16,804 results on '"Brock P"'
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2. Pandemic Relief Spending and Recovery Strategies: Findings from a Survey of Community Colleges in Six States. ARCC Network Report
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Community College Research Center (CCRC), Accelerating Recovery in Community Colleges (ARCC) Network, Serena C. Klempin, Sarah Griffin, Tia J. Monahan, Megan N. Anderson, and Thomas Brock
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In order to assist higher education institutions and their students during the pandemic, the federal government established the Higher Education Emergency Relief (HEER) Fund, which directed over $75 billion to institutions of higher education--including nearly $25 billion to community colleges--over a three-year period. The U.S. Department of Education worked on a rapid timeline to distribute these funds to institutions, which they could use to provide direct aid to students facing financial challenges and cover institutional costs related to the pandemic. Drawing on a survey of community colleges in six states--California, Michigan, New York (State University of New York [SUNY] colleges), Ohio, Tennessee, and Texas--this report provides insight into the specific pandemic recovery activities colleges implemented, colleges' perceptions of how successful HEER funds were in addressing student and institutional needs during the pandemic, and colleges' views of unmet needs. The institutional survey was completed by 170 out of a total of 265 community colleges in the six states. Key findings from the report: (1) Colleges spent nearly all the HEER funds they received. Given the large amount of HEER funding and the fact that colleges did not need to submit a proposal and budget for how they would use the funds, it should not be assumed that colleges would have spent all the money they received. Yet colleges spent nearly all the funds they received by the time the HEER program ended in June 2023; (2) HEER funds met a variety of student and institutional needs during the pandemic. Colleges had relatively few problems using the funds and felt that the aid was successful in mitigating student and institutional hardships; (3) Colleges focused on retaining existing students; they employed a variety of methods to support students in need. Colleges used HEER funds to support and retain existing (pre-pandemic) students rather than to recruit new students. They focused on supporting students with financial exigencies, including those experiencing food and housing insecurity. They used institutional aid to forgive debt owed to the college and to provide food, housing, and childcare assistance; (4) Spending patterns suggest that colleges experienced similar challenges during the pandemic and often prioritized the same objectives. Despite differences in state contexts and institutional settings, colleges tended to allocate funds in similar ways. For example, most colleges used aid for campus safety and technology hardware. Expenditure patterns also shifted over time in similar ways, indicating that colleges were responsive to evolving needs; (5) Expenditures related to campus safety and technology remained strong but decreased in frequency over time; expenditures to support students' mental health increased in frequency. Mental health services was the only expenditure category that increased in frequency in each of the three years of funding, likely reflecting the toll the pandemic took on students' mental health; (6) Comparing pre- and post-pandemic spending, HEER funds had the most impact on increasing support for technology hardware, high-speed internet, and housing assistance. Colleges used HEER funds both to fund existing services and to begin offering new ones. Fewer than a third of colleges had services in place to provide technology hardware, high-speed internet, and housing assistance before the pandemic; many more did so afterward; (7) Concerns about the end of HEER funding and priorities for future funding expose a need for continued flexible resources to address students' financial needs. Colleges' main concern about the end of HEER funding was that it would limit their ability to support students during an emergency. Their top priority for using future funding was additional student aid; and (8) Rural and vocational/technical colleges (as defined by the Carnegie Classification) may have had fewer resources prior to the pandemic and may be in greater need of additional support. Colleges in towns and rural areas and colleges focused on technical training were less likely to offer a number of supports both pre- and post-pandemic. Rural colleges were also less likely to report having received additional funding for pandemic recovery from sources other than HEER funds. Overall, while the survey findings suggest that HEER largely met the goals for which it was intended, they also point to the importance of addressing systemic challenges facing community college students and the institutions that serve them. Now that the immediate crisis of the pandemic has passed and HEER funding has ended, there is an opportunity to think strategically about the investments that are needed to promote student success over the long term, particularly for underserved and financially vulnerable students who are the most at risk of stopping out or not enrolling in the first place.
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- 2024
3. How HEER Funding Rescued Community Colleges from the Pandemic. ARCC Network Brief
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Columbia University, Community College Research Center (CCRC), National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, University of California, Davis. Wheelhouse: The Center for Community College Leadership and Research, Clive Belfield, Thomas Brock, John Fink, and Davis Jenkins
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The Higher Education Emergency Relief (HEER) Fund had two main purposes: (1) to ensure that colleges could continue to provide education to students in the wake of the pandemic and (2) to provide emergency financial assistance through colleges directly to students. Four years after the onset of the pandemic, this ARCC Network brief uses college financial data--including data recently released for fiscal year 2022--to look at what happened to college finances and to assess the importance of HEER funding for the financial solvency of community colleges over the course of the pandemic. The authors find that during the peak years of the pandemic (2020-2022), community colleges lost huge numbers of students: On average, colleges lost 580 full-time-equivalent (FTE) students or 15% of pre-pandemic year-on-year enrollment, whereas college enrollments typically fluctuate by +/-2% each year. The authors also find that federal HEER funding saved community colleges from massive losses in tuition revenue during the pandemic. Instead of losing revenue, HEER funding increased total revenue per college from $81 million to $84 million, covering lost tuition and offsetting new costs associated with the pandemic. HEER funding also provided $4 million in student aid per college, on average, making up for lost resources students experienced during the pandemic. The authors--who also wrote an associated blog post that includes an interactive dashboard on this topic--contend that community colleges are confronting new fiscal challenges post-pandemic. As HEER funding has ended, many community colleges are faced with a difficult fiscal outlook, with increased costs due to inflation and decreased overall enrollments relative to pre-pandemic levels. Navigating these new fiscal realities will be extremely challenging for community colleges, raising new concerns about the viability of many colleges in the post-pandemic era. [This report was written with the Accelerating Recovery in Community Colleges (ARCC) Network.]
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- 2024
4. Lessons from Two Major Evaluations of Guided Pathways. Research Brief
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Columbia University, Community College Research Center (CCRC), Davis Jenkins, Hana Lahr, and Thomas Brock
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CCRC recently conducted two major studies to shed light on the feasibility of implementing guided pathways reforms at scale and on the association between implementation and improvements in student outcomes. The first is an evaluation of the AACC Pathways Project, which involved 30 colleges from around the country that were committed to making guided pathways reforms, and the second is an evaluation of guided pathways implementation in three states--Ohio, Tennessee, and Washington State--that launched initiatives to assist colleges across their systems--70 institutions in total--to adopt reforms. This brief summarizes the results of these studies. One of the main findings is that whole-college reform is feasible but takes time--at least five years--to carry out. The authors also find that there is a positive relationship between the scaled implementation of complementary sets of guided pathways practices and some measures of early student momentum in AACC Pathways colleges that made the most progress in implementing guided pathways reforms and in one state (Tennessee) that got an early start on reforms and made good progress; in places that made less progress, the association is weak or not evident. A third major finding is that while students from all backgrounds may benefit from guided pathways reforms, these reforms are not sufficient to close equity gaps between racial and ethnic groups. The authors conclude with five recommendations for community colleges undertaking guided pathways reforms: (1) Offer ongoing case-managed advising by field, predictable schedules, and other supports to help students complete their plans; (2) Remove the obstacle to student success created by prerequisite remediation, particularly in math, and integrate support for students to master college-level courses in their field of study; (3) Take steps to strengthen teaching and learning in program gateway courses, not just math and English composition; (4) Extend tailored guided pathways supports for students from underserved groups; and (5) Build on-ramps to career-path college degree programs for underserved K-12 students after high school.
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- 2024
5. Nanoscale Connectomics Annotation Standards Framework
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Guittari, Nicole K., Wimbish, Miguel E., Rivlin, Patricia K., Hinton, Mark A., Matelsky, Jordan K., Rose, Victoria A., Rivera Jr., Jorge L., Stock, Nicole E., Wester, Brock A., Johnson, Erik C., and Gray-Roncal, William R.
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
The promise of large-scale, high-resolution datasets from Electron Microscopy (EM) and X-ray Microtomography (XRM) lies in their ability to reveal neural structures and synaptic connectivity, which is critical for understanding the brain. Effectively managing these complex and rapidly increasing datasets will enable new scientific insights, facilitate querying, and support secondary use across the neuroscience community. However, without effective neurodata standards that permit use of these data across multiple systems and workflows, these valuable and costly datasets risk being underutilized especially as they surpass petascale levels. These standards will promote data sharing through accessible interfaces, allow researchers to build on each other's work, and guide the development of tools and capabilities that are interoperable. Herein we outline a standards framework for creating and managing annotations originating and derived from high-resolution volumetric imaging and connectomic datasets, focusing on ensuring Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) practices. The goal is to enhance collaborative efforts, boost the reliability of findings, and enable comparative analysis across growing datasets of different species and modalities. We have formed a global working group with academic and industry partners in the high-resolution volumetric data generation and analysis community, focused on identifying gaps in current EM and XRM data pipelines, and refining outlines and platforms for standardizing EM and XRM methods. This focus considers existing and past community approaches and includes examining neuronal entities, biological components, and associated metadata, while emphasizing adaptability and fostering collaboration., Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
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- 2024
6. Quantum Error Correction of Qudits Beyond Break-even
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Brock, Benjamin L., Singh, Shraddha, Eickbusch, Alec, Sivak, Volodymyr V., Ding, Andy Z., Frunzio, Luigi, Girvin, Steven M., and Devoret, Michel H.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Hilbert space dimension is a key resource for quantum information processing. A large Hilbert space is not only an essential requirement for quantum error correction, but it can also be advantageous for realizing gates and algorithms more efficiently. There has thus been considerable experimental effort in recent years to develop quantum computing platforms using qudits (d-dimensional quantum systems with d>2) as the fundamental unit of quantum information. Just as with qubits, quantum error correction of these qudits will be necessary in the long run, but to date error correction of logical qudits has not been demonstrated experimentally. Here we report the experimental realization of an error-corrected logical qutrit (d=3) and ququart (d=4) by employing the Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) bosonic code. Using a reinforcement learning agent, we optimize the GKP qutrit (ququart) as a ternary (quaternary) quantum memory and achieve beyond break-even error correction with a gain of 1.82 +/- 0.03 (1.87 +/- 0.03). This work represents a new way of leveraging the large Hilbert space of a harmonic oscillator for hardware-efficient quantum error correction.
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- 2024
7. A New Superbubble Finding Algorithm: Description and Testing
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Wallin, Brock, Wibking, Benjamin D., and Voit, G. Mark
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a new algorithm for identifying superbubbles in HI column density maps of both observed and simulated galaxies that has only a single adjustable parameter. The algorithm includes an automated galaxy-background separation step to focus the analysis on the galactic disk. To test the algorithm, we compare the superbubbles it finds in a simulated galactic disk with the ones it finds in 21cm observations of a similar galactic disk. The sizes and radial distribution of those superbubbles are indeed qualitatively similar. However, superbubbles in the simulated galactic disk have lower central HI column densities. The HI superbubbles in the simulated disk are spatially associated with pockets of hot gas. We conclude that the algorithm is a promising method for systematically identifying and characterizing superbubbles using only HI column density maps that will enable standardized tests of stellar feedback models used in galaxy simulations., Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
8. Empowering Rural and Remote Health Professionals Training: A Cost-Effective Skin Suturing Simulator for Mobile Learning in Clinical Skills Acquisition
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Rebecca Mosaad, Julia Micallef, Aliyat Olatinwo, Gordon Brock, and Adam Dubrowski
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Introduction: This study aimed to develop a cost-effective suturing and knot typing simulator that aligns with the expectations of experts, addressing the need for affordable yet high-quality medical training tools. The focus was on assessing the efficacy of a silicone skin suture task trainer, created through a 3D printed mold, for use in mobile learning, specifically in rural and remote contexts. Methods: Rural and remote trainees participating in a skills acquisition workshop, engaged in a 90-minute suturing simulation station. They received minimal feedback from physician educators to simulate independent practice. After the practice, they completed a survey assessing the acceptability and feasibility of the simulator for the intended training purpose, as well as providing feedback for future improvements. Results: Results from quantitative data revealed the simulator's potential to develop competence (4.2 out of 5) and confidence (4.1 out of 5). Participants expressed a readiness to practice suturing independently using the simulator (4.3 out of 5). Notably, the realism of the simulator was identified as an area for improvement in terms of anatomical correctness (3.6 out of 5) and accuracy (3.4 out of 5), while durability scored high (4 out of 5). Participants found the simulator easy to use (4.4 out of 5) and well-suited for developing cognitive (4.4 out of 5) and psychomotor skills (4.2 out of 5) related to suturing and knot typing. Several improvements were noted, especially in the areas of anatomical representativeness, material selection, and interactions between the simulator and clinical tools. Conclusions: This paper outlines the acceptability and feasibility of the simulator, designed to complement an online learning management system for hands-on clinical skill learning within the mobile learning paradigm. Despite high self-efficacy and educational value scores, concerns about realism suggest a need for a hybrid design approach that balances costs and anatomical fidelity in simulator development. [For the full proceedings, see ED659933.]
