at least one bargaining problem, there exists at least one player who reaches a higher utility level than their disagreement utility. This paper shows that the Nash solution (Nash in Econometrica 18(2):155–162, 1950) is characterized by possibility of utility gain and continuity with respect to feasible sets together with Nash's axioms except weak Pareto optimality. We also show that in Nash's theorem, weak Pareto optimality can be replaced by conflict-freeness (introduced by Rachmilevitch in Math Soc Sci 76(C):107–109, 2015). This demands that when the agreement most preferred by all players is feasible, this should be chosen. Furthermore, we provide alternative and unified proofs for other efficiency-free characterizations of the Nash solution. This clarifies the role of each axiom in the related results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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70. Correction to: Conormal Spaces and Whitney Stratifications.
- Author
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Helmer, Martin and Nanda, Vidit
- Subjects
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MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This note remedies an error in our paper tilted Conormal Spaces and Whitney Stratifications (Found. Comput. Math., 2022). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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71. The mathematics and mechanics of tug of war.
- Author
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Moulton, Derek E and Oliveri, Hadrien
- Subjects
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STATIC equilibrium (Physics) , *MATHEMATICS , *MECHANICAL models , *WAR games , *DYNAMIC models - Abstract
In this paper, we propose a mechanical model for a game of tug of war (rope pulling). We focus on a game opposing two players, modelling each player's body as a structure composed of straight rods that can be actuated in three different ways to generate a pulling force. We first examine the static problem of two opponents being in a deadlock configuration of mechanical equilibrium; here we show that this situation is essentially governed by the ratio of masses of the players, with the heavier player having a strong advantage. We then turn to the dynamic problem and model the response of the system to an abrupt change in activation by one of the players. In this case, the system exhibits a nontrivial response; in particular, we compare a sudden pulling and a sudden "letting up," and demonstrate the existence of regimes in which the lighter player can momentarily take the advantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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72. Valuative dimension, constructive points of view.
- Author
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Lombardi, Henri, Neuwirth, Stefan, and Yengui, Ihsen
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COMMUTATIVE rings , *CONSTRUCTIVE mathematics , *ABSTRACT algebra , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
There are several classical characterisations of the valuative dimension of a commutative ring. Constructive versions of this dimension have been given and proven to be equivalent to the classical notion within classical mathematics, and they can be used for the usual examples of commutative rings. To the contrary of the classical versions, the constructive versions have a clear computational content. This paper investigates the computational relationship between three possible constructive definitions of the valuative dimension of a commutative ring. In doing so, it proves these constructive versions to be equivalent within constructive mathematics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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73. Preschool children's understanding of the musical concept of tempo by engaging in strategies from mathematical generalisation.
- Author
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Dogani, Konstantina and Papadopoulou, Evangelia
- Subjects
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PRESCHOOLS , *MATHEMATICS , *CYBERNETICS , *GENERALIZATION , *TEMPO (Music theory) - Abstract
Teaching music often focuses on developing musical concepts, through comparisons and discriminations. This paper contributes to the discussion on concept development in music through recognition of common elements in a situation and a shift from a local to a general level, considering theoretical approaches to mathematical generalisation. It sets to explore preschool children's understanding of tempo and its use in new musical situations. The research involved a musical intervention in six preschool classrooms. Critical incidences from focus group discussions and non-participant observation recorded children's understanding of tempo from their musical actions, drawings, responses and reflection to teacher questions. The findings highlight that children could go beyond the specific content of the activities and focus on the basic characteristics of tempo, integrating them into their song creations. A teaching approach oriented to generalisation through concept development can assist teachers to elaborate musical content and realise students' level of understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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74. Symmetric function generalizations of the q-Baker--Forrester ex-conjecture and Selberg-type integrals.
- Author
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Xin, Guoce and Zhou, Yue
- Subjects
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SYMMETRIC functions , *GENERALIZATION , *MATHEMATICS , *LOGICAL prediction - Abstract
It is well-known that the famous Selberg integral is equivalent to the Morris constant term identity. In 1998, Baker and Forrester conjectured a generalization of the q-Morris constant term identity[J. Combin. Theory Ser. A 81 (1998), pp. 69–87]. This conjecture was proved and extended by Károlyi, Nagy, Petrov, and Volkov (KNPV) in 2015 [Adv. Math. 277 (2015), pp. 252–282]. In this paper, we obtain two symmetric function generalizations of the q-Baker–Forrester ex-conjecture. These include: (i) a q-Baker–Forrester type constant term identity for a product of a complete symmetric function and a Macdonald polynomial; (ii) a complete symmetric function generalization of KNPV's result. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. An exceptional property of the one-dimensional Bianchi–Egnell inequality.
