1,155 research outputs found
INSTRUMENTATION-BASED MUSIC SIMILARITY USING SPARSE REPRESENTATIONS
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Instrumentation-based music similarity using sparse representations
International audienc
B : b interactions are essential for polymerization of variant fibrinogens with impaired holes 'a'
This is an electronic version of an Article published in Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2007; 5(12): 2352-2359.ArticleJOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS. 5(12): 2352-2359 (2007)journal articl
Asymptotic analysis of the model for distribution of high-tax payers
The z-transform technique is used to investigate the model for distribution
of high-tax payers, which is proposed by two of the authors (K. Y and S. M) and
others. Our analysis shows an asymptotic power-law of this model with the
exponent -5/2 when a total ``mass'' has a certain critical value. Below the
critical value, the system exhibits an ordinary critical behavior, and scaling
relations hold. Above the threshold, numerical simulations show that a
power-law distribution coexists with a huge ``monopolized'' member. It is
argued that these behaviors are observed universally in conserved aggregation
processes, by analizing an extended model.Comment: 5pages, 3figure
Development of Time- and Energy-Resolved Synchrotron-Radiation-Based Mössbauer Spectroscopy
14th International Conference on Synchrotron Radiation Instrumentation (SRI 2021) 28.03.2022 - 01.04.2022 OnlineSynchrotron-radiation based Mössbauer spectroscopy has become a useful technique capable for investigating various Mössbauer isotopes. For a typical experimental setup, the information associated with the pulse height (that is, energy) in an avalanche photodiode (APD) detector has not been used effectively. By using a system for simultaneous measurement system of time and energy associated with the APD signal, a system for the time- and energy-resolved Mössbauer spectroscopy has been developed. In this system, the pulse height information was converted to the time information through an amplitude-to-time converter applied to one of the divided signals from the APD. The corresponding time information was processed separately from another one of the divided signals. Both signals are recorded by a multi-channel scaler in an event-by-event data acquisition process. The velocity information from the Mössbauer transducer was also recorded as a tag for each signal event. Thus, the Mössbauer spectra with any time- and energy-window can be reconstructed after the data collection process. This system can be used for many purposes in time- and energy-resolved Mössbauer spectroscopy, and shows significant promise for use with other fast detectors and for various types of experiments
Controlling the Assembly of Cellulose-Based Oligosaccharides through Sequence Modifications
Peptides and nucleic acids with programmable sequences are widely explored for the production of tunable, self-assembling functional materials. Herein we demonstrate that the primary sequence of oligosaccharides can be designed to access materials with tunable shapes and properties. Synthetic cellulose-based oligomers were assembled into 2D or 3D rod-like crystallites. Sequence modifications within the oligosaccharide core influenced the molecular packing and led to the formation of square-like assemblies based on the rare cellulose IVII allomorph. In contrast, modifications at the termini generated elongated aggregates with tunable surfaces, resulting in self-healing supramolecular hydrogels
Disruption of the leptomeningeal blood barrier in neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder
OBJECTIVE: To describe leptomeningeal blood-barrier impairment reflected by MRI gadolinium-enhanced lesions in patients with aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin G (AQP4-IgG)-positive neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD). METHODS: A retrospective case series of 11 AQP4-IgG-positive NMOSD patients with leptomeningeal enhancement (LME) were collected from 5 centers. External neuroradiologists, blinded to the clinical details, evaluated MRIs. RESULTS: LME was demonstrated on postcontrast T1-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images as a sign of leptomeningeal blood-barrier disruption and transient leakage of contrast agent into the subarachnoid space in 11 patients, 6 in the brain and 6 in the spinal cord. The patterns of LME were linear or extensive and were accompanied by periependymal enhancement in 5 cases and intraparenchymal enhancement in all cases. The location of LME in the spinal cord was adjacent to intraparenchymal contrast enhancement with involvement of a median number of 12 (range 5-17) vertebral segments. At the time of LME on MRI, all patients had a clinical attack such as encephalopathy (36%) and/or myelopathy (70%) with median interval between symptom onset and LME of 12 days (range 2-30). LME occurred in association with an initial area postrema attack (44%), signs of systemic infection (33%), or AQP4-IgG in CSF (22%) followed by clinical progression. LME was found at initial clinical presentation in 5 cases and at clinical relapses leading to a diagnosis of NMOSD in 6 cases. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that altered leptomeningeal blood barrier may be accompanied by intraparenchymal blood-brain barrier breakdown in patients with AQP4-IgG-positive NMOSD during relapses
Variational Monte Carlo Study of Spin-Gapped Normal State and BCS-BEC Crossover in Two-Dimensional Attractive Hubbard Model
We study properties of normal, superconducting (SC) and CDW states for an
attractive Hubbard model on the square lattice, using a variational Monte Carlo
method. In trial wave functions, we introduce an interspinon binding factor,
indispensable to induce a spin-gap transition in the normal state, in addition
to the onsite attractive and intersite repulsive factors. It is found that, in
the normal state, as the interaction strength increases, a first-order
spin-gap transition arises at (: band width) from a
Fermi liquid to a spin-gapped state, which is conductive through hopping of
doublons. In the SC state, we confirm by analysis of various quantities that
the mechanism of superconductivity undergoes a smooth crossover at around
|U_{\ma{co}}|\sim |U_{\rm c}| from a BCS type to a Bose-Einstein condensation
(BEC) type, as increases. For |U|<|U_{\ma{co}}|, quantities such as
the condensation energy, a SC correlation function and the condensate fraction
of onsite pairs exhibit behavior of , as expected from the
BCS theory. For |U|>|U_{\ma{co}}|, quantities such as the energy gain in the
SC transition and superfluid stiffness, which is related to the cost of phase
coherence, behave as , as expected in a bosonic
scheme. In this regime, the SC transition is induced by a gain in kinetic
energy, in contrast with the BCS theory. We refer to the relevance to the
pseudogap in cuprate superconductors.Comment: 14 pages, 22 figures, submitted to Journal of the Physical Society of
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