3,541 results on '"Lynn, P"'
Search Results
2. Texas High School Counselors' Response to the Financial Aid Application Graduation Requirement
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American Institutes for Research (AIR), Lynn Mellor, and Kamal Middlebrook
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Universal Free Application for Financial Student Aid (FAFSA) policies are being implemented in states as a way to eliminate financial barriers to college enrollment and completion for underrepresented student groups. High school counselors play a critical role in helping students complete this graduation requirement. Texas adopted a universal FAFSA policy in 2019. This study summarizes findings from a survey administered to lead counselors in public high schools in Texas about their experiences implementing the policy, as well as the kinds of training, support, and resources they received to assist students and families.
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- 2024
3. Considerations with stacking absorption spectra: cold HI gas in cirrus region of the Milky Way
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Lynn, Callum, Marchal, Antoine, McClure-Griffiths, N. M., Miville-Deschênes, Marc-Antoine, Murray, Claire E., Nguyen, Hiep, Dempsey, James, Di Teodoro, Enrico, van Loon, Jacco Th., Dickey, John M., Lee, Min-Young, Joncas, Gilles, Ma, Yik Ki, Pingel, Nickolas M., Stanimirović, Snežana, Kemp, Ian, Gibson, Steven, and Dénes, Helga
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use the Milky Way neutral hydrogen (HI) absorption and emission spectra from the Galactic Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (GASKAP) Phase II Pilot survey along with toy models to investigate the effects of stacking multicomponent spectra on measurements of peak optical depth and spin temperature. Shifting spectra by the peak in emission, 'primary' components shifted to 0 km s$^{-1}$ are correctly averaged. Additional components on individual sightlines are averaged with non-centred velocities, producing a broader and shallower 'secondary' component in the resulting stack. Peak optical depths and brightness temperatures of the secondary components from stacks are lower limits of their true average values due to the velocity offset of each component. The spin temperature however is well correlated with the truth since the velocity offset of components affects the emission and absorption spectra equally. Stacking 462 GASKAP absorption-emission spectral pairs, we detect a component with a spin temperature of 1320 $\pm$ 263 K, consistent with gas from the unstable neutral medium and higher than any previous GASKAP detection in this region. We also stack 2240 pilot survey spectra containing no Milky Way absorption, revealing a primary narrow and secondary broad component, with spin temperatures belonging to the cold neutral medium (CNM). Spatially binning and stacking the non-detections across the plane-of-sky by their distance from CNM absorption detections, the primary component's optical depth decreases with distance from known locations of cold gas. The spin temperature however remains stable in both components, over an approximate physical plane-of-sky distance of $\sim$ 100 pc., Comment: This paper has 16 pages, 17 figures. This paper has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journal
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- 2025
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4. Academic Case Reports Lack Diversity: Assessing the Presence and Diversity of Sociodemographic and Behavioral Factors related to Post COVID-19 Condition
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Florez, Juan Andres Medina, Raza, Shaina, Lynn, Rashida, Shakeri, Zahra, Smith, Brendan T., and Dolatabadi, Elham
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Understanding the prevalence, disparities, and symptom variations of Post COVID-19 Condition (PCC) for vulnerable populations is crucial to improving care and addressing intersecting inequities. This study aims to develop a comprehensive framework for integrating social determinants of health (SDOH) into PCC research by leveraging NLP techniques to analyze disparities and variations in SDOH representation within PCC case reports. Following construction of a PCC Case Report Corpus, comprising over 7,000 case reports from the LitCOVID repository, a subset of 709 reports were annotated with 26 core SDOH-related entity types using pre-trained named entity recognition (NER) models, human review, and data augmentation to improve quality, diversity and representation of entity types. An NLP pipeline integrating NER, natural language inference (NLI), trigram and frequency analyses was developed to extract and analyze these entities. Both encoder-only transformer models and RNN-based models were assessed for the NER objective. Fine-tuned encoder-only BERT models outperformed traditional RNN-based models in generalizability to distinct sentence structures and greater class sparsity. Exploratory analysis revealed variability in entity richness, with prevalent entities like condition, age, and access to care, and underrepresentation of sensitive categories like race and housing status. Trigram analysis highlighted frequent co-occurrences among entities, including age, gender, and condition. The NLI objective (entailment and contradiction analysis) showed attributes like "Experienced violence or abuse" and "Has medical insurance" had high entailment rates (82.4%-80.3%), while attributes such as "Is female-identifying," "Is married," and "Has a terminal condition" exhibited high contradiction rates (70.8%-98.5%).
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- 2025
5. The putative center in NGC 1052
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Baczko, Anne-Kathrin, Kadler, Matthias, Ros, Eduardo, Fromm, Christian M., Wielgus, Maciek, Perucho, Manel, Krichbaum, Thomas P., Baloković, Mislav, Blackburn, Lindy, Chan, Chi-kwan, Issaoun, Sara, Janssen, Michael, Ricci, Luca, Akiyama, Kazunori, Albentosa-Ruíz, Ezequiel, Alberdi, Antxon, Alef, Walter, Algaba, Juan Carlos, Anantua, Richard, Asada, Keiichi, Azulay, Rebecca, Bach, Uwe, Ball, David, Bandyopadhyay, Bidisha, Barrett, John, Bauböck, Michi, Benson, Bradford A., Bintley, Dan, Blundell, Raymond, Bouman, Katherine L., Bower, Geoffrey C., Boyce, Hope, Bremer, Michael, Brinkerink, Christiaan D., Brissenden, Roger, Britzen, Silke, Broderick, Avery E., Broguiere, Dominique, Bronzwaer, Thomas, Bustamante, Sandra, Byun, Do-Young, Carlstrom, John E., Ceccobello, Chiara, Chael, Andrew, Chang, Dominic O., Chatterjee, Koushik, Chatterjee, Shami, Chen, Ming-Tang, Chen, Yongjun, Cheng, Xiaopeng, Cho, Ilje, Christian, Pierre, Conroy, Nicholas S., Conway, John E., Cordes, James M., Crawford, Thomas M., Crew, Geoffrey B., Cruz-Osorio, Alejandro, Cui, Yuzhu, Dahale, Rohan, Davelaar, Jordy, De Laurentis, Mariafelicia, Deane, Roger, Dempsey, Jessica, Desvignes, Gregory, Dexter, Jason, Dhruv, Vedant, Dihingia, Indu K., Doeleman, Sheperd S., Dougall, Sean Taylor, Dzib, Sergio A., Eatough, Ralph P., Emami, Razieh, Falcke, Heino, Farah, Joseph, Fish, Vincent L., Fomalont, Edward, Ford, H. Alyson, Foschi, Marianna, Fraga-Encinas, Raquel, Freeman, William T., Friberg, Per, Fuentes, Antonio, Galison, Peter, Gammie, Charles F., García, Roberto, Gentaz, Olivier, Georgiev, Boris, Goddi, Ciriaco, Gold, Roman, Gómez-Ruiz, Arturo I., Gómez, José L., Gu, Minfeng, Gurwell, Mark, Hada, Kazuhiro, Haggard, Daryl, Haworth, Kari, Hecht, Michael H., Hesper, Ronald, Heumann, Dirk, Ho, Luis C., Ho, Paul, Honma, Mareki, Huang, Chih-Wei L., Huang, Lei, Hughes, David H., Impellizzeri, C. M. Violette, Inoue, Makoto, James, David J., Jannuzi, Buell T., Jeter, Britton, Jiang, Wu, Jiménez-Rosales, Alejandra, Johnson, Michael D., Jorstad, Svetlana, Joshi, Abhishek V., Jung, Taehyun, Karami, Mansour, Karuppusamy, Ramesh, Kawashima, Tomohisa, Keating, Garrett K., Kettenis, Mark, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Jae-Young, Kim, Jongsoo, Kim, Junhan, Kino, Motoki, Koay, Jun Yi, Kocherlakota, Prashant, Kofuji, Yutaro, Koyama, Shoko, Kramer, Carsten, Kramer, Joana A., Kramer, Michael, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, La Bella, Noemi, Lauer, Tod R., Lee, Daeyoung, Lee, Sang-Sung, Leung, Po Kin, Levis, Aviad, Li, Zhiyuan, Lico, Rocco, Lindahl, Greg, Lindqvist, Michael, Lisakov, Mikhail, Liu, Jun, Liu, Kuo, Liuzzo, Elisabetta, Lo, Wen-Ping, Lobanov, Andrei P., Loinard, Laurent, Lonsdale, Colin J., Lowitz, Amy E., Lu, Ru-Sen, MacDonald, Nicholas R., Mao, Jirong, Marchili, Nicola, Markoff, Sera, Marrone, Daniel P., Marscher, Alan P., Martí-Vidal, Iván, Matsushita, Satoki, Matthews, Lynn D., Medeiros, Lia, Menten, Karl M., Michalik, Daniel, Mizuno, Izumi, Mizuno, Yosuke, Moran, James M., Moriyama, Kotaro, Moscibrodzka, Monika, Mulaudzi, Wanga, Müller, Cornelia, Müller, Hendrik, Mus, Alejandro, Musoke, Gibwa, Myserlis, Ioannis, Nadolski, Andrew, Nagai, Hiroshi, Nagar, Neil M., Nair, Dhanya G., Nakamura, Masanori, Narayanan, Gopal, Natarajan, Iniyan, Nathanail, Antonios, Fuentes, Santiago Navarro, Neilsen, Joey, Neri, Roberto, Ni, Chunchong, Noutsos, Aristeidis, Nowak, Michael A., Oh, Junghwan, Okino, Hiroki, Sánchez, Héctor Raúl Olivares, Ortiz-León, Gisela N., Oyama, Tomoaki, Özel, Feryal, Palumbo, Daniel C. M., Paraschos, Georgios Filippos, Park, Jongho, Parsons, Harriet, Patel, Nimesh, Pen, Ue-Li, Pesce, Dominic W., Piétu, Vincent, Plambeck, Richard, PopStefanija, Aleksandar, Porth, Oliver, Pötzl, Felix M., Prather, Ben, Preciado-López, Jorge A., Principe, Giacomo, Psaltis, Dimitrios, Pu, Hung-Yi, Ramakrishnan, Venkatessh, Rao, Ramprasad, Rawlings, Mark G., Raymond, Alexander W., Ricarte, Angelo, Ripperda, Bart, Roelofs, Freek, Rogers, Alan, Romero-Cañizales, Cristina, Roshanineshat, Arash, Rottmann, Helge, Roy, Alan L., Ruiz, Ignacio, Ruszczyk, Chet, Rygl, Kazi L. J., Sánchez, Salvador, Sánchez-Argüelles, David, Sánchez-Portal, Miguel, Sasada, Mahito, Satapathy, Kaushik, Savolainen, Tuomas, Schloerb, F. Peter, Schonfeld, Jonathan, Schuster, Karl-Friedrich, Shao, Lijing, Shen, Zhiqiang, Small, Des, Sohn, Bong Won, SooHoo, Jason, Salas, León David Sosapanta, Souccar, Kamal, Stanway, Joshua S., Sun, He, Tazaki, Fumie, Tetarenko, Alexandra J., Tiede, Paul, Tilanus, Remo P. J., Titus, Michael, Torne, Pablo, Toscano, Teresa, Traianou, Efthalia, Trent, Tyler, Trippe, Sascha, Turk, Matthew, van Bemmel, Ilse, van Langevelde, Huib Jan, van Rossum, Daniel R., Vos, Jesse, Wagner, Jan, Ward-Thompson, Derek, Wardle, John, Washington, Jasmin E., Weintroub, Jonathan, Wharton, Robert, Wiik, Kaj, Witzel, Gunther, Wondrak, Michael F., Wong, George N., Wu, Qingwen, Yadlapalli, Nitika, Yamaguchi, Paul, Yfantis, Aristomenis, Yoon, Doosoo, Young, André, Young, Ken, Younsi, Ziri, Yu, Wei, Yuan, Feng, Yuan, Ye-Fei, Zensus, J. Anton, Zhang, Shuo, and Zhao, Guang-Yao
