3,952 research outputs found
Data-matched filter
After amplification and normalization, incoming data bits are fed, alternately, to pair of integrators. While one integrator is operating, content of other is on hold, sample, and dump. Clock derived in bit-timing extractor times and controls integrators. Frequency of clock is one-half data rate
Kinematic analysis of handwriting movements in patients with Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment, depression and healthy subjects
A variety of studies have demonstrated that motor disorders, parkinsonism and extrapyramidal motor symptoms (EPMS) are common in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Several studies have reported an association of EPMS with severity, progression and poor prognosis of AD. The majority of these studies used clinical assessments for the rating of EPMS. In this study, kinematic handwriting analysis was used to quantify differences in fine hand motor function in patients with probable AD and mild cognitive impairment (MCl, as an assumed initial stage of AD) compared to depressed patients and healthy controls. Both patients with MCl and patients with probable AD exhibited loss of fine motor performance. Movements of AD patients were significantly less regular than those of healthy controls. Copyright (C) 2003 S. Karger AG, Basel
Small-sample asymptotic distributions of M-estimators of location
Asymptotic formulae for the distribution of M-estimators, i.e. maximum likelihood type estimators, of location, including the arithmetic mean, are derived which numerical studies show to give relative errors for densities and tail areas of the order of magnitude of 1% down to sample sizes 3 and 4 even in the extreme tails. The paper is the continuation of earlier work by the second author and is also closely related to Daniels's work on the saddlepoint approximation. The method consists in expanding the derivative of the logarithm of the unstandardized density of the estimator in powers of 1/n at each point, using recentring by means of conjugate distributions. This method yields a unified point of view for the comparison of other asymptotic methods, namely saddlepoint method, Edgeworth expansion and large deviations approach, which are also compared numericall
Slip Rate of the Danghe Nan Shan Thrust Fault from 10Be Exposure Dating of Folded River Terraces: Implications for the Strain Distribution in Northern Tibet
The northeastward motion of the Tibetan Plateau along the Altyn Tagh strike-slip fault causes thrust faulting in three parallel mountain ranges (Qilian Shan, Daxue Shan, and Danghe Nan Shan) in the plateau interior, and leads to NNE-directed crustal shortening and plateau growth. While slip rates at the plateau margin (i.e., along the Qilian Shan and the Altyn Tagh fault) are well constrained, rates of thrust faulting and the strain distribution in the plateau interior remain poorly resolved. Here, we use field investigations, a high-resolution DEM, and 10Be exposure dating to quantify the shortening rate across the Danghe Nan Shan thrust fault from fluvial terraces, which are deformed by a growing NNE-vergent anticline. 10Be exposure ages from two terrace levels range from 70 ± 5 to 92 ± 7 ka. When combined with uplift values of 37–68 m along the fold hinge, the 10Be ages yield a mean uplift rate of 0.6 ± 0.2 mm/year. Using the cross-sectional area of the fold and the subsurface geometry of the listric thrust fault, we obtain a shortening rate of 0.8 ± 0.2 mm/year, which is consistent with the rate of elastic strain accumulation recorded by GPS data. Together with published fault slip rates and GPS data, our results indicate that northern Tibet experiences NNE-directed shortening at a rate of ∼5 mm/year between the Qaidam Basin and the Hexi Corridor. In the plateau interior, this shortening is accommodated by several range-bounding thrust faults and closely coupled with the eastward decrease in the slip rate of the Altyn Tagh fault
Proteomic analysis in the brain and liver of sea bream (Sparus aurata) exposed to the antibiotics ciprofloxacin, sulfadiazine, and trimethoprim
Antibiotics, frequently detected in aquatic ecosystems, can negatively impact the health of resident organisms.
