184 research outputs found
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A robotic framework for semantic concept learning.
This report describes work carried out under a Sandia National Laboratories Excellence in Engineering Fellowship in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Our research group (at UIUC) is developing a intelligent robot, and attempting to teach it language. While there are many aspects of this research, for the purposes of this report the most important are the following ideas. Language is primarily based on semantics, not syntax. To truly learn meaning, the language engine must be part of an embodied intelligent system, one capable of using associative learning to form concepts from the perception of experiences in the world, and further capable of manipulating those concepts symbolically. In the work described here, we explore the use of hidden Markov models (HMMs) in this capacity. HMMs are capable of automatically learning and extracting the underlying structure of continuous-valued inputs and representing that structure in the states of the model. These states can then be treated as symbolic representations of the inputs. We describe a composite model consisting of a cascade of HMMs that can be embedded in a small mobile robot and used to learn correlations among sensory inputs to create symbolic concepts. These symbols can then be manipulated linguistically and used for decision making. This is the project final report for the University Collaboration LDRD project, 'A Robotic Framework for Semantic Concept Learning'
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Distributed micro-releases of bioterror pathogens : threat characterizations and epidemiology from uncertain patient observables.
Terrorist attacks using an aerosolized pathogen preparation have gained credibility as a national security concern since the anthrax attacks of 2001. The ability to characterize the parameters of such attacks, i.e., to estimate the number of people infected, the time of infection, the average dose received, and the rate of disease spread in contemporary American society (for contagious diseases), is important when planning a medical response. For non-contagious diseases, we address the characterization problem by formulating a Bayesian inverse problem predicated on a short time-series of diagnosed patients exhibiting symptoms. To keep the approach relevant for response planning, we limit ourselves to 3.5 days of data. In computational tests performed for anthrax, we usually find these observation windows sufficient, especially if the outbreak model employed in the inverse problem is accurate. For contagious diseases, we formulated a Bayesian inversion technique to infer both pathogenic transmissibility and the social network from outbreak observations, ensuring that the two determinants of spreading are identified separately. We tested this technique on data collected from a 1967 smallpox epidemic in Abakaliki, Nigeria. We inferred, probabilistically, different transmissibilities in the structured Abakaliki population, the social network, and the chain of transmission. Finally, we developed an individual-based epidemic model to realistically simulate the spread of a rare (or eradicated) disease in a modern society. This model incorporates the mixing patterns observed in an (American) urban setting and accepts, as model input, pathogenic transmissibilities estimated from historical outbreaks that may have occurred in socio-economic environments with little resemblance to contemporary society. Techniques were also developed to simulate disease spread on static and sampled network reductions of the dynamic social networks originally in the individual-based model, yielding faster, though approximate, network-based epidemic models. These reduced-order models are useful in scenario analysis for medical response planning, as well as in computationally intensive inverse problems
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Scalable assembly of patterned ordered functional micelle arrays : final LDRD report.
