1,911 research outputs found
Shift-Invariant Kernel Additive Modelling for Audio Source Separation
A major goal in blind source separation to identify and separate sources is
to model their inherent characteristics. While most state-of-the-art approaches
are supervised methods trained on large datasets, interest in non-data-driven
approaches such as Kernel Additive Modelling (KAM) remains high due to their
interpretability and adaptability. KAM performs the separation of a given
source applying robust statistics on the time-frequency bins selected by a
source-specific kernel function, commonly the K-NN function. This choice
assumes that the source of interest repeats in both time and frequency. In
practice, this assumption does not always hold. Therefore, we introduce a
shift-invariant kernel function capable of identifying similar spectral content
even under frequency shifts. This way, we can considerably increase the amount
of suitable sound material available to the robust statistics. While this leads
to an increase in separation performance, a basic formulation, however, is
computationally expensive. Therefore, we additionally present acceleration
techniques that lower the overall computational complexity.Comment: Feedback is welcom
Recruitment of Spiny Lobsters, Panulirus argus, to submerged sea cages off Puerto Rico, and its implication for the development of an aquaculture operation
Do big athletes have big hearts? Impact of extreme anthropometry upon cardiac hypertrophy in professional male athletes.
AIM: Differentiating physiological cardiac hypertrophy from pathology is challenging when the athlete presents with extreme anthropometry. While upper normal limits exist for maximal left ventricular (LV) wall thickness (14 mm) and LV internal diameter in diastole (LVIDd, 65 mm), it is unknown if these limits are applicable to athletes with a body surface area (BSA) >2.3 m(2). PURPOSE: To investigate cardiac structure in professional male athletes with a BSA>2.3 m(2), and to assess the validity of established upper normal limits for physiological cardiac hypertrophy. METHODS: 836 asymptomatic athletes without a family history of sudden death underwent ECG and echocardiographic screening. Athletes were grouped according to BSA (Group 1, BSA>2.3 m(2), n=100; Group 2, 2-2.29 m(2), n=244; Group 3, 13 mm, but in combination with an abnormal ECG suspicious of an inherited cardiac disease. CONCLUSION: Regardless of extreme anthropometry, established upper limits for physiological cardiac hypertrophy of 14 mm for maximal wall thickness and 65 mm for LVIDd are clinically appropriate for all athletes. However, the abnormal ECG is key to diagnosis and guides follow-up, particularly when cardiac dimensions are within accepted limits
Phase-plane analysis of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmologies in Brans-Dicke gravity
We present an autonomous phase-plane describing the evolution of
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker models containing a perfect fluid (with barotropic
index gamma) in Brans-Dicke gravity (with Brans-Dicke parameter omega). We find
self-similar fixed points corresponding to Nariai's power-law solutions for
spatially flat models and curvature-scaling solutions for curved models. At
infinite values of the phase-plane variables we recover O'Hanlon and Tupper's
vacuum solutions for spatially flat models and the Milne universe for negative
spatial curvature. We find conditions for the existence and stability of these
critical points and describe the qualitative evolution in all regions of the
(omega,gamma) parameter space for 0-3/2. We show that the
condition for inflation in Brans-Dicke gravity is always stronger than the
general relativistic condition, gamma<2/3.Comment: 24 pages, including 9 figures, LaTe
Counterparts: Clothing, value and the sites of otherness in Panapompom ethnographic encounters
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Anthropological Forum, 18(1), 17-35,
2008 [copyright Taylor & Francis], available online at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/00664670701858927.Panapompom people living in the western Louisiade Archipelago of Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea, see their clothes as indices of their perceived poverty. ‘Development’ as a valued form of social life appears as images that attach only loosely to the people employing them. They nevertheless hold Panapompom people to account as subjects to a voice and gaze that is located in the imagery they strive to present: their clothes. This predicament strains anthropological approaches to the study of Melanesia that subsist on strict alterity, because native self‐judgments are located ‘at home’ for the ethnographer. In this article, I develop the notion of the counterpart as a means to explore these forms of postcolonial oppression and their implications for the ethnographic encounter
Guillain-Barré syndrome: a century of progress
In 1916, Guillain, Barré and Strohl reported on two cases of acute flaccid paralysis with high cerebrospinal fluid protein levels and normal cell counts — novel findings that identified the disease we now know as Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS). 100 years on, we have made great progress with the clinical and pathological characterization of GBS. Early clinicopathological and animal studies indicated that GBS was an immune-mediated demyelinating disorder, and that severe GBS could result in secondary axonal injury; the current treatments of plasma exchange and intravenous immunoglobulin, which were developed in the 1980s, are based on this premise. Subsequent work has, however, shown that primary axonal injury can be the underlying disease. The association of Campylobacter jejuni strains has led to confirmation that anti-ganglioside antibodies are pathogenic and that axonal GBS involves an antibody and complement-mediated disruption of nodes of Ranvier, neuromuscular junctions and other neuronal and glial membranes. Now, ongoing clinical trials of the complement inhibitor eculizumab are the first targeted immunotherapy in GBS
Search for the rare decays and
A search for the rare decay of a or meson into the final
state is performed, using data collected by the LHCb experiment
in collisions at and TeV, corresponding to an integrated
luminosity of 3 fb. The observed number of signal candidates is
consistent with a background-only hypothesis. Branching fraction values larger
than for the decay mode are
excluded at 90% confidence level. For the decay
mode, branching fraction values larger than are excluded at
90% confidence level, this is the first branching fraction limit for this
decay.Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and
additional information, are available at
https://lhcbproject.web.cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/LHCbProjectPublic/LHCb-PAPER-2015-044.htm
A model-independent confirmation of the state
The decay is analyzed using of
collision data collected with the LHCb detector. A model-independent
description of the mass spectrum is obtained, using as input the
mass spectrum and angular distribution derived directly from data,
without requiring a theoretical description of resonance shapes or their
interference. The hypothesis that the mass spectrum can be
described in terms of reflections alone is rejected with more than
8 significance. This provides confirmation, in a model-independent way,
of the need for an additional resonant component in the mass region of the
exotic state.Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and
additional information, are available at
https://lhcbproject.web.cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/LHCbProjectPublic/LHCb-PAPER-2015-038.htm
A study of violation in () with the modes , and
An analysis of the decays of and is presented in which the meson is reconstructed in
the three-body final states , and . Using data from LHCb corresponding to an integrated luminosity of
3.0 fb of collisions, measurements of several observables are
performed. First observations are obtained of the suppressed ADS decay and the quasi-GLW decay . The results are interpreted in the
context of the unitarity triangle angle and related parameters
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