519 research outputs found

    Methods for estimating the upcrossings index: improvements and comparison

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    The upcrossings index 0≤η≤1, as a measure of the degree of local dependence in the upcrossings of a high level by a stationary process, plays, together with the extremal index θ, an important role in extreme events modelling. For stationary processes, verifying a long range dependence condition, upcrossings of high thresholds in different blocks can be assumed asymptotically independent and therefore blocks estimators for the upcrossings index can be easily constructed using disjoint blocks. In this paper we focus on the estimation of the upcrossings index via the blocks method and properties such as consistency and asymptotic normality are studied. Besides this new estimation approach for this parameter, we also enlarge its family of runs estimators and improve estimation within this class by providing an empirical way of checking local dependence conditions that control the clustering of upcrossings. We compare the performance of a range of different estimators for η and illustrate the methods using simulated data and financial data.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Anharmonicities of giant dipole excitations

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    The role of anharmonic effects on the excitation of the double giant dipole resonance is investigated in a simple macroscopic model.Perturbation theory is used to find energies and wave functions of the anharmonic ascillator.The cross sections for the electromagnetic excitation of the one- and two-phonon giant dipole resonances in energetic heavy-ion collisions are then evaluated through a semiclassical coupled-channel calculation.It is argued that the variations of the strength of the anharmonic potential should be combined with appropriate changes in the oscillator frequency,in order to keep the giant dipole resonance energy consistent with the experimental value.When this is taken into account,the effects of anharmonicities on the double giant dipole resonance excitation probabilities are small and cannot account for the well-known discrepancy between theory and experiment

    TOMATE PARA INDÚSTRIA ESTRATÉGIAS SUSTENTÁVEIS NO COMBATE A TUTA ABSOLUTA

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    O objetivo deste estudo foi desenvolver um sistema de apoio à decisão com base no acompanhamento técnico dos inimigos da cultura e na construção de mapas de risco para as principais zonas de produção. Outros objetivos foram o estabelecimento de uma metodologia de observação e avaliação, nomeadamente métodos expeditos de estimativa do risco, estabelecimento de regras de tomada de decisão e o estudo da bioecologia da espécie em tomate para indústria no Ribatejo. Os resultados deste projeto são uma contribuição para o uso sustentável dos produtos fitofarmacêuticos e, consequentemente, para uma maior ecoeficiência, conservação da biodiversidade e garantia de qualidade e segurança alimentar do produto final

    Non-invasive grading of astrocytic tumours from the relative contents of myo-inositol and glycine measured by in vivo MRS

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    Altres ajuts: INTERPRET (EU-IST1999-10310). This work was also partially funded by the Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red - Bioingeniería, Biomateriales y Nanomedicina, which is an initiative of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Spain) co-funded by EU FEDER funds.MRI and MRS are established methodologies for evaluating intracranial lesions. One MR spectral feature suggested for in vivo grading of astrocytic tumours is the apparent myo-Inositol (mI) intensity (ca 3.55ppm) at short echo times, although glycine (gly) may also contribute in vivo to this resonance. The purpose of this study was to quantitatively evaluate the mI + gly contribution to the recorded spectral pattern in vivo and correlate it with in vitro data obtained from perchloric acid extraction of tumour biopsies. Patient spectra (n = 95) at 1.5T at short (20-31 ms) and long (135-136 ms) echo times were obtained from the INTERPRET MRS database (http://gabrmn.uab.es/interpretvalidateddb/). Phantom spectra were acquired with a comparable protocol. Spectra were automatically processed and the ratios of the (mI + gly) to Cr peak heights ((mI + gly)/Cr) calculated. Perchloric acid extracts of brain tumour biopsies were analysed by high-resolution NMR at 9.4T. The ratio (mI + gly)/Cr decreased significantly with astrocytic grade in vivo between low-grade astrocytoma (A2) and glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). In vitro results displayed a somewhat different tendency, with anaplastic astrocytomas having significantly higher (mI + gly)/Cr than A2 and GBM. The discrepancy between in vivo and in vitro data suggests that the NMR visibility of glycine in glial brain tumours is restricted in vivo

    The imprint of the geological inheritage and present dynamics on uruguayan inner shelf sediments (south-western Atlantic)

