1,384,839 research outputs found
STRATEGIES OF CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY IN THE EUROPEAN UNION
The present paper emphasizes the corporate social responsibility (CSR) state and development strategies in the European Union and at the level of the Romanian business environment. The aim of the paper is to present the similarities and differences in theCorporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Strategy, Vision – Mission – Values System
Individual differences in human path integration abilities correlate with gray matter volume in retrosplenial cortex, hippocampus, and medial prefrontal cortex
Humans differ in their individual navigational abilities. These individual differences may exist in part because successful navigation relies on several disparate abilities, which rely on different brain structures. One such navigational capability is path integration, the updating of position and orientation, in which navigators track distances, directions, and locations in space during movement. Although structural differences related to landmark-based navigation have been examined, gray matter volume related to path integration ability has not yet been tested. Here, we examined individual differences in two path integration paradigms: (1) a location tracking task and (2) a task tracking translational and rotational self-motion. Using voxel-based morphometry, we related differences in performance in these path integration tasks to variation in brain morphology in 26 healthy young adults. Performance in the location tracking task positively correlated with individual differences in gray matter volume in three areas critical for path integration: the hippocampus, the retrosplenial cortex, and the medial prefrontal cortex. These regions are consistent with the path integration system known from computational and animal models and provide novel evidence that morphological variability in retrosplenial and medial prefrontal cortices underlies individual differences in human path integration ability. The results for tracking rotational self-motion-but not translation or location-demonstrated that cerebellum gray matter volume correlated with individual performance. Our findings also suggest that these three aspects of path integration are largely independent. Together, the results of this study provide a link between individual abilities and the functional correlates, computational models, and animal models of path integration
Design of a fault tolerant airborne digital computer. Volume 2: Computational requirements and technology
This final report summarizes the work on the design of a fault tolerant digital computer for aircraft. Volume 2 is composed of two parts. Part 1 is concerned with the computational requirements associated with an advanced commercial aircraft. Part 2 reviews the technology that will be available for the implementation of the computer in the 1975-1985 period. With regard to the computation task 26 computations have been categorized according to computational load, memory requirements, criticality, permitted down-time, and the need to save data in order to effect a roll-back. The technology part stresses the impact of large scale integration (LSI) on the realization of logic and memory. Also considered was module interconnection possibilities so as to minimize fault propagation
Volumes of Compact Manifolds
We present a systematic calculation of the volumes of compact manifolds which
appear in physics: spheres, projective spaces, group manifolds and generalized
flag manifolds. In each case we state what we believe is the most natural scale
or normalization of the manifold, that is, the generalization of the unit
radius condition for spheres. For this aim we first describe the manifold with
some parameters, set up a metric, which induces a volume element, and perform
the integration for the adequate range of the parameters; in most cases our
manifolds will be either spheres or (twisted) products of spheres, or quotients
of spheres (homogeneous spaces).
Our results should be useful in several physical instances, as instanton
calculations, propagators in curved spaces, sigma models, geometric scattering
in homogeneous manifolds, density matrices for entangled states, etc. Some flag
manifolds have also appeared recently as exceptional holonomy manifolds; the
volumes of compact Einstein manifolds appear in String theory.Comment: 26 pages, no figures; updated addresses and bibliography. To be
published in Rep. Math. Phy
The Thermal Environment of the Fiber Glass Dome for the New Solar Telescope at Big Bear Solar Observatory
The New Solar Telescope (NST) is a 1.6-meter off-axis Gregory-type telescope
with an equatorial mount and an open optical support structure. To mitigate the
temperature fluctuations along the exposed optical path, the effects of
local/dome-related seeing have to be minimized. To accomplish this, NST will be
housed in a 5/8-sphere fiberglass dome that is outfitted with 14 active vents
evenly spaced around its perimeter. The 14 vents house louvers that open and
close independently of one another to regulate and direct the passage of air
through the dome. In January 2006, 16 thermal probes were installed throughout
