41,700 results on '"Moro A"'
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2. Breakup of 8B+natZr at the sub-barrier energy of 26.5 MeV
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Palli K., Pakou A., Moro A. M., O’ Malley P. D., Acosta L., Sántzez-Bénitez A., Souliotis G., Aguilera E. F., Andrade E., Godos D., Sgouros O., Soukeras V., Agodi C., Bailey T. L., Bardayan D. W., Boomershine C., Brodeur M., Cappuzzello F., Caramichael S., Cavallaro M., Dede S., Dueñas J.A., Henning J., Lee K., Porter W.S., Rivero F., and von Seeger W.
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
In our systematic research on reactions with weakly bound nuclei at suband nearbarrier energies, we have studied the system 8B+natZr at the sub-barrier energy of 26.5 MeV. Our measurements, performed at the TriSol radioactive beam facility of the University of Notre Dame, include angular distributions of both elastic scattering and breakup, for the determination of the total reaction and breakup cross sections as well as the direct-to-total reaction cross section ratio. Preliminary results of the breakup analysis will be presented, supported by Continuum Discretized Coupling Channel calculations.
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- 2024
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3. Advanced Network Planning in 6G Smart Radio Environments
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Ayoubi, Reza Aghazadeh, Mizmizi, Marouan, Moro, Eugenio, Filippini, Ilario, and Spagnolini, Umberto
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Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
The growing demand for high-speed, reliable wireless connectivity in 6G networks necessitates innovative approaches to overcome the limitations of traditional Radio Access Network (RAN). Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface (RIS) and Network-Controlled Repeater (NCR) have emerged as promising technologies to address coverage challenges in high-frequency millimeter wave (mmW) bands by enhancing signal reach in environments susceptible to blockage and severe propagation losses. In this paper, we propose an optimized deployment framework aimed at minimizing infrastructure costs while ensuring full area coverage using only RIS and NCR. We formulate a cost-minimization optimization problem that integrates the deployment and configuration of these devices to achieve seamless coverage, particularly in dense urban scenarios. Simulation results confirm that this framework significantly reduces the network planning costs while guaranteeing full coverage, demonstrating RIS and NCR's viability as cost-effective solutions for next-generation network infrastructure., Comment: Submitted to IEEE International Conference on Communications 2025
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- 2024
4. MuCol Milestone Report No. 5: Preliminary Parameters
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Accettura, Carlotta, Adrian, Simon, Agarwal, Rohit, Ahdida, Claudia, Aimé, Chiara, Aksoy, Avni, Alberghi, Gian Luigi, Alden, Siobhan, Alfonso, Luca, Amapane, Nicola, Amorim, David, Andreetto, Paolo, Anulli, Fabio, Appleby, Rob, Apresyan, Artur, Asadi, Pouya, Mahmoud, Mohammed Attia, Auchmann, Bernhard, Back, John, Badea, Anthony, Bae, Kyu Jung, Bahng, E. J., Balconi, Lorenzo, Balli, Fabrice, Bandiera, Laura, Barbagallo, Carmelo, Barlow, Roger, Bartoli, Camilla, Bartosik, Nazar, Barzi, Emanuela, Batsch, Fabian, Bauce, Matteo, Begel, Michael, Berg, J. Scott, Bersani, Andrea, Bertarelli, Alessandro, Bertinelli, Francesco, Bertolin, Alessandro, Bhat, Pushpalatha, Bianchi, Clarissa, Bianco, Michele, Bishop, William, Black, Kevin, Boattini, Fulvio, Bogacz, Alex, Bonesini, Maurizio, Bordini, Bernardo, de Sousa, Patricia Borges, Bottaro, Salvatore, Bottura, Luca, Boyd, Steven, Breschi, Marco, Broggi, Francesco, Brunoldi, Matteo, Buffat, Xavier, Buonincontri, Laura, Burrows, Philip Nicholas, Burt, Graeme Campbell, Buttazzo, Dario, Caiffi, Barbara, Calatroni, Sergio, Calviani, Marco, Calzaferri, Simone, Calzolari, Daniele, Cantone, Claudio, Capdevilla, Rodolfo, Carli, Christian, Carrelli, Carlo, Casaburo, Fausto, Casarsa, Massimo, Castelli, Luca, Catanesi, Maria Gabriella, Cavallucci, Lorenzo, Cavoto, Gianluca, Celiberto, Francesco Giovanni, Celona, Luigi, Cemmi, Alessia, Ceravolo, Sergio, Cerri, Alessandro, Cerutti, Francesco, Cesarini, Gianmario, Cesarotti, Cari, Chancé, Antoine, Charitonidis, Nikolaos, Chiesa, Mauro, Chiggiato, Paolo, Ciccarella, Vittoria Ludovica, Puviani, Pietro Cioli, Colaleo, Anna, Colao, Francesco, Collamati, Francesco, Costa, Marco, Craig, Nathaniel, Curtin, David, Damerau, Heiko, Da Molin, Giacomo, D'Angelo, Laura, Dasu, Sridhara, de Blas, Jorge, De Curtis, Stefania, De Gersem, Herbert, Delahaye, Jean-Pierre, Del Moro, Tommaso, Denisov, Dmitri, Denizli, Haluk, Dermisek, Radovan, Valdor, Paula Desiré, Desponds, Charlotte, Di Luzio, Luca, Di Meco, Elisa, Diociaiuti, Eleonora, Di Petrillo, Karri Folan, Di Sarcina, Ilaria, Dorigo, Tommaso, Dreimanis, Karlis, Pree, Tristan du, Yildiz, Hatice Duran, Edgecock, Thomas, Fabbri, Siara, Fabbrichesi, Marco, Farinon, Stefania, Ferrand, Guillaume, Somoza, Jose Antonio Ferreira, Fieg, Max, Filthaut, Frank, Fox, Patrick, Franceschini, Roberto, Ximenes, Rui Franqueira, Gallinaro, Michele, Garcia-Sciveres, Maurice, Garcia-Tabares, Luis, Gargiulo, Ruben, Garion, Cedric, Garzelli, Maria Vittoria, Gast, Marco, Generoso, Lisa, Gerber, Cecilia E., Giambastiani, Luca, Gianelle, Alessio, Gianfelice-Wendt, Eliana, Gibson, Stephen, Gilardoni, Simone, Giove, Dario Augusto, Giovinco, Valentina, Giraldin, Carlo, Glioti, Alfredo, Gorzawski, Arkadiusz, Greco, Mario, Grojean, Christophe, Grudiev, Alexej, Gschwendtner, Edda, Gueli, Emanuele, Guilhaudin, Nicolas, Han, Chengcheng, Han, Tao, Hauptman, John Michael, Herndon, Matthew, Hillier, Adrian D, Hillman, Micah, Holmes, Tova Ray, Homiller, Samuel, Jana, Sudip, Jindariani, Sergo, Johannesson, Sofia, Johnson, Benjamin, Jones, Owain Rhodri, Jurj, Paul-Bogdan, Kahn, Yonatan, Kamath, Rohan, Kario, Anna, Karpov, Ivan, Kelliher, David, Kilian, Wolfgang, Kitano, Ryuichiro, Kling, Felix, Kolehmainen, Antti, Kong, K. C., Kosse, Jaap, Krintiras, Georgios, Krizka, Karol, Kumar, Nilanjana, Kvikne, Erik, Kyle, Robert, Laface, Emanuele, Lane, Kenneth, Latina, Andrea, Lechner, Anton, Lee, Junghyun, Lee, Lawrence, Lee, Seh Wook, Lefevre, Thibaut, Leonardi, Emanuele, Lerner, Giuseppe, Li, Peiran, Li, Qiang, Li, Tong, Li, Wei, Lindroos, Mats, Lipton, Ronald, Liu, Da, Liu, Miaoyuan, Liu, Zhen, Voti, Roberto Li, Lombardi, Alessandra, Lomte, Shivani, Long, Kenneth, Longo, Luigi, Lorenzo, José, Losito, Roberto, Low, Ian, Lu, Xianguo, Lucchesi, Donatella, Luo, Tianhuan, Lupato, Anna, Ma, Yang, Machida, Shinji, Madlener, Thomas, Magaletti, Lorenzo, Maggi, Marcello, Durand, Helene Mainaud, Maltoni, Fabio, Manczak, Jerzy Mikolaj, Mandurrino, Marco, Marchand, Claude, Mariani, Francesco, Marin, Stefano, Mariotto, Samuele, Martin-Haugh, Stewart, Masullo, Maria Rosaria, Mauro, Giorgio Sebastiano, Mazzolari, Andrea, Mękała, Krzysztof, Mele, Barbara, Meloni, Federico, Meng, Xiangwei, Mentink, Matthias, Métral, Elias, Miceli, Rebecca, Milas, Natalia, Mohammadi, Abdollah, Moll, Dominik, Montella, Alessandro, Morandin, Mauro, Morrone, Marco, Mulder, Tim, Musenich, Riccardo, Nardecchia, Marco, Nardi, Federico, Nenna, Felice, Neuffer, David, Newbold, David, Novelli, Daniel, Olvegård, Maja, Onel, Yasar, Orestano, Domizia, Osborne, John, Otten, Simon, Torres, Yohan Mauricio Oviedo, Paesani, Daniele, Griso, Simone Pagan, Pagani, Davide, Pal, Kincso, Palmer, Mark, Pampaloni, Alessandra, Panci, Paolo, Pani, Priscilla, Papaphilippou, Yannis, Paparella, Rocco, Paradisi, Paride, Passeri, Antonio, Pasternak, Jaroslaw, Pastrone, Nadia, Pellecchia, Antonello, Piccinini, Fulvio, Piekarz, Henryk, Pieloni, Tatiana, Plouin, Juliette, Portone, Alfredo, Potamianos, Karolos, Potdevin, Joséphine, Prestemon, Soren, Puig, Teresa, Qiang, Ji, Quettier, Lionel, Rabemananjara, Tanjona Radonirina, Radicioni, Emilio, Radogna, Raffaella, Rago, Ilaria Carmela, Ratkus, Andris, Resseguie, Elodie, Reuter, Juergen, Ribani, Pier Luigi, Riccardi, Cristina, Ricciardi, Stefania, Robens, Tania, Robert, Youri, Rogers, Chris, Rojo, Juan, Romagnoni, Marco, Ronald, Kevin, Rosser, Benjamin, Rossi, Carlo, Rossi, Lucio, Rozanov, Leo, Ruhdorfer, Maximilian, Ruiz, Richard, Saini, Saurabh, Sala, Filippo, Salierno, Claudia, Salmi, Tiina, Salvini, Paola, Salvioni, Ennio, Sammut, Nicholas, Santini, Carlo, Saputi, Alessandro, Sarra, Ivano, Scarantino, Giuseppe, Schneider-Muntau, Hans, Schulte, Daniel, Scifo, Jessica, Sen, Tanaji, Senatore, Carmine, Senol, Abdulkadir, Sertore, Daniele, Sestini, Lorenzo, Rêgo, Ricardo César Silva, Simone, Federica Maria, Skoufaris, Kyriacos, Sorbello, Gino, Sorbi, Massimo, Sorti, Stefano, Soubirou, Lisa, Spataro, David, Queiroz, Farinaldo S., Stamerra, Anna, Stapnes, Steinar, Stark, Giordon, Statera, Marco, Stechauner, Bernd Michael, Su, Shufang, Su, Wei, Sun, Xiaohu, Sytov, Alexei, Tang, Jian, Tang, Jingyu, Taylor, Rebecca, Kate, Herman Ten, Testoni, Pietro, Thiele, Leonard Sebastian, Garcia, Rogelio Tomas, Topp-Mugglestone, Max, Torims, Toms, Torre, Riccardo, Tortora, Luca, Tortora, Ludovico, Trifinopoulos, Sokratis, Udongwo, Sosoho-Abasi, Vai, Ilaria, Valente, Riccardo Umberto, van Rienen, Ursula, Van Weelderen, Rob, Vanwelde, Marion, Velev, Gueorgui, Venditti, Rosamaria, Vendrasco, Adam, Verna, Adriano, Vernassa, Gianluca, Verweij, Arjan, Verwilligen, Piet, Villamizar, Yoxara, Vittorio, Ludovico, Vitulo, Paolo, Vojskovic, Isabella, Wang, Dayong, Wang, Lian-Tao, Wang, Xing, Wendt, Manfred, Widorski, Markus, Wozniak, Mariusz, Wu, Yongcheng, Wulzer, Andrea, Xie, Keping, Yang, Yifeng, Yap, Yee Chinn, Yonehara, Katsuya, Yoo, Hwi Dong, You, Zhengyun, Zanetti, Marco, Zaza, Angela, Zhang, Liang, Zhu, Ruihu, Zlobin, Alexander, Zuliani, Davide, and Zurita, José Francisco
