6,436 research outputs found
Vacuum-isolation vessel and method for measurement of thermal noise in microphones
The vacuum isolation vessel and method in accordance with the present invention are used to accurately measure thermal noise in microphones. The apparatus and method could be used in a microphone calibration facility or any facility used for testing microphones. Thermal noise is measured to determine the minimum detectable sound pressure by the microphone. Conventional isolation apparatus and methods have been unable to provide an acoustically quiet and substantially vibration free environment for accurately measuring thermal noise. In the present invention, an isolation vessel assembly comprises a vacuum sealed outer vessel, a vacuum sealed inner vessel, and an interior suspension assembly coupled between the outer and inner vessels for suspending the inner vessel within the outer vessel. A noise measurement system records thermal noise data from the isolation vessel assembly. A vacuum system creates a vacuum between an internal surface of the outer vessel and an external surface of the inner vessel. The present invention thus provides an acoustically quiet environment due to the vacuum created between the inner and outer vessels and a substantially vibration free environment due to the suspension assembly suspending the inner vessel within the outer vessel. The thermal noise in the microphone, effectively isolated according to the invention, can be accurately measured
A review of the use of information and communication technologies for dietary assessment
Presently used dietary-assessment methods often present difficulties for researchers and respondents, and misreporting errors are common. Methods using information and communication technologies (ICT) may improve quality and accuracy. The present paper presents a systematic literature review describing studies applying ICT to dietary assessment. Eligible papers published between January 1995 and February 2008 were classified into four assessment categories: computerised assessment; personal digital assistants (PDA); digital photography; smart cards. Computerised assessments comprise frequency questionnaires, 24 h recalls (24HR) and diet history assessments. Self-administered computerised assessments, which can include audio support, may reduce literacy problems, be translated and are useful for younger age groups, but less so for those unfamiliar with computers. Self-administered 24HR utilising computers yielded comparable results as standard methods, but needed supervision if used in children. Computer-assisted interviewer-administered recall results were similar to conventional recalls, and reduced inter-interviewer variability. PDA showed some advantages but did not reduce underreporting. Mobile phone meal photos did not improve PDA accuracy. Digital photography for assessing individual food intake in dining facilities was accurate for adults and children, although validity was slightly higher with direct visual observation. Smart cards in dining facilities were useful for measuring food choice but not total dietary intake. In conclusion, computerised assessments and PDA are promising, and could improve dietary assessment quality in some vulnerable groups and decrease researcher workload. Both still need comprehensive evaluation for micronutrient intake assessment. Further work is necessary for improving ICT tools in established and new methods and for their rigorous evaluatio
Does Massive MIMO Fail in Ricean Channels?
Massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) is now making its way to the
standardization exercise of future 5G networks. Yet, there are still
fundamental questions pertaining to the robustness of massive MIMO against
physically detrimental propagation conditions. On these grounds, we identify
scenarios under which massive MIMO can potentially fail in Ricean channels, and
characterize them physically, as well as, mathematically. Our analysis extends
and generalizes a stream of recent papers on this topic and articulates
emphatically that such harmful scenarios in Ricean fading conditions are
unlikely and can be compensated using any standard scheduling scheme. This
implies that massive MIMO is intrinsically effective at combating interuser
interference and, if needed, can avail of the base-station scheduler for
further robustness.Comment: IEEE Wireless Communications Letters, accepte
Control and tuning of a suspended Fabry-Perot cavity using digitally-enhanced heterodyne interferometry
We present the first demonstration of real-time closed-loop control and
deterministic tuning of an independently suspended Fabry-Perot optical cavity
using digitally-enhanced heterodyne interferometry, realising a peak
sensitivity of 10 pm over the 10-1000 Hz frequency
band. The methods presented are readily extensible to multiple coupled
cavities. As such, we anticipate that refinements of this technique may find
application in future interferometric gravitational-wave detectors
The Impacts of Edmodo on Students’ Performance in ESP Classrooms
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of Edmodo, as a supplementary learning platform in ESP classrooms, on students’ performance as measured by standardized tests. To achieve this purpose, a classroom observational design was employed to collect data using the tests and questionnaire. The sample in this study was the first year students of 2016-2017 who enrolled in a course of ESP. A total of 97 students participated in the study. The finding indicates a positive and strong impact of Edmodo on students’ academic achievement. The more the students engage in their learning via Edmodo, the better the score they have. The study verifies that the traditional learning environment supported by Edmodo enabled students to learn and practice more which increase their academic achievement. Further, the study also confirms that Edmodo can be used as an effective supplementary platform in ESP classrooms. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of Edmodo, as a supplementary learning platform in ESP classrooms, on students’ performance as measured by standardized tests. To achieve this purpose, a classroom observational design was employed to collect data using the tests and questionnaire. The sample in this study was the first year students of 2016-2017 who enrolled in a course of ESP. A total of 97 students participated in the study. The finding indicates a positive and strong impact of Edmodo on students’ academic achievement. The more the students engage in their learning via Edmodo, the better the score they have. The study verifies that the traditional learning environment supported by Edmodo enable students to learn and practice more which increase their academic achievement. Further, the study also confirms that Edmodo can be used as an effective supplementary platform in ESP classrooms.
