3,609 research outputs found
Cross-Modal Health State Estimation
Individuals create and consume more diverse data about themselves today than
any time in history. Sources of this data include wearable devices, images,
social media, geospatial information and more. A tremendous opportunity rests
within cross-modal data analysis that leverages existing domain knowledge
methods to understand and guide human health. Especially in chronic diseases,
current medical practice uses a combination of sparse hospital based biological
metrics (blood tests, expensive imaging, etc.) to understand the evolving
health status of an individual. Future health systems must integrate data
created at the individual level to better understand health status perpetually,
especially in a cybernetic framework. In this work we fuse multiple user
created and open source data streams along with established biomedical domain
knowledge to give two types of quantitative state estimates of cardiovascular
health. First, we use wearable devices to calculate cardiorespiratory fitness
(CRF), a known quantitative leading predictor of heart disease which is not
routinely collected in clinical settings. Second, we estimate inherent genetic
traits, living environmental risks, circadian rhythm, and biological metrics
from a diverse dataset. Our experimental results on 24 subjects demonstrate how
multi-modal data can provide personalized health insight. Understanding the
dynamic nature of health status will pave the way for better health based
recommendation engines, better clinical decision making and positive lifestyle
changes.Comment: Accepted to ACM Multimedia 2018 Conference - Brave New Ideas, Seoul,
Korea, ACM ISBN 978-1-4503-5665-7/18/1
Dark Matter Annihilation inside Large Volume Neutrino Detectors
New particles in theories beyond the standard model can manifest as stable
relics that interact strongly with visible matter and make up a small fraction
of the total dark matter abundance. Such particles represent an interesting
physics target since they can evade existing bounds from direct detection due
to their rapid thermalization in high-density environments. In this work we
point out that their annihilation to visible matter inside large-volume
neutrino telescopes can provide a new way to constrain or discover such
particles. The signal is the most pronounced for relic masses in the GeV range,
and can be efficiently constrained by existing Super-Kamiokande searches for
di-nucleon annihilation. We also provide an explicit realization of this
scenario in the form of secluded dark matter coupled to a dark photon, and we
show that the present method implies novel and stringent bounds on the model
that are complementary to direct constraints from beam dumps, colliders, and
direct detection experiments.Comment: v2: 7 pages, 2 figures. Conclusions Unchanged. Matches version
Published in Physical Review Letter
Tentative Evidence for Relativistic Electrons Generated by the Jet of the Young Sun-like Star DG Tau
Synchrotron emission has recently been detected in the jet of a massive
protostar, providing further evidence that certain jet formation
characteristics for young stars are similar to those found for highly
relativistic jets from AGN. We present data at 325 and 610 MHz taken with the
GMRT of the young, low-mass star DG Tau, an analog of the Sun soon after its
birth. This is the first investigation of a low-mass YSO at at such low
frequencies. We detect emission with a synchrotron spectral index in the
proximity of the DG Tau jet and interpret this emission as a prominent bow
shock associated with this outflow. This result provides tentative evidence for
the acceleration of particles to relativistic energies due to the shock impact
of this otherwise very low-power jet against the ambient medium. We calculate
the equipartition magnetic field strength (0.11 mG) and particle energy
(4x10^40 erg), which are the minimum requirements to account for the
synchrotron emission of the DG Tau bow shock. These results suggest the
possibility of low energy cosmic rays being generated by young Sun-like stars.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Survival Of The Fittest: Contagion as a Determinant of Canadian and Australian Bank Risk
The relative success of Australian and Canadian banks in weathering the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) has been noted by a number of commentators. Their earnings, capital levels and credit ratings have all been a source of envy for regulators of banks in Europe, America and the United Kingdom. The G-20 and the European Union have tried to identify the features of the Canadian and Australian financial systems which have underpinned this success in order to use them in shaping a revised international regulatory framework. Despite this perceived success, the impaired assets (also known as non-performing loans) of banks in both countries increased several fold over the GFC, and we investigate the determinants of this, using impaired assets as our measure of bank risk. Previous studies in other countries have tended to focus on the impact of bank specific factors, such as size and return on equity, in explaining bank risk. Our approach involves including those traditional variables, plus Distance to Default (DD), and a novel contagion variable, which is the effect of major global bank DD on Australian and Canadian banks. Using panel data regression over the period 1999-2008, we find that various balance sheet and income statement factors are not good explanatory variables for bank risk. In contrast, the contagion variable is significant in explaining Canadian and Australian bank risk, which suggests that prudential regulators should look to specifically allocate a portion of regulatory capital to deal with contagion effects
A Disk Census for Young Brown Dwarfs
Recent surveys have identified sub-stellar objects down to planetary masses
in nearby star-forming regions. Reliable determination of the disk frequency in
young brown dwarfs is of paramount importance to understanding their origin.
Here we report the results of a systematic study of infrared L'-band
(3.8-micron) disk excess in ~50 spectroscopically confirmed objects near and
below the sub-stellar boundary in several young clusters. Our observations,
using the ESO Very Large Telescope, Keck I and the NASA Infrared Telescope
Facility, reveal that a significant fraction of brown dwarfs harbor disks at a
very young age. Their inner disk lifetimes do not appear to be vastly different
from those of disks around T Tauri stars. Our findings are consistent with the
hypothesis that sub-stellar objects form via a mechanism similar to solar-mass
stars.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journa
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