7,078 research outputs found
A new development cycle of the Statistical Toolkit
The Statistical Toolkit is an open source system specialized in the
statistical comparison of distributions. It addresses requirements common to
different experimental domains, such as simulation validation (e.g. comparison
of experimental and simulated distributions), regression testing in the course
of the software development process, and detector performance monitoring.
Various sets of statistical tests have been added to the existing collection to
deal with the one sample problem (i.e. the comparison of a data distribution to
a function, including tests for normality, categorical analysis and the
estimate of randomness). Improved algorithms and software design contribute to
the robustness of the results. A simple user layer dealing with primitive data
types facilitates the use of the toolkit both in standalone analyses and in
large scale experiments.Comment: To be published in the Proc. of CHEP (Computing in High Energy
Physics) 201
Proximity sensors provide an accurate alternative for measuring maternal pedigree of lambs in Australian sheep flocks under commercial conditions
Context: Proximity sensors were used recently to determine the maternal pedigree of lambs on a small plot with high accuracy. If this accuracy is maintained under commercial grazing conditions, this method could be a useful alternative to improving genetic gain in sheep, including reproduction traits.
Aims: To investigate using proximity sensors to determine the maternal pedigree of lambs and to define the level of interactions required to determine maternal pedigree confidently irrespective of differences in ewe age, lamb age, birth type, paddock size, flock size or stocking rate under commercial grazing conditions.
Methods: We compared maternal pedigree determined using the proximity sensors to DNA profiling (n = 10 flocks) and lambing rounds (n = 16 flocks). Ewes (n = 7315) and lambs (n = 8058) were fitted with proximity sensors under normal grazing conditions for each property for 1–3 days. Flocks varied in ewe age (adults, hoggets and ewe lambs), lamb age (up to 100 days old, except for 1 flock), birth type (singles, multiples), paddock size (0.25–320 ha), flock size (37–420 lambs) and stocking rate (2–100 dry sheep equivalents/ha, except for 1 flock).
Key results: An interaction ratio of >2 was required for a confident ewe–lamb match (ewe with the most interactions compared with the ewe with the second-most interactions for each lamb). Using this criterion, the average success of proximity sensors at matching a lamb to a ewe was 95% and the sensors were 97% accurate when compared with the pedigree results from lambing rounds or DNA. For lambs matched successfully, over 90% of this success was achieved in the first 7 h and over 99% in the first 20 h. While the success rate of matching a lamb to a ewe was not influenced significantly by ewe age, birth type, paddock size, flock size or stocking rate, the time to achieve sensor success was significantly quicker for singles than for twins and sensor accuracy was significantly higher for smaller paddocks with higher stocking rates.
Conclusions: Our results showed that proximity sensors can establish maternal pedigree effectively and accurately across a range of conditions experienced on commercial properties.
Implications: Private industry can now develop more cost-effective sensor technologies with greater confidence that will enhance recording of maternal pedigree and, hence, the rate of genetic gain across the sheep industry
An electromagnetic shashlik calorimeter with longitudinal segmentation
A novel technique for longitudinal segmentation of shashlik calorimeters has
been tested in the CERN West Area beam facility. A 25 tower very fine samplings
e.m. calorimeter has been built with vacuum photodiodes inserted in the first 8
radiation lengths to sample the initial development of the shower. Results
concerning energy resolution, impact point reconstruction and electron/pion
separation are reported.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
The Impact of the Level of Feed-On-Offer Available to Merino Ewes During Winter-Spring on the Wool Production of Their Progeny as Adults
New opportunities for developing optimum ewe management systems, based on achieving liveweight and body condition score (CS) targets at critical stages of the reproductive cycle, have emerged from the acceptance that nutrition during pregnancy can have substantial impacts on the lifetime wool performance of the progeny (Kelly et al,. 1996). However, most studies of the impacts of nutrition on foetal growth and development tended to focus on late pregnancy and have also only considered extreme nutritional regimes often outside the boundaries of commercial reality. Hence, the Lifetime Wool team (Thompson & Oldham, 2004) conducted dose-response experiments to determine the levels of feed-on-offer (FOO; kg dry matter/ha; Hyder et al., 2004) needed at different stages of the reproductive cycle to optimise both wool and meat production per ha in the short term and the lifetime performance of the progeny in the long term. This paper reports the response in the first two years of the experiment of clean fleece weight (CFW) and fibre diameter (FD) of the progeny as adults to the level of FOO available to their mother in late pregnancy and lactation
