2,578 research outputs found
Blueshifted galaxies in the Virgo Cluster
We examine a sample of 65 galaxies in the Virgo cluster with negative radial
velocities relative to the Local Group. Some features of this sample are
pointed out. All of these objects are positioned compactly within a virial zone
of radius 6{\deg} in the cluster, but their centroid is displaced relative to
the dynamic center of the cluster, M87, by 1.1{\deg} to the northwest. The
dwarf galaxies in this sample are clumped on a scale of ~10' (50 kpc). The
observed asymmetry in the distribution of the blueshifted galaxies may be
caused by infall of a group of galaxies around M86 onto the main body of the
cluster. We offer another attempt to explain this phenomenon, assuming a mutual
tangential velocity of ~300 km/s between the Local Group and the Virgo cluster
owing to their being repelled from the local cosmological void.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Published in Astrophysics, Vol. 53, No.
1, pp. 32-41, 201
Special Values of Generalized Polylogarithms
We study values of generalized polylogarithms at various points and
relationships among them. Polylogarithms of small weight at the points 1/2 and
-1 are completely investigated. We formulate a conjecture about the structure
of the linear space generated by values of generalized polylogarithms.Comment: 32 page
Case-control study of sudden infant death syndrome in Lithuania, 1997–2000
BACKGROUND: To identify risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome relevant in Lithuania. METHODS: A nationwide case-control study surveying parents of 35 infants who died from sudden infant death syndrome during the period of 1997–2000 and parents of 145 control infants matched with SIDS infants for date of birth and for region of birth was carried out. RESULTS: Deaths incidence was greater in the warm period (60%) vs. cold period (40%). Prone and side sleeping positions both carried no increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome compared with supine because of a rare prone sleeping (4.1% of controls vs. 0% of dead infants) and more prevalent side than supine sleeping (84.8% of controls vs. 94.3% of dead infants) in the controls as well as the cases. Bed sharing for the whole night as a risk factor for sudden infant death syndrome has not been confirmed, either, as bed sharing was common only for the controls (13.8% of controls vs. 0% of dead infants). Routine sleeping environment factors such as heavy wrapping (≥4 togs) of an infant (odds ratio 8.49; 95% confidence interval 2.38 to 30.32), sleeping in a bassinet (4.22; 1.16 to 15.38) and maternal factors such as maternal education ≤12 years (4.48; 1.34 to 14.94), unplanned pregnancy (5.22; 1.49 to 18.18) and ≥2 previous live births (3.90; 1.00 to 15.10) were significantly associated with sudden infant death syndrome on multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION: The results of this first population-based case-control study have shed some light on the epidemiology of the syndrome in Lithuania. Although the mortality of sudden infant death syndrome in Lithuania is not high, it might be lowered moreover by public informing about sudden infant death syndrome and related risk factors. Special attention must be paid to mothers with low education on potentially modifiable risk factors such as routine heavy wrapping of an infant during sleep, routine sleeping in a bassinet and unplanned pregnancy
An Intelligent Safety System for Human-Centered Semi-Autonomous Vehicles
Nowadays, automobile manufacturers make efforts to develop ways to make cars
fully safe. Monitoring driver's actions by computer vision techniques to detect
driving mistakes in real-time and then planning for autonomous driving to avoid
vehicle collisions is one of the most important issues that has been
investigated in the machine vision and Intelligent Transportation Systems
(ITS). The main goal of this study is to prevent accidents caused by fatigue,
drowsiness, and driver distraction. To avoid these incidents, this paper
proposes an integrated safety system that continuously monitors the driver's
attention and vehicle surroundings, and finally decides whether the actual
steering control status is safe or not. For this purpose, we equipped an
ordinary car called FARAZ with a vision system consisting of four mounted
cameras along with a universal car tool for communicating with surrounding
factory-installed sensors and other car systems, and sending commands to
actuators. The proposed system leverages a scene understanding pipeline using
deep convolutional encoder-decoder networks and a driver state detection
pipeline. We have been identifying and assessing domestic capabilities for the
development of technologies specifically of the ordinary vehicles in order to
manufacture smart cars and eke providing an intelligent system to increase
safety and to assist the driver in various conditions/situations.Comment: 15 pages and 5 figures, Submitted to the international conference on
Contemporary issues in Data Science (CiDaS 2019), Learn more about this
project at https://iasbs.ac.ir/~ansari/fara
The illusion of competency versus the desirability of expertise: Seeking a common standard for support professions in sport
