15,019 research outputs found
A Method to Separate Stochastic and Deterministic Information from Electrocardiograms
In this work we present a new idea to develop a method to separate stochastic
and deterministic information contained in an electrocardiogram, ECG, which may
provide new sources of information with diagnostic purposes. We assume that the
ECG has information corresponding to many different processes related with the
cardiac activity as well as contamination from different sources related with
the measurement procedure and the nature of the observed system itself. The
method starts with the application of an improuved archetypal analysis to
separate the mentioned stochastic and deterministic information. From the
stochastic point of view we analyze Renyi entropies, and with respect to the
deterministic perspective we calculate the autocorrelation function and the
corresponding correlation time. We show that healthy and pathologic information
may be stochastic and/or deterministic, can be identified by different measures
and located in different parts of the ECG.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Applications of the Conceptual Density Functional Theory Indices to Organic Chemistry Reactivity
Indexación: Web of ScienceTheoretical reactivity indices based on the conceptual Density Functional Theory (DFT) have become a powerful tool for the semiquantitative study of organic reactivity. A large number of reactivity indices have been proposed in the literature. Herein, global quantities like the electronic chemical potential μ, the electrophilicity ω and the nucleophilicity N indices, and local condensed indices like the electrophilic and nucleophilic Parr functions, as the most relevant indices for the study of organic reactivity, are discussed.http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/21/6/74
Synchronization of interconnected networks: the role of connector nodes
In this Letter we identify the general rules that determine the
synchronization properties of interconnected networks. We study analytically,
numerically and experimentally how the degree of the nodes through which two
networks are connected influences the ability of the whole system to
synchronize. We show that connecting the high-degree (low-degree) nodes of each
network turns out to be the most (least) effective strategy to achieve
synchronization. We find the functional relation between synchronizability and
size for a given network-of-networks, and report the existence of the optimal
connector link weights for the different interconnection strategies. Finally,
we perform an electronic experiment with two coupled star networks and conclude
that the analytical results are indeed valid in the presence of noise and
parameter mismatches.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letters. Main text: 5
pages, 4 figures. Supplemental material: 8 pages, 3 figure
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