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Many active galaxies harbor powerful relativistic jets, however, the detailed mechanisms of their formation and acceleration remain poorly understood. To investigate the area of jet acceleration and collimation with the highest available angular resolution, we study the innermost region of the bipolar jet in the nearby low-ionization nuclear emission-line region (LINER) galaxy NGC 1052. We combined observations of NGC 1052 taken with VLBA, GMVA, and EHT over one week in the spring of 2017. For the first time, NGC 1052 was detected with the EHT, providing a size of the central region in-between both jet bases of 250 RS (Schwarzschild radii) perpendicular to the jet axes. This size estimate supports previous studies of the jets expansion profile which suggest two breaks of the profile at around 300 RS and 10000 RS distances to the core. Furthermore, we estimated the magnetic field to be 1.25 Gauss at a distance of 22 {\mu}as from the central engine by fitting a synchrotron-self absorption spectrum to the innermost emission feature, which shows a spectral turn-over at about 130 GHz. Assuming a purely poloidal magnetic field, this implies an upper limit on the magnetic field strength at the event horizon of 26000 Gauss, which is consistent with previous measurements. The complex, low-brightness, double-sided jet structure in NGC 1052 makes it a challenge to detect the source at millimeter (mm) wavelengths. However, our first EHT observations have demonstrated that detection is possible up to at least 230 GHz. This study offers a glimpse through the dense surrounding torus and into the innermost central region, where the jets are formed. This has enabled us to finally resolve this region and provide improved constraints on its expansion and magnetic field strength., Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, published in A&A
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- 2025
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6. VLA+VLBA to ngVLA Transition Option Concepts
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Corsi, Alessandra, Lazio, Joseph W., Baum, Stefi, Giacintucci, Simona, Heald, George, Henning, Patricia, Heywood, Ian, Iono, Daisuke, Johnson, Megan, Lam, Michael T., Leroy, Adam, Loinard, Laurent, Looney, Leslie, Matthews, Lynn, Molter, Ned, Murphy, Eric, Schinnerer, Eva, Tetarenko, Alex, Umana, Grazia, and van der Horst, Alexander
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
The next-generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) is intended to be the premier centimeter-wavelength facility for astronomy and astrophysics, building on the substantial scientific legacies of the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) and the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA). The ngVLA would open a new window on the Universe through ultra-sensitive imaging of thermal line and continuum emission to milliarcsecond resolution, while delivering unprecedented broad-band continuum imaging and polarimetry of non-thermal emission. The ngVLA would provide a critical electromagnetic complement to a suite of particle detectors and gravitational-wave observatories, as well as space- and ground-based telescopes operating from infrared to gamma-ray wavelengths, hence enabling multi-messenger and multi-band astronomy and astrophysics. Current construction plans call for the ngVLA to leverage some of the physical infrastructure of both the VLA and the VLBA, potentially drawing on overlapping personnel and information infrastructure. Multiple options can be envisioned for a VLA+VLBA to ngVLA transition. In order to assess risks and benefits of possible transition plans, the ngVLA project established the VLA+VLBA to ngVLA Transition Advisory Group (TAG). The primary deliverable from the TAG is a ``VLA+VLBA to ngVLA Transition Option Concepts'' report (this report) that includes a prioritized list of transition options., Comment: This report reflects an initial set of recommendations by the Transition Advisory Group for the ngVLA Project and is distributed for the purposes of obtaining community comment. Modification of this report in response to community comment is expected. Please submit your feedback at ngvla-transition-feedback@listmgr.nrao.edu
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- 2025
7. A multi-frequency study of sub-parsec jets with the Event Horizon Telescope
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Röder, Jan, Wielgus, Maciek, Lobanov, Andrei P., Krichbaum, Thomas P., Nair, Dhanya G., Lee, Sang-Sung, Ros, Eduardo, Fish, Vincent L., Blackburn, Lindy, Chan, Chi-kwan, Issaoun, Sara, Janssen, Michael, Johnson, Michael D., Doeleman, Sheperd S., Bower, Geoffrey C., Crew, Geoffrey B., Tilanus, Remo P. J., Savolainen, Tuomas, Impellizzeri, C. M. Violette, Alberdi, Antxon, Baczko, Anne-Kathrin, Gómez, José L., Lu, Ru-Sen, Paraschos, Georgios F., Traianou, Efthalia, Goddi, Ciriaco, Kim, Daewon, Lisakov, Mikhail, Kovalev, Yuri Y., Voitsik, Petr A., Sokolovsky, Kirill V., Akiyama, Kazunori, Albentosa-Ruíz, Ezequiel, Alef, Walter, Algaba, Juan Carlos, Anantua, Richard, Asada, Keiichi, Azulay, Rebecca, Bach, Uwe, Ball, David, Baloković, Mislav, Bandyopadhyay, Bidisha, Barrett, John, Bauböck, Michi, Benson, Bradford A., Bintley, Dan, Blundell, Raymond, Bouman, Katherine L., Bremer, Michael, Brinkerink, Christiaan D., Brissenden, Roger, Britzen, Silke, Broderick, Avery E., Broguiere, Dominique, Bronzwaer, Thomas, Bustamante, Sandra, Byun, Do-Young, Carlstrom, John E., Ceccobello, Chiara, Chael, Andrew, Chang, Dominic O., Chatterjee, Koushik, Chatterjee, Shami, Chen, Ming-Tang, Chen, Yongjun, Cheng, Xiaopeng, Cho, Ilje, Christian, Pierre, Conroy, Nicholas S., Conway, John E., Cordes, James M., Crawford, Thomas M., Cruz-Osorio, Alejandro, Cui, Yuzhu, Curd, Brandon, Dahale, Rohan, Davelaar, Jordy, De Laurentis, Mariafelicia, Deane, Roger, Dempsey, Jessica, Desvignes, Gregory, Dexter, Jason, Dhruv, Vedant, Dihingia, Indu K., Dougall, Sean Taylor, Dzib, Sergio A., Eatough, Ralph P., Emami, Razieh, Falcke, Heino, Farah, Joseph, Fomalont, Edward, Ford, H. Alyson, Foschi, Marianna, Fraga-Encinas, Raquel, Freeman, William T., Friberg, Per, Fromm, Christian M., Fuentes, Antonio, Galison, Peter, Gammie, Charles F., García, Roberto, Gentaz, Olivier, Georgiev, Boris, Gold, Roman, Gómez-Ruiz, Arturo I., Gu, Minfeng, Gurwell, Mark, Hada, Kazuhiro, Haggard, Daryl, Haworth, Kari, Hecht, Michael H., Hesper, Ronald, Heumann, Dirk, Ho, Luis C., Ho, Paul, Honma, Mareki, Huang, Chih-Wei L., Huang, Lei, Hughes, David H., Ikeda, Shiro, Inoue, Makoto, James, David J., Jannuzi, Buell T., Jeter, Britton, Jiang, Wu, Jiménez-Rosales, Alejandra, Jorstad, Svetlana, Joshi, Abhishek V., Jung, Taehyun, Karami, Mansour, Karuppusamy, Ramesh, Kawashima, Tomohisa, Keating, Garrett K., Kettenis, Mark, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Jae-Young, Kim, Jongsoo, Kim, Junhan, Kino, Motoki, Koay, Jun Yi, Kocherlakota, Prashant, Kofuji, Yutaro, Koyama, Shoko, Kramer, Carsten, Kramer, Joana A., Kramer, Michael, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, La Bella, Noemi, Lauer, Tod R., Lee, Daeyoung, Leung, Po Kin, Levis, Aviad, Li, Zhiyuan, Lico, Rocco, Lindahl, Greg, Lindqvist, Michael, Liu, Jun, Liu, Kuo, Liuzzo, Elisabetta, Lo, Wen-Ping, Loinard, Laurent, Lonsdale, Colin J., Lowitz, Amy E., MacDonald, Nicholas R., Mao, Jirong, Marchili, Nicola, Markoff, Sera, Marrone, Daniel P., Marscher, Alan P., Martí-Vidal, Iván, Matsushita, Satoki, Matthews, Lynn D., Medeiros, Lia, Menten, Karl M., Michalik, Daniel, Mizuno, Izumi, Mizuno, Yosuke, Moran, James M., Moriyama, Kotaro, Moscibrodzka, Monika, Mulaudzi, Wanga, Müller, Cornelia, Müller, Hendrik, Mus, Alejandro, Musoke, Gibwa, Myserlis, Ioannis, Nadolski, Andrew, Nagai, Hiroshi, Nagar, Neil M., Nakamura, Masanori, Narayanan, Gopal, Natarajan, Iniyan, Nathanail, Antonios, Fuentes, Santiago Navarro, Neilsen, Joey, Neri, Roberto, Ni, Chunchong, Noutsos, Aristeidis, Nowak, Michael A., Oh, Junghwan, Okino, Hiroki, Sánchez, Héctor R. Olivares, Ortiz-León, Gisela N., Oyama, Tomoaki, özel, Feryal, Palumbo, Daniel C. M., Park, Jongho, Parsons, Harriet, Patel, Nimesh, Pen, Ue-Li, Pesce, Dominic W., Piétu, Vincent, Plambeck, Richard, PopStefanija, Aleksandar, Porth, Oliver, Pötzl, Felix M., Prather, Ben, Preciado-López, Jorge A., Principe, Giacomo, Psaltis, Dimitrios, Pu, Hung-Yi, Ramakrishnan, Venkatessh, Rao, Ramprasad, Rawlings, Mark G., Ricarte, Angelo, Ripperda, Bart, Roelofs, Freek, Rogers, Alan, Romero-Cañizales, Cristina, Roshanineshat, Arash, Rottmann, Helge, Roy, Alan L., Ruiz, Ignacio, Ruszczyk, Chet, Rygl, Kazi L. J., Sánchez, Salvador, Sánchez-Argüelles, David, Sánchez-Portal, Miguel, Sasada, Mahito, Satapathy, Kaushik, Schloerb, F. Peter, Schonfeld, Jonathan, Schuster, Karl-Friedrich, Shao, Lijing, Shen, Zhiqiang, Small, Des, Sohn, Bong Won, SooHoo, Jason, Salas, León David Sosapanta, Souccar, Kamal, Stanway, Joshua S., Sun, He, Tazaki, Fumie, Tetarenko, Alexandra J., Tiede, Paul, Titus, Michael, Torne, Pablo, Toscano, Teresa, Trent, Tyler, Trippe, Sascha, Turk, Matthew, van Bemmel, Ilse, van Langevelde, Huib J., van Rossum, Daniel R., Vos, Jesse, Wagner, Jan, Ward-Thompson, Derek, Wardle, John, Washington, Jasmin E., Weintroub, Jonathan, Wharton, Robert, Wiik, Kaj, Witzel, Gunther, Wondrak, Michael F., Wong, George N., Wu, Qingwen, Yadlapalli, Nitika, Yamaguchi, Paul, Yfantis, Aristomenis, Yoon, Doosoo, Young, André, Young, Ken, Younsi, Ziri, Yu, Wei, Yuan, Feng, Yuan, Ye-Fei, Zensus, J. Anton, Zhang, Shuo, Zhao, Guang-Yao, and Zhao, Shan-Shan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The 2017 observing campaign of the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) delivered the first very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) images at the observing frequency of 230 GHz, leading to a number of unique studies on black holes and relativistic jets from active galactic nuclei (AGN). In total, eighteen sources were observed: the main science targets, Sgr A* and M87 along with various calibrators. We investigated the morphology of the sixteen AGN in the EHT 2017 data set, focusing on the properties of the VLBI cores: size, flux density, and brightness temperature. We studied their dependence on the observing frequency in order to compare it with the Blandford-K\"onigl (BK) jet model. We modeled the source structure of seven AGN in the EHT 2017 data set using linearly polarized circular Gaussian components and collected results for the other nine AGN from dedicated EHT publications, complemented by lower frequency data in the 2-86 GHz range. Then, we studied the dependences of the VLBI core flux density, size, and brightness temperature on the frequency measured in the AGN host frame. We compared the observations with the BK jet model and estimated the magnetic field strength dependence on the distance from the central black hole. Our results indicate a deviation from the standard BK model, particularly in the decrease of the brightness temperature with the observing frequency. Either bulk acceleration of the jet material, energy transfer from the magnetic field to the particles, or both are required to explain the observations.