- Author
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König, Tobias
- Subjects
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LOGICAL prediction , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *BULLS , *MATHEMATICS , *FAMILIES - Abstract
In this paper, for d ≥ 1 and s ∈ (0 , d 2) , we study the Bianchi–Egnell quotient Q (f) = inf f ∈ H ˙ s (R d) \ B ‖ (- Δ) s / 2 f ‖ L 2 (R d) 2 - S d , s ‖ f ‖ L 2 d d - 2 s (R d) 2 dist H ˙ s (R d) (f , B) 2 , f ∈ H ˙ s (R d) \ B , where S d , s is the best Sobolev constant and B is the manifold of Sobolev optimizers. By a fine asymptotic analysis, we prove that when d = 1 , there is a neighborhood of B on which the quotient Q (f) is larger than the lowest value attainable by sequences converging to B . This behavior is surprising because it is contrary to the situation in dimension d ≥ 2 described recently in König (Bull Lond Math Soc 55(4):2070–2075, 2023). This leads us to conjecture that for d = 1 , Q (f) has no minimizer on H ˙ s (R d) \ B , which again would be contrary to the situation in d ≥ 2 . As a complement of the above, we study a family of test functions which interpolates between one and two Talenti bubbles, for every d ≥ 1 . For d ≥ 2 , this family yields an alternative proof of the main result of König (Bull Lond Math Soc 55(4):2070–2075, 2023). For d = 1 we make some numerical observations which support the conjecture stated above. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. Isoperimetric inequalities for Neumann eigenvalues on bounded domains in rank-1 symmetric spaces.
- Author
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Meng, Yifeng and Wang, Kui
- Subjects
- *
SYMMETRIC domains , *ISOPERIMETRIC inequalities , *SYMMETRIC spaces , *EIGENVALUES , *HYPERBOLIC spaces , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we prove sharp isoperimetric inequalities for lower order eigenvalues of Neumann Laplacian on bounded domains in both compact and noncompact rank-1 symmetric spaces. Our results generalize the work of Wang and Xia for bounded domains in the hyperbolic space (Xia and Wang in Math Ann 385(1–2):863–879, 2023), and Szegö–Weinberger inequalities in rank-1 symmetric spaces obtained by Aithal and Santhanam (Trans Am Math Soc 348(10):3955–3965, 1996). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Centralizer of fixed point free separating flows.
- Author
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Han, Bo and Wen, Xiao
- Subjects
- *
ORBITS (Astronomy) , *CONTINUOUS functions , *COMPACT spaces (Topology) , *RIEMANNIAN manifolds , *MATHEMATICS , *METRIC spaces - Abstract
In this paper, we study the centralizer of a separating continuous flow without fixed points. We show that if M is a compact metric space and $ \phi _t:M\to M $ ϕ t : M → M is a separating flow without fixed points, then $ \phi _t $ ϕ t has a quasi-trivial centralizer, that is, if a continuous flow $ \psi _t $ ψ t commutes with $ \phi _t $ ϕ t , then there exists a continuous function $ A: M\to \mathbb {R} $ A : M → R which is invariant along the orbit of $ \phi _t $ ϕ t such that $ \psi _t(x)=\phi _{A(x)t}(x) $ ψ t (x) = ϕ A (x) t (x) holds for all $ x\in M $ x ∈ M. We also show that if M is a compact Riemannian manifold without boundary and $ \Phi _u $ Φ u is a homogenous separating $ C^1 $ C 1 $ \mathbb {R}^m $ R m -action on M, then $ \Phi _u $ Φ u has a quasi-trivial centralizer, that is, if $ \Psi _u $ Ψ u is a $ \mathbb {R}^{ m} $ R m -action on M commuting with $ \Phi _u $ Φ u , then there is a continuous map $ A: M\to \mathcal {M}_{m\times m}(\mathbb {R}) $ A : M → M m × m (R) which is invariant along orbit of $ \Phi _u $ Φ u such that $ \Psi _{u}(x)=\Phi _{A(x)u}(x) $ Ψ u (x) = Φ A (x) u (x) for all $ x\in M $ x ∈ M. These improve Theorem 1 of [M. Oka, Expansive flows and their centralizers, Nagoya Math. J. 64 (1976), pp. 1–15.] and Theorem 2 of [W. Bonomo, J. Rocha, and P. Varandas, The centralizer of Komuro-expansive flows and expansive $ \mathbb {R}^d $ R d -actions, Math. Z. 289(3–4) (2018), pp. 1059–1088.] respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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78. To preprint or not to preprint: A global researcher survey.
