175 research outputs found
Deliberate Exercise of Pregnant Holstein Heifers Improves Milk Composition During Lactation
Exercise has substantial impacts on systemic physiology, but little research has been conducted to assess how it may influence dairy cattle in modern confined production systems. Dairy heifers were walked for up to 45 minutes, 4 days per week for 8 weeks during pregnancy to assess impacts on subsequent health and productivity. Heifers that were exercised had increased milk protein and solids-not-fat concentrations for up to 15 weeks into lactation, and increased milk fat and energy-corrected milk production at some time points during this period, as compared to sedentary contemporaries. No adverse or beneficial effects of exercise were found on locomotion, calving ease, date of parturition, or somatic cell scores. These findings point to potential impacts on lactation productivity following exercise in pregnant heifers
The restricted isometry property for random block diagonal matrices
In Compressive Sensing, the Restricted Isometry Property (RIP) ensures that
robust recovery of sparse vectors is possible from noisy, undersampled
measurements via computationally tractable algorithms. It is by now well-known
that Gaussian (or, more generally, sub-Gaussian) random matrices satisfy the
RIP under certain conditions on the number of measurements. Their use can be
limited in practice, however, due to storage limitations, computational
considerations, or the mismatch of such matrices with certain measurement
architectures. These issues have recently motivated considerable effort towards
studying the RIP for structured random matrices. In this paper, we study the
RIP for block diagonal measurement matrices where each block on the main
diagonal is itself a sub-Gaussian random matrix. Our main result states that
such matrices can indeed satisfy the RIP but that the requisite number of
measurements depends on certain properties of the basis in which the signals
are sparse. In the best case, these matrices perform nearly as well as dense
Gaussian random matrices, despite having many fewer nonzero entries
A First Analysis of the Stability of Takens' Embedding
Takens' Embedding Theorem asserts that when the states of a hidden dynamical
system are confined to a low-dimensional attractor, complete information about
the states can be preserved in the observed time-series output through the
delay coordinate map. However, the conditions for the theorem to hold ignore
the effects of noise and time-series analysis in practice requires a careful
empirical determination of the sampling time and number of delays resulting in
a number of delay coordinates larger than the minimum prescribed by Takens'
theorem. In this paper, we use tools and ideas in Compressed Sensing to provide
a first theoretical justification for the choice of the number of delays in
noisy conditions. In particular, we show that under certain conditions on the
dynamical system, measurement function, number of delays and sampling time, the
delay-coordinate map can be a stable embedding of the dynamical system's
attractor
Multiple General Anesthesia in Children: A Systematic Review of Its Effect on Neurodevelopment
The effect of multiple general anesthesia (mGA) procedures administered in early life is a critical theme and has led the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to issue an alert. This systematic review seeks to explore the potential effects on neurodevelopment of mGA on patients under 4 years. The Medline, Embase and Web of Science databases were searched for publications up to 31 March 2021. The databases were searched for publications regarding âchildren multiple general anesthesia OR pediatric multiple general anesthesiaâ. Case reports, animal studies and expert opinions were excluded. Systematic reviews were not included, but they were screened to identify any possible additional information. A total of 3156 studies were identified. After removing the duplicates, screening the remaining records and analyzing the systematic reviewsâ bibliography, 10 studies were considered suitable for inclusion. Comprehensively, a total cohort of 264.759 unexposed children and 11.027 exposed children were assessed for neurodevelopmental outcomes. Only one paper did not find any statistically significant difference between exposed and unexposed children in terms of neurodevelopmental alterations. Controlled studies on mGA administered before 4 years of age support that there might be a greater risk of neurodevelopmental delay in children receiving mGA, warranting the need for careful risk/benefit considerations
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