255,323 results on '"Fletcher, A"'
Search Results
2. Ethel Wright's Visual Record of Pine Mountain Settlement School, 1919–1921
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Fletcher, Allen
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- 2023
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3. Book Note
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Fletcher, Allen
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- 2024
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4. Where did the ingredients in that sandwich come from? Our global nutrient tracker tells a complex story
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Smith, Nick William, Fletcher, Andrew John, and McNabb, Warren
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- 2024
5. Circle in the Square Theatre: A Comprehensive History by Sheila Hickey Garvey (review)
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Fletcher, Anne
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- 2022
6. Why Computer AI Will Never Do What We Imagine It Can
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Fletcher, Angus
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- 2022
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7. SLOWLY GROWING MEROMORPHIC FUNCTIONS AND THE ZEROS OF DIFFERENCES
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Fletcher, A., Langley, J. K., and Meyer, J.
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- 2022
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8. The Staging of the Middle Cornish Play Bewnans Ke (‘The Life of St Kea)
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Fletcher, Alan J.
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- 2022
9. 2500 years of freethinkers, scientists, and religious believers
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Fletcher, Perry
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- 2024
10. Images, Idolatry, and Iconoclasm in Late Medieval England: Textuality and the Visual Image by <given-names>Jeremy</given-names> <surname>Dimmick</surname>, <given-names>James</given-names> <surname>Simpson</surname>, <given-names>Nicolette</given-names> <surname>Zeeman</surname> (review)
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Fletcher, Alan J.
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- 2022
11. Coulomb sensing of single ballistic electrons
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Fletcher, J. D., Park, W., See, P., Griffiths, J. P., Jones, G. A. C., Farrer, I., Ritchie, D. A., Sim, H. -S., and Kataoka, M.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
While ballistic electrons are a key tool for applications in sensing and flying qubits, sub-nanosecond propagation times and complicated interactions make control of ballistic single electrons challenging. Recent experiments have revealed Coulomb collisions of counterpropagating electrons in a beam splitter, giving time resolved control of interactions between single electrons. Here we use remote Coulomb interactions to demonstrate a scheme for sensing single ballistic electrons. We show that interactions are highly controllable via electron energy and emission timing. We use a weakly-coupled `sensing' regime to characterise the nanoscale potential landscape of the beam splitter and the strength of the Coulomb interaction, and show multi-electron sensing with picosecond resolution., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures (main) + 11 pages, 10 figures (supplementary)
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- 2024
12. High-resolution observational analysis of flare ribbon fine structures
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Faber, Jonas Thoen, Joshi, Reetika, van der Voort, Luc Rouppe, Wedemeyer, Sven, Fletcher, Lyndsay, Aulanier, Guillaume, and Nóbrega-Siverio, Daniel
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. Since the mechanism of energy release from solar flares is still not fully understood, the study of fine-scale features developing during flares becomes important for progressing towards a consistent picture of the essential physical mechanisms. Aims. We aim to probe the fine structures in flare ribbons at the chromospheric level using high-resolution observations with imaging and spectral techniques. Methods. We present a GOES C2.4 class solar flare observed with the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST), the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), and the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA). The high-resolution SST observations offer spectroscopic data in the H-alpha, Ca II 8542 {\AA}, and H-beta lines, which we use to analyse the flare ribbon. Results. Within the eastern flare ribbon, chromospheric bright blobs were detected and analysed in Ca II 8542 {\AA}, H-alpha, and H-beta wavelengths. A comparison of blobs in H-beta observations and Si IV 1400 {\AA} has also been performed. These blobs are observed as almost circular structures having widths from 140 km-200 km. The intensity profiles of the blobs show a red wing asymmetry. Conclusions. From the high spatial and temporal resolution H-beta observations, we conclude that the periodicity of the blobs in the flare ribbon, which are near-equally spaced in the range 330-550 km, is likely due to fragmented reconnection processes within a flare current sheet. This supports the theory of a direct link between fine-structure flare ribbons and current sheet tearing. We believe our observations represent the highest resolution evidence of fine-structure flare ribbons to date., Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
13. Scintillation Bandwidth Measurements from 23 Pulsars from the AO327 Survey
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Sheikh, Sofia Z., Brown, Grayce C., MacTaggart, Jackson, Nguyen, Thomas, Fletcher, William D., Jones, Brenda L., Koller, Emma, Petrus, Veronica, Pighini, Katie F., Rosario, Gray, Smedile, Vincent A., Stone, Adam T., You, Shawn, McLaughlin, Maura A., Turner, Jacob E., Deneva, Julia S., Lam, Michael T., and Shapiro-Albert, Brent J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
A pulsar's scintillation bandwidth is inversely proportional to the scattering delay, making accurate measurements of scintillation bandwidth critical to characterize unmitigated delays in efforts to measure low-frequency gravitational waves with pulsar timing arrays. In this pilot work, we searched for a subset of known pulsars within $\sim$97% of the data taken with the PUPPI instrument for the AO327 survey with the Arecibo telescope, attempting to measure the scintillation bandwidths in the dataset by fitting to the 2D autocorrelation function of their dynamic spectra. We successfully measured 38 bandwidths from 23 pulsars (six without prior literature values), finding that: almost all of the measurements are larger than the predictions from NE2001 and YMW16 (two popular galactic models); NE2001 is more consistent with our measurements than YMW16; Gaussian fits to the bandwidth are more consistent with both electron density models than Lorentzian ones; and for the 17 pulsars with prior literature values, the measurements between various sources often vary by factors of a few. The success of Gaussian fits may be due to the use of Gaussian fits to train models in previous work. The variance of literature values over time could relate to the scaling factor used to compare measurements, but also seems consistent with time-varying interstellar medium parameters. This work can be extended to the rest of AO327 to further investigate these trends, highlighting the continuing importance of large archival datasets for projects beyond their initial conception., Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
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14. Interpolating quasiregular power mappings
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Burkart, Jack, Fletcher, Alastair N., and Nicks, Daniel A.