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
This document is comprised of a collection of updated preliminary parameters for the key parts of the muon collider. The updated preliminary parameters follow on from the October 2023 Tentative Parameters Report. Particular attention has been given to regions of the facility that are believed to hold greater technical uncertainty in their design and that have a strong impact on the cost and power consumption of the facility. The data is collected from a collaborative spreadsheet and transferred to overleaf.
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- 2024
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5. One rule does not fit all: deviations from universality in human mobility modeling
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Napoli, Ludovico, Karsai, Márton, and Moro, Esteban
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Physics - Physics and Society - Abstract
The accurate modeling of individual movement in cities has significant implications for policy decisions across various sectors. Existing research emphasizes the universality of human mobility, positing that simple models can capture population-level movements. However, population-level accuracy does not guarantee consistent performance across all individuals. By overlooking individual differences, universality laws may accurately describe certain groups while less precisely representing others, resulting in aggregate accuracy from a balance of discrepancies. Using large-scale mobility data, we assess individual-level accuracy of a universal model, the Exploration and Preferential Return (EPR), by examining deviations from expected behavior in two scaling laws - one related to exploration and the other to return patterns. Our findings reveal that, while the model can describe population-wide movement patterns, it displays widespread deviations linked to individuals' behavioral traits, socioeconomic status, and lifestyles, contradicting model assumptions like non-bursty exploration and preferential return. Specifically, individuals poorly represented by the EPR model tend to visit routine locations in sequences, exploring rarely but in a bursty manner when they do. Among socioeconomic factors, income most strongly correlates with significant deviations. Consequently, spatial inhomogeneity emerges in model accuracy, with lower performance concentrated in urbanized, densely populated areas, underscoring policy implications. Our results show that emphasizing population-wide models can propagate socioeconomic inequalities by poorly representing vulnerable population sectors.
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- 2024
6. Solving Differential Equations with Constrained Learning
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Moro, Viggo and Chamon, Luiz F. O.
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computational Engineering, Finance, and Science - Abstract
(Partial) differential equations (PDEs) are fundamental tools for describing natural phenomena, making their solution crucial in science and engineering. While traditional methods, such as the finite element method, provide reliable solutions, their accuracy is often tied to the use of computationally intensive fine meshes. Moreover, they do not naturally account for measurements or prior solutions, and any change in the problem parameters requires results to be fully recomputed. Neural network-based approaches, such as physics-informed neural networks and neural operators, offer a mesh-free alternative by directly fitting those models to the PDE solution. They can also integrate prior knowledge and tackle entire families of PDEs by simply aggregating additional training losses. Nevertheless, they are highly sensitive to hyperparameters such as collocation points and the weights associated with each loss. This paper addresses these challenges by developing a science-constrained learning (SCL) framework. It demonstrates that finding a (weak) solution of a PDE is equivalent to solving a constrained learning problem with worst-case losses. This explains the limitations of previous methods that minimize the expected value of aggregated losses. SCL also organically integrates structural constraints (e.g., invariances) and (partial) measurements or known solutions. The resulting constrained learning problems can be tackled using a practical algorithm that yields accurate solutions across a variety of PDEs, neural network architectures, and prior knowledge levels without extensive hyperparameter tuning and sometimes even at a lower computational cost.
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- 2024
7. Generative Simulations of The Solar Corona Evolution With Denoising Diffusion : Proof of Concept
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Francisco, Grégoire, Ramunno, Francesco Pio, Georgoulis, Manolis K., Fernandes, João, Barata, Teresa, and Del Moro, Dario
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
The solar magnetized corona is responsible for various manifestations with a space weather impact, such as flares, coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and, naturally, the solar wind. Modeling the corona's dynamics and evolution is therefore critical for improving our ability to predict space weather In this work, we demonstrate that generative deep learning methods, such as Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models (DDPM), can be successfully applied to simulate future evolutions of the corona as observed in Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) wavelengths. Our model takes a 12-hour video of an Active Region (AR) as input and simulate the potential evolution of the AR over the subsequent 12 hours, with a time-resolution of two hours. We propose a light UNet backbone architecture adapted to our problem by adding 1D temporal convolutions after each classical 2D spatial ones, and spatio-temporal attention in the bottleneck part. The model not only produce visually realistic outputs but also captures the inherent stochasticity of the system's evolution. Notably, the simulations enable the generation of reliable confidence intervals for key predictive metrics such as the EUV peak flux and fluence of the ARs, paving the way for probabilistic and interpretable space weather forecasting. Future studies will focus on shorter forecasting horizons with increased spatial and temporal resolution, aiming at reducing the uncertainty of the simulations and providing practical applications for space weather forecasting. The code used for this study is available at the following link: https://github.com/gfrancisco20/video_diffusion
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- 2024
8. A Survey on Automatic Credibility Assessment of Textual Credibility Signals in the Era of Large Language Models
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Srba, Ivan, Razuvayevskaya, Olesya, Leite, João A., Moro, Robert, Schlicht, Ipek Baris, Tonelli, Sara, García, Francisco Moreno, Lottmann, Santiago Barrio, Teyssou, Denis, Porcellini, Valentin, Scarton, Carolina, Bontcheva, Kalina, and Bielikova, Maria
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
In the current era of social media and generative AI, an ability to automatically assess the credibility of online social media content is of tremendous importance. Credibility assessment is fundamentally based on aggregating credibility signals, which refer to small units of information, such as content factuality, bias, or a presence of persuasion techniques, into an overall credibility score. Credibility signals provide a more granular, more easily explainable and widely utilizable information in contrast to currently predominant fake news detection, which utilizes various (mostly latent) features. A growing body of research on automatic credibility assessment and detection of credibility signals can be characterized as highly fragmented and lacking mutual interconnections. This issue is even more prominent due to a lack of an up-to-date overview of research works on automatic credibility assessment. In this survey, we provide such systematic and comprehensive literature review of 175 research papers while focusing on textual credibility signals and Natural Language Processing (NLP), which undergoes a significant advancement due to Large Language Models (LLMs). While positioning the NLP research into the context of other multidisciplinary research works, we tackle with approaches for credibility assessment as well as with 9 categories of credibility signals (we provide a thorough analysis for 3 of them, namely: 1) factuality, subjectivity and bias, 2) persuasion techniques and logical fallacies, and 3) claims and veracity). Following the description of the existing methods, datasets and tools, we identify future challenges and opportunities, while paying a specific attention to recent rapid development of generative AI.
