637 research outputs found
A CT Database for Research, Development and Education: Concept and Potential
Both in radiology and in surgery, numerous applications are emerging that enable 3D visualization of data from various imaging modalities. In clinical practice, the patient's images are analyzed on work stations in the Radiology Department. For specific preclinical and educational applications, however, data from single patients are insufficient. Instead, similar scans from a number of individuals within a collective must be compiled. The definition of standardized acquisition procedures and archiving formats are prerequisite for subsequent analysis of multiple data sets. Focusing on bone morphology, we describe our concept of a computer database of 3D human bone models obtained from computed tomography (CT) scans. We further discuss and illustrate deployment areas ranging from prosthesis design, over virtual operation simulation up to 3D anatomy atlases. The database of 3D bone models described in this work, created and maintained by the AO Development Institute, may be accessible to research institutes on reques
How did they get here from there? Detecting changes of direction in terrestrial ranging
Efficient exploitation of large-scale space is crucial to many species of animal, but the difficulties of studying how animals decide on travel routes in natural environments have hampered scientific understanding of environmental cognition. Field experiments allow researchers to define travel goals for their subjects, but practical difficulties restrict large-scale studies. In contrast, data on natural travel patterns are abundant and easy to record, but hard to interpret without circularity and subjectivity when making inferences about when and why an animal began heading to a particular location. We present a method of determining objectively the point at which an animal’s travel path becomes directed at a location, for instance a distant feeding site, based on the statistical characteristics of its route. We evaluate this method and illustrate how it can be tailored to particular problems, using data that is (a) synthetic; (b) from baboons, where travel is from a single sleeping site in an overlapping home range, and (c) from chimpanzees, where sleeping sites are unlimited within a large territory. We suggest that this ‘change- point test’ might usefully become a routine first step in interpreting the decision- making behind animal travel under natural conditions
Recommended from our members
Ropinirole in the treatment of motor deficits after stroke: A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study
The Impact of Foregrounds on Redshift Space Distortion Measurements With the Highly-Redshifted 21 cm Line
The highly redshifted 21 cm line of neutral hydrogen has become recognized as
a unique probe of cosmology from relatively low redshifts (z ~ 1) up through
the Epoch of Reionization (z ~ 8) and even beyond. To date, most work has
focused on recovering the spherically averaged power spectrum of the 21 cm
signal, since this approach maximizes the signal-to-noise in the initial
measurement. However, like galaxy surveys, the 21 cm signal is affected by
redshift space distortions, and is inherently anisotropic between the
line-of-sight and transverse directions. A measurement of this anisotropy can
yield unique cosmological information, potentially even isolating the matter
power spectrum from astrophysical effects. However, in interferometric
measurements, foregrounds also have an anisotropic footprint between the
line-of-sight and transverse directions: the so-called foreground "wedge".
Although foreground subtraction techniques are actively being developed, a
"foreground avoidance" approach of simply ignoring contaminated modes has
arguably proven most successful to date. In this work, we analyze the effect of
this foreground anisotropy in recovering the redshift space distortion
signature in 21 cm measurements at both high and intermediate redshifts. We
find the foreground wedge corrupts nearly all of the redshift space signal for
even the largest proposed EoR experiments (HERA and the SKA), making
cosmological information unrecoverable without foreground subtraction. The
situation is somewhat improved at lower redshifts, where the redshift-dependent
mapping from observed coordinates to cosmological coordinates significantly
reduces the size of the wedge. Using only foreground avoidance, we find that a
large experiment like CHIME can place non-trivial constraints on cosmological
parameters.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables; minor changes to match version accepted
by MNRA
Wild chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) remember single foraging episodes
This study was supported by grants from Zürcher Hochschulverein, Schweizerische Akademie für Naturwissenschaften, Stiftung Thyll-Dürr, and Stiftung Annemarie Schindler, to R.N.Understanding animal episodic-like memory is important for tracing the evolution of the human mind. However, our knowledge about the existence and nature of episodic-like memory in non-human primates is minimal. We observed the behaviour of a wild male chacma baboon faced with a trade-off between protecting his stationary group from aggressive extra-group males and foraging among five out-of-sight platforms. These contained high-priority food at a time of natural food shortage. In 10 morning and eight evening trials, the male spontaneously visited the platforms in five and four different sequences, respectively. In addition, he interrupted foraging sequences at virtually any point on eight occasions, returning to the group for up to 2 h. He then visited some or all of the remaining platforms and prevented revisits to already depleted ones, apparently based on his memory for the previous foraging episode about food value, location, and time. Efficient use of memory allowed him to keep minimal time absent from his group while keeping food intake high. These findings support the idea that episodic-like memory offers an all-purpose solution to a wide variety of problems that require flexible, quick, yet precise decisions in situations arising from competition for food and mates in wild primates.PostprintPeer reviewe
Perceptions Of Undergraduate Business Students Toward Online Courses In Higher Education Expanded And Revisited: Do Gender, Age, And/Or Past Experiences Make A Difference?
This study analyzes the perceptions and preferences of a group of undergraduate business students with respect to taking on-line or distance education courses. In this last decade, distant learning programs have become very popular, and the number of offerings continues to increase. The growing popularity of this medium for instruction is due to a combination of factors. Technological advances have made the availability both economical and practical. The economic advantages of distributing scarce resources, geographically and temporally, to students in remote locations provide a broader market for distance education. Additionally, the increasing demand from students to acquire education at times that are convenient given their busy schedules and personal commitments makes distance education attractive to working learners (Roberts 1998). The new opportunities distance learning has provided have enabled students to create an atmosphere for learning at home. The distance debate usually focuses on issues related to student learning and outcomes and student attitudes as compared to traditional classroom-based settings (Phillips, 1998; Webster & Hackley, 1997). This study attempts to address these and other topics such as what is distance learning, what are the advantages and disadvantages, and what changes can be made to improve this type of learning. This research is intended to give students a realistic expectation of what to anticipate from distance learning courses based on information we have found and studies we have done. It is important that students have a realistic perception of the distant learning experience
A Hard Real-Time Kernel for Motorola Microcontrollers
This paper describes a real-time kernel for running embedded applications on a recent family of Motorola microcontrollers. Both periodic and aperiodic real-time tasks are managed, as well as non real-time tasks. The kernel has been called Yartos, and uses a hard real-time scheduling algorithm based on an EDF approach for the periodic task; aperiodic tasks are executed with a Total Bandwith Server
A Simple Iterative Model Accurately Captures Complex Trapline Formation by Bumblebees Across Spatial Scales and Flower Arrangements
PMCID: PMC3591286This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
- …