PLXNA1 and PLXNA3 cooperate to pattern the nasal axons that guide gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons regulate puberty onset and sexual reproduction by secreting GnRH to activate and maintain the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. During embryonic development, GnRH neurons migrate along olfactory and vomeronasal axons through the nose into the brain, where they project to the median eminence to release GnRH. The secreted glycoprotein SEMA3A binds its receptors neuropilin (NRP) 1 or NRP2 to position these axons for correct GnRH neuron migration, with an additional role for the NRP co-receptor PLXNA1. Accordingly, mutations in SEMA3A, NRP1, NRP2 and PLXNA1 have been linked to defective GnRH neuron development in mice and inherited GnRH deficiency in humans. Here, we show that only the combined loss of PLXNA1 and PLXNA3 phenocopied the full spectrum of nasal axon and GnRH neuron defects of SEMA3A knockout mice. Together with Plxna1, the human orthologue of Plxna3 should therefore be investigated as a candidate gene for inherited GnRH deficiency
Plxna1 and Plxna3 cooperate to pattern the nasal axons that guide gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons
The gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons regulate puberty onset and sexual
reproduction by secreting GnRH to activate and maintain the hypothalamic-pituitary gonadal axis. During embryonic development, GnRH neurons migrate along olfactory and
vomeronasal axons through the nose into the brain, where they project to the median
eminence to release GnRH. The secreted glycoprotein SEMA3A binds its receptors
neuropilin (NRP) 1 or NRP2 to position these axons for correct GnRH neuron migration,
with an additional role for the NRP co-receptor PLXNA1. Accordingly, mutations
in SEMA3A, NRP1, NRP2 and PLXNA1 have been linked to defective GnRH neuron
development in mice and inherited GnRH deficiency in humans. Here, we show that only
the combined loss of PLXNA1 and PLXNA3 phenocopied the full spectrum of nasal axon
and GnRH neuron defects of SEMA3A knockout mice. Together with Plxna1, the human
ortholog of Plxna3 should therefore be investigated as a candidate gene for inherited
GnRH deficiency
Linear regression models and k-means clustering for statistical analysis of fNIRS data
We propose a new algorithm, based on a linear regression model, to statistically estimate the hemodynamic activations in fNIRS data sets. The main concern guiding the algorithm development was the minimization of assumptions and approximations made on the data set for the application of statistical tests. Further, we propose a K-means method to cluster fNIRS data (i.e. channels) as activated or not activated. The methods were validated both on simulated and in vivo fNIRS data. A time domain (TD) fNIRS technique was preferred because of its high performances in discriminating cortical activation and superficial physiological changes. However, the proposed method is also applicable to continuous wave or frequency domain fNIRS data sets
The running of the electromagnetic coupling alpha in small-angle Bhabha scattering
A method to determine the running of alpha from a measurement of small-angle
Bhabha scattering is proposed and worked out. The method is suited to high
statistics experiments at e+e- colliders, which are equipped with luminometers
in the appropriate angular region. A new simulation code predicting small-angle
Bhabha scattering is also presentedComment: 15 pages, 3 Postscript figure
Growth pattern to the end of the mating period influences the reproductive performance of Merino ewe lambs mated at 7 to 8 months of age
The reproductive performance of Merino ewe lambs is highly variable and generally poor in comparison to older ewes. In this study, we determined the impacts of growth pattern to the end of the mating period and sire genetics on the reproductive performance of Merino ewe lambs. Five hundred ewe lambs with full pedigree records were managed under commercial conditions from weaning and weighed 43.5 kg at the start of the mating period with an average age of 224 days. The ewe lambs were offered a moderate or high feed allowance to achieve target growth rates of 100 or 200 g/day during a 46-day mating period. They were then recombined and scanned for pregnancy status 60 days after the mating period. At the individual animal level, a 5 kg greater live weight at the start of the mating period increased reproductive rate (foetuses per 100 ewes joined) by about 20% (P < 0.001). Regardless of their live weight at the start of the mating period, gaining an extra 100 g/day of live weight during the mating period further increased their reproductive rate by about 20% (P < 0.001). Ewe lambs from sires with higher Australian Sheep Breeding Values for fat measured post-weaning achieved a higher fertility (P < 0.05) and reproductive rate (P < 0.01) regardless of feed allowance treatment. The effects of sire fatness was significant even when the sire breeding values for live weight measured post-weaning were included in the model. The effects of managing growth pattern and sire genetics were additive, so improving the reproductive performance of Merino ewe lambs mated at 7 to 8 months of age requires improving their feed allowance and rate of live weight gain until the end of the mating period and using sires with higher breeding values for fatness
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