231 research outputs found
Nonlinear Dynamic Analysis of Cracked Beam on Elastic Foundation Subjected to Moving Mass
This paper presents a finite element algorithm for nonlinear dynamic analysis of cracked beams on an elastic foundation subjected to moving mass. Quantity surveying with parameters of varied cracks, foundation and loads shows their influence levels on the nonlinear dynamic response of the beams. The findings of the paper are the basis for the analysis, evaluation, and diagnosis of damages of beam structures on the elastic foundation subjected to moving loads, in which the common defects of the beams such as cracks are considered in order to improve the system's operational efficiency in a wide range of engineering applications
When can we reconstruct the ancestral state? Beyond Brownian motion
Reconstructing the ancestral state of a group of species helps answer many
important questions in evolutionary biology. Therefore, it is crucial to
understand when we can estimate the ancestral state accurately. Previous works
provide a necessary and sufficient condition, called the big bang condition,
for the existence of an accurate reconstruction method under discrete trait
evolution models and the Brownian motion model. In this paper, we extend this
result to a wide range of continuous trait evolution models. In particular, we
consider a general setting where continuous traits evolve along the tree
according to stochastic processes that satisfy some regularity conditions. We
verify these conditions for popular continuous trait evolution models including
Ornstein-Uhlenbeck, reflected Brownian Motion, and Cox-Ingersoll-Ross
Superpixel-based segmentation of muscle fibers in multi-channel microscopy
Background
Confetti fluorescence and other multi-color genetic labelling strategies are useful for observing stem cell regeneration and for other problems of cell lineage tracing. One difficulty of such strategies is segmenting the cell boundaries, which is a very different problem from segmenting color images from the real world. This paper addresses the difficulties and presents a superpixel-based framework for segmentation of regenerated muscle fibers in mice.
Results
We propose to integrate an edge detector into a superpixel algorithm and customize the method for multi-channel images. The enhanced superpixel method outperforms the original and another advanced superpixel algorithm in terms of both boundary recall and under-segmentation error. Our framework was applied to cross-section and lateral section images of regenerated muscle fibers from confetti-fluorescent mice. Compared with “ground-truth” segmentations, our framework yielded median Dice similarity coefficients of 0.92 and higher.
Conclusion
Our segmentation framework is flexible and provides very good segmentations of multi-color muscle fibers. We anticipate our methods will be useful for segmenting a variety of tissues in confetti fluorecent mice and in mice with similar multi-color labels.National University of Singapore (Duke-NUS SRP Phase 2 Research Block Grant)Singapore. National Research Foundation (CREATE programme)Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART
Co-infection of human parvovirus B19 with Plasmodium falciparum contributes to malaria disease severity in Gabonese patients
Background: High seroprevalence of parvovirus B19 (B19V) coinfection with Plasmodium falciparum has been previously reported. However, the impact of B19V-infection on the clinical course of malaria is still elusive. In this study, we investigated the prevalence and clinical significance of B19V co-infection in Gabonese children with malaria. Methods: B19V prevalence was analyzed in serum samples of 197 Gabonese children with P. falciparum malaria and 85 healthy controls using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and direct DNA-sequencing. Results: B19V was detected in 29/282 (10.28%) of Gabonese children. B19V was observed more frequently in P. falciparum malaria patients (14.21%) in comparison to healthy individuals (1.17%) (
Electric and Magnetic Tuning Between the Trivial and Topological Phases in InAs/GaSb Double Quantum Wells
Among the theoretically predicted two-dimensional topological insulators,
InAs/GaSb double quantum wells (DQWs) have a unique double-layered structure
with electron and hole gases separated in two layers, which enables tuning of
the band alignment via electric and magnetic fields. However, the rich
trivial-topological phase diagram has yet to be experimentally explored. We
present an in situ and continuous tuning between the trivial and topological
insulating phases in InAs/GaSb DQWs through electrical dual-gating.
Furthermore, we show that an in-plane magnetic field shifts the electron and
hole bands relatively to each other in momentum space, functioning as a
powerful tool to discriminate between the topologically distinct states
Application of AHP algorithm on power distribution of load shedding in island microgrid
This paper proposes a method of load shedding in a microgrid system operated in an Island Mode, which is disconnected with the main power grid and balanced loss of the electrical power. This proposed method calculates the minimum value of the shed power with reference to renewable energy sources such as wind power generator, solar energy and the ability to control the frequency of the generator to restore the frequency to the allowable range and reduce the amount of load that needs to be shed. Computing the load importance factor (LIF) using AHP algorithm supports to determine the order of which load to be shed. The damaged outcome of load shedding, thus, will be noticeably reduced. The experimental results of this proposed method is demonstrated by simulating on IEEE 16-Bus microgrid system with six power sources
Giant spin-orbit splitting in inverted InAs/GaSb double quantum wells
Transport measurements in inverted InAs/GaSb quantum wells reveal a giant
spin-orbit splitting of the energy bands close to the hybridization gap. The
splitting results from the interplay of electron-hole mixing and spin-orbit
coupling, and can exceed the hybridization gap. We experimentally investigate
the band splitting as a function of top gate voltage for both electron-like and
hole-like states. Unlike conventional, noninverted two-dimensional electron
gases, the Fermi energy in InAs/GaSb can cross a single spin-resolved band,
resulting in full spin-orbit polarization. In the fully polarized regime we
observe exotic transport phenomena such as quantum Hall plateaus evolving in
steps and a non-trivial Berry phase
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