8,713 research outputs found
Posterior moments and quantiles for the normal location model with Laplace prior
We derive explicit expressions for arbitrary moments and quantiles of the posterior distribution of the location parameter eta in the normal location model with Laplace prior, and use the results to approximate the posterior distribution of sums of independent copies of eta
Estimation of the methane emission factor for the Italian Mediterranean buffalo
In order to contribute to the improvement of the national greenhouse gas emission inventory, this work aimed at estimating a country-specific enteric methane (CH4) emission factor for the Italian Mediterranean buffalo. For this purpose, national agriculture statistics, and information on animal production and farming conditions were analysed, and the emission factor was estimated using the Tier 2 model of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Country-specific CH4 emission factors for buffalo cows (630 kg body weight, BW) and other buffalo (313 kg BW) categories were estimated for the period 1990–2004. In 2004, the estimated enteric CH4 emission factor for the buffalo cows was 73 kg/head per year, whereas that for other buffalo categories it was 56 kg/head per year. Research in order to determine specific CH4 conversion rates at the predominant production system is suggested
Multi-path entanglement of two photons
We present a novel optical device based on an integrated system of
micro-lenses and single mode optical fibers. It allows to collect and direct
into many modes two photons generated by spontaneous parametric down
conversion. By this device multiqubit entangled states and/or multilevel
qu-it states of two photons, encoded in the longitudinal momentum degree of
freedom, are created. The multi-path photon entanglement realized by this
device is expected to find important applications in modern quantum information
technology.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revtex, revised versio
Shedding Light on Diatom Photonics by means of Digital Holography
Diatoms are among the dominant phytoplankters in the worl's ocean, and their
external silica investments, resembling artificial photonics crystal, are
expected to play an active role in light manipulation. Digital holography
allowed studying the interaction with light of Coscinodiscus wailesii cell wall
reconstructing the light confinement inside the cell cytoplasm, condition that
is hardly accessible via standard microscopy. The full characterization of the
propagated beam, in terms of quantitative phase and intensity, removed a
long-standing ambiguity about the origin of the light. The data were discussed
in the light of living cell behavior in response to their environment
Contracts for Abstract Processes in Service Composition
Contracts are a well-established approach for describing and analyzing
behavioral aspects of web service compositions. The theory of contracts comes
equipped with a notion of compatibility between clients and servers that
ensures that every possible interaction between compatible clients and servers
will complete successfully. It is generally agreed that real applications often
require the ability of exposing just partial descriptions of their behaviors,
which are usually known as abstract processes. We propose a formal
characterization of abstraction as an extension of the usual symbolic
bisimulation and we recover the notion of abstraction in the context of
contracts.Comment: In Proceedings FIT 2010, arXiv:1101.426
PINK1 homozygous W437X mutation in a patient with apparent dominant transmission of parkinsonism.
We analyzed the PINK1 gene in 58 patients with early-onset Parkinsonism and detected the homozygous mutation W437X in 1 patient. The clinical phenotype was characterized by early onset (22 years of age), good re- sponse to levodopa, early fluctuations and dyskinesias, and psychiatric symptoms. The mother, heterozygote for W437X mutation, was affected by Parkinson’s disease and 3 further relatives were reported affected, according to an autosomal dominant transmission
Weighted-Average Least Squares (WALS): Confidence and Prediction Intervals
We consider inference for linear regression models estimated by weighted-average least squares (WALS), a frequentist model averaging approach with a Bayesian flavor. We propose a new simulation method that yields re-centered confidence and prediction intervals by exploiting the bias-corrected posterior mean as a frequentist
estimator of a normal location parameter. We investigate the performance of WALS and several alternative estimators in an extensive set of Monte Carlo experiments that allow for increasing complexity of the model space and heteroskedastic, skewed, and thick-tailed regression errors. In addition to WALS, we include unrestricted
and fully restricted least squares, two post-selection estimators based on classical information criteria, a penalization estimator, and Mallows and jackknife model averaging estimators. We show that, compared to the other approaches, WALS performs well in terms of the mean squared error of point estimates, and also in
terms of coverage errors and lengths of confidence and prediction intervals
Updating neuropathology and neuropharmacology of monoaminergic systems
PreprintNon peer reviewe
Dynamics and Hadronization at intermediate transverse momentum at RHIC
The ultra-relativistic heavy-ion program at RHIC has shown that at
intermediate transverse momenta (-6 GeV) standard (independent)
parton fragmentation can neither describe the observed baryon-to-meson ratios
nor the empirical scaling of the hadronic elliptic flow () according to
the number of valence quarks. Both aspects find instead a natural explanation
in a coalescence plus fragmentation approach to hadronization. After a brief
review of the main results for light quarks, we focus on heavy quarks showing
that a combined fragmentation and quark-coalescence framework is relevant also
here. Moreover, within relativistic Langevin simulations we find evidence for
the importance of heavy-light resonances in the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) to
explain the strong energy loss and collective flow of heavy-quark spectra as
inferred from non-photonic electron observables. Such heavy-light resonances
can pave the way to a unified understanding of the microscopic structure of the
QGP and its subsequent hadronization by coalescence.Comment: Proceedings of the International Workshop on QCD - Martina Franca
(Italy), June 2007. To be published in AIP. 6 pages, 6 figure
Developing Legacy System Migration Methods and Tools for Technology Transfer
This paper presents the research results of an ongoing technology transfer project carried out in coopera- tion between the University of Salerno and a small software company. The project is aimed at developing and transferring migration technology to the industrial partner. The partner should be enabled to migrate monolithic multi-user COBOL legacy systems to a multi-tier Web-based architecture. The assessment of the legacy systems of the partner company revealed that these systems had a very low level of decompos- ability with spaghetti-like code and embedded control flow and database accesses within the user interface descriptions. For this reason, it was decided to adopt an incremental migration strategy based on the reengineering of the user interface using Web technology, on the transformation of interactive legacy programs into batch programs, and the wrapping of the legacy programs. A middleware framework links the new Web-based user interface with the Wrapped Legacy System. An Eclipse plug-in, named MELIS (migration environment for legacy information systems), was also developed to support the migration process. Both the migration strategy and the tool have been applied to two essential subsystems of the most business critical legacy system of the partner company
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