1,992 research outputs found
Embodiment and the senses in travelogue filmmaking
This practice-based research presents an analysis of the representation of embodied experience in the travelogue film genre. It reflects upon the embodied and synaesthesic nature of the cinematic experience by tracing a shift in travelogue filmmaking from the ocular realism characteristic of early travelogue films to the emergence and
proliferation of subjective approaches. Moreover, it analyses experimental travelogue films and the capacity of non-linear and non-narrative structures to express sensuous, embodied perception.
9 Meditations is the practice component of this thesis. It is an experimental travelogue film. Through its production this research explores the translation of embodied
experience as a multi-sensory process into filmmaking practice.
In the field of film studies, the travelogue has not been widely discussed outside historical approaches, and it has certainly never been discussed in relation to
phenomenology and embodied sensation. This research articulates a new conceptual framework for both the production and theorisation of the travelogue film, as a form that is intrinsically related to performance, subjectivity and embodied perception. Moreover, this research concerns both the production process in filmmaking practice and the cinematic experience as grounded in synaesthesic, embodied perception. This approach brings to the forefront the capacity of audiovisual practice to both encode and produce sensuous knowledge
Reply to "Comment on `Performance of different synchronization measures in real data: A case study on electroencephalographic signals'"
We agree with the Comment by Nicolaou and Nasuto about the utility of mutual information (MI) when properly estimated and we also concur with their view that the estimation based on k nearest neighbors gives optimal results. However, we claim that embedding parameters can indeed change MI results, as we show for the electroencephalogram data sets of our original study and for coupled chaotic systems. Furthermore, we show that proper embedding can actually improve the estimation of MI with the k nearest neighbors algorithm
Event synchronization: a simple and fast method to measure synchronicity and time delay patterns
We propose a simple method to measure synchronization and time delay patterns
between signals. It is based on the relative timings of events in the time
series, defined e.g. as local maxima. The degree of synchronization is obtained
from the number of quasi-simultaneous appearances of events, and the delay is
calculated from the precedence of events in one signal with respect to the
other. Moreover, we can easily visualize the time evolution of the delay and
synchronization level with an excellent resolution.
We apply the algorithm to short rat EEG signals, some of them containing
spikes. We also apply it to an intracranial human EEG recording containing an
epileptic seizure, and we propose that the method might be useful for the
detection of foci and for seizure prediction. It can be easily extended to
other types of data and it is very simple and fast, thus being suitable for
on-line implementations.Comment: 6 pages, including 6 figures, RevTe
Jet Fragmentation Function Moments in Heavy Ion Collisions
The nature of a jet's fragmentation in heavy-ion collisions has the potential
to cast light on the mechanism of jet quenching. However the presence of the
huge underlying event complicates the reconstruction of the jet fragmentation
function as a function of the momentum fraction z of hadrons in the jet. Here
we propose the use of moments of the fragmentation function. These quantities
appear to be as sensitive to quenching modifications as the fragmentation
function directly in z. We show that they are amenable to background
subtraction using the same jet-area based techniques proposed in the past for
jet p_t's. Furthermore, complications due to correlations between
background-fluctuation contributions to the jet's p_t and to its particle
content are easily corrected for.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Fluvic acid carbon as a dignostic feature for agricultural soil evaluation
The fluvic acid fraction in considered to be sensitive to agronomic and environment factors. Therefore, the objectives of this study were to evaluate total carbon (TC) and fluvic acid carbon (FC) contens and to establish a possible relationship between the FC fraction and coarse organic matter in agricultural soils (CTVs), (ii) conservation tilled soils (CSTs), and (iii) virgins soils (VIRs) from a wide region in Argentina. The investigation includes 114 surface samples of Hapludolls, Haplustolls, and Entisols ranging in texture from sand to slit loam. In 29 selected samples, two separate soil mineral fraction were used (<0.05 mm and 0.1-2 mm) to determinate FC and TC contents. No statistically significant differences were found in TC contents in the fine fraction < 0.05 mm between VlRs, CSTs, and CVTs; however, FC contents were higher in VIRs than in CSTs and CVTs at the 0.05 probability level. In addition" statistically significant differences (P< 0.05) observed in FC contents among all three treatments in the coarse fraction 0.1-2 mm confirm that the FC fraction Is more influenced by the farming-system thn Is TC. Moreover, FC I TC ratios tended to increase under agricultural land use (CVTs > CSTs > VIRs), and this radio also Increased from finer textured soils to creaser tent was highly related to recently incorporated organic residues.Resúmenes de Trabajos presentados en otras publicaciones (por docentes de la UNLPam.) Publicado en Soil Science 1999; Vol 164: 57-6
Testing collinear factorization and nuclear parton distributions with pA collisions at the LHC
Global perturbative QCD analyses, based on large data sets from
electron-proton and hadron collider experiments, provide tight constraints on
the parton distribution function (PDF) in the proton. The extension of these
analyses to nuclear parton distributions (nPDF) has attracted much interest in
recent years. nPDFs are needed as benchmarks for the characterization of hot
QCD matter in nucleus-nucleus collisions, and attract further interest since
they may show novel signatures of non- linear density-dependent QCD evolution.
