8,112 research outputs found
A statistical model for contamination due to long-range atmospheric transport of radionuclides
Imperial Users onl
Statistical Modeling of Spatial Extremes
The areal modeling of the extremes of a natural process such as rainfall or
temperature is important in environmental statistics; for example,
understanding extreme areal rainfall is crucial in flood protection. This
article reviews recent progress in the statistical modeling of spatial
extremes, starting with sketches of the necessary elements of extreme value
statistics and geostatistics. The main types of statistical models thus far
proposed, based on latent variables, on copulas and on spatial max-stable
processes, are described and then are compared by application to a data set on
rainfall in Switzerland. Whereas latent variable modeling allows a better fit
to marginal distributions, it fits the joint distributions of extremes poorly,
so appropriately-chosen copula or max-stable models seem essential for
successful spatial modeling of extremes.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-STS376 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Rejoinder to "Statistical Modeling of Spatial Extremes"
Rejoinder to "Statistical Modeling of Spatial Extremes" by A. C. Davison, S.
A. Padoan and M. Ribatet [arXiv:1208.3378].Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-STS376REJ the
Statistical Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
The control of a nuclear reactor using helium- 3 gas control elements
Control system for water moderated reactor using helium-3 ga
Marker based Thermal-Inertial Localization for Aerial Robots in Obscurant Filled Environments
For robotic inspection tasks in known environments fiducial markers provide a
reliable and low-cost solution for robot localization. However, detection of
such markers relies on the quality of RGB camera data, which degrades
significantly in the presence of visual obscurants such as fog and smoke. The
ability to navigate known environments in the presence of obscurants can be
critical for inspection tasks especially, in the aftermath of a disaster.
Addressing such a scenario, this work proposes a method for the design of
fiducial markers to be used with thermal cameras for the pose estimation of
aerial robots. Our low cost markers are designed to work in the long wave
infrared spectrum, which is not affected by the presence of obscurants, and can
be affixed to any object that has measurable temperature difference with
respect to its surroundings. Furthermore, the estimated pose from the fiducial
markers is fused with inertial measurements in an extended Kalman filter to
remove high frequency noise and error present in the fiducial pose estimates.
The proposed markers and the pose estimation method are experimentally
evaluated in an obscurant filled environment using an aerial robot carrying a
thermal camera.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Published in International Symposium on Visual
Computing 201
Composite likelihood estimation for the Brown-Resnick process
Genton et al. (2011) investigated the gain in efficiency when triplewise, rather than pairwise, likelihood is used to fit the popular Smith max-stable model for spatial extremes. We generalize their results to the Brown-Resnick model and show that the efficiency gain is substantial only for very smooth processes, which are generally unrealistic in application
Saddlepoint approximations as smoothers
This note investigates the sense in which saddlepoint approximations act as smoothers of discrete distributions. The discrete problem is embedded in a continuous model that closely matches it on the discrete sample space, with saddlepoint approximation yielding an inference that is almost exact for the continuous model. The same applies to conditional distributions. An example is given and implications for inference are discusse
Pleural mesothelioma and lung cancer risks in relation to occupational history and asbestos lung burden.
BACKGROUND: We have conducted a population-based study of pleural mesothelioma patients with occupational histories and measured asbestos lung burdens in occupationally exposed workers and in the general population. The relationship between lung burden and risk, particularly at environmental exposure levels, will enable future mesothelioma rates in people born after 1965 who never installed asbestos to be predicted from their asbestos lung burdens. METHODS: Following personal interview asbestos fibres longer than 5 µm were counted by transmission electron microscopy in lung samples obtained from 133 patients with mesothelioma and 262 patients with lung cancer. ORs for mesothelioma were converted to lifetime risks. RESULTS: Lifetime mesothelioma risk is approximately 0.02% per 1000 amphibole fibres per gram of dry lung tissue over a more than 100-fold range, from 1 to 4 in the most heavily exposed building workers to less than 1 in 500 in most of the population. The asbestos fibres counted were amosite (75%), crocidolite (18%), other amphiboles (5%) and chrysotile (2%). CONCLUSIONS: The approximate linearity of the dose-response together with lung burden measurements in younger people will provide reasonably reliable predictions of future mesothelioma rates in those born since 1965 whose risks cannot yet be seen in national rates. Burdens in those born more recently will indicate the continuing occupational and environmental hazards under current asbestos control regulations. Our results confirm the major contribution of amosite to UK mesothelioma incidence and the substantial contribution of non-occupational exposure, particularly in women
Posterior probability intervals in Bayesian wavelet estimation
We use saddlepoint approximation to derive credible intervals for Bayesian wavelet regression estimates. Simulations show that the resulting intervals perform better than the best existing metho
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