235 research outputs found
JWalk: a tool for lazy, systematic testing of java classes by design introspection and user interaction
Popular software testing tools, such as JUnit, allow frequent retesting of modified code; yet the manually created test scripts are often seriously incomplete. A unit-testing tool called JWalk has therefore been developed to address the need for systematic unit testing within the context of agile methods. The tool operates directly on the compiled code for Java classes and uses a new lazy method for inducing the changing design of a class on the fly. This is achieved partly through introspection, using Javaâs reflection capability, and partly through interaction with the user, constructing and saving test oracles on the fly. Predictive rules reduce the number of oracle values that must be confirmed by the tester. Without human intervention, JWalk performs bounded exhaustive exploration of the classâs method protocols and may be directed to explore the space of algebraic constructions, or the intended design state-space of the tested class. With some human interaction, JWalk performs up to the equivalent of fully automated state-based testing, from a specification that was acquired incrementally
Nucleon charge exchange on the deuteron: A critical review
The existing experimental data on the d(n,p)nn and d(p,n)pp cross sections in
the forward direction are reviewed in terms of the Dean sum rule. It is shown
that the measurement of the ratio of the charge exchange on the deuteron to
that on the proton might, if taken together with other experimental data, allow
a direct construction of the np -> np scattering amplitude in the backward
direction with few ambiguities.Comment: 7 pages with 3 figure
Production and Decay of D_1(2420)^0 and D_2^*(2460)^0
We have investigated and final states and
observed the two established charmed mesons, the with mass
MeV/c and width MeV/c and
the with mass MeV/c and width
MeV/c. Properties of these final states, including
their decay angular distributions and spin-parity assignments, have been
studied. We identify these two mesons as the doublet predicted
by HQET. We also obtain constraints on {\footnotesize } as a function of the cosine of the relative phase of the two
amplitudes in the decay.Comment: 15 pages in REVTEX format. hardcopies with figures can be obtained by
sending mail to: [email protected]
Relating the microscopic rules in coalescence-fragmentation models to the macroscopic cluster size distributions which emerge
Coalescence-fragmentation problems are of great interest across the physical,
biological, and recently social sciences. They are typically studied from the
perspective of the rate equations, at the heart of such models are the rules
used for coalescence and fragmentation. Here we discuss how changes in these
microscopic rules affect the macroscopic cluster-size distribution which
emerges from the solution to the rate equation. More generally, our work
elucidates the crucial role that the fragmentation rule can play in such
dynamical grouping models. We focus on two well-known models whose
fragmentation rules lie at opposite extremes setting the models within the
broader context of binary coalescence-fragmentation models. Further, we provide
a range of generalizations and new analytic results for a well-known model of
social group formation [V. M. Eguiluz and M. G. Zimmermann, Phys. Rev. Lett.
85, 5659 (2000)]. We develop analytic perturbation treatment of the original
model, and extend the mathematical to the treatment of growing and declining
populations
Transcript- and annotation-guided genome assembly of the European starling
First published: 28 June 2022The European starling, Sturnus vulgaris, is an ecologically significant, globally invasive avian species that is also suffering from a major decline in its native range. Here, we present the genome assembly and long- read transcriptome of an Australian-sourced European starling (S. vulgaris vAU), and a second, North American, short- read genome assembly (S. vulgaris vNA), as complementary reference genomes for population genetic and evolutionary characterization. S. vulgaris vAU combined 10Ă genomics linked- reads, low-coverage Nanopore sequencing, and PacBio Iso-Seq full- length transcript scaffolding to generate a 1050 Mb assembly on 6222 scaffolds (7.6 Mb scaffold N50, 94.6% busco completeness). Further scaffolding against the high-quality zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) genome assigned 98.6% of the assembly to 32 puta-tive nuclear chromosome scaffolds. Species-specific transcript mapping and gene an-notation revealed good gene- level assembly and high functional completeness. Using S. vulgaris vAU, we demonstrate how the multifunctional use of PacBio Iso-Seq tran-script data and complementary homology-based annotation of sequential assembly steps (assessed using a new tool, saaga) can be used to assess, inform, and validate assembly workflow decisions. We also highlight some counterintuitive behaviour in traditional busco metrics, and present buscomp, a complementary tool for assembly comparison designed to be robust to differences in assembly size and base-calling quality. This work expands our knowledge of avian genomes and the available toolkit for assessing and improving genome quality. The new genomic resources presented will facilitate further global genomic and transcriptomic analysis on this ecologically important species.Katarina C. Stuart, Richard J. Edwards, Yuanyuan Cheng, Wesley C. Warren, David W. Burt, William B. Sherwin, Natalie R. Hofmeister, Scott J. Werner, Gregory F. Ball, Melissa Bateson, Matthew C. Brandley, Katherine L. Buchanan, Phillip Cassey, David F. Clayton, Tim De Meyer, Simone L. Meddle, Lee A. Rollin
High-spin study of rotational structures in 72Br
High-spin states in 3572Br37 were studied using the 40Ca(36Ar, 3pn) reaction. The existing level scheme has been significantly modified and extended. Evidence has been found for a spin reassignment of -1âh to the previously observed negative-parity band, which carries implications for the interpretation of a signature inversion in this structure. One signature of the previously assigned positive-parity band is interpreted as negative parity and has been extended to I Ï=(22-) and its signature partner has been observed up to IÏ = (19-) for the first time. The remaining positive-parity band has been extended to IÏ=(29+). A sequence of states observed to IÏ=(22+) may be the signature partner of this structure. Configurations have been assigned to each of these three structures through comparisons to cranked Nilsson-Strutinsky calculations
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