1,717 research outputs found
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A Portable System for Detecting Infrasound Using a Microcontroller
The purpose of this project was to create a device to detect infrasound communication from elephants. The device was designed and prototyped to be capable of monitoring an input signal for infrasound. If infrasound is detected, an audible alarm is sounded. This device can record audio signals for long periods of time to a digital storage device. It can be utilized for other areas of study with some modification. For example, by selecting appropriate sensors the device can be used for studying vibrations in structures. The device is low-cost so it would be able to be procured more easily and in higher quantities than more expensive and cumbersome laboratory monitoring equipment. This device could also be used as an educational and research device for students studying animal behavior in the field and laboratory. Infrasound is not limited to only elephants, but hippopotamuses, rhinoceroses and giraffes also communicate with infrasound. Environmental infrasound from sources such as wind turbines, sonic booms, explosions, tornadoes, and earthquakes can also be monitored
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The View of Russian Students on Whether Psychology is a Science
The Psychology as Science Scale (Friedrich, 1996) was administered to 525 psychology students from nine Russian universities to assess their beliefs about the nature of the discipline. About half of students (49.6%) generally agreed that psychology may be called a scientific discipline. Specifically, 71. 5% of the students agreed that psychology is a natural science, similar to biology, chemistry, and physics, 39. 9% of students agreed that psychological research is important and training in psychological methodology is necessary, and 43.1% of students agreed that human behavior is highly predictable. Students who took three methodology courses shared significantly stronger beliefs in the need for psychological research and the importance of training in methodology compared to students who did not take any methodology courses. Furthermore, students with a specialist degree had significantly stronger beliefs that psychology is a science compared to students who have just finished school. In terms of the effect of students’ career aspirations, students who wanted to be academic psychologists and clinicians had significantly stronger beliefs that psychology is a science compared to students who did not have clarity about their future careers. Regardless of the study limitations, these findings have potential implications for Russian psychology instructors
The Dependence of Galaxy Shape on Luminosity and Surface Brightness Profile
For a sample of 96,951 galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data
Release 3, we study the distribution of apparent axis ratios as a function of
r-band absolute magnitude and surface brightness profile type. We use the
parameter fracDeV to quantify the profile type (fracDeV = 1 for a de
Vaucouleurs profile; fracDeV = 0 for an exponential profile). When the apparent
axis ratio q_{am} is estimated from the moments of the light distribution, the
roundest galaxies are very bright (M_r \sim -23) de Vaucouleurs galaxies and
the flattest are modestly bright (M_r \sim -18) exponential galaxies. When the
apparent axis ratio q_{25} is estimated from the axis ratio of the 25
mag/arcsec^2 isophote, we find that de Vaucouleurs galaxies are flatter than
exponential galaxies of the same absolute magnitude. For a given surface
brightness profile type, very bright galaxies are rounder, on average, than
fainter galaxies. We deconvolve the distributions of apparent axis ratios to
find the distribution of the intrinsic short-to-long axis ratio gamma, assuming
constant triaxiality T. For all profile types and luminosities, the
distribution of apparent axis ratios is inconsistent with a population of
oblate spheroids, but is usually consistent with a population of prolate
spheroids. Bright galaxies with a de Vaucouleurs profile (M_r < -21.84, fracDeV
> 0.9) have a distribution of q_{am} that is consistent with triaxiality in the
range 0.4 < T < 0.8, with mean intrinsic axis ratio 0.66 < gamma < 0.69. The
fainter de Vaucouleurs galaxies are best fit with prolate spheroids (T = 1)
with mean axis ratio gamma = 0.51.Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures, to appear in Ap
Perception of nonnative tonal contrasts by Mandarin-English and English-Mandarin sequential bilinguals
This study examined the role of acquisition order and crosslinguistic similarity in influencing transfer at the initial stage of perceptually acquiring a tonal third language (L3). Perception of tones in Yoruba and Thai was tested in adult sequential bilinguals representing three different first (L1) and second language (L2) backgrounds: L1 Mandarin-L2 English (MEBs), L1 English-L2 Mandarin (EMBs), and L1 English-L2 intonational/non-tonal (EIBs). MEBs outperformed EMBs and EIBs in discriminating L3 tonal contrasts in both languages, while EMBs showed a small advantage over EIBs on Yoruba. All groups showed better overall discrimination in Thai than Yoruba, but group differences were more robust in Yoruba. MEBs’ and EMBs’ poor discrimination of certain L3 contrasts was further reflected in the L3 tones being perceived as similar to the same Mandarin tone; however, EIBs, with no knowledge of Mandarin, showed many of the same similarity judgments. These findings thus suggest that L1 tonal experience has a particularly facilitative effect in L3 tone perception, but there is also a facilitative effect of L2 tonal experience. Further, crosslinguistic perceptual similarity between L1/L2 and L3 tones, as well as acoustic similarity between different L3 tones, play a significant role at this early stage of L3 tone acquisition.Published versio
Enumeration of self-avoiding walks on the square lattice
We describe a new algorithm for the enumeration of self-avoiding walks on the
square lattice. Using up to 128 processors on a HP Alpha server cluster we have
enumerated the number of self-avoiding walks on the square lattice to length
71. Series for the metric properties of mean-square end-to-end distance,
mean-square radius of gyration and mean-square distance of monomers from the
end points have been derived to length 59. Analysis of the resulting series
yields accurate estimates of the critical exponents and
confirming predictions of their exact values. Likewise we obtain accurate
amplitude estimates yielding precise values for certain universal amplitude
combinations. Finally we report on an analysis giving compelling evidence that
the leading non-analytic correction-to-scaling exponent .Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure
On the origin of the Norwegian lemming.