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- 2024
9. Multimodal Flare Forecasting with Deep Learning
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Francisco, Grégoire, Guastavino, Sabrina, Barata, Teresa, Fernandes, João, and Del Moro, Dario
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Solar flare forecasting mainly relies on photospheric magnetograms and associated physical features to predict forthcoming flares. However, it is believed that flare initiation mechanisms often originate in the chromosphere and the lower corona. In this study, we employ deep learning as a purely data-driven approach to compare the predictive capabilities of chromospheric and coronal UV and EUV emissions across different wavelengths with those of photospheric line-of-sight magnetograms. Our findings indicate that individual EUV wavelengths can provide discriminatory power comparable or better to that of line-of-sight magnetograms. Moreover, we identify simple multimodal neural network architectures that consistently outperform single-input models, showing complementarity between the flare precursors that can be extracted from the distinct layers of the solar atmosphere. To mitigate potential biases from known misattributions in Active Region flare catalogs, our models are trained and evaluated using full-disk images and a comprehensive flare event catalog at the full-disk level. We introduce a deep-learning architecture suited for extracting temporal features from full-disk videos.
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- 2024
10. Explainable Metrics for the Assessment of Neurodegenerative Diseases through Handwriting Analysis
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Thebaud, Thomas, Favaro, Anna, Chen, Casey, Chavez, Gabrielle, Moro-Velazquez, Laureano, Butala, Ankur, and Dehak, Najim
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Motor changes are early signs of neurodegenerative diseases (NDs) such as Parkinson's disease (PD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD), but are often difficult to detect, especially in the early stages. In this work, we examine the behavior of a wide array of explainable metrics extracted from the handwriting signals of 113 subjects performing multiple tasks on a digital tablet. The aim is to measure their effectiveness in characterizing and assessing multiple NDs, including AD and PD. To this end, task-agnostic and task-specific metrics are extracted from 14 distinct tasks. Subsequently, through statistical analysis and a series of classification experiments, we investigate which metrics provide greater discriminative power between NDs and healthy controls and among different NDs. Preliminary results indicate that the various tasks at hand can all be effectively leveraged to distinguish between the considered set of NDs, specifically by measuring the stability, the speed of writing, the time spent not writing, and the pressure variations between groups from our handcrafted explainable metrics, which shows p-values lower than 0.0001 for multiple tasks. Using various classification algorithms on the computed metrics, we obtain up to 87% accuracy to discriminate AD and healthy controls (CTL), and up to 69% for PD vs CTL., Comment: 19 pages plus references, to be submitted to IEEE JHBI
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- 2024
11. An OpenMetBuoy dataset of Marginal Ice Zone dynamics collected around Svalbard in 2022 and 2023
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Rabault, Jean, Taelman, Catherine, Idžanović, Martina, Hope, Gaute, Nose, Takehiko, Kristoffersen, Yngve, Jensen, Atle, Breivik, Øyvind, Bryhni, Helge Thomas, Hoppmann, Mario, Demchev, Denis, Korosov, Anton, Johansson, Malin, Eltoft, Torbjørn, Dagestad, Knut-Frode, Röhrs, Johannes, Eriksson, Leif, Moro, Marina Durán, Rikardsen, Edel S. U., Waseda, Takuji, Kodaira, Tsubasa, Lohse, Johannes, Desjonquères, Thibault, Olsen, Sveinung, Gundersen, Olav, de Aguiar, Victor Cesar Martins, Karlsen, Truls, Babanin, Alexander, Voermans, Joey, Park, Jeong-Won, and Müller, Malte
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Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
Sea ice is a key element of the global Earth system, with a major impact on global climate and regional weather. Unfortunately, accurate sea ice modeling is challenging due to the diversity and complexity of underlying physics happening there, and a relative lack of ground truth observations. This is especially true for the Marginal Ice Zone (MIZ), which is the area where sea ice is affected by incoming ocean waves. Waves contribute to making the area dynamic, and due to the low survival time of the buoys deployed there, the MIZ is challenging to monitor. In 2022-2023, we released 79 OpenMetBuoys (OMBs) around Svalbard, both in the MIZ and the ocean immediately outside of it. OMBs are affordable enough to be deployed in large number, and gather information about drift (GPS position) and waves (1-dimensional elevation spectrum). This provides data focusing on the area around Svalbard with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. We expect that this will allow to perform validation and calibration of ice models and remote sensing algorithms.
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- 2024
12. Effectiveness of University-Provided Individual Counselling for Healthcare Students: A Systematic Review
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Giuseppina Lo Moro, Maria Rosaria Gualano, Costanza Vicentini, Noemi Marengo, Fabrizio Bert, and Roberta Siliquini
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Medical, nursing, and other healthcare students undergo specific stressors. Their mental health represents a priority for universities and the entire community. This review aimed to gather evidence about the effectiveness of individual psychological counselling offered by universities to healthcare students. A systematic review was conducted by searching PubMed, Scopus, and APA PsycInfo. A total of 1906 records were identified. The selection resulted in six studies published between 1994 and 2014. The most common design was quasi-experimental. Half focused on medical students and often interventions comprised other elements. Outcomes were related to mental health issues, academic performance, or both. The results showed statistically significant improvements, with some exceptions. The present review highlighted some specific characteristics that must be considered in order to fill the existing gap in this field, such as widening the range of studied outcomes, improving the description of the intervention, and planning randomized controlled trials (RCT) to compare strategies.
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- 2024
13. Structure and diversity patterns of coralligenous cliffs across three ecoregions in the Central-Western Mediterranean Sea
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Casoli, Edoardo, Moro, Stefano, Falasca, Matteo, Montefalcone, Monica, Rizzo, Lucia, Teixidó, Núria, Piazzi, Luigi, Longo, Caterina, Mercurio, Maria, Gennaro, Paola, Cecchi, Enrico, Penna, Marina, Gambi, Maria Cristina, Mirasole, Alice, Ballesteros, Enric, Andrello, Marco, Ventura, Daniele, Mancini, Gianluca, Belluscio, Andrea, Fraschetti, Simonetta, Ardizzone, Giandomenico, and Jona-Lasinio, Giovanna
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- 2024
14. Sensing data and methodology from the Adaptive DBS Algorithm for Personalized Therapy in Parkinsons Disease (ADAPT-PD) clinical trial.
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Stanslaski, Scott, Summers, Rebekah, Tonder, Lisa, Tan, Ye, Case, Michelle, Raike, Robert, Morelli, Nathan, Herrington, Todd, Beudel, Martijn, Ostrem, Jill, Little, Simon, Almeida, Leonardo, Ramirez-Zamora, Adolfo, Fasano, Alfonso, Hassell, Travis, Mitchell, Kyle, Moro, Elena, Gostkowski, Michal, Sarangmat, Nagaraja, and Bronte-Stewart, Helen
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Adaptive deep brain stimulation (aDBS) is an emerging advancement in DBS technology; however, local field potential (LFP) signal rate detection sufficient for aDBS algorithms and the methods to set-up aDBS have yet to be defined. Here we summarize sensing data and aDBS programming steps associated with the ongoing Adaptive DBS Algorithm for Personalized Therapy in Parkinsons Disease (ADAPT-PD) pivotal trial (NCT04547712). Sixty-eight patients were enrolled with either subthalamic nucleus or globus pallidus internus DBS leads connected to a Medtronic PerceptTM PC neurostimulator. During the enrollment and screening procedures, a LFP (8-30 Hz, ≥1.2 µVp) control signal was identified by clinicians in 84.8% of patients on medication (65% bilateral signal), and in 92% of patients off medication (78% bilateral signal). The ADAPT-PD trial sensing data indicate a high LFP signal presence in both on and off medication states of these patients, with bilateral signal in the majority, regardless of PD phenotype.
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- 2024
15. A cluster randomized controlled trial to assess the impact of the Caring for Providers to Improve Patient Experience (CPIPE) intervention in Kenya and Ghana: study protocol.