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- 2025
8. Neural encoding with affine feature response transforms
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Le, Lynn, Kimman, Nils, Dado, Thirza, Seeliger, Katja, Papale, Paolo, Lozano, Antonio, Roelfsema, Pieter, van Gerven, Marcel, Güçlütürk, Yağmur, and Güçlü, Umut
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Current linearizing encoding models that predict neural responses to sensory input typically neglect neuroscience-inspired constraints that could enhance model efficiency and interpretability. To address this, we propose a new method called affine feature response transform (AFRT), which exploits the brain's retinotopic organization. Applying AFRT to encode multi-unit activity in areas V1, V4, and IT of the macaque brain, we demonstrate that AFRT reduces redundant computations and enhances the performance of current linearizing encoding models by segmenting each neuron's receptive field into an affine retinal transform, followed by a localized feature response. Remarkably, by factorizing receptive fields into a sequential affine component with three interpretable parameters (for shifting and scaling) and response components with a small number of feature weights per response, AFRT achieves encoding with orders of magnitude fewer parameters compared to unstructured models. We show that the retinal transform of each neuron's encoding agrees well with the brain's receptive field. Together, these findings suggest that this new subset within spatial transformer network can be instrumental in neural encoding models of naturalistic stimuli.
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- 2025
9. Inverse receptive field attention for naturalistic image reconstruction from the brain
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Le, Lynn, Dado, Thirza, Seeliger, Katja, Papale, Paolo, Lozano, Antonio, Roelfsema, Pieter, Güçlütürk, Yağmur, van Gerven, Marcel, and Güçlü, Umut
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Visual perception in the brain largely depends on the organization of neuronal receptive fields. Although extensive research has delineated the coding principles of receptive fields, most studies have been constrained by their foundational assumptions. Moreover, while machine learning has successfully been used to reconstruct images from brain data, this approach faces significant challenges, including inherent feature biases in the model and the complexities of brain structure and function. In this study, we introduce an inverse receptive field attention (IRFA) model, designed to reconstruct naturalistic images from neurophysiological data in an end-to-end fashion. This approach aims to elucidate the tuning properties and representational transformations within the visual cortex. The IRFA model incorporates an attention mechanism that determines the inverse receptive field for each pixel, weighting neuronal responses across the visual field and feature spaces. This method allows for an examination of the dynamics of neuronal representations across stimuli in both spatial and feature dimensions. Our results show highly accurate reconstructions of naturalistic data, independent of pre-trained models. Notably, IRF models trained on macaque V1, V4, and IT regions yield remarkably consistent spatial receptive fields across different stimuli, while the features to which neuronal representations are selective exhibit significant variation. Additionally, we propose a data-driven method to explore representational clustering within various visual areas, further providing testable hypotheses.
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- 2025
10. Demographics of black holes at $<$100 R$_{\rm g}$ scales: accretion flows, jets, and shadows
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Nair, Dhanya G., Nagar, Neil M., Ramakrishnan, Venkatessh, Wielgus, Maciek, Arratia, Vicente, Krichbaum, Thomas P., Zhang, Xinyue A., Ricarte, Angelo, S., Silpa, Hernández-Yévenes, Joaquín, Ford, Nicole M., Bandyopadhyay, Bidisha, Gurwell, Mark, Burridge, Roman, Pesce, Dominic W., Doeleman, Sheperd S., Kim, Jae-Young, Kim, Daewon, Janssen, Michael, von Fellenberg, Sebastiano D., Fromm, Christian M., Lee, Deokhyeong, Falcke, Heino, Wagner, Jan, Bower, Geoffrey C., Baczko, Anne-Kathrin, Kim, Dong-Jin, Akiyama, Kazunori, Asada, Keiichi, Arevalo, Patricia, Bignall, Hayley, Blackburn, Lindy, Broderick, Avery E., Brunthaler, Andreas, Chan, Chi-kwan, Doi, Akihiro, Fish, Vincent L., Fomalont, Edward, Gómez, José L., Haggard, Daryl, Hada, Kazuhiro, Herrera-Camus, Rodrigo, Hoak, Daniel, Hughes, David, Hlavacek-Larrondo, Julie, Jorstad, Svetlana, Johnson, Michael D., Kawashima, Tomohisa, Keating, Garrett K., Kharb, Preeti, Koay, Jun Yi, Koyama, Shoko, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, Leigh, Nathan W. C., Lira, Paulina, Lindqvist, Michael, Lobanov, Andrei P., Lo, Wen-Ping, Lu, Ru-Sen, Markoff, Sera, MacDonald, Nicholas R., Martínez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Matthews, Lynn D., Matsushita, Satoki, Mezcua, Mar, Moscibrodzka, Monika, Müller, Hendrik, Nagai, Hiroshi, Nakamura, Masanori, Natarajan, Priyamvada, Narayanan, Gopal, Nowak, Michael A., Sánchez, Héctor Raúl Olivares, Park, Jongho, Psaltis, Dimitrios, Pu, Hung-Yi, Porth, Oliver, Rao, Ramprasad, Reynolds, Cormac, Reeves, Rodrigo, Romero-Cañizales, Cristina, Ros, Eduardo, Rottmann, Helge, Roy, Alan L., Schleicher, Dominik, Savolainen, Tuomas, Impellizzeri, C. M. Violette, Treister, Ezequiel, Wiik, Kaj, and Zensus, J. Anton
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Using the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), the gravitationally lensed rings around the supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in Messier 87 (M87) and Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*) have now been successfully imaged at a resolution under 10 gravitational radii (R$_{\rm g}$ $ = \rm{GM/c^2}$). To expand studies beyond M87 and Sgr A*, we have constructed the Event Horizon and Environs (ETHER) sample, a comprehensive database encompassing approximately 3.15 million SMBH mass estimates, $\sim$ 20,000 Very-Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) radio flux densities, and $\sim$ 36,000 hard X-ray flux densities. This database is designed to identify and optimize target selection for the EHT and its upgrades on the ground and in space. We have identified a Gold Sample (GS) of nearby low-luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) within it that are ideal for studying jet bases and potentially imaging black hole shadows. We observed 27 of these AGNs using the EHT from 2022 to 2024, providing an opportunity to resolve and image accretion flows and jets at resolutions of $\leq$ 100 R$_{\rm g}$. Only a few SMBHs have sufficiently high enough flux density to be imaged at scales of $\leq$ 50 R$_{\rm g}$ with the present EHT. Among these are M87, Sgr A*, NGC4594 (Sombrero/M104), NGC4261, and NGC4374 (Messier 84/M84). Of these, NGC4261, Sombrero, and M84 have been observed and/or are scheduled for deep imaging with EHT+ALMA from 2023 to 2025. Sombrero, NGC4261, M84, NGC4278, and NGC5232 are clearly detected in our EHT+ALMA observations in 2022, indicating that the 230 GHz flux density from the accretion flows is significantly high. Ongoing imaging of the ETHER GS will enable measurements of black hole mass and spin, help constrain General Relativity, and enrich our understanding of jet launching and accretion inflows across a broad multi-parameter space, including black hole mass, spin, accretion rate, and orientation., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, published in Proceedings of the 16th EVN Symposium, Ed. E. Ros, P. Benke, S.A. Dzib, I. Rottmann, & J.A. Zensus, Bonn: Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Radioastronomie, 2024, pages 75-84, https://cloud.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/index.php/s/BkX2CC2Xjn2aKR4
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- 2024
11. Statistical physics of large-scale neural activity with loops
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Carcamo, David P. and Lynn, Christopher W.
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Physics - Biological Physics ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
As experiments advance to record from tens of thousands of neurons, statistical physics provides a framework for understanding how collective activity emerges from networks of fine-scale correlations. While modeling these populations is tractable in loop-free networks, neural circuitry inherently contains feedback loops of connectivity. Here, for a class of networks with loops, we present an exact solution to the maximum entropy problem that scales to very large systems. This solution provides direct access to information-theoretic measures like the entropy of the model and the information contained in correlations, which are usually inaccessible at large scales. In turn, this allows us to search for the optimal network of correlations that contains the maximum information about population activity. Applying these methods to 45 recordings of approximately 10,000 neurons in the mouse visual system, we demonstrate that our framework captures more information -- providing a better description of the population -- than existing methods without loops. For a given population, our models perform even better during visual stimulation than spontaneous activity; however, the inferred interactions overlap significantly, suggesting an underlying neural circuitry that remains consistent across stimuli. Generally, we construct an optimized framework for studying the statistical physics of large neural populations, with future applications extending to other biological networks.
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- 2024
12. Balls-and-Bins Sampling for DP-SGD
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Chua, Lynn, Ghazi, Badih, Harrison, Charlie, Leeman, Ethan, Kamath, Pritish, Kumar, Ravi, Manurangsi, Pasin, Sinha, Amer, and Zhang, Chiyuan
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
We introduce the Balls-and-Bins sampling for differentially private (DP) optimization methods such as DP-SGD. While it has been common practice to use some form of shuffling in DP-SGD implementations, privacy accounting algorithms have typically assumed that Poisson subsampling is used instead. Recent work by Chua et al. (ICML 2024) however pointed out that shuffling based DP-SGD can have a much larger privacy cost in practical regimes of parameters. We show that the Balls-and-Bins sampling achieves the "best-of-both" samplers, namely, the implementation of Balls-and-Bins sampling is similar to that of Shuffling and models trained using DP-SGD with Balls-and-Bins sampling achieve utility comparable to those trained using DP-SGD with Shuffling at the same noise multiplier, and yet, Balls-and-Bins sampling enjoys similar-or-better privacy amplification as compared to Poisson subsampling in practical regimes.
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- 2024
13. Fearful Falcons and Angry Llamas: Emotion Category Annotations of Arguments by Humans and LLMs
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Greschner, Lynn and Klinger, Roman
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Arguments evoke emotions, influencing the effect of the argument itself. Not only the emotional intensity but also the category influence the argument's effects, for instance, the willingness to adapt stances. While binary emotionality has been studied in arguments, there is no work on discrete emotion categories (e.g., "Anger") in such data. To fill this gap, we crowdsource subjective annotations of emotion categories in a German argument corpus and evaluate automatic LLM-based labeling methods. Specifically, we compare three prompting strategies (zero-shot, one-shot, chain-of-thought) on three large instruction-tuned language models (Falcon-7b-instruct, Llama-3.1-8B-instruct, GPT-4o-mini). We further vary the definition of the output space to be binary (is there emotionality in the argument?), closed-domain (which emotion from a given label set is in the argument?), or open-domain (which emotion is in the argument?). We find that emotion categories enhance the prediction of emotionality in arguments, emphasizing the need for discrete emotion annotations in arguments. Across all prompt settings and models, automatic predictions show a high recall but low precision for predicting anger and fear, indicating a strong bias toward negative emotions.
