2,211 research outputs found
Spectral Properties of Elementwise-Transformed Spiked Matrices
This work concerns elementwise-transformations of spiked matrices: . Here, is a function applied elementwise,
is a low-rank signal matrix, and is white noise. We find that
principal component analysis is powerful for recovering signal under highly
nonlinear or discontinuous transformations. Specifically, in the
high-dimensional setting where is of size with and , we uncover a phase
transition: for signal-to-noise ratios above a sharp threshold -- depending on
, the distribution of elements of , and the limiting aspect ratio
-- the principal components of (partially) recover those of
. Below this threshold, the principal components of are
asymptotically orthogonal to the signal. In contrast, in the standard setting
where is observed directly, the analogous phase transition
depends only on . A similar phenomenon occurs with square and
symmetric and a generalized Wigner matrix
A Slight Excess of Large Scale Power from Moments of the Peculiar Velocity Field
The peculiar motions of galaxies can be used to infer the distribution of
matter in the Universe. It has recently been shown that measurements of the
peculiar velocity field indicates an anomalously high bulk flow of galaxies in
our local volume. In this paper we find the implications of the high bulk flow
for the power spectrum of density fluctuations. We find that analyzing only the
dipole moment of the velocity field yields an average power spectrum amplitude
which is indeed much higher than the LCDM value. However, by also including
shear and octupole moments of the velocity field, and marginalizing over
possible values for the growth rate, an average power spectrum amplitude which
is consistent with LCDM is recovered. We attempt to infer the shape of the
matter power spectrum from moments of the velocity field, and find a slight
excess of power on scales ~ h-1 Gpc.Comment: 6 pages,6 figures, updated to match accepted versio
Optimal Eigenvalue Shrinkage in the Semicircle Limit
Recent studies of high-dimensional covariance estimation often assume the
proportional growth asymptotic, where the sample size and dimension are
comparable, with and . Yet, many datasets have very different numbers of rows
and columns. Consider instead disproportional growth, where and or . With far
fewer dimensions than observations, the disproportional limit may seem similar to classical fixed- asymptotics. In fact,
either disproportional limit induces novel phenomena distinct from the
proportional and fixed- limits. We study the spiked covariance model,
finding for each of 15 different loss functions optimal shrinkage and
thresholding rules. Readers who initially view the disproportionate limit
as similar to classical fixed- asymptotics may
expect, given the dominance in that setting of the sample covariance estimator,
that there is no alternative here. On the contrary, our optimal procedures
demand extensive eigenvalue shrinkage and offer substantial performance
benefits. The sample covariance is similarly improvable in the disproportionate
limit . Practitioners may worry how to choose
between proportional and disproportional growth frameworks in practice.
Conveniently, under the spiked covariance model there is no conflict between
the two and no choice is needed; one unified set of closed forms (used with the
aspect ratio of the practitioner's data) offers full asymptotic
optimality in both regimes. At the heart of these phenomena is the spiked
Wigner model. Via a connection to the spiked covariance model as , we derive optimal shrinkers for the Wigner setting
Hubble Space Telescope Observations of Comet 9P/Tempel 1 during the Deep Impact Encounter
We report on the Hubble Space Telescope program to observe periodic comet
9P/Tempel 1 in conjunction with NASA's Deep Impact mission. Our objectives were
to study the generation and evolution of the coma resulting from the impact and
to obtain wide-band images of the visual outburst generated by the impact. Two
observing campaigns utilizing a total of 17 HST orbits were carried out: the
first occurred on 2005 June 13-14 and fortuitously recorded the appearance of a
new, short-lived fan in the sunward direction on June 14. The principal
campaign began two days before impact and was followed by contiguous orbits
through impact plus several hours and then snapshots one, seven, and twelve
days later. All of the observations were made using the Advanced Camera for
Surveys (ACS). For imaging, the ACS High Resolution Channel (HRC) provides a
spatial resolution of 36 km (16 km/pixel) at the comet at the time of impact.
Baseline images of the comet, made prior to impact, photometrically resolved
the comet's nucleus. The derived diameter, 6.1 km, is in excellent agreement
with the 6.0 +/- 0.2 km diameter derived from the spacecraft imagers. Following
the impact, the HRC images illustrate the temporal and spatial evolution of the
ejecta cloud and allow for a determination of its expansion velocity
distribution. One day after impact the ejecta cloud had passed out of the
field-of-view of the HRC.Comment: 15 pages, 14 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in Icarus
special issue on Deep Impac
Susceptibility to intestinal infection and diarrhoea in Zambian adults in relation to HIV status and CD4 count.