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Afulani, Patience, Getahun, Monica, Ongeri, Linnet, Aborigo, Raymond, Kinyua, Joyceline, Ogolla, Beryl, Okiring, Jaffer, Moro, Ali, Oluoch, Iscar, Dalaba, Maxwell, Odiase, Osamuedeme, Ouner, Jerry, Mendes, Wendy, Walker, Dilys, and Neilands, Torsten
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Humans ,Kenya ,Ghana ,Female ,Maternal Health Services ,Health Personnel ,Patient-Centered Care ,Pregnancy ,Quality Improvement ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Patient Satisfaction - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poor person-centered maternal care (PCMC) contributes to high maternal mortality and morbidity, directly and indirectly, through lack of, delayed, inadequate, unnecessary, or harmful care. While evidence on poor PCMC prevalence, as well as inequities, expanded in the last decade, there is still a significant gap in evidence-based interventions to address PCMC. We describe the protocol for a trial to test the effectiveness of the Caring for Providers to Improve Patient Experience (CPIPE) intervention, which includes five strategies, targeting provider stress and bias as intermediate factors to improve PCMC and address inequities. METHODS: The trial will assess the effect of CPIPE on PCMC, as well as on intermediate and distal outcomes, using a two-arm cluster randomized controlled trial in 40 health facilities in Migori and Homa Bay Counties in Kenya and Upper East and Northeast Regions in Ghana. Twenty facilities in each country will be randomized to 10 intervention and 10 control sites. The primary intervention targets are all healthcare workers who provide maternal health services. The intervention impact will be assessed among healthcare workers in the study health facilities and among women who give birth in the study health facilities. The primary outcome is PCMC measured with the PCMC scale, via multiple cross-sectional surveys of mothers who gave birth in the preceding 12 weeks in study facilities at baseline (prior to the intervention), midline (6 months after intervention start), and endline (12 months post-baseline) (N = 2000 across both countries at each time point). Additionally, 400 providers in the study facilities across both countries will be followed longitudinally at baseline, midline, and endline, to assess intermediate outcomes. The trial incorporates a mixed-methods design; survey data alongside in-depth interviews (IDIs) with healthcare facility leaders, providers, and mothers to qualitatively explore factors influencing the outcomes. Finally, we will collect process and cost data to assess intervention fidelity and cost-effectiveness. DISCUSSION: This trial will be the first to rigorously assess an intervention to improve PCMC that addresses both provider stress and bias and will advance the evidence base for interventions to improve PCMC and contribute to equity in maternal and neonatal health. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT06085105. Protocol version and date: v2-11-07-23.
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- 2024
16. Quantum Machine Learning Algorithms for Anomaly Detection: a Survey
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Corli, Sebastiano, Moro, Lorenzo, Dragoni, Daniele, Dispenza, Massimiliano, and Prati, Enrico
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
The advent of quantum computers has justified the development of quantum machine learning algorithms , based on the adaptation of the principles of machine learning to the formalism of qubits. Among such quantum algorithms, anomaly detection represents an important problem crossing several disciplines from cybersecurity, to fraud detection to particle physics. We summarize the key concepts involved in quantum computing, introducing the formal concept of quantum speed up. The survey provides a structured map of anomaly detection based on quantum machine learning. We have grouped existing algorithms according to the different learning methods, namely quantum supervised, quantum unsupervised and quantum reinforcement learning, respectively. We provide an estimate of the hardware resources to provide sufficient computational power in the future. The survey provides a systematic and compact understanding of the techniques belonging to each category. We eventually provide a discussion on the computational complexity of the learning methods in real application domains.
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- 2024
17. The art of modeling nuclear reactions with weakly bound nuclei: status and perspectives
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Moro, A. M., Casal, J., and Gomez-Ramos, M.
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Nuclear Theory ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We give an overview of the theoretical description of nuclear reactions involving weakly-bound nuclei. Some of the more widespread reaction formalisms employed in the analysis of these reactions are briefly introduced, including various recent developments. We put special emphasis on the continuum-discretized coupled-channel (CDCC) method and its extensions to incorporate core and target excitations as well as its application to three-body projectiles. The role of the continuum for one-nucleon transfer reactions is also discussed. The problem of the evaluation of inclusive breakup cross sections is addressed within the Ichimura-Austern-Vincent (IAV) model. Other methods, such as those based on a semiclasical description of the scattering process, are also briefly introduced and some of their applications are discussed and a brief discussion on topics of current interest, such as nucleon-nucleon correlations, uncertainty evaluation and non-locality is presented., Comment: review paper; submitted to EPJA
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- 2024
18. The Role of Temporal Hierarchy in Spiking Neural Networks
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Moro, Filippo, Aceituno, Pau Vilimelis, Kriener, Laura, and Payvand, Melika
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Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) have the potential for rich spatio-temporal signal processing thanks to exploiting both spatial and temporal parameters. The temporal dynamics such as time constants of the synapses and neurons and delays have been recently shown to have computational benefits that help reduce the overall number of parameters required in the network and increase the accuracy of the SNNs in solving temporal tasks. Optimizing such temporal parameters, for example, through gradient descent, gives rise to a temporal architecture for different problems. As has been shown in machine learning, to reduce the cost of optimization, architectural biases can be applied, in this case in the temporal domain. Such inductive biases in temporal parameters have been found in neuroscience studies, highlighting a hierarchy of temporal structure and input representation in different layers of the cortex. Motivated by this, we propose to impose a hierarchy of temporal representation in the hidden layers of SNNs, highlighting that such an inductive bias improves their performance. We demonstrate the positive effects of temporal hierarchy in the time constants of feed-forward SNNs applied to temporal tasks (Multi-Time-Scale XOR and Keyword Spotting, with a benefit of up to 4.1% in classification accuracy). Moreover, we show that such architectural biases, i.e. hierarchy of time constants, naturally emerge when optimizing the time constants through gradient descent, initialized as homogeneous values. We further pursue this proposal in temporal convolutional SNNs, by introducing the hierarchical bias in the size and dilation of temporal kernels, giving rise to competitive results in popular temporal spike-based datasets., Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, pre-print
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- 2024
19. Interim report for the International Muon Collider Collaboration (IMCC)
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Accettura, C., Adrian, S., Agarwal, R., Ahdida, C., Aimé, C., Aksoy, A., Alberghi, G. L., Alden, S., Amapane, N., Amorim, D., Andreetto, P., Anulli, F., Appleby, R., Apresyan, A., Asadi, P., Mahmoud, M. Attia, Auchmann, B., Back, J., Badea, A., Bae, K. J., Bahng, E. J., Balconi, L., Balli, F., Bandiera, L., Barbagallo, C., Barlow, R., Bartoli, C., Bartosik, N., Barzi, E., Batsch, F., Bauce, M., Begel, M., Berg, J. S., Bersani, A., Bertarelli, A., Bertinelli, F., Bertolin, A., Bhat, P., Bianchi, C., Bianco, M., Bishop, W., Black, K., Boattini, F., Bogacz, A., Bonesini, M., Bordini, B., de Sousa, P. Borges, Bottaro, S., Bottura, L., Boyd, S., Breschi, M., Broggi, F., Brunoldi, M., Buffat, X., Buonincontri, L., Burrows, P. N., Burt, G. C., Buttazzo, D., Caiffi, B., Calatroni, S., Calviani, M., Calzaferri, S., Calzolari, D., Cantone, C., Capdevilla, R., Carli, C., Carrelli, C., Casaburo, F., Casarsa, M., Castelli, L., Catanesi, M. G., Cavallucci, L., Cavoto, G., Celiberto, F. G., Celona, L., Cemmi, A., Ceravolo, S., Cerri, A., Cerutti, F., Cesarini, G., Cesarotti, C., Chancé, A., Charitonidis, N., Chiesa, M., Chiggiato, P., Ciccarella, V. L., Puviani, P. Cioli, Colaleo, A., Colao, F., Collamati, F., Costa, M., Craig, N., Curtin, D., D'Angelo, L., Da Molin, G., Damerau, H., Dasu, S., de Blas, J., De Curtis, S., De Gersem, H., Del Moro, T., Delahaye, J. -P., Denisov, D., Denizli, H., Dermisek, R., Valdor, P. Desiré, Desponds, C., Di Luzio, L., Di Meco, E., Di Petrillo, K. F., Di