Keywords: EDMODO, supplementary learning platform, students’ performanc
Robust Machine Learning-Based Correction on Automatic Segmentation of the Cerebellum and Brainstem.
Automated segmentation is a useful method for studying large brain structures such as the cerebellum and brainstem. However, automated segmentation may lead to inaccuracy and/or undesirable boundary. The goal of the present study was to investigate whether SegAdapter, a machine learning-based method, is useful for automatically correcting large segmentation errors and disagreement in anatomical definition. We further assessed the robustness of the method in handling size of training set, differences in head coil usage, and amount of brain atrophy. High resolution T1-weighted images were acquired from 30 healthy controls scanned with either an 8-channel or 32-channel head coil. Ten patients, who suffered from brain atrophy because of fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome, were scanned using the 32-channel head coil. The initial segmentations of the cerebellum and brainstem were generated automatically using Freesurfer. Subsequently, Freesurfer's segmentations were both manually corrected to serve as the gold standard and automatically corrected by SegAdapter. Using only 5 scans in the training set, spatial overlap with manual segmentation in Dice coefficient improved significantly from 0.956 (for Freesurfer segmentation) to 0.978 (for SegAdapter-corrected segmentation) for the cerebellum and from 0.821 to 0.954 for the brainstem. Reducing the training set size to 2 scans only decreased the Dice coefficient ≤0.002 for the cerebellum and ≤ 0.005 for the brainstem compared to the use of training set size of 5 scans in corrective learning. The method was also robust in handling differences between the training set and the test set in head coil usage and the amount of brain atrophy, which reduced spatial overlap only by <0.01. These results suggest that the combination of automated segmentation and corrective learning provides a valuable method for accurate and efficient segmentation of the cerebellum and brainstem, particularly in large-scale neuroimaging studies, and potentially for segmenting other neural regions as well
Lateral spin-orbit interaction and spin polarization in quantum point contacts
We study ballistic transport through semiconductor quantum point contact
systems under different confinement geometries and applied fields. In
particular, we investigate how the {\em lateral} spin-orbit coupling,
introduced by asymmetric lateral confinement potentials, affects the spin
polarization of the current. We find that even in the absence of external
magnetic fields, a variable {\em non-zero spin polarization} can be obtained by
controlling the asymmetric shape of the confinement potential. These results
suggest a new approach to produce spin polarized electron sources and we study
the dependence of this phenomenon on structural parameters and applied magnetic
fields. This asymmetry-induced polarization provides also a plausible
explanation of our recent observations of a 0.5 conductance plateau (in units
of ) in quantum point contacts made on InAs quantum-well structures.
Although our estimates of the required spin-orbit interaction strength in these
systems do not support this explanation, they likely play a role in the effects
enhanced by electron-electron interactions.Comment: Summited to PRB (2009
Continuous theory of active matter systems with metric-free interactions
We derive a hydrodynamic description of metric-free active matter: starting
from self-propelled particles aligning with neighbors defined by "topological"
rules, not metric zones, -a situation advocated recently to be relevant for
bird flocks, fish schools, and crowds- we use a kinetic approach to obtain
well-controlled nonlinear field equations. We show that the density-independent
collision rate per particle characteristic of topological interactions
suppresses the linear instability of the homogeneous ordered phase and the
nonlinear density segregation generically present near threshold in metric
models, in agreement with microscopic simulations.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter
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