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- 2024
9. From Reading to Restoration: Using Book Clubs and Critical Dialogue to Challenge, Critique, and Change Us and Our Work
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Lay-nah Blue Morris-Howe, Cynthia H. Brock, Kate Welsh, and Aldora White Eagle
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This transformative autoethnography focuses on the authors' learning about diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) as a result of their participation in university diversity-related book clubs and subsequent extensive dialogue with one another. The paper features three implementation vignettes where the authors engage in critical self-reflection and self-critique as they (re)consider ways to improve their educational practice as it pertains to DEI. The paper ends with implications for educators to consider as they engage in critical self-reflection/self-critique around DEI in their work.
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- 2024
10. Speech-Language Pathology Graduate Students' Experiences with the Use of Case-Based Learning to Develop Skills for Evidence-Based Practice
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Aleah S. Brock
- Abstract
The American Speech-Language Hearing Association (ASHA) states that practitioners should use the principles of evidence-based practice (EBP) for clinical decision making. However, speech-language pathologists (SLPs) often report a lack of understanding, time, and resources to implement EBP. Clinicians who were exposed to EBP training during their graduate program or clinical fellowship are more likely to use EBP in their clinical practice; therefore, graduate programs in SLP must provide explicit EBP training to upcoming clinicians. At present, no consensus exists on the best way to train students in the principles of EBP. The present study sought to investigate student experiences and perceptions of a case-based learning (CBL) approach to training EBP. Thirty-two graduate SLP students completed a semester-long CBL activity which required them to create a PICO question, complete a literature review and annotated bibliography, and write a plan of care for a hypothetical clinical case. At the end of the semester, students were asked to write reflections on their use and learning of EBP during the course of the project. Those reflections were analyzed to understand the students' experiences with CBL as a method to learn the principles of EBP.
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- 2024
11. Public School Nurses in the United States: National School Nurse Workforce Study 2.0
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Mayumi A. Willgerodt, Andrea Tanner, Ellen McCabe, Beth Jameson, and Doug Brock
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The National School Nurse Workforce Study 2.0 describes the demographic characteristics and distribution patterns, school nursing models and activities, and practice environment among self-reported public school nurses in the United States. A random sample of U.S. public schools was surveyed, stratified by region, school level, and urban/rural locale. A total of 2,827 schools responded, yielding a 38.1% response rate. Using these data, we estimate 78,869 full-time equivalents of school nurses, with 65,052 registered nurses (RN) and 13,817 licensed practical/vocational nurses (LPN/LVN). Findings indicate school nurse distribution differences by region, locale, and income. The predominant model of school nursing practice was the RN only, followed by the RN and LPN model. In general, school nurse respondents felt supported by school staff and parents. Less than half of survey respondents stated they were supervised by an RN. Research, policy, and school nursing practice implications are discussed.
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- 2024
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12. Mild traumatic brain injury induces microvascular injury and accelerates Alzheimer-like pathogenesis in mice
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Yingxi Wu, Haijian Wu, Jianxiong Zeng, Brock Pluimer, Shirley Dong, Xiaochun Xie, Xinying Guo, Tenghuan Ge, Xinyan Liang, Sudi Feng, Youzhen Yan, Jian-Fu Chen, Naomi Sta Maria, Qingyi Ma, Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, and Zhen Zhao
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Traumatic brain injury ,Alzheimer’s disease ,Microvascular injury ,Blood–brain barrier ,β-amyloid ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is considered as the most robust environmental risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Besides direct neuronal injury and neuroinflammation, vascular impairment is also a hallmark event of the pathological cascade after TBI. However, the vascular connection between TBI and subsequent AD pathogenesis remains underexplored. Methods In a closed-head mild TBI (mTBI) model in mice with controlled cortical impact, we examined the time courses of microvascular injury, blood–brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, gliosis and motor function impairment in wild type C57BL/6 mice. We also evaluated the BBB integrity, amyloid pathology as well as cognitive functions after mTBI in the 5xFAD mouse model of AD. Results mTBI induced microvascular injury with BBB breakdown, pericyte loss, basement membrane alteration and cerebral blood flow reduction in mice, in which BBB breakdown preceded gliosis. More importantly, mTBI accelerated BBB leakage, amyloid pathology and cognitive impairment in the 5xFAD mice. Discussion Our data demonstrated that microvascular injury plays a key role in the pathogenesis of AD after mTBI. Therefore, restoring vascular functions might be beneficial for patients with mTBI, and potentially reduce the risk of developing AD.
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- 2021
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13. Searching for GEMS: Characterizing Six Giant Planets around Cool Dwarfs
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Kanodia, Shubham, Gupta, Arvind F., Canas, Caleb I., Bernabo, Lia Marta, Reji, Varghese, Han, Te, Brady, Madison, Seifahrt, Andreas, Cochran, William D., Morrell, Nidia, Basant, Ritvik, Bean, Jacob, Bender, Chad F., de Beurs, Zoe L., Bieryla, Allyson, Birkholz, Alexina, Brown, Nina, Chapman, Franklin, Ciardi, David R., Clark, Catherine A., Cotter, Ethan G., Diddams, Scott A., Halverson, Samuel, Hawley, Suzanne, Hebb, Leslie, Holcomb, Rae, Howell, Steve B., Kobulnicky, Henry A., Kowalski, Adam F., Larsen, Alexander, Libby-Roberts, Jessica, Lin, Andrea S. J., Lund, Michael B., Luque, Rafael, Monson, Andrew, Ninan, Joe P., Parker, Brock A., Patel, Nishka, Rodruck, Michael, Ross, Gabrielle, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Thoms, Aubrie, and Vanderburg, Andrew
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Transiting giant exoplanets around M-dwarf stars (GEMS) are rare, owing to the low-mass host stars. However, the all-sky coverage of TESS has enabled the detection of an increasingly large number of them to enable statistical surveys like the \textit{Searching for GEMS} survey. As part of this endeavour, we describe the observations of six transiting giant planets, which includes precise mass measurements for two GEMS (K2-419Ab, TOI-6034b) and statistical validation for four systems, which includes validation and mass upper limits for three of them (TOI-5218b, TOI-5616b, TOI-5634Ab), while the fourth one -- TOI-5414b is classified as a `likely planet'. Our observations include radial velocities from the Habitable-zone Planet Finder on the Hobby-Eberly Telescope, and MAROON-X on Gemini-North, along with photometry and high-contrast imaging from multiple ground-based facilities. In addition to TESS photometry, K2-419Ab was also observed and statistically validated as part of the K2 mission in Campaigns 5 and 18, which provides precise orbital and planetary constraints despite the faint host star and long orbital period of $\sim 20.4$ days. With an equilibrium temperature of only 380 K, K2-419Ab is one of the coolest known well-characterized transiting planets. TOI-6034 has a late F-type companion about 40\arcsec~away, making it the first GEMS host star to have an earlier main-sequence binary companion. These confirmations add to the existing small sample of confirmed transiting GEMS., Comment: Accepted in AJ
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- 2024
14. A Biologically Inspired Design Principle for Building Robust Robotic Systems
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Li, Xing, Zenkri, Oussama, Pfisterer, Adrian, and Brock, Oliver
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Computer Science - Robotics - Abstract
Robustness, the ability of a system to maintain performance under significant and unanticipated environmental changes, is a critical property for robotic systems. While biological systems naturally exhibit robustness, there is no comprehensive understanding of how to achieve similar robustness in robotic systems. In this work, we draw inspirations from biological systems and propose a design principle that advocates active interconnections among system components to enhance robustness to environmental variations. We evaluate this design principle in a challenging long-horizon manipulation task: solving lockboxes. Our extensive simulated and real-world experiments demonstrate that we could enhance robustness against environmental changes by establishing active interconnections among system components without substantial changes in individual components. Our findings suggest that a systematic investigation of design principles in system building is necessary. It also advocates for interdisciplinary collaborations to explore and evaluate additional principles of biological robustness to advance the development of intelligent and adaptable robotic systems.
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- 2024
15. Mechanical problem solving in Goffin's cockatoos -- Towards modeling complex behavior
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Baum, Manuel, Roessler, Theresa, Osuna-Mascaró, Antonio J., Auersperg, Alice, and Brock, Oliver
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Research continues to accumulate evidence that Goffin's cockatoos (Cacatua goffiniana) can solve wide sets of mechanical problems, such as tool use, tool manufacture, and solving mechanical puzzles. However, the proximate mechanisms underlying this adaptive behavior are largely unknown. In this study, we analyze how three Goffin's cockatoos learn to solve a specific mechanical puzzle, a lockbox. The observed behavior results from the interaction between a complex environment (the lockbox) and different processes that jointly govern the animals' behavior. We thus jointly analyze the parrots' (1) engagement, (2) sensorimotor skill learning, and (3) action selection. We find that neither of these aspects could solely explain the animals' behavioral adaptation and that a plausible model of proximate mechanisms (including adaptation) should thus also jointly address these aspects. We accompany this analysis with a discussion of methods that may be used to identify such mechanisms. A major point we want to make is, that it is implausible to reliably identify a detailed model from the limited data of one or a few studies. Instead, we advocate for a more coarse approach that first establishes constraints on proximate mechanisms before specific, detailed models are formulated. We exercise this idea on the data we present in this study., Comment: Accepted for publication at journal Adaptive Behavior with SAGE publishing
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- 2024
16. Integrating Annotations into the Design Process for Sonifications and Physicalizations
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Sorenson-Graff, Rhys, Bae, S. Sandra, and Wirfs-Brock, Jordan
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Annotations are a critical component of visualizations, helping viewers interpret the visual representation and highlighting critical data insights. Despite their significant role, we lack an understanding of how annotations can be incorporated into other data representations, such as physicalizations and sonifications. Given the emergent nature of these representations, sonifications, and physicalizations lack formalized conventions (e.g., design space, vocabulary) that can introduce challenges for audiences to interpret the intended data encoding. To address this challenge, this work focuses on how annotations can be more tightly integrated into the design process of creating sonifications and physicalizations. In an exploratory study with 13 designers, we explore how visualization annotation techniques can be adapted to sonic and physical modalities. Our work highlights how annotations for sonification and physicalizations are inseparable from their data encodings., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Proceedings of IEEE VIS 2024
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- 2024
17. Dimensionality Reduction and Nearest Neighbors for Improving Out-of-Distribution Detection in Medical Image Segmentation
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Woodland, McKell, Patel, Nihil, Castelo, Austin, Taie, Mais Al, Eltaher, Mohamed, Yung, Joshua P., Netherton, Tucker J., Calderone, Tiffany L., Sanchez, Jessica I., Cleere, Darrel W., Elsaiey, Ahmed, Gupta, Nakul, Victor, David, Beretta, Laura, Patel, Ankit B., and Brock, Kristy K.