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- 2024
14. Multi-phase HI clouds in the Small Magellanic Cloud halo
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Buckland-Willis, F., Miville-Deschenes, M. A., Marchal, A., Dawson, J. R., Denes, H., Di Teodoro, E. M., Dickey, J. M., Gibson, S. J., Kemp, I. P., Lynn, C., Ma, Y. K., McClure-Griffiths, N. M., Murray, C. E., Pingel, N. M., Stanimirovic, S., and Van Loon, J. Th.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context. The Galactic ASKAP collaboration (GASKAP) is undertaking an HI emission survey of the 21cm line to map the Magellanic system and the Galactic plane with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). One of the first areas observed in the Pilot Phase I of the survey was the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). Previous surveys of the SMC have uncovered new structures in the periphery of the SMC, along relatively low column density lines of sight. Aims. In this work we aimed to uncover the phase distribution of three distinct structures in the periphery of the SMC. This work will add to the constraints we have on the existence and survival of the cold neutral medium (CNM) in the SMC. Methods. We used ROHSA, a Gaussian decomposition algorithm, to model the emission across each cloud and classify the HI emission into their respective phases based on the linewidths of the fitted Gaussians. We created maps of velocity and column density of each phase of the HI across these three clouds. We measured the HI mass and CNM number density for each cloud. We also compared the HI results across the different phases with other gas tracers. Results. We find that in two clouds, the ends of each cloud are almost completely CNM dominated. Analysis of these two clouds indicates they are experiencing a compressive force from the direction of the SMC main body. In the third cloud we find a uniform CNM distribution along one wall of what is likely a supershell structure. Comparison with previous measurements of CO clumps in two of the clouds show the CO and HI are co-moving within a few km/s in regions of high HI column density, particularly when considering just the CNM., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2024
15. Exchange-Symmetrized Qudit Bell Bases and Bell-State Distinguishability
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Scholin, Oscar and Lynn, Theresa W.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Entanglement of qudit pairs, with single particle Hilbert space dimension $d$, has important potential for quantum information processing, with applications in cryptography, algorithms, and error correction. For a pair of qudits of arbitrary even dimension $d$, we introduce a generalized Bell basis with definite symmetry under exchange of states between the two particles. We show that no complete exchange-symmetrized basis can exist for odd $d$. This framework extends prior work on exchange-symmetrized hyperentangled qubit bases, where $d$ is a power of two. As a direct application of our basis, we quantify the number of qudit Bell states that can be unambiguously distinguished by devices restricted to linear evolution and local measurement (LELM). We show that for any even $d$, at most $2d-1$ states can be reliably distinguished, extending known results for $d = 2^n$ and $d=3$.
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- 2024
16. Parseval Regularization for Continual Reinforcement Learning
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Chung, Wesley, Cherif, Lynn, Meger, David, and Precup, Doina
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Loss of plasticity, trainability loss, and primacy bias have been identified as issues arising when training deep neural networks on sequences of tasks -- all referring to the increased difficulty in training on new tasks. We propose to use Parseval regularization, which maintains orthogonality of weight matrices, to preserve useful optimization properties and improve training in a continual reinforcement learning setting. We show that it provides significant benefits to RL agents on a suite of gridworld, CARL and MetaWorld tasks. We conduct comprehensive ablations to identify the source of its benefits and investigate the effect of certain metrics associated to network trainability including weight matrix rank, weight norms and policy entropy.
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- 2024
17. Continuous non-contact vital sign monitoring of neonates in intensive care units using RGB-D cameras
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Estévez, Silas Ruhrberg, Grafton, Alex, Thomson, Lynn, Warnecke, Joana, Beardsall, Kathryn, and Lasenby, Joan
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
Neonates in intensive care require continuous monitoring. Current measurement devices are limited for long-term use due to the fragility of newborn skin and the interference of wires with medical care and parental interactions. Camera-based vital sign monitoring has the potential to address these limitations and has become of considerable interest in recent years due to the absence of physical contact between the recording equipment and the neonates, as well as the introduction of low-cost devices. We present a novel system to capture vital signs while offering clinical insights beyond current technologies using a single RGB-D camera. Heart rate and oxygen saturation were measured using colour and infrared signals with mean average errors (MAE) of 7.69 bpm and 3.37%, respectively. Using the depth signals, an MAE of 4.83 breaths per minute was achieved for respiratory rate. Tidal volume measurements were obtained with a MAE of 0.61 mL. Flow-volume loops can also be calculated from camera data, which have applications in respiratory disease diagnosis. Our system demonstrates promising capabilities for neonatal monitoring, augmenting current clinical recording techniques to potentially improve outcomes for neonates.
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- 2024
18. Asteroseismic Structure Inversions of Main-Sequence Solar-like Oscillators with Convective Cores
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Buchele, Lynn, Bellinger, Earl P., Hekker, Saskia, and Basu, Sarbani
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Asteroseismic inferences of main-sequence solar-like oscillators often rely on best-fit models. However, these models cannot fully reproduce the observed mode frequencies, suggesting that the internal structure of the model does not fully match that of the star. Asteroseismic structure inversions provide a way to test the interior of our stellar models. Recently, structure inversion techniques were used to study 12 stars with radiative cores. In this work, we extend that analysis to 43 main-sequence stars with convective cores observed by Kepler to look for differences in the sound speed profiles in the inner 30% of the star by radius. For around half of our stars, the structure inversions show that our models reproduce the internal structure of the star, where the inversions are sensitive, within the observational uncertainties. For the stars where our inversions reveal significant differences, we find cases where our model sound speed is too high and cases where our model sound speed is too low. We use the star with the most significant differences to explore several changes to the physics of our model in an attempt to resolve the inferred differences. These changes include using a different overshoot prescription and including the effects of diffusion, gravitational settling, and radiative levitation. We find that the resulting changes to the model structure are too small to resolve the differences shown in our inversions., Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, Resubmitted to ApJ after favorable referee report
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- 2024
19. Robots in the Wild: Contextually-Adaptive Human-Robot Interactions in Urban Public Environments
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Yu, Xinyan, Wang, Yiyuan, Tran, Tram Thi Minh, Zhao, Yi, Perez, Julie Stephany Berrio, Hoggenmuller, Marius, Humphry, Justine, Loke, Lian, Masuda, Lynn, Parker, Callum, Tomitsch, Martin, and Worrall, Stewart
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Computer Science - Robotics ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
The increasing transition of human-robot interaction (HRI) context from controlled settings to dynamic, real-world public environments calls for enhanced adaptability in robotic systems. This can go beyond algorithmic navigation or traditional HRI strategies in structured settings, requiring the ability to navigate complex public urban systems containing multifaceted dynamics and various socio-technical needs. Therefore, our proposed workshop seeks to extend the boundaries of adaptive HRI research beyond predictable, semi-structured contexts and highlight opportunities for adaptable robot interactions in urban public environments. This half-day workshop aims to explore design opportunities and challenges in creating contextually-adaptive HRI within these spaces and establish a network of interested parties within the OzCHI research community. By fostering ongoing discussions, sharing of insights, and collaborations, we aim to catalyse future research that empowers robots to navigate the inherent uncertainties and complexities of real-world public interactions.
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- 2024
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20. DeepDISC-photoz: Deep Learning-Based Photometric Redshift Estimation for Rubin LSST
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Merz, Grant, Liu, Xin, Schmidt, Samuel, Malz, Alex I., Zhang, Tianqing, Branton, Doug, Burke, Colin J., Delucchi, Melissa, Ejjagiri, Yaswant Sai, Kubica, Jeremy, Liu, Yichen, Lynn, Olivia, Oldag, Drew, and Collaboration, The LSST Dark Energy Science
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Photometric redshifts will be a key data product for the Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) as well as for future ground and space-based surveys. The need for photometric redshifts, or photo-zs, arises from sparse spectroscopic coverage of observed galaxies. LSST is expected to observe billions of objects, making it crucial to have a photo-z estimator that is accurate and efficient. To that end, we present DeepDISC photo-z, a photo-z estimator that is an extension of the DeepDISC framework. The base DeepDISC network simultaneously detects, segments, and classifies objects in multi-band coadded images. We introduce photo-z capabilities to DeepDISC by adding a redshift estimation Region of Interest head, which produces a photo-z probability distribution function for each detected object. On simulated LSST images, DeepDISC photo-z outperforms traditional catalog-based estimators, in both point estimate and probabilistic metrics. We validate DeepDISC by examining dependencies on systematics including galactic extinction, blending and PSF effects. We also examine the impact of the data quality and the size of the training set and model. We find that the biggest factor in DeepDISC photo-z quality is the signal-to-noise of the imaging data, and see a reduction in photo-z scatter approximately proportional to the image data signal-to-noise. Our code is fully public and integrated in the RAIL photo-z package for ease of use and comparison to other codes at https://github.com/LSSTDESC/rail_deepdisc, Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures
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- 2024
21. Processing of GASKAP-HI pilot survey data using a commercial supercomputer
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Kemp, Ian P., Pingel, Nickolas M., Worth, Rowan, Wake, Justin, Mitchell, Daniel A., Midgely, Stuart D., Tingay, Steven J., Dempsey, James, Dénes, Helga, Dickey, John M., Gibson, Steven J., Jameson, Kate E., Lynn, Callum, Ma, Yik Ki, Marchal, Antoine, McClure-Griffiths, Naomi M., Stanimirović, Snežana, and van Loon, Jacco Th.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Modern radio telescopes generate large amounts of data, with the next generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) and the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) expected to feed up to 292 GB of visibilities per second to the science data processor (SDP). However, the continued exponential growth in the power of the world's largest supercomputers suggests that for the foreseeable future there will be sufficient capacity available to provide for astronomers' needs in processing 'science ready' products from the new generation of telescopes, with commercial platforms becoming an option for overflow capacity. The purpose of the current work is to trial the use of commercial high performance computing (HPC) for a large scale processing task in astronomy, in this case processing data from the GASKAP-HI pilot surveys. We delineate a four-step process which can be followed by other researchers wishing to port an existing workflow from a public facility to a commercial provider. We used the process to provide reference images for an ongoing upgrade to ASKAPSoft (the ASKAP SDP software), and to provide science images for the GASKAP collaboration, using the joint deconvolution capability of WSClean. We document the approach to optimising the pipeline to minimise cost and elapsed time at the commercial provider, and give a resource estimate for processing future full survey data. Finally we document advantages, disadvantages, and lessons learned from the project, which will aid other researchers aiming to use commercial supercomputing for radio astronomy imaging. We found the key advantage to be immediate access and high availability, and the main disadvantage to be the need for improved HPC knowledge to take best advantage of the facility.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Quark: Real-time, High-resolution, and General Neural View Synthesis
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Flynn, John, Broxton, Michael, Murmann, Lukas, Chai, Lucy, DuVall, Matthew, Godard, Clément, Heal, Kathryn, Kaza, Srinivas, Lombardi, Stephen, Luo, Xuan, Achar, Supreeth, Prabhu, Kira, Sun, Tiancheng, Tsai, Lynn, and Overbeck, Ryan
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Graphics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
We present a novel neural algorithm for performing high-quality, high-resolution, real-time novel view synthesis. From a sparse set of input RGB images or videos streams, our network both reconstructs the 3D scene and renders novel views at 1080p resolution at 30fps on an NVIDIA A100. Our feed-forward network generalizes across a wide variety of datasets and scenes and produces state-of-the-art quality for a real-time method. Our quality approaches, and in some cases surpasses, the quality of some of the top offline methods. In order to achieve these results we use a novel combination of several key concepts, and tie them together into a cohesive and effective algorithm. We build on previous works that represent the scene using semi-transparent layers and use an iterative learned render-and-refine approach to improve those layers. Instead of flat layers, our method reconstructs layered depth maps (LDMs) that efficiently represent scenes with complex depth and occlusions. The iterative update steps are embedded in a multi-scale, UNet-style architecture to perform as much compute as possible at reduced resolution. Within each update step, to better aggregate the information from multiple input views, we use a specialized Transformer-based network component. This allows the majority of the per-input image processing to be performed in the input image space, as opposed to layer space, further increasing efficiency. Finally, due to the real-time nature of our reconstruction and rendering, we dynamically create and discard the internal 3D geometry for each frame, generating the LDM for each view. Taken together, this produces a novel and effective algorithm for view synthesis. Through extensive evaluation, we demonstrate that we achieve state-of-the-art quality at real-time rates. Project page: https://quark-3d.github.io/, Comment: SIGGRAPH Asia 2024 camera ready version; project page https://quark-3d.github.io/
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- 2024
23. Multi-Mission Observations of Relativistic Electrons and High-Speed Jets Linked to Shock Generated Transients
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Raptis, Savvas, Lindberg, Martin, Liu, Terry Z., Turner, Drew L., Lalti, Ahmad, Zhou, Yufei, Kajdič, Primož, Kouloumvakos, Athanasios, Sibeck, David G., Vuorinen, Laura, Michael, Adam, Shumko, Mykhaylo, Osmane, Adnane, Krämer, Eva, Turc, Lucile, Karlsson, Tomas, Katsavrias, Christos, Wilson III, Lynn B., Madanian, Hadi, Blanco-Cano, Xóchitl, Cohen, Ian J., and Escoubet, C. Philippe
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Shock-generated transients, such as hot flow anomalies (HFAs), upstream of planetary bow shocks, play a critical role in electron acceleration. Using multi-mission data from NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) and ESA's Cluster missions, we demonstrate the transmission of HFAs through Earth's quasi-parallel bow shock, associated with acceleration of electrons up to relativistic energies. Energetic electrons, initially accelerated upstream, are shown to remain broadly confined within the transmitted transient structures downstream, where betatron acceleration further boosts their energy due to elevated compression levels. Additionally, high-speed jets form at the compressive edges of HFAs, exhibiting a significant increase in dynamic pressure and potentially contributing to driving further localized compression. Our findings emphasize the efficiency of quasi-parallel shocks in driving particle acceleration far beyond the immediate shock transition region, expanding the acceleration region to a larger spatial domain. Finally, this study underscores the importance of multi-scale observational approach in understanding the convoluted processes behind collisionless shock physics and their broader implications.
