19,232 research outputs found
1.5V fully programmable CMOS Membership Function Generator Circuit with proportional DC-voltage control
A Membership Function Generator Circuit (MFGC) with bias supply of 1.5 Volts and independent DC-voltage programmable functionalities is presented. The realization is based on a programmable differential current mirror and three compact voltage-to-current converters, allowing continuous and quasi-linear adjustment of the center position, height, width and slopes of the triangular/trapezoidal output waveforms. HSPICE simulation results of the proposed circuit using the parameters of a double-poly, three metal layers, 0.5 μm CMOS technology validate the functionality of the proposed architecture, which exhibits a maximum deviation of the linearity in the programmability of 7 %
Die neuen Länder und ihre Verfassungen
The relationship between Rapid Automatized Naming (RAN) tasks and reading proficiency was first studied for English during the 70s, one finding being that children with dyslexia were slow and inconsistent in the RAN tasks. Later on, some studies have confirmed that RAN is the best predictor for transparent ortographies - and so of particular interest for Spanish. The research done so far on RAN and reading in Spanish is therefore reviewed here in order to draw conclusions for the diagnosis and treatment of reading difficulties. Our review shows that RAN is both a powerful early predictor of future reading outcomes and capable of discriminating between typical and poor readers. Being very easy to test, RAN is thus of great use in the diagnosis and prevention of reading disorders in Spanish
High Gain Amplifier with Enhanced Cascoded Compensation
A two-stage CMOS operational amplifier with both, gain-boosting and indirect current feedback frequency compensation performed by means of regulated cascode amplifiers, is presented. By using quasi-floating-gate transistors (QFGT) the supply requirements, the number of capacitors and the size of the compensation capacitors respect to other Miller schemes are reduced. A prototype was fabricated using a 0.5 μm technology, resulting, for a load of 45 pF and supply voltage of 1.65 V, in open-loop-gain of 129 dB, 23 MHz of gain-bandwidth product, 60o phase margin, 675 μW power consumption and 1% settling time of 28 ns
Evolution and excitation conditions of outflows in high-mass star-forming regions
Theoretical models suggest that massive stars form via disk-mediated
accretion, with bipolar outflows playing a fundamental role. A recent study
toward massive molecular outflows has revealed a decrease of the SiO line
intensity as the object evolves. The present study aims at characterizing the
variation of the molecular outflow properties with time, and at studying the
SiO excitation conditions in outflows associated with massive YSOs. We used the
IRAM30m telescope to map 14 massive star-forming regions in the SiO(2-1),
SiO(5-4) and HCO+(1-0) outflow lines, and in several dense gas and hot core
tracers. Hi-GAL data was used to improve the spectral energy distributions and
the L/M ratio, which is believed to be a good indicator of the evolutionary
stage of the YSO. We detect SiO and HCO+ outflow emission in all the sources,
and bipolar structures in six of them. The outflow parameters are similar to
those found toward other massive YSOs. We find an increase of the HCO+ outflow
energetics as the object evolve, and a decrease of the SiO abundance with time,
from 10^(-8) to 10^(-9). The SiO(5-4) to (2-1) line ratio is found to be low at
the ambient gas velocity, and increases as we move to high velocities,
indicating that the excitation conditions of the SiO change with the velocity
of the gas (with larger densities and/or temperatures for the high-velocity gas
component). The properties of the SiO and HCO+ outflow emission suggest a
scenario in which SiO is largely enhanced in the first evolutionary stages,
probably due to strong shocks produced by the protostellar jet. As the object
evolves, the power of the jet would decrease and so does the SiO abundance.
During this process, however, the material surrounding the protostar would have
been been swept up by the jet, and the outflow activity, traced by entrained
molecular material (HCO+), would increase with time.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures and 5 tables (plus 2 figures and 3 tables in the
appendix). Accepted for publication in A&A. [Abstract modified to fit the
arXiv requirements.
Kinematic Adaptations of Forward And Backward Walking on Land and in Water
The aim of this study was to compare sagittal plane lower limb kinematics during walking on land and submerged to the hip in water. Eight healthy adults (age 22.1 ± 1.1 years, body height 174.8 ± 7.1 cm, body mass 63.4 ± 6.2 kg) were asked to cover a distance of 10 m at comfortable speed with controlled step frequency, walking forward or backward. Sagittal plane lower limb kinematics were obtained from three dimensional video analysis to compare spatiotemporal gait parameters and joint angles at selected events using two-way repeated measures ANOVA. Key findings were a reduced walking speed, stride length, step length and a support phase in water, and step length asymmetry was higher compared to the land condition (p<0.05). At initial contact, knees and hips were more flexed during walking forward in water, whilst, ankles were more dorsiflexed during walking backward in water. At final stance, knees and ankles were more flexed during forward walking, whilst the hip was more flexed during backward walking. These results show how walking in water differs from walking on land, and provide valuable insights into the development and prescription of rehabilitation and training programs
Effects of incidental physical activity on morphosyntactic processing in aging
Older adults have difficulties in sentence comprehension when working memory (WM) load increases (e.g., multiple embedded clauses). Structured physical activity has been related to improvements in cognition; however, incidental physical activity (PA, i.e., unstructured daily physical activities), particularly incidental vigorous activity has been poorly studied in relation to its effects on behavior. Furthermore, no positive effect on language has been reported in either form of physical activity. The aim of this study was to evaluate how two levels of PA (high or low) affect WM processing and how this, in turn, may affect morphosyntactic processing in older adults. Individuals with high PA (n = 18) had a higher WM load effect than those with low PA (n = 18), both behaviorally (greater differences between high and low WM loads in correct responses) and in terms of event-related potentials (only subjects with high PA showed LAN and P600b amplitude differences between high and low WM loads). These findings suggest that PA promotes cognitive strategies to face WM loads and morphosyntactic processing
On the generation of asymmetric warps in disk galaxies
The warps in many spiral galaxies are now known to asymmetric. Recent
sensitive observations have revealed that asymmetry of warps may be the norm
rather than exception. However there exists no generic mechanism to generate
these asymmetries in warps. We have derived the dispersion relation in a
compact form for the S-shaped warps(described by the m=1 mode) and the
bowl-shaped distribution(described by the m=0 mode) in galactic disk embedded
in a dark matter halo. We then performed the numerical modal analysis and used
the linear and time-dependent superposition principle to generate asymmetric
warps in the disk. On doing the modal analysis we find the frequency of the
mode is much larger than that of the mode. The linear and
time-dependent superposition of these modes with their unmodulated
amplitudes(that is, the coefficients of superposition being unity) results in
an asymmetry in warps of ~ 20 - 40 %, whereas a smaller coefficient for the m=0
mode results in a smaller asymmetry. The resulting values agree well with the
recent observations. We study the dependence of the asymmetry index on the dark
matter halo parameters. This approach can also naturally produce U-shaped warps
and L-shaped warps. We show that a rich variety of possible asymmetries in the
z-distribution of the spiral galaxies can naturally arise due to a dynamical
wave interference between the first two bending modes(i.e. m=0 and m=1) in the
disk. This is a simple but general method for generating asymmetric warps that
is independent of how the individual modes arise in the disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in A &
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