Sarcina, I., Diociaiuti, E., Dorigo, T., Dreimanis, K., Pree, T. du, Edgecock, T., Fabbri, S., Fabbrichesi, M., Farinon, S., Ferrand, G., Somoza, J. A. Ferreira, Fieg, M., Filthaut, F., Fox, P., Franceschini, R., Ximenes, R. Franqueira, Gallinaro, M., Garcia-Sciveres, M., Garcia-Tabares, L., Gargiulo, R., Garion, C., Garzelli, M. V., Gast, M., Gerber, C. E., Giambastiani, L., Gianelle, A., Gianfelice-Wendt, E., Gibson, S., Gilardoni, S., Giove, D. A., Giovinco, V., Giraldin, C., Glioti, A., Gorzawski, A., Greco, M., Grojean, C., Grudiev, A., Gschwendtner, E., Gueli, E., Guilhaudin, N., Han, C., Han, T., Hauptman, J. M., Herndon, M., Hillier, A. D., Hillman, M., Holmes, T. R., Homiller, S., Jana, S., Jindariani, S., Johannesson, S., Johnson, B., Jones, O. R., Jurj, P. -B., Kahn, Y., Kamath, R., Kario, A., Karpov, I., Kelliher, D., Kilian, W., Kitano, R., Kling, F., Kolehmainen, A., Kong, K. C., Kosse, J., Krintiras, G., Krizka, K., Kumar, N., Kvikne, E., Kyle, R., Laface, E., Lane, K., Latina, A., Lechner, A., Lee, J., Lee, L., Lee, S. W., Lefevre, T., Leonardi, E., Lerner, G., Li, P., Li, Q., Li, T., Li, W., Voti, R. Li, Lindroos, M., Lipton, R., Liu, D., Liu, M., Liu, Z., Lombardi, A., Lomte, S., Long, K., Longo, L., Lorenzo, J., Losito, R., Low, I., Lu, X., Lucchesi, D., Luo, T., Lupato, A., Métral, E., Mękała, K., Ma, Y., Mańczak, J. M., Machida, S., Madlener, T., Magaletti, L., Maggi, M., Durand, H. Mainaud, Maltoni, F., Mandurrino, M., Marchand, C., Mariani, F., Marin, S., Mariotto, S., Martin-Haugh, S., Masullo, M. R., Mauro, G. S., Mazzolari, A., Mele, B., Meloni, F., Meng, X., Mentink, M., Miceli, R., Milas, N., Mohammadi, A., Moll, D., Montella, A., Morandin, M., Morrone, M., Mulder, T., Musenich, R., Nardecchia, M., Nardi, F., Neuffer, D., Newbold, D., Novelli, D., Olvegård, M., Onel, Y., Orestano, D., Osborne, J., Otten, S., Torres, Y. M. Oviedo, Paesani, D., Griso, S. Pagan, Pagani, D., Pal, K., Palmer, M., Pampaloni, A., Panci, P., Pani, P., Papaphilippou, Y., Paparella, R., Paradisi, P., Passeri, A., Pastrone, N., Pellecchia, A., Piccinini, F., Piekarz, H., Pieloni, T., Plouin, J., Portone, A., Potamianos, K., Potdevin, J., Prestemon, S., Puig, T., Qiang, J., Quettier, L., Rabemananjara, T. R., Radicioni, E., Radogna, R., Rago, I. C., Ratkus, A., Resseguie, E., Reuter, J., Ribani, P. L., Riccardi, C., Ricciardi, S., Robens, T., Robert, Y., Roger, C., Rojo, J., Romagnoni, M., Ronald, K., Rosser, B., Rossi, C., Rossi, L., Rozanov, L., Ruhdorfer, M., Ruiz, R., Queiroz, F. S., Saini, S., Sala, F., Salierno, C., Salmi, T., Salvini, P., Salvioni, E., Sammut, N., Santini, C., Saputi, A., Sarra, I., Scarantino, G., Schneider-Muntau, H., Schulte, D., Scifo, J., Sen, T., Senatore, C., Senol, A., Sertore, D., Sestini, L., Rêgo, R. C. Silva, Simone, F. M., Skoufaris, K., Sorbello, G., Sorbi, M., Sorti, S., Soubirou, L., Spataro, D., Stamerra, A., Stapnes, S., Stark, G., Statera, M., Stechauner, B. M., Su, S., Su, W., Sun, X., Sytov, A., Tang, J., Taylor, R., Kate, H. Ten, Testoni, P., Thiele, L. S., Garcia, R. Tomas, Mugglestone, M. Topp, Torims, T., Torre, R., Tortora, L. T., Trifinopoulos, S., Udongwo, S. -A., Vai, I., Valente, R. U., van Rienen, U., van Weelderen, R., Vanwelde, M., Velev, G., Venditti, R., Vendrasco, A., Verna, A., Verweij, A., Verwilligen, P., Villamzar, Y., Vittorio, L., Vitulo, P., Vojskovic, I., Wang, D., Wang, L. -T., Wang, X., Wendt, M., Widorski, M., Wozniak, M., Wu, Y., Wulzer, A., Xie, K., Yang, Y., Yap, Y. C., Yonehara, K., Yoo, H. D., You, Z., Zanetti, M., Zaza, A., Zhang, L., Zhu, R., Zlobin, A., Zuliani, D., and Zurita, J. F.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The International Muon Collider Collaboration (IMCC) [1] was established in 2020 following the recommendations of the European Strategy for Particle Physics (ESPP) and the implementation of the European Strategy for Particle Physics-Accelerator R&D Roadmap by the Laboratory Directors Group [2], hereinafter referred to as the the European LDG roadmap. The Muon Collider Study (MuC) covers the accelerator complex, detectors and physics for a future muon collider. In 2023, European Commission support was obtained for a design study of a muon collider (MuCol) [3]. This project started on 1st March 2023, with work-packages aligned with the overall muon collider studies. In preparation of and during the 2021-22 U.S. Snowmass process, the muon collider project parameters, technical studies and physics performance studies were performed and presented in great detail. Recently, the P5 panel [4] in the U.S. recommended a muon collider R&D, proposed to join the IMCC and envisages that the U.S. should prepare to host a muon collider, calling this their "muon shot". In the past, the U.S. Muon Accelerator Programme (MAP) [5] has been instrumental in studies of concepts and technologies for a muon collider., Comment: This document summarises the International Muon Collider Collaboration (IMCC) progress and status of the Muon Collider R&D programme
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- 2024
20. MIRI MRS Observations of Beta Pictoris II. The Spectroscopic Case for a Recent Giant Collision
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Chen, Christine H., Lu, Cicero X., Worthen, Kadin, Law, David R., Sargent, B. A., Moro-Martin, Amaya, Sloan, G. C., Lisse, Carey M., Watson, Dan M., Girard, Julien H., Chai, Yiwei, Hines, Dean C., Kammerer, Jens, Li, Alexis, Perrin, Marshall, Pueyo, Laurent, Rebollido, Isabel, Stapelfeldt, Karl R., Stark, Christopher, and Werner, Michael W.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Modeling observations of the archetypal debris disk around $\beta$ Pic, obtained in 2023 January with the MIRI MRS on board JWST, reveals significant differences compared with that obtained with the IRS on board Spitzer. The bright 5 - 15 $\mu$m continuum excess modeled using a $\sim$600 K black body has disappeared. The previously prominent 18 and 23 $\mu$m crystalline forsterite emission features, arising from cold dust ($\sim$100 K) in the Rayleigh limit, have disappeared and been replaced by very weak features arising from the hotter 500 K dust population. Finally, the shape of the 10 $\mu$m silicate feature has changed, consistent with a shift in the temperature of the warm dust population from $\sim$300 K to $\sim$500 K and an increase in the crystalline fraction of the warm, silicate dust. Stellar radiation pressure may have blown both the hot and the cold crystalline dust particles observed in the Spitzer spectra out of the planetary system during the intervening 20 years between the Spitzer and JWST observations. These results indicate that the $\beta$ Pic system has a dynamic circumstellar environment, and that periods of enhanced collisions can create large clouds of dust that sweep through the planetary system., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, ApJ in press
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- 2024
21. Shaping Radio Access to Match Variable Wireless Fronthaul Quality in Next-Generation Networks
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Morini, Marcello, Moro, Eugenio, Filippini, Ilario, De Donno, Danilo, and Capone, Antonio
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Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
The emergence of Centralized-RAN (C-RAN) has revolutionized mobile network infrastructure, offering streamlined cell-site engineering and enhanced network management capabilities. As C-RAN gains momentum, the focus shifts to optimizing fronthaul links. While fiber fronthaul guarantees performance, wireless alternatives provide cost efficiency and scalability, making them preferable in densely urbanized areas. However, wireless fronthaul often requires expensive over-dimensioning to overcome the challenging atmospheric attenuation typical of high frequencies. We propose a framework designed to continuously align radio access capacity with fronthaul link quality to overcome this rigidity. By gradually adapting radio access capacity to available fronthaul capacity, the framework ensures smooth degradation rather than complete service loss. Various strategies are proposed, considering factors like functional split and beamforming technology and exploring the tradeoff between adaptation strategy complexity and end-to-end system performance. Numerical evaluations using experimental rain attenuation data illustrate the framework's effectiveness in optimizing radio access capacity under realistically variable fronthaul link quality, ultimately proving the importance of adaptive capacity management in maximizing C-RAN efficiency.
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- 2024
22. MultiSocial: Multilingual Benchmark of Machine-Generated Text Detection of Social-Media Texts
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Macko, Dominik, Kopal, Jakub, Moro, Robert, and Srba, Ivan
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Recent LLMs are able to generate high-quality multilingual texts, indistinguishable for humans from authentic human-written ones. Research in machine-generated text detection is however mostly focused on the English language and longer texts, such as news articles, scientific papers or student essays. Social-media texts are usually much shorter and often feature informal language, grammatical errors, or distinct linguistic items (e.g., emoticons, hashtags). There is a gap in studying the ability of existing methods in detection of such texts, reflected also in the lack of existing multilingual benchmark datasets. To fill this gap we propose the first multilingual (22 languages) and multi-platform (5 social media platforms) dataset for benchmarking machine-generated text detection in the social-media domain, called MultiSocial. It contains 472,097 texts, of which about 58k are human-written and approximately the same amount is generated by each of 7 multilingual LLMs. We use this benchmark to compare existing detection methods in zero-shot as well as fine-tuned form. Our results indicate that the fine-tuned detectors have no problem to be trained on social-media texts and that the platform selection for training matters.