- Author
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Ni, Rong and Waltman, Ludo
- Subjects
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MATHEMATICS , *ASTRONOMY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SURVEYS , *PREPRINTS , *PUBLISHING , *PHYSICS , *INFORMATION science , *COMMITMENT (Psychology) , *ACCESS to information , *OPEN access publishing , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Open science is receiving widespread attention globally, and preprinting offers an important way to implement open science practices in scholarly publishing. To develop a systematic understanding of researchers' adoption of and attitudes toward preprinting, we conducted a survey of authors of research papers published in 2021 and early 2022. Our survey results show that the United States and Europe led the way in the adoption of preprinting. The United States and European respondents reported a higher familiarity with and a stronger commitment to preprinting than their colleagues elsewhere in the world. The adoption of preprinting is much stronger in physics and astronomy as well as mathematics and computer science than in other research areas. Respondents identified free accessibility of preprints and acceleration of research communication as the most important benefits of preprinting. Low reliability and credibility of preprints, sharing results before peer review and premature media coverage are the most significant concerns about preprinting, emphasized in particular by respondents in the life and health sciences. According to respondents, the most crucial strategies to encourage preprinting are integrating preprinting into journal submission workflows and providing recognition for posting preprints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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79. Time-discrete momentum consensus-based optimization algorithm and its application to Lyapunov function approximation.
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Ha, Seung-Yeal, Hwang, Gyuyoung, and Kim, Sungyoon
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- *
OPTIMIZATION algorithms , *LYAPUNOV functions , *DISTRIBUTED algorithms , *GLOBAL optimization , *APPROXIMATION algorithms , *MATHEMATICS , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
In this paper, we study a discrete momentum consensus-based optimization (Momentum-CBO) algorithm which corresponds to a second-order generalization of the discrete first-order CBO [S.-Y. Ha, S. Jin and D. Kim, Convergence of a first-order consensus-based global optimization algorithm, Math. Models Methods Appl. Sci. 30 (2020) 2417–2444]. The proposed algorithm can be understood as the modification of ADAM-CBO, replacing the normalization term by unity. For the proposed Momentum-CBO, we provide a sufficient framework which guarantees the convergence of algorithm toward a global minimum of the objective function. Moreover, we present several experimental results showing that Momentum-CBO has an improved success rate of finding the global minimum compared to vanilla-CBO and show the stability of Momentum-CBO under different initialization schemes. We also show that Momentum-CBO can be used as the alternative of ADAM-CBO which does not have a proper convergence analysis. Finally, we give an application of Momentum-CBO for Lyapunov function approximation using symbolic regression techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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80. Active particle methods towards a mathematics of living systems.
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Bellomo, Nicola and Brezzi, Franco
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SOCIAL dynamics , *MATHEMATICS , *SOCIAL interaction , *FINANCIAL markets , *SYSTEM dynamics , *VEHICLE routing problem - Abstract
This editorial paper reviews the articles published in a special issue devoted to the application of active particle methods applied to the study of the collective dynamics of large systems of interacting entities in science and society. The applications presented in this special issue focus on the study of financial markets, cell dynamics in the context of cancer modeling, vehicle and crowd vehicle and crowd dynamics, and classical problems in the kinetic theory of active particles and swarm theory. A critical analysis is proposed to look forward to research. Perspectives with emphasis on the interaction of multiple social dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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81. Mathematical experience in game‐based problem‐solving.
