6,442 research outputs found
Bottom-flavored mono-tau tails at the LHC
We study the effective field theory sensitivity of an LHC analysis for the tau nu final state with an associated b-jet. To illustrate the improvement due to the b-tagging, we first recast the recent CMS analysis in the tau nu channel, using an integrated luminosity of 35.9 fb(-1) at s = 13 TeV, and provide limits on all the dimension-six effective operators which contribute to the process. The expected limits from the b-tagged analysis are then derived and compared. We find an improvement of approximately similar to 30% in the bounds for operators with a b quark. We also discuss in detail possible angular observables to be used as a discriminator between dimension-six operators with different Lorentz structure. Finally, we study the impact of these limits on some simplified scenarios aimed at addressing the observed deviations from the Standard Model in lepton flavor universality ratios of semileptonic B-meson decays. In particular, we compare the collider limits on those scenarios set by our analysis either with or without the b-tagging, assuming an integrated luminosity of 300 fb(-1), with relevant low-energy flavor measurements
VariantEffect/mavedb-ui: v2023.5.0
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Upgrade Node to 20 and swap from webpack/vue-cli to Vite. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/83</li>
<li>Remove Node polyfills and fix heatmap by removing last corejs dependency. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/84</li>
<li>add SendToGalaxy option by @PlushZ in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/85</li>
<li>Change author query to param translation to use a list. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/89</li>
<li>Changes search filters to only count published score sets. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/88</li>
<li>Use Vite's config functionality to choose API among localhost and production instead of manually editing config.js. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/90</li>
<li>Upgrade package versions and pin versions where breakages would occur. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/92</li>
<li>Add types for the API using openapi-typescript and instructions to re-generate them. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/91</li>
<li>Remove vestigial vue.config.js. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/93</li>
<li>Refactor #1 in preparation for typescriptifying SearchView.vue. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/96</li>
<li>Change from comma-separated query param to repeated query params (refactor 2 in preparation for Typescript). by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/97</li>
<li>Typescriptify SearchView.vue. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/98</li>
<li>Use kebab-case for Ensembl Item Type URL by @bencap in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/102</li>
<li>Use <code>modelValue</code> in place of <code>inputTextValue</code> for External Target Gene Identifiers by @bencap in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/101</li>
<li>Merge target gene identifiers change from -4.3 into -5.0. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/103</li>
<li>Based on Ashley's geneName codes, modify Assembly dropdown codes together by @EstelleDa in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/105</li>
<li>Fix primevue styling for create experiment/scoreset after version upgrade to fix bad-looking forms. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/110</li>
<li>Add /signed-in.html and /signed-out.html that were in webpack version to vite/rollup. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/104</li>
<li>Fix validation errors on new experiment/score set so they no longer forever block submission. by @ashsny in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/116</li>
<li>Solve #109 problem by @EstelleDa in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/113</li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li>@PlushZ made their first contribution in https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/pull/85</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: https://github.com/VariantEffect/mavedb-ui/compare/v2023.4.2...v2023.5.0</p>
A Study on “the regime of Yi Ui-min” in the late 12th century Goryeo
論文The purpose of this study is to consider whether "the regime of Yi Ui-min" really existed or not in the late 12th century Korea (Goryeo). Yi Ui-min was a military general who was born as a slave in Gyeongju. It is commonly accepted that he ruled the Goryeo government as the 4th leader of the "Goryeo military regime" from 1184 to 1196, when Choe Chung-heon assassinated him. It is difficult, however, to prove the existence of "the regime of Yi Ui-min" due to a lack of historical materials.
This study examined the following three points to reconsider the theory of "the regime of Yi Uimin." Firstly, it examined how previous studies evaluated the regime. Through this examination, we found that previous studies had already pointed out the weakness of "the regime of Yi Uimin." Secondly, it critically discussed the theoretical grounds that support the regime’s existence. As a result, it was found that there are no historical records to support the claim directly. Thirdly, it analyzed the historical records that are inconsistent with the theory. The results revealed that Du Gyeong-seung was as powerful as Yi Ui-min, and that Yi Ui-min couldn’t overwhelm him till the end.
