1,067 research outputs found
A Study of the Combination of Variation Operators in the NSGA-II Algorithm
Multi-objective evolutionary algorithms rely on the use of variation operators as their basic mechanism to carry out the evolutionary
process. These operators are usually fixed and applied in the same way during algorithm execution, e.g., the mutation probability in genetic algorithms. This paper analyses whether a more dynamic approach combining different operators with variable application rate along the search process allows to improve the static classical behavior. This way, we explore
the combined use of three different operators (simulated binary crossover, differential evolution’s operator, and polynomial mutation) in
the NSGA-II algorithm. We have considered two strategies for selecting the operators: random and adaptive. The resulting variants have been
tested on a set of 19 complex problems, and our results indicate that both
schemes significantly improve the performance of the original NSGA-II
algorithm, achieving the random and adaptive variants the best overall
results in the bi- and three-objective considered problems, respectively.UNIVERSIDAD DE MÁLAGA. CAMPUS DE EXCELENCIA INTERNACIONAL ANDALUCÍA TEC
Sparse LS-SVMs with L0-norm minimization
This is an electronic version of the paper presented at the 19th European Symposium on Artificial Neural Networks, held in Bruges on 2011Least-Squares Support Vector Machines (LS-SVMs) have
been successfully applied in many classification and regression tasks. Their
main drawback is the lack of sparseness of the final models. Thus, a
procedure to sparsify LS-SVMs is a frequent desideratum. In this paper,
we adapt to the LS-SVM case a recent work for sparsifying classical SVM
classifiers, which is based on an iterative approximation to the L0-norm.
Experiments on real-world classification and regression datasets illustrate
that this adaptation achieves very sparse models, without significant loss
of accuracy compared to standard LS-SVMs or SVMs
Material properties from air puff corneal deformation by numerical simulations on model corneas
19 págs.; 11 figs.; 2 tabs.Objective To validate a new method for reconstructing corneal biomechanical properties from air puff corneal deformation images using hydrogel polymer model corneas and porcine corneas. Methods Air puff deformation imaging was performed on model eyes with artificial corneas made out of three different hydrogel materials with three different thicknesses and on porcine eyes, at constant intraocular pressure of 15 mmHg. The cornea air puff deformation was modeled using finite elements, and hyperelastic material parameters were determined through inverse modeling, minimizing the difference between the simulated and the measured central deformation amplitude and central-peripheral deformation ratio parameters. Uniaxial tensile tests were performed on the model cornea materials as well as on corneal strips, and the results were compared to stress-strain simulations assuming the reconstructed material parameters. Results The measured and simulated spatial and temporal profiles of the air puff deformation tests were in good agreement (< 7% average discrepancy). The simulated stress-strain curves of the studied hydrogel corneal materials fitted well the experimental stress-strain curves from uniaxial extensiometry, particularly in the 0-0.4 range. Equivalent Young?s moduli of the reconstructed material properties from air-puff were 0.31, 0.58 and 0.48 MPa for the three polymer materials respectively which differed < 1% from those obtained from extensiometry. The simulations of the same material but different thickness resulted in similar reconstructed material properties. The air-puff reconstructed average equivalent Young?s modulus of the porcine corneas was 1.3 MPa, within 18% of that obtained from extensiometry. Conclusions Air puff corneal deformation imaging with inverse finite element modeling can retrieve material properties of model hydrogel polymer corneas and real corneas, which are in good correspondence with those obtained from uniaxial extensiometry, suggesting that this is a promising technique to retrieve quantitative corneal biomechanical properties.This work was supported by the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Program ERC Advanced Grant agreement no. 294099 (erc.europa.eu) to SM; Comunidad de Madrid and EU Marie Curie COFUND program (FP7) 291820 (mvisionconsortium.org/) to NB; Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad Grant FIS2014-56643-R (www.mineco.gob.es) to SM; Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad Grant FIS2013-49544-EXP (www.mineco.gob.es) to CD; Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad FPI Fellowship BES-2015-072197 (www.idi.mineco.gob.es) to AdlH.Peer Reviewe
F-theory and Dark Energy
Motivated by its potential use as a starting point for solving various
cosmological constant problems, we study F-theory compactified on the warped
product where is a
manifold, and the factor is the target space of an
Wess--Zumino--Witten (WZW) model at level . Reduction to M-theory exploits
the abelian duality of this WZW model to an orbifold. In
the large limit, the untwisted sector is captured by 11D supergravity. The
local dynamics of intersecting 7-branes in the geometry is controlled
by a Donaldson--Witten twisted gauge theory coupled to defects. At late times,
the system is governed by a 1D quantum mechanics system with a ground state
annihilated by two real supercharges, which in four dimensions would appear as
" supersymmetry" on a curved background. This leads to a
cancellation of zero point energies in the 4D field theory but a split mass
spectrum for superpartners of order specified by the IR and UV cutoffs of the model. This is
suggestively close to the TeV scale in some scenarios. The classical 4D
geometry has an intrinsic instability which can produce either a collapsing or
expanding Universe, the latter providing a promising starting point for a
number of cosmological scenarios. The resulting 1D quantum mechanics in the
time direction also provides an appealing starting point for a more detailed
study of quantum cosmology.Comment: v3: 67 pages, 5 figures, reference added, typos corrected, revised
analysis of superpartner masse
Tobacco smoking-associated genome-wide DNA methylation changes in the EPIC study.
