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Eurycea tridentifera
Number of Pages: 2Integrative BiologyGeological Science
The Pedophile Prophet? Breathing a Culturally Relative Point of View into a Controversial Cultural Debate
This work focuses on a controversial topic within women studies of the Islamic world, the very young marriage of Mohammad\u27s second wife Aisha. The work attempts to meet the issue on level ground and explain that while this may seem as a spark on conflict between non-Muslim cultures and the Islamic world this marriage was not altogether that uncommon for the time
Prediction of specific virus outbreaks made from the increased concentration of a new class of virus genomic peptides, replikins.
Advance warning of pathogen outbreaks has not been possible heretofore. A new class of genomic peptides associated with rapid replication was discovered and named replikins. Software was designed to analyze replikins quantitatively. Replikin concentration changes were measured annually prior to, and “real time” every few days during, the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic. Replikins were seen by both linear sequence representation and three-dimensional X-ray diffraction, and found to expand on the virus hemagglutinin surface prior to and during the H1N1 pandemic.

A highly significant increased concentration of virus replikins was found a) retrospectively in three pandemics from 1918 to 1999 (14,227 sequences)(p<0.001), and b) prospectively before the H1N1 2009 pandemic (12,806 sequences) (in the hemagglutinin gene (N=8,046), p values by t-test = 1/10130, by linear regression = 1/1024 and 1/1029, by Spearman correlation < 2/1016, by Wilcoxon rank sum<1/1016, by multiple regression adjusting for correlation between consecutive years = 2/1022. Rising replikin concentration in H1N1 from 2006 to 2008, predicted one year in advance the H1N1 outbreak of 2009; and in H5N1, predicted the lethal outbreaks of H5N1 1997-2010. 

The possible combination of influenza strains H1N1 (high infectivity) and H5N1 (high lethality) is a matter of global concern (1,2). The risk of a combined H1N1 (high infectivity) - H5N1 (high lethality) outbreak may have increased because first, the Replikin Counts of the two virus strains have risen simultaneously, not seen previously; second, the rise is to the highest levels recorded since 1918 for H1N1, in Mexico (16.7), and since 1957 for H5N1, in Egypt (23.3); and third, clinical outbreaks of each strain are occurring in 2011. These simultaneous conditions may increase the risk that the two virus strains might come into contact with each other more frequently, facilitating transfer of genomic material to form a hybrid
On estimation of the diagonal elements of a sparse precision matrix
In this paper, we present several estimators of the diagonal elements of the
inverse of the covariance matrix, called precision matrix, of a sample of iid
random vectors. The focus is on high dimensional vectors having a sparse
precision matrix. It is now well understood that when the underlying
distribution is Gaussian, the columns of the precision matrix can be estimated
independently form one another by solving linear regression problems under
sparsity constraints. This approach leads to a computationally efficient
strategy for estimating the precision matrix that starts by estimating the
regression vectors, then estimates the diagonal entries of the precision matrix
and, in a final step, combines these estimators for getting estimators of the
off-diagonal entries. While the step of estimating the regression vector has
been intensively studied over the past decade, the problem of deriving
statistically accurate estimators of the diagonal entries has received much
less attention. The goal of the present paper is to fill this gap by presenting
four estimators---that seem the most natural ones---of the diagonal entries of
the precision matrix and then performing a comprehensive empirical evaluation
of these estimators. The estimators under consideration are the residual
variance, the relaxed maximum likelihood, the symmetry-enforced maximum
likelihood and the penalized maximum likelihood. We show, both theoretically
and empirically, that when the aforementioned regression vectors are estimated
without error, the symmetry-enforced maximum likelihood estimator has the
smallest estimation error. However, in a more realistic setting when the
regression vector is estimated by a sparsity-favoring computationally efficient
method, the qualities of the estimators become relatively comparable with a
slight advantage for the residual variance estimator.Comment: Companion R package at
http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/DESP/index.htm
Marked Rise in Replikin Counts in H5N1 Influenza Virus Localized to Lethality Gene p B1.
Abstract: Virus outbreaks have been found to be related to the concentration of a new class of genomic peptides, Replikins^1^. The eight genes of H5N1 influenza virus were analyzed for the distribution of Replikin Counts (number Replikins /100 amino acids) in 2,441 sequences from birds and humans. An increase (p<0.001) occurred from 2004 to August 2011 in one gene, pB1
Step-up simultaneous tests for identifying active effects in orthogonal saturated designs
A sequence of null hypotheses regarding the number of negligible effects
(zero effects) in orthogonal saturated designs is formulated. Two step-up
simultaneous testing procedures are proposed to identify active effects
(nonzero effects) under the commonly used assumption of effect sparsity. It is
shown that each procedure controls the experimentwise error rate at a given
level in the strong sense.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009053606000001136 in the
Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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