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Clinically deployed deep learning-based segmentation models are known to fail on data outside of their training distributions. While clinicians review the segmentations, these models tend to perform well in most instances, which could exacerbate automation bias. Therefore, detecting out-of-distribution images at inference is critical to warn the clinicians that the model likely failed. This work applied the Mahalanobis distance (MD) post hoc to the bottleneck features of four Swin UNETR and nnU-net models that segmented the liver on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography. By reducing the dimensions of the bottleneck features with either principal component analysis or uniform manifold approximation and projection, images the models failed on were detected with high performance and minimal computational load. In addition, this work explored a non-parametric alternative to the MD, a k-th nearest neighbors distance (KNN). KNN drastically improved scalability and performance over MD when both were applied to raw and average-pooled bottleneck features., Comment: Accepted for publication at the Journal of Machine Learning for Biomedical Imaging (MELBA) https://melba-journal.org/2024:020. Expansion of "Dimensionality Reduction for Improving Out-of-Distribution Detection in Medical Image Segmentation" arXiv:2308.03723. Code available at https://github.com/mckellwoodland/dimen_reduce_mahal (https://zenodo.org/records/13881989)
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- 2024
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18. A Robotics-Inspired Scanpath Model Reveals the Importance of Uncertainty and Semantic Object Cues for Gaze Guidance in Dynamic Scenes
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Mengers, Vito, Roth, Nicolas, Brock, Oliver, Obermayer, Klaus, and Rolfs, Martin
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
How we perceive objects around us depends on what we actively attend to, yet our eye movements depend on the perceived objects. Still, object segmentation and gaze behavior are typically treated as two independent processes. Drawing on an information processing pattern from robotics, we present a mechanistic model that simulates these processes for dynamic real-world scenes. Our image-computable model uses the current scene segmentation for object-based saccadic decision-making while using the foveated object to refine its scene segmentation recursively. To model this refinement, we use a Bayesian filter, which also provides an uncertainty estimate for the segmentation that we use to guide active scene exploration. We demonstrate that this model closely resembles observers' free viewing behavior, measured by scanpath statistics, including foveation duration and saccade amplitude distributions used for parameter fitting and higher-level statistics not used for fitting. These include how object detections, inspections, and returns are balanced and a delay of returning saccades without an explicit implementation of such temporal inhibition of return. Extensive simulations and ablation studies show that uncertainty promotes balanced exploration and that semantic object cues are crucial to form the perceptual units used in object-based attention. Moreover, we show how our model's modular design allows for extensions, such as incorporating saccadic momentum or pre-saccadic attention, to further align its output with human scanpaths., Comment: 35+16 pages, 8+4 figures
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- 2024
19. Gemma 2: Improving Open Language Models at a Practical Size
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Gemma Team, Riviere, Morgane, Pathak, Shreya, Sessa, Pier Giuseppe, Hardin, Cassidy, Bhupatiraju, Surya, Hussenot, Léonard, Mesnard, Thomas, Shahriari, Bobak, Ramé, Alexandre, Ferret, Johan, Liu, Peter, Tafti, Pouya, Friesen, Abe, Casbon, Michelle, Ramos, Sabela, Kumar, Ravin, Lan, Charline Le, Jerome, Sammy, Tsitsulin, Anton, Vieillard, Nino, Stanczyk, Piotr, Girgin, Sertan, Momchev, Nikola, Hoffman, Matt, Thakoor, Shantanu, Grill, Jean-Bastien, Neyshabur, Behnam, Bachem, Olivier, Walton, Alanna, Severyn, Aliaksei, Parrish, Alicia, Ahmad, Aliya, Hutchison, Allen, Abdagic, Alvin, Carl, Amanda, Shen, Amy, Brock, Andy, Coenen, Andy, Laforge, Anthony, Paterson, Antonia, Bastian, Ben, Piot, Bilal, Wu, Bo, Royal, Brandon, Chen, Charlie, Kumar, Chintu, Perry, Chris, Welty, Chris, Choquette-Choo, Christopher A., Sinopalnikov, Danila, Weinberger, David, Vijaykumar, Dimple, Rogozińska, Dominika, Herbison, Dustin, Bandy, Elisa, Wang, Emma, Noland, Eric, Moreira, Erica, Senter, Evan, Eltyshev, Evgenii, Visin, Francesco, Rasskin, Gabriel, Wei, Gary, Cameron, Glenn, Martins, Gus, Hashemi, Hadi, Klimczak-Plucińska, Hanna, Batra, Harleen, Dhand, Harsh, Nardini, Ivan, Mein, Jacinda, Zhou, Jack, Svensson, James, Stanway, Jeff, Chan, Jetha, Zhou, Jin Peng, Carrasqueira, Joana, Iljazi, Joana, Becker, Jocelyn, Fernandez, Joe, van Amersfoort, Joost, Gordon, Josh, Lipschultz, Josh, Newlan, Josh, Ji, Ju-yeong, Mohamed, Kareem, Badola, Kartikeya, Black, Kat, Millican, Katie, McDonell, Keelin, Nguyen, Kelvin, Sodhia, Kiranbir, Greene, Kish, Sjoesund, Lars Lowe, Usui, Lauren, Sifre, Laurent, Heuermann, Lena, Lago, Leticia, McNealus, Lilly, Soares, Livio Baldini, Kilpatrick, Logan, Dixon, Lucas, Martins, Luciano, Reid, Machel, Singh, Manvinder, Iverson, Mark, Görner, Martin, Velloso, Mat, Wirth, Mateo, Davidow, Matt, Miller, Matt, Rahtz, Matthew, Watson, Matthew, Risdal, Meg, Kazemi, Mehran, Moynihan, Michael, Zhang, Ming, Kahng, Minsuk, Park, Minwoo, Rahman, Mofi, Khatwani, Mohit, Dao, Natalie, Bardoliwalla, Nenshad, Devanathan, Nesh, Dumai, Neta, Chauhan, Nilay, Wahltinez, Oscar, Botarda, Pankil, Barnes, Parker, Barham, Paul, Michel, Paul, Jin, Pengchong, Georgiev, Petko, Culliton, Phil, Kuppala, Pradeep, Comanescu, Ramona, Merhej, Ramona, Jana, Reena, Rokni, Reza Ardeshir, Agarwal, Rishabh, Mullins, Ryan, Saadat, Samaneh, Carthy, Sara Mc, Cogan, Sarah, Perrin, Sarah, Arnold, Sébastien M. R., Krause, Sebastian, Dai, Shengyang, Garg, Shruti, Sheth, Shruti, Ronstrom, Sue, Chan, Susan, Jordan, Timothy, Yu, Ting, Eccles, Tom, Hennigan, Tom, Kocisky, Tomas, Doshi, Tulsee, Jain, Vihan, Yadav, Vikas, Meshram, Vilobh, Dharmadhikari, Vishal, Barkley, Warren, Wei, Wei, Ye, Wenming, Han, Woohyun, Kwon, Woosuk, Xu, Xiang, Shen, Zhe, Gong, Zhitao, Wei, Zichuan, Cotruta, Victor, Kirk, Phoebe, Rao, Anand, Giang, Minh, Peran, Ludovic, Warkentin, Tris, Collins, Eli, Barral, Joelle, Ghahramani, Zoubin, Hadsell, Raia, Sculley, D., Banks, Jeanine, Dragan, Anca, Petrov, Slav, Vinyals, Oriol, Dean, Jeff, Hassabis, Demis, Kavukcuoglu, Koray, Farabet, Clement, Buchatskaya, Elena, Borgeaud, Sebastian, Fiedel, Noah, Joulin, Armand, Kenealy, Kathleen, Dadashi, Robert, and Andreev, Alek
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
In this work, we introduce Gemma 2, a new addition to the Gemma family of lightweight, state-of-the-art open models, ranging in scale from 2 billion to 27 billion parameters. In this new version, we apply several known technical modifications to the Transformer architecture, such as interleaving local-global attentions (Beltagy et al., 2020a) and group-query attention (Ainslie et al., 2023). We also train the 2B and 9B models with knowledge distillation (Hinton et al., 2015) instead of next token prediction. The resulting models deliver the best performance for their size, and even offer competitive alternatives to models that are 2-3 times bigger. We release all our models to the community.
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- 2024
20. Simple Grid Polygon Online Exploration Revisited
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Brock, Maximilian, Brückmann, Martin, Langetepe, Elmar, and Wude, Raphael
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Computer Science - Computational Geometry ,Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms - Abstract
Due to some significantly contradicting research results, we reconsider the problem of the online exploration of a simple grid cell environment. In this model an agent attains local information about the direct four-neigbourship of a current grid cell and can also successively build a map of all detected cells. Beginning from a starting cell at the boundary of the environment, the agent has to visit any cell of the grid environment and finally has to return to its starting position. The performance of an online strategy is given by competitive analysis. We compare the number of overall cell visits (number of steps) of an online strategy to the number of such visits in the optimal offline solution under full information of the environment in advance. The corresponding worst-case ratio gives the competitive ratio. The aforementioned contradiction among two publications turns out to be as follows: There is a journal publication that claims to present an optimal competitive strategy with ratio 7/6 and a former conference paper that presents a lower bound of 20/17. In this note we extract the flaw in the upper bound and also present a new slightly improved and (as we think) simplified general lower bound of 13/11.
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- 2024
21. Advancing Ultraviolet Detector Technology for future missions: Investigating the dark current plateau in silicon detectors using photon-counting EMCCDs
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Khan, Aafaque R., Hamden, Erika, Kyne, Gillian, Jewell, April D., Henessey, John, Nikzad, Shouleh, Picouet, Vincent, Jones, Olivia, Bradley, Harrison, Kerkeser, Nazende, Lin, Zeren, Parker, Brock, West, Grant, Ford, John, Gacon, Frank, Beaty, Dave, and Vider, Jacob
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Understanding the noise characteristics of high quantum efficiency silicon-based ultraviolet detectors, developed by the Microdevices Lab at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, is critical for current and proposed UV missions using these devices. In this paper, we provide an overview of our detector noise characterization test bench that uses delta-doped, photon counting, Electron-multiplying CCDs (EMCCDs) to understand the fundamental noise properties relevant to all silicon CCDs and CMOS arrays. This work attempts to identify the source of the dark current plateau that has been previously measured with photon-counting EMCCDs and is known to be prevalent in other silicon-based arrays. It is suspected that the plateau could be due to a combination of detectable photons in the tail of blackbody radiation of the ambient instrument, low-level light leaks, and a non-temperature-dependent component that varies with substrate voltage. Our innovative test setup delineates the effect of the ambient environment during dark measurements by independently controlling the temperature of the detector and surrounding environment. We present the design of the test setup and preliminary results., Comment: Submitted for Proceedings of SPIE Astronomical Telescopes+Instrumentation 2024, Paper number: 13093-26
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- 2024
22. Quantum Control of an Oscillator with a Kerr-cat Qubit
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Ding, Andy Z., Brock, Benjamin L., Eickbusch, Alec, Koottandavida, Akshay, Frattini, Nicholas E., Cortinas, Rodrigo G., Joshi, Vidul R., de Graaf, Stijn J., Chapman, Benjamin J., Ganjam, Suhas, Frunzio, Luigi, Schoelkopf, Robert J., and Devoret, Michel H.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Bosonic codes offer a hardware-efficient strategy for quantum error correction by redundantly encoding quantum information in the large Hilbert space of a harmonic oscillator. However, experimental realizations of these codes are often limited by ancilla errors propagating to the encoded logical qubit during syndrome measurements. The Kerr-cat qubit has been proposed as an ancilla for these codes due to its theoretically-exponential noise bias, which would enable fault-tolerant error syndrome measurements, but the coupling required to perform these syndrome measurements has not yet been demonstrated. In this work, we experimentally realize driven parametric coupling of a Kerr-cat qubit to a high-quality-factor microwave cavity and demonstrate a gate set enabling universal quantum control of the cavity. We measure the decoherence of the cavity in the presence of the Kerr-cat and discover excess dephasing due to heating of the Kerr-cat to excited states. By engineering frequency-selective dissipation to counteract this heating, we are able to eliminate this dephasing, thereby demonstrating a high on-off ratio of control. Our results pave the way toward using the Kerr-cat to fault-tolerantly measure error syndromes of bosonic codes.
