scholarly journals On contact graphs of totally separable packings in low dimensions

2018 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 266-280
Author(s):  
Károly Bezdek ◽  
Márton Naszódi
Fractals ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (04) ◽  
pp. 1550042 ◽  
Author(s):  
CÉCILE MONTHUS

For Gaussian Spin-Glasses in low dimensions, we introduce a simple Strong Disorder renormalization at zero temperature in order to construct ground states for Periodic and Anti-Periodic boundary conditions. The numerical study in dimensions [Formula: see text] (up to sizes [Formula: see text]) and [Formula: see text] (up to sizes [Formula: see text]) yields that Domain Walls are fractal of dimensions [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text], respectively.


Author(s):  
Zakir Deniz ◽  
Esther Galby ◽  
Andrea Munaro ◽  
Bernard Ries
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
pp. 223-249
Author(s):  
Shavkat Ayupov ◽  
Bakhrom Omirov ◽  
Isamiddin Rakhimov

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. 1642-1657
Author(s):  
Cian Cummins ◽  
Guillaume Pino ◽  
Daniele Mantione ◽  
Guillaume Fleury

Recently engineered high χ-low N block copolymers for nanolithography are evaluated. Synthetic routes together with thin film processing strategies are highlighted that could enable the relentless scaling for logic technologies at sub-10 nanometres.


2017 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 1067-1090 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolás García Trillos ◽  
Dejan Slepčev ◽  
James von Brecht

Abstract We investigate the estimation of the perimeter of a set by a graph cut of a random geometric graph. For Ω ⊆ D = (0, 1)d with d ≥ 2, we are given n random independent and identically distributed points on D whose membership in Ω is known. We consider the sample as a random geometric graph with connection distance ε > 0. We estimate the perimeter of Ω (relative to D) by the, appropriately rescaled, graph cut between the vertices in Ω and the vertices in D ∖ Ω. We obtain bias and variance estimates on the error, which are optimal in scaling with respect to n and ε. We consider two scaling regimes: the dense (when the average degree of the vertices goes to ∞) and the sparse one (when the degree goes to 0). In the dense regime, there is a crossover in the nature of the approximation at dimension d = 5: we show that in low dimensions d = 2, 3, 4 one can obtain confidence intervals for the approximation error, while in higher dimensions one can obtain only error estimates for testing the hypothesis that the perimeter is less than a given number.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A5-A5
Author(s):  
E Chachos ◽  
L Shen ◽  
S Maskevich ◽  
Y Yap ◽  
J Stone ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Sleep and affect are closely related. Late adolescence and emerging adulthood are associated with unique sleep patterns and risk for mood disturbances. This daily study examined whether dysfunctional beliefs and attitudes about sleep (DBAS), a modifiable cognitive vulnerability factor, moderated daily sleep-affect associations. Methods 421 community adolescents (n=205, 54.1% females, M±SDage=16.9±0.87) and emerging adults (n=216, 73.1% females, M±SDage=21.31±1.73) self-reported sleep and affect (adapted 12-item PANAS) and wore an actigraphy device for 7–28 days, providing >5000 daily observations. Linear mixed models tested whether DBAS moderated daily associations between self-reported and actigraphic sleep duration (total sleep time), sleep efficiency, and next-day affect on between and within-person levels. Both valence (positive/negative) and arousal (high/low) dimensions of affect were examined. Covariates included age, gender, ethnicity, day of week, and previous-day affect. Results DBAS significantly moderated associations between average sleep and next-day positive, but not negative, affect. Individuals with higher DBAS had significantly lower high arousal positive affect as average sleep duration (actigraphic: p=.002; self-reported: p=.014) and efficiency (actigraphic: p=.014) decreased. Similar moderation was found for average self-reported sleep duration and low arousal positive affect (p=.032). No significant results emerged on the within-person level. Previous-day affect significantly predicted next-day affect across models and outcomes (all p<.001). Discussion Adolescents and emerging adults with more negative views about sleep may experience dampened positive affect in shorter, or poorer, sleep periods. DBAS may constitute a modifiable factor increasing affective vulnerability on a global but not day-to-day level, and a therapeutic target for sleep-related affect disturbances in youths.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 983-1006
Author(s):  
M. Kopecky ◽  
P. Vojtas

Our customer preference model is based on aggregation of partly linear relaxations of value filters often used in e-commerce applications. Relaxation is motivated by the Analytic Hierarchy Processing method and combining fuzzy information in web accessible databases. In low dimensions our method is well suited also for data visualization. The process of translating models (user behavior) to programs (learned recommendation) is formalized by Challenge-Response Framework ChRF. ChRF resembles remote process call and reduction in combinatorial search problems. In our case, the model is automatically translated to a program using spatial database features. This enables us to define new metrics with visual motivation. We extend the conference paper with inductive ChRF, new representation of user and an additional method and metric. We provide experiments with synthetic data (items) and users.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Indu R. U. Churchill ◽  
M. Elhamdadi ◽  
M. Green ◽  
A. Makhlouf

AbstractWe introduce and study ternary f-distributive structures, Ternary f-quandles and more generally their higher n-ary analogues. A classification of ternary f-quandles is provided in low dimensions. Moreover, we study extension theory and introduce a cohomology theory for ternary, and more generally n-ary, f-quandles. Furthermore, we give some computational examples.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document