Source author record

Raj Singh

Raj Singh appears in the imported research catalog. Authorship, coauthor and topic links are available while profile ownership is still unclaimed.

ResearcherUnclaimed source record

Catalog footprint

What is connected

2works
2topics
4close collaborators

Actions

Connect this record

Log in to claim

Research graph

See the researcher in context

Open full explorer

Inspect adjacent papers, topics, institutions and collaborators without losing the researcher page.

Building this map preview

BZPEER is loading the nearby papers, people, topics and institutions for this page.

Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Presupposition and Reasoning in Conditionals: A Theory-Based Study of Humans and LLMs

Presupposition projection in conditionals is central to theories of meaning and pragmatics, yet it remains largely unevaluated in large language models. We address this gap through a parallel behavioral study comparing human judgments and LLM predictions on a normed dataset of conditional sentences that controls the relation between the antecedent and the projected presupposition. We collect likelihood ratings from 120 participants and four LLMs under matched contextual conditions. Results show that humans integrate probabilistic and pragmatic cues in their judgment, whereas LLMs show variable alignment with human patterns. Using a linguistically motivated checklist within an LLM-as-a-Judge framework, we further evaluate model reasoning. We observe models that best match human ratings often lack coherent pragmatic reasoning, while models with stronger reasoning produce less human-like judgments. These findings suggest that LLMs' performance on such tasks may result from surface pattern matching rather than pragmatic competence. Our findings highlight the importance of benchmarks grounded in linguistic theory for comparing humans and models.

preprint2020arXiv

Application of high frequency biasing and its effect in STOR-M tokamak

A pulsed oscillating power amplifier has been developed to apply high frequency biasing voltage to an electrode at the edge of the STOR-M tokamak plasma. The power amplifier can deliver a peak-to-peak oscillating voltage up to 120V and current 30A within the frequency range of 1kHz-50kHz. The electrode is located in the equatorial plane at radius $ρ= 0.88$. The frequency of the applied voltage has been varied between discharges. It is observed that the plasma density and soft x-ray intensity from the plasma core region usually increase at lower frequency regime 1kHz-5kHz as well as relatively higher frequency regime 20kHz-25kHz but seldom increase in between them. Increment of $τ_{p}$ \& $τ_{E}$ have been observed from the derivations of experimental data in both frequency regimes. Transport simulation has been carried out using the ASTRA simulation code for STOR-M tokamak parameters to understand the physical process behind experimental observations at higher frequency branch. The model is based on GAM excitement at resonance frequency associated with Ware-pinch due to oscillating electric field produced by biasing voltage which can suppress anomalous transport. Simulation results reproduce the experiment quite well in terms of the density, particle confinement as well as energy confinement time evolution. All those results indicate high frequency biasing is capable of improving confinement efficiently.