The Pleistocene glacial cycles resulted in significant changes in species distributions, and it has been discussed whether this caused increased rates of population divergence and speciation. One species that is likely to have evolved during the Pleistocene is the Norwegian lemming (Lemmus lemmus). However, the origin of this species, both in terms of when and from what ancestral taxon it evolved, has been difficult to ascertain. Here, we use ancient DNA recovered from lemming remains from a series of Late Pleistocene and Holocene sites to explore the species' evolutionary history. The results revealed considerable genetic differentiation between glacial and contemporary samples. Moreover, the analyses provided strong support for a divergence time prior to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), therefore likely ruling out a postglacial colonization of Scandinavia. Consequently, it appears that the Norwegian lemming evolved from a small population that survived the LGM in an ice-free Scandinavian refugium
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The Nimrod computational workbench: a case study in desktop metacomputing
The coordinated use of geographically distributed computers, or metacomputing, can in principle provide more accessible and cost- effective supercomputing than conventional high-performance systems. However, we lack evidence that metacomputing systems can be made easily usable, or that there exist large numbers of applications able to exploit metacomputing resources. In this paper, we present work that addresses both these concerns. The basis for this work is a system called Nimrod that provides a desktop problem-solving environment for parametric experiments. We describe how Nimrod has been extended to support the scheduling of computational resources located in a wide-area environment, and report on an experiment in which Nimrod was used to schedule a large parametric study across the Australian Internet. The experiment provided both new scientific results and insights into Nimrod capabilities. We relate the results of this experiment to lessons learned from the I-WAY distributed computing experiment, and draw conclusions as to how Nimrod and I-WAY- like computing environments should be developed to support desktop metacomputing
The Intrinsic Shape of Spiral Galaxies in the 2MASS Large Galaxy Atlas
The apparent shapes of spiral galaxies in the 2-Micron All Sky Survey Large
Galaxy Atlas are used to constrain the intrinsic shape of their disks. When the
distribution of apparent axis ratios is estimated using a nonparametric kernel
method, the shape distribution is inconsistent with axisymmetry at the 90%
confidence level in the B band and at the 99% confidence level in the K band.
If spirals are subdivided by Hubble type, the late-type spirals (Sc and later)
are consistent with axisymmetry, while the earlier spirals are strongly
inconsistent with axisymmetry. The distribution of disk ellipticity can be
fitted adequately with either a Gaussian or a lognormal distribution. The best
fits for the late spirals imply a median ellipticity of epsilon = 0.07 in the B
band and epsilon = 0.02 in the K band. For the earlier spirals, the best fits
imply a median ellipticity of epsilon = 0.18 in the B band and epsilon = 0.30
in the K band. The observed scatter in the Tully-Fisher relation, for both late
and early spirals, is consistent with the disk ellipticity measured in the B
band. This indicates that excluding spirals of Hubble type earlier than Sc will
reduce the intrinsic scatter in the Tully-Fisher relation used as a distance
indicator.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Ap
Extremal dynamics model on evolving networks
We investigate an extremal dynamics model of evolution with a variable number
of units. Due to addition and removal of the units, the topology of the network
evolves and the network splits into several clusters. The activity is mostly
concentrated in the largest cluster. The time dependence of the number of units
exhibits intermittent structure. The self-organized criticality is manifested
by a power-law distribution of forward avalanches, but two regimes with
distinct exponents tau = 1.98 +- 0.04 and tau^prime = 1.65 +- 0.05 are found.
The distribution of extinction sizes obeys a power law with exponent 2.32 +-
0.05.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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