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Mathematics - Complex Variables ,Mathematics - Dynamical Systems - Abstract
In this paper, we construct a quasiregular mapping $f$ in $\mathbb{R}^3$ that is the first to illustrate several important properties: the quasi-Fatou set contains bounded, hollow components, the Julia set contains bounded components and, moreover, some of these components are genuine round spheres. The key tool to this construction is a new quasiregular interpolation in round rings in $\mathbb{R}^3$ between power mappings of differing degrees on the boundary components. We also exhibit the flexibility of constructions based on these interpolations by showing that we may obtain quasiregular mappings which grow as quickly, or as slowly, as desired.
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- 2024
15. Measuring pair correlations in Bose and Fermi gases via atom-resolved microscopy
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Yao, Ruixiao, Chi, Sungjae, Wang, Mingxuan, Fletcher, Richard J., and Zwierlein, Martin
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Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Physics - Atomic Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We demonstrate atom-resolved detection of itinerant bosonic $^{23}$Na and fermionic $^6$Li quantum gases, enabling the direct in situ measurement of interparticle correlations. In contrast to prior work on lattice-trapped gases, here we realize microscopy of quantum gases in the continuum. We reveal Bose-Einstein condensation with single-atom resolution, measure the enhancement of two-particle $g^{(2)}$ correlations of thermal bosons, and observe the suppression of $g^{(2)}$ for fermions; the Fermi or exchange hole. For strongly interacting Fermi gases confined to two dimensions, we directly observe non-local fermion pairs in the BEC-BCS crossover. We obtain the pairing gap, the pair size, and the short-range contact directly from the pair correlations. In situ thermometry is enabled via the fluctuation-dissipation theorem. Our technique opens the door to the atom-resolved study of strongly correlated quantum gases of bosons, fermions, and their mixtures., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
16. Towards Model-free Temperature Diagnostics of Warm Dense Matter from Multiple Scattering Angles
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Bellenbaum, Hannah M., Bachmann, Benjamin, Kraus, Dominik, Gawne, Thomas, Böhme, Maximilian P., Döppner, Tilo, Fletcher, Luke B., MacDonald, Michael J., Moldabekov, Zhandos A., Preston, Thomas R., Vorberger, Jan, and Dornheim, Tobias
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Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Warm dense matter (WDM) plays an important role in astrophysical objects and technological applications, but the rigorous diagnostics of corresponding experiments is notoriously difficult. In this work, we present a model-free analysis of x-ray Thomson scattering (XRTS) measurements at multiple scattering angles. Specifically, we analyze scattering data that have been collected for isochorically heated graphite at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Overall, we find good consistency in the extracted temperature between small and large scattering angles, whereas possible signatures of non-equilibrium may be hidden by the source function, and by the available dynamic spectral range. The present proof-of-principle study directly points to improved experimental set-ups for equation-of-state measurements and for the model-free study of relaxation times.
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- 2024
17. Why Computers Will Never Read (or Write) Literature: A Logical Proof and a Narrative
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Fletcher, Angus
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- 2021
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18. The American Drama Since 1918: An Informal History by Joseph Wood Krutch (review)
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Fletcher, Anne
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- 2020
19. Benefits and risks of implementing cloud-based technology for child sexual abuse investigations in Australia
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Westlake, Bryce, Brewer, Russell, Toole, Kellie, Daly, Tom, Swearingen, Thomas, Fletcher, Scott, Ucci, Franco, and Logos, Katie
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- 2024
20. Autistic Traits, Communicative Efficiency, and Social Biases Shape Language Learning in Autistic and Allistic Learners
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Lauren Fletcher, Hugh Rabagliati, and Jennifer Culbertson
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There is ample evidence that individual-level cognitive mechanisms active during language learning and use can contribute to the evolution of language. For example, experimental work suggests that learners will reduce case marking in a language where grammatical roles are reliably indicated by fixed word order, a correlation found robustly in the languages of the world. However, such research often assumes homogeneity among language learners and users, or at least does not dig into individual differences in behavior. Yet, it is increasingly clear that language users vary in a large number of ways: in culture, in demographics, and--critically for present purposes--in terms of cognitive diversity. Here, we explore how neurodiversity impacts behavior in an experimental task similar to the one summarized above, and how this behavior interacts with social pressures. We find both similarities and differences between autistic and nonautistic English-speaking individuals, suggesting that neurodiversity can impact language change in the lab. This, in turn, highlights the potential for future research on the role of neurodivergent populations in language evolution more generally.
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- 2024
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21. A prenatal skin atlas reveals immune regulation of human skin morphogenesis.
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Gopee, Nusayhah, Winheim, Elena, Olabi, Bayanne, Admane, Chloe, Foster, April, Huang, Ni, Botting, Rachel, Torabi, Fereshteh, Sumanaweera, Dinithi, Le, Anh, Kim, Jin, Verger, Luca, Stephenson, Emily, Adão, Diana, Ganier, Clarisse, Gim, Kelly, Serdy, Sara, Deakin, CiCi, Goh, Issac, Steele, Lloyd, Annusver, Karl, Miah, Mohi-Uddin, Tun, Win, Moghimi, Pejvak, Kwakwa, Kwasi, Li, Tong, Basurto Lozada, Daniela, Rumney, Ben, Tudor, Catherine, Roberts, Kenny, Chipampe, Nana-Jane, Sidhpura, Keval, Englebert, Justin, Jardine, Laura, Reynolds, Gary, Rose, Antony, Rowe, Vicky, Pritchard, Sophie, Mulas, Ilaria, Fletcher, James, Popescu, Dorin-Mirel, Poyner, Elizabeth, Dubois, Anna, Guy, Alyson, Filby, Andrew, Lisgo, Steven, Barker, Roger, Glass, Ian, Park, Jong-Eun, Vento-Tormo, Roser, Nikolova, Marina, He, Peng, Lawrence, John, Moore, Josh, Ballereau, Stephane, Hale, Christine, Shanmugiah, Vijaya, Horsfall, David, Rajan, Neil, McGrath, John, OToole, Edel, Treutlein, Barbara, Bayraktar, Omer, Kasper, Maria, Progatzky, Fränze, Mazin, Pavel, Lee, Jiyoon, Gambardella, Laure, Koehler, Karl, Teichmann, Sarah, and Haniffa, Muzlifah
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Humans ,Skin ,Morphogenesis ,Macrophages ,Hair Follicle ,Organoids ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Immunity ,Innate ,Atlases as Topic ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Endothelial Cells ,Female ,Neovascularization ,Physiologic ,Transcriptome ,Human Embryonic Stem Cells ,Wound Healing ,Fetus - Abstract
Human prenatal skin is populated by innate immune cells, including macrophages, but whether they act solely in immunity or have additional functions in morphogenesis is unclear. Here we assembled a comprehensive multi-omics reference atlas of prenatal human skin (7-17 post-conception weeks), combining single-cell and spatial transcriptomics data, to characterize the microanatomical tissue niches of the skin. This atlas revealed that crosstalk between non-immune and immune cells underpins the formation of hair follicles, is implicated in scarless wound healing and is crucial for skin angiogenesis. We systematically compared a hair-bearing skin organoid (SkO) model derived from human embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells to prenatal and adult skin1. The SkO model closely recapitulated in vivo skin epidermal and dermal cell types during hair follicle development and expression of genes implicated in the pathogenesis of genetic hair and skin disorders. However, the SkO model lacked immune cells and had markedly reduced endothelial cell heterogeneity and quantity. Our in vivo prenatal skin cell atlas indicated that macrophages and macrophage-derived growth factors have a role in driving endothelial development. Indeed, vascular network remodelling was enhanced following transfer of autologous macrophages derived from induced pluripotent stem cells into SkO cultures. Innate immune cells are therefore key players in skin morphogenesis beyond their conventional role in immunity, a function they achieve through crosstalk with non-immune cells.