However, it is not known from first principles whether the factorization of
long-range phenomena into process-independent parton distribution, which
underlies global PDF extractions for the proton, extends to nuclear effects. As
a consequence, assessing the reliability of nPDFs for benchmark calculations
goes beyond testing the numerical accuracy of their extraction and requires
phenomenological tests of the factorization assumption. Here we argue that a
proton-nucleus collision program at the LHC would provide a set of measurements
allowing for unprecedented tests of the factorization assumption underlying
global nPDF fits.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Draft Genome of Shewanella frigidimarina Ag06-30, a Marine Bacterium Isolated from Potter Peninsula, King George Island, Antarctica
We present the draft genome of Shewanella frigidimarina Ag06-30, a marine bacterium from King George Island, Antarctica,which encodes the carbapenemase SFP-1. The assembly contains 4,799,218 bp (GC content 41.24%). This strain harbors severalmobile genetic elements that provide insight into lateral gene transfer and bacterial plasticity and evolution.Fil: Parmeciano Di Noto, Gisela Paula. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay. Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina. Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica; ArgentinaFil: Vázquez, Susana Claudia. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay. Instituto de Nanobiotecnología. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Farmacia y Bioquímica. Instituto de Nanobiotecnología; ArgentinaFil: MacCormack, Walter P.. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay. Instituto de Nanobiotecnología. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Farmacia y Bioquímica. Instituto de Nanobiotecnología; Argentina. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Comercio Interno y Culto. Dirección Nacional del Antártico. Instituto Antártico Argentino; ArgentinaFil: Iriarte, Andrés. Universidad de la República; Uruguay. Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas ; UruguayFil: Quiroga, Cecilia. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay. Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina. Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica; Argentin
Analytic results for particles with interaction in two dimensions and an external magnetic field
The -dimensional quantum problem of particles (e.g. electrons) with
interaction in a two-dimensional parabolic potential
(e.g. quantum dot) and magnetic field , reduces exactly to solving a
-dimensional problem which is independent of and . An
exact, infinite set of relative mode excitations are obtained for any . The
problem reduces to that of a ficticious particle in a two-dimensional,
non-linear potential of strength , subject to a ficticious magnetic
field , the relative angular momentum.Comment: To appear in Physical Review Letters (in press). RevTeX file. Two
figures available from [email protected] or
[email protected]
Probing ferroelectricity in highly conducting materials through their elastic response: persistence of ferroelectricity in metallic BaTiO3-d
The question whether ferroelectricity (FE) may coexist with a metallic or
highly conducting state, or rather it must be suppressed by the screening from
the free charges, is the focus of a rapidly increasing number of theoretical
studies and is finally receiving positive experimental responses. The issue is
closely related to the thermoelectric and multiferroic (also magnetic)
applications of FE materials, where the electrical conductivity is required or
spurious. In these circumstances, the traditional methods for probing
ferroelectricity are hampered or made totally ineffective by the free charges,
which screen the polar response to an external electric field. This fact may
explain why more than 40 years passed between the first proposals of FE metals
and the present experimental and theoretical activity. The measurement of the
elastic moduli, Young's modulus in the present case, versus temperature is an
effective method for studying the influence of doping on a FE transition
because the elastic properties are unaffected by electrical conductivity. In
this manner, it is shown that the FE transitions of BaTiO3-d are not suppressed
by electron doping through O vacancies; only the onset temperatures are
depressed, but the magnitudes of the softenings, and hence of the piezoelectric
activity, are initially even increased
Overview of the JET results in support to ITER
The 2014–2016 JET results are reviewed in the light of their significance for optimising
the ITER research plan for the active and non-active operation. More than 60 h of plasma
operation with ITER first wall materials successfully took place since its installation in
2011. New multi-machine scaling of the type I-ELM divertor energy flux density to ITER
is supported by first principle modelling. ITER relevant disruption experiments and first
principle modelling are reported with a set of three disruption mitigation valves mimicking
the ITER setup. Insights of the L–H power threshold in Deuterium and Hydrogen are given,
stressing the importance of the magnetic configurations and the recent measurements of
fine-scale structures in the edge radial electric. Dimensionless scans of the core and pedestal
confinement provide new information to elucidate the importance of the first wall material on
the fusion performance. H-mode plasmas at ITER triangularity (H = 1 at βN ~ 1.8 and n/nGW
~ 0.6) have been sustained at 2 MA during 5 s. The ITER neutronics codes have been validated
on high performance experiments. Prospects for the coming D–T campaign and 14 MeV
neutron calibration strategy are reviewed.European Commission (EUROfusion 633053
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