The conclusion of this study is as follows; From 1184 to 1190 Yi Ui-min was not a prominent leader in the Goryeo government. From 1190 to 1196 there were two leaders, Yi Ui-min and Du Gyeong-seung in the Goryeo government. The common theory of "the regime of Yi Ui-min" says that Yi Ui-min ruled the Goryeo government then as a dictator, although he was less powerful than other military leaders. But the theory of "the dyarchy of Yi Ui-min and Du Gyeong-seung" is closer to the actual situation than that of "the regime of Yi Ui-min." The next paper will explore the relationship between these two leaders.departmental bulletin pape
Appropriations of Irish drama by modern Korean nationalist theatre : a focus on the influence of Sean O’Casey in a colonial context
My thesis explores how a translated author on the periphery of the host culture’s
translated repertoire can be at once subversive and innovative on the colonial scene,
using as an example the case of Sean O’Casey in colonial Korea. It explores the
importation of Irish drama in modern Korean theatre during the colonial period and
examines the appropriations of O’Casey’s plays by a central Korean playwright, Yu
Chi-jin, in creating his own plays. Under Japanese colonial rule in the early twentieth
century, intellectuals perceived the supreme task for the Korean people to be the
recovery of national sovereignty and independence. The modern Korean theatre
movement which rose among Korean intellectuals and dramatists during the colonial
period was to play a major part in this task. The ultimate goal of this movement was
to establish a modern national theatre promoting Korean culture and educating the
people, thereby recovering national independence. As their modernised dramatic
polysystem was still "young", Korean intellectuals and dramatists who were
involved in the theatre movement had to borrow dramatic models from other
countries. One of the models they chose was Irish playwrights, especially those who
were involved in the Irish dramatic movement. They published or staged the works
of W.B. Yeats, Lord Dunsany [Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett], Augusta
Gregory, J.M. Synge, St. J. Ervine, T.C. Murray and Sean O'Casey. Although
O'Casey was considered an important dramatist in the Irish dramatic movement, he
was a playwright on the periphery in the list of translated Irish dramatists in Korea
due to the colonisers’ censorship. However, he remained as a subversive and
innovative playwright on the colonial scene by virtue of being appropriated by Yu
Chi-jin who used O’Casey’s plays as models when creating his own works. In
discussing the subject matter of my thesis, I use Even Zohar’s polysystems theory as
a starting point in looking at ideological issues surrounding translation and extend
the discussion to offer a postcolonial perspective. While most translation in a
colonial context was considered as "an expression of the cultural power of the
colonisers," my thesis shifts the focus to translation as an expression of the cultural
power of the colonised. I explore how the colonised uses another colonised culture to
subvert the colonisers’ power
AUTHOR\u27S RIGHT IS NOT ONLY COPYRIGHT
This article discusses the difference between the concept of Author\u27s Right and Copyright. These two concepts are often mistakenly considered to be inter-changeable. The purpose of this article is to help readers obtain a better insight into the basic concept of Author\u27s Right and Copyright
A study on the development of measurement system of planar cam by oscillating roller cam mechanism
학위논문(석사) - 한국과학기술원 : 기계공학전공, 2000.2, [ [vi], 57 p. ]한국과학기술원 : 기계공학전공
UI ELIGIBILITY RULE, MORAL HAZARD, AND OPTIMAL UNEMPLOYMENT TRANSFER SCHEME
This paper derives the optimal unemployment insurance (UI) transfer scheme, UI benefits, and UI contribution fees: When a worker has to earn his or her UI eligibility through work, the UI benefits do not last forever, and the UI agency has imperfect monitoring power on the strategic behavior of the worker. We show that the consideration of the UI eligibility rule generates the effective entitlement effect, which serves as an additional incentive device and alters the nature of the optimal UI transfer scheme established in literature. In contrast with previous studies, we find that when the effective entitlement effect is large, it completely removes the moral hazards in job searches, job acceptances, and job quits. As a result, the optimal UI benefits and contribution fees become constant. Calibrated to the data in the United States, the model reproduces some key features of the existing UI system.</jats:p
EGI-Foundation/ansible-role-ui: Ansible Role: UMD user interface (v0.1.0)
<p>User Interface Role</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This role provisions a UMD User Interface. It contains the client libraries of the middleware distribution, for interacting with the various infrastructure services, and is based on the <a href="https://galaxy.ansible.com/egi-foundation/voms-client">VOMS-client role</a>.</p>
