7,518 research outputs found
Transformation Based Ensembles for Time Series Classification
Until recently, the vast majority of data mining time series classification (TSC) research has focused on alternative distance measures for 1-Nearest Neighbour (1-NN) classifiers based on either the raw data, or on compressions or smoothing of the raw data. Despite the extensive evidence in favour of 1-NN classifiers with Euclidean or Dynamic Time Warping distance, there has also been a flurry of recent research publications proposing classification algorithms for TSC. Generally, these classifiers describe different ways of incorporating summary measures in the time domain into more complex classifiers. Our hypothesis is that the easiest way to gain improvement on TSC problems is simply to transform into an alternative data space where the discriminatory features are more easily detected. To test our hypothesis, we perform a range of benchmarking experiments in the time domain, before evaluating nearest neighbour classifiers on data transformed into the power spectrum, the autocorrelation function, and the principal component space. We demonstrate that on some problems there is dramatic improvement in the accuracy of classifiers built on the transformed data over classifiers built in the time domain, but that there is also a wide variance in accuracy for a particular classifier built on different data transforms. To overcome this variability, we propose a simple transformation based ensemble, then demonstrate that it improves performance and reduces the variability of classifiers built in the time domain only. Our advice to a practitioner with a real world TSC problem is to try transforms before developing a complex classifier; it is the easiest way to get a potentially large increase in accuracy, and may provide further insights into the underlying relationships that characterise the problem
'Special K' and a loss of cell-to-cell adhesion in proximal tubule-derived epithelial cells: modulation of the adherens junction complex by ketamine
Ketamine, a mild hallucinogenic class C drug, is the fastest growing ‘party drug’ used by 16–24 year olds in the UK. As the recreational use of Ketamine increases we are beginning to see the signs of major renal and bladder complications. To date however, we know nothing of a role for Ketamine in modulating both structure and function of the human renal proximal tubule. In the current study we have used an established model cell line for human epithelial cells of the proximal tubule (HK2) to demonstrate that Ketamine evokes early changes in expression of proteins central to the adherens junction complex. Furthermore we use AFM single-cell force spectroscopy to assess if these changes functionally uncouple cells of the proximal tubule ahead of any overt loss in epithelial cell function. Our data suggests that Ketamine (24–48 hrs) produces gross changes in cell morphology and cytoskeletal architecture towards a fibrotic phenotype. These physical changes matched the concentration-dependent (0.1–1 mg/mL) cytotoxic effect of Ketamine and reflect a loss in expression of the key adherens junction proteins epithelial (E)- and neural (N)-cadherin and β-catenin. Down-regulation of protein expression does not involve the pro-fibrotic cytokine TGFβ, nor is it regulated by the usual increase in expression of Slug or Snail, the transcriptional regulators for E-cadherin. However, the loss in E-cadherin can be partially rescued pharmacologically by blocking p38 MAPK using SB203580. These data provide compelling evidence that Ketamine alters epithelial cell-to-cell adhesion and cell-coupling in the proximal kidney via a non-classical pro-fibrotic mechanism and the data provides the first indication that this illicit substance can have major implications on renal function. Understanding Ketamine-induced renal pathology may identify targets for future therapeutic intervention
Current-Voltage Characteristics of Weyl Semimetal Semiconducting Devices, Veselago Lenses and Hyperbolic Dirac Phase
The current-voltage characteristics of a new range of devices built around
Weyl semimetals has been predicted using the Landauer formalism. The potential
step and barrier have been reconsidered for a three-dimensional Weyl
semimetals, with analogies to the two-dimensional material graphene and to
optics. With the use of our results we also show how a Veselago lens can be
made from Weyl semimetals, e.g. from NbAs and NbP. Such a lens may have many
practical applications and can be used as a probing tip in a scanning tunneling
microscope (STM). The ballistic character of Weyl fermion transport inside the
semimetal tip, combined with the ideal focusing of the Weyl fermions (by
Veselago lens) on the surface of the tip may create a very narrow electron beam
from the tip to the surface of the studied material. With a Weyl semimetal
probing tip the resolution of the present STMs can be improved significantly,
and one may image not only individual atoms but also individual electron
orbitals or chemical bonding and therewith to resolve the long-term issue of
chemical and hydrogen bond formation. We show that applying a pressure to the
Weyl semimental, having no centre of spacial inversion one may model matter at
extreme conditions such as those arising in the vicinity of a black hole. As
the materials Cd3As2 and Na3Bi show an asymmetry in their Dirac cones, a
scaling factor was used to model this asymmetry. The scaling factor created
additional regions of no propagation and condensed the appearance of
resonances. We argue that under an external pressure there may arise a
topological phase transition in Weyl semimetals, where the electron transport
changes character and becomes anisotropic. There a hyperbolic Dirac phases
occurs where there is a strong light absorption and photo-current generation
Effects of stellar collisions on star cluster evolution and core collapse
We systematically study the effects of collisions on the overall dynamical
evolution of dense star clusters using Monte Carlo simulations over many
relaxation times. We derive many observable properties of these clusters,
including their core radii and the radial distribution of collision products.
We also study different aspects of collisions in a cluster taking into account
the shorter lifetimes of more massive stars, which has not been studied in
detail before. Depending on the lifetimes of the significantly more massive
collision products, observable properties of the cluster can be modified
qualitatively; for example, even without binaries, core collapse can sometimes
be avoided simply because of stellar collisions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Submitted for the IAU symposium, 246 in Capri,
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Trapped radiation experiment
Trapped radiation detector on Mariner IV space probe measurement of outer Van Allen belt - feasibility of detecting trapped radiation at Mar
Protocol: optimised electrophyiological analysis of intact guard cells from arabidopsis
Genetic resources available for Arabidopsis thaliana make this species particularly attractive as a model for molecular genetic studies of guard cell homeostasis, transport and signalling, but this facility is not matched by accessible tools for quantitative analysis of transport in the intact cell. We have developed a reliable set of procedures for voltage clamp analysis of guard cells from Arabidopsis leaves. These procedures greatly simplify electrophysiological recordings, extending the duration of measurements and scope for analysis of the predominant K+ and anion channels of intact stomatal guard cells to that achieved previously in work with Vicia and tobacco guard cells
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