1,017 research outputs found
Bayesian Analysis of Simple Random Densities
A tractable nonparametric prior over densities is introduced which is closed
under sampling and exhibits proper posterior asymptotics.Comment: 19 pages; 6 figure
Predictive analysis of microarray data
Microarray gene expression data are analyzed by means of a Bayesian
nonparametric model, with emphasis on prediction of future observables,
yielding a method for selection of differentially expressed genes and a
classifier
Networking Opportunities with the Agro-Food Systems from the Alentejo Region in Portugal
PACMAn aims to stimulate the innovative and dynamic capacities of the agrofood sector in Mediterranean regions so to make them able to promote their attractiveness and
competitiveness at transnational level. This is achieved by:
Developing innovation in skills and abilities of the main stakeholders involved in agrofood sector to enhance their growth potentials through networking activities;
Contributing to making agrofood clusters more attractive and competitive on international markets by stimulating their innovation, modernisation, diversification and adaptation to new issues and market trends;
Increasing of market-oriented production and commercial trade in order to enhance the
export performances;
Encouraging the strategic cooperation between economic development actors, science/
research poles and public authorities for new integrated approaches, tools, strategies and plans/policies generating the sustainable development of agrofood sector;
Fostering framework agreements among different stakeholders and public authorities;
Implementing innovative joint actions strengthening the international dimension of
Mediterranean agrofood clusters;
Ensuring the maximum information and dissemination on project activities to grant future outcomes, new initiatives, wide interest on innovation potentials. The Chapters of this book focus on Networking Opportunities with the Agro-Food Systems of different mediterranean regions namely, Murcia Region / Spain Crete / Greece Emilia-Romagna / Italy Valencian Community/ Spain Alentejo Region / Portugal Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur / France Cyprus Central Macedonia/ Greece. Chapter 10 is about Alentejo olive oil and wine agro-food systems
High performance liquid level monitoring system based on polymer fiber Bragg gratings embedded in silicone rubber diaphragm
Liquid-level sensing technologies have attracted great prominence, because such measurements are essential to industrial applications, such as fuel storage, flood warning and in the biochemical industry. Traditional liquid level sensors are based on electromechanical techniques; however they suffer from intrinsic safety concerns in explosive environments. In recent years, given that optical fiber sensors have lots of well-established advantages such as high accuracy, costeffectiveness, compact size, and ease of multiplexing, several optical fiber liquid level sensors have been investigated which are based on different operating principles such as side-polishing the cladding and a portion of core, using a spiral side-emitting optical fiber or using silica fiber gratings. The present work proposes a novel and highly sensitive liquid level sensor making use of polymer optical fiber Bragg gratings (POFBGs). The key elements of the system are a set of POFBGs embedded in silicone rubber diaphragms. This is a new development building on the idea of determining liquid level by measuring the pressure at the bottom of a liquid container, however it has a number of critical advantages. The system features several FBG-based pressure sensors as described above placed at different depths. Any sensor above the surface of the liquid will read the same ambient pressure. Sensors below the surface of the liquid will read pressures that increase linearly with depth. The position of the liquid surface can therefore be approximately identified as lying between the first sensor to read an above-ambient pressure and the next higher sensor. This level of precision would not in general be sufficient for most liquid level monitoring applications; however a much more precise determination of liquid level can be made by linear regression to the pressure readings from the sub-surface sensors. There are numerous advantages to this multi-sensor approach. First, the use of linear regression using multiple sensors is inherently more accurate than using a single pressure reading to estimate depth. Second, common mode temperature induced wavelength shifts in the individual sensors are automatically compensated. Thirdly, temperature induced changes in the sensor pressure sensitivity are also compensated. Fourthly, the approach provides the possibility to detect and compensate for malfunctioning sensors. Finally, the system is immune to changes in the density of the monitored fluid and even to changes in the effective force of gravity, as might be obtained in an aerospace application. The performance of an individual sensor was characterized and displays a sensitivity (54 pm/cm), enhanced by more than a factor of 2 when compared to a sensor head configuration based on a silica FBG published in the literature, resulting from the much lower elastic modulus of POF. Furthermore, the temperature/humidity behavior and measurement resolution were also studied in detail. The proposed configuration also displays a highly linear response, high resolution and good repeatability. The results suggest the new configuration can be a useful tool in many different applications, such as aircraft fuel monitoring, and biochemical and environmental sensing, where accuracy and stability are fundamental. © (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only
NMR conformational study of diamagnetic complexes of some triazatriacetate macrocycles