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- 2024
22. Implementation and validation of face de-identification (de-facing) in ADNI4.
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Schwarz, Christopher, Choe, Mark, Rossi, Stephanie, Das, Sandhitsu, Ittyerah, Ranjit, Fletcher, Evan, Maillard, Pauline, Singh, Baljeet, Harvey, Danielle, Malone, Ian, Prosser, Lloyd, Senjem, Matthew, Matoush, Leonard, Ward, Chadwick, Prakaashana, Carl, Landau, Susan, Koeppe, Robert, Lee, JiaQie, Decarli, Charles, Weiner, Michael, Jack, Clifford, Jagust, William, Yushkevich, Paul, and Tosun, Duygu
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ADNI ,anonymization ,de‐facing ,de‐identification ,face recognition ,Humans ,Alzheimer Disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain ,Neuroimaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Face ,Algorithms - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Recent technological advances have increased the risk that de-identified brain images could be re-identified from face imagery. The Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) is a leading source of publicly available de-identified brain imaging, who quickly acted to protect participants privacy. METHODS: An independent expert committee evaluated 11 face-deidentification (de-facing) methods and selected four for formal testing. RESULTS: Effects of de-facing on brain measurements were comparable across methods and sufficiently small to recommend de-facing in ADNI. The committee ultimately recommended mri_reface for advantages in reliability, and for some practical considerations. ADNI leadership approved the committees recommendation, beginning in ADNI4. DISCUSSION: ADNI4 de-faces all applicable brain images before subsequent pre-processing, analyses, and public release. Trained analysts inspect de-faced images to confirm complete face removal and complete non-modification of brain. This paper details the history of the algorithm selection process and extensive validation, then describes the production workflows for de-facing in ADNI. HIGHLIGHTS: ADNI is implementing de-facing of MRI and PET beginning in ADNI4. De-facing alters face imagery in brain images to help protect privacy. Four algorithms were extensively compared for ADNI and mri_reface was chosen. Validation confirms mri_reface is robust and effective for ADNI sequences. Validation confirms mri_reface negligibly affects ADNI brain measurements.
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- 2024
23. NodeOP: Optimizing Node Management for Decentralized Networks
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Tsang, Angela, Sun, Jiankai, Xie, Boo, Khan, Azeem, Lu, Ender, Fan, Fletcher, Wu, Maggie, and Tang, Jing
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Computer Science - Databases ,Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
We present NodeOP, a novel framework designed to optimize the management of General Node Operators in decentralized networks. By integrating Agent-Based Modeling (ABM) with a Tendermint Byzantine Fault Tolerance (BFT)-based consensus mechanism, NodeOP addresses key challenges in task allocation, consensus formation, and system stability. Through rigorous mathematical modeling and formal optimization, NodeOP ensures stable equilibrium in node task distribution. We validate the framework via convergence analysis and performance metrics such as transaction throughput, system latency, and fault tolerance. We further demonstrate NodeOP's practical utility through two use cases: decentralized sequencer management in Layer 2 networks and off-chain payment validation. These examples underscore how NodeOP enhances validation efficiency and unlocks new revenue opportunities in large-scale decentralized environments. Our results position NodeOP as a scalable and flexible solution, significantly improving operational efficiency and economic sustainability in decentralized systems.
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- 2024
24. Reproducibility study of 'LICO: Explainable Models with Language-Image Consistency'
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Fletcher, Luan, van der Klis, Robert, Sedláček, Martin, Vasilev, Stefan, and Athanasiadis, Christos
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
The growing reproducibility crisis in machine learning has brought forward a need for careful examination of research findings. This paper investigates the claims made by Lei et al. (2023) regarding their proposed method, LICO, for enhancing post-hoc interpretability techniques and improving image classification performance. LICO leverages natural language supervision from a vision-language model to enrich feature representations and guide the learning process. We conduct a comprehensive reproducibility study, employing (Wide) ResNets and established interpretability methods like Grad-CAM and RISE. We were mostly unable to reproduce the authors' results. In particular, we did not find that LICO consistently led to improved classification performance or improvements in quantitative and qualitative measures of interpretability. Thus, our findings highlight the importance of rigorous evaluation and transparent reporting in interpretability research., Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, Machine Learning Reproducibility Challenge 2024
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- 2024
25. Meta-Property Graphs: Extending Property Graphs with Metadata Awareness and Reification
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Sadoughi, Sepehr, Yakovets, Nikolay, and Fletcher, George
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Computer Science - Databases - Abstract
The ISO standard Property Graph model has become increasingly popular for representing complex, interconnected data. However, it lacks native support for querying metadata and reification, which limits its abilities to deal with the demands of modern applications. We introduce the vision of Meta-Property Graphs, a backwards compatible extension of the property graph model addressing these limitations. Our approach enables first-class treatment of labels and properties as queryable objects and supports reification of substructures in a graph. We propose MetaGPML, a backwards compatible extension of the Graph Pattern Matching Language forming the core of the ISO standard GQL, to query these enhanced graphs. We demonstrate how these foundations pave the way for advanced data analytics and governance tasks that are challenging or impossible with current property graph systems.
