2,781 research outputs found
Isotopic effect on collisional widths and shifts of Hg clock transition induced by cold Rb atoms
Data set related to numerical simulations of isotopic effect on collisional widths and shifts of Hg clock transition induced by cold Rb atoms.</p
Absolute frequency measurement of the 6s2 1S0 → 6s6p 3P1 F = 3/2 → F ′ = 5/2 201Hg transition with background-free saturation spectroscopy
Data set related to absolute frequency measurement of the 6s2 1S0 → 6s6p 3P1 F = 3/2 → F ′ = 5/2 201Hg transition with background-free saturation spectroscopy.</p
Photoionisation losses in a strontium optical lattice clock operating at blue-detuned magic wavelength light
Data set related to the determination of photoionisation losses in a strontium optical lattice clock operating at blue-detuned magic wavelength light.</p
Distributed Approximations of f-Matchings and b-Matchings in Graphs of Sub-Logarithmic Expansion
We give a distributed algorithm which given ε > 0 finds a (1-ε)-factor approximation of a maximum f-matching in graphs G = (V,E) of sub-logarithmic expansion. Using a similar approach we also give a distributed approximation of a maximum b-matching in the same class of graphs provided the function b: V → ℤ^+ is L-Lipschitz for some constant L. Both algorithms run in O(log^* n) rounds in the LOCAL model, which is optimal
Processed measurement data of acceleration of MR fluid-filled cushion gripper on UR3e robot
The dataset is a supplement to the article that will soon be submitted for review. DESCRIPTION:The dataset consists of Absolute Orientation Sensor (BNO055) measurements during the transportation of an object by a UR3e robot. The trajectory of the robot's movement includes lifting the object to a height of about 200 mm, horizontal displacement for a distance of 400 mm, and lowering by 200 mm. The transfer procedure begins with the closing of the jaws and ends with their opening. The procedure is analogous to the one outlined in the following dataset:Białek, Marcin, 2023, "Processed measurement data on grip forces during object transportation by a robot using gripper with a MR fluid-filled cushions", https://doi.org/10.18150/B2KCKC, RepOD.The experiment was conducted for three values of acceleration and velocity of the robot joints. For each such configuration, 5 handling tests were carried out.LICENSE:The data are under Creative Commons License CC BY. It is though recommended to manipulate along with the author to fully understand the outcomes. If you have any questions do not hesitate to contact: marcin.bialek@put.poznan.plThis research was funded by the National Science Centre, Poland, grant number: 2021/41/N/ST8/02619. https://ror.org/03ha2q922FILE:"dataset.csv" - processed measurement data obtained during the experiment.For proper interpretation, please refer to the images provided in readme files.COLUMNS: - R_Speed[deg/s] - robot joint movement velocity;- R_Acc[deg/s^2] - robot joint movement acceleration;- SAMPLE[-] - sample number. For each object configuration, acceleration and speed, 5 trials were conducted;- TIME[s] - the measurement time at which the force was recorded;- Linear_X[m/s^2] - X axis of linear acceleration data (acceleration minus gravity)- Linear_Y[m/s^2] - Y axis of linear acceleration data (acceleration minus gravity)- Linear_Z[m/s^2] - Z axis of linear acceleration data (acceleration minus gravity)- Orient_X[deg] - X axis orientation data based on a 360° sphere- Orient_Y[deg] - Y axis orientation data based on a 360° sphere- Orient_Z[deg] - Z axis orientation data based on a 360° sphere- Accl_X[m/s^2] - X axis of acceleration (gravity + linear motion)- Accl_Y[m/s^2] - Y axis of acceleration (gravity + linear motion)- Accl_Z[m/s^2] - Z axis of acceleration (gravity + linear motion)</p
Autoethnography, Storytelling, and Life as Lived: A Conversation Between Marcin Kafar and Carolyn Ellis
This conversation takes place in Warsaw. Carolyn Ellis has come to Poland to accompany Jerry
Rawicki, a Warsaw Ghetto survivor, on his first trip back to Poland since the Holocaust. There
she arranged to meet Marcin Kafar, a scholar in Poland who has spent time with her at the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida. During this visit, Marcin assists Carolyn with video
recording Jerry’s experiences as they visit Holocaust sites, and Jerry remembers and reflects on
his experience. Afterwards, Marcin converses with Carolyn about autoethnography, storytelling,
and the importance of life in the context of searching for ethos by academics
Distributed Approximation Algorithms for the Minimum Dominating Set in K_h-Minor-Free Graphs