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- 2024
23. Noise-robust Speech Separation with Fast Generative Correction
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Wang, Helin, Villalba, Jesus, Moro-Velazquez, Laureano, Hai, Jiarui, Thebaud, Thomas, and Dehak, Najim
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing - Abstract
Speech separation, the task of isolating multiple speech sources from a mixed audio signal, remains challenging in noisy environments. In this paper, we propose a generative correction method to enhance the output of a discriminative separator. By leveraging a generative corrector based on a diffusion model, we refine the separation process for single-channel mixture speech by removing noises and perceptually unnatural distortions. Furthermore, we optimize the generative model using a predictive loss to streamline the diffusion model's reverse process into a single step and rectify any associated errors by the reverse process. Our method achieves state-of-the-art performance on the in-domain Libri2Mix noisy dataset, and out-of-domain WSJ with a variety of noises, improving SI-SNR by 22-35% relative to SepFormer, demonstrating robustness and strong generalization capabilities., Comment: Accepted at INTERSPEECH 2024
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- 2024
24. Non-Spherical Pauli Forbidden States in Deformed Halo Nuclei: Impact on the ${}^7\mathrm{Be}+p$ Resonant States in the Particle Rotor Model
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Watanabe, Shin and Moro, Antonio M.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Background: An important aspect of reducing nuclear many-body problems to few-body models is the presence of Pauli forbidden (PF) states, which are excluded in fully antisymmetrized calculations. Insufficient treatments of PF states in deformed halo nuclei underscore the need for model refinement. Purpose: We propose a new method utilizing Nilsson states as PF states in the orthogonality condition model, and investigate the impact of PF states on the properties of resonant states. Method: We investigate the scattering states of ${}^8\mathrm{B}$ within the Particle Rotor Model (PRM) framework based on a deformed ${}^7\mathrm{Be}$ core and $p$ two-body model. We compare several methods for eliminating PF states and test them with the experimental data. Results: Our model successfully reproduces the experimental excitation function for elastic scattering cross section by properly eliminating PF states. The same calculation predicts the presence of a low-energy bump in the inelastic scattering excitation function, although its position is overestimated by about 1 MeV compared to experimental data. Conclusion: This study extends the applicability of the PRM, offering a comprehensive approach for exploring structures and reactions of loosely bound nuclei like ${}^8$B. Future integration with the continuum discretized coupled channels (CDCC) method promises to further advance the research., Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
25. Impact of core excitations in break-up reactions with halo nuclei
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Lay J.A., Punta P., and Moro A.M.
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We revisit the resonant break-up of 19C on protons at intermediate energies. In this reaction, it was found, for the first time in a halo nucleus to our knowledge, that the cross section was largely dominated by the excitation of the core. In this contribution, we study the robustness of this conclusion against the choice of different optical potentials for the core.
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- 2023
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26. Dineutron correlations in knockout reactions with Borromean halo nuclei
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Casal Jesús, Gómez-Ramos Mario, and Moro Antonio M.
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We study dineutron correlations in proton-target knockout reactions induced by Borromean two-neutron halo nuclei. Using a core + n + n three-body model for the projectile and a quasifree sudden reaction framework, we focus on the correlation angle as a function of the intrinsic neutron momentum. Our results indicate that the correlations are strong in a range of neutron momenta associated to the nuclear surface. We also discuss on the role of core excitations for such correlations.
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- 2023
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27. The role of deformation in the 17C structure and its influence in transfer and breakup reactions
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Punta P., Lay J.A., and Moro A.M.
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
17C structure is studied within a two-body model, a weakly bound neutron moving in a deformed potential generated by the core. A semi-microscopic method has been used to generate the deformed valencecore potential. The method consists of the convolution of a realistic nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction with the core transition densities, which are obtained by antisymetrized molecular dynamics (AMD). The results highlight the important role of deformation for this nucleus and can be easily applied to reaction calculations.
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- 2023
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28. Development of the Multi-Beam Transmission Line for DTT ECRH system
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Garavaglia Saul, Bruschi Alex, Fanale Francesco, Granucci Gustavo, Moro Alessandro, Platania Paola, Romano Afra, Schmuck Stefan, Simonetto Alessandro, and Vassallo Espedito
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The DTT tokamak, whose construction is starting in Frascati (Italy), will be equipped with an ECRH system of 16 MW for the first operation phase and with a total of 32 gyrotrons (170 GHz, ≥ 1 MW, 100 s), organized in 4 clusters of 8 units each in the final design stage. To transmit this large number of power beams from the gyrotron hall to the torus hall building a Quasi-Optical (QO) approach has been chosen by a multi-beam transmission line (MBTL) similar to the one installed at W7-X Stellarator. This compact solution, mainly composed of mirrors in “square arrangement” shared by 8 different beams, minimizes the mode conversion losses. The single-beam QOTL is used to connect each gyrotron MOU output to a beam-combiner mirror unit and, after the MBTL, from a beam-splitter mirror unit to the exvessel and launchers sections located in the equatorial and upper ports of 4 DTT sectors. A novelty introduced is that the mirrors of the TLs are embodied in a vacuum enclosure, using metal gaskets, to avoid atmospheric absorption losses and microwave leaks. The TL, designed for up to 1.5 MW per single power beam, will have a total optical path length between 84 m and 138 m from the gyrotrons to the launchers. The main straight section will travel along an elevated corridor ~10 m above the ground level. The development of the optical design reflects the constraints due to existing buildings and expected neutron flux during plasma operation. In addition, the power throughput of at least 90% should be achieved.
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- 2023
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29. ECRF stray radiation studies in preparation of the operations of JT-60SA
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Sozzi Carlo, Kajiwara Ken, Kobayashi Takayuki, Figini Lorenzo, Garzotti Luca, Moro Alessandro, Nowak Silvana, and Taylor David
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
JT-60SA tokamak is equipped with an ECRF system since the beginning of its operational phase. Starting from two gyrotrons units during the Integrated Commissioning, applicable for core heating, assisted breakdown and assisted Wall Conditioning, the system capabilities will be progressively extended from the Initial Research phase for wider applications. The development of the full current plasma H mode scenario 2 (inductive, type I ELM, Ip=5.5 MA, BT=2.25 T, q95=3) is among the first scientific objectives of the research program. In preparation of this, predictive modelling of the current ramp-up in scaled versions of scenario 2 is being done, based on parameters previously published. In this scenario the ECRF power is injected from an early phase of the discharge. Such modelling provides the kinetic profiles giving the opportunity to estimate the expected amount of EC stray radiation during the ramp-up phase when the EC power absorption might be less than 100% and consequently the potential risk of damage of the in-vessel components is higher.
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- 2023
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30. Effectiveness of Low Volume and Low Pressure in Severe Hypoxemic Patients (avengARDS)
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Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri IRCCS and University of Bari Aldo Moro
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- 2024
31. Recurrence and tumor-related death after resection of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with metabolic syndrome.
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Berardi, Giammauro, Cucchetti, Alessandro, Sposito, Carlo, Ratti, Francesca, Nebbia, Martina, DSouza, Daniel, Pascual, Franco, Dogeas, Epameinondas, Tohme, Samer, Vitale, Alessandro, DAmico, Francesco, Alessandris, Remo, Panetta, Valentina, Simonelli, Ilaria, Colasanti, Marco, Russolillo, Nadia, Moro, Amika, Fiorentini, Guido, Serenari, Matteo, Rotellar, Fernando, Zimitti, Giuseppe, Famularo, Simone, Ivanics, Tommy, Donando, Felipe, Hoffman, Daniel, Onkendi, Edwin, Essaji, Yasmin, Giuliani, Tommaso, Lopez Ben, Santiago, Caula, Celia, Rompianesi, Gianluca, Chopra, Asmita, Abu Hilal, Mohammed, Sapisochin, Gonzalo, Torzilli, Guido, Corvera, Carlos, Alseidi, Adnan, Helton, Scott, Troisi, Roberto, Simo, Kerri, Conrad, Claudius, Cescon, Matteo, Cleary, Sean, Kwon, David, Ferrero, Alessandro, Ettorre, Giuseppe, Cillo, Umberto, Geller, David, Cherqui, Daniel, Serrano, Pablo, Ferrone, Cristina, Aldrighetti, Luca, Kingham, T, and Mazzaferro, Vincenzo
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Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Metabolic syndrome ,Metabolic-associated fatty liver disease ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,Obesity ,Recurrence ,Steatosis - Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Metabolic syndrome (MS) is a growing epidemic and a risk factor for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This study investigated the long-term outcomes of liver resection (LR) for HCC in patients with MS. Rates, timing, patterns, and treatment of recurrences were investigated, and cancer-specific survivals were assessed. METHODS: Between 2001 and 2021, data from 24 clinical centers were collected. Overall survival (OS), recurrence-free survival (RFS), and cancer-specific survival were analyzed as well as recurrence patterns and treatment. The analysis was conducted using a competing-risk framework. The trajectory of the risk of recurrence over time was applied to a competing risk analysis. For post-recurrence survival, death resulting from tumor progression was the primary endpoint, whereas deaths with recurrence relating to other causes were considered as competing events. RESULTS: In total, 813 patients were included in the study. Median OS was 81.4 months (range 28.1-157.0 months), and recurrence occurred in 48.3% of patients, with a median RFS of 39.8 months (range 15.7-174.7 months). Cause-specific hazard of recurrence showed a first peak 6 months (0.027), and a second peak 24 months (0.021) after surgery. The later the recurrence, the higher the chance of receiving curative intent approaches (p = 0.001). Size >5 cm, multiple tumors, microvascular invasion, and cirrhosis were independent predictors of recurrence showing a cause-specific hazard over time. RFS was associated with death for recurrence (hazard ratio: 0.985, 95% CI: 0.977-0.995; p = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with MS undergoing LR for HCC have good long-term survival. Recurrence occurs in 48% of patients with a double-peak incidence and time-specific hazards depending on tumor-related factors and underlying disease. The timing of recurrence significantly impacts survival. Surveillance after resection should be adjusted over time depending on risk factors. IMPACT AND IMPLICATIONS: Metabolic syndrome (MS) is a growing epidemic and a significant risk factor for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The present study demonstrated that patients who undergo surgical resection for HCC on MS have a good long-term survival and that recurrence occurs in almost half of the cases with a double peak incidence and time-specific hazards depending on tumor-related factors and underlying liver disease. Also, the timing of recurrence significantly impacts survival. Clinicians should therefore adjust follow-up after surgery accordingly, considering timing of recurrence and specific risk factors. Also, the results of the present study might help design future trials on the use of adjuvant therapy following resection.