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- 2024
26. Simultaneous Eruption and Shrinkage of Pre-existing Flare Loops during a Subsequent Solar Eruption
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Chen, Huadong, Fletcher, Lyndsay, Zhou, Guiping, Cheng, Xin, Wang, Ya, Mulay, Sargam, Zheng, Ruisheng, Ma, Suli, and Zhang, Xiaofan
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
We investigated two consecutive solar eruption events in the solar active region (AR) 12994 at the solar eastern limb on 2022 April 15. We found that the flare loops formed by the first eruption were involved in the second eruption. During the initial stage of the second flare, the middle part of these flare loops (E-loops) erupted outward along with the flux ropes below, while the parts of the flare loops (I-loops1 and I-loops2) on either side of the E-loops first rose and then contracted. Approximately 1 hour after the eruption, the heights of I-loops1 and I-loops2 decreased by 9 Mm and 45 Mm, respectively, compared to before the eruption. Their maximum descent velocities were 30 km/s and 130 km/s, respectively. The differential emission measure (DEM) results indicate that the plasma above I-loops1 and I-loops2 began to be heated about 23 minutes and 44 minutes after the start of the second flare, respectively. Within 20 minutes, the plasma temperature in these regions increased from ~3 MK to 6 MK. We proposed an adiabatic heating mechanism that magnetic energy would be converted into thermal and kinetic energy when the pre-stretched loops contract. Our calculations show that the magnetic energy required to heat the two high-temperature regions are 10^29-10^30 erg, which correspond to a loss of field strength of 2-3 G., Comment: The paper has been accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2024
27. Design Space Exploration of Embedded SoC Architectures for Real-Time Optimal Control
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Dong, Kris Shengjun, Nikiforov, Dima, Soedarmadji, Widyadewi, Nguyen, Minh, Fletcher, Christopher, and Shao, Yakun Sophia
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Computer Science - Robotics ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
Empowering resource-limited robots to execute computationally intensive tasks such as locomotion and manipulation is challenging. This project provides a comprehensive design space exploration to determine optimal hardware computation architectures suitable for model-based control algorithms. We profile and optimize representative architectural designs across general-purpose scalar, vector processors, and specialized accelerators. Specifically, we compare CPUs, vector machines, and domain-specialized accelerators with kernel-level benchmarks and end-to-end representative robotic workloads. Our exploration provides a quantitative performance, area, and utilization comparison and analyzes the trade-offs between these representative distinct architectural designs. We demonstrate that architectural modifications, software, and system optimization can alleviate bottlenecks and enhance utilization. Finally, we propose a code generation flow to simplify the engineering work for mapping robotic workloads to specialized architectures., Comment: This submission has been withdrawn following further internal review and discussions with collaborators, as it was determined that the current version does not meet our intended standards, and will not be updated further. This decision aligns with internal changes and agreements that were finalized post-submission
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- 2024
28. The Thermal Structure and Composition of Jupiter's Great Red Spot From JWST/MIRI
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Harkett, Jake, Fletcher, Leigh N., King, Oliver R. T., Roman, Michael T., Melin, Henrik, Hammel, Heidi B., Hueso, Ricardo, Sánchez-Lavega, Agustín, Wong, Michael H., Milam, Stefanie N., Orton, Glenn S., de Kleer, Katherine, Irwin, Patrick G. J., de Pater, Imke, Fouchet, Thierry, Rodríguez-Ovalle, Pablo, Fry, Patrick M., and Showalter, Mark R.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Jupiter's Great Red Spot (GRS) was mapped by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)/Mid-Infrared Instrument (4.9-27.9 micron) in July and August 2022. These observations took place alongside a suite of visual and infrared observations from; Hubble, JWST/NIRCam, Very Large Telescope/VISIR and amateur observers which provided both spatial and temporal context across the jovian disc. The stratospheric temperature structure retrieved using the NEMESIS software revealed a series of hot-spots above the GRS. These could be the consequence of GRS-induced wave activity. In the troposphere, the temperature structure was used to derive the thermal wind structure of the GRS vortex. These winds were only consistent with the independently determined wind field by JWST/NIRCam at 240 mbar if the altitude of the Hubble-derived winds were located around 1,200 mbar, considerably deeper than previously assumed. No enhancement in ammonia was found within the GRS but a link between elevated aerosol and phosphine abundances was observed within this region. North-south asymmetries were observed in the retrieved temperature, ammonia, phosphine and aerosol structure, consistent with the GRS tilting in the north-south direction. Finally, a small storm was captured north-west of the GRS that displayed a considerable excess in retrieved phosphine abundance, suggestive of vigorous convection. Despite this, no ammonia ice was detected in this region. The novelty of JWST required us to develop custom-made software to resolve challenges in calibration of the data. This involved the derivation of the "FLT-5" wavelength calibration solution that has subsequently been integrated into the standard calibration pipeline., Comment: 53 pages, 19 figures, 4 tables
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- 2024
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29. RTL2M$\mu$PATH: Multi-$\mu$PATH Synthesis with Applications to Hardware Security Verification
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Hsiao, Yao, Nikoleris, Nikos, Khyzha, Artem, Mulligan, Dominic P., Petri, Gustavo, Fletcher, Christopher W., and Trippel, Caroline
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Hardware Architecture - Abstract