<p>Using</p>
<p>This repository is kept under continuous integration. The role has been expressed into the <a href="https://quay.io/repository/egi/ui">UI container</a> during the CI phase and can be immediately re-used, or can be applied to base images of your favourite platform - bare metal, cloud or local vms. A generic <code>griduser</code> has been created for you :smiley:. See the example playbook below.</p>
<p>Docker</p>
<p>Running the user interface in a Docker container can be done interactively, or by starting the container and <code>exec</code>ing commands in it:</p>
<ol>
<li>First pull the container image: <code>docker pull quay.io/egi/ui</code></li>
<li>Don't forget to mount a volume with your user credentials : <code>-v HOME/.globus:/home/griduser/.globus</code></li>
<li>Run interactively: <code>docker run -u griduser -ti --rm --name ui -v HOME/.globus:/home/griduser/.globus quay.io/egi/ui /bin/bash/</code> (enter the container and do gridcloud things)</li>
<li>Run detached: <code>docker run -d -t --rm --name ui quay.io/egi/ui /bin/bash -c 'while true ; do sleep 1000 ; done'</code>
<ol>
<li>run things in it: <code>docker exec ui voms-proxy-init</code></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<p>Requirements</p>
<p>No particular requirements are needed, but a typical playbook will need the <a href="https://galaxy.ansible.com/egi-foundation/voms-client">VOMS-client role</a></p>
<p>Role Variables</p>
<p>See <code>defaults/main.yml</code></p>
<p>Dependencies</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://galaxy.ansible.com/EGI-Foundation/umd">EGI-Foundation.umd</a></li>
<li><a href="https://galaxy.ansible.com/EGI-Foundation/VOMS-client">EGI-Fondation.VOMS-client</a></li>
</ul>
<p>Example Playbook</p>
<pre><code> - name: Converge
hosts: all
roles:
- { role: EGI-Foundation.umd, release: 4, ca_verification: false, tags: "umd" }
- { role: EGI-Foundation.voms-client, tags: "voms"}
- { role: ansible-role-ui, tags: "ui"}
</code></pre>
<p>License</p>
<p>Apache-2.0</p>
<p>Author Information</p>
<ul>
<li>Pablo Orviz @orviz</li>
<li>Bruce Becker @brucellino</li>
</ul>
Yes, UI/UX Is Worth It: Investigating Scalable Productivity of UX Research Data with Machine Learning
UI/UX is one of the most relevant fields of the decade, taking the tech industry and general public by storm. The popularization of UI/UX following historical deprioritization of the user has proven to yield immense returns for users and businesses. However, many companies still show reluctance to invest in UI/UX due to perceived unimportance, cost, and unscalability of UX research methods central to learning about the user’s perspective. This paper proposes a novel approach to increasing the scalability and productivity of the UI/UX field by capitalizing on large repositories of unused UX research data. This investigation utilizes the Rico UI image dataset and implements a 99-participant survey that labels UI screens with a usability score, in order to emulate the kind of data generated by the most prevalent UX research practice: usability testing. The feasibility of modeling relationships between whole UI screens and user experience data given existing UI representation methods is evaluated using linear regression on layout-based, pixel-based, and structure-based UI vectorizations. This paper’s research process offers an explorative assessment on the sufficiency of current literature for large-scale, cross-context machine learning applications on UI data, and brings to light the future research necessary to support this imminent but unexplored task
Therapeutic Effect of Acer tegmentosum Maxim Twig Extract in Bile Duct Ligation-Induced Acute Cholestasis in Mice
Cholestatic liver disease, or cholestasis, is a condition characterized by liver inflammation and fibrosis following a bile duct obstruction and an intrahepatic accumulation of bile acids. Inhibiting inflammation is a promising therapeutic strategy for cholestatic liver diseases. Acer tegmentosum Maxim extract (ATE) is best known for its anti-inflammatory and antioxidative properties. In this study, we investigated the effects of ATE on liver injury and fibrosis in mice with bile duct ligation (BDL)-induced cholestasis through analysis of gene expression, cytokines, and histological examination. Oral administration of ATE (20 or 50 mg/kg) for 14 days significantly attenuated hepatocellular necrosis compared to vehicle-treated BDL mice, which was accompanied by the reduced level of serum bile acids and bilirubin. We determined that ATE treatment reduced liver inflammation, oxidative stress, and fibrosis. These beneficial effects of ATE were concurrent with the decreased expression of genes involved in the NF-kappa B pathway, suggesting that the anti-inflammatory effect of ATE could be a possible mechanism against cholestasis-associated liver injury. Our findings substantiate ATE's role as an alternative therapeutic agent for cholestasis-induced liver injury and fibrosis.
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