4,238 research outputs found
Numerical computation of an Evans function for travelling waves
We demonstrate a geometrically inspired technique for computing Evans
functions for the linearised operators about travelling waves. Using the
examples of the F-KPP equation and a Keller-Segel model of bacterial
chemotaxis, we produce an Evans function which is computable through several
orders of magnitude in the spectral parameter and show how such a function can
naturally be extended into the continuous spectrum. In both examples, we use
this function to numerically verify the absence of eigenvalues in a large
region of the right half of the spectral plane. We also include a new proof of
spectral stability in the appropriate weighted space of travelling waves of
speed in the F-KPP equation.Comment: 37 pages, 11 figure
MissForest - nonparametric missing value imputation for mixed-type data
Modern data acquisition based on high-throughput technology is often facing
the problem of missing data. Algorithms commonly used in the analysis of such
large-scale data often depend on a complete set. Missing value imputation
offers a solution to this problem. However, the majority of available
imputation methods are restricted to one type of variable only: continuous or
categorical. For mixed-type data the different types are usually handled
separately. Therefore, these methods ignore possible relations between variable
types. We propose a nonparametric method which can cope with different types of
variables simultaneously. We compare several state of the art methods for the
imputation of missing values. We propose and evaluate an iterative imputation
method (missForest) based on a random forest. By averaging over many unpruned
classification or regression trees random forest intrinsically constitutes a
multiple imputation scheme. Using the built-in out-of-bag error estimates of
random forest we are able to estimate the imputation error without the need of
a test set. Evaluation is performed on multiple data sets coming from a diverse
selection of biological fields with artificially introduced missing values
ranging from 10% to 30%. We show that missForest can successfully handle
missing values, particularly in data sets including different types of
variables. In our comparative study missForest outperforms other methods of
imputation especially in data settings where complex interactions and nonlinear
relations are suspected. The out-of-bag imputation error estimates of
missForest prove to be adequate in all settings. Additionally, missForest
exhibits attractive computational efficiency and can cope with high-dimensional
data.Comment: Submitted to Oxford Journal's Bioinformatics on 3rd of May 201
Occupational lead neurotoxicity: Improvement in behavioural effects after reduction of exposure.
To evaluate critical exposure levels and the reversibility of lead neurotoxicity a group of lead exposed foundry workers and an unexposed reference population were followed up for three years. During this period, tests designed to monitor neurobehavioural function and lead dose were administered. Evaluations of 160 workers during the first year showed dose dependent decrements in mood, visual/motor performance, memory, and verbal concept formation. Subsequently, an improvement in the hygienic conditions at the plant resulted in striking reductions in blood lead concentrations over the following two years. Attendant improvement in indices of tension (20% reduction), anger (18%), depression (26%), fatigue (27%), and confusion (13%) was observed. Performance on neurobehavioural testing generally correlated best with integrated dose estimates derived from blood lead concentrations measured periodically over the study period; zinc protoporphyrin levels were less well correlated with function. This investigation confirms the importance of compliance with workplace standards designed to lower exposures to ensure that individual blood lead concentrations remain below 50 micrograms/dl
A novel approach to correcting -based mass-metallicity relations
Deriving oxygen abundances from the electron temperature (hereafter the
-method) is the gold-standard for extragalactic metallicity studies.
However, unresolved temperature fluctuations within individual HII regions and
across different HII regions throughout a galaxy can bias metallicity estimates
low, with a magnitude that depends on the underlying and typically unknown
temperature distribution. Using a toy model, we confirm that computing
-based metallicities using the temperature derived from the [O III]
4363/5007 or [O II] 7320,7330 / [O II]
3727 ratio ('ratio temperature'; ) results in an
underprediction of metallicity when temperature fluctuations are present. In
contrast, using the unobservable 'line temperatures' () that
provide the mean electron and ion density-weighted emissivity yield an accurate
metallicity estimate. To correct this bias in low-mass galaxies, we demonstrate
an example calibration of a relation between T_ratio and T_line based on a
high-resolution (4.5 pc) RAMSES-RTZ simulation of a dwarf galaxy that
self-consistently models the formation of multiple HII regions and ion
temperature distribution in a galactic context. Applying this correction to the
low-mass end of the mass-metallicity relation shifts its normalization up by
0.18 dex on average and flattens its slope from 0.87 to 0.58, highlighting the
need for future studies to account for, and correct, this bias.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Monitoring neurotoxins in industry: development of a neurobehavioral test battery
Huguet Françoise. 104 - Elémens (Les) ou premières instructions de la jeunesse. In: , . Les Livres pour l'Enfance et la Jeunesse de Gutenberg à Guizot. Les collections de la Bibliothèque de l'Institut National de Recherche Pédagogique. Paris : Institut national de recherche pédagogique, 1997. p. 57. (Bibliothèque de l'Histoire de l'Education, 16
Constitutional Convention
Billings Gazette special issue about the Montana Constitutional Convention and government information articles pertaining to the subject. Included is a list of 1972 delegates.https://digitalcommons.mtech.edu/crucible_materials/1007/thumbnail.jp
Volatile organic emissions from the distillation and pyrolysis of vegetation
International audienceLeaf and woody plant tissue (Pinus ponderosa, Eucalyptus saligna, Quercus gambelli, Saccharum officinarum and Oriza sativa) were heated from 30 to 300°C and volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions were identified and quantified. Major VOC emissions were mostly oxygenated and included acetic acid, furylaldehyde, acetol, pyrazine, terpenes, 2,3-butadione, phenol and methanol, as well as smaller emissions of furan, acetone, acetaldehyde, acetonitrile and benzaldehyde. Total VOC emissions from distillation and pyrolysis were on the order of 10 gC/kgC dry weight of vegetation, as much as 33% and 44% of CO2 emissions (gC(VOC)/gC(CO2)) measured during the same experiments, in air and nitrogen atmospheres, respectively. The emissions are similar in identity and quantity to those from smoldering combustion of woody tissue and of different character than those evolved during flaming combustion. VOC emissions from the distillation of pools and endothermic pyrolysis under low turbulence conditions may produce flammable concentrations near leaves and may facilitate the propagation of wildfires. VOC emissions from charcoal production are also related to distillation and pyrolysis; the emissions of the highly reactive VOCs from production are as large as the carbon monoxide emissions
Absence of the Rashba effect in undoped asymmetric quantum wells
To an electron moving in free space an electric field appears as a magnetic
field which interacts with and can reorient the electron spin. In semiconductor
quantum wells this spin-orbit interaction seems to offer the possibility of
gate-voltage control in spintronic devices but, as the electrons are subject to
both ion-core and macroscopic structural potentials, this over-simple picture
has lead to intense debate. For example, an externally applied field acting on
the envelope of the electron wavefunction determined by the macroscopic
potential, underestimates the experimentally observed spin-orbit field by many
orders of magnitude while the Ehrenfest theorem suggests that it should
actually be zero. Here we challenge, both experimentally and theoretically, the
widely held belief that any inversion asymmetry of the macroscopic potential,
not only electric field, will produce a significant spin-orbit field for
electrons. This conclusion has far-reaching consequences for the design of
spintronic devices while illuminating important fundamental physics.Comment: 7 pages, 5 fig
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