53,515 research outputs found

    P-matrices and signed digraphs

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    We associate a signed digraph with a list of matrices whose dimensions permit them to be multiplied, and whose product is square. Cycles in this graph have a parity, that is, they are either even (termed e-cycles) or odd (termed o-cycles). The absence of e-cycles in the graph is shown to imply that the matrix product is a P0-matrix, i.e., all of its principal minors are nonnegative. Conversely, the presence of an e-cycle is shown to imply that there exists a list of matrices associated with the graph whose product fails to be a P0-matrix. The results generalise a number of previous results relating P- and P0-matrices to graphs

    Representing climate and extreme weather events in integrated assessment models: A review of existing methods and options for development

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    The lack of information about future changes in extreme weather is a major constraint of Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) of climate change. The generation of descriptions of future climate in current IAMs is assessed.We also review recent work on scenario development methods for weather extremes, focusing on those issues which are most relevant to the needs of IAMs. Finally, some options for implementing scenarios of weather extremes in IAMs are considered

    Cerebellar Morphometry and Cognition in the Context of Chronic Alcohol Consumption and Cigarette Smoking.

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    BackgroundCerebellar atrophy (especially involving the superior-anterior cerebellar vermis) is among the most salient and clinically significant effects of chronic hazardous alcohol consumption on brain structure. Smaller cerebellar volumes are also associated with chronic cigarette smoking. The present study investigated effects of both chronic alcohol consumption and cigarette smoking on cerebellar structure and its relation to performance on select cognitive/behavioral tasks.MethodsUsing T1-weighted Magnetic Resonance Images (MRIs), the Cerebellar Analysis Tool Kit segmented the cerebellum into bilateral hemispheres and 3 vermis parcels from 4 participant groups: smoking (s) and nonsmoking (ns) abstinent alcohol-dependent treatment seekers (ALC) and controls (CON) (i.e., sALC, nsALC, sCON, and nsCON). Cognitive and behavioral data were also obtained.ResultsWe found detrimental effects of chronic drinking on all cerebellar structural measures in ALC participants, with largest reductions seen in vermis areas. Furthermore, both smoking groups had smaller volumes of cerebellar hemispheres but not vermis areas compared to their nonsmoking counterparts. In exploratory analyses, smaller cerebellar volumes were related to lower measures of intelligence. In sCON, but not sALC, greater smoking severity was related to smaller cerebellar volume and smaller superior-anterior vermis area. In sALC, greater abstinence duration was associated with larger cerebellar and superior-anterior vermis areas, suggesting some recovery with abstinence.ConclusionsOur results show that both smoking and alcohol status are associated with smaller cerebellar structural measurements, with vermal areas more vulnerable to chronic alcohol consumption and less affected by chronic smoking. These morphometric cerebellar deficits were also associated with lower intelligence and related to duration of abstinence in sALC only

    Mutual information and conditional mean prediction error

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    This version: arXiv:1407.7165v1. Available from arXiv.org via the link in this recordMutual information is fundamentally important for measuring statistical dependence between variables and for quantifying information transfer by signaling and communication mechanisms. It can, however, be challenging to evaluate for physical models of such mechanisms and to estimate reliably from data. Furthermore, its relationship to better known statistical procedures is still poorly understood. Here we explore new connections between mutual information and regression-based dependence measures, ν1\nu^{-1}, that utilise the determinant of the second-moment matrix of the conditional mean prediction error. We examine convergence properties as ν0\nu\rightarrow0 and establish sharp lower bounds on mutual information and capacity of the form log(ν1/2)\mathrm{log}(\nu^{-1/2}). The bounds are tighter than lower bounds based on the Pearson correlation and ones derived using average mean square-error rate distortion arguments. Furthermore, their estimation is feasible using techniques from nonparametric regression. As an illustration we provide bootstrap confidence intervals for the lower bounds which, through use of a composite estimator, substantially improve upon inference about mutual information based on kk-nearest neighbour estimators alone

    The magnitude and colour of noise in genetic negative feedback systems

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    This is the final version of the article. Available from OUP via the DOI in this record.The comparative ability of transcriptional and small RNA-mediated negative feedback to control fluctuations or 'noise' in gene expression remains unexplored. Both autoregulatory mechanisms usually suppress the average (mean) of the protein level and its variability across cells. The variance of the number of proteins per molecule of mean expression is also typically reduced compared with the unregulated system, but is almost never below the value of one. This relative variance often substantially exceeds a recently obtained, theoretical lower limit for biochemical feedback systems. Adding the transcriptional or small RNA-mediated control has different effects. Transcriptional autorepression robustly reduces both the relative variance and persistence (lifetime) of fluctuations. Both benefits combine to reduce noise in downstream gene expression. Autorepression via small RNA can achieve more extreme noise reduction and typically has less effect on the mean expression level. However, it is often more costly to implement and is more sensitive to rate parameters. Theoretical lower limits on the relative variance are known to decrease slowly as a measure of the cost per molecule of mean expression increases. However, the proportional increase in cost to achieve substantial noise suppression can be different away from the optimal frontier-for transcriptional autorepression, it is frequently negligible.Funding for open access charge: MRC-EPSRC funded Fellowship in Bioinformatics (to C.G.B.)

