4,685 research outputs found
Resolving candidate genes of mouse skeletal muscle QTL via RNA-Seq and expression network analyses
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The Internal Spin Angular Momentum of an Asymptotically Flat Spacetime
In this paper we investigate the manner in which the internal spin angular
momentum of a spinor field is encoded in the gravitational field at asymptotic
infinity. The inclusion of internal spin requires us to re-analyze our notion
of asymptotic flatness. In particular, the Poincar\'{e} symmetry at asymptotic
infinity must replaced by a spin-enlarged Poincar\'{e} symmetry. Likewise, the
generators of the asymptotic symmetry group must be supplemented to account for
the internal spin. In the Hamiltonian framework of first order Einstein-Cartan
gravity, the extra generator comes from the boundary term of the Gauss
constraint in the asymptotically flat context. With the additional term, we
establish the relations among the Noether charges of a Dirac field, the Komar
integral, and the asymptotic ADM-like geometric integral. We show that by
imposing mild restraints on the generating functionals of gauge transformations
at asymptotic infinity, the phase space is rendered explicitly finite. We
construct the energy-momentum and the new total (spin+orbital) angular momentum
boundary integrals that satisfy the appropriate algebra to be the generators of
the spin-enlarged Poincar\'{e} symmetry. This demonstrates that the internal
spin is encoded in the tetrad at asymptotic infinity. In addition, we find that
a new conserved and (spin-enlarged) Poincar\'{e} invariant charge emerges that
is associated with the global structure of a gauge transformation.Comment: V2: No major changes, journal reference adde
Probing Cosmic Acceleration Beyond the Equation of State: Distinguishing between Dark Energy and Modified Gravity Models
If general relativity is the correct theory of physics on large scales, then
there is a differential equation that relates the Hubble expansion function,
inferred from measurements of angular diameter distance and luminosity
distance, to the growth rate of large scale structure. For a dark energy fluid
without couplings or an unusual sound speed, deviations from this consistency
relationship could be the signature of modified gravity on cosmological scales.
We propose a procedure based on this consistency relation in order to
distinguish between some dark energy models and modified gravity models. The
procedure uses different combinations of cosmological observations and is able
to find inconsistencies when present. As an example, we apply the procedure to
a universe described by a recently proposed 5-dimensional modified gravity
model. We show that this leads to an inconsistency within the dark energy
parameter space detectable by future experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures; expanded paper; matches PRD accepted version;
corrected growth rate formula; main results and conclusion unchange
Metabolically exaggerated cardiac reactions to acute psychological stress: The effects of resting blood pressure status and possible underlying mechanisms
The study aimed to: confirm that acute stress elicits metabolically exaggerated increases in cardiac activity; test whether individuals with elevated resting blood pressure show more exaggerated cardiac reactions to stress than those who are clearly normotensive; and explore the underlying mechanisms. Cardiovascular activity and oxygen consumption were measured pre-, during, and post- mental stress, and during graded submaximal cycling exercise in 11 young men with moderately elevated resting blood pressure and 11 normotensives. Stress provoked increases in cardiac output that were much greater than would be expected from contemporary levels of oxygen consumption. Exaggerated cardiac reactions were larger in the relatively elevated blood pressure group. They also had greater reductions in total peripheral resistance, but not heart rate variability, implying that their more exaggerated cardiac reactions reflected greater β-adrenergic activation
A Unified Approach to Attractor Reconstruction
In the analysis of complex, nonlinear time series, scientists in a variety of
disciplines have relied on a time delayed embedding of their data, i.e.
attractor reconstruction. The process has focused primarily on heuristic and
empirical arguments for selection of the key embedding parameters, delay and
embedding dimension. This approach has left several long-standing, but common
problems unresolved in which the standard approaches produce inferior results
or give no guidance at all. We view the current reconstruction process as
unnecessarily broken into separate problems. We propose an alternative approach
that views the problem of choosing all embedding parameters as being one and
the same problem addressable using a single statistical test formulated
directly from the reconstruction theorems. This allows for varying time delays
appropriate to the data and simultaneously helps decide on embedding dimension.
