3,238 research outputs found

    Detection of fixed points in spatiotemporal signals by clustering method

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    We present a method to determine fixed points in spatiotemporal signals. A 144-dimensioanl simulated signal, similar to a Kueppers-Lortz instability, is analyzed and its fixed points are reconstructed.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure

    QUASI-CONTRACTS-TAXATION-RESCISSION OF GIFTS WHERE GIFT FAILS TO ACHIEVE DONOR\u27S PURPOSE OF MINIMIZING FEDERAL INCOME TAXES

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    A recent Michigan case, Stone v. Stone, presents problems of complexity and far-reaching importance. The plaintiffs, husband and wife, each owned a one-half interest in a family business partnership, and each apparently reported a proportionate share of the partnership earnings for federal income tax purposes. For the purpose of further reducing taxes on the income of the family unit, each parent transferred a one-quarter interest in the partnership to one of their two minor children, and thereafter each parent and child filed separate income tax returns reporting one-fourth of the partnership earnings as individual income. Each parent, under a probate court appointment, acted as guardian for one of the children in accepting the transferred business interests. The United States Supreme Court then announced its decision in Commissioner v. Tower, and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue accordingly refunded the income taxes paid by the wife and children and ruled that since the father managed and controlled the business without any contribution of services by the wife and children, the entire partnership income for the year was taxable to the father. Because the total business income was then returnable by one person instead of four, the income came within a higher surtax bracket and greatly, increased the total tax, all payable by the father, who as an individual received only one-fourth of the total partnership income taxed to him. Conceding the correctness of the. commissioner\u27s determination, the plaintiffs brought action to set aside the gifts to the children. In the alternative, the father sought to recover from each guardianship estate the amount of the taxes refunded for the year, plus its pro rata share of the total increased tax. The guardian ad litem, who was a neutral guardian appointed in the instant proceeding, admitted the desirability of relief by way of rescission. The Supreme Court of Michigan affirmed a decree granting rescission of the transfers to the children, basing its decision on the premise that the plaintiffs had made the gifts under a mistake as to their antecedent and existing private legal rights

    Factors on Vibrational Harm during Hammer Drilling : Influences of Lateral Force, Feed Force, Hammer Drill and Drill Bit Type

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    When using hammer drills, the user is exposed to vibrations which can cause damage to the body. Those vibrations can be affected by external factors such as feed forces, which can increase the degree of damage to the user. However, currently there is a lack of knowledge as to whether the lateral forces applied by the user also have an influence on the technical system and whether these influences depend on the system. For this reason, a study with 1152 test runs was carried out on a test rig to investigate the relationship between the feed force and the lateral force as a function of the hammer drill setup on the vibrations at the hammer drill housing and main handle. The experiment showed that the feed (p = < .001, up to r = 0.57) and lateral (p = < .001, up to r = 0.77) forces had an influence on the vibrations of the hammer drill. However, these depended strongly on the technical system and hence cannot be generalized. Furthermore, it was proven that the impact frequency of the hammer drill was reduced by increasing both the feed force (p = < .001, r = 0.55) and the lateral force (p = < .001, r = 0.23). The findings can not only be used by engineers and scientists to further develop vibration standards, but also to design more ergonomic hammer drills. Hence, the vibration decoupling of hammer drills should be redesigned so that lateral forces do not lead to an increase in vibrations that are harmful to the user

    Genomic Regions Identified by Overlapping Clusters of Nominally-Positive SNPs from Genome-Wide Studies of Alcohol and Illegal Substance Dependence