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- 2024
24. Optical orthogonal codes from a combinatorial perspective
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Huczynska, Sophie and Ng, Siaw-Lynn
- Subjects
Mathematics - Combinatorics ,Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics ,05B10 - Abstract
Optical orthogonal codes (OOCs) are sets of $(0,1)$-sequences with good auto- and cross-correlation properties. They were originally introduced for use in multi-access communication, particularly in the setting of optical CDMA communications systems. They can also be formulated in terms of families of subsets of $\mathbb{Z}_v$, where the correlation properties can be expressed in terms of conditions on the internal and external differences within and between the subsets. With this link there have been many studies on their combinatorial properties. However, in most of these studies it is assumed that the auto- and cross-correlation values are equal; in particular, many constructions focus on the case where both correlation values are $1$. This is not a requirement of the original communications application. In this paper, we "decouple" the two correlation values and consider the situation with correlation values greater than $1$. We consider the bounds on each of the correlation values, and the structural implications of meeting these separately, as well as associated links with other combinatorial objects. We survey definitions, properties and constructions, establish some new connections and concepts, and discuss open questions.
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- 2024
25. Scalable DP-SGD: Shuffling vs. Poisson Subsampling
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Chua, Lynn, Ghazi, Badih, Kamath, Pritish, Kumar, Ravi, Manurangsi, Pasin, Sinha, Amer, and Zhang, Chiyuan
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms - Abstract
We provide new lower bounds on the privacy guarantee of the multi-epoch Adaptive Batch Linear Queries (ABLQ) mechanism with shuffled batch sampling, demonstrating substantial gaps when compared to Poisson subsampling; prior analysis was limited to a single epoch. Since the privacy analysis of Differentially Private Stochastic Gradient Descent (DP-SGD) is obtained by analyzing the ABLQ mechanism, this brings into serious question the common practice of implementing shuffling-based DP-SGD, but reporting privacy parameters as if Poisson subsampling was used. To understand the impact of this gap on the utility of trained machine learning models, we introduce a practical approach to implement Poisson subsampling at scale using massively parallel computation, and efficiently train models with the same. We compare the utility of models trained with Poisson-subsampling-based DP-SGD, and the optimistic estimates of utility when using shuffling, via our new lower bounds on the privacy guarantee of ABLQ with shuffling., Comment: To appear at NeurIPS 2024
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- 2024
26. Effects of background solar wind and drag force on the propagation of coronal mass ejection driven shock
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Wu, Chin-Chun, Liou, Kan, Wood, Brian E., and Hutting, Lynn
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Propagation of interplanetary (IP) shocks, particularly those driven by coronal mass ejections (CMEs), is still an outstanding question in heliophysics and space weather forecasting. Here we address effects of the ambient solar wind on the propagation of two similar CME-driven shocks from the Sun to Earth. The two shock events (CME03: April 3, 2010 and CME12: July 12, 2012) have the following properties: Both events (1) were driven by a halo CME (i.e., source location is near the Sun-Earth line), (2) had a CME source in the southern hemisphere, (3) had a similar transit time (~2 days) to Earth, (4) occurred in a non-quiet solar period, and (5) led to a severe geomagnetic storm. The initial (near the Sun) propagation speed, as measured by coronagraph images, was slower (by ~300 km/s) for CME03 than CME12, but it took about the same amount of traveling time for both events to reach Earth. According to the in-situ solar wind observations from the Wind spacecraft, the CME03-driven shock was associated with a faster solar wind upstream of the shock than the CME12-driven shock. This is also demonstrated in our global MHD simulations. Analysis of our simulation result indicates that the drag force indirectly plays an important role in the shock propagation. The present study suggests that in addition to the initial CME propagation speed near the Sun the shock speed (in the inertial frame) and the ambient solar wind condition, in particular the solar wind speed, are the key to timing the arrival of CME-driven-shock events., Comment: in press
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- 2024
27. If parallel lines could meet: What exactly can a poet say about the Fano plane?
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Collins, Katherine and Ng, Siaw-Lynn
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Mathematics - History and Overview ,Mathematics - Combinatorics ,00A64, 51A99 - Abstract
This article describes our invention of a new poetic form based on projective geometry. In doing this we also explore the 'what ifs' in mathematics and poetry which spark the creative processes of poet and mathematician. In other words, throughout our collaboration we often asked one another, is this what it's like for you? Do you think in this way, too? How does your experience of creativity compare to mine? And often, as well, what exactly do you mean when you say...? We spent a fair amount of time and energy, for example, trying to understand one another's interpretation of 'a line'. This collaboration resulted in three poems in the new projective plane form. We also consider what might be interesting avenues for future research, such as the incorporation of octonions in poetic form.
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- 2024
28. Towards Population Scale Testis Volume Segmentation in DIXON MRI
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Ernsting, Jan, Beeken, Phillip Nikolas, Ogoniak, Lynn, Kockwelp, Jacqueline, Hahn, Tim, Busch, Alexander Siegfried, and Risse, Benjamin
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Testis size is known to be one of the main predictors of male fertility, usually assessed in clinical workup via palpation or imaging. Despite its potential, population-level evaluation of testicular volume using imaging remains underexplored. Previous studies, limited by small and biased datasets, have demonstrated the feasibility of machine learning for testis volume segmentation. This paper presents an evaluation of segmentation methods for testicular volume using Magnet Resonance Imaging data from the UKBiobank. The best model achieves a median dice score of $0.87$, compared to median dice score of $0.83$ for human interrater reliability on the same dataset, enabling large-scale annotation on a population scale for the first time. Our overall aim is to provide a trained model, comparative baseline methods, and annotated training data to enhance accessibility and reproducibility in testis MRI segmentation research.
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- 2024
29. An Improved Chicken Swarm Optimization Algorithm for Handwritten Document Image Enhancement
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Mugisha, Stanley, Gutu, Lynn tar, and Nagabhushan, P
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Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,I.4.3 - Abstract
Chicken swarm optimization is a new meta-heuristic algorithm which mimics the foraging hierarchical behavior of chicken. In this paper, we describe the preprocessing of handwritten document by contrast enhancement while preserving detail with an improved chicken swarm optimization algorithm.The results of the algorithm are compared with other existing meta heuristic algorithms like Cuckoo Search, Firefly Algorithm and the Artificial bee colony. The proposed algorithm considerably outperforms all the above by giving good results., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, conference
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- 2024
30. Improving Colorectal Cancer Screening and Risk Assessment through Predictive Modeling on Medical Images and Records
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Jiang, Shuai, Robinson, Christina, Anderson, Joseph, Hisey, William, Butterly, Lynn, Suriawinata, Arief, and Hassanpour, Saeed
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Colonoscopy screening is an effective method to find and remove colon polyps before they can develop into colorectal cancer (CRC). Current follow-up recommendations, as outlined by the U.S. Multi-Society Task Force for individuals found to have polyps, primarily rely on histopathological characteristics, neglecting other significant CRC risk factors. Moreover, the considerable variability in colorectal polyp characterization among pathologists poses challenges in effective colonoscopy follow-up or surveillance. The evolution of digital pathology and recent advancements in deep learning provide a unique opportunity to investigate the added benefits of including the additional medical record information and automatic processing of pathology slides using computer vision techniques in the calculation of future CRC risk. Leveraging the New Hampshire Colonoscopy Registry's extensive dataset, many with longitudinal colonoscopy follow-up information, we adapted our recently developed transformer-based model for histopathology image analysis in 5-year CRC risk prediction. Additionally, we investigated various multimodal fusion techniques, combining medical record information with deep learning derived risk estimates. Our findings reveal that training a transformer model to predict intermediate clinical variables contributes to enhancing 5-year CRC risk prediction performance, with an AUC of 0.630 comparing to direct prediction. Furthermore, the fusion of imaging and non-imaging features, while not requiring manual inspection of microscopy images, demonstrates improved predictive capabilities for 5-year CRC risk comparing to variables extracted from colonoscopy procedure and microscopy findings. This study signifies the potential of integrating diverse data sources and advanced computational techniques in transforming the accuracy and effectiveness of future CRC risk assessments.
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- 2024
31. Unlearn and Burn: Adversarial Machine Unlearning Requests Destroy Model Accuracy
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Huang, Yangsibo, Liu, Daogao, Chua, Lynn, Ghazi, Badih, Kamath, Pritish, Kumar, Ravi, Manurangsi, Pasin, Nasr, Milad, Sinha, Amer, and Zhang, Chiyuan
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Machine unlearning algorithms, designed for selective removal of training data from models, have emerged as a promising approach to growing privacy concerns. In this work, we expose a critical yet underexplored vulnerability in the deployment of unlearning systems: the assumption that the data requested for removal is always part of the original training set. We present a threat model where an attacker can degrade model accuracy by submitting adversarial unlearning requests for data not present in the training set. We propose white-box and black-box attack algorithms and evaluate them through a case study on image classification tasks using the CIFAR-10 and ImageNet datasets, targeting a family of widely used unlearning methods. Our results show extremely poor test accuracy following the attack: 3.6% on CIFAR-10 and 0.4% on ImageNet for white-box attacks, and 8.5% on CIFAR-10 and 1.3% on ImageNet for black-box attacks. Additionally, we evaluate various verification mechanisms to detect the legitimacy of unlearning requests and reveal the challenges in verification, as most of the mechanisms fail to detect stealthy attacks without severely impairing their ability to process valid requests. These findings underscore the urgent need for research on more robust request verification methods and unlearning protocols, should the deployment of machine unlearning systems become more prevalent in the future.
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- 2024
32. Which Demographics do LLMs Default to During Annotation?
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Schäfer, Johannes, Combs, Aidan, Bagdon, Christopher, Li, Jiahui, Probol, Nadine, Greschner, Lynn, Papay, Sean, Resendiz, Yarik Menchaca, Velutharambath, Aswathy, Wührl, Amelie, Weber, Sabine, and Klinger, Roman
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Demographics and cultural background of annotators influence the labels they assign in text annotation -- for instance, an elderly woman might find it offensive to read a message addressed to a "bro", but a male teenager might find it appropriate. It is therefore important to acknowledge label variations to not under-represent members of a society. Two research directions developed out of this observation in the context of using large language models (LLM) for data annotations, namely (1) studying biases and inherent knowledge of LLMs and (2) injecting diversity in the output by manipulating the prompt with demographic information. We combine these two strands of research and ask the question to which demographics an LLM resorts to when no demographics is given. To answer this question, we evaluate which attributes of human annotators LLMs inherently mimic. Furthermore, we compare non-demographic conditioned prompts and placebo-conditioned prompts (e.g., "you are an annotator who lives in house number 5") to demographics-conditioned prompts ("You are a 45 year old man and an expert on politeness annotation. How do you rate {instance}"). We study these questions for politeness and offensiveness annotations on the POPQUORN data set, a corpus created in a controlled manner to investigate human label variations based on demographics which has not been used for LLM-based analyses so far. We observe notable influences related to gender, race, and age in demographic prompting, which contrasts with previous studies that found no such effects.
