48,247 research outputs found
Waveguide physical modeling of vocal tract acoustics: flexible formant bandwidth control from increased model dimensionality
Digital waveguide physical modeling is often used as an efficient representation of acoustical resonators such as the human vocal tract. Building on the basic one-dimensional (1-D) Kelly-Lochbaum tract model, various speech synthesis techniques demonstrate improvements to the wave scattering mechanisms in order to better approximate wave propagation in the complex vocal system. Some of these techniques are discussed in this paper, with particular reference to an alternative approach in the form of a two-dimensional waveguide mesh model. Emphasis is placed on its ability to produce vowel spectra similar to that which would be present in natural speech, and how it improves upon the 1-D model. Tract area function is accommodated as model width, rather than translated into acoustic impedance, and as such offers extra control as an additional bounding limit to the model. Results show that the two-dimensional (2-D) model introduces approximately linear control over formant bandwidths leading to attainable realistic values across a range of vowels. Similarly, the 2-D model allows for application of theoretical reflection values within the tract, which when applied to the 1-D model result in small formant bandwidths, and, hence, unnatural sounding synthesized vowels
Developed Country Trade Barriers and the Least Developed Countries: The Economic Results of Freeing Trade
Least Developed Countries, Generalized System of Preferences, Doha Round
A control system formulation of the mechanism that controls the secretions of serum group hormone in humans during sleep
Plasma growth hormone concentrations during sleep were determined experimentally. An elevated level of plasma growth hormone was observed during the initial phase of sleep and remained elevated for approximately 3 hr before returning to the steady-state level. Moreover, subsequent to a prolonged interruption of sleep, of the order of 2-3 hr, an elevated level of plasma growth hormone was again observed during the initial phase of resumed sleep. A control system formulation of the mechanism that controls the secretions of serum growth hormone in humans was used to account for the growth hormone responses observed
Soot formation and burnout in flames
The amount of soot formed when burning a benzene/hexane mixture in a turbulent combustor was examined. Soot concentration profiles in the same combustor for kerosene fuel are given. The chemistry of the formation of soot precursors, the nucleation, growth and subsequent burnout of soot particles, and the effect of mixing on the previous steps were considered
UK Soils: their phosphorus sorption capacity and potential for P removal from sewage effluents in emergent hydrophyte treatment systems
Human factors in space telepresence
The problems of interfacing a human with a teleoperation system, for work in space are discussed. Much of the information presented here is the result of experience gained by the M.I.T. Space Systems Laboratory during the past two years of work on the ARAMIS (Automation, Robotics, and Machine Intelligence Systems) project. Many factors impact the design of the man-machine interface for a teleoperator. The effects of each are described in turn. An annotated bibliography gives the key references that were used. No conclusions are presented as a best design, since much depends on the particular application desired, and the relevant technology is swiftly changing
Non-local fluctuation correlations in active gels
Many active materials and biological systems are driven far from equilibrium
by embedded agents that spontaneously generate forces and distort the
surrounding material. Probing and characterizing these athermal fluctuations is
essential for understanding the properties and behaviors of such systems. Here
we present a mathematical procedure to estimate the local action of
force-generating agents from the observed fluctuating displacement fields. The
active agents are modeled as oriented force dipoles or isotropic compression
foci, and the matrix on which they act is assumed to be either a compressible
elastic continuum or a coupled network-solvent system. Correlations at a single
point and between points separated by an arbitrary distance are obtained,
giving a total of three independent fluctuation modes that can be tested with
microrheology experiments. Since oriented dipoles and isotropic compression
foci give different contributions to these fluctuation modes, ratiometric
analysis allows us characterize the force generators. We also predict and
experimentally find a high-frequency ballistic regime, arising from individual
force generating events in the form of the slow build-up of stress followed by
rapid but finite decay. Finally, we provide a quantitative statistical model to
estimate the mean filament tension from these athermal fluctuations, which
leads to stiffening of active networks.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures; some clarifications and ammended figure
notation
Non-equilibrium fluctuations and mechanochemical couplings of a molecular motor
We investigate theoretically the violations of Einstein and Onsager
relations, and the efficiency for a single processive motor operating far from
equilibrium using an extension of the two-state model introduced by Kafri {\em
et al.} [Biophys. J. {\bf 86}, 3373 (2004)]. With the aid of the Fluctuation
Theorem, we analyze the general features of these violations and this
efficiency and link them to mechanochemical couplings of motors. In particular,
an analysis of the experimental data of kinesin using our framework leads to
interesting predictions that may serve as a guide for future experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Phys. Rev. Let
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