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Ke, Fengfeng, Dai, Chih‐Pu, and West, Luke
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ARCHITECTURE , *MATHEMATICS , *TASK performance , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *RESEARCH funding , *INTERVIEWING , *PROBLEM solving , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *MIDDLE school students , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *BUSINESS , *THEMATIC analysis , *ACADEMIC achievement , *RESEARCH methodology , *MULTIMEDIA systems , *LEARNING strategies , *STUDENT attitudes , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *GAMIFICATION , *VIDEO games - Abstract
Background: Game‐based learning can frame problem‐solving as a sense‐making experience with domain‐specific tasks for school students. However, multiple challenges arise when trying to support learners in such a complex, problem‐oriented learning environment. Objectives and Methods: With an architecture‐themed mathematics learning game, we conducted two mixed‐method studies to explore the impact and design of game‐based mathematical experience on the math problem‐solving performance of middle school students. Results and Conclusions: The study findings suggested a positive impact of game‐based math experience on math problem‐solving for middle school students. Problematization‐oriented game‐based math tasks with structuring features enhanced students' reasoning with problems and channelled it to doing mathematics. Takeaways: The current research findings support the initiative to frame learning as a sense‐making experience with domain‐specific tasks and inform the design of game‐based mathematical experience and learning support. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Realistic mathematical practices frame learning as a sense‐making experience.Challenges arise when involving learners in realistic mathematical experiences driven by domain‐specific tasks. What this paper adds: Game‐based simulation of math tasks framed learning as sense‐making experience.Game‐based math experiencing promoted math contextual problem‐solving performance.Structuring features enhanced problematized experiencing with math tasks. Implications for practice and/or policy: Teachers can integrate and facilitate game‐based math experiencing in class.Efforts should be made to make game‐based math tasks meaningful for students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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82. Enacting control with student dashboards: The role of motivation.
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Knoop‐van Campen, Carolien A. N., van der Graaf, Joep, Horvers, Anne, Kooi, Rianne, Dijkstra, Rick, and Molenaar, Inge
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LANGUAGE & languages , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *MATHEMATICS , *STATISTICAL significance , *RESEARCH funding , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *SCHOOL children , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *LEARNING strategies , *VOCABULARY , *DATA analysis software , *INFORMATION display systems , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling - Abstract
Background: Even though monitoring and control enactment are key aspects of self‐regulated learning (SRL), Adaptive learning technologies (ALTs) may reduce the need for learners to monitor and control their learning. Personalized dashboards are effective in supporting learners' monitoring and can potentially support control behaviour. Allowing learners to enact control over their learning process, seems to hold potential for increasing their motivation. Objectives: Therefore, this study's aim was to investigate the relation between control enactment and motivation. We examined how learners enacted control while learning with an ALT with personalized dashboards and examined the relation between learners' enactment of control and their motivation. Methods: Seventy‐eight primary school learners (Grade 5) participated. During the lesson, learners worked on mathematics in the ALT and concurrently were shown personalized visualizations that supported monitoring and enacting control over their learning process. Learners could enact control to change problems' difficulty to easy, medium, or hard. Motivation was measured before and after learning. Results: The SEM analyses showed that how learners enacted control was related to their motivation. Choosing difficult problems was related to more enjoyment and competence while choosing easy problems related to more pressure and tension. Learners who complied with the suggested difficulty level experienced less choice, but also less pressure/tension and more enjoyment and competence. Conclusions: These results provide avenues to account for broader learner characteristics like SRL and motivation to optimize learning. This way, hybrid systems in which control enactment is a shared responsibility of the system and learner, can be improved to support SRL development. Lay Description: What is currently known: Monitor and control enactment are key aspects of self‐regulated learning (SRL).Adaptive learning technologies may reduce the need for learners to monitor and control their learning.Personalized dashboards support learners' monitoring behaviour and can potentially also support control enactment.Enactment of control could positively affect learners' motivation. What does this paper add: There is a large variation in how learners enact control and whether they comply with the scaffold.Learners who chose more difficult problems experienced more enjoyment, while learners choosing easy problems, experienced more pressure.Learners complied with the scaffold, experienced less choice, but also less pressure and more enjoyment.This study provides avenues to account for broader learner characteristics like SRL and motivation to optimize learning. Practical implications: Support control enactment by actively involve learners in choice during the learning process.Offer monitor and enactment in conjunction, as learners can only make well‐founded choices if they can monitor their learning process.Intrinsically and extrinsically motivated learners showed different choice patterns and learning experience.It is important to have an understanding and monitoring of learners' motivation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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83. A trace Trudinger-Moser inequality involving L^p-norm on a compact Riemann surface with boundary.
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Zhang, Mengjie
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RIEMANN surfaces , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, using the method of blow-up analysis, we establish a trace Trudinger-Moser inequality involving L^p-norm and obtain the corresponding extremal on a compact Riemann surface with a smooth boundary. The result generalizes those of Li-Liu [Math. Z. 250 (2005), pp. 363–686] and Zhang [Commun. Pure Appl. Anal. 20 (2021), pp. 1721–1735]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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84. Exploring q-Bernstein-Bézier surfaces in Minkowski space: Analysis, modeling, and applications.
