400 research outputs found

    A new species of \u3cem\u3eCatalinia\u3c/em\u3e Soleglad et al., 2017 (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae) from southern California, USA

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    Herein we describe a new species of the vaejovid scorpion genus Catalinia Soleglad, Ayrey, Graham & Fet, 2017. It was collected in a single locality of the northwestern foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains. It is most closely related to both Catalinia andreas (Gertsch & Soleglad, 1972) and C. minima (Kraepelin, 1911), but is clearly distinguished by tegumentary sculpture, morphometric ratios and pectinal tooth counts. The new species is described and illustrated in detail, with some ecological data included; moreover, a minor correction is introduced to the diagnosis of the genus

    A new island species of \u3cem\u3eCentruroides\u3c/em\u3e Marx, 1890 (Scorpiones: Buthidae) from the southwestern Caribbean

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    Herein we describe a new species of the Buthidae scorpion genus Centruroides Marx, 1890. It occurs at least in two small offshore islands of the southwestern Caribbean: Cozumel in Mexico and Guanaja in Honduras, based upon type specimens from the former and photographic evidence from the latter. It belongs in the gracilis species-group and is most closely related to both Centruroides gracilis (Latreille, 1805) and Centruroides nigrescens (Pocock, 1898)

    A new \u3cem\u3e“vorhiesi”\u3c/em\u3e group species of \u3cem\u3eVaejovis\u3c/em\u3e from the Galiuro Mountains, southern Arizona (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae)

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    A new scorpion species, Vaejovis stetsoni sp. n. is described from Galiuro Mountains, Graham County, Arizona. This is the smallest species of the “vorhiesi” group discovered so far, most similar to V. brysoni Ayrey & Webber. The pedipalp fixed finger has five ID denticles and the movable finger has six, like in most other southern Arizona Vaejovis. The most unique characteristics of this species are its small size (18.35 mm) and a large subaculear tubercle

    \u3cem\u3eVaejovis lapidicola\u3c/em\u3e Stahnke, 1940: hemispermatophore and mating plug from a topotype male (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae)

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    While doing research on an undescribed scorpion species, we needed to examine the hemispermatophore and mating plug of Vaejovis lapidicola Stahnke, 1940. Included are photographs and a description of these structures from a topotype specimen collected in the same “red sandstone quarry” (Flagstaff, Arizona, USA), from which Herbert Stahnke collected the original specimens in 1938

    Description of the male of \u3cem\u3eWernerius mumai\u3c/em\u3e (Sissom, 1993) from western Arizona, with data on reproduction (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae)

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    A male of Wernerius mumai (Sissom, 1993) is described for the first time, collected at the type locality (Gold Road, Black Mountains, Mohave County, Arizona). Originally placed in the genus Vaejovis, this species later was transferred by Soleglad & Fet (2008) to the genus Wernerius. It is one of the smallest vaejovid species known. The pedipalp fixed finger usually has 6 ID denticles and the movable finger has 7. The most unique characteristic of this species is the long, pointed, subaculear tubercle

    Architectural synthesis of timed asynchronous systems

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    Journal ArticleThis paper describes a new method for architectural synthesis of timed asynchronous systems. Due to the variable delays associated with asynchronous resources, implicit schedules are created by the addition of supplementary constraints between resources. Since the number of schedules grows exponentially with respect to the size of the given data flow graph, pruning techniques are introduced which dramatically improve run-time without significantly affecting the quality of the results. Using a combination of data and resource constraints, as well as an analysis of bounded delay information, our method determines the minimum number of resources and registers needed to implement a given schedule. Results are demonstrated using some high-level synthesis benchmark circuits and an industrial example

    Visual Search and Target Selection Using a Bounded Optimal Model of State Estimation & Control

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    Visual attention and motor control are tightly coupled in domains requiring a human operator to interact with a visual interface. Here, we integrate a boundedly optimal visual attention model with two separate motor control models and compare the predictions made by these models against perceptual and motor data collected from human subjects engaged in a parafoveal detection task. The results indicate that humans use an optimal motor control policy limited by precision constraints – humans executed ballistic movements using near-optimal velocity (i.e., bang-bang control), but imprecision in those movements often caused participants to overshoot their targets, necessitating corrective action. Motor movements did not reflect response hedging, but rather a perceptual-motor policy permitting ballistic movements to a target only after localization confidence exceeded a threshold. We conclude that a boundedly-optimal perceptual-motor model can predict aspects of human performance visual search tasks requiring motor response

    A new species of \u3cem\u3ePseudouroctonus\u3c/em\u3e from the Pinaleño Mountains, southern Arizona (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae)

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    A new scorpion species, Pseudouroctonus moyeri sp. n. (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae) is described. This large, dark, reddish brown species is found in the Pinaleño Mountains, Arizona. This is the largest species of Pseudouroctonus found in Arizona. Ruberhieronymus Rossi, 2018 is synonymized with Pseudouroctonus Stahnke, 197
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