    Mutual information and conditional mean prediction error

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    This version: arXiv:1407.7165v1. Available from arXiv.org via the link in this recordMutual information is fundamentally important for measuring statistical dependence between variables and for quantifying information transfer by signaling and communication mechanisms. It can, however, be challenging to evaluate for physical models of such mechanisms and to estimate reliably from data. Furthermore, its relationship to better known statistical procedures is still poorly understood. Here we explore new connections between mutual information and regression-based dependence measures, ν1\nu^{-1}, that utilise the determinant of the second-moment matrix of the conditional mean prediction error. We examine convergence properties as ν0\nu\rightarrow0 and establish sharp lower bounds on mutual information and capacity of the form log(ν1/2)\mathrm{log}(\nu^{-1/2}). The bounds are tighter than lower bounds based on the Pearson correlation and ones derived using average mean square-error rate distortion arguments. Furthermore, their estimation is feasible using techniques from nonparametric regression. As an illustration we provide bootstrap confidence intervals for the lower bounds which, through use of a composite estimator, substantially improve upon inference about mutual information based on kk-nearest neighbour estimators alone

    Ex vivo perfusion, arteriography, and autotransplantation procedures for kidney salvage

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    Three kidneys with arterial lesions that would have been difficult or impossible to repair by standard vascular reconstruction were removed, perfused by the Belzer technique, and returned to host after partial or complete autotransplantation. The fact that kidneys can be studied, dissected, repaired, and constantly salvaged with this technique should have important implications in several aspects of urologic operations

    The Therapeutic Potential of Epigenome-Modifying Drugs in Cardiometabolic Disease

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    Collapse of linefish stocks between cape hangklip and Walker bay, South Africa

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    The state of the linefishery between Cape Hangklip and Walker Bay on the Cape south coast, South Africa, is assessed. The coast was subdivided into 20 “beats” to provide high spatial resolution on catch and effort of theshore-based recreational fishery. An observer recorded the number of anglers in each fishery sector, and their catch, during shore patrols over a two-year period. Catch-and-effort data for the commercial boat-based fishery were obtained from an historical database at the turn of last century and from the extant National Marine Linefish System database. Catch per unit effort (cpue) of shore-anglers was low and many of the species caught earlier in the century have disappeared from catches. Compared to the early records, contemporary commercial linefish cpue had dropped by approximately 80%, despite a greater fishing capacity. It is argued that most targeted stocks have been overexploited (notwithstanding indications of environmental change) and many are severely depleted. Poor management of the fishery, including a lack of control of commercial effort and inadequate enforcement, contributed to overexploitation

    Assentication: User Deauthentication and Lunchtime Attack Mitigation with Seated Posture Biometric

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    Biometric techniques are often used as an extra security factor in authenticating human users. Numerous biometrics have been proposed and evaluated, each with its own set of benefits and pitfalls. Static biometrics (such as fingerprints) are geared for discrete operation, to identify users, which typically involves some user burden. Meanwhile, behavioral biometrics (such as keystroke dynamics) are well suited for continuous, and sometimes more unobtrusive, operation. One important application domain for biometrics is deauthentication, a means of quickly detecting absence of a previously authenticated user and immediately terminating that user's active secure sessions. Deauthentication is crucial for mitigating so called Lunchtime Attacks, whereby an insider adversary takes over (before any inactivity timeout kicks in) authenticated state of a careless user who walks away from her computer. Motivated primarily by the need for an unobtrusive and continuous biometric to support effective deauthentication, we introduce PoPa, a new hybrid biometric based on a human user's seated posture pattern. PoPa captures a unique combination of physiological and behavioral traits. We describe a low cost fully functioning prototype that involves an office chair instrumented with 16 tiny pressure sensors. We also explore (via user experiments) how PoPa can be used in a typical workplace to provide continuous authentication (and deauthentication) of users. We experimentally assess viability of PoPa in terms of uniqueness by collecting and evaluating posture patterns of a cohort of users. Results show that PoPa exhibits very low false positive, and even lower false negative, rates. In particular, users can be identified with, on average, 91.0% accuracy. Finally, we compare pros and cons of PoPa with those of several prominent biometric based deauthentication techniques
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