3,320 research outputs found
Challenges of measuring body temperatures of free-ranging birds and mammals
The thermal physiology of most birds and mammals is characterised by considerable spatial and temporal variation in body temperature. Body temperature is, therefore, a key parameter in physiological, behavioural and ecological research. Temperature measurements on freely moving or free-ranging animals in the wild are challenging but can be undertaken using a range of techniques. Internal temperature may be sampled using thermometry, surgically implanted loggers or transmitters, gastrointestinal or non-surgically placed devices. Less invasive approaches measure peripheral temperature with subcutaneous passive integrated transponder tags or skin surface-mounted radio transmitters and data loggers, or use infrared thermography to record surface temperature. Choice of technique is determined by focal research question and region of interest that reflects appropriate physiological or behavioural causal mechanisms of temperature change, as well as welfare and logistical considerations. Particularly required are further studies that provide opportunities of continuously sampling from multiple sites from within the body. This will increase our understanding of thermoregulation and temperature variation in different parts of the body and how these temperatures may change in response to physiological, behavioural and environmental parameters. Technological advances that continue to reduce the size and remote sensing capability of temperature recorders will greatly benefit field research
What to Fix? Distinguishing between design and non-design rules in automated tools
Technical debt---design shortcuts taken to optimize for delivery speed---is a
critical part of long-term software costs. Consequently, automatically
detecting technical debt is a high priority for software practitioners.
Software quality tool vendors have responded to this need by positioning their
tools to detect and manage technical debt. While these tools bundle a number of
rules, it is hard for users to understand which rules identify design issues,
as opposed to syntactic quality. This is important, since previous studies have
revealed the most significant technical debt is related to design issues. Other
research has focused on comparing these tools on open source projects, but
these comparisons have not looked at whether the rules were relevant to design.
We conducted an empirical study using a structured categorization approach, and
manually classify 466 software quality rules from three industry tools---CAST,
SonarQube, and NDepend. We found that most of these rules were easily labeled
as either not design (55%) or design (19%). The remainder (26%) resulted in
disagreements among the labelers. Our results are a first step in formalizing a
definition of a design rule, in order to support automatic detection.Comment: Long version of accepted short paper at International Conference on
Software Architecture 2017 (Gothenburg, SE
A Project Design of the Costumes for Godspell
A thesis presented to the faculty of the Division of Communications at Morehead State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Marsha Ann Nord in May of 1976
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Common CHD8 Genomic Targets Contrast With Model-Specific Transcriptional Impacts of CHD8 Haploinsufficiency.
The packaging of DNA into chromatin determines the transcriptional potential of cells and is central to eukaryotic gene regulation. Case sequencing studies have revealed mutations to proteins that regulate chromatin state, known as chromatin remodeling factors, with causal roles in neurodevelopmental disorders. Chromodomain helicase DNA binding protein 8 (CHD8) encodes a chromatin remodeling factor with among the highest de novo loss-of-function mutation rates in patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, mechanisms associated with CHD8 pathology have yet to be elucidated. We analyzed published transcriptomic data across CHD8 in vitro and in vivo knockdown and knockout models and CHD8 binding across published ChIP-seq datasets to identify convergent mechanisms of gene regulation by CHD8. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) across models varied, but overlap was observed between downregulated genes involved in neuronal development and function, cell cycle, chromatin dynamics, and RNA processing, and between upregulated genes involved in metabolism and immune response. Considering the variability in transcriptional changes and the cells and tissues represented across ChIP-seq analysis, we found a surprisingly consistent set of high-affinity CHD8 genomic interactions. CHD8 was enriched near promoters of genes involved in basic cell functions and gene regulation. Overlap between high-affinity CHD8 targets and DEGs shows that reduced dosage of CHD8 directly relates to decreased expression of cell cycle, chromatin organization, and RNA processing genes, but only in a subset of studies. This meta-analysis verifies CHD8 as a master regulator of gene expression and reveals a consistent set of high-affinity CHD8 targets across human, mouse, and rat in vivo and in vitro studies. These conserved regulatory targets include many genes that are also implicated in ASD. Our findings suggest a model where perturbation to dosage-sensitive CHD8 genomic interactions with a highly-conserved set of regulatory targets leads to model-specific downstream transcriptional impacts
The L_X--M relation of Clusters of Galaxies
We present a new measurement of the scaling relation between X-ray luminosity
and total mass for 17,000 galaxy clusters in the maxBCG cluster sample.