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    The Uruguayan continental shelf is characterised by a unique hydrographic system, composed of the Río de la Plata buoyant plume (RdlP-BP), and by water masses of contrasting thermohaline characteristics. Below the RdlP-BP the southward-flowing Subtropical Shelf Water and the northward-flowing Subantarctic Shelf Water converge at the Subtropical Shelf Front, which is the shelf extension of the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence. Three main sedimentary environments can be described associated with; I) “Atlantic coastal sands” (i.e. onshore from the palaeovalley); II) the SW-NE running “RdlP palaeovalley” and; III) “Relict sands” (i.e., offshore of the RdlP palaeovalley). Three exposed sedimentary units (U1 to U3) identified from acoustic profiles and sediment cores (sedimentary characteristics of stratigraphic units) almost entirely restricted to the palaeovalley. The transect here studied intersects these three environments contributing thus with the description of the morphological setting and sedimentary coverture. Physical and geochemical data were integrated and used to characterise the sedimentary facies previously described in the inner shelf and to understand environmental control on the development of these facies. Sediments from U1 show the terrestrial imprint of the RdlP and drier regional conditions, while sediments that characterised U3 indicate a sandy facies (quartz and bioclasts: whole and fragmented shells and polychaetes tubes) corresponding to an ancient coast. This last (with approximately 11 m height), is probably related to sea-level stabilization, between 20 and 25 m occurring during the Upper Pleistocene and Holocene for the South-Western Atlantic. The sediment from U3 reflects the colder and drier conditions prevailing in the region during the formation of this facies (13.7 and 9.7 cal ka BP). Eroded sediments (e.g., from U3; ancient coast) are deposited inside the palaeovalley and on the onshore region (between the palaeovalley and coastal sands). Also, U1 extends from the palaeovalley covering the onshore region. The outcrop of warmer oceanic shelf waters was probably a consequence of the geomorphology of the palaeovalley (edge of the palaeovalley) and related to the still fall presence of waters typical of the austral warm season when higher advection of Brazil Current occurs over the shelf. In this regard, the mound-like feature should induce bottom water to rise, operating as a ramp. Productivity proxies (Si/Ti, Ba/Ti, Ca/Ti and P/Ti) present the highest values in these stations (S16-S18), reflecting the imprint of the upwelling in the sediment. The information reported in this work is particularly important to better understand sedimentological dynamics in the Uruguayan inner shelf and the Southwestern Atlantic region. It is also important for elaborating more precise paleoenvironmental and palaeoceanographic reconstructions

    Single-institution experience in clinical trials during the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain: Not so bad after all?

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    The impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Spain during March-April 2020 has been unbalanced throughout the different regions of the country. The alarm status defined by the government on March 14, and still in place at the time of this writing, has transformed the country in different perspectives, including care of patients with cancer.1 In many centers, clinical trial activity was suspended, because it was not considered a priority under the health care challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic.2 Nevertheless, experimental therapy is the only and/or best therapeutic option for many patients with cancer

    Effect of phosphorus supply on root traits of two Brassica oleracea L. genotypes

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    BACKGROUND: Phosphorus (P) deficiency limits crop production worldwide. Crops differ in their ability to acquire and utilise the P available. The aim of this study was to determine root traits (root exudates, root system architecture (RSA), tissue-specific allocation of P, and gene expression in roots) that (a) play a role in P-use efficiency and (b) contribute to large shoot zinc (Zn) concentration in Brassica oleracea. RESULTS: Two B. oleracea accessions (var. sabellica C6, a kale, and var. italica F103, a broccoli) were grown in a hydroponic system or in a high-throughput-root phenotyping (HTRP) system where they received Low P (0.025 mM) or High P (0.25 mM) supply for 2weeks. In hydroponics, root and shoot P and Zn concentrations were measured, root exudates were profiled using both Fourier-Transform-Infrared spectroscopy and gas-chromatography-mass spectrometry and previously published RNAseq data from roots was re-examined. In HTRP experiments, RSA (main and lateral root number and lateral root length) was assessed and the tissue-specific distribution of P was determined using micro-particle-induced-X-ray emission. The C6 accession had greater root and shoot biomass than the F103 accession, but the latter had a larger shoot P concentration than the C6 accession, regardless of the P supply in the hydroponic system. The F103 accession had a larger shoot Zn concentration than the C6 accession in the High P treatment. Although the F103 accession had a larger number of lateral roots, which were also longer than in the C6 accession, the C6 accession released a larger quantity and number of polar compounds than the F103 accession. A larger number of P-responsive genes were found in the Low P treatment in roots of the F103 accession than in roots of the C6 accession. Expression of genes linked with "phosphate starvation" was up-regulated, while those linked with iron homeostasis were down-regulated in the Low P treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The results illustrate large within-species variability in root acclimatory responses to P supply in the composition of root exudates, RSA and gene expression, but not in P distribution in root cross sections, enabling P sufficiency in the two B. oleracea accessions studied

    The AdS/QCD Correspondence: Still Undelivered

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    We consider the particle spectrum and event shapes in large N gauge theories in different regimes of the short-distance 't Hooft coupling, lambda. The mesons in the small lambda limit should have a Regge spectrum in order to agree with perturbation theory, while generically the large lambda theories with gravity duals produce spectra reminiscent of KK modes. We argue that these KK-like states are qualitatively different from QCD modes: they are deeply bound states which are sensitive to short distance interactions rather than the flux tube-like states expected in asymptotically free, confining gauge theories. In addition, we also find that the characteristic event shapes for the large lambda theories with gravity duals are close to spherical, very different from QCD-like (small lambda, small N) and Nambu-Goto-like (small lambda, large N) theories which have jets. This observation is in agreement with the conjecture of Strassler on event shapes in large 't Hooft coupling theories, which was recently proved by Hofman and Maldacena for the conformal case. This conclusion does not change even when considering soft-wall backgrounds in the gravity dual. The picture that emerges is the following: theories with small and large lambda are qualitatively different, while theories with small and large N are qualitatively similar. Thus it seems that it is the relative smallness of the 't Hooft coupling in QCD that prevents a reliable AdS/QCD correspondence from emerging, and that reproducing characteristic QCD-like behavior will require genuine stringy dynamics to be incorporated into any putative dual theory.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures; references added, minor changes, history clarifie
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