260 research outputs found
Implementing a Web-based Application for Analysis and Evaluation of Heart Rate Variability Using Serverless Architecture
This article is devoted to the development of a web-based application for analysis and evaluation of Heart Rate Variability (HRV) using serverless architecture. Advancements in information algorithms and computing technologies have been playing an increasingly important role in cardiology, as continuous monitoring of patients’ health can be vital to their well-being. One physiological parameter that can be easily measured and that can provide indispensable insight into the state of the human body is the HRV. HRV analysis can assess not only the physiological state of the body but also provide the capability to monitor its dynamics and predict future diseases. As the research in the sphere of cardiology is constantly growing there is a multitude of new ways to assess the physiological state of patients and provide an early indicator to pathological conditions. Therefore, there is a need to bring these advances to a growing number of end-users (health-care professionals and patients) in the shortest possible time. To address this problem, this study proposes the development of a web-based application for analysis and evaluation of HRV by applying linear and nonlinear mathematical methods. The application is created using a serverless architectural approach, which allows for fast development time, as there is no need to manage server infrastructure, and for automatic scaling to dynamically match the number of requests. The developer can instead focus on implementing the logic for the HRV analysis algorithms and deliver new improvements at a faster rate. The proposed web application can be accessed by any device that is connected to the Internet and is optimized to handle both an intermittent and a consistent volume of requests. The algorithms implemented in the web application have been validated by examining two groups of subjects (young adults and older adults) using linear and non-linear models. The obtained results from the two groups can be compared with a set of reference values (only for the linear methods) and an assessment can be made whether each studied parameter is within the normal range or outside it (its value is too high or too low). To aid the assessment for HRV, the results obtained by the linear and nonlinear analysis are presented using a set of both graphs and tables
Novel Field-Induced Phases in HoMnO3 at Low Temperatures
The novel field-induced re-entrant phase in multiferroic hexagonal HoMnO3 is
investigated to lower temperatures by dc magnetization, ac susceptibility, and
specific heat measurements at various magnetic fields. Two new phases have been
unambiguously identified below the Neel transition temperature, TN=76 K, for
magnetic fields up to 50 kOe. The existence of an intermediate phase between
the P[6]_3[c]m and P[6]_3c[m] magnetic structures (previously predicted from
dielectric measurements) was confirmed and the magnetic properties of this
phase have been investigated. At low temperatures (T<5 K) a dome shaped phase
boundary characterized by a magnetization jump and a narrow heat capacity peak
was detected between the magnetic fields of 5 kOe and 18 kOe. The transition
across this phase boundary is of first order and the magnetization and entropy
jumps obey the magnetic analogue of the Clausius-Clapeyron relation. Four of
the five low-temperature phases coexist at a tetracritical point at 2 K and 18
kOe. The complex magnetic phase diagram so derived provides an informative
basis for unraveling the underlying driving forces for the occurrence of the
various phases and the coupling between the different orders.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Fingerprints of Inelastic Transport at the Surface of the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3: Role of Electron-Phonon Coupling
We report on electric-field and temperature dependent transport measurements
in exfoliated thin crystals of BiSe topological insulator. At low
temperatures ( K) and when the chemical potential lies inside the bulk
gap, the crystal resistivity is strongly temperature dependent, reflecting
inelastic scattering due to the thermal activation of optical phonons. A linear
increase of the current with voltage is obtained up to a threshold value at
which current saturation takes place. We show that the activated behavior, the
voltage threshold and the saturation current can all be quantitatively
explained by considering a single optical phonon mode with energy meV. This phonon mode strongly interacts with the surface states of
the material and represents the dominant source of scattering at the surface at
high electric fields.Comment: Supplementary Material at:
http://journals.aps.org/prl/supplemental/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.086601/TIPhonon_SM.pd
A Field-Induced Re-Entrant Novel Phase and A Ferroelectric-Magnetic Order Coupling in HoMnO3
A re-entrant novel phase has been observed in the hexagonal ferroelectric
HoMnO3 in the presence of magnetic fields, in the temperature ranges defined by
the plateau of the dielectric constant anomaly. The dielectric plateau evolves
with fields from a narrow sharp dielectric peak at the Mn-spin rotation
transition at 32.8 K in zero magnetic field. Such a field-induced dielectric
plateau anomaly appears both in the temperature sweep at a constant field and
in the field sweep at a constant temperature without detectable hysteresis.
This is attributed to the indirect coupling between the ferroelectric and
antiferromagnetic orders, arising from an antiferromagnetic domain wall effect,
where the magnetic order parameter of the Mn subsystem has to change sign
across the ferroelectric domain wall in the compound, that influences the
ferroelectric domains via a local magnetostrictive effect
Short-Range B-site Ordering in Inverse Spinel Ferrite NiFe2O4
The Raman spectra of single crystals of NiFe2O4 were studied in various
scattering configurations in close comparison with the corresponding spectra of
Ni0.7Zn0.3Fe2O4 and Fe3O4. The number of experimentally observed Raman modes
exceeds significantly that expected for a normal spinel structure and the
polarization properties of most of the Raman lines provide evidence for a
microscopic symmetry lower than that given by the Fd-3m space group. We argue
that the experimental results can be explained by considering the short range
1:1 ordering of Ni2+ and Fe3+ at the B-sites of inverse spinel structure, most
probably of tetragonal P4_122/P4_322 symmetry.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 6 table
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