Stacking sub-samples within fixed ranges of optical richness, N_200, we measure
the mean 0.1-2.4 keV X-ray luminosity, , from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey.
The mean mass, , is measured from weak gravitational lensing of SDSS
background galaxies (Johnston et al. 2007). For 9 <= N_200 < 200, the data are
well fit by a power-law, /10^42 h^-2 erg/s = (12.6+1.4-1.3 (stat) +/- 1.6
(sys)) (/10^14 h^-1 M_sun)^1.65+/-0.13. The slope agrees to within 10%
with previous estimates based on X-ray selected catalogs, implying that the
covariance in L_X and N_200 at fixed halo mass is not large. The luminosity
intercent is 30%, or 2\sigma, lower than determined from the X-ray flux-limited
sample of Reiprich & Bohringer (2002), assuming hydrostatic equilibrium. This
difference could arise from a combination of Malmquist bias and/or systematic
error in hydrostatic mass estimates, both of which are expected. The intercept
agrees with that derived by Stanek et al. (2006) using a model for the
statistical correspondence between clusters and halos in a WMAP3 cosmology with
power spectrum normalization sigma_8 = 0.85. Similar exercises applied to
future data sets will allow constraints on the covariance among optical and hot
gas properties of clusters at fixed mass.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, MNRAS accepte
Towards More Accurate Molecular Dynamics Calculation of Thermal Conductivity. Case Study: GaN Bulk Crystals
Significant differences exist among literature for thermal conductivity of
various systems computed using molecular dynamics simulation. In some cases,
unphysical results, for example, negative thermal conductivity, have been
found. Using GaN as an example case and the direct non-equilibrium method,
extensive molecular dynamics simulations and Monte Carlo analysis of the
results have been carried out to quantify the uncertainty level of the
molecular dynamics methods and to identify the conditions that can yield
sufficiently accurate calculations of thermal conductivity. We found that the
errors of the calculations are mainly due to the statistical thermal
fluctuations. Extrapolating results to the limit of an infinite-size system
tend to magnify the errors and occasionally lead to unphysical results. The
error in bulk estimates can be reduced by performing longer time averages using
properly selected systems over a range of sample lengths. If the errors in the
conductivity estimates associated with each of the sample lengths are kept
below a certain threshold, the likelihood of obtaining unphysical bulk values
becomes insignificant. Using a Monte-Carlo approach developed here, we have
determined the probability distributions for the bulk thermal conductivities
obtained using the direct method. We also have observed a nonlinear effect that
can become a source of significant errors. For the extremely accurate results
presented here, we predict a [0001] GaN thermal conductivity of 185 at 300 K, 102 at 500 K, and 74
at 800 K. Using the insights obtained in the work, we have achieved a
corresponding error level (standard deviation) for the bulk (infinite sample
length) GaN thermal conductivity of less than 10 , 5 , and 15 at 300 K, 500 K, and 800 K respectively
Impact of van der Waals forces on the classical shuttle instability
The effects of including the van der Waals interaction in the modelling of
the single electron shuttle have been investigated numerically. It is
demonstrated that the relative strength of the vdW-forces and the elastic
restoring forces determine the characteristics of the shuttle instability. In
the case of weak elastic forces and low voltages the grain is trapped close to
one lead, and this trapping can be overcome by Coulomb forces by applying a
bias voltage larger than a threshold voltage . This allows for
grain motion leading to an increase in current by several orders of magnitude
above the transition voltage . Associated with the process is also
hysteresis in the I-V characteristics.Comment: minor revisions, updated references, Article published in Phys. Rev.
B 69, 035309 (2004
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