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- 2024
23. Robust and effective ab initio molecular dynamics simulations on the GPU cloud infrastructure using the Schr\'odinger Materials Science Suite
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Fonari, Alexandr, Agarwal, Garvit, Tiwari, Subodh C., Brock, Casey N., Gavartin, Jacob, and Halls, Mathew D.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Ab initio Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (AIMD) is a valuable method for simulating physico-chemical processes of complex systems, including reactive systems, and for training machine learning models and force fields. Speed and stability issues on traditional hardware preclude routine AIMD simulations for larger systems and longer timescales. We postulate that any practically useful AIMD simulation must generate a trajectory of a minimum 1000 MD steps a day on a moderate cloud resource. In this work, we implement a computing workflow that enables routine calculations at this throughput and demonstrate results for several non-trivial atomistic dynamical systems. In particular, we have employed the GPU implementation of the Quantum ESPRESSO code which we will show increases AIMD productivity compared to the CPU version. In order to take advantage of transient servers (which are more cost and energy effective compared to the stable servers), we have implemented automatic restart/continuation of the AIMD runs within the Schr\"odinger Materials Science Suite. Finally, to reduce simulation size and thus reduce compute time when modeling surfaces, we have implemented a wall potential constraint. Our benchmarks using several reactive systems (lithium anode surface/solvent interface, hydrogen diffusion in an iron grain boundary) show a significant speed up when running on a GPU-enabled transient server using our updated implementation.
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- 2024
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24. NeRF-Feat: 6D Object Pose Estimation using Feature Rendering
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Vutukur, Shishir Reddy, Brock, Heike, Busam, Benjamin, Birdal, Tolga, Hutter, Andreas, and Ilic, Slobodan
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Object Pose Estimation is a crucial component in robotic grasping and augmented reality. Learning based approaches typically require training data from a highly accurate CAD model or labeled training data acquired using a complex setup. We address this by learning to estimate pose from weakly labeled data without a known CAD model. We propose to use a NeRF to learn object shape implicitly which is later used to learn view-invariant features in conjunction with CNN using a contrastive loss. While NeRF helps in learning features that are view-consistent, CNN ensures that the learned features respect symmetry. During inference, CNN is used to predict view-invariant features which can be used to establish correspondences with the implicit 3d model in NeRF. The correspondences are then used to estimate the pose in the reference frame of NeRF. Our approach can also handle symmetric objects unlike other approaches using a similar training setup. Specifically, we learn viewpoint invariant, discriminative features using NeRF which are later used for pose estimation. We evaluated our approach on LM, LM-Occlusion, and T-Less dataset and achieved benchmark accuracy despite using weakly labeled data., Comment: 3DV 2024
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- 2024
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25. An Existence Theorem for a Model of Temperature Within a Lithium-Ion Battery
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Price, Brock C. and Xu, Xiangsheng
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs - Abstract
In this article we investigate a model for the temperature within a Lithium-Ion battery. The model takes the form of a parabolic PDE for the temperature coupled with two elliptic PDE's for the electric potential within the solid and electrolyte phases. The primary difficulty comes from the coupling term, which is given by the Butler-Volmer equation. It features an exponential nonlinearity of both the electric potentials and the reciprocal of the temperature. Another difficulty arising in the temperature equation are the gradients of the electric potentials squared showing up on the right-hand side. Due to the nonlinearity, meaningful estimates for the temperature are currently not known. In spite of this, our investigation reveals the local existence of continuous temperature for the Lithium-Ion Battery.
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- 2024
26. The azimuthal correlation between the leading jet and the scattered lepton in deep inelastic scattering at HERA
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ZEUS Collaboration, Abt, I., Aggarwal, R., Aushev, V., Behnke, O., Bertolin, A., Bloch, I., Brock, I., Brook, N. H., Brugnera, R., Bruni, A., Bussey, P. J., Caldwell, A., Catterall, C. D., Chwastowski, J., Ciborowski, J., Ciesielski, R., Cooper-Sarkar, A. M., Corradi, M., Dementiev, R. K., Dusini, S., Ferrando, J., Foster, B., Gallo, E., Gangadharan, D., Garfagnini, A., Geiser, A., Grzelak, G., Gwenlan, C., Hochman, D., Jomhari, N. Z., Kadenko, I., Karshon, U., Kaur, P., Klanner, R., Klein, U., Korzhavina, I. A., Kovalchuk, N., Kuze, M., Levchenko, B. B., Levy, A., Löhr, B., Lohrmann, E., Longhin, A., Lorkowski, F., Lunghi, E., Makarenko, I., Malka, J., Masciocchi, S., Nagano, ^ K., Nam, J. D., Onishchuk, Yu., Paul, E., Pidhurskyi, I., Polini, A., Przybycień, M., Quintero, A., Ruspa, M., Schneekloth, U., Schörner-Sadenius, T., Selyuzhenkov, I., Shchedrolosiev, M., Shcheglova, L. M., Sherrill, N., Skillicorn, I. O., Słomiński, W., Solano, A., Stanco, L., Stefaniuk, N., Surrow, B., Tokushuku, K., Turkot, O., Tymieniecka, T., Verbytskyi, A., Abdullah, W. A. T. Wan, Wichmann, K., Wing, M., Yamada, S., Yamazaki, Y., Żarnecki, A. F., and Zenaiev, O.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The azimuthal correlation angle, $\Delta\phi$, between the scattered lepton and the leading jet in deep inelastic $e^{\pm}p$ scattering at HERA has been studied using data collected with the ZEUS detector at a centre-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s} = 318 \;\mathrm{GeV}$, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of $326 \;\mathrm{pb}^{-1}$. A measurement of jet cross sections in the laboratory frame was made in a fiducial region corresponding to photon virtuality $10 \;\mathrm{GeV}^2 < Q^2 < 350 \;\mathrm{GeV}^2$, inelasticity $0.04 < y < 0.7$, outgoing lepton energy $E_e > 10 \;\mathrm{GeV}$, lepton polar angle $140^\circ < \theta_e < 180^\circ$, jet transverse momentum $2.5 \;\mathrm{GeV} < p_\mathrm{T,jet} < 30 \;\mathrm{GeV}$, and jet pseudorapidity $-1.5 < \eta_\mathrm{jet} < 1.8$. Jets were reconstructed using the $k_\mathrm{T}$ algorithm with the radius parameter $R = 1$. The leading jet in an event is defined as the jet that carries the highest $p_\mathrm{T,jet}$. Differential cross sections, $d\sigma/d\Delta\phi$, were measured as a function of the azimuthal correlation angle in various ranges of leading-jet transverse momentum, photon virtuality and jet multiplicity. Perturbative calculations at $\mathcal{O}(\alpha_{s}^2)$ accuracy successfully describe the data within the fiducial region, although a lower level of agreement is observed near $\Delta\phi \rightarrow \pi$ for events with high jet multiplicity, due to limitations of the perturbative approach in describing soft phenomena in QCD. The data are equally well described by Monte Carlo predictions that supplement leading-order matrix elements with parton showering.
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- 2024
27. How Important Are Community Colleges in Promoting STEM?
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Columbia University, Community College Research Center (CCRC), Belfield, Clive R., and Brock, Thomas
- Abstract
Although community colleges contribute to STEM education and the workforce in a variety of ways, it is impossible to determine how much they contribute--or to assess the effectiveness of policies and programs designed to strengthen STEM education in community colleges--without agreement on what constitutes STEM. In this report, the authors review the conceptual challenges of defining STEM and propose a definition that recognizes STEM-oriented contributions from the dual missions of community colleges: preparing students for transfer to a four-year institution, which the authors refer to as STEM-Transfer, and training students for technical jobs--largely unaccounted for in popular definitions of STEM education--which they call STEM-Tech. STEM-Transfer relates directly to programs of study that teach explicitly STEM subject matter (biological sciences; chemistry; earth, atmospheric, and ocean sciences; engineering; mathematics; physics; and mechanic/production technologies), while STEM-Tech encompasses a range of technical programs of study--including those in computer and information sciences and the health professions--that community colleges offer. The authors then provide an accounting of STEM within the community college sector and develop a catalog of STEM programs and awards. Broadly, community colleges appear to provide significant amounts of STEM coursework, and there are more than three times as many community college students enrolled in STEM-Tech programs than in STEM-Transfer programs; similarly, community colleges award many more associate degrees in STEM-Tech than in STEM-Transfer. The authors conclude with an analysis of how many community college graduates work in STEM and of their relative collective earnings in the workforce. Based on their findings, they argue that a broader definition of STEM is more appropriate and should be adopted by federal agencies and researchers.
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- 2023
28. Practitioner-Implemented Video Prompting on Vocational Skills of Students with Significant Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
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Xiaoning Sun and Matthew E. Brock
- Abstract
Video prompting (VP) is an evidence-based practice, but few studies have included teachers and paraeducators as implementers. We adopted one of the single-case designs (multiple probe design) to evaluate the effectiveness of teacher and paraeducator-implemented VP on vocational skills for four high school students with significant intellectual and developmental disabilities. Experimental effects were demonstrated for all four students, but only two students met the mastery criterion. Individualized adaptations (i.e., priming, more frequent reinforcement) enabled two students to make further progress. The two students who met the mastery criterion maintained their performance after 2 weeks. These findings add to growing evidence that teachers and practitioners can effectively implement VP and suggest that individualized adaptations may be needed for some students with significant disabilities.
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- 2024
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29. Non-Traditional Students' Preferences for Learning Technologies and Impacts on Academic Self-Efficacy
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Karen Sutherland, Ginna Brock, Margarietha. J. de Villiers Scheepers, Prudence M. Millear, Sherelle Norman, Tim Strohfeldt, Terri Downer, Nicole Masters, and Alison. L. Black
- Abstract
Blended Learning (BL) as a pedagogical approach has increased in significance during the COVID-19 pandemic, with blended and online learning environments becoming the new digital norm for higher educational institutions around the globe. While BL has been discussed in the literature for thirty years, a common approach has been to categorise learner cohorts to support educators in better understanding students' relationships with learning technologies. This approach, largely unsupported by empirical evidence, has failed to adequately address the challenges of integrating learning technologies to fit with non-traditional students' preferences, their BL self-efficacy and the associated pedagogical implications. Focusing on student preference, our study presents findings from a pre-COVID survey of undergraduate students across four campuses of an Australian regional university where students shared their learning technology preferences and the self-regulated learning that influenced their academic self-efficacy in a BL context. Findings show students want consistency, relevance, and effectiveness with the use of BL tools, with a preference for lecture recordings and video resources to support their learning, while email and Facebook Messenger were preferred for communicating with peers and academic staff. Our study suggests a quality BL environment facilitates self-regulated learning using fit-for-purpose technological applications. Academic self-efficacy for BL can increase when students perceive the educational technologies used by their institution are sufficient for their learning needs.