BACKGROUND: The HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa has had a major impact on infectious disease, and there is currently great interest in the impact of HIV on intestinal barrier function. A three year longitudinal cohort study in a shanty compound in Lusaka, Zambia, carried out before anti-retroviral therapy was widely available, was used to assess the impact of HIV on susceptibility to intestinal infectious disease. We measured the incidence and seasonality of intestinal infection and diarrhoea, aggregation of disease in susceptible individuals, clustering by co-habitation and genetic relatedness, and the disease-to-infection ratio. METHODS: Adults living in a small section of Misisi, Lusaka, were interviewed every two weeks to ascertain the incidence of diarrhoea. Monthly stool samples were analysed for selected pathogens. HIV status and CD4 count were determined annually. RESULTS: HIV seroprevalence was 31% and the prevalence of immunosuppression (CD4 count 200 cells/microL or less) was 10%. Diarrhoea incidence was 1.1 episodes per year and the Incidence Rate Ratio for HIV infection was 2.4 (95%CI 1.7-3.3; p < 0.001). The disease-to-infection ratio was increased at all stages of HIV infection. Aggregation of diarrhoea in susceptible individuals was observed irrespective of immunosuppression, but there was little evidence of clustering by co-habitation or genetic relatedness. There was no evidence of aggregation of asymptomatic infections. CONCLUSION: HIV has an impact on intestinal infection at all stages, with an increased disease-to-infection ratio. The aggregation of disease in susceptible individuals irrespective of CD4 count suggests that this phenomenon is not a function of cell mediated immunity
Genomic Education – Bench to Bedside: A Novel Approach to Teaching Genetic Diagnosis
Problem: Teaching genetic diagnosis is required in all medical schools and physician assistant programs. However, with thousands of relevant findings and thousands more rare diseases, lectures and narrative resources are inadequate for the task. Whatever information that is taught is easily forgotten and does not carry over into the clinic. Many rare disease patients suffer through “diagnostic odysseys” (3 to 30 years to correct diagnosis). Approach: We used a commercially available diagnostic decision support system (DDSS) that encompasses all Mendelian disorders with known genes, together with other conditions in their differential diagnosis, and a case-based educational approach to teach diagnostic skills in a way that could then be replicated in the clinic. After a lecture, which included a demonstration using the DDSS with a sample case, 74 students were assigned to replicate the sample case at home and then complete 7 other anonymized cases, all with known rare diagnoses. After each case, students saved the “patient summary” that included the findings entered and differential diagnosis list and submitted it as homework. Students also completed a questionnaire about their experience, including satisfaction. Outcomes: Students were effective at diagnosing rare diseases in 483 of the 514 testing instances, a 94% success rate, with success defined as the correct diagnosis being listed in the differential diagnosis. Eighty-five percent of students rated this interactive learning session “highly,” encouraged us to repeat the assignment next year, and 89% reported that they wanted to use the DDSS during their clinical rotations in the coming year. Next Steps: We plan to refine the cases, add more material on findings, and ensure that all the synonyms students might use are in the software tool. We plan to repeat the program next year and recommend its use more widely in medical education
Improved Probability Method for Estimating Signal in the Presence of Background
A suggestion is made for improving the Feldman Cousins method of estimating
signal counts in the presence of background. The method concentrates on finding
essential information about the signal and ignoring extraneous information
about background. An appropriate method is found which uses the condition that
the number of background events obtained does not exceed the total number of
events obtained. Several alternative approaches are explored.Comment: Modified 12/21 for singlespace to save trees, 9 pages, 1 figure.
Modified 8/11/99 to add small modifications made for the Phys. Rev. articl
Macrophage-released ADAMTS1 promotes muscle stem cell activation.
Coordinated activation of muscle stem cells (known as satellite cells) is critical for postnatal muscle growth and regeneration. The muscle stem cell niche is central for regulating the activation state of satellite cells, but the specific extracellular signals that coordinate this regulation are poorly understood. Here we show that macrophages at sites of muscle injury induce activation of satellite cells via expression of Adamts1. Overexpression of Adamts1 in macrophages in vivo is sufficient to increase satellite cell activation and improve muscle regeneration in young mice. We demonstrate that NOTCH1 is a target of ADAMTS1 metalloproteinase activity, which reduces Notch signaling, leading to increased satellite cell activation. These results identify Adamts1 as a potent extracellular regulator of satellite cell activation and have significant implications for understanding the regulation of satellite cell activity and regeneration after muscle injury.Satellite cells are crucial for growth and regeneration of skeletal muscle. Here the authors show that in response to muscle injury, macrophages secrete Adamts1, which induces satellite cell activation by modulating Notch1 signaling
Micro-Valences: Perceiving Affective Valence in Everyday Objects
Perceiving the affective valence of objects influences how we think about and react to the world around us. Conversely, the speed and quality with which we visually recognize objects in a visual scene can vary dramatically depending on that scene’s affective content. Although typical visual scenes contain mostly “everyday” objects, the affect perception in visual objects has been studied using somewhat atypical stimuli with strong affective valences (e.g., guns or roses). Here we explore whether affective valence must be strong or overt to exert an effect on our visual perception. We conclude that everyday objects carry subtle affective valences – “micro-valences” – which are intrinsic to their perceptual representation
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