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- 2024
32. Detecting and Mitigating Bias in Algorithms Used to Disseminate Information in Social Networks
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Sekara, Vedran, Dotu, Ivan, Cebrian, Manuel, Moro, Esteban, and Garcia-Herranz, Manuel
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Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Physics - Physics and Society - Abstract
Social connections are conduits through which individuals communicate, information propagates, and diseases spread. Identifying individuals who are more likely to adopt ideas and spread them is essential in order to develop effective information campaigns, maximize the reach of resources, and fight epidemics. Influence maximization algorithms are used to identify sets of influencers. Based on extensive computer simulations on synthetic and ten diverse real-world social networks we show that seeding information using these methods creates information gaps. Our results show that these algorithms select influencers who do not disseminate information equitably, threatening to create an increasingly unequal society. To overcome this issue we devise a multi-objective algorithm which maximizes influence and information equity. Our results demonstrate it is possible to reduce vulnerability at a relatively low trade-off with respect to spread. This highlights that in our search for maximizing information we do not need to compromise on information equality.
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- 2024
33. On $\sigma$ self-orthogonal matrix-product codes associated with Toeplitz matrices
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Li, Yang, Zhu, Shixin, and Martínez-Moro, Edgar
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,94B05 15B05 12E10 - Abstract
In this paper, we present four general constructions of $\sigma$ self-orthogonal matrix-product codes associated with Toeplitz matrices. The first one relies on the $\sigma'$ dual of a known $\sigma'$ dual-containing matrix-product code; the second one is founded on quasi-$\widehat{\sigma}$ matrices, where we provide an efficient algorithm for generating them on the basic of Toeplitz matrices; and the last two ones are based on the utilization of certain special Toeplitz matrices. Concrete examples and detailed comparisons are provided. As a byproduct, we also find an application of Toeplitz matrices in $\widetilde{\tau}$-optimal defining matrices.
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- 2024
34. State-Free Inference of State-Space Models: The Transfer Function Approach
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Parnichkun, Rom N., Massaroli, Stefano, Moro, Alessandro, Smith, Jimmy T. H., Hasani, Ramin, Lechner, Mathias, An, Qi, Ré, Christopher, Asama, Hajime, Ermon, Stefano, Suzuki, Taiji, Yamashita, Atsushi, and Poli, Michael
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
We approach designing a state-space model for deep learning applications through its dual representation, the transfer function, and uncover a highly efficient sequence parallel inference algorithm that is state-free: unlike other proposed algorithms, state-free inference does not incur any significant memory or computational cost with an increase in state size. We achieve this using properties of the proposed frequency domain transfer function parametrization, which enables direct computation of its corresponding convolutional kernel's spectrum via a single Fast Fourier Transform. Our experimental results across multiple sequence lengths and state sizes illustrates, on average, a 35% training speed improvement over S4 layers -- parametrized in time-domain -- on the Long Range Arena benchmark, while delivering state-of-the-art downstream performances over other attention-free approaches. Moreover, we report improved perplexity in language modeling over a long convolutional Hyena baseline, by simply introducing our transfer function parametrization. Our code is available at https://github.com/ruke1ire/RTF., Comment: Resubmission 02/06/2024: Fixed minor typo of recurrent form RTF
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- 2024
35. Custom Gradient Estimators are Straight-Through Estimators in Disguise
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Schoenbauer, Matt, Moro, Daniele, Lew, Lukasz, and Howard, Andrew
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Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Quantization-aware training comes with a fundamental challenge: the derivative of quantization functions such as rounding are zero almost everywhere and nonexistent elsewhere. Various differentiable approximations of quantization functions have been proposed to address this issue. In this paper, we prove that when the learning rate is sufficiently small, a large class of weight gradient estimators is equivalent with the straight through estimator (STE). Specifically, after swapping in the STE and adjusting both the weight initialization and the learning rate in SGD, the model will train in almost exactly the same way as it did with the original gradient estimator. Moreover, we show that for adaptive learning rate algorithms like Adam, the same result can be seen without any modifications to the weight initialization and learning rate. We experimentally show that these results hold for both a small convolutional model trained on the MNIST dataset and for a ResNet50 model trained on ImageNet.
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- 2024
36. Study of the $^7$Be($d$,$^3$He)$^6$Li* reaction at 5 MeV/u
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Ali, Sk M., Gupta, D., Kundalia, K., Maity, S., Saha, Swapan K, Tengblad, O., Ovejas, J. D., Perea, A., Martel, I., Cederkall, J., Park, J., and Moro, A. M.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The measurement of the $^7$Be($d$,$^3$He)$^6$Li* transfer cross section at 5 MeV/u is carried out. The population of the 2.186 MeV excited state of $^6$Li in this reaction channel is observed for the first time. The experimental angular distributions have been analyzed in the finite range DWBA and coupled-channel frameworks. The effect of the $^7$Be($d$,$^3$He)$^6$Li reaction on both the $^6$Li and $^7$Li abundances are investigated at the relevant big-bang nucleosynthesis energies. The excitation function is calculated by TALYS and normalized to the experimental data. The $S$ factor of the ($d$,$^3$He) channel from the present work is about 50$\%$ lower than existing data at nearby energies. At big-bang energies, the $S$ factor is about three orders of magnitude smaller than that of the ($d,p$) channel. The ($d$,$^3$He) reaction rate is found to have a less than 0.1$\%$ effect on the $^{6,7}$Li abundances., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures
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- 2024
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37. MobileNetV4 -- Universal Models for the Mobile Ecosystem
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Qin, Danfeng, Leichner, Chas, Delakis, Manolis, Fornoni, Marco, Luo, Shixin, Yang, Fan, Wang, Weijun, Banbury, Colby, Ye, Chengxi, Akin, Berkin, Aggarwal, Vaibhav, Zhu, Tenghui, Moro, Daniele, and Howard, Andrew
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
We present the latest generation of MobileNets, known as MobileNetV4 (MNv4), featuring universally efficient architecture designs for mobile devices. At its core, we introduce the Universal Inverted Bottleneck (UIB) search block, a unified and flexible structure that merges Inverted Bottleneck (IB), ConvNext, Feed Forward Network (FFN), and a novel Extra Depthwise (ExtraDW) variant. Alongside UIB, we present Mobile MQA, an attention block tailored for mobile accelerators, delivering a significant 39% speedup. An optimized neural architecture search (NAS) recipe is also introduced which improves MNv4 search effectiveness. The integration of UIB, Mobile MQA and the refined NAS recipe results in a new suite of MNv4 models that are mostly Pareto optimal across mobile CPUs, DSPs, GPUs, as well as specialized accelerators like Apple Neural Engine and Google Pixel EdgeTPU - a characteristic not found in any other models tested. Finally, to further boost accuracy, we introduce a novel distillation technique. Enhanced by this technique, our MNv4-Hybrid-Large model delivers 87% ImageNet-1K accuracy, with a Pixel 8 EdgeTPU runtime of just 3.8ms.