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- 2024
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30. Distinguishing Nature of Science Beliefs, Knowledge and Understandings: Towards Clarity and Coherence in Educational Goals Related to the Nature of Science
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Richard Brock and Wonyong Park
- Abstract
Whilst teaching about the nature of science (NOS) is a significant goal of science education, there remains debate about specifying the NOS and appropriate pedagogies and approaches to researching the NOS. A neglected, but conceptually and practically significant, problem is the proliferation of NOS-related learning goals such as NOS beliefs, views, understandings and knowledge. In this theoretical paper, we argue that such goals are often poorly defined, and different goals cohere with different pedagogical and research strategies. We propose a novel three-part taxonomy of NOS learning goals (as NOS beliefs, knowledge and understandings) and contend that different approaches are appropriate for teaching and assessing NOS beliefs, views and knowledge. An NOS belief refers to a positive attitudinal stance towards some proposition that lacks justificatory support or cannot easily be judged true or false. NOS knowledge indicates justified true beliefs related to the NOS. NOS understanding denotes a grasping of how a collection of NOS knowledge is related. The goals vary by the extent to which they can be judged true or false and the degree of justification they require. For NOS beliefs, a range of stances is acceptable; NOS knowledge must be a true and justified belief; in the case of NOS understanding, teaching and assessment should focus on the appreciation of relationships between justified true beliefs. The novel taxonomy brings needed clarity to a confused aspect of NOS research and may lead to the development of NOS pedagogies and assessment tools more precisely targeted to well-defined learning goals.
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- 2024
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31. A Systematic Review of Goal Setting and Performance Feedback to Improve Teacher Practice
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Caitlin J. Criss, Moira Konrad, Sheila R. Alber-Morgan, and Matthew E. Brock
- Abstract
Performance feedback has been identified as an evidence-based practice to improve teacher implementation fidelity. The efficacy of performance feedback might be enhanced with ancillary strategies such as goal setting. In this paper, we systematically reviewed 22 experimental studies in which a combination of goal setting and performance feedback was used to improve teacher implementation of practices. We summarized effects and explored which aspects of goal setting and performance feedback were associated with improved performance. Overall, we found the combination of goal setting and performance feedback was highly effective. We found that the features associated with consistent positive effects included visual presentation of data, verbal feedback, teacher-created goals, measurement of progress toward goals, and discussion of goals during feedback. We discuss why these particular features might be efficacious, and how administrators and teacher trainers can integrate them into their efforts to support teachers to improve their practice.
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- 2024
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32. Pneumothorax Identified by a Remote Physician Using Paramedic-obtained Tele-ultrasound: Case Report
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Balasubramanian, Shriman, Defilippo, Michael, Stone, Michael, Galli, Gabriela, McCarty, Matthew, and Daniels, Brock
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Telehealth ,community paramedicine ,Pneumothorax ,point-of-care-ultrasound ,case report - Abstract
Introduction: The use of telemedicine and ultrasound is emerging and novel in the field of community paramedicine. However, there is a paucity of data supporting its use and even less evidence that shows a morbidity and mortality benefit. This case highlights a unique way to diagnose a common medical emergency, which can lead to a good outcome.Case Report: We describe the use of lung point-of-care ultrasound by a trained community paramedic that led to the identification of a pneumothorax in an 86-year-old male at a scheduled home visit. The images were interpreted over telehealth in real-time by an emergency physician, and the patient was transported to the emergency department where the diagnosis was confirmed by chest radiography. He underwent chest tube placement and was discharged five days later after returning to his baseline.Conclusion: Despite minimal data to support or refute the use of paramedic tele-ultrasound, this case highlights a unique opportunity to expand the use of telemedicine and ultrasound in community paramedicine to improve patient outcomes.
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- 2024
33. Distributed Ranges: A Model for Distributed Data Structures, Algorithms, and Views
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Brock, Benjamin, Cohn, Robert, Bakshi, Suyash, Karna, Tuomas, Kim, Jeongnim, Nowak, Mateusz, Ślusarczyk, Łukasz, Stefanski, Kacper, and Mattson, Timothy G.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing - Abstract
Data structures and algorithms are essential building blocks for programs, and \emph{distributed data structures}, which automatically partition data across multiple memory locales, are essential to writing high-level parallel programs. While many projects have designed and implemented C++ distributed data structures and algorithms, there has not been widespread adoption of an interoperable model allowing algorithms and data structures from different libraries to work together. This paper introduces distributed ranges, which is a model for building generic data structures, views, and algorithms. A distributed range extends a C++ range, which is an iterable sequence of values, with a concept of segmentation, thus exposing how the distributed range is partitioned over multiple memory locales. Distributed data structures provide this distributed range interface, which allows them to be used with a collection of generic algorithms implemented using the distributed range interface. The modular nature of the model allows for the straightforward implementation of \textit{distributed views}, which are lightweight objects that provide a lazily evaluated view of another range. Views can be composed together recursively and combined with algorithms to implement computational kernels using efficient, flexible, and high-level standard C++ primitives. We evaluate the distributed ranges model by implementing a set of standard concepts and views as well as two execution runtimes, a multi-node, MPI-based runtime and a single-process, multi-GPU runtime. We demonstrate that high-level algorithms implemented using generic, high-level distributed ranges can achieve performance competitive with highly-tuned, expert-written code., Comment: To appear in ACM International Conference on Supercomputing (ICS) 2024
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- 2024
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34. Intelligence as Computation
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Brock, Oliver
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Robotics ,68T01 ,I.2.0 - Abstract
This paper proposes a specific conceptualization of intelligence as computation. This conceptualization is intended to provide a unified view for all disciplines of intelligence research. Already, it unifies several conceptualizations currently under investigation, including physical, neural, embodied, morphological, and mechanical intelligences. To achieve this, the proposed conceptualization explains the differences among existing views by different computational paradigms, such as digital, analog, mechanical, or morphological computation. Viewing intelligence as a composition of computations from different paradigms, the challenges posed by previous conceptualizations are resolved. Intelligence is hypothesized as a multi-paradigmatic computation relying on specific computational principles. These principles distinguish intelligence from other, non-intelligent computations. The proposed conceptualization implies a multi-disciplinary research agenda that is intended to lead to unified science of intelligence., Comment: 30 pages, 0 figures, submitted for review to a journal
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- 2024
35. The Bohr-type inequalities for holomorphic functions with lacunary series in complex Banach space
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Kumar, Shankey, Ponnusamy, Saminathan, and Williams, G. Brock
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Mathematics - Complex Variables - Abstract
In this paper, we study the Bohr inequality with lacunary series to the single valued (resp. vector-valued) holomorphic function defined in unit ball of finite dimensional Banach sequence space. Also, we extend the Bohr inequality with an alternating series to the higher-dimensional space.
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- 2024
36. The LHCb VELO Upgrade Module Construction
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Akiba, K., Alexander, M., Bertella, C., Biolchini, A., Bitadze, A., Bogdanova, G., Borghi, S., Bowcock, T. J. V., Bridges, K., Brock, M., Burke, A. T., Buytaert, J., Byczynski, W., Carroll, J., Coco, V., Collins, P., Davis, A., Francisco, O. De Aguiar, De Bruyn, K., De Capua, S., De Roo, K., Doherty, F., Douglas, L., Dufour, L., Dumps, R., Dutta, D., Eklund, L., Elvin, A., Farry, S., Prieto, A. Fernandez, Lima, V. Franco, Freestone, J., Fuzipeg, C., Galati, M. D., Torreira, A. Gallas, Geertsema, R. E., Gersabeck, E., Gersabeck, M., Grant, F., Halewood-leagas, T., Hennessy, K., Hulsbergen, W., Hutchcroft, D., Hynds, D., Jans, E., John, D., John, M., Jurik, N., Ketel, T., Klaver, S., Kopciewicz, P., Kostiuk, I., Kraan, M., Langstaff, M., Latham, T., Leflat, A., Cid, E. Lemos, Lukashenko, V., Merk, M., Milovanovic, M., Monk, M., Murray, D., Nasteva, I., Oblakowska-Mucha, A., Pajero, T., Parkes, C., Alvarez, A. Pazos, Trigo, E. Perez, Perry, M., Reiss, F., Rinnert, K., Rodriguez, E. Rodriguez, Rovekamp, J., Sanders, F., Smead, L. G. Scantlebury, Schiller, M., Shears, T., Smith, N. A., Snoch, A., Svihra, P., Szumlak, T., van Beuzekom, M., van Overbeek, M., Regueiro, P. Vazquez, Volkov, V., Wormald, M., and Zunica, G.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The LHCb detector has undergone a major upgrade for LHC Run 3. This Upgrade I detector facilitates operation at higher luminosity and utilises full-detector information at the LHC collision rate, critically including the use of vertex information. A new vertex locator system, the VELO Upgrade, has been constructed. The core element of the new VELO are the double-sided pixelated hybrid silicon detector modules which operate in vacuum close to the LHC beam in a high radiation environment. The construction and quality assurance tests of these modules are described in this paper. The modules incorporate 200 \mum thick, n-on-p silicon sensors bump-bonded to 130 \nm technology ASICs. These are attached with high precision to a silicon microchannel substrate that uses evaporative CO$_2$ cooling. The ASICs are controlled and read out with flexible printed circuits that are glued to the substrate and wire-bonded to the chips. The mechanical support of the module is given by a carbon fibre plate, two carbon fibre rods and an aluminium plate. The sensor attachment was achieved with an average precision of 21 $\mathrm{\mu m}$, more than 99.5\% of all pixels are fully functional, and a thermal figure of merit of 3 \mathrm{Kcm^{2}W^{-1}}$ was achieved. The production of the modules was successfully completed in 2021, with the final assembly and installation completed in time for data taking in 2022.
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- 2024
37. Chiral phase transition in soft-wall AdS/QCD with scalar-dilaton coupling
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Bartz, Sean P., Meadows, Robert C., and Brock, Glenn
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The chiral phase boundary of nuclear matter is expected to have a critical point where the rapid crossover of lattice methods at zero chemical potential becomes a first-order phase transition. Phenomenological models based on the AdS/CFT correspondence, known as AdS/ QCD, have succeeded in capturing many features of nuclear matter, with recent progress in producing the expected critical point. We study a model that produces a critical point in the chiral phase diagram by introducing a coupling between the scalar chiral field and the dilaton. We examine the effect of the scalar-dilaton coupling on the critical point. We also study the zero-temperature chiral dynamics, which must allow for spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking in the limit of zero quark mass. We find that when the scalar-dilaton coupling is large enough to ensure correct zero-temperature chiral dynamics, a critical point is present only if the quark mass is greater than 12.8 MeV., Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
38. RecurrentGemma: Moving Past Transformers for Efficient Open Language Models
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Botev, Aleksandar, De, Soham, Smith, Samuel L, Fernando, Anushan, Muraru, George-Cristian, Haroun, Ruba, Berrada, Leonard, Pascanu, Razvan, Sessa, Pier Giuseppe, Dadashi, Robert, Hussenot, Léonard, Ferret, Johan, Girgin, Sertan, Bachem, Olivier, Andreev, Alek, Kenealy, Kathleen, Mesnard, Thomas, Hardin, Cassidy, Bhupatiraju, Surya, Pathak, Shreya, Sifre, Laurent, Rivière, Morgane, Kale, Mihir Sanjay, Love, Juliette, Tafti, Pouya, Joulin, Armand, Fiedel, Noah, Senter, Evan, Chen, Yutian, Srinivasan, Srivatsan, Desjardins, Guillaume, Budden, David, Doucet, Arnaud, Vikram, Sharad, Paszke, Adam, Gale, Trevor, Borgeaud, Sebastian, Chen, Charlie, Brock, Andy, Paterson, Antonia, Brennan, Jenny, Risdal, Meg, Gundluru, Raj, Devanathan, Nesh, Mooney, Paul, Chauhan, Nilay, Culliton, Phil, Martins, Luiz Gustavo, Bandy, Elisa, Huntsperger, David, Cameron, Glenn, Zucker, Arthur, Warkentin, Tris, Peran, Ludovic, Giang, Minh, Ghahramani, Zoubin, Farabet, Clément, Kavukcuoglu, Koray, Hassabis, Demis, Hadsell, Raia, Teh, Yee Whye, and de Frietas, Nando
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
We introduce RecurrentGemma, a family of open language models which uses Google's novel Griffin architecture. Griffin combines linear recurrences with local attention to achieve excellent performance on language. It has a fixed-sized state, which reduces memory use and enables efficient inference on long sequences. We provide two sizes of models, containing 2B and 9B parameters, and provide pre-trained and instruction tuned variants for both. Our models achieve comparable performance to similarly-sized Gemma baselines despite being trained on fewer tokens.
