3,380 research outputs found
Abundances of Disk Planetary Nebulae in M31 and the Radial Oxygen Gradient
We have obtained spectra of 16 planetary nebulae in the disk of M31 and
determined the abundances of He, N, O, Ne, S and Ar. Here we present the median
abundances and compare them with previous M31 PN disk measurements and with PNe
in the Milky Way. We also derive the radial oxygen gradient in M31, which is
shallower than that in the Milky Way, even accounting for M31's larger disk
scale length.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, to appear in the proceedings of IAU
Symposium No. 283, Planetary Nebulae: An Eye to the Futur
Fingerprints of biocomplexity: Taxon‐specific growth of phytoplankton in relation to environmental factors
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110012/1/lno2004494part21446.pd
The effects of changes in thyroid function on testis 32P uptake and the response to gonadotropin in the chick
Propylthiouracil (PTU)-induced hypothroidism has been shown to produce a significant increase in the uptake of radiophosphorus (32P) by the testes of young chicks. Continued investigation of this effect demonstrated that thyroidectomy of young birds resulted in elevations in testis 32P uptake comparable to those observed following the administration of PTU. It would thus appear that the increased levels of 32P in the testes of PTU-treated chicks resulted from the hypothyroid condition itself rather than from some other pharmacological action of PTU. A time course study indicated that there were no differences in the turnover rates of labeled testicular phosphorus in hypo-, hyper-, and euthyroid birds which might account for the above observations.Sensitivity of the chick testis to pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG) was unaffected by changes in thyroid activity, and the combined effects of PMSG and hypothyroidism on the testis were seemingly additive. Alternative possibilities to explain the apparent indirect effect of subnormal thyroid activity on the testis were therefore discussed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/21803/1/0000203.pd
On Hilberg's Law and Its Links with Guiraud's Law
Hilberg (1990) supposed that finite-order excess entropy of a random human
text is proportional to the square root of the text length. Assuming that
Hilberg's hypothesis is true, we derive Guiraud's law, which states that the
number of word types in a text is greater than proportional to the square root
of the text length. Our derivation is based on some mathematical conjecture in
coding theory and on several experiments suggesting that words can be defined
approximately as the nonterminals of the shortest context-free grammar for the
text. Such operational definition of words can be applied even to texts
deprived of spaces, which do not allow for Mandelbrot's ``intermittent
silence'' explanation of Zipf's and Guiraud's laws. In contrast to
Mandelbrot's, our model assumes some probabilistic long-memory effects in human
narration and might be capable of explaining Menzerath's law.Comment: To appear in Journal of Quantitative Linguistic
Open-Ended Evolutionary Robotics: an Information Theoretic Approach
This paper is concerned with designing self-driven fitness functions for
Embedded Evolutionary Robotics. The proposed approach considers the entropy of
the sensori-motor stream generated by the robot controller. This entropy is
computed using unsupervised learning; its maximization, achieved by an on-board
evolutionary algorithm, implements a "curiosity instinct", favouring
controllers visiting many diverse sensori-motor states (sms). Further, the set
of sms discovered by an individual can be transmitted to its offspring, making
a cultural evolution mode possible. Cumulative entropy (computed from ancestors
and current individual visits to the sms) defines another self-driven fitness;
its optimization implements a "discovery instinct", as it favours controllers
visiting new or rare sensori-motor states. Empirical results on the benchmark
problems proposed by Lehman and Stanley (2008) comparatively demonstrate the
merits of the approach
Assessing architectural evolution: A case study
This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2011 SpringerThis paper proposes to use a historical perspective on generic laws, principles,
and guidelines, like Lehman’s software evolution laws and Martin’s design principles, in order to achieve a multi-faceted process and structural assessment of a system’s architectural evolution. We present a simple structural model with associated historical metrics and
visualizations that could form part of an architect’s dashboard. We perform such an assessment for the Eclipse SDK, as a case study of a large, complex, and long-lived system for which sustained effective architectural evolution is paramount. The twofold aim of checking generic principles on a well-know system is, on the one hand,
to see whether there are certain lessons that could be learned for best practice of architectural evolution, and on the other hand to get more insights about the applicability of such principles. We find that while the Eclipse SDK does follow several of the laws and principles, there are some deviations, and we discuss areas of architectural improvement and limitations of the assessment approach
Evaluating Greek equity funds using data envelopment analysis
This study assesses the relative performance of Greek equity funds employing a non-parametric method, specifically Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA). Using an original sample of cost and operational attributes we explore the e¤ect of each variable on funds' operational efficiency for an oligopolistic and bank-dominated fund industry. Our results have significant implications for the investors' fund selection process since we are able to identify potential sources of inefficiencies for the funds. The most striking result is that the percentage of assets under management affects performance negatively, a conclusion which may be related to the structure of the domestic stock market. Furthermore, we provide evidence against the notion of funds' mean-variance efficiency
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