18,825 research outputs found
The first report of South American edrioasteroids and the paleoecology and ontogeny of rhenopyrgid echinoderms
A new species of rhenopyrgid edrioasteroid Rhenopyrgus piojoensis sp. nov. is described form the Silurian (Lower Lud− low) Los Espejos Formation in the Precordillera of Argentina. This species is the first reported edrioasteroid from South America. Rhenopyrgids are widely distributed in Ordovician through Devonian deposits of most continents. Numerous juvenile specimens show that the general bodyplan is organized early in ontogeny and that the pedenculate zone lengthens with age. Phylogenetic analysis shows that rhenopyrgids are more closely related to edrioasterid edrioasteroids such as edrioblastoids and cyathocystids than to pyrgocystid isorophids.Fil: Sumrall, Colin D.. University of Tennessee; Estados UnidosFil: Heredia, Susana Emma. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Investigaciones Mineras; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Rodríguez, Cecilia María. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Investigaciones Mineras; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Mestre García, Ana Isabel. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Investigaciones Mineras; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentin
Moving Toward Non-transcription Based Discourse Analysis in Stable and Progressive Aphasia
Measurement of communication ability at the discourse level holds promise for predicting how well persons with stable (e.g., stroke-induced), or progressive aphasia navigate everyday communicative interactions. However, barriers to the clinical utilization of discourse measures have persisted. Recent advancements in the standardization of elicitation protocols and the existence of large databases for development of normative references have begun to address some of these barriers. Still, time remains a consistently reported barrier by clinicians. Non-transcription based discourse measurement would reduce the time required for discourse analysis, making clinical utilization a reality. The purpose of this article is to present evidence regarding discourse measures (main concept analysis, core lexicon, and derived efficiency scores) that are well suited to non-transcription based analysis. Combined with previous research, our results suggest that these measures are sensitive to changes following stroke or neurodegenerative disease. Given the evidence, further research specifically assessing the reliability of these measures in clinical implementation is warranted
A singular structure: Monopost made in composites
p. 3002-3012This work presents the design process, the analysis, and the performance of a cylindrical hollow monopost, made entirely in composites. It is about a translucent structure of height 40m, external diameter 1.60m and the average wall-thickness 11mm. The material is a polymer made up of vinylster resin and reinforced by glass fiber (GFRP). The manufactured processing used is filament winding. Moreover, due to geographical emplacement where it is situated, the structure has to support wind velocity value above 180Km/h and its elastic modulus of the material does not exceed 25GPa. Eventually, we was able to achieve an optimum solution and strentgh structure, considering and developing differents types of approaches and analysis, such as linear, non-linear and buckling.Rovira, JA.; Martin, P.; Pons, D.; Almerich Chulia, AI. (2009). A singular structure: Monopost made in composites. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/670
Label-free optical detection of single enzyme-reactant reactions and associated conformational changes
Monitoring the kinetics and conformational dynamics of single enzymes is
crucial in order to better understand their biological functions as these
motions and structural dynamics are usually unsynchronized among the molecules.
Detecting the enzyme-reactant interactions and associated conformational
changes of the enzyme on a single molecule basis, however, remain as a
challenge with established optical techniques due to the commonly required
labeling of the reactants or the enzyme itself. The labeling process is usually
non-trivial and the labels themselves might skew the physical properties of the
enzyme. Here we demonstrate an optical, label-free method capable of observing
enzymatic interactions and the associated conformational changes on the single
molecule level. We monitor polymerase/DNA interactions via the strong
near-field enhancement provided by plasmonic nanorods resonantly coupled to
whispering gallery modes in microcavities. Specifically, we employ two
different recognition schemes: one in which the kinetics of polymerase/DNA
interactions are probed in the vicinity of DNA-functionalized nanorods, and the
other in which these interactions are probed via the magnitude of
conformational changes in the polymerase molecules immobilized on nanorods. In
both approaches we find that low and high polymerase activities can be clearly
discerned via their characteristic signal amplitude and signal length
distributions. Furthermore, the thermodynamic study of the monitored
interactions suggests the occurrence of DNA polymerization. This work
constitutes a proof-of-concept study of enzymatic activities via plasmonically
enhanced microcavities and establishes an alternative and label-free method
capable of investigating structural changes in single molecules
Nondiffractive sonic crystals
We predict theoretically the nondiffractive propagation of sonic waves in
periodic acoustic media (sonic crystals), by expansion into a set of plane
waves (Bloch mode expansion), and by finite difference time domain calculations
of finite beams. We also give analytical evaluations of the parameters for
nondiffractive propagation, as well as the minimum size of the nondiffractively
propagating acoustic beams.Comment: 7 figures, submitted to J. Acoust. Soc. A
A second-order PHD filter with mean and variance in target number
The Probability Hypothesis Density (PHD) and Cardinalized PHD (CPHD) filters
are popular solutions to the multi-target tracking problem due to their low
complexity and ability to estimate the number and states of targets in
cluttered environments. The PHD filter propagates the first-order moment (i.e.
mean) of the number of targets while the CPHD propagates the cardinality
distribution in the number of targets, albeit for a greater computational cost.
Introducing the Panjer point process, this paper proposes a second-order PHD
filter, propagating the second-order moment (i.e. variance) of the number of
targets alongside its mean. The resulting algorithm is more versatile in the
modelling choices than the PHD filter, and its computational cost is
significantly lower compared to the CPHD filter. The paper compares the three
filters in statistical simulations which demonstrate that the proposed filter
reacts more quickly to changes in the number of targets, i.e., target births
and target deaths, than the CPHD filter. In addition, a new statistic for
multi-object filters is introduced in order to study the correlation between
the estimated number of targets in different regions of the state space, and
propose a quantitative analysis of the spooky effect for the three filters
Global Saddles for Planar Maps
We study the dynamics of planar diffeomorphisms having a unique fixed point
that is a hyperbolic local saddle. We obtain sufficient conditions under which
the fixed point is a global saddle. We also address the special case of
-symmetric maps, for which we obtain a similar result for
homeomorphisms. Some applications to differential equations are also given
- …