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- 2024
39. Effect of Ir growth pressure on the domain wall dynamics in Ta/Pt/Co/Ir/Ta stacks
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Domenichini, P., Brock, J., Curiale, J., and Kolton, A. B.
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Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networks - Abstract
The dynamical response of magnetic domain walls to external magnetic fields in ultra-thin multilayer magnetic films is determined not only by the composition and thickness of the layers but also by the growth conditions. Growth conditions can induce significant structural changes inside the layers and at the interfaces between them, affecting in particular the dynamics of domain walls, their mobility, elastic tension, and the pinning forces acting on them. In this work, we focus specifically on the effect of Ir layer growth pressure in Ta/Pt/Co/Ir/Ta ultra-thin multilayers films. Measurements of the DC magnetic properties, domain wall velocity and domain morphology in the creep regime for both constant and alternating field pulses, were performed for a batch of samples where the Ir layer was grown at different pressures. We find that the saturation magnetization, the effective anisotropy constant and the domain wall surface tension grow with increasing pressure and saturate at a threshold pressure, while the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya field and the strength of the disorder remain practically unaltered over the range of pressures considered., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. UniSparse: An Intermediate Language for General Sparse Format Customization
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Liu, Jie, Zhao, Zhongyuan, Ding, Zijian, Brock, Benjamin, Rong, Hongbo, and Zhang, Zhiru
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
The ongoing trend of hardware specialization has led to a growing use of custom data formats when processing sparse workloads, which are typically memory-bound. These formats facilitate optimized software/hardware implementations by utilizing sparsity pattern- or target-aware data structures and layouts to enhance memory access latency and bandwidth utilization. However, existing sparse tensor programming models and compilers offer little or no support for productively customizing the sparse formats. Additionally, because these frameworks represent formats using a limited set of per-dimension attributes, they lack the flexibility to accommodate numerous new variations of custom sparse data structures and layouts. To overcome this deficiency, we propose UniSparse, an intermediate language that provides a unified abstraction for representing and customizing sparse formats. Unlike the existing attribute-based frameworks, UniSparse decouples the logical representation of the sparse tensor (i.e., the data structure) from its low-level memory layout, enabling the customization of both. As a result, a rich set of format customizations can be succinctly expressed in a small set of well-defined query, mutation, and layout primitives. We also develop a compiler leveraging the MLIR infrastructure, which supports adaptive customization of formats, and automatic code generation of format conversion and compute operations for heterogeneous architectures. We demonstrate the efficacy of our approach through experiments running commonly-used sparse linear algebra operations with specialized formats on multiple different hardware targets, including an Intel CPU, an NVIDIA GPU, an AMD Xilinx FPGA, and a simulated processing-in-memory (PIM) device., Comment: to be published in OOPSLA'24
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- 2024
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41. Gemini 1.5: Unlocking multimodal understanding across millions of tokens of context
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Gemini Team, Georgiev, Petko, Lei, Ving Ian, Burnell, Ryan, Bai, Libin, Gulati, Anmol, Tanzer, Garrett, Vincent, Damien, Pan, Zhufeng, Wang, Shibo, Mariooryad, Soroosh, Ding, Yifan, Geng, Xinyang, Alcober, Fred, Frostig, Roy, Omernick, Mark, Walker, Lexi, Paduraru, Cosmin, Sorokin, Christina, Tacchetti, Andrea, Gaffney, Colin, Daruki, Samira, Sercinoglu, Olcan, Gleicher, Zach, Love, Juliette, Voigtlaender, Paul, Jain, Rohan, Surita, Gabriela, Mohamed, Kareem, Blevins, Rory, Ahn, Junwhan, Zhu, Tao, Kawintiranon, Kornraphop, Firat, Orhan, Gu, Yiming, Zhang, Yujing, Rahtz, Matthew, Faruqui, Manaal, Clay, Natalie, Gilmer, Justin, Co-Reyes, JD, Penchev, Ivo, Zhu, Rui, Morioka, Nobuyuki, Hui, Kevin, Haridasan, Krishna, Campos, Victor, Mahdieh, Mahdis, Guo, Mandy, Hassan, Samer, Kilgour, Kevin, Vezer, Arpi, Cheng, Heng-Tze, de Liedekerke, Raoul, Goyal, Siddharth, Barham, Paul, Strouse, DJ, Noury, Seb, Adler, Jonas, Sundararajan, Mukund, Vikram, Sharad, Lepikhin, Dmitry, Paganini, Michela, Garcia, Xavier, Yang, Fan, Valter, Dasha, Trebacz, Maja, Vodrahalli, Kiran, Asawaroengchai, Chulayuth, Ring, Roman, Kalb, Norbert, Soares, Livio Baldini, Brahma, Siddhartha, Steiner, David, Yu, Tianhe, Mentzer, Fabian, He, Antoine, Gonzalez, Lucas, Xu, Bibo, Kaufman, Raphael Lopez, Shafey, Laurent El, Oh, Junhyuk, Hennigan, Tom, Driessche, George van den, Odoom, Seth, Lucic, Mario, Roelofs, Becca, Lall, Sid, Marathe, Amit, Chan, Betty, Ontanon, Santiago, He, Luheng, Teplyashin, Denis, Lai, Jonathan, Crone, Phil, Damoc, Bogdan, Ho, Lewis, Riedel, Sebastian, Lenc, Karel, Yeh, Chih-Kuan, Chowdhery, Aakanksha, Xu, Yang, Kazemi, Mehran, Amid, Ehsan, Petrushkina, Anastasia, Swersky, Kevin, Khodaei, Ali, Chen, Gowoon, Larkin, Chris, Pinto, Mario, Yan, Geng, Badia, Adria Puigdomenech, Patil, Piyush, Hansen, Steven, Orr, Dave, Arnold, Sebastien M. R., Grimstad, Jordan, Dai, Andrew, Douglas, Sholto, Sinha, Rishika, Yadav, Vikas, Chen, Xi, Gribovskaya, Elena, Austin, Jacob, Zhao, Jeffrey, Patel, Kaushal, Komarek, Paul, Austin, Sophia, Borgeaud, Sebastian, Friso, Linda, Goyal, Abhimanyu, Caine, Ben, Cao, Kris, Chung, Da-Woon, Lamm, Matthew, Barth-Maron, Gabe, Kagohara, Thais, Olszewska, Kate, Chen, Mia, Shivakumar, Kaushik, Agarwal, Rishabh, Godhia, Harshal, Rajwar, Ravi, Snaider, Javier, Dotiwalla, Xerxes, Liu, Yuan, Barua, Aditya, Ungureanu, Victor, Zhang, Yuan, Batsaikhan, Bat-Orgil, Wirth, Mateo, Qin, James, Danihelka, Ivo, Doshi, Tulsee, Chadwick, Martin, Chen, Jilin, Jain, Sanil, Le, Quoc, Kar, Arjun, Gurumurthy, Madhu, Li, Cheng, Sang, Ruoxin, Liu, Fangyu, Lamprou, Lampros, Munoz, Rich, Lintz, Nathan, Mehta, Harsh, Howard, Heidi, Reynolds, Malcolm, Aroyo, Lora, Wang, Quan, Blanco, Lorenzo, Cassirer, Albin, Griffith, Jordan, Das, Dipanjan, Lee, Stephan, Sygnowski, Jakub, Fisher, Zach, Besley, James, Powell, Richard, Ahmed, Zafarali, Paulus, Dominik, Reitter, David, Borsos, Zalan, Joshi, Rishabh, Pope, Aedan, Hand, Steven, Selo, Vittorio, Jain, Vihan, Sethi, Nikhil, Goel, Megha, Makino, Takaki, May, Rhys, Yang, Zhen, Schalkwyk, Johan, Butterfield, Christina, Hauth, Anja, Goldin, Alex, Hawkins, Will, Senter, Evan, Brin, Sergey, Woodman, Oliver, Ritter, Marvin, Noland, Eric, Giang, Minh, Bolina, Vijay, Lee, Lisa, Blyth, Tim, Mackinnon, Ian, Reid, Machel, Sarvana, Obaid, Silver, David, Chen, Alexander, Wang, Lily, Maggiore, Loren, Chang, Oscar, Attaluri, Nithya, Thornton, Gregory, Chiu, Chung-Cheng, Bunyan, Oskar, Levine, Nir, Chung, Timothy, Eltyshev, Evgenii, Si, Xiance, Lillicrap, Timothy, Brady, Demetra, Aggarwal, Vaibhav, Wu, Boxi, Xu, Yuanzhong, McIlroy, Ross, Badola, Kartikeya, Sandhu, Paramjit, Moreira, Erica, Stokowiec, Wojciech, Hemsley, Ross, Li, Dong, Tudor, Alex, Shyam, Pranav, Rahimtoroghi, Elahe, Haykal, Salem, Sprechmann, Pablo, Zhou, Xiang, Mincu, Diana, Li, Yujia, Addanki, Ravi, Krishna, Kalpesh, Wu, Xiao, Frechette, Alexandre, Eyal, Matan, Dafoe, Allan, Lacey, Dave, Whang, Jay, Avrahami, Thi, Zhang, Ye, Taropa, Emanuel, Lin, Hanzhao, Toyama, Daniel, Rutherford, Eliza, Sano, Motoki, Choe, HyunJeong, Tomala, Alex, Safranek-Shrader, Chalence, Kassner, Nora, Pajarskas, Mantas, Harvey, Matt, Sechrist, Sean, Fortunato, Meire, Lyu, Christina, Elsayed, Gamaleldin, Kuang, Chenkai, Lottes, James, Chu, Eric, Jia, Chao, Chen, Chih-Wei, Humphreys, Peter, Baumli, Kate, Tao, Connie, Samuel, Rajkumar, Santos, Cicero Nogueira dos, Andreassen, Anders, Rakićević, Nemanja, Grewe, Dominik, Kumar, Aviral, Winkler, Stephanie, Caton, Jonathan, Brock, Andrew, Dalmia, Sid, Sheahan, Hannah, Barr, Iain, Miao, Yingjie, Natsev, Paul, Devlin, Jacob, Behbahani, Feryal, Prost, Flavien, Sun, Yanhua, Myaskovsky, Artiom, Pillai, Thanumalayan Sankaranarayana, Hurt, Dan, Lazaridou, Angeliki, Xiong, Xi, Zheng, Ce, Pardo, Fabio, Li, Xiaowei, Horgan, Dan, Stanton, Joe, Ambar, Moran, Xia, Fei, Lince, Alejandro, Wang, Mingqiu, Mustafa, Basil, Webson, Albert, Lee, Hyo, Anil, Rohan, Wicke, Martin, Dozat, Timothy, Sinha, Abhishek, Piqueras, Enrique, Dabir, Elahe, Upadhyay, Shyam, Boral, Anudhyan, Hendricks, Lisa Anne, Fry, Corey, Djolonga, Josip, Su, Yi, Walker, Jake, Labanowski, Jane, Huang, Ronny, Misra, Vedant, Chen, Jeremy, Skerry-Ryan, RJ, Singh, Avi, Rijhwani, Shruti, Yu, Dian, Castro-Ros, Alex, Changpinyo, Beer, Datta, Romina, Bagri, Sumit, Hrafnkelsson, Arnar