The Check tools automate formal memory consistency model and security verification of processors by analyzing abstract models of microarchitectures, called $\mu$SPEC models. Despite the efficacy of this approach, a verification gap between $\mu$SPEC models, which must be manually written, and RTL limits the Check tools' broad adoption. Our prior work, called RTL2$\mu$SPEC, narrows this gap by automatically synthesizing formally verified $\mu$SPEC models from SystemVerilog implementations of simple processors. But, RTL2$\mu$SPEC assumes input designs where an instruction (e.g., a load) cannot exhibit more than one microarchitectural execution path ($\mu$PATH, e.g., a cache hit or miss path) -- its single-execution-path assumption. In this paper, we first propose an automated approach and tool, called RTL2M$\mu$PATH, that resolves RTL2$\mu$SPEC's single-execution-path assumption. Given a SystemVerilog processor design, instruction encodings, and modest design metadata, RTL2M$\mu$PATH finds a complete set of formally verified $\mu$PATHs for each instruction. Next, we make an important observation: an instruction that can exhibit more than one $\mu$PATH strongly indicates the presence of a microarchitectural side channel in the input design. Based on this observation, we then propose an automated approach and tool, called SynthLC, that extends RTL2M$\mu$PATH with a symbolic information flow analysis to support synthesizing a variety of formally verified leakage contracts from SystemVerilog processor designs. Leakage contracts are foundational to state-of-the-art defenses against hardware side-channel attacks. SynthLC is the first automated methodology for formally verifying hardware adherence to them., Comment: Authors' version; to appear in the Proceedings of the 57th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture 57th (MICRO 2024)
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- 2024
30. The James Webb Space Telescope Absolute Flux Calibration. III. Mid-Infrared Instrument Medium Resolution IFU Spectrometer
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Law, David R., Argyriou, Ioannis, Gordon, Karl D., Sloan, G. C., Gasman, Danny, Glasse, Alistair, Larson, Kirsten, Fletcher, Leigh N., Labiano, Alvaro, and Noriega-Crespo, Alberto
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the spectrophotometric calibration of the Mid-Infrared Instrument's (MIRI) Medium Resolution Spectrometer (MRS) aboard the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). This calibration is complicated by a time-dependent evolution in the effective throughput of the MRS; this evolution is strongest at long wavelengths, approximately a factor of 2 at 25um over the first two years of the mission. We model and correct for this evolution through regular observations of internal calibration lamps. Pixel flatfields are constructed from observations of the infrared-bright planetary nebula NGC 7027, and photometric aperture corrections from a combination of theoretical models and observations of bright standard stars. We tie the 5--18um flux calibration to high signal/noise (S/N; ~ 600-1000) observations of the O9 V star 10 Lacertae, scaled to the average calibration factor of nine other spectrophotometric standards. We calibrate the 18--28um spectral range using a combination of observations of main belt asteroid 515 Athalia and the circumstellar disk around young stellar object SAO 206462. The photometric repeatability is stable to better than 1% in the wavelength range 5--18um, and the S/N ratio of the delivered spectra is consistent between bootstrapped measurements, pipeline estimates, and theoretical predictions. The MRS point-source calibration agrees with that of the MIRI imager to within 1% from 7 to 21um and is approximately 1% fainter than prior Spitzer observations, while the extended source calibration agrees well with prior Cassini/CIRS and Voyager/IRIS observations., Comment: 26 pages, 28 figures. Revised version accepted for publication by AJ
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- 2024
31. A patchy CO$_2$ exosphere on Ganymede revealed by the James Webb Space Telescope
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Bockelée-Morvan, Dominique, Poch, Olivier, Leblanc, Françcois, Zakharov, Vladimir, Lellouch, Emmanuel, Quirico, Eric, de Pater, Imke, Fouchet, Thierry, Rodriguez-Ovalle, Pablo, Roth, Lorenz, Merlin, Frédéric, Duling, Stefan, Saur, Joachim, Masson, Adrien, Fry, Patrick, Trumbo, Samantha, Brown, Michael, Cartwright, Richard, Cazaux, Stéphanie, de Kleer, Katherine, Fletcher, Leigh N., Milby, Zachariah, Moingeon, Audrey, Mura, Alessandro, Orton, Glenn S., Schmitt, Bernard, Tosi, Federico, and Wong, Michael H.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Jupiter's icy moon Ganymede has a tenuous exosphere produced by sputtering and possibly sublimation of water ice. To date, only atomic hydrogen and oxygen have been directly detected in this exosphere. Here, we present observations of Ganymede's CO$_2$ exosphere obtained with the James Webb Space Telescope. CO$_2$ gas is observed over different terrain types, mainly over those exposed to intense Jovian plasma irradiation, as well as over some bright or dark terrains. Despite warm surface temperatures, the CO$_2$ abundance over equatorial subsolar regions is low. CO$_2$ vapor has the highest abundance over the north polar cap of the leading hemisphere, reaching a surface pressure of 1 pbar. From modeling we show that the local enhancement observed near 12 h local time in this region can be explained by the presence of cold traps enabling CO$_2$ adsorption. However, whether the release mechanism in this high-latitude region is sputtering or sublimation remains unclear. The north polar cap of the leading hemisphere also has unique surface-ice properties, probably linked to the presence of the large atmospheric CO2 excess over this region. These CO2 molecules might have been initially released in the atmosphere after the radiolysis of CO$_2$ precursors, or from the sputtering of CO$_2$ embedded in the H$_2$O ice bedrock. Dark terrains (regiones), more widespread on the north versus south polar regions, possibly harbor CO$_2$ precursors. CO$_2$ molecules would then be redistributed via cold trapping on ice-rich terrains of the polar cap and be diurnally released and redeposited on these terrains. Ganymede's CO$_2$ exosphere highlights the complexity of surface-atmosphere interactions on Jupiter's icy Galilean moons., Comment: 21 pages, 21 figures, Accepted as a Letter in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2024
- Full Text
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32. A Simple and Adaptive Confidence Interval when Nuisance Parameters Satisfy an Inequality
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Cox, Gregory Fletcher
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Economics - Econometrics - Abstract
Inequalities may appear in many models. They can be as simple as assuming a parameter is nonnegative, possibly a regression coefficient or a treatment effect. This paper focuses on the case that there is only one inequality and proposes a confidence interval that is particularly attractive, called the inequality-imposed confidence interval (IICI). The IICI is simple. It does not require simulations or tuning parameters. The IICI is adaptive. It reduces to the usual confidence interval (calculated by adding and subtracting the standard error times the $1 - \alpha/2$ standard normal quantile) when the inequality is sufficiently slack. When the inequality is sufficiently violated, the IICI reduces to an equality-imposed confidence interval (the usual confidence interval for the submodel where the inequality holds with equality). Also, the IICI is uniformly valid and has (weakly) shorter length than the usual confidence interval; it is never longer. The first empirical application considers a linear regression when a coefficient is known to be nonpositive. A second empirical application considers an instrumental variables regression when the endogeneity of a regressor is known to be nonnegative.