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Bashir, Sadia, Ahmad, Daud, and Ali, Ghada
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- *
MINKOWSKI space , *MICROSOFT Surface (Computer) , *COMPUTER graphics , *COMPUTER-aided design , *GEOMETRIC modeling , *GAUSSIAN curvature , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we examine q-Bernstein-Bézier surfaces in Minkowski space- R13 with q as the shape parameter. These surfaces, a generalization of Bézier surfaces, have applications in mathematics, computer-aided geometric design, and computer graphics for the surface formation and modeling. We analyze the timelike and spacelike cases of q-Bernstein-Bézier surfaces using known boundary control points. The mean curvature and Gaussian curvature of these q-Bernstein-Bézier surfaces are computed by finding the respective fundamental coefficients. We also investigate the shape operator dependency for timelike and spacelike q-Bernstein-Bézier surfaces in Minkowski space- R13 , and provide biquadratic and bicubic q-Bernstein-Bézier surfaces as illustrative examples for different values of the shape controlling parameter q. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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85. A study on reversed dynamic inequalities of Hilbert-type on time scales nabla calculus.
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Saied, A. I.
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- *
CALCULUS , *INTEGRAL inequalities , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we establish some reversed dynamic inequalities of Hilbert type on time scales nabla calculus by applying reversed Hölder's inequality, chain rule on time scales, and the mean inequality. As particular cases of our results (when T = N and T = R ), we get the reversed form of discrete and continuous inequalities proved by Chang-Jian, Lian-Ying and Cheung (Math. Slovaca 61(1):15–28, 2011). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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86. ChatGPT-generated help produces learning gains equivalent to human tutor-authored help on mathematics skills.
- Author
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Pardos, Zachary A. and Bhandari, Shreya
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CHATGPT , *LANGUAGE models , *QUALITY control , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Authoring of help content within educational technologies is labor intensive, requiring many iterations of content creation, refining, and proofreading. In this paper, we conduct an efficacy evaluation of ChatGPT-generated help using a 3 x 4 study design (N = 274) to compare the learning gains of ChatGPT to human tutor-authored help across four mathematics problem subject areas. Participants are randomly assigned to one of three hint conditions (control, human tutor, or ChatGPT) paired with one of four randomly assigned subject areas (Elementary Algebra, Intermediate Algebra, College Algebra, or Statistics). We find that only the ChatGPT condition produces statistically significant learning gains compared to a no-help control, with no statistically significant differences in gains or time-on-task observed between learners receiving ChatGPT vs human tutor help. Notably, ChatGPT-generated help failed quality checks on 32% of problems. This was, however, reducible to nearly 0% for algebra problems and 13% for statistics problems after applying self-consistency, a "hallucination" mitigation technique for Large Language Models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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87. Corrigendum to "Sharp Hardy Space Estimates for Multipliers" (Int. Math. Res. Not. 2022 (2022): 10403–30).
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Grafakos, Loukas and Park, Bae Jun
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MATHEMATICS - Abstract
We correct an error in Lemma 4.1 [pages 10420–2] in our article listed in the title. This concerns the cases |$s=n$| and |$\gamma \leqslant 2$| below, but it does not affect the main results of the article, that is, Theorems 1.1 and 1.2, as only the case |$s
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- 2024
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88. Examining the mathematical autobiographies of undergraduate health science students.
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Dingel, Molly J. and Ayebo, Abraham
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- *
MATHEMATICS , *UNDERGRADUATES , *MEDICAL sciences , *AUTOBIOGRAPHY , *BIOGRAPHICAL sources - Abstract
Numerous studies affirm the importance of students' attitudes for mathematical education. This study uses mathematical autobiographical essays to examine the mathematical experiences and attitudes of undergraduate students enrolled in mathematics classes at a Midwestern University in the United States. The essays of 41 students (20 men, 21 women) out of 170 enrolled in College Algebra, Precalculus, and Calculus were analyzed using the categories of (1) confidence in mathematics ability, (2) value of mathematics, and (3) liking of mathematics. This paper provides context and theoretical depth to student reports of their attitudes in these categories. Statements at the intersections of both confidence and liking, and value and liking provide additional insights. First, students who perceive mathematics as valuable are more likely to like it. Second, the vast majority of students talk about confidence and liking together, and with a positive correlation. Further, these students tend to talk about liking or not liking mathematics because of their perceived ability in mathematics. Our study suggests the importance of proactive teaching strategies to improve students' perceptions of the value, liking of, and their confidence in, mathematics, and also suggests self-efficacy as a potential theoretical basis for this work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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89. A Generalization of the Avalanche Principle.