In this paper we will give two distributed approximation algorithms (in the Local model) for the minimum dominating set problem. First we will give a distributed algorithm which finds a dominating set D of size O(gamma(G)) in a graph G which has no topological copy of K_h. The algorithm runs L_h rounds where L_h is a constant which depends on h only. This procedure can be used to obtain a distributed algorithm which given epsilon>0 finds in a graph G with no K_h-minor a dominating set D of size at most (1+epsilon)gamma(G). The second algorithm runs in O(log^*{|V(G)|}) rounds
PLoS Open Peer Review Corpus
PLoS Open Peer Review CorpusSection for Logic & Cognitive Science, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of ScienceGenerated by Ksawery Jasieński under supervision of Marcin Miłkowski (2022)Public Library of Science (PLoS) journals are committed to open peer review idea, but these are voluntary. They are not available for download in a single package, but they are contained in their huge data dump.The data set contains all available peer reviews as of 16 June 2022 (138 papers with reviews). In addition, the corpus contains metadata about particular reviews, author responses, decision letters and paper metadata in the JSON format. The JSON schema files are available in the schema subdirectory in files with self-explanatory names.The original files were not enriched with any linguistic annotation or converted to any format (these are predominantly PDF, TXT, and DOCX files, as uploaded through the MDPI editorial system by reviewers).Additionally, we are making the filter code available, in the review_crawler directory. For PLoS reviews, plos_crawler.py should be used (more notes in the subdirectory).The files are being made available under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).</p
MDPI Open Peer Review Corpus
MDPI Open Peer Review CorpusSection for Logic & Cognitive Science, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of ScienceGenerated by Ksawery Jasieński under supervision of Marcin Miłkowski (2022)MDPI is committed to open peer review idea, but these are voluntary. They are not available for download in a single package, so they must be crawled from their website.The data set contains all available peer reviews as of 16 June 2022 (123 papers with reviews). In addition, the corpus contains metadata about particular reviews, author responses and paper metadata in the JSON format. The JSON schema files are available in the schema subdirectory in files with self-explanatory names.The original files were not enriched with any linguistic annotation or converted to any format (these are predominantly PDF, TXT, and DOCX files, as uploaded through the MDPI editorial system by reviewers).Additionally, we are making the crawler code available, in the review_crawler directory. For MDPI reviews, mdpi_crawler.py should be used (more notes in the subdirectory).The files are being made available under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).</p
eLife Open Peer Review Corpus
eLife Open Peer Review CorpusSection for Logic & Cognitive Science, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of ScienceGenerated by Ksawery Jasieński under supervision of Marcin Miłkowski (2022)eLife is committed to open peer review idea. Reviews are not available for download in a single package, so they must be extracted from their complete data set, which is several gigabytes large.The data set contains all available peer reviews as of 24 July 2022 (10853 papers with reviews or at least decision letters that omit minor comments). As stated by eLife:“In the interests of transparency, eLife includes the editorial decision letter and accompanying author responses. A lightly edited version of the letter sent to the authors after peer review is shown, indicating the most substantive concerns; minor comments are not usually included.”In addition, the corpus contains metadata about particular reviews (the filename contains ‘r’ and a numerical id before ‘.xml’), author responses (the filename then contains ‘a’ and a number before the ‘.xml’ suffix) and paper metadata in the JSON format. The JSON schema files are available in the schema subdirectory in files with self-explanatory names.The original files were not enriched with any linguistic annotation or converted (these are in XML format, as used by eLife).Additionally, we are making the crawler code available, in the review_crawler directory. For eLife reviews, elife_crawler.py should be used (more notes in the subdirectory).The files are being made available under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).</p
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