Mar, Maggioni, Marcello, Zheng, Daniel, Sulsky, Yury, Hou, Shaobo, Paine, Tom Le, Yang, Antoine, Riesa, Jason, Rogozinska, Dominika, Marcus, Dror, Badawy, Dalia El, Zhang, Qiao, Wang, Luyu, Miller, Helen, Greer, Jeremy, Sjos, Lars Lowe, Nova, Azade, Zen, Heiga, Chaabouni, Rahma, Rosca, Mihaela, Jiang, Jiepu, Chen, Charlie, Liu, Ruibo, Sainath, Tara, Krikun, Maxim, Polozov, Alex, Lespiau, Jean-Baptiste, Newlan, Josh, Cankara, Zeyncep, Kwak, Soo, Xu, Yunhan, Chen, Phil, Coenen, Andy, Meyer, Clemens, Tsihlas, Katerina, Ma, Ada, Gottweis, Juraj, Xing, Jinwei, Gu, Chenjie, Miao, Jin, Frank, Christian, Cankara, Zeynep, Ganapathy, Sanjay, Dasgupta, Ishita, Hughes-Fitt, Steph, Chen, Heng, Reid, David, Rong, Keran, Fan, Hongmin, van Amersfoort, Joost, Zhuang, Vincent, Cohen, Aaron, Gu, Shixiang Shane, Mohananey, Anhad, Ilic, Anastasija, Tobin, Taylor, Wieting, John, Bortsova, Anna, Thacker, Phoebe, Wang, Emma, Caveness, Emily, Chiu, Justin, Sezener, Eren, Kaskasoli, Alex, Baker, Steven, Millican, Katie, Elhawaty, Mohamed, Aisopos, Kostas, Lebsack, Carl, Byrd, Nathan, Dai, Hanjun, Jia, Wenhao, Wiethoff, Matthew, Davoodi, Elnaz, Weston, Albert, Yagati, Lakshman, Ahuja, Arun, Gao, Isabel, Pundak, Golan, Zhang, Susan, Azzam, Michael, Sim, Khe Chai, Caelles, Sergi, Keeling, James, Sharma, Abhanshu, Swing, Andy, Li, YaGuang, Liu, Chenxi, Bostock, Carrie Grimes, Bansal, Yamini, Nado, Zachary, Anand, Ankesh, Lipschultz, Josh, Karmarkar, Abhijit, Proleev, Lev, Ittycheriah, Abe, Yeganeh, Soheil Hassas, Polovets, George, Faust, Aleksandra, Sun, Jiao, Rrustemi, Alban, Li, Pen, Shivanna, Rakesh, Liu, Jeremiah, Welty, Chris, Lebron, Federico, Baddepudi, Anirudh, Krause, Sebastian, Parisotto, Emilio, Soricut, Radu, Xu, Zheng, Bloxwich, Dawn, Johnson, Melvin, Neyshabur, Behnam, Mao-Jones, Justin, Wang, Renshen, Ramasesh, Vinay, Abbas, Zaheer, Guez, Arthur, Segal, Constant, Nguyen, Duc Dung, Svensson, James, Hou, Le, York, Sarah, Milan, Kieran, Bridgers, Sophie, Gworek, Wiktor, Tagliasacchi, Marco, Lee-Thorp, James, Chang, Michael, Guseynov, Alexey, Hartman, Ale Jakse, Kwong, Michael, Zhao, Ruizhe, Kashem, Sheleem, Cole, Elizabeth, Miech, Antoine, Tanburn, Richard, Phuong, Mary, Pavetic, Filip, Cevey, Sebastien, Comanescu, Ramona, Ives, Richard, Yang, Sherry, Du, Cosmo, Li, Bo, Zhang, Zizhao, Iinuma, Mariko, Hu, Clara Huiyi, Roy, Aurko, Bijwadia, Shaan, Zhu, Zhenkai, Martins, Danilo, Saputro, Rachel, Gergely, Anita, Zheng, Steven, Jia, Dawei, Antonoglou, Ioannis, Sadovsky, Adam, Gu, Shane, Bi, Yingying, Andreev, Alek, Samangooei, Sina, Khan, Mina, Kocisky, Tomas, Filos, Angelos, Kumar, Chintu, Bishop, Colton, Yu, Adams, Hodkinson, Sarah, Mittal, Sid, Shah, Premal, Moufarek, Alexandre, Cheng, Yong, Bloniarz, Adam, Lee, Jaehoon, Pejman, Pedram, Michel, Paul, Spencer, Stephen, Feinberg, Vladimir, Xiong, Xuehan, Savinov, Nikolay, Smith, Charlotte, Shakeri, Siamak, Tran, Dustin, Chesus, Mary, Bohnet, Bernd, Tucker, George, von Glehn, Tamara, Muir, Carrie, Mao, Yiran, Kazawa, Hideto, Slone, Ambrose, Soparkar, Kedar, Shrivastava, Disha, Cobon-Kerr, James, Sharman, Michael, Pavagadhi, Jay, Araya, Carlos, Misiunas, Karolis, Ghelani, Nimesh, Laskin, Michael, Barker, David, Li, Qiujia, Briukhov, Anton, Houlsby, Neil, Glaese, Mia, Lakshminarayanan, Balaji, Schucher, Nathan, Tang, Yunhao, Collins, Eli, Lim, Hyeontaek, Feng, Fangxiaoyu, Recasens, Adria, Lai, Guangda, Magni, Alberto, De Cao, Nicola, Siddhant, Aditya, Ashwood, Zoe, Orbay, Jordi, Dehghani, Mostafa, Brennan, Jenny, He, Yifan, Xu, Kelvin, Gao, Yang, Saroufim, Carl, Molloy, James, Wu, Xinyi, Arnold, Seb, Chang, Solomon, Schrittwieser, Julian, Buchatskaya, Elena, Radpour, Soroush, Polacek, Martin, Giordano, Skye, Bapna, Ankur, Tokumine, Simon, Hellendoorn, Vincent, Sottiaux, Thibault, Cogan, Sarah, Severyn, Aliaksei, Saleh, Mohammad, Thakoor, Shantanu, Shefey, Laurent, Qiao, Siyuan, Gaba, Meenu, Chang, Shuo-yiin, Swanson, Craig, Zhang, Biao, Lee, Benjamin, Rubenstein, Paul Kishan, Song, Gan, Kwiatkowski, Tom, Koop, Anna, Kannan, Ajay, Kao, David, Schuh, Parker, Stjerngren, Axel, Ghiasi, Golnaz, Gibson, Gena, Vilnis, Luke, Yuan, Ye, Ferreira, Felipe Tiengo, Kamath, Aishwarya, Klimenko, Ted, Franko, Ken, Xiao, Kefan, Bhattacharya, Indro, Patel, Miteyan, Wang, Rui, Morris, Alex, Strudel, Robin, Sharma, Vivek, Choy, Peter, Hashemi, Sayed Hadi, Landon, Jessica, Finkelstein, Mara, Jhakra, Priya, Frye, Justin, Barnes, Megan, Mauger, Matthew, Daun, Dennis, Baatarsukh, Khuslen, Tung, Matthew, Farhan, Wael, Michalewski, Henryk, Viola, Fabio, Quitry, Felix de Chaumont, Lan, Charline Le, Hudson, Tom, Wang, Qingze, Fischer, Felix, Zheng, Ivy, White, Elspeth, Dragan, Anca, Alayrac, Jean-baptiste, Ni, Eric, Pritzel, Alexander, Iwanicki, Adam, Isard, Michael, Bulanova, Anna, Zilka, Lukas, Dyer, Ethan, Sachan, Devendra, Srinivasan, Srivatsan, Muckenhirn, Hannah, Cai, Honglong, Mandhane, Amol, Tariq, Mukarram, Rae, Jack W., Wang, Gary, Ayoub, Kareem, FitzGerald, Nicholas, Zhao, Yao, Han, Woohyun, Alberti, Chris, Garrette, Dan, Krishnakumar, Kashyap, Gimenez, Mai, Levskaya, Anselm, Sohn, Daniel, Matak, Josip, Iturrate, Inaki, Chang, Michael B., Xiang, Jackie, Cao, Yuan, Ranka, Nishant, Brown, Geoff, Hutter, Adrian, Mirrokni, Vahab, Chen, Nanxin, Yao, Kaisheng, Egyed, Zoltan, Galilee, Francois, Liechty, Tyler, Kallakuri, Praveen, Palmer, Evan, Ghemawat, Sanjay, Liu, Jasmine, Tao, David, Thornton, Chloe, Green, Tim, Jasarevic, Mimi, Lin, Sharon, Cotruta, Victor, Tan, Yi-Xuan, Fiedel, Noah, Yu, Hongkun, Chi, Ed, Neitz, Alexander, Heitkaemper, Jens, Sinha, Anu, Zhou, Denny, Sun, Yi, Kaed, Charbel, Hulse, Brice, Mishra, Swaroop, Georgaki, Maria, Kudugunta, Sneha, Farabet, Clement, Shafran, Izhak, Vlasic, Daniel, Tsitsulin, Anton, Ananthanarayanan, Rajagopal, Carin, Alen, Su, Guolong, Sun, Pei, V, Shashank, Carvajal, Gabriel, Broder, Josef, Comsa, Iulia, Repina, Alena, Wong, William, Chen, Warren Weilun, Hawkins, Peter, Filonov, Egor, Loher, Lucia, Hirnschall, Christoph, Wang, Weiyi, Ye, Jingchen, Burns, Andrea, Cate, Hardie, Wright, Diana Gage, Piccinini, Federico, Zhang, Lei, Lin, Chu-Cheng, Gog, Ionel, Kulizhskaya, Yana, Sreevatsa, Ashwin, Song, Shuang, Cobo, Luis C., Iyer, Anand, Tekur, Chetan, Garrido, Guillermo, Xiao, Zhuyun, Kemp, Rupert, Zheng, Huaixiu Steven, Li, Hui, Agarwal, Ananth, Ngani, Christel, Goshvadi, Kati, Santamaria-Fernandez, Rebeca, Fica, Wojciech, Chen, Xinyun, Gorgolewski, Chris, Sun, Sean, Garg, Roopal, Ye, Xinyu, Eslami, S. M. Ali, Hua, Nan, Simon, Jon, Joshi, Pratik, Kim, Yelin, Tenney, Ian, Potluri, Sahitya, Thiet, Lam Nguyen, Yuan, Quan, Luisier, Florian, Chronopoulou, Alexandra, Scellato, Salvatore, Srinivasan, Praveen, Chen, Minmin, Koverkathu, Vinod, Dalibard, Valentin, Xu, Yaming, Saeta, Brennan, Anderson, Keith, Sellam, Thibault, Fernando, Nick, Huot, Fantine, Jung, Junehyuk, Varadarajan, Mani, Quinn, Michael, Raul, Amit, Le, Maigo, Habalov, Ruslan, Clark, Jon, Jalan, Komal, Bullard, Kalesha, Singhal, Achintya, Luong, Thang, Wang, Boyu, Rajayogam, Sujeevan, Eisenschlos, Julian, Jia, Johnson, Finchelstein, Daniel, Yakubovich, Alex, Balle, Daniel, Fink, Michael, Agarwal, Sameer, Li, Jing, Dvijotham, Dj, Pal, Shalini, Kang, Kai, Konzelmann, Jaclyn, Beattie, Jennifer, Dousse, Olivier, Wu, Diane, Crocker, Remi, Elkind, Chen, Jonnalagadda, Siddhartha Reddy, Lee, Jong, Holtmann-Rice, Dan, Kallarackal, Krystal, Liu, Rosanne, Vnukov, Denis, Vats, Neera, Invernizzi, Luca, Jafari, Mohsen, Zhou, Huanjie, Taylor, Lilly, Prendki, Jennifer, Wu, Marcus, Eccles, Tom, Liu, Tianqi, Kopparapu, Kavya, Beaufays, Francoise, Angermueller, Christof, Marzoca, Andreea, Sarcar, Shourya, Dib, Hilal, Stanway, Jeff, Perbet, Frank, Trdin, Nejc, Sterneck, Rachel, Khorlin, Andrey, Li, Dinghua, Wu, Xihui, Goenka, Sonam, Madras, David, Goldshtein, Sasha, Gierke, Willi, Zhou, Tong, Liu, Yaxin, Liang, Yannie, White, Anais, Li, Yunjie, Singh, Shreya, Bahargam, Sanaz, Epstein, Mark, Basu, Sujoy, Lao, Li, Ozturel, Adnan, Crous, Carl, Zhai, Alex, Lu, Han, Tung, Zora, Gaur, Neeraj, Walton, Alanna, Dixon, Lucas, Zhang, Ming, Globerson, Amir, Uy, Grant, Bolt, Andrew, Wiles, Olivia, Nasr, Milad, Shumailov, Ilia, Selvi, Marco, Piccinno, Francesco, Aguilar, Ricardo, McCarthy, Sara, Khalman, Misha, Shukla, Mrinal, Galic, Vlado, Carpenter, John, Villela, Kevin, Zhang, Haibin, Richardson, Harry, Martens, James, Bosnjak, Matko, Belle, Shreyas Rammohan, Seibert, Jeff, Alnahlawi, Mahmoud, McWilliams, Brian, Singh, Sankalp, Louis, Annie, Ding, Wen, Popovici, Dan, Simicich, Lenin, Knight, Laura, Mehta, Pulkit, Gupta, Nishesh, Shi, Chongyang, Fatehi, Saaber, Mitrovic, Jovana, Grills, Alex, Pagadora, Joseph, Petrova, Dessie, Eisenbud, Danielle, Zhang, Zhishuai, Yates, Damion, Mittal, Bhavishya, Tripuraneni, Nilesh, Assael, Yannis, Brovelli, Thomas, Jain, Prateek, Velimirovic, Mihajlo, Akbulut, Canfer, Mu, Jiaqi, Macherey, Wolfgang, Kumar, Ravin, Xu, Jun, Qureshi, Haroon, Comanici, Gheorghe, Wiesner, Jeremy, Gong, Zhitao, Ruddock, Anton, Bauer, Matthias, Felt, Nick, GP, Anirudh, Arnab, Anurag, Zelle, Dustin, Rothfuss, Jonas, Rosgen, Bill, Shenoy, Ashish, Seybold, Bryan, Li, Xinjian, Mudigonda, Jayaram, Erdogan, Goker, Xia, Jiawei, Simsa, Jiri, Michi, Andrea, Yao, Yi, Yew, Christopher, Kan, Steven, Caswell, Isaac, Radebaugh, Carey, Elisseeff, Andre, Valenzuela, Pedro, McKinney, Kay, Paterson, Kim, Cui, Albert, Latorre-Chimoto, Eri, Kim, Solomon, Zeng, William, Durden, Ken, Ponnapalli, Priya, Sosea, Tiberiu, Choquette-Choo, Christopher