- Author
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Xu, Jiahao
- Subjects
- *
GENERALIZATION , *MATHEMATICS , *COCYCLES - Abstract
In this paper, we generalize the Avalanche Principle in [Ann. of. Math. (2), 2001, 154(1): 155–203]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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90. Programmatic Strategies to Engage and Support Undergraduate Women in Applied Mathematics and Computer Science.
- Author
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Han, Sandie, Kennedy, Nadia Stoyanova, Samaroo, Diana, and Duttagupta, Urmi
- Subjects
- *
SCHOLARSHIPS , *COMPUTER science , *APPLIED mathematics , *UNDERGRADUATES , *SELF-efficacy , *COMMUNITY involvement - Abstract
This paper describes the implementation of a STEM scholarship program which utilized a holistic approach to providing a multi-dimensional student support system. The program has been successful in encouraging and supporting women in Applied Mathematics and Computer Science by offering a diverse suite of extracurricular opportunities, actively engaging them in organized events, research projects, and participation in STEM communities, and helping them achieve higher GPAs and shorter times to graduation. The supported women also benefitted from close mentoring relationships with the faculty mentors. The program emphasized the development of empowering settings for women's engagement and achievement, which act to sustain and expand interest in mathematics and computing, and thereby help them to see themselves as future professionals in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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91. Promoting Women in Mathematics through Creating a Learning Community and Encouraging Double Majors.
- Author
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OShaughnessy, J.
- Subjects
- *
LEARNING communities , *MATHEMATICS , *ACADEMIC departments - Abstract
The Mathematical Sciences Department at Shenandoah University focused on increasing the participation of women in the mathematics program by fostering a welcoming learning community and promoting double majors. Data from the past decade is presented. During this time, the program saw an increase in women undergraduate mathematics majors from 11% to as high as 71%. This paper describes the initiatives taken to make these changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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92. "I Just Feel the Need to be Good at Something, and that Thing Should be Math": Acknowledging Asian/Asian American Identity in an Accelerated Mathematics Program.
- Author
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Yadavalli, Anila, Walker, J. D., Shi, Jeff J., and Rogness, Jonathan
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- *
ASIAN American students , *AMERICAN identity , *COLLEGE curriculum , *MATHEMATICS , *MULTIVARIABLE calculus , *LINEAR algebra - Abstract
The University of Minnesota Talented Youth Mathematics Program (UMTYMP) is a selective, five-year accelerated mathematics program for students in grades 6–12. During the program, students take college mathematics courses on University of Minnesota campuses, starting with algebra and continuing through logic and proofs, linear algebra, and multivariable calculus. The majority of UMTYMP students come from two demographic groups: White and Asian/Asian American. In 2020, we surveyed UMTYMP students to understand the impact of model minority stereotypes (MMS) on Asian/Asian American students, particularly girls, who are labeled as "gifted" and/or "talented." In this paper, we reveal the preliminary results of this study, discuss their implications, and provide recommendations for addressing the MMS in mathematics programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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93. On the exterior Dirichlet problem for Hessian-type fully nonlinear elliptic equations.
- Author
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Li, Xiaoliang and Wang, Cong
- Subjects
- *
DIRICHLET problem , *NONLINEAR equations , *MONGE-Ampere equations , *ELLIPTIC equations , *VISCOSITY solutions , *MATHEMATICS , *CONCAVE functions - Abstract
We treat the exterior Dirichlet problem for a class of fully nonlinear elliptic equations of the form f (λ (D 2 u)) = g (x) with prescribed asymptotic behavior at infinity. The equations of this type had been studied extensively by Caffarelli et al. [The Dirichlet problem for nonlinear second-order elliptic equations. III. Functions of the eigenvalues of the Hessian, Acta Math. 155 (1985) 261–301], Trudinger [On the Dirichlet problem for Hessian equations, Acta Math. 175 (1995) 151–164] and many others, and there had been significant discussions on the solvability of the classical Dirichlet problem via the continuity method, under the assumption that f is a concave function. In this paper, based on Perron's method, we establish an exterior existence and uniqueness result for viscosity solutions of the equations, by assuming f to satisfy certain structure conditions as in [L. Caffarelli, L. Nirenberg and J. Spruck, The Dirichlet problem for nonlinear second-order elliptic equations. III. Functions of the eigenvalues of the Hessian, Acta Math. 155 (1985) 261–301; N. S. Trudinger, On the Dirichlet problem for Hessian equations, Acta Math. 175 (1995) 151–164] but without requiring the concavity of f. The equations in our setting may embrace the well-known Monge–Ampère equations, Hessian equations and Hessian quotient equations as special cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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94. Russell's Theories of Events and Instants from the Perspective of Point-Free Ontologies in the Tradition of the Lvov-Warsaw School.