the dome and the temperature distribution was measured. The measurements
confirmed the existence of a strong thermal gradient on the order of 5 degree
Celsius inside the dome. In December 2006, a second set of temperature
measurements were made using different louver configurations. In this study, we
present the results of these measurements along with their integration into the
thermal control system (ThCS) and the overall telescope control system (TCS).Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, submitted to SPIE Optics+Photonics, San Diego,
U.S.A., 26-30 August 2007, Conference: Solar Physics and Space Weather
Instrumentation II, Proceedings of SPIE Volume 6689, Paper #2
Frequency-splitting estimators of single-propagator traces
Single-propagator traces are the most elementary fermion Wick contractions
which occur in numerical lattice QCD, and are usually computed by introducing
random-noise estimators to profit from volume averaging. The additional
contribution to the variance induced by the random noise is typically orders of
magnitude larger than the one due to the gauge field. We propose a new family
of stochastic estimators of single-propagator traces built upon a frequency
splitting combined with a hopping expansion of the quark propagator, and test
their efficiency in two-flavour QCD with pions as light as 190 MeV. Depending
on the fermion bilinear considered, the cost of computing these diagrams is
reduced by one to two orders of magnitude or more with respect to standard
random-noise estimators. As two concrete examples of physics applications, we
compute the disconnected contributions to correlation functions of two vector
currents in the isosinglet omega channel and to the hadronic vacuum
polarization relevant for the muon anomalous magnetic moment. In both cases,
estimators with variances dominated by the gauge noise are computed with a
modest numerical effort. Theory suggests large gains for disconnected three and
higher point correlation functions as well. The frequency-splitting estimators
and their split-even components are directly applicable to the newly proposed
multi-level integration in the presence of fermions.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, LaTe
[68Ga]-DOTATOC-PET/CT for meningioma IMRT treatment planning
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Purpose</p> <p>The observation that human meningioma cells strongly express somatostatin receptor (SSTR 2) was the rationale to analyze retrospectively in how far DOTATOC PET/CT is helpful to improve target volume delineation for intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT).</p> <p>Patients and Methods</p> <p>In 26 consecutive patients with preferentially skull base meningioma, diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and planning-computed tomography (CT) was complemented with data from [<sup>68</sup>Ga]-DOTA-D Phe<sup>1</sup>-Tyr<sup>3</sup>-Octreotide (DOTATOC)-PET/CT. Image fusion of PET/CT, diagnostic computed tomography, MRI and radiotherapy planning CT as well as target volume delineation was performed with OTP-Masterplan<sup>®</sup>. Initial gross tumor volume (GTV) definition was based on MRI data only and was secondarily complemented with DOTATOC-PET information. Irradiation was performed as EUD based IMRT, using the Hyperion Software package.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The integration of the DOTATOC data led to additional information concerning tumor extension in 17 of 26 patients (65%). There were major changes of the clinical target volume (CTV) which modify the PTV in 14 patients, minor changes were realized in 3 patients. Overall the GTV-MRI/CT was larger than the GTV-PET in 10 patients (38%), smaller in 13 patients (50%) and almost the same in 3 patients (12%). Most of the adaptations were performed in close vicinity to bony skull base structures or after complex surgery. Median GTV based on MRI was 18.1 cc, based on PET 25.3 cc and subsequently the CTV was 37.4 cc. Radiation planning and treatment of the DOTATOC-adapted volumes was feasible.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>DOTATOC-PET/CT information may strongly complement patho-anatomical data from MRI and CT in cases with complex meningioma and is thus helpful for improved target volume delineation especially for skull base manifestations and recurrent disease after surgery.</p
European Integration and Baltic Sea Region: Diversity and Perspectives
This publication presents a collection of research papers in conjunction with the international conference “ European Integration and Baltic Sea Region: Diversity and Perspectives” , 26–27 September 2011 at the University of Latvia, Riga.
The conference is hosted by the Doctoral School for European Integration and Baltic Sea Region Studies, recently established at the university. The publication is a conference volume – Volume I in an anticipated series of publications featuring research papers by doctoral students issued in two-year intervals. -- All contributions have been double-blind peer reviewed.The publication is part-financed by European Regional Development Fund, project
2010/0202/2DP/2.1.1.2.0/10/APIA/VIAA/013 and European Social Fund, project
Nr.2009/0138/1DP/1.1.2.1.2/09/IPIA/VIAA/004
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