Charmed meson decay constants in three-flavor lattice QCD
We present the first lattice QCD calculation with realistic sea quark content
of the D^+ meson decay constant f_{D^+}. We use the MILC Collaboration's
publicly available ensembles of lattice gauge fields, which have a quark sea
with two flavors (up and down) much lighter than a third (strange). We obtain
f_{D^+} = 201 +/- 3 +/- 17 MeV, where the errors are statistical and a
combination of systematic errors. We also obtain f_{D_s} = 249 +/- 3 +/- 16 MeV
for the D_s meson.Comment: note added on recent CLEO measurement; PRL versio
Towards a Stable Numerical Evolution of Strongly Gravitating Systems in General Relativity: The Conformal Treatments
We study the stability of three-dimensional numerical evolutions of the
Einstein equations, comparing the standard ADM formulation to variations on a
family of formulations that separate out the conformal and traceless parts of
the system. We develop an implementation of the conformal-traceless (CT)
approach that has improved stability properties in evolving weak and strong
gravitational fields, and for both vacuum and spacetimes with active coupling
to matter sources. Cases studied include weak and strong gravitational wave
packets, black holes, boson stars and neutron stars. We show under what
conditions the CT approach gives better results in 3D numerical evolutions
compared to the ADM formulation. In particular, we show that our implementation
of the CT approach gives more long term stable evolutions than ADM in all the
cases studied, but is less accurate in the short term for the range of
resolutions used in our 3D simulations.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures. Small changes in the text, and a change in the
list of authors. One new reference adde
Exercise training prevents the deterioration in the arterial baroreflex control of sympathetic nerve activity in chronic heart failure patients
Arterial baroreflex control of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (ABRMSNA) is impaired in chronic systolic heart failure (CHF). the purpose of the study was to test the hypothesis that exercise training would improve the gain and reduce the time delay of ABRMSNA in CHF patients. Twenty-six CHF patients, New York Heart Association Functional Class II-III, EF <= 40%, peak (V) over dot O-2 <= 20 ml.kg(-1).min(-1) were divided into two groups: untrained (UT, n = 13, 57 +/- 3 years) and exercise trained (ET, n = 13, 49 +/- 3 years). Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) was directly recorded by microneurography technique. Arterial pressure was measured on a beat-to-beat basis. Time series of MSNA and systolic arterial pressure were analyzed by autoregressive spectral analysis. the gain and time delay of ABRMSNA was obtained by bivariate autoregressive analysis. Exercise training was performed on a cycle ergometer at moderate intensity, three 60-min sessions per week for 16 wk. Baseline MSNA, gain and time delay of ABRMSNA, and low frequency of MSNA (LFMSNA) to high-frequency ratio (HFMSNA) (LFMSNA/HFMSNA) were similar between groups. ET significantly decreased MSNA. MSNA was unchanged in the UT patients. the gain and time delay of ABRMSNA were unchanged in the ET patients. in contrast, the gain of ABRMSNA was significantly reduced [3.5 +/- 0.7 vs. 1.8 +/- 0.2, arbitrary units (au)/mmHg, P = 0.04] and the time delay of ABRMSNA was significantly increased (4.6 +/- 0.8 vs. 7.9 +/- 1.0 s, P = 0.05) in the UT patients. LFMSNA-to-HFMSNA ratio tended to be lower in the ET patients (P < 0.08). Exercise training prevents the deterioration of ABRMSNA in CHF patients.Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Fundacao ZerbiniCoordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)National Heart, Lung, and Blood InstituteUniv São Paulo, Sch Med, Heart Inst InCor, São Paulo, BrazilUniv São Paulo, Sch Phys Educ & Sport, São Paulo, BrazilUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Med, Div Cardiol, São Paulo, BrazilUniv Calif Los Angeles, David Geffen Sch Med, Dept Med Cardiol & Physiol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USAUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Med, Div Cardiol, São Paulo, BrazilFAPESP: 2010/50048-1FAPESP: 140643/2009-5FAPESP: 2013/07651-7CNPq: 142366/2009-9CNPq: 301867/2010-0CNPq: 308068/2011-4FAPESP: 2013/15651-7National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: RO1-HL084525Web of Scienc
Document de diagnosi : eix 3 : Una ciutat que promou la pràctica de l'esport, un esport que construeix socialment la ciutat
És base per Conferència d’Exploració Estratègica : conclusions provisionals [http://hdl.handle.net/11703/111234
In-Plane Deformation Mechanics for Highly Stretchable Electronics
Scissoring in thick bars suppresses buckling behavior in serpentine traces that have thicknesses greater than their widths, as detailed in a systematic set of analytical and experimental studies. Scissoring in thick copper traces enables elastic stretchability as large as approximate to 350%, corresponding to a sixfold improvement over previously reported values for thin geometries (approximate to 60%).</p
Document de diagnosi : eix 1 : Barcelona, ciutat de l'esport entre les ciutats del món
És base per Conferència d’Exploració Estratègica : conclusions provisionals [http://hdl.handle.net/11703/111234
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