2,224 research outputs found
CE17003
The second annual Irish Beam trawl Ecosystem (IBES) took place from 7-16th March 2017 on RV Celtic Explorer in the western Celtic sea. The main objective of the survey is to connect the Irish Anglerfish and Megrim Survey (IAMS) to the UK beam trawl surveys in the Celtic Sea, English Channel and Irish Sea, with the purpose of providing a swept-area biomass estimate for anglerfish (Lophius piscatorius and L. budegassa) in area VII. Secondary objectives are to collect data on the distribution and relative abundance of commercially exploited species as well as invertebrates and by-catch species, particularly vulnerable and indicator species. The survey also collects maturity and other biological information for commercial fish species in the western Celtic Sea. The IBES survey uses the same gear, methods and stratification as the CEFAS Q1 South-west Ecosystem Survey (Q1SWECOS). The IBES survey is formally coordinated by the ICES Working Group on Beam Trawl Survey
Pleading Civil Rights Complaints: Wheat and Chaff
The purpose of this Article is two-fold. First, there will be a brief survey of the opinions that have required specificity in pleading civil rights complaints. Courts ought to speak for themselves before being criticized. The second part will evaluate the reasons federal courts provide for this requirement
The social and political implications behind the popular rebellion in Peru in 1895
Thesis (B.A.) in Liberal Arts and Sciences -- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1988.Bibliography: leaves 68-73.Microfiche of typescript. [Urbana, Ill.]: Photographic Services, University of Illinois, U of I Library, [1988]. 2 microfiches (78 frames): negative
Regional assessment of the wheatbelt of Western Australia : Central Wheatbelt
The Australian Heritage Commission (AHC) is responsible for identifying and providing advice to the Commonwealth Government about Australia's National Estate. The Register of the National Estate (RNE) is the comprehensive list of places throughout Australia that are deemed to be of National Estate significance as defined in the Australian Heritage Commission Act 1975 (Commonwealth). The objectives of this study were: to assess and determine places of natural National Estate significance in the central region of Western Australian Wheatbelt and, as part of this assessment, to document the assessment and consultation methods used as well as establish and maintain a relational database, capable of linking to a GIS, of places evaluated
Energy Budget of Cosmological First-order Phase Transitions
The study of the hydrodynamics of bubble growth in first-order phase
transitions is very relevant for electroweak baryogenesis, as the baryon
asymmetry depends sensitively on the bubble wall velocity, and also for
predicting the size of the gravity wave signal resulting from bubble
collisions, which depends on both the bubble wall velocity and the plasma fluid
velocity. We perform such study in different bubble expansion regimes, namely
deflagrations, detonations, hybrids (steady states) and runaway solutions
(accelerating wall), without relying on a specific particle physics model. We
compute the efficiency of the transfer of vacuum energy to the bubble wall and
the plasma in all regimes. We clarify the condition determining the runaway
regime and stress that in most models of strong first-order phase transitions
this will modify expectations for the gravity wave signal. Indeed, in this
case, most of the kinetic energy is concentrated in the wall and almost no
turbulent fluid motions are expected since the surrounding fluid is kept mostly
at rest.Comment: 36 pages, 14 figure
The Baryon asymmetry in the Standard Model with a low cut-off
We study the generation of the baryon asymmetry in a variant of the standard
model, where the Higgs field is stabilized by a dimension-six interaction.
Analyzing the one-loop potential, we find a strong first order electroweak
phase transition for Higgs masses up to at least 170 GeV. Dimension-six
operators induce also new sources of CP violation. We compute the baryon
asymmetry in the WKB approximation. Novel source terms in the transport
equations enhance the generated baryon asymmetry. For a wide range of
parameters the model predicts a baryon asymmetry close to the observed value.Comment: 22 pages, latex, 6 figure
Investigating deep neural structures and their interpretability in the domain of voice conversion
Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) are machine learning networks based around creating synthetic data. Voice Conversion (VC) is a subset of voice translation that involves translating the paralinguistic features of a source speaker to a target speaker while preserving the linguistic information. The aim of non-parallel conditional GANs for VC is to translate an acoustic speech feature sequence from one domain to another without the use of paired data. In the study reported here, we investigated the interpretability of state-of-the-art implementations of non-parallel GANs in the domain of VC. We show that the learned representations in the repeating layers of a particular GAN architecture remain close to their original random initialised parameters, demonstrating that it is the number of repeating layers that is more responsible for the quality of the output. We also analysed the learned representations of a model trained on one particular dataset when used during transfer learning on another dataset. This also showed high levels of similarity in the repeating layers. Together, these results provide new insight into how the learned representations of deep generative networks change during learning and the importance of the number of layers, which would help build better GAN-based speech conversion models
CE19004
The 2019 Irish Anglerfish and Megrim Survey (IAMS) took place from 1-25th March (area 7bcjk) and 16-25th April 2019 (area 6a) on RV Celtic Explorer.
The main objective of the survey is to obtain biomass and abundance indices for anglerfish (Lophius piscatorius and L. budegassa) and megrim (Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis and L. boscii) in areas 6a (south of 58°N) and 7 (west of 8°W).
Secondary objectives are to collect data on the distribution, relative abundance and biology of other commercially exploited species.
This year, additional sampling took place in deep water (up to 1,500m) in order to monitor the recovery of exploited deep-water species following the decline of the deep-water fisheries in Irish waters.
The IAMS survey is coordinated with the Scottish Anglerfish and Megrim Survey (SIAMISS) and uses the same gear and fishing practices
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