25 research outputs found
AI in Production: Video Analysis and Machine Learning for Expanded Live Events Coverage
In common with many industries, TV and video production is likely to be
transformed by Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML), with
software and algorithms assisting production tasks that, conventionally,
could only be carried out by people. Expanded coverage of a diverse
range of live events is particularly constrained by the relative scarcity of
skilled people, and is a strong use case for AI-based automation.
This paper describes recent BBC research into potential production
benefits of AI algorithms, using visual analysis and other techniques.
Rigging small, static UHD cameras, we have enabled a one-person crew
to crop UHD footage in multiple ways and cut between the resulting shots,
effectively creating multi-camera HD coverage of events that cannot
accommodate a camera crew. By working with programme makers to
develop simple deterministic rules and, increasingly, training systems
using advanced video analysis, we are developing a system of algorithms
to automatically frame, sequence and select shots, and construct
acceptable multicamera coverage of previously untelevised types of event
AFLP analysis reveals high genetic diversity but low population structure in Coccidioides posadasiiisolates from Mexico and Argentina
BACKGROUND: Coccidioides immitis and C. posadasii cause coccidioidomycosis, a disease that is endemic to North and South America, but for Central America, the incidence of coccidioidomycosis has not been clearly established. Several studies suggest genetic variability in these fungi; however, little definitive information has been discovered about the variability of Coccidioides fungi in Mexico (MX) and Argentina (AR). Thus, the goals for this work were to study 32 Coccidioides spp. isolates from MX and AR, identify the species of these Coccidioides spp. isolates, analyse their phenotypic variability, examine their genetic variability and investigate the Coccidioides reproductive system and its level of genetic differentiation. METHODS: Coccidioides spp. isolates from MX and AR were taxonomically identified by phylogenetic inference analysis using partial sequences of the Ag2/PRA gene and their phenotypic characteristics analysed. The genetic variability, reproductive system and level of differentiation were estimated using AFLP markers. The level of genetic variability was assessed measuring the percentage of polymorphic loci, number of effective allele, expected heterocygosity and Index of Association (I(A)). The degree of genetic differentiation was determined by AMOVA. Genetic similarities among isolates were estimated using Jaccard index. The UPGMA was used to contsruct the corresponding dendrogram. Finally, a network of haplotypes was built to evaluate the genealogical relationships among AFLP haplotypes. RESULTS: All isolates of Coccidioides spp. from MX and AR were identified as C. posadasii. No phenotypic variability was observed among the C. posadasii isolates from MX and AR. Analyses of genetic diversity and population structure were conducted using AFLP markers. Different estimators of genetic variability indicated that the C. posadasii isolates from MX and AR had high genetic variability. Furthermore, AMOVA, dendrogram and haplotype network showed a small genetic differentiation among the C. posadasii populations analysed from MX and AR. Additionally, the I(A) calculated for the isolates suggested that the species has a recombinant reproductive system. CONCLUSIONS: No phenotypic variability was observed among the C. posadasii isolates from MX and AR. The high genetic variability observed in the isolates from MX and AR and the small genetic differentiation observed among the C. posadasii isolates analysed, suggest that this species could be distributed as a single genetic population in Latin America
On the algebraic classification of perfect fluid solutions of Einstein's equation
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D35402/81 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
Genotypes of individuals analysed
Allelic profile for each of the 699 individuals analysed for 10 microsatellites. The format follows the three digits coding used by the program Genepop, with #000000 indicating missing data
Unique mitochondrial haplotypes
FASTA file containing the sequences of unique mitochondrial DN
Geographical coordinates of the sites sampled
Location and sample size of each site. Most of the sites in England are private properties
Passing Propinquities in the Multicultural City: the everyday encounters of bus passengering
This paper examines how intercultural relations are continuously developed, destroyed, and remade in the practice of everyday bus travel. Through an ethnographic study of one bus route across Birmingham, UK, the paper explores the formation of relational practices on the move and the bodily orientations, public codes of conduct, material cultures, habits and affects through which they are formed. In particular, this paper gives specific attention to the tacit obligations of public travel and how such obligations both produce and sustain tolerance of others across a journey, to further reveal the multifaceted nature and workings of multicultural intimacies on the ground. In so doing, the paper responds to recent calls to politically revalorise public mobility spaces as key sites of encounter and identity formation, to position the bus as a crucial site of everyday multiculture through which wider processes of differentiation and exclusion are experienced and further understood