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- 2024
33. First Very Long Baseline Interferometry Detections at 870{\mu}m
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Raymond, Alexander W., Doeleman, Sheperd S., Asada, Keiichi, Blackburn, Lindy, Bower, Geoffrey C., Bremer, Michael, Broguiere, Dominique, Chen, Ming-Tang, Crew, Geoffrey B., Dornbusch, Sven, Fish, Vincent L., García, Roberto, Gentaz, Olivier, Goddi, Ciriaco, Han, Chih-Chiang, Hecht, Michael H., Huang, Yau-De, Janssen, Michael, Keating, Garrett K., Koay, Jun Yi, Krichbaum, Thomas P., Lo, Wen-Ping, Matsushita, Satoki, Matthews, Lynn D., Moran, James M., Norton, Timothy J., Patel, Nimesh, Pesce, Dominic W., Ramakrishnan, Venkatessh, Rottmann, Helge, Roy, Alan L., Sánchez, Salvador, Tilanus, Remo P. J., Titus, Michael, Torne, Pablo, Wagner, Jan, Weintroub, Jonathan, Wielgus, Maciek, Young, André, Akiyama, Kazunori, Albentosa-Ruíz, Ezequiel, Alberdi, Antxon, Alef, Walter, Algaba, Juan Carlos, Anantua, Richard, Azulay, Rebecca, Bach, Uwe, Baczko, Anne-Kathrin, Ball, David, Baloković, Mislav, Bandyopadhyay, Bidisha, Barrett, John, Bauböck, Michi, Benson, Bradford A., Bintley, Dan, Blundell, Raymond, Bouman, Katherine L., Boyce, Hope, Brissenden, Roger, Britzen, Silke, Broderick, Avery E., Bronzwaer, Thomas, Bustamante, Sandra, Carlstrom, John E., Chael, Andrew, Chan, Chi-kwan, Chang, Dominic O., Chatterjee, Koushik, Chatterjee, Shami, Chen, Yongjun, Cheng, Xiaopeng, Cho, Ilje, Christian, Pierre, Conroy, Nicholas S., Conway, John E., Crawford, Thomas M., Cruz-Osorio, Alejandro, Cui, Yuzhu, Dahale, Rohan, Davelaar, Jordy, De Laurentis, Mariafelicia, Deane, Roger, Dempsey, Jessica, Desvignes, Gregory, Dexter, Jason, Dhruv, Vedant, Dihingia, Indu K., Dzib, Sergio A., Eatough, Ralph P., Emami, Razieh, Falcke, Heino, Farah, Joseph, Fomalont, Edward, Fontana, Anne-Laure, Ford, H. Alyson, Foschi, Marianna, Fraga-Encinas, Raquel, Freeman, William T., Friberg, Per, Fromm, Christian M., Fuentes, Antonio, Galison, Peter, Gammie, Charles F., Georgiev, Boris, Gold, Roman, Gómez-Ruiz, Arturo I., Gómez, José L., Gu, Minfeng, Gurwell, Mark, Hada, Kazuhiro, Haggard, Daryl, Hesper, Ronald, Heumann, Dirk, Ho, Luis C., Ho, Paul, Honma, Mareki, Huang, Chih-Wei L., Huang, Lei, Hughes, David H., Ikeda, Shiro, Impellizzeri, C. M. Violette, Inoue, Makoto, Issaoun, Sara, James, David J., Jannuzi, Buell T., Jeter, Britton, Jiang, Wu, Jiménez-Rosales, Alejandra, Johnson, Michael D., Jorstad, Svetlana, Jones, Adam C., Joshi, Abhishek V., Jung, Taehyun, Karuppusamy, Ramesh, Kawashima, Tomohisa, Kettenis, Mark, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Jae-Young, Kim, Jongsoo, Kim, Junhan, Kino, Motoki, Kocherlakota, Prashant, Kofuji, Yutaro, Koch, Patrick M., Koyama, Shoko, Kramer, Carsten, Kramer, Joana A., Kramer, Michael, Kubo, Derek, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, La Bella, Noemi, Lee, Sang-Sung, Levis, Aviad, Li, Zhiyuan, Lico, Rocco, Lindahl, Greg, Lindqvist, Michael, Lisakov, Mikhail, Liu, Jun, Liu, Kuo, Liuzzo, Elisabetta, Lobanov, Andrei P., Loinard, Laurent, Lonsdale, Colin J., Lowitz, Amy E., Lu, Ru-Sen, MacDonald, Nicholas R., Mahieu, Sylvain, Maier, Doris, Mao, Jirong, Marchili, Nicola, Markoff, Sera, Marrone, Daniel P., Marscher, Alan P., Martí-Vidal, Iván, Medeiros, Lia, Menten, Karl M., Mizuno, Izumi, Mizuno, Yosuke, Montgomery, Joshua, Moriyama, Kotaro, Moscibrodzka, Monika, Mulaudzi, Wanga, Müller, Cornelia, Müller, Hendrik, Mus, Alejandro, Musoke, Gibwa, Myserlis, Ioannis, Nagai, Hiroshi, Nagar, Neil M., Nakamura, Masanori, Narayanan, Gopal, Natarajan, Iniyan, Nathanail, Antonios, Fuentes, Santiago Navarro, Neilsen, Joey, Ni, Chunchong, Nowak, Michael A., Oh, Junghwan, Okino, Hiroki, Sánchez, Héctor Raúl Olivares, Oyama, Tomoaki, Özel, Feryal, Palumbo, Daniel C. M., Paraschos, Georgios Filippos, Park, Jongho, Parsons, Harriet, Pen, Ue-Li, Piétu, Vincent, PopStefanija, Aleksandar, Porth, Oliver, Prather, Ben, Principe, Giacomo, Psaltis, Dimitrios, Pu, Hung-Yi, Raffin, Philippe A., Rao, Ramprasad, Rawlings, Mark G., Ricarte, Angelo, Ripperda, Bart, Roelofs, Freek, Romero-Cañizales, Cristina, Ros, Eduardo, Roshanineshat, Arash, Ruiz, Ignacio, Ruszczyk, Chet, Rygl, Kazi L. J., Sánchez-Argüelles, David, Sánchez-Portal, Miguel, Sasada, Mahito, Satapathy, Kaushik, Savolainen, Tuomas, Schloerb, F. Peter, Schonfeld, Jonathan, Schuster, Karl-Friedrich, Shao, Lijing, Shen, Zhiqiang, Small, Des, Sohn, Bong Won, SooHoo, Jason, Salas, León David Sosapanta, Souccar, Kamal, Srinivasan, Ranjani, Stanway, Joshua S., Sun, He, Tazaki, Fumie, Tetarenko, Alexandra J., Tiede, Paul, Toma, Kenji, Toscano, Teresa, Traianou, Efthalia, Trent, Tyler, Trippe, Sascha, Turk, Matthew, van Bemmel, Ilse, van Langevelde, Huib Jan, van Rossum, Daniel R., Vos, Jesse, Ward-Thompson, Derek, Wardle, John, Washington, Jasmin E., Wharton, Robert, Wiik, Kaj, Witzel, Gunther, Wondrak, Michael F., Wong, George N., Wu, Qingwen, Yadlapalli, Nitika, Yamaguchi, Paul, Yfantis, Aristomenis, Yoon, Doosoo, Younsi, Ziri, Yu, Wei, Yuan, Feng, Yuan, Ye-Fei, Zensus, J. Anton, Zhang, Shuo, Zhao, Guang-Yao, and Zhao, Shan-Shan
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The first very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) detections at 870$\mu$m wavelength (345$\,$GHz frequency) are reported, achieving the highest diffraction-limited angular resolution yet obtained from the surface of the Earth, and the highest-frequency example of the VLBI technique to date. These include strong detections for multiple sources observed on inter-continental baselines between telescopes in Chile, Hawaii, and Spain, obtained during observations in October 2018. The longest-baseline detections approach 11$\,$G$\lambda$ corresponding to an angular resolution, or fringe spacing, of 19$\mu$as. The Allan deviation of the visibility phase at 870$\mu$m is comparable to that at 1.3$\,$mm on the relevant integration time scales between 2 and 100$\,$s. The detections confirm that the sensitivity and signal chain stability of stations in the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) array are suitable for VLBI observations at 870$\mu$m. Operation at this short wavelength, combined with anticipated enhancements of the EHT, will lead to a unique high angular resolution instrument for black hole studies, capable of resolving the event horizons of supermassive black holes in both space and time., Comment: Corresponding author: S. Doeleman
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- 2024
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34. A solar rotation signature in cosmic dust: frequency analysis of dust particle impacts on the Wind spacecraft
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Baalmann, Lennart R., Hunziker, Silvan, Péronne, Arthur, Kirchner, James W., Glassmeier, Karl-Heinz, Malaspina, David M., Wilson III, Lynn B., Strähl, Christoph, Chadda, Shivank, and Sterken, Veerle J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Dust particle impacts on the Wind spacecraft were detected with its plasma wave instrument Wind/WAVES. Frequency analysis on this dust impact time series revealed spectral peaks indicative of a solar rotation signature. We investigated whether this solar rotation signature is embedded in the interplanetary or interstellar dust (ISD) and whether it is caused by co-rotating interaction regions (CIRs), by the sector structure of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF), or by external effects. We performed frequency analysis on subsets of the data to investigate the origin of these spectral peaks, comparing segments of Wind's orbit when the spacecraft moved against or with the ISD inflow direction and comparing the time periods of the ISD focusing and defocusing phases of the solar magnetic cycle. A superposed epoch analysis of the number of dust impacts during CIRs was used to investigate the systematic effect of CIRs. Case studies of time periods with frequent or infrequent occurrences of CIRs were compared to synthetic data of dust impacts affected by CIRs. We performed similar case studies for time periods with a stable or chaotic IMF sector structure. The superposed epoch analysis was repeated for a time series of the spacecraft floating potential. Spectral peaks were found at the solar rotation period of ~27d and its harmonics at 13.5d and 9d. This solar rotation signature may affect both interplanetary and ISD. The appearance of this signature correlates with the occurrence of CIRs but not with the stability of the IMF sector structure. The CIRs cause, on average, a reduction in the number of dust impact detections. Periodic changes of the spacecraft's floating potential were found to partially counteract this reduction by enhancing the instrument's sensitivity to dust impacts; these changes of the floating potential are thus unlikely to be the cause of the solar rotation signature.
