coincidence effect
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Cognition ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 210 ◽  
pp. 104576
Author(s):  
Gavin W. Jenkins ◽  
Larissa K. Samuelson ◽  
Will Penny ◽  
John P. Spencer

2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 8758-8782
Author(s):  
DongMei Li ◽  
◽  
Rui-xue Zhang ◽  
Qian Xie ◽  
Qi Wang ◽  
...  

<abstract> <p>Based on the mechanism of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia treatment methods (light, exchange blood and drugs), three types of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia treatment mathematical models are established, and the expressions of the model solutions are given in this paper. By applying clinical test data and numerical approximation algorithm, the relevant parameters in the model can be estimated. According to the standards of "Expert Consensus", two treatment plans are designed, which are 1) the combined transfusion and phototherapy treatment plan and 2) the combined treatment plan of drugs, transfusion and phototherapy. The results of the program operation are numerically simulated and compared with the treatment data of clinical cases. It is found that the coincidence effect is important, which verified the rationality of the model. The model results can track and predict the changes of bilirubin levels in real-time, which provides a theoretical basis for the clinical design of treatment plans.</p> </abstract>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katsuya Matsuzaki

For thick panels under certain conditions, continually low values of transmission loss can be shown in the high frequency range. This effect has been thought to be due to the shear type wave coincidence effect. In this work, the dispersion properties of thick panels are precisely investigated to get a right explanation for this phenomenon and to determine conditions in which this phenomenon occurs. It is also shown that lowering the stiffness of the panels is not always an effective approach to improving the transmission loss for thick panels though the approach is well-known to be effective for thin panels and has been also proposed for thick panels.


Author(s):  
Y. X. Mu ◽  
G. Q. Zhou ◽  
X. Zhou ◽  
J. Gao ◽  
X. Y. Peng

Abstract. This paper mainly uses manual calibration technology to check the elements Yaw, Pitch and Roll (YPR) in the LiDAR DGPS/IMU system and obtained the error value. Combined with the error angle, the external azimuth angle elements Kappa, Omega and Phi required by photogrammetry are obtained. The paper points out that the placement angle error will have a serious impact on the LiDAR foot position. Therefore, this paper puts forward a method to check the placement angle of the steeple roof and flat straight highway, and gives the design scheme of the optimized route to reduce the number of flights. This paper focuses on the specific process of YPR calibration, and gives a mathematical calibration model based on the influence of attitude angles Yaw, Pitch and Roll on the LiDAR foot during the flight. The placement angle error is obtained after the calibration, and the error angle matrix is used to convert the elements YPR and OPK. After checking and error correction, the point cloud obtained from adjacent airlines have achieved better coincidence effect. The experimental results show that the theory and method of YPR element calibration are correct and feasible, which simplifies the conversion process of YPR and OPK. Compared with the traditional calibration method that requires control points, this method can greatly improve the efficiency and reliability of the inspection.


2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (05) ◽  
pp. 938-954
Author(s):  
Lauren L. EMBERSON ◽  
Nicole LONCAR ◽  
Carolyn MAZZEI ◽  
Isaac TREVES ◽  
Adele E. GOLDBERG

AbstractLearners preferentially interpret novel nouns at the basic level (‘dog’) rather than at a more narrow level (‘Labrador’). This ‘basic-level bias’ is mitigated by statistics: children and adults are more likely to interpret a novel noun at a more narrow label if they witness ‘a suspicious coincidence’ – the word applied to three exemplars of the same narrow category. Independent work has found that exemplar typicality influences learners’ inferences and category learning. We bring these lines of work together to investigate whether the content (typicality) of a single exemplar affects the level of interpretation of words and whether an atypicality effect interacts with input statistics. Results demonstrate that both four- to five-year-olds and adults tend to assign a narrower interpretation to a word if it is exemplified by an atypical category member. This atypicality effect is roughly as strong as, and independent of, the suspicious coincidence effect, which is replicated.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 2039-2047 ◽  
Author(s):  
Molly L. Lewis ◽  
Michael C. Frank

Imagine hearing someone call a particular dalmatian a “dax.” The meaning of the novel noun dax is ambiguous between the subordinate meaning (dalmatian) and the basic-level meaning (dog). Yet both children and adults successfully learn noun meanings at the intended level of abstraction from similar evidence. Xu and Tenenbaum (2007a) provided an explanation for this apparent puzzle: Learners assume that examples are sampled from the true underlying category (strong sampling), making cases in which there are more observed exemplars more consistent with a subordinate meaning than cases in which there are fewer exemplars (the suspicious-coincidence effect). Authors of more recent work (Spencer, Perone, Smith, & Samuelson, 2011) have questioned the relevance of this finding, however, arguing that the effect occurs only when the examples are presented to the learner simultaneously. Across a series of 12 experiments ( N = 600), we systematically manipulated several experimental parameters that varied across previous studies, and we successfully replicated the findings of both sets of authors. Taken together, our data suggest that the suspicious-coincidence effect in fact is robust to presentation timing of examples but is sensitive to another factor that varied in the Spencer et al. (2011) experiments, namely, trial order. Our work highlights the influence of pragmatics on behavior in experimental tasks.


Author(s):  
Cui Mao ◽  
Yibao Liu ◽  
Liguo Zhang ◽  
Jiejuan Tong ◽  
Bing Xia ◽  
...  

The efficient and accurate burn-up measurement of the spherical fuel element is the key component of the operation of the pebble bed high temperature gas-cooled reactor. The accuracy of the method that determine burnup by the activity of Cs-137 degrades due to operation characteristics of HTR-10. HTR-10, as an test reactor, operated on and off during the past years. It stayed shutdown more than power operation. In order to improve the measurement accuracy of Cs-137 activity and enhance the possibility to detect radionuclides with low activity, which can be used to correct the classic burnup assay method, a new measurement system is now discussed using anti-coincidence technology, which suppresses the Compton plateau. In this paper, Geant4 is used to simulate the anticoincidence measurement process taking high purity germanium γ-ray spectrometer as main detector and plastic scintillator as the annular detector. By analyzing the signal to noise ratio in different detection scenarios with all kinds of shape parameters of the annular detector, the annular detector with the best anti-coincidence effect are optimaized. The above research results provide an important theoretical basis for the construction of online burn-up measurement system based on anti-Compton technology.


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