646 research outputs found
Cylindrical Graph Construction (definition and basic properties)
In this article we introduce the {\it cylindrical construction} for graphs
and investigate its basic properties. We state a main result claiming a weak
tensor-like duality for this construction. Details of our motivations and
applications of the construction will appear elsewhere
Investigating the impact of facebook use on cancer survivors' psychological well-being
Rapid growth of Social Network Sites (SNSs) use by cancer survivors makes it important to examine whether there is a relationship between the use of these online communities and cancer survivors' psychological well-being. This article poses the question of how the Facebook use as the most popular SNS, may impact cancer survivors' psychological well-being. To answer this question a comprehensive literature review of studies conducted in information systems and health disciplines has been undertaken and a theoretical model is proposed. This study is expected to contribute to the existing knowledge base through the development of a new theoretical model which introduces and explains the ways that SNS use may impact cancer survivors' psychological well-being. It provides important information on the health-related SNSs use and is envisioned to assist health care organizations and cancer survivors to use SNS as an e-health application. © (2013) by the AIS/ICIS Administrative Office All rights reserved
On nodal domains of finite reversible Markov processes and spectral decomposition of cycles
24 pagesInternational audienceLet be a reversible Markovian generator on a finite set . Relations between the spectral decomposition of and subpartitions of the state space into a given number of components which are optimal with respect to min-max or max-min Dirichlet connectivity criteria are investigated. Links are made with higher order Cheeger inequalities and with a generical characterization of subpartitions given by the nodal domains of an eigenfunction. These considerations are applied to generators whose positive rates are supported by the edges of a discrete cycle , to obtain a full description of their spectra and of the shapes of their eigenfunctions, as well as an interpretation of the spectrum through a double covering construction. Also, we prove that for these generators, higher Cheeger inequalities hold, with a universal constant factor 48
Osservazione delle zone marine costiere da dati ottici multi-sensore: il caso studio della foce del Volturno
Questo lavoro s’inserisce nell’ambito del progetto bandiera RITMARE (Ricerca ITaliana per il MARE, 2012-2016, MIUR-CNR) che ha lo scopo di studiare, monitorare, gestire e valorizzare la risorsa marina in Italia. A tale fine il telerilevamento è parte integrante al progetto che, in questo studio, viene applicato alla fascia costiera della foce del Volturno. Lo studio si avvale dell’utilizzo di immagini satellitari (RapidEye (2013) e Landsat-8 OLI (2014)) e aviotrasportate (MIVIS (2011)). A supporto dell’analisi delle immagini sono state acquisite misure in-situ di riflettanza e di concentrazione dei seguenti parametri: clorofilla-a (Chl-a), sedimenti totali sospesi (TSM) e sostanza organica colorata disciolta (CDOM) durante una campagna svoltasi in agosto 2014. I dati telerilevati, geocodificati e co-registrati, sono stati pre-elaborati per correggere gli effetti radiometrici ed atmosferici. Le immagini sono state successivamente elaborate per classificare le acque marino-costiere secondo diversi gradi di complessità ottica e per produrre mappe di concentrazione di Chl-a, TSM e CDOM. In particolare, per la generazione delle mappe è stato applicato un approccio semi-empirico basato su analisi di correlazione dei dati in-situ; in particolare tra valori spettrali di riflettanza (es. rapporti di banda) e le corrispondenti misure di concentrazione di Chl-a, TSM e CDOM. I risultati mostrano un gradiente crescente di complessità ottica delle acque spostandosi dalle zone pelagiche verso le aree costiere. In queste aree l’analisi del dato OLI ha mostrato una variabilità spaziale di Chl-a, TSM e CDOM imputabile ai regimi idrologici del fiume Volturno
Simple Plant Traits Explain Functional Group Diversity Decline in Novel Grassland Communities of Texas
Previous research has found that plant diversity declines more quickly in exotic than native grassland plots, which offers a model system for testing whether diversity decline is associated with specific plant traits. In a common garden experiment in the Southern Great Plains in central Texas, USA, we studied monocultures and 9-species mixtures of either all exotic or all native grassland species. A total of 36 native and exotic species were paired by phylogeny and functional group. We used community-level measures (relative abundance in mixture) and whole-plant (height, aboveground biomass, and light capture) and leaf-level traits (area, specific leaf area, and C:N ratio) to determine whether trait differences explained native-exotic differences in functional group diversity. Increases in species’ relative abundance in mixture were correlated with high biomass, height, and light capture in both native and exotic communities. However, increasing exotic species were all C4 grasses, whereas, increasing native species included forb, C3 grass and C4 grass species. Exotic C4 grasses had traits associated with relatively high resource capture: greater leaf area, specific leaf area, height, biomass, and light capture, but similar leaf C:N ratios compared to native C4grasses. Leaf C:N was consistently higher for native than exotic C3 species, implying that resource use efficiency was greater in natives than exotics. Our results suggest that functional diversity will differ between grasslands restored to native assemblages and those dominated by novel collections of exotic species, and that simple plant traits can help to explain diversity decline
- …