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- 2024
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35. Local HI Absorption towards the Magellanic Cloud foreground using ASKAP
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Nguyen, Hiep, McClure-Griffiths, N. M., Dempsey, James, Dickey, John M., Lee, Min-Young, Lynn, Callum, Murray, Claire E., Stanimirović, Snežana, Busch, Michael P., Clark, Susan E., Dawson, J. R., Dénes, Helga, Gibson, Steven, Jameson, Katherine, Joncas, Gilles, Kemp, Ian, Leahy, Denis, Ma, Yik Ki, Marchal, Antoine, Miville-Deschênes, Marc-Antoine, Pingel, Nickolas M., Seta, Amit, Soler, Juan D., and van Loon, Jacco Th.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the largest Galactic neutral hydrogen HI absorption survey to date, utilizing the Australian SKA Pathfinder Telescope at an unprecedented spatial resolution of 30''. This survey, GASKAP-HI, unbiasedly targets 2,714 continuum background sources over 250 square degrees in the direction of the Magellanic Clouds, a significant increase compared to a total of 373 sources observed by previous Galactic absorption surveys across the entire Milky Way. We aim to investigate the physical properties of cold (CNM) and warm (WNM) neutral atomic gas in the Milky Way foreground, characterized by two prominent filaments at high Galactic latitudes (between $-45^{\circ}$ and $-25^{\circ}$). We detected strong HI absorption along 462 lines of sight above the 3$\sigma$ threshold, achieving an absorption detection rate of 17%. GASKAP-HI's unprecedented angular resolution allows for simultaneous absorption and emission measurements to sample almost the same gas clouds along a line of sight. A joint Gaussian decomposition is then applied to absorption-emission spectra to provide direct estimates of HI optical depths, temperatures, and column densities for the CNM and WNM components. The thermal properties of CNM components are consistent with those previously observed along a wide range of Solar neighborhood environments, indicating that cold HI properties are widely prevalent throughout the local interstellar medium. Across our region of interest, CNM accounts for ~30% of the total HI gas, with the CNM fraction increasing with column density toward the two filaments. Our analysis reveals an anti-correlation between CNM temperature and its optical depth, which implies that CNM with lower optical depth leads to a higher temperature., Comment: Largest Galactic HI Absorption Survey To Date (GASKAP-HI): Cold Atomic Gas in the Magellanic Cloud foreground using Australian SKA Pathfinder. This paper has 19 pages, 17 figures. This paper has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journal
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- 2024
36. Elated Numbers
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Fox, N. Bradley, Fox, Nathan H., Grundman, Helen G., Lynn, Rachel, Namoijam, Changningphaabi, and Vanderschoot, Mary
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Mathematics - Number Theory ,11A63 - Abstract
For a base $b \geq 2$, the $b$-elated function, $E_{2,b}$, maps a positive integer written in base $b$ to the product of its leading digit and the sum of the squares of its digits. A $b$-elated number is a positive integer that maps to $1$ under iteration of $E_{2,b}$. The height of a $b$-elated number is the number of iterations required to map it to $1$. We determine the fixed points and cycles of $E_{2,b}$ and prove a range of results concerning sequences of $b$-elated numbers and $b$-elated numbers of minimal heights. Although the $b$-elated function is closely related to the $b$-happy function, the behaviors of the two are notably different, as demonstrated by the results in this work., Comment: 21 pages
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- 2024
37. Observers' Data Access Portal: Realtime Streaming for Astronomical Data
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Coda, T., Oluyide, T., Lynn, M. S., Mader, J. A., Berriman, G. Bruce, Brodheim, M., Gelino, C. R., and Good, J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The W. M. Keck Observatory Archive (KOA) has released the Observers Data Access Portal (ODAP), a web-application that delivers astronomical data from the W. M. Keck Observatory to the scheduled program's principal investigator and their collaborators anywhere in the world in near real-time. Data files and their associated metadata are streamed to a user's desktop machine moments after they are written to disk and archived in KOA. The ODAP User Interface is built in React and uses the WebSocket protocol to stream data between KOA and the user. This document describes the design of the tool, challenges encountered, shows how ODAP is integrated into the Keck observing model, and provides an analysis of usage metrics., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2024
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- 2024
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38. Video-based Analysis Reveals Atypical Social Gaze in People with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Yu, Xiangxu, Ruan, Mindi, Hu, Chuanbo, Li, Wenqi, Paul, Lynn K., Li, Xin, and Wang, Shuo
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
In this study, we present a quantitative and comprehensive analysis of social gaze in people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Diverging from traditional first-person camera perspectives based on eye-tracking technologies, this study utilizes a third-person perspective database from the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, 2nd Edition (ADOS-2) interview videos, encompassing ASD participants and neurotypical individuals as a reference group. Employing computational models, we extracted and processed gaze-related features from the videos of both participants and examiners. The experimental samples were divided into three groups based on the presence of social gaze abnormalities and ASD diagnosis. This study quantitatively analyzed four gaze features: gaze engagement, gaze variance, gaze density map, and gaze diversion frequency. Furthermore, we developed a classifier trained on these features to identify gaze abnormalities in ASD participants. Together, we demonstrated the effectiveness of analyzing social gaze in people with ASD in naturalistic settings, showcasing the potential of third-person video perspectives in enhancing ASD diagnosis through gaze analysis.
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- 2024
39. Texas Students' Progress under the Foundation High School Program
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American Institutes for Research (AIR), Lynn Mellor, and Molly Cain
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For students entering Grade 9 in the 2014-15 school year and later, Texas modified its public high school graduation requirements by enacting House Bill 5 (HB 5) during the 83rd Texas Legislature. These changes provided students with greater flexibility in the courses required for graduation (including eliminating Algebra II as a required course) and the opportunity to focus on postsecondary opportunities and career paths by completing an endorsement. This descriptive study used state longitudinal administrative data to examine the graduation pathways of the first three Grade 9 cohorts who entered high school under the new Foundation High School Program (2014-15, 2015-16, and 2016-17). Results indicate that more than 80% of graduates earned the distinguished level of achievement, which included the completion of Algebra II. Student inequities persisted under the Foundation High School Program. Gaps across student groups continued in the types of courses that students completed. The percentage of graduates who earned the distinguished level of achievement, driven by Algebra II completion, was lower for Black and Hispanic students than for White and Asian students. Race/ethnicity and special student population gaps remained in the percentage of graduates taking Algebra II before and after the change in graduation requirements. Although critics feared making Algebra II optional would reduce the number of students taking Algebra II, Algebra II completion rates continued to increase after the policy. Excluding Multidisciplinary Studies, Business and Industry and Arts and Humanities had the largest percentage of graduates completing the endorsements and remained fairly consistent across the first three cohorts. Fewer students earned STEM and Public Services endorsements.
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- 2024
40. Washington Tribes ESSA Toolkit. The Education Sovereignty Then Justice Project
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Region 16 Comprehensive Center (R16CC) and Nancy Lynn Palmanteer-Holder
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Imagine a public K-12 school system where Native students and communities can thrive. The Washington Tribal Education Sovereignty then Justice Toolkit is designed to support Tribal leaders engaging in consultation and government-to-government communication with local and state education agencies. The toolkit includes: Part 1: Applying educational Sovereignty as a strategy to construct Tribal plans toward educational justice for future generations. In this section, explore example target goals of educational Sovereignty, reflect on the historical events and policies that have shaped Indian education over the past 150 years, and read about five Indigenous theories shaping education. Part 2: Detailing K-12 school systems, structures, leadership models, and funding sources. In this section, learn more about structures, policies, and process in public K-12 school systems that impact Native students, including key practices around demographic data collection and funding. Part 3: Framing guiding questions for Tribes to ask K-12 schools prior to Tribal consultation and government-to-government gatherings. In this section, consider guiding questions to ask school districts responsible for the education of your Tribal citizens and implement meaningful consultation protocols and procedures. Part 4: Accessing resources for best practices by other Tribes, Indian education organizations, and national leaders. In this section, review resources and become familiar with the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) terms used in government-to-government consultation with school districts. Parts 5-7 offer references, a glossary, and information about consultation beyond ESSA.
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- 2024
41. Optimizing AI in Higher Education: SUNY FACT[superscript 2] Guide, Second Edition. Open Educational Resources
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Lynn Aaron, Santina Abbate, Nicola Marae Allain, Bridgmas, Brian Fallon, Dana Gavin, C. Gordon, Margarete Jadamec, Adele Merlino, Laura Pierie, Gina Solano, David Wolf, Lynn Aaron, Santina Abbate, Nicola Marae Allain, Bridgmas, Brian Fallon, Dana Gavin, C. Gordon, Margarete Jadamec, Adele Merlino, Laura Pierie, Gina Solano, and David Wolf
- Abstract
In this "Optimizing AI in Higher Education: SUNY FACT[superscript 2] Guide, Second Edition," you will find updated information to reflect the changing landscape of generative AI technology. We offer practical suggestions for how to help educators and students achieve AI literacy and find the right methods of using or eschewing generative AI in their pedagogy. The second edition represents both an update to the first Guide, but also a recognition of the fact that generative AI is a tool in constant development; we will continue to advocate for equitable education and access for all students and educators as this dynamic and innovative field continues to grow. The book results from a Task Group charged by the FACT2 Council with Judith Littlejohn as Chair. Co-chairs Billie Franchini and Jeffrey Riman, who also served as editors, led the Task Group's year-long efforts.
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- 2024
42. Quantum Sieving for Code-Based Cryptanalysis and Its Limitations for ISD
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Engelberts, Lynn, Etinski, Simona, and Loyer, Johanna
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Quantum Physics ,Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Sieving using near-neighbor search techniques is a well-known method in lattice-based cryptanalysis, yielding the current best runtime for the shortest vector problem in both the classical [BDGL16] and quantum [BCSS23] setting. Recently, sieving has also become an important tool in code-based cryptanalysis. Specifically, using a sieving subroutine, [GJN23, DEEK24] presented a variant of the information-set decoding (ISD) framework, which is commonly used for attacking cryptographically relevant instances of the decoding problem. The resulting sieving-based ISD framework yields complexities close to the best-performing classical algorithms for the decoding problem such as [BJMM12, BM18]. It is therefore natural to ask how well quantum versions perform. In this work, we introduce the first quantum algorithms for code sieving by designing quantum variants of the aforementioned sieving subroutine. In particular, using quantum-walk techniques, we provide a speed-up over the best known classical algorithm from [DEEK24] and over a variant using Grover's algorithm [Gro96]. Our quantum-walk algorithm exploits the structure of the underlying search problem by adding a layer of locality-sensitive filtering, inspired by the quantum-walk algorithm for lattice sieving from [CL21]. We complement our asymptotic analysis of the quantum algorithms with numerical results, and observe that our quantum speed-ups for code sieving behave similarly as those observed in lattice sieving. In addition, we show that a natural quantum analog of the sieving-based ISD framework does not provide any speed-up over the first presented quantum ISD algorithm [Ber10]. Our analysis highlights that the framework should be adapted in order to outperform the state-of-the-art of quantum ISD algorithms [KT17, Kir18].
