9,479 research outputs found
Predictions of Cockpit Simulator Experimental Outcome Using System Models
This study involved predicting the outcome of a cockpit simulator experiment where pilots used cockpit displays of traffic information (CDTI) to establish and maintain in-trail spacing behind a lead aircraft during approach. The experiments were run on the NASA Ames Research Center multicab cockpit simulator facility. Prior to the experiments, a mathematical model of the pilot/aircraft/CDTI flight system was developed which included relative in-trail and vertical dynamics between aircraft in the approach string. This model was used to construct a digital simulation of the string dynamics including response to initial position errors. The model was then used to predict the outcome of the in-trail following cockpit simulator experiments. Outcome included performance and sensitivity to different separation criteria. The experimental results were then used to evaluate the model and its prediction accuracy. Lessons learned in this modeling and prediction study are noted
Comparative genetic resistance to Ascaridia galli infections of 4 different commercial layer-lines
1. The objective of the study was to compare the establishment and effect of Ascaridia galli infections in 4 different layer-lines.
2. A total of 160 birds comprising 4 different commercial layer-lines, ISA Brown, New Hampshire, Skalborg and a cross of New Hampshire(NH) and Skalborg (Sk), were infected with A. galli eggs. The birds were examined for the presence of parasite eggs and parasites at weeks 3, 6 and 9 post infection (pi).
3. At week 6 pi the chickens of the NH line harboured more larvae compared with the three other lines. The Sk line chickens excreted more A. galli eggs throughout the study compared with the other lines. Female worms in the Sk line were more fecund than the worms in the other lines. Male and female worms recovered from the Sk line at week 9 pi were longer. Male worms recovered from the NH line 6 weeks pi were shorter than male worms from the other lines. Female worms recovered from the NH line were shorter than the female worms from the ISA line and the Sk line. No differences were seen
in weight gain among the 4 lines.
4. The results suggest that genetic factors are involved in the establishment and survival of A. galli in the intestine of layers. Further studies are needed to elucidate the genetic mechanisms behind the observed parasitological findings
Herding cats: observing live coding in the wild
After a momentous decade of live coding activities, this paper seeks to explore the practice with the aim of situating it in the history of contemporary arts and music. The article introduces several key points of investigation in live coding research and discusses some examples of how live coding practitioners engage with these points in their system design and performances. In the light of the extremely diverse manifestations of live coding activities, the problem of defining the practice is discussed, and the question raised whether live coding will actually be necessary as an independent category
Prenatal exposure to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and childhood overweight at 7 years of age
Abstract not availableLuke E. Grzeskowiak, Andrew L. Gilbert, Thorkild I. A. Sørensen, Jørn Olsen, Henrik T. Sørensen, Lars H. Pedersen, Janna L. Morriso
Positive Effects of Negative Publicity: When Negative Reviews Increase Sales
Can negative information about a product increase sales, and if so, when? Although popular wisdom suggests that “any publicity is good publicity,” prior research has demonstrated only downsides to negative press. Negative reviews or word of mouth, for example, have been found to hurt product evaluation and sales. Using a combination of econometric analysis and experimental methods, we unify these perspectives to delineate contexts under which negative publicity about a product will have positive versus negative effects. Specifically, we argue that negative publicity can increase purchase likelihood and sales by increasing product awareness. Consequently, negative publicity should have differential effects on established versus unknown products. Three studies support this perspective. Whereas a negative review in the New York Times hurt sales of books by well-known authors, for example, it increased sales of books that had lower prior awareness. The studies further underscore the importance of a gap between publicity and purchase occasion and the mediating role of increased awareness in these effects
Partial coherence in the core/halo picture of Bose-Einstein n-particle correlations
We study the influence of a possible coherent component in the boson source
on the two-, three- and -particle correlation functions in a generalized
core/halo type of boson-emitting source. In particular, a simple formula is
presented for the strengh of the -particle correlation functions for such
systems. Graph rules are obtained to evaluate the correlation functions of
arbitrary high order. The importance of experimental determination of the 4-th
and 5-th order Bose-Einstein correlation function is emphasized.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, 3 EPS files, 1 tabl
Ultra-large bandwidth hollow-core guiding in all-silica Bragg fibers with nano-supports
We demonstrate a new class of hollow-core Bragg fibers that are composed of
concentric cylindrical silica rings separated by nanoscale support bridges. We
theoretically predict and experimentally observe hollow-core confinement over
an octave frequency range. The bandwidth of bandgap guiding in this new class
of Bragg fibers exceeds that of other hollow-core fibers reported in the
literature. With only three rings of silica cladding layers, these Bragg fibers
achieve propagation loss of the order of 1 dB/m.Comment: 9 pages including 5 figure
The Physical Conditions and Dynamics of the Interstellar Medium in the Nucleus of M83: Observations of CO and CI
This paper presents CI, CO J=4-3, and CO J=3-2 maps of the barred spiral
galaxy M83 taken at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. Observations indicate a
double peaked structure which is consistent with gas inflow along the bar
collecting at the inner Lindblad resonance. This structure suggests that
nuclear starbursts can occur even in galaxies where this inflow/collection
occurs, in contrast to previous studies of barred spiral galaxies. However, the
observations also suggest that the double peaked emission may be the result of
a rotating molecular ring oriented nearly perpendicular to the main disk of the
galaxy. The CO J=4-3 data indicate the presence of warm gas in the nucleus that
is not apparent in the lower-J CO observations, which suggests that CO J=1-0
emission may not be a reliable tracer of molecular gas in starburst galaxies.
The twelve CI/CO J=4-3 line ratios in the inner 24'' x 24'' are uniform at the
2 sigma level, which indicates that the CO J=4-3 emission is originating in the
same hot photon-dominated regions as the CI emission. The CO J=4-3/J=3-2 line
ratios vary significantly within the nucleus with the higher line ratios
occurring away from peaks of emission along an arc of active star forming
regions. These high line ratios (>1) likely indicate optically thin gas created
by the high temperatures caused by star forming regions in the nucleus of this
starburst galaxy.Comment: 15 pages with 10 figures. To appear in the August 10 1998 issue of
The Astrophysical Journa
Low temperature spin diffusion in the one-dimensional quantum nonlinear -model
An effective, low temperature, classical model for spin transport in the
one-dimensional, gapped, quantum non-linear -model is developed.
Its correlators are obtained by a mapping to a model solved earlier by Jepsen.
We obtain universal functions for the ballistic-to-diffusive crossover and the
value of the spin diffusion constant, and these are claimed to be exact at low
temperatures. Implications for experiments on one-dimensional insulators with a
spin gap are noted.Comment: 4 pages including 3 eps-figures, Revte
Superconductor-insulator transition driven by local dephasing
We consider a system where localized bound electron pairs form an array of
"Andreev"-like scattering centers and are coupled to a fermionic subsystem of
uncorrelated electrons. By means of a path-integral approach, which describes
the bound electron pairs within a coherent pseudospin representation, we derive
and analyze the effective action for the collective phase modes which arise
from the coupling between the two subsystems once the fermionic degrees of
freedom are integrated out. This effective action has features of a quantum
phase model in the presence of a Berry phase term and exhibits a coupling to a
field which describes at the same time the fluctuations of density of the bound
pairs and those of the amplitude of the fermion pairs. Due to the competition
between the local and the hopping induced non-local phase dynamics it is
possible, by tuning the exchange coupling or the density of the bound pairs, to
trigger a transition from a phase ordered superconducting to a phase disordered
insulating state. We discuss the different mechanisms which control this
occurrence and the eventual destruction of phase coherence both in the weak and
strong coupling limit.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PRB (05-Feb04
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