54 research outputs found
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The stochastic modelling of kleptoparasitism using a Markov process
Kleptoparasitism, the stealing of food items from other animals, is a common behaviour observed across a huge variety of species, and has been subjected to significant modelling effort. Most such modelling has been deterministic, effectively assuming an infinite population, although recently some important stochastic models have been developed. In particular the model of Yates and Broom (Stochastic models of kleptoparasitism. J. Theor. Biol. 248 (2007), 480–489) introduced a stochastic version following the original model of Ruxton and Moody (The ideal free distribution with kleptoparasitism. J. Theor. Biol. 186 (1997), 449–458), and whilst they generated results of interest, they did not solve the model explicitly. In this paper, building on methods used already by van der Meer and Smallegange (A stochastic version of the Beddington-DeAngelis functional response: Modelling interference for a finite number of predators. J. Animal Ecol. 78 (2009) 134–142) we give an exact solution to the distribution of the population over the states for the Yates and Broom model and investigate the effects of some key biological parameters, especially for small populations where stochastic models can be expected to differ most from their deterministic equivalents
Relationships of pericoronary and epicardial fat measurements in male and female patients with and without coronary artery disease
INTRODUCTION: Although pericoronary adipose tissue (PCAT) is a component of the epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) depot, they may have different associations to coronary artery disease (CAD). We explored relationships between pericoronary adipose tissue mean attenuation (PCAT MA) and EAT measurements in coronary CT angiography (CCTA) in patients with and without CAD. MATERIAL AND METHODS: CCTA scans of 185 non-CAD and 81 CAD patients (86.4% >50% stenosis) were included and retrospectively analyzed. PCAT MA and EAT density/volume were measured and analyzed by sex, including associations with age, risk factors and tube voltage using linear regression models. RESULTS: In non-CAD and CAD, mean PCAT MA and EAT volume were higher in men than in women (non-CAD: -92.5 ± 10.6HU vs -96.2 ± 8.4HU, and 174.4 ± 69.1 cm 3 vs 124.1 ± 57.3 cm 3; CAD: -92.2 ± 9.0HU vs -97.4 ± 9.7HU, and 193.6 ± 62.5 cm 3 vs 148.5 ± 50.5 cm 3 (p < 0.05)). EAT density was slightly lower in men than women in non-CAD (-96.4 ± 6.3HU vs -94.4 ± 5.5HU (p < 0.05)), and similar in CAD (-98.2 ± 5.2HU vs 98.2 ± 6.4HU). There was strong correlation between PCAT MA and EAT density (non-CAD: r = 0.725, p < 0.001, CAD: r = 0.686, p < 0.001) but no correlation between PCAT MA and EAT volume (non-CAD: r = 0.018, p = 0.81, CAD: r = -0.055, p = 0.63). A weak inverse association was found between EAT density and EAT volume (non-CAD: r = -0.244, p < 0.001, CAD: r = -0.263, p = 0.02). In linear regression models, EAT density was significantly associated with PCAT MA in both non-CAD and CAD patients independent of risk factors and tube voltage. CONCLUSION: In CAD and non-CAD patients, EAT density, but not EAT volume, showed significant associations with PCAT MA. Compared to women, men had higher PCAT MA and EAT volume independently of disease status, but similar or slightly lower EAT density. Differences in trends and relations of PCAT MA and EAT by sex could indicate that personalized interpretation and thresholding is needed. </p
The Freshman, vol. 4, no. 12
The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students. Social news leading into the holiday season is the focus of this edition. The Class of 1937 run of The Freshman featured original cover art by sketch artist Jack Frost (John Edward Frost, 1915-1997), who was born in Eastport, Maine. He attended the University of Maine for only a single academic year before moving to Massachusetts to work for the Boston Herald. Frost later became a columnist and illustrator for the Boston Post
Happy Moves? Assessing the Link between Life Satisfaction and Emigration Intentions
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. It has been shown that higher levels of subjective well-being lead to greater work productivity, better physical health and enhanced social skills. Because of these positive externalities, policymakers across the world should be interested in attracting and retaining happy and life-satisfied migrants. This paper studies the link between life satisfaction and one's intentions to move abroad. Using survey data from 35 European and Central Asian countries, I find a U-shaped association between life satisfaction and emigration intentions: it is the most and the least life-satisfied people who are the most likely to express intentions to emigrate. This result is found in countries with different levels of economic development and institutional quality. The instrumental variable results suggest that higher levels of life satisfaction have a positive effect on the probability of reporting intentions to migrate. The findings of this paper raise concerns about possible 'happiness drain' in migrant-sending countries
Jan Amos Comenius’s Trinitarian and conciliar vision of a united Europe:Christ as the universal ‘centre of security’
The impact of bird herbivory on macrophytes and the resilience of the clear-water state in shallow lakes: a model study
Towards a black-box solver for finite games: Finding all Nash equilibriua with Gambit and PHCpack
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