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Pietruszczak, Andrzej
- Subjects
- *
ONTOLOGY , *AXIOMS , *MATHEMATICS , *LVOV-Warsaw school of philosophy - Abstract
We classify two of Bertrand Russell's theories of events within the point-free ontology. The first of such approaches was presented informally by Russell in 'The World of Physics and the World of Sense' (Lecture IV in Our Knowledge of the External World of 1914). Based on this theory, Russell sketched ways to construct instants as collections of events. This paper formalizes Russell's approach from 1914. We will also show that in such a reconstructed theory, we obtain all axioms of Russell's second theory from 1936 and all axioms of Thomason's theory of events from 1989. Russell's work certainly influenced the works of Stanisław Leśniewski, his student Alfred Tarski, and Czesław Lejewski – prominent members of the Lvov-Warsaw School (LWS). We see our work in the tradition of the research of Leśniewski and Tarski. Building on the technical tools developed in this environment and in the spirit of the traditional research of the LWS, we engage here, in particular, with two classic works by Russell on fundamental ontology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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95. The Problem of Natural Representation of Reasoning in the Lvov-Warsaw School.
- Author
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Indrzejczak, Andrzej
- Subjects
- *
REASONING , *THOUGHT & thinking , *REASON , *MATHEMATICS , *NATURAL deduction (Logic) , *PROOF theory - Abstract
The problem of precise characterisation of traditional forms of reasoning applied in mathematics was independently investigated and successfully resolved by Jaśkowski and Gentzen in 1934. However, there are traces of earlier interests in this field exhibited by the members of the Lvov-Warsaw School. We focus on the results obtained by Jaśkowski and Leśniewski. Jaśkowski provided the first formal system of natural deduction in 1926. Leśniewski also demonstrated in some of his papers how to construct proofs in accordance with intuitively correct principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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96. Gender Differences in Math and Science Academic Self-Concepts and the Association With Female Climate in 8th Grade Classrooms.
- Author
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Andersen, Ida Gran and Smith, Emil
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of middle school students , *SCHOOL environment , *STATISTICAL correlation , *MATHEMATICS , *PHILOSOPHY of education , *STEREOTYPES , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *SCIENCE , *AFFINITY groups , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SURVEYS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *RESEARCH , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SELF-perception - Abstract
Although women's representation in STEM fields and occupations has increased, science and math continue to be stereotyped as male domains. This paper links psychological and sociological explanations for gendered disparities in STEM by examining the relationship between the local "micro-situational" female learning environment and the gender gap in academic self-concept in math and science. We applied hybrid models to TIMSS 2015 data comprised of a pseudo-panel of repeated measures for individual student and peer achievement, academic self-concept, utility value, and interest-enjoyment value in math/science (at age 14). We analyzed data from three countries, including a subsample of students who were taught by the same teacher in both math and science, thus eliminating unobserved teacher heterogeneity. Results indicate that female peer climate in the classroom is important for understanding how girls' self-concept in math/science is formed, even though it was unrelated to the gender gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
