1,606 research outputs found
Efficient Video Indexing on the Web: A System that Leverages User Interactions with a Video Player
In this paper, we propose a user-based video indexing method, that
automatically generates thumbnails of the most important scenes of an online
video stream, by analyzing users' interactions with a web video player. As a
test bench to verify our idea we have extended the YouTube video player into
the VideoSkip system. In addition, VideoSkip uses a web-database (Google
Application Engine) to keep a record of some important parameters, such as the
timing of basic user actions (play, pause, skip). Moreover, we implemented an
algorithm that selects representative thumbnails. Finally, we populated the
system with data from an experiment with nine users. We found that the
VideoSkip system indexes video content by leveraging implicit users
interactions, such as pause and thirty seconds skip. Our early findings point
toward improvements of the web video player and its thumbnail generation
technique. The VideSkip system could compliment content-based algorithms, in
order to achieve efficient video-indexing in difficult videos, such as lectures
or sports.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, UCMedia 2010: 2nd International ICST Conference
on User Centric Medi
Highly asymmetric magnetic domain wall propagation due to coupling to a periodic pinning potential
Magneto-optical microscopy and magnetometry have been used to study
19 magnetization reversal in an ultrathin magnetically soft [Pt/Co]2 ferromagnetic film
20 coupled to an array of magnetically harder [Co/Pt]4 nanodots via a predominantly
21 dipolar interaction across a 3 nm Pt spacer. This interaction generates a spatially
22 periodic pinning potential for domain walls propagating through the continuous
23 magnetic film. When reversing the applied field with respect to the static nanodot
24 array magnetization orientation, strong asymmetries in the wall velocity and switching
25 fields are observed. Asymmetric switching fields mean that the hysteresis of the film is
26 characterized by a large bias field of dipolar origin which is linked to the wall velocity
27 asymmetry. This latter asymmetry, though large at low fields, vanishes at high fields
28 where the domains become round and compact. A field-polarity-controlled transition
29 from dendritic to compact faceted domain structures is also seen at low field and a
30 model is proposed to interpret the transition
Surface States in Template Synthesized Tin Oxide Nanoparticles
Tin–oxide nanoparticles with controlled narrow size distributions are synthesized while physically encapsulated inside silica mesoporous templates. By means of ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, a redshift of the optical absorbance edge is observed. Photoluminescence measurements corroborate the existence of an optical transition at 3.2 eV. The associated band of states in the semiconductor gap is present even on template-synthesized nanopowders calcined at 800 °C, which contrasts with the evolution of the gap states measured on materials obtained by other methods. The gap states are thus considered to be surface localized, disappearing with surface faceting or being hidden by the surface-to-bulk ratio decrease
A spontaneous gravity prior: newborn chicks prefer stimuli that move against gravity
To investigate whether upward movement is attractive already at birth, before any previosu visual experience, we tested the early preferences of dark-hatched chicks (Gallus gallus) for upward vs downward moving visual stimuli. The results are published in Bliss et al. 2023, Biology Letters “A spontaneous gravity prior: Newborn chicks prefer stimuli that move against gravity"
This entry contains experimental data (output from DeepLabCut tracking, python pre-processed data, summary .csv files of results) and data analysis scripts used in the publication. A readme file is also provided
Cohesive and mixed sediment in the Regional Ocean Modeling System (ROMS v3.6) implemented in the Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere-Wave-Sediment Transport Modeling System (COAWST r1234)
We describe and demonstrate algorithms for treating cohesive and mixed sediment that have been added to the Regional Ocean Modeling System (ROMS version 3.6), as implemented in the Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere-Wave- Sediment Transport Modeling System (COAWST Subversion repository revision 1234). These include the following: floc dynamics (aggregation and disaggregation in the water column); changes in floc characteristics in the seabed; erosion and deposition of cohesive and mixed (combination of cohesive and non-cohesive) sediment; and biodiffusive mixing of bed sediment. These routines supplement existing noncohesive sediment modules, thereby increasing our ability to model fine-grained and mixed-sediment environments. Additionally, we describe changes to the sediment bed layering scheme that improve the fidelity of the modeled stratigraphic record. Finally, we provide examples of these modules implemented in idealized test cases and a realistic application
Scaling properties of the critical behavior in the dilute antiferromagnet Fe(0.93)Zn(0.07)F2
Critical scattering analyses for dilute antiferromagnets are made difficult
by the lack of predicted theoretical line shapes beyond mean-field models.
Nevertheless, with the use of some general scaling assumptions we have
developed a procedure by which we can analyze the equilibrium critical
scattering in these systems for H=0, the random-exchange Ising model, and, more
importantly, for H>0, the random-field Ising model. Our new fitting approach,
as opposed to the more conventional techniques, allows us to obtain the
universal critical behavior exponents and amplitude ratios as well as the
critical line shapes. We discuss the technique as applied to
Fe(0.93)Zn(0.07)F2. The general technique, however, should be applicable to
other problems where the scattering line shapes are not well understood but
scaling is expected to hold.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Why are we fat? Discussions on the socioeconomic dimensions and responses to obesity
This paper draws together contributions to a scientific table discussion on obesity at the European Science Open Forum 2008 which took place in Barcelona, Spain. Socioeconomic dimensions of global obesity, including those factors promoting it, those surrounding the social perceptions of obesity and those related to integral public health solutions, are discussed. It argues that although scientific accounts of obesity point to large-scale changes in dietary and physical environments, media representations of obesity, which context public policy, pre-eminently follow individualistic models of explanation. While the debate at the forum brought together a diversity of views, all the contributors agreed that this was a global issue requiring an equally global response. Furthermore, an integrated ecological model of obesity proposes that to be effective, policy will need to address not only human health but also planetary health, and that therefore, public health and environmental policies coincide
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