48 research outputs found

    Contrainte de correspondance Document-Document pour la RI. Application Ă  la Divergence de Kullback-Leibler

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    National audienceThis paper defines a new axiomatic constraint, namely DDMC (Document-DocumentMatching Constraint), for information retrieval that depicts the behavior of a matching if a corpusdocument is used as a query. The DDMC constraint is not verified by a classical IR modellike the Language Model based on Jelinek-Mercer smoothing and Kulback-Leibler Divergence.We introduce a modification of this model to validate DDMC. An experiment conducted on twocorpus show that the modification of the reference model does not degrade significantly theresults, and validates the DDMC.Cet article dĂ©crit une contrainte d'un modĂšle de recherche d'information dĂ©crivant les comportement attendu d'un systĂšme si un document du corpus est posĂ© en requĂȘte, la contrainte DDMC (Document-Document Matching Constraint). Cette contrainte n'Ă©tant pas vĂ©rifiĂ©e par un modĂšle classique de recherche d'information (modĂšle de langue basĂ© sur un calcul de nĂ©ga-tive de Divergence de Kullback-Leibler avec lissage de Jelinek-Mercer), nous prĂ©sentons une modification de ce dernier modĂšle qui permet de vĂ©rifier DDMC. Une derniĂšre partie prĂ©sente des expĂ©rimentations menĂ©es afin de vĂ©rifier que notre modification n'impacte pas la qualitĂ© des rĂ©ponses d'un systĂšme, tout en garantissant la vĂ©rification de DDMC

    Genetic components of litter size variability in sheep

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    Classical selection for increasing prolificacy in sheep leads to a concomitant increase in its variability, even though the objective of the breeder is to maximise the frequency of an intermediate litter size rather than the frequency of high litter sizes. For instance, in the Lacaune sheep breed raised in semi-intensive conditions, ewes lambing twins represent the economic optimum. Data for this breed, obtained from the national recording scheme, were analysed. Variance components were estimated in an infinitesimal model involving genes controlling the mean level as well as its environmental variability. Large heritability was found for the mean prolificacy, but a high potential for increasing the percentage of twins at lambing while reducing the environmental variability of prolificacy is also suspected. Quantification of the response to such a canalising selection was achieved

    Elektrokemijska detekcija mikročestica gela u morskoj vodi

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    We present the first atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of the native marine gel network and a new type of electrochemical signals of individual gel microparticles in seawater. Gel microparticles in seawater are selectively detected through specific amperometric signals using a dropping mercury electrode (DME) as a sensor. We have demonstrated that organic microparticles naturally present in Northern Adriatic seawater can be detected as single particles and sorted at the DME/seawater interface according to their hydrophobicity and supramolecular organization.Prvi puta prikazana je nanostruktura morskog gela oslikana mikroskopijom atomskih sila i nova vrsta elektrokemijskih signala mikročestica gela u morskoj vodi. Čestice gela u morskoj vodi selektivno se detektiraju kao specifični amperometrijski signali primjenom ĆŸivine kapajuće elektrode kao senzora. Svaki signal je rezultat sudara mikročestice gela s rastućom povrĆĄinom ĆŸivine elektrode. Primjenom amperometrijske tehnike i ĆŸivine kapajuće elektrode kao senzora organske mikročestice detektiraju se na dinamičkoj međupovrĆĄini ĆŸivina elektroda/morska voda temeljem svojstava hidrofobnosti i supramolekulske organizacije kao povrĆĄinski-aktivne i gel čestice

    Detection of quantitative trait loci for carcass composition traits in pigs

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    A quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of carcass composition data from a three-generation experimental cross between Meishan (MS) and Large White (LW) pig breeds is presented. A total of 488 F2 males issued from six F1 boars and 23 F1 sows, the progeny of six LW boars and six MS sows, were slaughtered at approximately 80 kg live weight and were submitted to a standardised cutting of the carcass. Fifteen traits, i.e. dressing percentage, loin, ham, shoulder, belly, backfat, leaf fat, feet and head weights, two backfat thickness and one muscle depth measurements, ham + loin and back + leaf fat percentages and estimated carcass lean content were analysed. Animals were typed for a total of 137 markers covering the entire porcine genome. Analyses were performed using a line-cross (LC) regression method where founder lines were assumed to be fixed for different QTL alleles and a half/full sib (HFS) maximum likelihood method where allele substitution effects were estimated within each half-/full-sib family. Additional analyses were performed to search for multiple linked QTL and imprinting effects. Significant gene effects were evidenced for both leanness and fatness traits in the telomeric regions of SSC 1q and SSC 2p, on SSC 4, SSC 7 and SSC X. Additional significant QTL were identified for ham weight on SSC 5, for head weight on SSC 1 and SSC 7, for feet weight on SSC 7 and for dressing percentage on SSC X. LW alleles were associated with a higher lean content and a lower fat content of the carcass, except for the fatness trait on SSC 7. Suggestive evidence of linked QTL on SSC 7 and of imprinting effects on SSC 6, SSC 7, SSC 9 and SSC 17 were also obtained

    Detection of quantitative trait loci for growth and fatness in pigs

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    A quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of growth and fatness data from a three-generation experimental cross between Meishan (MS) and Large White (LW) pig breeds is presented. Six boars and 23 F1 sows, the progeny of six LW boars and six MS sows, produced 530 F2 males and 573 F2 females. Nine growth traits, i.e. body weight at birth and at 3, 10, 13, 17 and 22 weeks of age, average daily gain from birth to 3 weeks, from 3 to 10 weeks and from 10 to 22 weeks of age, as well as backfat thickness at 13, 17 and 22 weeks of age and at 40 and 60 kg live weight were analysed. Animals were typed for a total of 137 markers covering the entire porcine genome. Analyses were performed using two interval mapping methods: a line-cross (LC) regression method where founder lines were assumed to be fixed for different QTL alleles and a half-/full-sib (HFS) maximum likelihood method where allele substitution effects were estimated within each half-/full-sib family. Both methods revealed highly significant gene effects for growth on chromosomes 1, 4 and 7 and for backfat thickness on chromosomes 1, 4, 5, 7 and X, and significant gene effects on chromosome 6 for growth and backfat thickness. Suggestive QTLs were also revealed by both methods on chromosomes 2 and 3 for growth and 2 for backfat thickness. Significant gene effects were detected for growth on chromosomes 11, 13, 14, 16 and 18 and for backfat thickness on chromosome 8, 10, 13 and 14. LW alleles were associated with high growth rate and low backfat thickness, except for those of chromosome 7 and to a lesser extent early-growth alleles on chromosomes 1 and 2 and backfat thickness alleles on chromosome 6
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