A second new statistic, undersampling, acts as a check against overly long time
delays and overly large embedding dimension. Our approach is more flexible than
those currently used, but is more directly connected with the mathematical
requirements of embedding. In addition, the statistics developed guide the user
by allowing optimization and warning when embedding parameters are chosen
beyond what the data can support. We demonstrate our approach on uni- and
multivariate data, data possessing multiple time scales, and chaotic data. This
unified approach resolves all the main issues in attractor reconstruction.Comment: 22 pages, revised version as submitted to CHAOS. Manuscript is
currently under review. 4 Figures, 31 reference
Spatially Adaptive Bayesian P-Splines with Heteroscedastic Errors
An increasingly popular tool for nonparametric smoothing are penalized splines (P-splines) which use low-rank spline bases to make computations tractable while maintaining accuracy as good as smoothing splines. This paper extends penalized spline methodology by both modeling the variance function nonparametrically and using a spatially adaptive smoothing parameter. These extensions have been studied before, but never together and never in the multivariate case. This combination is needed for satisfactory inference and can be implemented effectively by Bayesian \mbox{MCMC}. The variance process controlling the spatially-adaptive shrinkage of the mean and the variance of the heteroscedastic error process are modeled as log-penalized splines. We discuss the choice of priors and extensions of the methodology,in particular, to multivariate smoothing using low-rank thin plate splines. A fully Bayesian approach provides the joint posterior distribution of all parameters, in particular, of the error standard deviation and penalty functions. In the multivariate case we produce maps of the standard deviation and penalty functions. Our methodology can be implemented using the Bayesian software WinBUGS
Boundary fields and renormalization group flow in the two-matrix model
We analyze the Ising model on a random surface with a boundary magnetic field
using matrix model techniques. We are able to exactly calculate the disk
amplitude, boundary magnetization and bulk magnetization in the presence of a
boundary field. The results of these calculations can be interpreted in terms
of renormalization group flow induced by the boundary operator. In the
continuum limit this RG flow corresponds to the flow from non-conformal to
conformal boundary conditions which has recently been studied in flat space
theories.Comment: 31 pages, Late
The HealthPia GlucoPack™ Diabetes Phone: A Usability Study
This is a copy of an article published in Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics copyright Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.; Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics is available online at: http://online.liebertpub.com.Background: Type I diabetes is a common chronic disease of childhood. Both the growing influence of peers and the shifting away from parental influence have been implicated as prime elements contributing to poor glycemic outcomes in adolescents. Mobile technology that can be directed towards providing self-management support and modifying potentially negative child parent interaction holds promise to improve control in adolescents with diabetes.
Methods: HealthPia, Inc. (Palisades Park, NJ) has developed a prototype system, the HealthPia GlucoPack™ Diabetes Monitoring System, which integrates a small blood glucose monitoring device into the battery pack of a cell phone. A pilot study used mixed quantitative and qualitative methods to evaluate user satisfaction with the integrated system, including the potential of the device to transmit self-monitoring data to a website for review and analysis by clinicians, parents, and patients.
Results: Adolescents in our study liked the integration of the two technologies and agreed that the glucometer was easy to use and that the tool was useful in the management of their diabetes.
Conclusions: Future work will focus on the utilization of the diabetes phone as a component of a care delivery system for adolescents with diabetes, including involvement of the health care team and enhancement of the web services that support the use of the phone
Outer Retinal Structure in Best Vitelliform Macular Dystrophy
Importance Demonstrating the utility of adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO) to assess outer retinal structure in Best vitelliform macular dystrophy (BVMD).
Objective To characterize outer retinal structure in BVMD using spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and AOSLO.
Design, Setting, and Participants Prospective, observational case series. Four symptomatic members of a family with BVMD with known BEST1 mutation were recruited at the Advanced Ocular Imaging Program research lab at the Medical College of Wisconsin Eye Institute, Milwaukee.
Intervention Thickness of 2 outer retinal layers corresponding to photoreceptor inner and outer segments was measured using SD-OCT. Photoreceptor mosaic AOSLO images within and around visible lesions were obtained, and cone density was assessed in 2 subjects.
Main Outcome and Measure Photoreceptor structure.
Results Each subject was at a different stage of BVMD, with photoreceptor disruption evident by AOSLO at all stages. When comparing SD-OCT and AOSLO images from the same location, AOSLO images allowed for direct assessment of photoreceptor structure. A variable degree of retained photoreceptors was seen within all lesions. The photoreceptor mosaic immediately adjacent to visible lesions appeared contiguous and was of normal density. Fine hyperreflective structures were visualized by AOSLO, and their anatomical orientation and size were consistent with Henle fibers.
Conclusions and Relevance The AOSLO findings indicate that substantial photoreceptor structure persists within active lesions, accounting for good visual acuity in these patients. Despite previous reports of diffuse photoreceptor outer segment abnormalities in BVMD, our data reveal normal photoreceptor structure in areas adjacent to clinical lesions. This study demonstrates the utility of AOSLO for understanding the spectrum of cellular changes that occur in inherited degenerations such as BVMD. Photoreceptors are often significantly affected at various stages of inherited degenerations, and these changes may not be readily apparent with current clinical imaging instrumentation
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