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- 2024
43. Re-evaluation of Face Anti-spoofing Algorithm in Post COVID-19 Era Using Mask Based Occlusion Attack
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Sundharam, Vaibhav, Sarkar, Abhijit, and Abbott, A. Lynn
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Face anti-spoofing algorithms play a pivotal role in the robust deployment of face recognition systems against presentation attacks. Conventionally, full facial images are required by such systems to correctly authenticate individuals, but the widespread requirement of masks due to the current COVID-19 pandemic has introduced new challenges for these biometric authentication systems. Hence, in this work, we investigate the performance of presentation attack detection (PAD) algorithms under synthetic facial occlusions using masks and glasses. We have used five variants of masks to cover the lower part of the face with varying coverage areas (low-coverage, medium-coverage, high-coverage, round coverage), and 3D cues. We have also used different variants of glasses that cover the upper part of the face. We systematically tested the performance of four PAD algorithms under these occlusion attacks using a benchmark dataset. We have specifically looked at four different baseline PAD algorithms that focus on, texture, image quality, frame difference/motion, and abstract features through a convolutional neural network (CNN). Additionally we have introduced a new hybrid model that uses CNN and local binary pattern textures. Our experiment shows that adding the occlusions significantly degrades the performance of all of the PAD algorithms. Our results show the vulnerability of face anti-spoofing algorithms with occlusions, which could be in the usage of such algorithms in the post-pandemic era., Comment: 10 pages, This work was done in 2020
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- 2024
44. Comparing NASA Discovery and New Frontiers Class Mission Concepts for the Io Volcano Observer (IVO)
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Hamilton, Christopher W., McEwen, Alfred S., Keszthelyi, Laszlo, Carter, Lynn M., Davies, Ashley G., de Kleer, Katherine, Jessup, Kandis Lea, Jia, Xianzhe, Keane, James T., Mandt, Kathleen, Nimmo, Francis, Paranicas, Chris, Park, Ryan S., Perry, Jason E., Pommier, Anne, Radebaugh, Jani, Sutton, Sarah S., Vorburger, Audrey, Wurz, Peter, Borlina, Cauê, Haapala, Amanda F., DellaGiustina, Daniella N., Denevi, Brett W., Hörst, Sarah M., Kempf, Sascha, Khurana, Krishan K., Likar, Justin J., Masters, Adam, Mousis, Olivier, Polit, Anjani T., Bhushan, Aditya, Bland, Michael, Matsuyama, Isamu, and Spencer, John
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Jupiter's moon Io is a highly compelling target for future exploration that offers critical insight into tidal dissipation processes and the geology of high heat flux worlds, including primitive planetary bodies, such as the early Earth, that are shaped by enhanced rates of volcanism. Io is also important for understanding the development of volcanogenic atmospheres and mass-exchange within the Jupiter System. However, fundamental questions remain about the state of Io's interior, surface, and atmosphere, as well as its role in the evolution of the Galilean satellites. The Io Volcano Observer (IVO) would address these questions by achieving the following three key goals: (A) Determine how and where tidal heat is generated inside Io; (B) Understand how tidal heat is transported to the surface of Io; and (C) Understand how Io is evolving. IVO was selected for Phase A study through the NASA Discovery program in 2020 and, in anticipation of a New Frontiers 5 opportunity, an enhanced IVO-NF mission concept was advanced that would increase the Baseline mission from 10 flybys to 20, with an improved radiation design; employ a Ka-band communications to double IVO's total data downlink; add a wide angle camera for color and stereo mapping; add a dust mass spectrometer; and lower the altitude of later flybys to enable new science. This study compares and contrasts the mission architecture, instrument suite, and science objectives for Discovery (IVO) and New Frontiers (IVO-NF) missions to Io, and advocates for continued prioritization of Io as an exploration target for New Frontiers., Comment: Submitted to The Planetary Science Journal for peer-review on 14 August 2024
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- 2024
45. Electrostatic Waves and Electron Holes in Simulations of Low-Mach Quasi-Perpendicular Shocks
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Bohdan, Artem, Tran, Aaron, Sironi, Lorenzo, and Wilson III, Lynn B.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Collisionless low Mach number shocks are abundant in astrophysical and space plasma environments, exhibiting complex wave activity and wave-particle interactions. In this paper, we present 2D Particle-in-Cell (PIC) simulations of quasi-perpendicular nonrelativistic ($\vsh \approx (5500-22000)$ km/s) low Mach number shocks, with a specific focus on studying electrostatic waves in the shock ramp and the precursor regions. In these shocks, an ion-scale oblique whistler wave creates a configuration with two hot counter-streaming electron beams, which drive unstable electron acoustic waves (EAWs) that can turn into electrostatic solitary waves (ESWs) at the late stage of their evolution. By conducting simulations with periodic boundaries, we show that EAW properties agree with linear dispersion analysis. The characteristics of ESWs in shock simulations, including their wavelength and amplitude, depend on the shock velocity. When extrapolated to shocks with realistic velocities ($\vsh \approx 300$ km/s), the ESW wavelength is reduced to one tenth of the electron skin depth and the ESW amplitude is anticipated to surpass that of the quasi-static electric field by more than a factor of 100. These theoretical predictions may explain a discrepancy, between PIC and satellite measurements, in the relative amplitude of high- and low-frequency electric field fluctuations., Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2024
46. Communicating the gravitational-wave discoveries of the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration
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Middleton, Hannah, Berry, Christopher P L, Arnaud, Nicolas, Blair, David, Bondell, Jacqueline, Bonino, Alice, Bonne, Nicolas, Chatterjee, Debarati, Chaty, Sylvain, Colloms, Storm, Cominsky, Lynn, Conti, Livia, Cordero-Carrión, Isabel, Coyne, Robert, Doctor, Zoheyr, Freise, Andreas, Geller, Aaron, Green, Anna C, Gupta, Jen, Holz, Daniel, Katzman, William, Kaur, Jyoti, Keitel, David, Key, Joey Shapiro, Kijbunchoo, Nutsinee, Knox, Carl, Krawczyk, Coleman, Lang, Ryan N, Larson, Shane L, Milde, Susanne, Napolano, Vincenzo, North, Chris, Rieger, Sascha, Rossi, Giada, Shinkai, Hisaaki, Simonnet, Aurore, and Spencer, Andrew
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,Physics - Physics Education ,Physics - Popular Physics - Abstract
The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) Collaboration has made breakthrough discoveries in gravitational-wave astronomy, a new field that provides a different means of observing our Universe. Gravitational-wave discoveries are possible thanks to the work of thousands of people from across the globe working together. In this article, we discuss the range of engagement activities used to communicate LVK gravitational-wave discoveries and the stories of the people behind the science, using the activities surrounding the release of the third Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog as a case study., Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, published in JCOM: https://doi.org/10.22323/2.23070803
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- 2024
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47. SCIsegV2: A Universal Tool for Segmentation of Intramedullary Lesions in Spinal Cord Injury
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Karthik, Enamundram Naga, Valošek, Jan, Farner, Lynn, Pfyffer, Dario, Schading-Sassenhausen, Simon, Lebret, Anna, David, Gergely, Smith, Andrew C., Weber II, Kenneth A., Seif, Maryam, Group, RHSCIR Network Imaging, Freund, Patrick, and Cohen-Adad, Julien
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating incidence leading to permanent paralysis and loss of sensory-motor functions potentially resulting in the formation of lesions within the spinal cord. Imaging biomarkers obtained from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans can predict the functional recovery of individuals with SCI and help choose the optimal treatment strategy. Currently, most studies employ manual quantification of these MRI-derived biomarkers, which is a subjective and tedious task. In this work, we propose (i) a universal tool for the automatic segmentation of intramedullary SCI lesions, dubbed \texttt{SCIsegV2}, and (ii) a method to automatically compute the width of the tissue bridges from the segmented lesion. Tissue bridges represent the spared spinal tissue adjacent to the lesion, which is associated with functional recovery in SCI patients. The tool was trained and validated on a heterogeneous dataset from 7 sites comprising patients from different SCI phases (acute, sub-acute, and chronic) and etiologies (traumatic SCI, ischemic SCI, and degenerative cervical myelopathy). Tissue bridges quantified automatically did not significantly differ from those computed manually, suggesting that the proposed automatic tool can be used to derive relevant MRI biomarkers. \texttt{SCIsegV2} and the automatic tissue bridges computation are open-source and available in Spinal Cord Toolbox (v6.4 and above) via the \texttt{sct\_deepseg -task seg\_sc\_lesion\_t2w\_sci} and \texttt{sct\_analyze\_lesion} functions, respectively., Comment: Accepted at MICCAI AMAI 2024 workshop
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- 2024
48. The need to implement FAIR principles in biomolecular simulations
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Amaro, Rommie, Åqvist, Johan, Bahar, Ivet, Battistini, Federica, Bellaiche, Adam, Beltran, Daniel, Biggin, Philip C., Bonomi, Massimiliano, Bowman, Gregory R., Bryce, Richard, Bussi, Giovanni, Carloni, Paolo, Case, David, Cavalli, Andrea, Chang, Chie-En A., Cheatham III, Thomas E., Cheung, Margaret S., Chipot, Cris, Chong, Lillian T., Choudhary, Preeti, Cisneros, Gerardo Andres, Clementi, Cecilia, Collepardo-Guevara, Rosana, Coveney, Peter, Covino, Roberto, Crawford, T. Daniel, Peraro, Matteo Dal, de Groot, Bert, Delemotte, Lucie, De Vivo, Marco, Essex, Jonathan, Fraternali, Franca, Gao, Jiali, Gelpí, Josep Lluís, Gervasio, Francesco Luigi, Gonzalez-Nilo, Fernando Danilo, Grubmüller, Helmut, Guenza, Marina, Guzman, Horacio V., Harris, Sarah, Head-Gordon, Teresa, Hernandez, Rigoberto, Hospital, Adam, Huang, Niu, Huang, Xuhui, Hummer, Gerhard, Iglesias-Fernández, Javier, Jensen, Jan H., Jha, Shantenu, Jiao, Wanting, Jorgensen, William L., Kamerlin, Shina Caroline Lynn, Khalid, Syma, Laughton, Charles, Levitt, Michael, Limongelli, Vittorio, Lindahl, Erik, Lindorff-Larsen, Kresten, Loverde, Sharon, Lundborg, Magnus, Luo, Yun Lyna, Luque, Francisco Javier, Lynch, Charlotte I., MacKerell, Alexander, Magistrato, Alessandra, Marrink, Siewert J., Martin, Hugh, McCammon, J. Andrew, Merz, Kenneth, Moliner, Vicent, Mulholland, Adrian, Murad, Sohail, Naganathan, Athi N., Nangia, Shikha, Noe, Frank, Noy, Agnes, Oláh, Julianna, O'Mara, Megan, Ondrechen, Mary Jo, Onuchic, José N., Onufriev, Alexey, Osuna, Silvia, Panchenko, Anna R., Pantano, Sergio, Parish, Carol, Parrinello, Michele, Perez, Alberto, Perez-Acle, Tomas, Perilla, Juan R., Pettitt, B. Montgomery, Pietropalo, Adriana, Piquemal, Jean-Philip, Poma, Adolfo, Praprotnik, Matej, Ramos, Maria J., Ren, Pengyu, Reuter, Nathalie, Roitberg, Adrian, Rosta, Edina, Rovira, Carme, Roux, Benoit, Röthlisberger, Ursula, Sanbonmatsu, Karissa Y., Schlick, Tamar, Shaytan, Alexey K., Simmerling, Carlos, Smith, Jeremy C., Sugita, Yuji, Świderek, Katarzyna, Taiji, Makoto, Tao, Peng, Tikhonova, Irina G., Tirado-Rives, Julian, Tunón, Inaki, Van Der Kamp, Marc W., Van der Spoel, David, Velankar, Sameer, Voth, Gregory A., Wade, Rebecca, Warshel, Ariel, Welborn, Valerie Vaissier, Wetmore, Stacey, Wong, Chung F., Yang, Lee-Wei, Zacharias, Martin, and Orozco, Modesto
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Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules - Abstract
This letter illustrates the opinion of the molecular dynamics (MD) community on the need to adopt a new FAIR paradigm for the use of molecular simulations. It highlights the necessity of a collaborative effort to create, establish, and sustain a database that allows findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability of molecular dynamics simulation data. Such a development would democratize the field and significantly improve the impact of MD simulations on life science research. This will transform our working paradigm, pushing the field to a new frontier. We invite you to support our initiative at the MDDB community (https://mddbr.eu/community/)
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- 2024
49. Report on the Conference on Ethical and Responsible Design in the National AI Institutes: A Summary of Challenges
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Conklin, Sherri Lynn, Bae, Sue, Sett, Gaurav, Hoffmann, Michael, and Biddle, Justin B.
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Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
In May 2023, the Georgia Tech Ethics, Technology, and Human Interaction Center organized the Conference on Ethical and Responsible Design in the National AI Institutes. Representatives from the National AI Research Institutes that had been established as of January 2023 were invited to attend; researchers representing 14 Institutes attended and participated. The conference focused on three questions: What are the main challenges that the National AI Institutes are facing with regard to the responsible design of AI systems? What are promising lines of inquiry to address these challenges? What are possible points of collaboration? Over the course of the conference, a revised version of the first question became a focal point: What are the challenges that the Institutes face in identifying ethical and responsible design practices and in implementing them in the AI development process? This document summarizes the challenges that representatives from the Institutes in attendance highlighted., Comment: 9 pages
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- 2024
50. Minimal surfaces and alternating multiple zetas
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Charlton, Steven, Heller, Lynn, Heller, Sebastian, and Traizet, Martin
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Mathematics - Differential Geometry ,Mathematics - Number Theory ,11M32, 11G55, 53A10, 53C42, 53C43 - Abstract
In this paper we show for every sufficiently large integer $g$ the existence of a complete family of closed and embedded constant mean curvature (CMC) surfaces deforming the Lawson surfaces $\xi_{1,g}$ parametrized by their conformal type. When specializing to the minimal case, we discover a pattern resulting in the coefficients of the involved expansions being alternating multiple zeta values (MZVs), which generalizes the notion of Riemann's zeta values to multiple integer variables. This allows us to extend a new existence proof of the Lawson surfaces $\xi_{1,g}$ to all $g\geq 3$ using complex analytic methods and to give closed form expressions of their area expansion up to order $7$. For example, the third order coefficient is $\tfrac{9}{4}\zeta(3)$ (the first and second order term were shown to be $\log(2)$ and $0$ respectively in \cite{HHT}). As a corollary, we obtain that the area of $\xi_{1,g}$ is monotonically increasing in their genus $g$ for all $g\geq 0.$, Comment: 85 pages, 13 figures, 4 appendices. Includes ancillary Mathematica files verifying calculations. This paper supersedes arXiv:2108.10214
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- 2024
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