Although the study on the possible effects of antibiotics on these organisms has been increasing, there is still little
information available on the molecular effects on exposed non-target organisms. In our study we used a label free
proteomic approach and sea bream, Sparus aurata, to evaluate the effects of exposure to environmentally relevant
concentrations of the antibiotic compounds ciprofloxacin (CIP), sulfadiazine (SULF) and trimethoprim (TRIM)
produced at the protein level. Individuals of sea bream were exposed to single compounds at 5.2 ± 2.1 μg L− 1 of
CIP, 3.8 ± 2.7 μg L− 1 of SULF and 25.7 ± 10.8 μg L− 1 of TRIM for 21 days. After exposure, the number of
differentially expressed proteins in the liver was 39, 73 and 4 for CIP, SULF and TRIM respectively. In the brain,
there was no alteration of proteins after CIP and TRIM treatment, while 9 proteins were impacted after SULF
treatment. The differentially expressed proteins were involved in cellular biological, metabolic, developmental,
growth and biological regulatory processes. Overall, our study evidences the vulnerability of Sparus aurata, after
exposure to environmentally relevant concentrations of the major antibiotics CIP, SULF and TRIM and that their
chronic exposure could lead to a stress situation, altering the proteomic profile of key organs such as brain and
liver.Ministerio de EconomÃa y Competitividad (MINECO), Spain
Universidad de Cádiz, Spain
Asociación Universitaria Iberoamericana de Postgrado, Spain
Ministerio de Asuntos Económicos y Transformación Digital, Gobierno de España, Spain
Latin American Association of Postgraduates13 página
Results of ultra-low level 71ge counting for application in the Gallex-solar neutrino experiment at the Gran Sasso Underground Physics Laboratory
It has been experimentally verified that the Ultra-Low-Level Counting System for the Gallex solar neutrino experiment is capable of measuring the expected solar up silon-flux to plus or minus 12% during two years of operation
Violation of Equivalence Principle and Solar Neutrinos
We have updated the analysis for the solution to the solar neutrino problem
by the long-wavelength neutrino oscillations induced by a tiny breakdown of the
weak equivalence principle of general relativity, and obtained a very good fit
to all the solar neutrino data.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, uses espcrc2.sty, Talk presented by H. Nunokawa
at Europhysics Neutrino Oscillation Workshop (NOW2000), Otranto, Italy,
September 9-16, 200
Cleaning the USNO-B Catalog through automatic detection of optical artifacts
The USNO-B Catalog contains spurious entries that are caused by diffraction
spikes and circular reflection halos around bright stars in the original
imaging data. These spurious entries appear in the Catalog as if they were real
stars; they are confusing for some scientific tasks. The spurious entries can
be identified by simple computer vision techniques because they produce
repeatable patterns on the sky. Some techniques employed here are variants of
the Hough transform, one of which is sensitive to (two-dimensional)
overdensities of faint stars in thin right-angle cross patterns centered on
bright (<13 \mag) stars, and one of which is sensitive to thin annular
overdensities centered on very bright (<7 \mag) stars. After enforcing
conservative statistical requirements on spurious-entry identifications, we
find that of the 1,042,618,261 entries in the USNO-B Catalog, 24,148,382 of
them (2.3 \percent) are identified as spurious by diffraction-spike criteria
and 196,133 (0.02 \percent) are identified as spurious by reflection-halo
criteria. The spurious entries are often detected in more than 2 bands and are
not overwhelmingly outliers in any photometric properties; they therefore
cannot be rejected easily on other grounds, i.e., without the use of computer
vision techniques. We demonstrate our method, and return to the community in
electronic form a table of spurious entries in the Catalog.Comment: published in A
V2:Performance of the solid deuterium ultra-cold neutron source at the pulsed reactor TRIGA Mainz
The performance of the solid deuterium ultra-cold neutron source at the
pulsed reactor TRIGA Mainz with a maximum peak energy of 10 MJ is described.
The solid deuterium converter with a volume of V=160 cm3 (8 mol), which is
exposed to a thermal neutron fluence of 4.5x10^13 n/cm2, delivers up to 550 000
UCN per pulse outside of the biological shield at the experimental area. UCN
densities of ~ 10/cm3 are obtained in stainless steel bottles of V ~ 10 L
resulting in a storage efficiency of ~20%. The measured UCN yields compare well
with the predictions from a Monte Carlo simulation developed to model the
source and to optimize its performance for the upcoming upgrade of the TRIGA
Mainz into a user facility for UCN physics.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
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