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- 2024
33. Model-free Rayleigh weight from x-ray Thomson scattering measurements
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Dornheim, Tobias, Bellenbaum, Hannah M., Bethkenhagen, Mandy, Hansen, Stephanie B., Böhme, Maximilian P., Döppner, Tilo, Fletcher, Luke B., Gawne, Thomas, Gericke, Dirk O., Hamel, Sebastien, Kraus, Dominik, MacDonald, Michael J., Moldabekov, Zhandos A., Preston, Thomas R., Redmer, Ronald, Schörner, Maximilian, Schwalbe, Sebastian, Tolias, Panagiotis, and Vorberger, Jan
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
X-ray Thomson scattering (XRTS) has emerged as a powerful tool for the diagnostics of matter under extreme conditions. In principle, it gives one access to important system parameters such as the temperature, density, and ionization state, but the interpretation of the measured XRTS intensity usually relies on theoretical models and approximations. In this work, we show that it is possible to extract the Rayleigh weight -- a key property that describes the electronic localization around the ions -- directly from the experimental data without the need for any model calculations or simulations. As a practical application, we consider an experimental measurement of strongly compressed Be at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [D\"oppner \emph{et al.}, \textit{Nature} \textbf{618}, 270-275 (2023)]. In addition to being interesting in their own right, our results will open up new avenues for diagnostics from \emph{ab initio} simulations, help to further constrain existing chemical models, and constitute a rigorous benchmark for theory and simulations.
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- 2024
34. Realizing tunable Fermi level in SnTe by defect control
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Onipede, Bamidele Oluwagbenga, Metcalf, Matthew, Fletcher, Nisha, and Cai, Hui
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
The tuning of the Fermi level in tin telluride, a topological crystalline insulator, is essential for accessing its unique surface states and optimizing its electronic properties for applications such as spintronics and quantum computing. In this study, we demonstrate that the Fermi level in tin telluride can be effectively modulated by controlling the tin concentration during chemical vapor deposition synthesis. By introducing tin-rich conditions, we observed a blue shift in the X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy core-level peaks of both tin and tellurium, indicating an upward shift in the Fermi level. This shift is corroborated by a decrease in work function values measured via ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, confirming the suppression of Sn vacancies. Our findings provide a low-cost, scalable method to achieve tunable Fermi levels in tin telluride, offering a significant advancement in the development of materials with tailored electronic properties for next-generation technological applications.
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- 2024
35. Photospheric signatures of CME onset
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Ottupara, Aslam, MacTaggart, David, Williams, Tom, Fletcher, Lyndsay, and Romano, Paolo
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are solar eruptions that involve large-scale changes to the magnetic topology of an active region. There exists a range of models for CME onset which are based on twisted or sheared magnetic field above a polarity inversion line (PIL). We present observational evidence that topological changes at PILs, in the photosphere, form a key part of CME onset, as implied by many models. In particular, we study the onset of 30 CMEs and investigate topological changes in the photosphere by calculating the magnetic winding flux, using the \texttt{ARTop} code. By matching the times and locations of winding signatures with CME observations produced by the \texttt{ALMANAC} code, we confirm that these signatures are indeed associated with CMEs. Therefore, as well as presenting evidence that changes in magnetic topology at the photosphere are a common signature of CME onset, our approach also allows for the finding of the source location of a CME within an active region., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS
- Published
- 2024
36. Multi-faceted Sensory Substitution for Curb Alerting: A Pilot Investigation in Persons with Blindness and Low Vision
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Ruan, Ligao, Hamilton-Fletcher, Giles, Beheshti, Mahya, Hudson, Todd E, Porfiri, Maurizio, and Rizzo, JR
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Curbs -- the edge of a raised sidewalk at the point where it meets a street -- crucial in urban environments where they help delineate safe pedestrian zones, from dangerous vehicular lanes. However, curbs themselves are significant navigation hazards, particularly for people who are blind or have low vision (pBLV). The challenges faced by pBLV in detecting and properly orientating themselves for these abrupt elevation changes can lead to falls and serious injuries. Despite recent advancements in assistive technologies, the detection and early warning of curbs remains a largely unsolved challenge. This paper aims to tackle this gap by introducing a novel, multi-faceted sensory substitution approach hosted on a smart wearable; the platform leverages an RGB camera and an embedded system to capture and segment curbs in real time and provide early warning and orientation information. The system utilizes YOLO (You Only Look Once) v8 segmentation model, trained on our custom curb dataset for the camera input. The output of the system consists of adaptive auditory beeps, abstract sonification, and speech, conveying information about the relative distance and orientation of curbs. Through human-subjects experimentation, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the system as compared to the white cane. Results show that our system can provide advanced warning through a larger safety window than the cane, while offering nearly identical curb orientation information.
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- 2024
37. Haptics-based, higher-order Sensory Substitution designed for Object Negotiation in Blindness and Low Vision: Virtual Whiskers
- Author
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Feng, Junchi, Hamilton-Fletcher, Giles, Hudson, Todd E, Beheshti, Mahya, Porfiri, Maurizio, and Rizzo, John-Ross
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
People with blindness and low vision (pBLV) face challenges in navigating. Mobility aids are crucial for enhancing independence and safety. This paper presents an electronic travel aid that leverages a haptic-based, higher-order sensory substitution approach called Virtual Whiskers, designed to help pBLV negotiate obstacles effectively, efficiently, and safely. Virtual Whiskers is equipped with a plurality of modular vibration units that operate independently to deliver haptic feedback to users. Virtual Whiskers features two navigation modes: open path mode and depth mode, each addressing obstacle negotiation from different perspectives. The open path mode detects and delineate a traversable area within an analyzed field of view. Then, it guides the user through to the traversable direction adaptive vibratory feedback. The depth mode assists users in negotiating obstacles by highlighting spatial areas with prominent obstacles via haptic feedback. We recruited 10 participants with blindness or low vision to participate in user testing for Virtual Whiskers. Results show that the device significantly reduces idle periods and decreases the number of cane contacts. Virtual Whiskers is a promising obstacle negotiation strategy that demonstrating great potential to assist with pBLV navigation.
