Paper List
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Developing the PsyCogMetrics™ AI Lab to Evaluate Large Language Models and Advance Cognitive Science
This paper addresses the critical gap between sophisticated LLM evaluation needs and the lack of accessible, scientifically rigorous platforms that in...
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Equivalence of approximation by networks of single- and multi-spike neurons
This paper resolves the fundamental question of whether single-spike spiking neural networks (SNNs) are inherently less expressive than multi-spike SN...
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The neuroscience of transformers
提出了Transformer架构与皮层柱微环路之间的新颖计算映射,连接了现代AI与神经科学。
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Framing local structural identifiability and observability in terms of parameter-state symmetries
This paper addresses the core challenge of systematically determining which parameters and states in a mechanistic ODE model can be uniquely inferred ...
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Leveraging Phytolith Research using Artificial Intelligence
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in phytolith research by automating the labor-intensive manual microscopy process through a multimodal AI...
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Neural network-based encoding in free-viewing fMRI with gaze-aware models
This paper addresses the core challenge of building computationally efficient and ecologically valid brain encoding models for naturalistic vision by ...
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Scalable DNA Ternary Full Adder Enabled by a Competitive Blocking Circuit
This paper addresses the core bottleneck of carry information attenuation and limited computational scale in DNA binary adders by introducing a scalab...
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ELISA: An Interpretable Hybrid Generative AI Agent for Expression-Grounded Discovery in Single-Cell Genomics
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of translating high-dimensional single-cell transcriptomic data into interpretable biological hypotheses ...
Household Bubbling Strategies for Epidemic Control and Social Connectivity
Departamento de Física, FCEyN, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, Argentina | Instituto de Investigaciones Físicas de Mar del Plata (IFIMAR), CONICET, Argentina
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of designing household merging (social bubble) strategies that effectively control epidemic risk while maximizing social connectivity and psychological well-being during lockdowns.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a novel household merging criterion based on the number of economically active (working) members, moving beyond traditional criteria like household size or age composition.
- Methodology Develops a mathematical network model integrating real-world demographic data (from Argentina, China, Israel, Spain) with household structure, labor activity, and explicit SIR epidemic dynamics.
- Theory Derives analytical expressions for the epidemic threshold using generating functions, explicitly linking it to heterogeneity in worker connectivity (⟨k_E²⟩ - ⟨k_E⟩) and variability in workers per household (⟨w²⟩ - ⟨w⟩).
主要结论
- Merging strategies based on the number of working members can maintain epidemic risk at levels comparable to those based on household size, as shown by similar critical thresholds (β_c^E) in simulations.
- The worker-based approach enables a significantly larger portion of the population (exceeding 40% in some countries) to form larger social bubbles, directly addressing isolation and loneliness.
- The strategy of merging households with at most one worker (w* = 1) provides the optimal trade-off, maximizing social connectivity (increasing ⟨ℓ_I⟩) while keeping the epidemic risk effectively controlled across all studied countries.
摘要: During the COVID-19 crisis, policymakers have implemented "social bubble" merging strategies, which allowed people from different households to meet and interact. Although these measures can mitigate the negative effects of extreme isolation, they also introduce additional contacts that may facilitate disease spread. As a result, several modeling studies have explored the epidemiological impact of different household-merging strategies, in which the selection of households to be merged is guided by specific demographic criteria, such as household size or the age composition of their members. Here, we investigate an alternative pairing strategy in which households are merged according to the number of economically active (working) members. We develop a mathematical model of household networks using real demographic data from multiple regions around the world, and simulate a lockdown scenario in which only economically active individuals can leave their households, while the remaining non-working members stay indoors. By using numerical simulations and the generating function technique, we then estimate the epidemic risk for different household merging strategies. We found that merging strategies based on the number of working members can keep epidemic risk at similar levels as those based on household size. Moreover, the worker-based approach allows significantly more people to form larger social bubbles, exceeding 40% of the population in some countries. We found that merging households with at most one worker provides the best balance between controlling epidemic risk and addressing people’s need for social contact.