11,845 research outputs found
Central spar and module joint Patent
Design and development of module joint clamping device for application to solar array constructio
BigEAR: Inferring the Ambient and Emotional Correlates from Smartphone-based Acoustic Big Data
This paper presents a novel BigEAR big data framework that employs
psychological audio processing chain (PAPC) to process smartphone-based
acoustic big data collected when the user performs social conversations in
naturalistic scenarios. The overarching goal of BigEAR is to identify moods of
the wearer from various activities such as laughing, singing, crying, arguing,
and sighing. These annotations are based on ground truth relevant for
psychologists who intend to monitor/infer the social context of individuals
coping with breast cancer. We pursued a case study on couples coping with
breast cancer to know how the conversations affect emotional and social well
being. In the state-of-the-art methods, psychologists and their team have to
hear the audio recordings for making these inferences by subjective evaluations
that not only are time-consuming and costly, but also demand manual data coding
for thousands of audio files. The BigEAR framework automates the audio
analysis. We computed the accuracy of BigEAR with respect to the ground truth
obtained from a human rater. Our approach yielded overall average accuracy of
88.76% on real-world data from couples coping with breast cancer.Comment: 6 pages, 10 equations, 1 Table, 5 Figures, IEEE International
Workshop on Big Data Analytics for Smart and Connected Health 2016, June 27,
2016, Washington DC, US
On the miscible Rayleigh-Taylor instability: two and three dimensions
We investigate the miscible Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability in both 2 and 3
dimensions using direct numerical simulations, where the working fluid is
assumed incompressible under the Boussinesq approximation. We first consider
the case of randomly perturbed interfaces. With a variety of diagnostics, we
develop a physical picture for the detailed temporal development of the mixed
layer: We identify three distinct evolutionary phases in the development of the
mixed layer, which can be related to detailed variations in the growth of the
mixing zone. Our analysis provides an explanation for the observed differences
between two and three-dimensional RT instability; the analysis also leads us to
concentrate on the RT models which (1) work equally well for both laminar and
turbulent flows, and (2) do not depend on turbulent scaling within the mixing
layer between fluids. These candidate RT models are based on point sources
within bubbles (or plumes) and interaction with each other (or the background
flow). With this motivation, we examine the evolution of single plumes, and
relate our numerical results (of single plumes) to a simple analytical model
for plume evolution.Comment: 31 pages, 27 figures, to appear in November issue of JFM, 2001. For
better figures: http://astro.uchicago.edu/~young/ps/jfmtry08.ps.
Incremental selective decode-and-forward relaying for power line communication
In this paper, an incremental selective decode-and-forward (ISDF) relay
strategy is proposed for power line communication (PLC) systems to improve the
spectral efficiency. Traditional decode-and-forward (DF) relaying employs two
time slots by using half-duplex relays which significantly reduces the spectral
efficiency. The ISDF strategy utilizes the relay only if the direct link
quality fails to attain a certain information rate, thereby improving the
spectral efficiency. The path gain is assumed to be log-normally distributed
with very high distance dependent signal attenuation. Furthermore, the additive
noise is modeled as a Bernoulli-Gaussian process to incorporate the effects of
impulsive noise contents. Closed-form expressions for the outage probability
and the fraction of times the relay is in use, and an approximate closed-form
expression for the average bit error rate (BER) are derived for the binary
phase-shift keying signaling scheme. We observe that the fraction of times the
relay is in use can be significantly reduced compared to the traditional DF
strategy. It is also observed that at high transmit power, the spectral
efficiency increases while the average BER decreases with increase in the
required rate.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, VTC Fall 201
Prevalence and co-infection of Toxoplasma gondii and Neospora caninum in Apodemus sylvaticus in an area relatively free of cats
The protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii is prevalent worldwide and can infect a remarkably wide range of hosts despite
felids being the only definitive host. As cats play a major role in transmission to secondary mammalian hosts, the interaction
between cats and these hosts should be a major factor determining final prevalence in the secondary host. This study
investigates the prevalence of T. gondii in a natural population of Apodemus sylvaticus collected from an area with low cat
density (<2·5 cats/km2). A surprisingly high prevalence of 40·78% (95% CI: 34·07%–47·79%) was observed despite this.
A comparable level of prevalence was observed in a previously published study using the same approaches where a
prevalence of 59% (95% CI: 50·13%–67·87%) was observed in a natural population of Mus domesticus from an area with high
cat density (>500 cats/km2). Detection of infected foetuses frompregnant dams in both populations suggests that congenital
transmission may enable persistence of infection in the absence of cats. The prevalences of the related parasite, Neospora
caninum were found to be low in both populations (A. sylvaticus: 3·39% (95% CI: 0·12%–6·66%); M. domesticus: 3·08%
(95% CI: 0·11%–6·05%)). These results suggest that cat density may have a lower than expected effect on final prevalence in
these ecosystems
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