- Published
- 2024
38. An analogue of Green's Functions for Quasiregular Maps
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Broderius, Mark and Fletcher, Alastair
- Subjects
Mathematics - Dynamical Systems ,Mathematics - Complex Variables - Abstract
Green's functions are highly useful in analyzing the dynamical behavior of polynomials in their escaping set. The aim of this paper is to construct an analogue of Green's functions for planar quasiregular mappings of degree two and constant complex dilatation. These Green's functions are dynamically natural, in that they semi-conjugate our quasiregular mappings to the real squaring map. However, they do not share the same regularity properties as Green's functions of polynomials. We use these Green's functions to investigate properties of the boundary of the escaping set and give several examples to illustrate behavior that does not occur for the dynamics of quadratic polynomials., Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
39. Sleeper Social Bots: a new generation of AI disinformation bots are already a political threat
- Author
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Doshi, Jaiv, Novacic, Ines, Fletcher, Curtis, Borges, Mats, Zhong, Elea, Marino, Mark C., Gan, Jason, Mager, Sophia, Sprague, Dane, and Xia, Melinda
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
This paper presents a study on the growing threat of "sleeper social bots," AI-driven social bots in the political landscape, created to spread disinformation and manipulate public opinion. We based the name sleeper social bots on their ability to pass as humans on social platforms, where they're embedded like political "sleeper" agents, making them harder to detect and more disruptive. To illustrate the threat these bots pose, our research team at the University of Southern California constructed a demonstration using a private Mastodon server, where ChatGPT-driven bots, programmed with distinct personalities and political viewpoints, engaged in discussions with human participants about a fictional electoral proposition. Our preliminary findings suggest these bots can convincingly pass as human users, actively participate in conversations, and effectively disseminate disinformation. Moreover, they can adapt their arguments based on the responses of human interlocutors, showcasing their dynamic and persuasive capabilities. College students participating in initial experiments failed to identify our bots, underscoring the urgent need for increased awareness and education about the dangers of AI-driven disinformation, and in particular, disinformation spread by bots. The implications of our research point to the significant challenges posed by social bots in the upcoming 2024 U.S. presidential election and beyond.
- Published
- 2024
40. Quantifying gendered citation imbalance in computer science conferences
- Author
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Nakajima, Kazuki, Sasaki, Yuya, Tokuno, Sohei, and Fletcher, George
- Subjects
Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Computer Science - Digital Libraries - Abstract
The number of citations received by papers often exhibits imbalances in terms of author attributes such as country of affiliation and gender. While recent studies have quantified citation imbalance in terms of the authors' gender in journal papers, the computer science discipline, where researchers frequently present their work at conferences, may exhibit unique patterns in gendered citation imbalance. Additionally, understanding how network properties in citations influence citation imbalances remains challenging due to a lack of suitable reference models. In this paper, we develop a family of reference models for citation networks and investigate gender imbalance in citations between papers published in computer science conferences. By deploying these reference models, we found that homophily in citations is strongly associated with gendered citation imbalance in computer science, whereas heterogeneity in the number of citations received per paper has a relatively minor association with it. Furthermore, we found that the gendered citation imbalance is most pronounced in papers published in the highest-ranked conferences, is present across different subfields, and extends to citation-based rankings of papers. Our study provides a framework for investigating associations between network properties and citation imbalances, aiming to enhance our understanding of the structure and dynamics of citations between research publications., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, and 7 tables. This work has been accepted as a full paper in the AAAI/ACM conference on Artificial Intelligence, Ethics and Society (AIES) 2024
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- 2024
41. Variance of the distance to the boundary of convex domains in $\mathbb{R}^{2}$ and $\mathbb{R}^{3}$
- Author
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Fletcher, Alastair N. and Fletcher, Alexander G.
- Subjects
Mathematics - General Mathematics ,52A10, 52A15, 52A20 - Abstract
In this paper, we give for the first time a systematic study of the variance of the distance to the boundary for arbitrary bounded convex domains in $\mathbb{R}^2$ and $\mathbb{R}^3$. In dimension two, we show that this function is strictly convex, which leads to a new notion of the centre of such a domain, called the variocentre. In dimension three, we investigate the relationship between the variance and the distance to the boundary, which mathematically justifies claims made for a recently developed algorithm for classifying interior and exterior points with applications in biology., Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2024
42. New Medieval Literatures. Volume I by <given-names>Wendy</given-names> <surname>Scase</surname>, <given-names>Rita</given-names> <surname>Copeland</surname>, <given-names>David</given-names> <surname>Lawton</surname> (review)
- Author
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Fletcher, Alan J.
- Published
- 2022
43. Discordance between MR enterography and endoscopic detection of Crohn’s disease ileal strictures: evidence to inform recommendations
- Author
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Yalon, Mariana, Mohammadinejad, Payam, Inoue, Akitoshi, Takahashi, Hiroaki, Ehman, Eric C., Esquivel, Andrea, Fletcher, Ella C., Behnke, Cam J., Lee, Yong S., Fidler, Jeff L., Hansel, Stephanie L., Jairath, Vipul, Feagan, Brian G., Rieder, Florian, Baker, Mark E., Bruining, David H., and Fletcher, Joel G.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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44. Frameworks and Challenges for Implementing Machine Learning Curriculum in Secondary Education
- Author
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Fletcher Wadsworth, Josh Blaney, Matthew Springsteen, Bruce Coburn, Nischal Khanal, Tessa Rodgers, Chase Livingston, and Suresh Muknahallipatna
- Abstract
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and, more specifically, Machine Learning (ML) methodologies have successfully tailored commercial applications for decades. However, the recent profound success of large language models like ChatGPT and the enormous subsequent funding from governments and investors have positioned ML to emerge as a paradigm-shifting technology across numerous domains in the coming years. To cultivate a competent workforce and prepare students for success in this new AI-focused evolving world, the integration of ML is proposed to begin in compulsory education rather than in college courses or expensive boot camps. Unfortunately, ML is a complex and intimidating topic for high school teachers to engage with, let alone high school students. Based on our experiences hosting Machine Learning for High School Teachers (ML4HST) workshops for teachers teaching ML topics at our institution, we present in this paper various considerations for educating educators on the topic of ML. In particular, we discuss (a) overarching pedagogic strategies, (b) accessibility of resources such as computational hardware and datasets, (c) balancing theory and implementation, (d) appropriate selection of topics and activities for fostering understanding and engagement, and perhaps most importantly, (e) a compilation of pitfalls to avoid. Synthesizing these insights, we propose a framework for successfully empowering educators to introduce ML in the classroom.
