9,782 research outputs found
The AXES-lite video search engine
The aim of AXES is to develop tools that provide various types of users with new engaging ways to interact with audiovisual libraries, helping them discover, browse, navigate, search, and enrich archives. This paper describes the initial (lite) version of the AXES search engine, which is targeted at professional users such as media professionals and archivists. We describe the overall system design, the user interface, and the results of our experiments at TRECVid 2011
Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Seroprevalence in a Traditionally Managed Large California Beef Herd.
Recent observations by stakeholders suggested that ecosystem changes may be driving an increased incidence of bovine erythrocytic anaplasmosis, resulting in a reemerging cattle disease in California. The objective of this prospective cohort study was to estimate the incidence of Anaplasma marginale infection using seroconversion in a northern California beef cattle herd. A total of 143 Black Angus cattle (106 prebreeding heifers and 37 cows) were enrolled in the study. Serum samples were collected to determine Anaplasma marginale seroprevalence using a commercially available competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test kit. Repeat sampling was performed in seronegative animals to determine the incidence density rate from March through September (2013). Seroprevalence of heifers was significantly lower than that of cows at the beginning of the study (P < 0.001) but not at study completion (P = 0.075). Incidence density rate of Anaplasma marginale infection was 8.17 (95% confidence interval: 6.04, 10.81) cases per 1000 cow-days during the study period. Study cattle became Anaplasma marginale seropositive and likely carriers protected from severe clinical disease that might have occurred had they been first infected as mature adults. No evidence was found within this herd to suggest increased risk for clinical bovine erythrocytic anaplasmosis
"Propeller" Regime of Disk Accretion to Rapidly Rotating Stars
We present results of axisymmetic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the
interaction of a rapidly-rotating, magnetized star with an accretion disk. The
disk is considered to have a finite viscosity and magnetic diffusivity. The
main parameters of the system are the star's angular velocity and magnetic
moment, and the disk's viscosity, diffusivity. We focus on the "propeller"
regime where the inner radius of the disk is larger than the corotation radius.
Two types of magnetohydrodynamic flows have been found as a result of
simulations: "weak" and "strong" propellers. The strong propeller is
characterized by a powerful disk wind and a collimated magnetically dominated
outflow or jet from the star. The weak propeller have only weak outflows. We
investigated the time-averaged characteristics of the interaction between the
main elements of the system, the star, the disk, the wind from the disk, and
the jet. Rates of exchange of mass and angular momentum between the elements of
the system are derived as a function of the main parameters. The propeller
mechanism may be responsible for the fast spinning-down of the classical T
Tauri stars in the initial stages of their evolution, and for the spinning-down
of accreting millisecond pulsars.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, ApJ (accepted), added references, corrected
typos; see animation at
http://astrosun2.astro.cornell.edu/us-rus/disk_prop.ht
Tests for exponentiality against NBUE alternatives: a Monte Carlo comparison
Testing of various classes of life distributions has been addressed in the
literature for more than 45 years. In this paper, we consider the problem of
testing exponentiality (which essentially implies no ageing) against positive
ageing which is captured by the fairly large class of new better than used in
expectation (NBUE) distributions. These tests of exponentiality against NBUE
alternatives are discussed and compared. The empirical size of the tests is
obtained by simulations. Power comparisons for different popular alternatives
are done using Monte Carlo simulations. These comparisons are made for both
small and large sample sizes. The paper concludes with a discussion in which
suggestions are made regarding the choices of the test when a particular
alternative is suspected
Warping and Precession of Accretion Disks Around Magnetic Stars: Nonlinear Evolution
The inner region of the accretion disk around a magnetized star (T Tauri
star, white dwarf or neutron star) is subjected to magnetic torques that induce
warping and precession of the disk. These torques arise from the interaction
between the stellar field and the induced electric currents in the disk. We
carry out numerical simulations of the nonlinear evolution of warped, viscous
accretion disks driven by the magnetic torques. We show that the disk can
develop into a highly warped steady state in which the disk attains a fixed
(warped) shape and precesses rigidly. The warp is most pronounced at the disk
inner radius (near the magnetosphere boundary). As the system parameters (such
as accretion rate) change, the disk can switch between a completely flat state
(warping stable) and a highly warped state. The precession of warped disks may
be responsible for a variety of quasi-periodic oscillations or radiation flux
variabilities observed in many different systems, including young stellar
objects and X-ray binaries.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures; extended parameter searches, changes in
discussion; accepted for publication in Ap
THE TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY OF ILLINOIS GRAIN FARMS: AN APPLICATION OF A RAY-HOMOTHETIC PRODUCTION FUNCTION
The purpose of this paper is to measure the extent of technical inefficiency among a sample of Illinois grain farms using the corrected ordinary least squares method. Instead of assuming a Cobb-Douglas production function, a linear form of the ray-homothetic is used. The results show a significant amount of technical inefficiency among all the farms in the sample, but with large farms being less technically inefficient than small farms.Crop Production/Industries,
Link anchors in images: is there truth?
While automatic linking in text collections is well understood, little is known about links in images. In this work, we investigate two aspects of anchors, the origin of a link, in images: 1) the requirements of users for such anchors, e.g. the things users would like more information on, and 2) possible evaluation methods assessing anchor selection al- gorithms. To investigate these aspects, we perform a study with 102 users. We find that 59% of the required anchors are image segments, as opposed to the whole image, and most users require information on displayed persons. The agreement of users on the required anchors is too low (often below 30%) for a ground truth-based evaluation, which is the standard IR evaluation method. As an alternative, we propose a novel evaluation method based on improved search performance and user experience
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