In this paper we examine and challenge the competency-based models which currently dominate accreditation and development systems in sport support disciplines, largely the sciences and coaching. Through consideration of exemplar shortcomings, the limitations of competency-based systems are presented as failing to cater for the complexity of decision making and the need for proactive experimentation essential to effective practice. To provide a better fit with the challenges of the various disciplines in their work with performers, an alternative approach is presented which focuses on the promotion, evaluation and elaboration of expertise. Such an approach resonates with important characteristics of professions, whilst also providing for the essential ‘shades of grey’ inherent in work with human participants. Key differences between the approaches are considered through exemplars of evaluation processes. The expertise-focused method, although inherently more complex, is seen as offering a less ambiguous and more positive route, both through more accurate representation of essential professional competence and through facilitation of future growth in proficiency and evolution of expertise in practice. Examples from the literature are also presented, offering further support for the practicalities of this approach
Predictors of antiretroviral therapy initiation in eThekwini (Durban), South Africa: Findings from a prospective cohort study
Despite expanded antiretroviral therapy (ART) eligibility in South Africa, many people diagnosed with HIV do not initiate ART promptly, yet understanding of the reasons is limited. Using data from an 8-month prospective cohort interview study of women and men newly-diagnosed with HIV in three public-sector primary care clinics in the eThekwini (Durban) region, South Africa, 2010–2014, we examined if theoretically-relevant social-structural, social-cognitive, psychosocial, and health status indicators were associated with time to ART initiation. Of 459 diagnosed, 350 returned to the clinic for their CD4+ test results (linkage); 153 (33.3%) were ART-eligible according to treatment criteria at the time; 115 (75.2% of those eligible) initiated ART (median = 12.86 weeks [95% CI: 9.75, 15.97] after linkage). In adjusted Cox proportional hazard models, internalized stigma was associated with a 65% decrease in the rate of ART initiation (Adjusted hazard ratio [AHR] 0.35, 95% CI: 0.19–0.80) during the period less than four weeks after linkage to care, but not four or more weeks after linkage to care, suggesting that stigma-reduction interventions implemented shortly after diagnosis may accelerate ART uptake. As reported by others, older age was associated with more rapid ART initiation (AHR for 1-year age increase: 1.04, 95% CI: 1.01–1.07) and higher CD4+ cell count (≥300μL vs. <150μL) was associated with a lower rate of initiation (AHR 0.38, 95% CI: 0.19–0.80). Several other factors that were assessed prior to diagnosis, including stronger belief in traditional medicine, higher endorsement of stigma toward people living with HIV, food insecurity, and higher psychological distress, were found to be in the expected direction of association with ART initiation, but confidence intervals were wide and could not exclude a null finding
What we observe is biased by what other people tell us: beliefs about the reliability of gaze behavior modulate attentional orienting to gaze cues
For effective social interactions with other people, information about the physical environment must be integrated with information about the interaction partner. In order to achieve this, processing of social information is guided by two components: a bottom-up mechanism reflexively triggered by stimulus-related information in the social scene and a top-down mechanism activated by task-related context information. In the present study, we investigated whether these components interact during attentional orienting to gaze direction. In particular, we examined whether the spatial specificity of gaze cueing is modulated by expectations about the reliability of gaze behavior. Expectations were either induced by instruction or could be derived from experience with displayed gaze behavior. Spatially specific cueing effects were observed with highly predictive gaze cues, but also when participants merely believed that actually non-predictive cues were highly predictive. Conversely, cueing effects for the whole gazed-at hemifield were observed with non-predictive gaze cues, and spatially specific cueing effects were attenuated when actually predictive gaze cues were believed to be non-predictive. This pattern indicates that (i) information about cue predictivity gained from sampling gaze behavior across social episodes can be incorporated in the attentional orienting to social cues, and that (ii) beliefs about gaze behavior modulate attentional orienting to gaze direction even when they contradict information available from social episodes
On Poincare and logarithmic Sobolev inequalities for a class of singular Gibbs measures
This note, mostly expository, is devoted to Poincar{\'e} and log-Sobolev
inequalities for a class of Boltzmann-Gibbs measures with singular interaction.
Such measures allow to model one-dimensional particles with confinement and
singular pair interaction. The functional inequalities come from convexity. We
prove and characterize optimality in the case of quadratic confinement via a
factorization of the measure. This optimality phenomenon holds for all beta
Hermite ensembles including the Gaussian unitary ensemble, a famous exactly
solvable model of random matrix theory. We further explore exact solvability by
reviewing the relation to Dyson-Ornstein-Uhlenbeck diffusion dynamics admitting
the Hermite-Lassalle orthogonal polynomials as a complete set of
eigenfunctions. We also discuss the consequence of the log-Sobolev inequality
in terms of concentration of measure for Lipschitz functions such as maxima and
linear statistics.Comment: Minor improvements. To appear in Geometric Aspects of Functional
Analysis -- Israel Seminar (GAFA) 2017-2019", Lecture Notes in Mathematics
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