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    Declaring “replication” from results of genome wide association (GWA) studies is straightforward when major gene effects provide genome-wide significance for association of the same allele of the same SNP in each of multiple independent samples. However, such unambiguous replication is unlikely when phenotypes display polygenic genetic architecture, allelic heterogeneity, locus heterogeneity and when different samples display linkage disequilibria with different fine structures. We seek chromosomal regions that are tagged by clustered SNPs that display nominally-significant association in each of several independent samples. This approach provides one “nontemplate” approach to identifying overall replication of groups of GWA results in the face of difficult genetic architectures. We apply this strategy to 1 M SNP GWA results for dependence on: a) alcohol (including many individuals with dependence on other addictive substances) and b) at least one illegal substance (including many individuals dependent on alcohol). This approach provides high confidence in rejecting the null hypothesis that chance alone accounts for the extent to which clustered, nominally-significant SNPs from samples of the same racial/ethnic background identify the same sets of chromosomal regions. It identifies several genes that are also reported in other independent alcohol-dependence GWA datasets. There is more modest confidence in: a) identification of individual chromosomal regions and genes that are not also identified by data from other independent samples, b) the more modest overlap between results from samples of different racial/ethnic backgrounds and c) the extent to which any gene not identified herein is excluded, since the power of each of these individual samples is modest. Nevertheless, the strong overlap identified among the samples with similar racial/ethnic backgrounds supports contributions to individual differences in vulnerability to addictions that come from newer allelic variants that are common in subsets of current humans

    Does the User Behavior effect the Productivity of Hammer Drilling? : Analysis of the Influences of Feed and Lateral Force

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    The objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between feed and lateral force with productivity in hammer drilling. Necessary user forces and vibration caused by hammer drilling leads to user fatigue and long-term injuries. Through an increase in productivity, the stress duration and thus injuries caused can be reduced. The user, who influences productivity, applies lateral forces in addition to the feed force during hammer drilling. Their influence and interaction with the feed force on productivity has not yet been investigated. In this study, a total of 1152 boreholes were performed on an automated test bench. Along with the feed and lateral forces, the setup, consisting of hammer drill and drill bit model, was varied in order to investigate interaction effects as well as discuss transferability of the findings. The productivity was evaluated by the rate of penetration (ROP). It was observed that the ROP decreased with increasing lateral forces (p < .001, r = 0.315) and increased with increasing feed force. The detailed courses of these relationships were setup-specific. At low feed forces, the feed and lateral force interacted on the ROP. The investigated relationships indicate an efficient operating range depending on the user forces and setup used, which enables a reduction of the user\u27s stress duration. The findings help engineers develop power tools that provide more efficient and hence less fatiguing work, making them more ergonomic for the user

    Neurotensin: immunohistochemical localization in rat central nervous system.

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    Non-collinear magnetism in iron at high pressures

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    Using a first principles based, magnetic tight-binding total energy model, the magnetization energy and moments are computed for various ordered spin configurations in the high pressure polymorphs of iron (fcc, or γ\gamma-Fe, and hcp, or ϵ\epsilon-Fe), as well ferromagnetic bcc iron (α\alpha-Fe). For hcp, a non-collinear, antiferromagnetic, spin configuration that minimizes unfavorable ferromagnetic nearest neighbor ordering is the lowest energy state and is more stable than non-magnetic ϵ\epsilon iron up to about 75 GPa. Accounting for non-collinear magnetism yields better agreement with the experimental equation of state, in contrast to the non-magnetic equation of state, which is in poor agreement with experiment below 50 GPa

    Literature and Psychoanalysis

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    Schedule component for the FIQWS Writing Section for Psychoanalysis and Literature course

    MOTOR CONTROL PATTERNS IN ELITE SWIMMERS’ FREESTYLE STROKE DURING DRYLAND SWIMMING

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    The purpose of this study was to compare motor control patterns of elite freestyle swimmers when asked to swim at 100m freestyle pace using a dryland swimbench. Collegiate and masters level swimmers (n=15) whose 100m freestyle time were faster than 75% of the FINA cutoff time, performed four 10 second trials of freestyle swimming on a dryland swimbench. 3-D kinematic analysis was used to calculate displacement in the hand in the cranial-caudal, vertical, and medial-lateral directions. A 2-way repeated measures ANOVA was used to compare hand path between swimmers and within trials (n=58). Data was not statically significant, but three distinct combinations of hand paths were used to perform the 100m freestyle task on the swimbench. These hand paths differed from historical in-water data. Findings imply individual swimmers adjusted kinematics on the swimbench to accommodate for environmental constraints
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