Inductive Bias Extraction and Matching for LLM Prompts
Christian M. Angel, Francis Ferraro
https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.10295 https://arxiv.org/pdf/2508.1029…
The Underground Muon Detector of AugerPrime: Status and Performance
Joaquin de Jesus (for the Pierre Auger Collaboration)
https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.08631 https://
White sausage party in the desert 🙂
Burning Man 2025 census: Middle-aged, highly educated, mostly white
#BurningMan
Mitigating Increase-Decrease Gaming with Alternative Connection Agreements: A Defender-Attacker-Defender Game
Bart van der Holst, Thomas Swarts, Phuong Nguyen, Johan Morren, Koen Kok
https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.07102
"""
In the sixteenth century, lunacy was a constant theme that was never questioned. It was still frequent in the seventeenth century, but started to disappear, and by 1707, the year in which Le François asked the question ‘Estne aliquod lunae in corpora humana imperium?’ (Does the moon have any influence over the human body?), after lengthy discussions, the university decided that their reply was in the negative. In the course of the eighteenth century the moon was rarely cited among the causes of madness, even as a possible factor or an aggravation. But right at the end of the century the idea reappears, perhaps under the influence of English medicine, which had never entirely forgotten the moon, and Daquin, followed by Leuret and Guislain, all admitted the influence of the moon on the phases of maniacal excitement, or at the least on the agitation of their patients. But what is important here is not so much the return of the theme as the possibility and conditions necessary for its reappearance. It reappears entirely transformed, filled with a new significance that it did not formerly possess. In its traditional form, it designated an immediate influence, a direct coincidence in time and intersection in space, whose mode of action was entirely situated in the power of the stars. But in Daquin by contrast, the influence of the moon acts through a whole series of mediations, in a kind of hierarchy, surrounding man. The moon acts on the atmosphere with such intensity that it can set in motion a mass as heavy as the ocean. The nervous system, of all the parts that make up the human organism, is the part most sensitive to atmospheric variations, as the slightest variation in temperature, humidity or dryness can have serious effects upon it. The moon therefore, given the important power that its trajectory exerts on the atmosphere, is likely to act most on people whose nervous fibres are particularly delicate:
“Madness is an exclusively nervous condition, and the brain of a madman must therefore be infinitely more susceptible to the influence of the atmosphere, which itself undergoes considerable changes of intensity as a result of the different positions of the moon relative to the earth.” [Daquin, Philosophie de la folie, Paris, 1792]
"""
(Michel Foucault, History of Madness)
The Personality Illusion: Revealing Dissociation Between Self-Reports & Behavior in LLMs
Pengrui Han, Rafal Kocielnik, Peiyang Song, Ramit Debnath, Dean Mobbs, Anima Anandkumar, R. Michael Alvarez
https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.03730
A Comparison of Star Formation Rates by Different Tracers in Nearby Galaxies
Huynh Anh N. Le, Jong-Hak Woo, Yongquan Xue, Ashraf Ayubinia, Changseok Kim, Xiaozhi Lin
https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.05687
AugerPrime Surface Detector Electronics: requirements, verification and performance
Martina Boh\'a\v{c}ov\'a (for the Pierre Auger Collaboration)
https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.14955
On the Deployment of Multiple Radio Stripes for Large-Scale Near-Field RF Wireless Power Transfer
Amirhossein Azarbahram, Onel L. A. L\'opez, Petar Popovski, Matti Latva-aho
https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.21640
Between Myth and History: von Neumann on Consciousness in Quantum Mechanics
Federico Laudisa
https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.15871 https://arxiv.org/pdf/2508.15…