164 research outputs found
Estimation for an additive growth curve model with orthogonal design matrices
An additive growth curve model with orthogonal design matrices is proposed in
which observations may have different profile forms. The proposed model allows
us to fit data and then estimate parameters in a more parsimonious way than the
traditional growth curve model. Two-stage generalized least-squares estimators
for the regression coefficients are derived where a quadratic estimator for the
covariance of observations is taken as the first-stage estimator. Consistency,
asymptotic normality and asymptotic independence of these estimators are
investigated. Simulation studies and a numerical example are given to
illustrate the efficiency and parsimony of the proposed model for model
specifications in the sense of minimizing Akaike's information criterion (AIC).Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.3150/10-BEJ315 the Bernoulli
(http://isi.cbs.nl/bernoulli/) by the International Statistical
Institute/Bernoulli Society (http://isi.cbs.nl/BS/bshome.htm
Deflection in higher dimensional spacetime and asymptotically non-flat spacetimes
Using a perturbative technique, in this work we study the deflection of null
and timelike signals in the extended Einstein-Maxwell spacetime, the
Born-Infeld gravity and the charged Ellis-Bronnikov (CEB) spacetime in the weak
field limit. The deflection angles are found to take a (quasi-)series form of
the impact parameter, and automatically takes into account the finite distance
effect of the source and observer. The method is also applied to find the
deflections in CEB spacetime with arbitrary dimension. It's shown that to the
leading non-trivial order, the deflection in some -dimensional spacetimes is
of the order . We then extended the method to
spacetimes that are asymptotically non-flat and studied the deflection in a
nonlinear electrodynamical scalar theory. The deflection angle in such
asymptotically non-flat spacetimes at the trivial order is found to be not
anymore. In all these cases, the perturbative deflection angles are shown
to agree with numerical results extremely well. The effects of some nontrivial
spacetime parameters as well as the signal velocity on the deflection angles
are analyzed.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures; title modified; to match published version in
Class.Quant.Gra
FPGA Implementation of a Fixed Latency Scheme in a Signal Packet Router for the Upgrade of ATLAS Forward Muon Trigger Electronics
We propose a new fixed latency scheme for Xilinx gigabit transceivers that
will be used in the upgrade of the ATLAS forward muon spectrometer at the Large
Hadron Collider. The fixed latency scheme is implemented in a 4.8 Gbps link
between a frontend data serializer ASIC and a packet router. To achieve fixed
latency, we use IO delay and dedicated carry in resources in a Xilinx FPGA,
while minimally relying on the embedded features of the FPGA transceivers. The
scheme is protocol independent and can be adapted to FPGA from other vendors
with similar resources. This paper presents a detailed implementation of the
fixed latency scheme, as well as simulations of the real environment in the
ATLAS forward muon region.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted by IEEE - Transactions on Nuclear
Scienc
Bacterial Communities in the Womb During Healthy Pregnancy
The idea that healthy uterine cavity is sterile is challenged nowadays. It is still debatable whether the bacteria present in the uterine cavity during pregnancy are residents or invaders. To reveal microbiome composition and its characteristics in the womb of pregnant women, 41 decidual tissue samples and 64 amniotic fluid samples were taken from pregnant Chinese women. DNA extraction was followed by pyrosequencing of the hypervariable V4 region of the 16S rDNA gene to characterize womb microbiome. Both types of samples had low diversity microbiome with Enterobacteriaceae being the dominant phylotypes at family level. To characterize the nature of colonization during pregnancy, the presence of endogenous biomass was confirmed by cultivation. Surprisingly, all of the 50 amniotic fluid samples studied were culture-negative, whereas 379 out of 1,832 placenta samples were culture-positive. Our results suggested that womb contained microbiome with low diversity. Culture-based investigation of amniotic fluid and placenta samples confirmed the presence of cultivable microorganisms in the placenta but not in amniotic fluid. Thus it suggests that bacterial colonization does occur during healthy pregnancy
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