The conformational properties of the diamagnetic complexes formed by five triazatriacetic macrocyclic ligands with monovalent (alkaline) and divalent (alkaline-earth, Zn2+ and Cd2+) cations have been studied by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H NMR) in aqueous solution as a function of pH and temperature. These structurally related triazatriacetic ligands, 1,4,7-triazacyclononane-N,N',N''-triacetic acid (NOTA), 1,4,7-triazacyclodecane-N,N',N''-triacetic acid (DETA), 1,4,8-triazacycloundecane-N,N',N''-triacetic acid (UNTA), 1,5,9-triazacyclododecane-N,N',N''-triacetic acid (DOTRA), and 9,10-benzylidene-1,4,7-triazacyclotridecane-N,N',N''-triacetic acid, (BUNTA) have triazamacrocyclic rings with different sizes and flexibilities, bearing three pendant acetate arms. In the case of the alkaline-earth, Zn2+ and Cd2+ cations, only one complex form (1:1) has been detected for all the ligands studied. In most cases the metal ion is coordinated to all the ligand ring nitrogens and to all or some of the carboxylate groups of the pendant arms, except when a poor fit of the cations into the macrocyclic hole occurs, such as for the Ba2+ complexes of DETA, UNTA and DOTRA and the Ca2+ and Sr2+ complexes of BUNTA. The resonance patterns of the ring proton resonances, determined by the long lifetime of the metal-nitrogen bonds, indicate that the six-membered rings formed upon chelation are conformationally rigid and the five-membered rings are conformationally flexible. The multiplicity of the acetate proton resonances shows that the metal-oxygen bonds are long-lived or short lived depending whether the acetates are bound to nitrogens involved in two ring bridges of equal or unequal sizes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6TG5-3T829PD-1D/1/7651a74d4d83a8b051a5d0b9286244e
Molecular detection of EGFRvIII-positive cells in the peripheral blood of breast cancer patients
The aim of this study is to evaluate epidermal growth factor receptor variant III, EGFRvIII, a cancer specific mutant, as a possible marker for the diagnosis of breast cancer occult systemic disease. EGFRvIII mRNA was identified by an RT-nested PCR with a high sensitivity. In 102 women studied, the mutant was detected in the peripheral blood of 30% of 33 low risk, early stage patients, in 56% of 18 patients selected for neoadjuvant chemotherapy, in 63.6% of 11 patients with disseminated disease and 0% of 40 control women. In low risk, early stage patients, the presence of one or more tumour characteristics predicting recurrence such as the absence of oestrogen receptors and the presence of ERBB2 or histologic grades G2/G3 was significantly associated with EFGRvIII detection (p < 0.05). EGFRvIII mRNA has characteristics to be a useful marker for the diagnosis of occult systemic disease in breast cancer. Follow-up studies will evaluate its clinical value as a decision criterion for systemic therapy.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6T68-4KV2RH2-1/1/8d7f06700e09e0cb34c8a3861e1b0ba
Morphometric differences in the grasshopper Cornops aquaticum (Bruner, 1906) from South America and South Africa
The semi-aquatic grasshopper Cornops aquaticum is native to South America and inhabits lowlands from southern Mexico to Central Argentina and Uruguay. It is host-specific to aquatic plants in the genera Eichhornia and Pontederia. A quarantine population has existed in South Africa for 10 y, and it is planned to release it there as a biological control agent of water hyacinth, E. crassipes. Various studies of C. aquaticum are coordinated under HICWA (www.mpil-ploen.mpg.de). This paper compares the morphometry of the release population and 11 native populations in South America. We tested four hypotheses: 1) South African and South American populations of C. aquaticum differ in morphology; 2) the South African laboratory population is more similar to other isolated populations in South America than to nonisolated populations; 3) morphology differs across sites; 4) morphology differs with host plant. South African populations differed from continental nonisolated populations, but not from continental isolated ones. Isolated populations presented smaller individuals than nonisolated, but there was also a change in male morphology: while in nonisolated populations male wing length was similar to their body length, in isolated populations, male wings were smaller than body length. Females were larger when on Eicchornia azurea than on E. crassipes, while males presented larger wings than their body on E. azurea, and similar lengths on E. crassipes. These morphological changes may have resulted from phenotypic plasticity, selection for small size, or because of a loss of genetic diversity in quantitative traits.Fil: Adis, Joachim. Institute for Limnology; AlemaniaFil: Sperber, Carlos F. Universidade Federal de Viçosa; BrasilFil: Brede, Edward G. Institute for Limnology; AlemaniaFil: Capello, Soledad. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto Nacional de LimnologÃa. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Instituto Nacional de LimnologÃa; ArgentinaFil: Franceschini, Maria Celeste. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Nordeste. Centro de EcologÃa Aplicada del Litoral. Universidad Nacional del Nordeste. Centro de EcologÃa Aplicada del Litoral; ArgentinaFil: Hill, Martin. Rhodes University; SudáfricaFil: Lhano, Marcos G. Universidade Federal de Viçosa; BrasilFil: Marques, Marinê. A;z M.. Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso; BrasilFil: Nunes, Ana L.. Muséu Paraense EmÃlio Goeldi; BrasilFil: Polar, Perry. CAB International; Trinidad y Tobag
Omni-directional catadioptric vision for soccer robots
This paper describes the design of a multi-part mirror catadioptric vision system and its use for self-localization and
detection of relevant objects in soccer robots. The mirror and associated algorithms have been used in robots participating in
the middle-size league of RoboCup — The World Cup of Soccer Robots.This work was supported by grant PRAXIS XXI BM/21091/99 of the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technolog
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