74 research outputs found
Species richness on islands in time: variation in ephemeral pond crustacean communities in relation to habitat duration and size
Intimate partner violence and help-seeking – a cross-sectional study of women in Sweden
A systematic review of non-hormonal treatments of vasomotor symptoms in climacteric and cancer patients
Innovating Career Counseling by Promoting Social Justice (Advocacy) and Decent Work for All: Helping People Make Social Contributions and Heal Themselves
Measuring Preference for Non-standard Work: Relationships with EPL Motivations, Efficacies, Perceived Employability, and Career Adaptability
Structural damage detection using quantile regression
Structural health monitoring is an important emerging engineering discipline in the UK and the world. Structural failure without warning is recognised as a significant hazard in the service life of a structure. Thus there is a need to provide a clear guidance to determine the cutoff line for operation, repair and maintenance. A quantile regression approach has been proposed for structural damage detection using vibration data (accelerations). This method is based on a sequence of quantile autoregressive time series models and the differences between two distributions associated with the residual series of the undamaged and damaged structures are studied at different quantile levels. This new approach is based on the information on damages at any quantile levels, not just at a mean level that is commonly used in the literature. In addition, it does not depend on the distribution of the error term. This is a very useful feature as in practice it can be very difficult to assume a proper distribution for the error term of the model. The performance of the developed method is investigated via extensive simulation studies to detect single-damage and multi-damage scenarios with input and output measurement noise. The proposed method is further substantiated experimentally using an eight-storey steel plane frame model subjected to shaker excitation. Both numerical and experimental results have shown that the proposed method gives reasonably accurate damage identification, including both damage existence and location
Branchinecta oterosanvicentei n. sp. (Branchiopoda: Anostraca), a new fairy shrimp from the Chihuahuan desert, with a proposal for the conservation of the Branchinectidae of Mexico
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