37 research outputs found

    A Database of Freely Written Texts of German School Students for the Purpose of Automatic Spelling Error Classification

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    Abstract The spelling competence of school students is best measured on freely written texts, instead of pre-determined, dictated texts. Since the analysis of the error categories in these kinds of texts is very labor intensive and costly, we are working on an automatic systems to perform this task. The modules of the systems are derived from techniques from the area of natural language processing, and are learning systems that need large amounts of training data. To obtain the data necessary for training and evaluating the resulting system, we conducted data collection of freely written, German texts by school children. 1,730 students from grade 1 through 8 participated in this data collection. The data was transcribed electronically and annotated with their corrected version. This resulted in a total of 14,563 sentences that can now be used for research regarding spelling diagnostics. Additional meta-data was collected regarding writers' language biography, teaching methodology, age, gender, and school year. In order to do a detailed manual annotation of the categories of the spelling errors committed by the students we developed a tool specifically tailored to the task

    The impact of boldness on demographic rates and life-history outcomes in the wandering albatross.

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    Differences among individuals within a population are ubiquitous. Those differences are known to affect the entire life cycle with important consequences for all demographic rates and outcomes. One source of among-individual phenotypic variation that has received little attention from a demographic perspective is animal personality, which is defined as consistent and heritable behavioural differences between individuals. While many studies have shown that individual variation in individual personality can generate individual differences in survival and reproductive rates, the impact of personality on all demographic rates and outcomes remains to be assessed empirically. Here, we used a unique, long-term, dataset coupling demography and personality of wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans) in the Crozet Archipelago and a comprehensive analysis based on a suite of approaches (capture-mark-recapture statistical models, Markov chains models and structured matrix population models). We assessed the effect of boldness on annual demographic rates (survival, breeding probability, breeding success), life-history outcomes (life expectancy, lifetime reproductive outcome, occupancy times), and an integrative demographic outcome (population growth rate). We found that boldness had little impact on female demographic rates, but was very likely associated with lower breeding probabilities in males. By integrating the effects of boldness over the entire life cycle, we found that bolder males had slightly lower lifetime reproductive success compared to shyer males. Indeed, bolder males spent a greater proportion of their lifetime as non-breeders, which suggests longer inter-breeding intervals due to higher reproductive allocation. Our results reveal that the link between boldness and demography is more complex than anticipated by the pace-of-life literature and highlight the importance of considering the entire life cycle with a comprehensive approach when assessing the role of personality on individual performance and demography

    Temporal correlations among demographic parameters are ubiquitous but highly variable across species

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    Temporal correlations among demographic parameters can strongly influence population dynamics. Our empirical knowledge, however, is very limited regarding the direction and the magnitude of these correlations and how they vary among demographic parameters and species’ life histories. Here, we use long-term demographic data from 15 bird and mammal species with contrasting pace of life to quantify correlation patterns among five key demographic parameters: juvenile and adult survival, reproductive probability, reproductive success and productivity. Correlations among demographic parameters were ubiquitous, more frequently positive than negative, but strongly differed across species. Correlations did not markedly change along the slow-fast continuum of life histories, suggesting that they were more strongly driven by ecological than evolutionary factors. As positive temporal demographic correlations decrease the mean of the long-run population growth rate, the common practice of ignoring temporal correlations in population models could lead to the underestimation of extinction risks in most species

    Energy Resolution Performance of the CMS Electromagnetic Calorimeter

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    The energy resolution performance of the CMS lead tungstate crystal electromagnetic calorimeter is presented. Measurements were made with an electron beam using a fully equipped supermodule of the calorimeter barrel. Results are given both for electrons incident on the centre of crystals and for electrons distributed uniformly over the calorimeter surface. The electron energy is reconstructed in matrices of 3 times 3 or 5 times 5 crystals centred on the crystal containing the maximum energy. Corrections for variations in the shower containment are applied in the case of uniform incidence. The resolution measured is consistent with the design goals

    De l’envol Ă  la premiĂšre reproduction: aspects Ă©cologiques et Ă©volutifs des traits d’histoire de vie de jeunes oiseaux marins longĂ©vifs

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    This manuscript brings together the work done during my three years of thesis. Through this I wanted to integrate my work into the general framework of life history strategies and evolutionary ecology. The introduction therefore presents an overview of patterns and evolutionary mechanisms explaining variations in life history traits from the species scale to that of individuals. She introduces the five articles I wrote during this Ph.D. The following general discussion summarizes the main results obtained during this work. I wanted this discussion complementary to those already presented within each chapter. Also, the points largely developed in the articles have not been repeated. Like the introduction, I tried to put my results in perspective of current knowledge in the widest possible context.Ce manuscrit rassemble le travail effectuĂ© au cours de mes trois annĂ©es de thĂšse. J’ai souhaitĂ© Ă  travers celui-ci intĂ©grer mes travaux dans le cadre gĂ©nĂ©ral des stratĂ©gies d’histoire de vie et de l’écologie Ă©volutive. L’introduction prĂ©sente donc une vue d’ensemble des patrons et mĂ©canismes Ă©volutifs expliquant les variations des traits d’histoire de vie de l’échelle des espĂšces Ă  celle des individus. Elle introduit les cinq articles que j’ai rĂ©digĂ© durant ce doctorat. La discussion gĂ©nĂ©rale qui suit reprend les principaux rĂ©sultats obtenus durant ces travaux. J’ai voulu cette discussion complĂ©mentaire de celles dĂ©jĂ  prĂ©sentĂ©es au sein de chaque chapitre. Aussi, les points largement dĂ©veloppĂ©s dans les articles n’ont pas Ă©tĂ© rĂ©pĂ©tĂ©s. A l’instar de l’introduction, j’ai tentĂ© de mettre mes rĂ©sultats en perspective des connaissances actuelles dans le contexte le plus large possible

    Data from: Paternal but not maternal age influences early-life performance of offspring in a long-lived seabird

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    Variability in demographic traits between individuals within populations has profound implications for both evolutionary processes and population dynamics. Parental effects as a source of non-genetic inheritance are important processes to consider to understand the causes of individual variation. In iteroparous species, parental age is known to influence strongly reproductive success and offspring quality, but consequences on offspring fitness component after independence are much less studied. Based on a 37 years longitudinal monitoring of a long-lived seabird, the wandering albatross, we investigate delayed effects of parental age on offspring fitness components. We provide evidence that parental age influences offspring performance beyond the age of independence. By distinguishing maternal and paternal age effects, we demonstrate that paternal age, but not maternal age, impacts negatively post-fledging offspring performance
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