661 research outputs found

    Analytical and computational estimation of patellofemoral forces in the knee under squatting and isometric motion

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    This study presents an intermediate step in prosthesis design, by introducing a newly developed two-dimensional mathematical, and a three-dimensional computational knee model. The analytical model is derived from Newton’s law with respect to the equilibrium equations, thus based on theoretical assumptions, and experimentally obtained parameter. The numeric model is built from an existing prosthesis, involving three parts as patella, femur and tibia, and currently it is under development. The models are capable to predict – with their standard deviation – the patellofemoral (numerically tibiofemoral as well) forces in the knee joint during squatting motion. The reason why the squatting is investigated is due to its relative simplicity and the fact, that during the movement the forces reach extremity in the knee joint. The obtained forces – as a function of flexion angle – are used firstly as fundaments to the knee design method, and secondly to extend the results related to the existing isometric kinetics, where one of the newly obtained functions appears as an essential – and so far missing – input function. Most results are compared and validated to the ones found in the relevant literature and put into a dimensionless form in order to have more general meaning

    On the transitivity of the comonotonic and countermonotonic comparison of random variables

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    AbstractA recently proposed method for the pairwise comparison of arbitrary independent random variables results in a probabilistic relation. When restricted to discrete random variables uniformly distributed on finite multisets of numbers, this probabilistic relation expresses the winning probabilities between pairs of hypothetical dice that carry these numbers and exhibits a particular type of transitivity called dice-transitivity. In case these multisets have equal cardinality, two alternative methods for statistically comparing the ordered lists of the numbers on the faces of the dice have been studied recently: the comonotonic method based upon the comparison of the numbers of the same rank when the lists are in increasing order, and the countermonotonic method, also based upon the comparison of only numbers of the same rank but with the lists in opposite order. In terms of the discrete random variables associated to these lists, these methods each turn out to be related to a particular copula that joins the marginal cumulative distribution functions into a bivariate cumulative distribution function. The transitivity of the generated probabilistic relation has been completely characterized. In this paper, the list comparison methods are generalized for the purpose of comparing arbitrary random variables. The transitivity properties derived in the case of discrete uniform random variables are shown to be generic. Additionally, it is shown that for a collection of normal random variables, both comparison methods lead to a probabilistic relation that is at least moderately stochastic transitive

    Regional innovation in southern Europe: a poset-based analysis

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    This paper examines the performance of regional innovation across the 60 southern European regions of Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain. A poset-based analysis is carried out in two phases. The first phase establishes a ranking of the clusters in which regions are grouped to identify patterns of comparable regions. The second phase focuses on the country level, where the regions of each of the four countries are ranked into five different performance levels. The outcomes of the two phases are compared with the results described in the Regional Innovation Scoreboard 2019, with a view to providing insights for policymakers

    A comparison of fuzzy regression methods for the estimation of the implied volatility smile function

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    The information content of option prices on the underlying asset has a special importance in finance. In particular, with the use of option implied trees, market participants may price other derivatives, estimate and forecast volatility (see e.g. the volatility index VIX), or higher moments of the underlying asset distribution. A crucial input of option implied trees is the estimation of the smile (implied volatility as a function of the strike price), which boils down to fitting a function to a limited number of existing knots. However, standard techniques require a one-to-one mapping between volatility and strike price, which is not met in the reality of financial markets, where, to a given strike price, two different implied volatilities are usually associated (coming from different types of options: call and put). In this paper we compare the widely used methodology of discarding some implied volatilities and interpolating the remaining knots with cubic splines, to a fuzzy regression approach which does not require an a-priori choice of implied volatilities. To this end, we first extend some linear fuzzy regression methods to a polynomial form and we apply them to the financial problem. The fuzzy regression methods used range from the possibilistic regression method of Tanaka, Uejima and Asai [14], the least squares fuzzy regression method of Savic and Pedrycz [13] and the hybrid method of Ishibuchi and Nii [4]

    Characterizations of quasitrivial symmetric nondecreasing associative operations

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    We provide a description of the class of n-ary operations on an arbitrary chain that are quasitrivial, symmetric, nondecreasing, and associative. We also prove that associativity can be replaced with bisymmetry in the definition of this class. Finally we investigate the special situation where the chain is finite
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