- Published
- 2024
45. Disparate Effects of Disruptive Events on Children
- Author
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Florencia Torche, Jason Fletcher, and Jennie E. Brand
- Abstract
Disruptive events such as economic recessions, natural disasters, job loss, and divorce are highly prevalent among American families. These events can have a long-lasting impact when experienced during childhood, potentially altering academic achievement, socioemotional well-being, health and development, and later life socioeconomic status. Much research has considered the overall impact of disruptive events on children's lives, but the consequences of disruption also vary across groups. The same event may have profound negative consequences for some groups, minor or no impact for others, and even be a generative or positive turning point for other groups. This issue focuses on the disparate consequences of disruptive events on children. We consider theoretical approaches accounting for effect heterogeneity and methodological challenges in identifying unequal impacts. We also review an emerging multidisciplinary literature accounting for variation in the impact of disruption across several widely studied domains that affect children's life chances, including economic, household, educational, health, and environmental events.
- Published
- 2024
46. When there was happiness in a hellhole and misery in Jerusalem
- Author
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Fletcher, Perry
- Published
- 2024
47. Outreach: Impact on Skills and Future Careers of Postgraduate Practitioners Working with the Bristol ChemLabS Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning
- Author
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Timothy G. Harrison, Shirin Alexander, Nick Barron, Jessica Bonham, Marisol Correa Ascencio, Andrew Chapman, Ben Cheesman, Matthew England, Jane Fletcher, Stephanie Flynn, Phyllis Fiadzomor, James Fothergill, Claudio Greco, Ash Griffith, Kate Hanford, Preeti Kaur, M. Anwar H. Khan, Rebecca Ingle, Gordon Inglis, Adele Laurain, Emma Liddle, Marcus I. Medley, Ikenna Ndukwe, Alison Rivett, Rebecca Sage, Zoe Schnepp, Linda Sellou, Katherine E. Shaw, Steve Street, Godiraone Tatolo, Rachel Wellington, and Dudley E. Shallcross
- Abstract
Postgraduate engagement in delivering outreach activities is more commonplace than it once was. However, the impact on postgraduate students (typically studying for a Ph.D. degree) of participating in the delivery of these outreach activities has rarely, if ever, been recorded. The Bristol ChemLabS Outreach program has been running for ca. 17 years, and in that time, many postgraduate students have been involved (approximately 500), with around 250 typically for up to 3 years. We sought to investigate the impact of outreach engagement on postgraduate alumni who were involved in the program for over 3 years (32) and how the experiences and training of the outreach program had impacted on their careers postgraduation. Thirty of the 32 postgraduates engaged and ~70% reported that their outreach experience had influenced their decision making on future careers. Many respondents reported that the skills and experiences gained through outreach participation had contributed to success in applying for and interviewing at their future employers. All respondents reported that outreach had helped them to develop key skills that were valued in the workplace, specifically, communication, teamwork, organizational skills, time planning, event planning, and event management. Rather than a pleasant distraction or an opportunity to supplement income, all participants noted that they felt there were many additional benefits and that this was time well spent. Outreach should not be viewed as a distraction to science research but rather an important enhancement to it provided that the program is well constructed and seeks to develop those delivering the outreach activities.
- Published
- 2023
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48. Adverse Childhood Experiences and Academic Performance among U.S. Students: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Author
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Rachel S. Tyrone, Lauren M. Fletcher, Courtney S. Walker, Caroline Compretta, Paul Burns, and Jennifer C. Reneker
- Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with disparate health and educational outcomes. The objective of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to determine the relationship between ACEs and academic performance among U.S. children and adolescents. A total of 20 articles were included for a descriptive synthesis and 11 articles were included in the quantitative synthesis. Among the 11 studies, we found a weak, negative correlation between ACEs and academic performance. Further research is needed to explore all the potential adverse exposures that could impact academic outcomes and factors that might mediate the effects of ACEs on academic performance.
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- 2024
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49. The Critical Role of Instructional Response in Defining and Identifying Students with Dyslexia: A Case for Updating Existing Definitions
- Author
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Sharon Vaughn, Jeremy Miciak, Nathan Clemens, and Jack M. Fletcher
- Abstract
We address defining and identifying students with dyslexia within the context of multi-tier systems of support (MTSS). We review proposed definitions of dyslexia, evidence for proposed definitional attributes, and emphasize the role of instructional response in identifying students with dyslexia. We identify dyslexia as individuals with specific deficits in reading and spelling single words combined with inadequate response to evidence-based instruction. We propose a hybrid identification process in which assessment is utilized within school-wide MTSS allowing for integration of routinely collected progress monitoring data as well integrating with more formal diagnostic measures. This proposed "hybrid" method demonstrates strong evidence for valid decision-making and directly informs instruction. We close proposing a revised definition of dyslexia that incorporates these elements.
- Published
- 2024
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50. Guidelines for Sensory Havens in Autism and Sensory-Friendly Events
- Author
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Tina Fletcher, Alicia Chen, Ashlee Norris, Edgar Pizarro, Jason Tran, and Megan Tripp
- Abstract
Autism and sensory-friendly events are an increasingly common feature of community life. One predictable aspect of these events is the presence of sensory havens, which serve as a respite or self-regulation zone for neurodiverse children, family, friends, and, occasionally, their service animals. When research evidence contributes to the design of these spaces, they can positively impact the length of time people attend events and the quality of their experiences. The authors detail autism architecture guidelines and sensory regulation research, and provide practical strategies for designing and operating havens.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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