Epigenetic changes may occur in response to environmental stressors, and an altered epigenome pattern may represent a stable signature of environmental exposure
Lifestyle, dietary factors and antibody levels to oral bacteria in cancer-free participants of a European cohort study
Background—Increasing evidence suggests that oral microbiota play a pivotal role in chronic diseases, in addition to the well-established role in periodontal disease. Moreover, recent studies suggest that oral bacteria may also be involved in carcinogenesis; periodontal disease has been linked several cancers. In this study, we examined whether lifestyle factors have an impact on antibody levels to oral bacteria.
Methods—Data on demographic characteristics, lifestyle factors, and medical conditions were obtained at the time of blood sample collection. For the current analysis, we measured antibody levels to 25 oral bacteria in 395 cancer-free individuals using an immunoblot array. Combined total immunglobin G (IgG) levels were obtained by summing concentrations for all oral bacteria measured.
Results—IgG antibody levels were substantially lower among current and former smokers (1697 and 1677 ng/mL, respectively) than never smokers (1960 ng/mL; p-trend = 0.01), but did not vary by other factors, including BMI, diabetes, physical activity, or by dietary factors, after adjusting for age, sex, education, country and smoking status. The highest levels of total IgG were found among individuals with low education (2419 ng/mL).
Conclusions—Our findings on smoking are consistent with previous studies and support the notion that smokers have a compromised humoral immune response. Moreover, other major factors known to be associated with inflammatory markers, including obesity, were not associated with antibody levels to a large number of oral bacteria
Plasma antibodies to oral bacteria and risk of pancreatic cancer in a large European prospective cohort study.
Reproductive factors and risk of mortality in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; a cohort study
Abstract
Background
Reproductive events are associated with important physiologic changes, yet little is known about how reproductive factors influence long-term health in women. Our objective was to assess the relation of reproductive characteristics with all-cause and cause-specific mortality risk.
Methods
The analysis was performed within the European Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition prospective cohort study, which enrolled >500,000 women and men from 1992 to 2000, who were residing in a given town/geographic area in 10 European countries. The current analysis included 322,972 eligible women aged 25–70 years with 99 % complete follow-up for vital status. We assessed reproductive characteristics reported at the study baseline including parity, age at the first birth, breastfeeding, infertility, oral contraceptive use, age at menarche and menopause, total ovulatory years, and history of oophorectomy/hysterectomy. Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95 % confidence intervals (CIs) for mortality were determined using Cox proportional hazards regression models adjusted for menopausal status, body mass index, physical activity, education level, and smoking status/intensity and duration.
Results
During a mean follow-up of 12.9 years, 14,383 deaths occurred. The HR (95 % CI) for risk of all-cause mortality was lower in parous versus nulliparous women (0.80; 0.76–0.84), in women who had ever versus never breastfed (0.92; 0.87–0.97), in ever versus never users of oral contraceptives (among non-smokers; 0.90; 0.86–0.95), and in women reporting a later age at menarche (≥15 years versus <12; 0.90; 0.85–0.96; P for trend = 0.038).
Conclusions
Childbirth, breastfeeding, oral contraceptive use, and a later age at menarche were associated with better health outcomes. These findings may contribute to the development of improved strategies to promote better long-term health in women
Plasma Elaidic Acid Level as Biomarker of Industrial Trans Fatty Acids and Risk of Weight Change: Report from the EPIC Study
Background Few epidemiological studies have examined the association between dietary trans fatty acids and weight gain, and the evidence remains inconsistent. The main objective of the study was to investigate the prospective association between biomarker of industrial trans fatty acids and change in weight within the large study European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) cohort. Methods Baseline plasma fatty acid concentrations were determined in a representative EPIC sample from the 23 participating EPIC centers. A total of 1,945 individuals were followed for a median of 4.9 years to monitor weight change. The association between elaidic acid level and percent change of weight was investigated using a multinomial logistic regression model, adjusted by length of follow-up, age, energy, alcohol, smoking status, physical activity, and region. Results In women, doubling elaidic acid was associated with a decreased risk of weight loss (odds ratio (OR) = 0.69, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.55-0.88, p = 0.002) and a trend was observed with an increased risk of weight gain during the 5-year follow-up (OR = 1.23, 95% CI = 0.97-1.56, p = 0.082) (p-trend<.0001). In men, a trend was observed for doubling elaidic acid level and risk of weight loss (OR = 0.82, 95% CI = 0.66-1.01, p = 0.062) while no significant association was found with risk of weight gain during the 5-year follow-up (OR = 1.08, 95% CI = 0.88-1.33, p = 0.454). No association was found for saturated and cis-monounsaturated fatty acids. Conclusions These data suggest that a high intake of industrial trans fatty acids may decrease the risk of weight loss, particularly in women. Prevention of obesity should consider limiting the consumption of highly processed foods, the main source of industrially-produced trans fatty acids
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