A., Manyika, James, Robenek, Brona, Vashisht, Harsha, Pereira, Sebastien, Lam, Hoi, Velic, Marko, Owusu-Afriyie, Denese, Lee, Katherine, Bolukbasi, Tolga, Parrish, Alicia, Lu, Shawn, Park, Jane, Venkatraman, Balaji, Talbert, Alice, Rosique, Lambert, Cheng, Yuchung, Sozanschi, Andrei, Paszke, Adam, Kumar, Praveen, Austin, Jessica, Li, Lu, Salama, Khalid, Kim, Wooyeol, Dukkipati, Nandita, Baryshnikov, Anthony, Kaplanis, Christos, Sheng, XiangHai, Chervonyi, Yuri, Unlu, Caglar, Casas, Diego de Las, Askham, Harry, Tunyasuvunakool, Kathryn, Gimeno, Felix, Poder, Siim, Kwak, Chester, Miecnikowski, Matt, Dimitriev, Alek, Parisi, Aaron, Liu, Dangyi, Tsai, Tomy, Shevlane, Toby, Kouridi, Christina, Garmon, Drew, Goedeckemeyer, Adrian, Brown, Adam R., Vijayakumar, Anitha, Elqursh, Ali, Jazayeri, Sadegh, Huang, Jin, Carthy, Sara Mc, Hoover, Jay, Kim, Lucy, Kumar, Sandeep, Chen, Wei, Biles, Courtney, Bingham, Garrett, Rosen, Evan, Wang, Lisa, Tan, Qijun, Engel, David, Pongetti, Francesco, de Cesare, Dario, Hwang, Dongseong, Yu, Lily, Pullman, Jennifer, Narayanan, Srini, Levin, Kyle, Gopal, Siddharth, Li, Megan, Aharoni, Asaf, Trinh, Trieu, Lo, Jessica, Casagrande, Norman, Vij, Roopali, Matthey, Loic, Ramadhana, Bramandia, Matthews, Austin, Carey, CJ, Johnson, Matthew, Goranova, Kremena, Shah, Rohin, Ashraf, Shereen, Dasgupta, Kingshuk, Larsen, Rasmus, Wang, Yicheng, Vuyyuru, Manish Reddy, Jiang, Chong, Ijazi, Joana, Osawa, Kazuki, Smith, Celine, Boppana, Ramya Sree, Bilal, Taylan, Koizumi, Yuma, Xu, Ying, Altun, Yasemin, Shabat, Nir, Bariach, Ben, Korchemniy, Alex, Choo, Kiam, Ronneberger, Olaf, Iwuanyanwu, Chimezie, Zhao, Shubin, Soergel, David, Hsieh, Cho-Jui, Cai, Irene, Iqbal, Shariq, Sundermeyer, Martin, Chen, Zhe, Bursztein, Elie, Malaviya, Chaitanya, Biadsy, Fadi, Shroff, Prakash, Dhillon, Inderjit, Latkar, Tejasi, Dyer, Chris, Forbes, Hannah, Nicosia, Massimo, Nikolaev, Vitaly, Greene, Somer, Georgiev, Marin, Wang, Pidong, Martin, Nina, Sedghi, Hanie, Zhang, John, Banzal, Praseem, Fritz, Doug, Rao, Vikram, Wang, Xuezhi, Zhang, Jiageng, Patraucean, Viorica, Du, Dayou, Mordatch, Igor, Jurin, Ivan, Liu, Lewis, Dubey, Ayush, Mohan, Abhi, Nowakowski, Janek, Ion, Vlad-Doru, Wei, Nan, Tojo, Reiko, Raad, Maria Abi, Hudson, Drew A., Keshava, Vaishakh, Agrawal, Shubham, Ramirez, Kevin, Wu, Zhichun, Nguyen, Hoang, Liu, Ji, Sewak, Madhavi, Petrini, Bryce, Choi, DongHyun, Philips, Ivan, Wang, Ziyue, Bica, Ioana, Garg, Ankush, Wilkiewicz, Jarek, Agrawal, Priyanka, Guo, Danhao, Xue, Emily, Shaik, Naseer, Leach, Andrew, Khan, Sadh MNM, Wiesinger, Julia, Jerome, Sammy, Chakladar, Abhishek, Wang, Alek Wenjiao, Ornduff, Tina, Abu, Folake, Ghaffarkhah, Alireza, Wainwright, Marcus, Cortes, Mario, Liu, Frederick, Maynez, Joshua, Terzis, Andreas, Samangouei, Pouya, Mansour, Riham, Kępa, Tomasz, Aubet, François-Xavier, Algymr, Anton, Banica, Dan, Weisz, Agoston, Orban, Andras, Senges, Alexandre, Andrejczuk, Ewa, Geller, Mark, Santo, Niccolo Dal, Anklin, Valentin, Merey, Majd Al, Baeuml, Martin, Strohman, Trevor, Bai, Junwen, Petrov, Slav, Wu, Yonghui, Hassabis, Demis, Kavukcuoglu, Koray, Dean, Jeffrey, and Vinyals, Oriol
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
In this report, we introduce the Gemini 1.5 family of models, representing the next generation of highly compute-efficient multimodal models capable of recalling and reasoning over fine-grained information from millions of tokens of context, including multiple long documents and hours of video and audio. The family includes two new models: (1) an updated Gemini 1.5 Pro, which exceeds the February version on the great majority of capabilities and benchmarks; (2) Gemini 1.5 Flash, a more lightweight variant designed for efficiency with minimal regression in quality. Gemini 1.5 models achieve near-perfect recall on long-context retrieval tasks across modalities, improve the state-of-the-art in long-document QA, long-video QA and long-context ASR, and match or surpass Gemini 1.0 Ultra's state-of-the-art performance across a broad set of benchmarks. Studying the limits of Gemini 1.5's long-context ability, we find continued improvement in next-token prediction and near-perfect retrieval (>99%) up to at least 10M tokens, a generational leap over existing models such as Claude 3.0 (200k) and GPT-4 Turbo (128k). Finally, we highlight real-world use cases, such as Gemini 1.5 collaborating with professionals on completing their tasks achieving 26 to 75% time savings across 10 different job categories, as well as surprising new capabilities of large language models at the frontier; when given a grammar manual for Kalamang, a language with fewer than 200 speakers worldwide, the model learns to translate English to Kalamang at a similar level to a person who learned from the same content.
- Published
- 2024
42. Prevalence of self-reported symptoms of diabetic autonomic dysfunction in the North Denmark Region: a population-based survey
- Author
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Bitsch Poulsen, Maria, Wegeberg, Anne-Marie, Røikjer, Johan, Nikontovic, Amar, Vestergaard, Peter, and Brock, Christina
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- 2024
- Full Text
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43. Impact of non-contrast-enhanced imaging input sequences on the generation of virtual contrast-enhanced breast MRI scans using neural network
- Author
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Liebert, Andrzej, Schreiter, Hannes, Kapsner, Lorenz A., Eberle, Jessica, Ehring, Chris M., Hadler, Dominique, Brock, Luise, Erber, Ramona, Emons, Julius, Laun, Frederik B., Uder, Michael, Wenkel, Evelyn, Ohlmeyer, Sabine, and Bickelhaupt, Sebastian
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Competition for talent: heterogenous abilities in team production
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Ramalingam, Abhijit, Stoddard, Brock V., and Walker, James M.
- Published
- 2024
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45. Association between smoking and prostate cancer survivors’ long-term quality of life and function: an analysis of the CEASAR (Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation) study
- Author
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Nguyen, David-Dan, Barocas, Daniel A., Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Koyama, Tatsuki, Al Hussein AI Awamlh, Bashir, Penson, David F., Morgans, Alicia K., Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xia-Cheng, Li, Jie, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette M., O’Neil, Brock B., Hoffman, Karen E., and Wallis, Christopher J. D.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Boosting effects of mindfulness-based intervention with a multi-modal adaptive supplement: a preliminary investigation
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Lucas-Thompson, Rachel G., Krause, Jill T., Rzonca, Addie, Moran, Megan J., Miller, Reagan L., Rigsby, Brock A., Najman, Jonathan I., Adams, Melanie S., Haddock, Shelley A., Zimmerman, Toni S., and Shomaker, Lauren B.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Improving Process Mining Maturity – From Intentions to Actions
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Brock, Jonathan, Brennig, Katharina, Löhr, Bernd, Bartelheimer, Christian, von Enzberg, Sebastian, and Dumitrescu, Roman
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- 2024
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48. Therapeutic applications and challenges in myostatin inhibition for enhanced skeletal muscle mass and functions
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Wetzlich, Brock, Nyakundi, Benard B., and Yang, Jinzeng
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- 2024
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49. Exploring preparedness transitions in medicine and pharmacy: a qualitative longitudinal study to inform multiprofessional learning opportunities
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Ottrey, Ella, Rees, Charlotte E., Kemp, Caitlin, Lyons, Kayley M., Brock, Tina P., Leech, Michelle, Monrouxe, Lynn V., and Palermo, Claire
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- 2024
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50. Experimental and simulative investigations of burr formation in planing of AISI 1045
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Polus, Gero, Saelzer, Jannis, Brock, Sven, Pleskun, Heiko, Biermann, Dirk, and Brümmer, Andreas
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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