2,016 research outputs found
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Distributed fibre optic sensors for measuring strain and temperature of cast-in-situ concrete test piles
In this paper we present the use of distributed fibre optic sensor (DFOS) technology to measure the temperature and strain of reinforced concrete test piles during construction and during static load tests. Eight test piles were recently instrumented with DFOS, on three construction sites in London, by the Cambridge Centre for Smart Infrastructure and Construction (CSIC), in collaboration with Ove Arup & Partners Ltd. The concrete curing temperature profiles of the piles were used to detect the presence of significant defects in the piles. The load test strain profiles along the length of the piles were used to determine the load capacity of the piles and estimate the design parameters of the various soil strata, as well as the internal relative displacement of the piles under various loads. Being distributed in nature, DFOS give a much more detailed picture of the performance of a test pile, as compared to traditional embedded point sensors, such as vibrating wire strain gauges and extensometers. This is demonstrated with a sample of data obtained from one of the instrumented test piles.This is the author accepted manuscript. It is currently under an indefinite embargo pending publication by ICE Publishing
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Monitoring the axial shortening of principal tower using embedded distributed fibre optic sensors
Healthcare Associated Infections. educational intervention by "Adult Learning" in an Italian teaching hospital
An educational intervention for HAI prevention based on a combination of training, motivation and subsequent application in the current clinical practice in an Italian teaching hospital
Ordered Level Planarity, Geodesic Planarity and Bi-Monotonicity
We introduce and study the problem Ordered Level Planarity which asks for a
planar drawing of a graph such that vertices are placed at prescribed positions
in the plane and such that every edge is realized as a y-monotone curve. This
can be interpreted as a variant of Level Planarity in which the vertices on
each level appear in a prescribed total order. We establish a complexity
dichotomy with respect to both the maximum degree and the level-width, that is,
the maximum number of vertices that share a level. Our study of Ordered Level
Planarity is motivated by connections to several other graph drawing problems.
Geodesic Planarity asks for a planar drawing of a graph such that vertices
are placed at prescribed positions in the plane and such that every edge is
realized as a polygonal path composed of line segments with two adjacent
directions from a given set of directions symmetric with respect to the
origin. Our results on Ordered Level Planarity imply -hardness for any
with even if the given graph is a matching. Katz, Krug, Rutter and
Wolff claimed that for matchings Manhattan Geodesic Planarity, the case where
contains precisely the horizontal and vertical directions, can be solved in
polynomial time [GD'09]. Our results imply that this is incorrect unless
. Our reduction extends to settle the complexity of the Bi-Monotonicity
problem, which was proposed by Fulek, Pelsmajer, Schaefer and
\v{S}tefankovi\v{c}.
Ordered Level Planarity turns out to be a special case of T-Level Planarity,
Clustered Level Planarity and Constrained Level Planarity. Thus, our results
strengthen previous hardness results. In particular, our reduction to Clustered
Level Planarity generates instances with only two non-trivial clusters. This
answers a question posed by Angelini, Da Lozzo, Di Battista, Frati and Roselli.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017
Numerical Evidence for Spontaneously Broken Replica Symmetry in 3D Spin Glasses
By numerical simulations of the Ising spin glass we find evidence that
spontaneous replica symmetry breaking theory and not the droplet model
describes with good accuracy the equilibrium behavior of the system.Comment: PHYSREV format, 2 .ps figures added with figure command in uufiles
forma
Early pathological gambling in co-occurrence with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia: A case report
We have comprehensively documented a case of semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia (sv-PPA) presenting with early-onset pathological gambling (PG). While a growing number of studies have shown the presence of behavioral alterations in patients with sv-PPA, PG has been observed only in the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bv-FTD). To date, no case of PG with the co-occurrence of prominent semantic deficits at the onset of the disease has been reported in the literature. Impulse disorders at onset may wrongly lead to a misdiagnosis (ie, psychiatric disorders). Therefore, a wider characterization of cognitive/aphasia symptoms in patients presenting impulse disorders and predominant language dysfunctions is recommended
Anatomy of the inferior orbital fissure: Implications for endoscopic cranial base surgery
Considering many approaches to the skull base confront the inferior orbital fissure (IOF) or sphenomaxillary fissure, the authors examine this anatomy as an important endoscopic surgical landmark. In morphometric analyses of 50 adult human dry skulls from both sexes, we divided the length of the IOF into three segments (anterolateral, middle, posteromedial). Hemotoxylin- and eosin-stained sections were analyzed. Dissections were performed using transnasal endoscopy in four formalin-fixed cadaveric cranial specimens (eight sides); three endoscopic approaches to the IOF were performed.IOF length ranged from 25 to 35 mm (mean 29 mm). Length/width of the individual anterolateral, middle, and posteromedial segments averaged 6.46/5, 4.95/3.2, and 17.6/ 2.4 mm, respectively. Smooth muscle within the IOF had a consistent elationship with several important anatomical landmarks. The maxillary introstomy,total ethmoidectomy approach allowed access to the posteromedial segment of the fissure. The endoscopic modified, medial maxillectomy approach allowed access to the middle and posterior-medial segment. The Caldwell-Luc approach allowed complete exposure of the IOF. The IOF serves as an important anatomic landmark during endonasal endoscopic approaches to the skull base and orbit. Each of the three segments provides a characteristic endoscopic corridor, unique to the orbit and different fossas surrounding the fissure.Fil: de Battista, Juan Carlos. University of Cincinnati; Estados Unidos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Medicina. Instituto de Anatomia Normal; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Zimmer, Lee A.. University of Cincinnati; Estados UnidosFil: Theodosopoulos, Philip V.. University of Cincinnati; Estados UnidosFil: Froelich, Sebastien C.. University of Cincinnati; Estados UnidosFil: Keller, Jeffrey T.. University of Cincinnati; Estados Unidos. Mayfield Clinic; Estados Unido
3D Spin Glass and 2D Ferromagnetic XY Model: a Comparison
We compare the probability distributions and Binder cumulants of the overlap
in the 3D Ising spin glass with those of the magnetization in the ferromagnetic
2D XY model. We analyze similarities and differences. Evidence for the
existence of a phase transition in the spin glass model is obtained thanks to
the crossing of the Binder cumulant. We show that the behavior of the XY model
is fully compatible with the Kosterlitz-Thouless scenario. Finite size effects
have to be dealt with by using great care in order to discern among two very
different physical pictures that can look very similar if analyzed without
large attention.Comment: 14 pages and 6 figures. Also available at
http://chimera.roma1.infn.it/index_papers_complex.htm
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