97. A rigidity theorem for asymptotically flat static manifolds and its applications.
- Author
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Harvie, Brian and Wang, Ye-Kai
- Subjects
- *
QUANTUM gravity , *ROTATIONAL symmetry , *GEOMETRIC rigidity , *BLACK holes , *PHOTONS , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we study the Minkowski-type inequality for asymptotically flat static manifolds (M^{n},g) with boundary and with dimension n<8 that was established by McCormick [Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 146 (2018), pp. 4039–4046]. First, we show that any asymptotically flat static (M^{n},g) which achieves the equality and has CMC or equipotential boundary is isometric to a rotationally symmetric region of the Schwarzschild manifold. Then, we apply conformal techniques to derive a new Minkowski-type inequality for the level sets of bounded static potentials. Taken together, these provide a robust approach to detecting rotational symmetry of asymptotically flat static systems. As an application, we prove global uniqueness of static metric extensions for the Bartnik data induced by both Schwarzschild coordinate spheres and Euclidean coordinate spheres in dimension n < 8 under the natural condition of Schwarzschild stability. This generalizes an earlier result of Miao [Classical Quantum Gravity 22 (2005), pp. L53–L59]. We also establish uniqueness for equipotential photon surfaces with small Einstein-Hilbert energy. This is interesting to compare with other recent uniqueness results for static photon surfaces and black holes, e.g. see V. Agostiniani and L. Mazzieri [Comm. Math. Phys. 355 (2017), pp. 261–301], C. Cederbaum and G. J. Galloway [J. Math. Phys. 62 (2021), p. 22], and S. Raulot [Classical Quantum Gravity 38 (2021), p. 22]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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98. Uniformity of quadratic points.
- Author
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Ge, Tangli
- Subjects
- *
UNIFORMITY , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we extend a uniformity result of Dimitrov et al. [Uniformity in Mordell-Lang for curves, Ann. of Math. (2) 194(1) (2021) 237–298] to dimension two and use it to get a uniform bound on the cardinality of the set of all quadratic points for non-hyperelliptic non-bielliptic curves which only depend on the Mordell–Weil rank, the genus of the curve and the degree of the number field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
99. An undecidable statement regarding zero-sum games.
- Author
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Fey, Mark
- Subjects
- *
ZERO sum games , *ERGODIC theory , *SET theory , *EXPECTED utility , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we give an example of a statement concerning two-player zero-sum games which is undecidable, meaning that it can neither be proven or disproven by the standard axioms of mathematics. Earlier work has shown that there exist "paradoxical" two-player zero-sum games with unbounded payoffs, in which a standard calculation of the two players' expected utilities of a mixed strategy profile yield a positive sum. We show that whether or not a modified version of this paradoxical situation, with bounded payoffs and a weaker measurability requirement, exists is an unanswerable question. Our proof relies on a mixture of techniques from set theory and ergodic theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. SwingBoard: introducing swipe based virtual keyboard for visually impaired and blind users.
- Author
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Ahmed, Iftekhar and Farrok, Omar
- Subjects
- *
SMARTPHONES , *MATHEMATICS , *COGNITIVE processing speed , *WORD processing , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ASSISTIVE technology , *LONGITUDINAL method , *KEYBOARDS (Electronics) , *COMMUNICATION devices for people with disabilities , *BLINDNESS , *HUMAN error , *USER interfaces , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) - Abstract
Nowadays, typing is considered as one of the highly important aspects of accessibility that the visually impaired and blinds struggle with the most as existing virtual keyboards are complex and slow. This paper proposes a new text entry method named SwingBoard for visually impaired and blind smartphone users to solve their accessibility problem. It supports a–z, 0–9, 7 punctuations, 12 symbols, and eight keyboard functionalities that are arranged in 8 zones (specific range of angles), four segments, two modes, and different gestures. The proposed keyboard is suitable for the either single-handed or both-handed operation that tracks swipe angle and length to trigger any of the 66 key events. The key triggering process is based on only swiping the finger at different angles with different lengths. Typing speed of SwingBoard is increased by including some effective features such as the quick alphabet and number mode shifting, haptic feedback feature, talkback on swipe to learn the map quickly, and customizable swipe length feature. At the end of 150 one-minute tests, seven blind participants reached an average of 19.89 words per minute (WPM) with an 88% accuracy rate which is one of the fastest-ever recorded average typing speeds for the blind. Almost all users found SwingBoard effective, easy to learn and want to keep using it. SwingBoard is a handy virtual keyboard for visually impaired people with amazing typing speed and accuracy. Rehabilitation would be easier for a visually impaired/disabled person who can adapt the current technology-oriented world and use communication tools easily. As visually impaired and blind people faced a lot of problems in their regular life because of their inability to see things, coping with the evolving world's demands from a person to do a certain task using smart devices would be easier for them with the proposed virtual keyboard topology. As the number of visually impaired and blind users of smartphones rises, faster typing becomes a vital aspect of the smartphone experience. Deaf-blind communities are expanding but solutions for them are not increasing at the same pace because of the limitation of implication. Research on a virtual keyboard with the proposed eyes-free swipe-based typing operation and ears-free reliability on haptic feedback would enable others to create new solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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