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- 2024
38. Polycyclic codes over serial rings and their annihilator CSS construction
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Bajalan, Maryam and Martinez-Moro, Edgar
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Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the algebraic structure for polycyclic codes over a specific class of serial rings, defined as $\mathscr R=R[x_1,\ldots, x_s]/\langle t_1(x_1),\ldots, t_s(x_s) \rangle$, where $R$ is a chain ring and each $t_i(x_i)$ in $R[x_i]$ for $i\in\{1,\ldots, s\}$ is a monic square-free polynomial. We define quasi-$s$-dimensional polycyclic codes and establish an $R$-isomorphism between these codes and polycyclic codes over $\mathscr R$. We provide necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of annihilator self-dual, annihilator self-orthogonal, annihilator linear complementary dual, and annihilator dual-containing polycyclic codes over this class of rings. We also establish the CSS construction for annihilator dual-preserving polycyclic codes over the chain ring $R$ and use this construction to derive quantum codes from polycyclic codes over $\mathscr{R}$., Comment: 24 pages, version accepted for publication in Cryptography and Communications
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- 2024
39. Test Time Training for Industrial Anomaly Segmentation
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Costanzino, Alex, Ramirez, Pierluigi Zama, Del Moro, Mirko, Aiezzo, Agostino, Lisanti, Giuseppe, Salti, Samuele, and Di Stefano, Luigi
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Anomaly Detection and Segmentation (AD&S) is crucial for industrial quality control. While existing methods excel in generating anomaly scores for each pixel, practical applications require producing a binary segmentation to identify anomalies. Due to the absence of labeled anomalies in many real scenarios, standard practices binarize these maps based on some statistics derived from a validation set containing only nominal samples, resulting in poor segmentation performance. This paper addresses this problem by proposing a test time training strategy to improve the segmentation performance. Indeed, at test time, we can extract rich features directly from anomalous samples to train a classifier that can discriminate defects effectively. Our general approach can work downstream to any AD&S method that provides an anomaly score map as output, even in multimodal settings. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach over baselines through extensive experimentation and evaluation on MVTec AD and MVTec 3D-AD., Comment: Accepted at VAND 2.0, CVPRW 2024
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- 2024
40. PikeLPN: Mitigating Overlooked Inefficiencies of Low-Precision Neural Networks
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Neseem, Marina, McCullough, Conor, Hsin, Randy, Leichner, Chas, Li, Shan, Chong, In Suk, Howard, Andrew G., Lew, Lukasz, Reda, Sherief, Rautio, Ville-Mikko, and Moro, Daniele
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Low-precision quantization is recognized for its efficacy in neural network optimization. Our analysis reveals that non-quantized elementwise operations which are prevalent in layers such as parameterized activation functions, batch normalization, and quantization scaling dominate the inference cost of low-precision models. These non-quantized elementwise operations are commonly overlooked in SOTA efficiency metrics such as Arithmetic Computation Effort (ACE). In this paper, we propose ACEv2 - an extended version of ACE which offers a better alignment with the inference cost of quantized models and their energy consumption on ML hardware. Moreover, we introduce PikeLPN, a model that addresses these efficiency issues by applying quantization to both elementwise operations and multiply-accumulate operations. In particular, we present a novel quantization technique for batch normalization layers named QuantNorm which allows for quantizing the batch normalization parameters without compromising the model performance. Additionally, we propose applying Double Quantization where the quantization scaling parameters are quantized. Furthermore, we recognize and resolve the issue of distribution mismatch in Separable Convolution layers by introducing Distribution-Heterogeneous Quantization which enables quantizing them to low-precision. PikeLPN achieves Pareto-optimality in efficiency-accuracy trade-off with up to 3X efficiency improvement compared to SOTA low-precision models., Comment: Accepted in CVPR 2024. 10 Figures, 9 Tables
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- 2024
41. To Generate or to Retrieve? On the Effectiveness of Artificial Contexts for Medical Open-Domain Question Answering
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Frisoni, Giacomo, Cocchieri, Alessio, Presepi, Alex, Moro, Gianluca, and Meng, Zaiqiao
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Medical open-domain question answering demands substantial access to specialized knowledge. Recent efforts have sought to decouple knowledge from model parameters, counteracting architectural scaling and allowing for training on common low-resource hardware. The retrieve-then-read paradigm has become ubiquitous, with model predictions grounded on relevant knowledge pieces from external repositories such as PubMed, textbooks, and UMLS. An alternative path, still under-explored but made possible by the advent of domain-specific large language models, entails constructing artificial contexts through prompting. As a result, "to generate or to retrieve" is the modern equivalent of Hamlet's dilemma. This paper presents MedGENIE, the first generate-then-read framework for multiple-choice question answering in medicine. We conduct extensive experiments on MedQA-USMLE, MedMCQA, and MMLU, incorporating a practical perspective by assuming a maximum of 24GB VRAM. MedGENIE sets a new state-of-the-art in the open-book setting of each testbed, allowing a small-scale reader to outcompete zero-shot closed-book 175B baselines while using up to 706$\times$ fewer parameters. Our findings reveal that generated passages are more effective than retrieved ones in attaining higher accuracy., Comment: ACL 2024 (camera-ready paper)
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- 2024
42. Exploring Upper-6GHz and mmWave in Real-World 5G Networks: A Direct on-Field Comparison
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Morini, Marcello, Moro, Eugenio, Filippini, Ilario, Capone, Antonio, and De Donno, Danilo
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Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
The spectrum crunch challenge poses a vital threat to the progress of cellular networks and recently prompted the inclusion of millimeter wave (mmWave) and Upper 6GHz (U6G) in the 3GPP standards. These two bands promise to unlock a large portion of untapped spectrum, but the harsh propagation due to the increased carrier frequency might negatively impact the performance of urban Radio Access Network (RAN) deployments. Within the span of a year, two co-located 5G networks operating in these frequency bands were deployed at Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy, entirely dedicated to the dense urban performance assessment of the two systems. This paper presents an in-depth analysis of the measurement campaigns conducted on them, with the U6G campaign representing the first of its kind. A benchmark is provided by ray-tracing simulations. The results suggest that networks operating in these frequency bands provide good indoor and outdoor coverage and throughput in urban scenarios, even when deployed in the macro base station setup common to lower frequencies. In addition, a comparative performance analysis of these two key technologies is provided, offering insights on their relative strengths, weaknesses and improvement margins and informing on which bands is better suited for urban macro coverage.
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- 2024
43. Hechos, pero también palabras. La producción cultural del movimiento sufragista británico
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Moro Carrera, Sara
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- 2024
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44. Effectiveness of university-provided individual counselling for healthcare students: A systematic review
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Moro, Giuseppina Lo, Gualano, Maria Rosaria, Vicentini, Costanza, Marengo, Noemi, Bert, Fabrizio, and Siliquini, Roberta
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- 2024
45. Landscape of homologous recombination deficiency in gastric cancer and clinical implications for first-line chemotherapy
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Ichikawa, Hiroshi, Aizawa, Masaki, Kano, Yosuke, Hanyu, Takaaki, Muneoka, Yusuke, Hiroi, Sou, Ueki, Hiroto, Moro, Kazuki, Hirose, Yuki, Miura, Kohei, Shimada, Yoshifumi, Sakata, Jun, Yabusaki, Hiroshi, Nakagawa, Satoru, Kawasaki, Takashi, Okuda, Shujiro, and Wakai, Toshifumi
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- 2024
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46. Involvement of prelimbic cortex neurons and related circuits in the acquisition of a cooperative learning by pairs of rats
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Conde-Moro, A. R., Rocha-Almeida, F., Gebara, E., Delgado-García, J. M., Sandi, C., and Gruart, A.
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- 2024
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47. Proposal for a social certification model for agriculture in Latin America aligned with the sustainable development goals
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de Alba Verduzco, Javier Eugenio García, Barbosa, Samuel Borges, Hernández, Blanca Catalina Ramírez, Moro, Leila Dal, Rodríguez, Luis Enrique Lomelí, Brandli, Luciana Londero, Deggau, André Borchardt, Peixoto, Maria Gabriela Mendonça, Navarro, Angélica Isabel García, Sehnem, Simone, dos Guimarães Alvim Nunes, Viviane, and de Andrade Guerra, José Baltazar Salgueirinho Osório
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- 2024
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48. LAWSUIT: a LArge expert-Written SUmmarization dataset of ITalian constitutional court verdicts
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Ragazzi, Luca, Moro, Gianluca, Guidi, Stefano, and Frisoni, Giacomo
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- 2024
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49. Mapping small metabolite changes after traumatic brain injury using AP-MALDI MSI
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Siciliano, Angela Marika, Moro, Federico, De Simone, Giulia, Pischiutta, Francesca, Morabito, Aurelia, Pastorelli, Roberta, Brunelli, Laura, Zanier, Elisa R., and Davoli, Enrico
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- 2024
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50. Prices, peers, and perceptions (P3): study protocol for improved biomass cookstove project in northern Ghana
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Katherine L. Dickinson, Maxwell Dalaba, Zachary S. Brown, Rex Alirigia, Evan R. Coffey, Elise Mesenbring, Manies Achazanaga, Desmond Agao, Moro Ali, Ernest Kanyomse, Julius Awaregya, Clifford Amoah Adagenera, John Bosco A. Aburiya, Bernard Gubilla, Abraham Rexford Oduro, and Michael P. Hannigan
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Cookstoves ,Household air pollution ,Behavior change ,Global health ,Study protocol ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Despite their potential health and social benefits, adoption and use of improved cookstoves has been low throughout much of the world. Explanations for low adoption rates of these technologies include prices that are not affordable for the target populations, limited opportunities for households to learn about cookstoves through peers, and perceptions that these technologies are not appropriate for local cooking needs. The P3 project employs a novel experimental design to explore each of these factors and their interactive effects on cookstove demand, adoption, use and exposure outcomes. Methods The P3 study is being conducted in the Kassena-Nankana Districts of Northern Ghana. Leveraging an earlier improved cookstove study that was conducted in this area, the central design of the P3 biomass stove experiment involves offering stoves at randomly varying prices to peers and non-peers of households that had previously received stoves for free. Using household surveys, electronic stove use monitors, and low-cost, portable monitoring equipment, we measure how prices and peers’ experience affect perceptions of stove quality, the decision to purchase a stove, use of improved and traditional stoves over time, and personal exposure to air pollutants from the stoves. Discussion The challenges that public health and development communities have faced in spreading adoption of potentially welfare-enhancing technologies, like improved cookstoves, have highlighted the need for interdisciplinary, multisectoral approaches. The design of the P3 project draws on economic theory, public health practice, engineering, and environmental sciences, to more fully grasp the drivers and barriers to expanding access to and uptake of cleaner stoves. Our partnership between academic institutions, in the US and Ghana, and a local environmental non-governmental organization creates unique opportunities to disseminate and scale up lessons learned. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03617952 7/31/18 (Retrospectively Registered).
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- 2018
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