2,681 research outputs found
Qualification of the most statistically "sensitive" diffusion tensor imaging parameters for detection of spinal cord injury
Qualification of the most statistically "sensitive" diffusion parameters using Magnetic Resonance (MR) Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) of the control and injured spinal cord of a rat in vivo and in vitro after the trauma is reported. Injury was induced in TH12/TH13 level by a controlled "weight-drop". In vitro experiments were performed in a home-built MR microscope, with a 6.4 T magnet, in vivo samples were measured in a 9.4 T/21 horizontal magnet The aim of this work was to find the most effective diffusion parameters which are useful in the statistically significant detection of spinal cord tissue damage. Apparent diffusion tensor (ADT) weighted data measured in vivo and in vitro on control and injured rat spinal cord (RSC) in the transverse planes and analysis of the diffusion anisotropy as a function of many parameters, which allows statisticall expose of the existence of the damage are reported
WIMPs and stellar-mass primordial black holes are incompatible
We recently showed that postulated ultracompact minihalos with a steep density proïŹle do not form in realistic simulations with enhanced initial perturbations. In this paper we assume that a small fraction of the dark matter consists of primordial black holes (PBHs) and simulate the formation of structures around them. We ïŹnd that in this scenario halos with steep density proïŹles do form, consistent with theoretical predictions. If the rest of the dark matter consists of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), we also show that WIMPs in the dense innermost part of halos surrounding the PBH would annihilate and produce a detectable gamma-ray signal. The non-detection of this signal implies that PBHs make up at most one billionth of the dark matter, provided that their mass is greater than one millionth of the mass of the Sun. Similarly, a detection of PBHs would imply that the remaining dark matter could not be WIMPs
3D simulations with boosted primordial power spectra and ultracompact minihalos
We perform three-dimensional simulations of structure formation in the early Universe, when boosting the primordial power spectrum on âŒkpc scales. We demonstrate that our simulations are capable of producing power-law profiles close to the steep Ï â râ9=4 halo profiles that are commonly assumed to be a good approximation to ultracompact minihalos (UCMHs). However, we show that for more realistic initial conditions in which halos are neither perfectly symmetric nor isolated the steep power-law profile is disrupted, and we find that the Navarro-Frenk-White profile is a better fit to most halos. In the presence of background fluctuations, even extreme, nearly spherical initial conditions do not remain exceptional. Nonetheless, boosting the amplitude of initial fluctuations causes all structures to form earlier and thus at larger densities. With a sufficiently large amplitude of fluctuations, we find that values for the concentration of typical halos in our simulations can become very large. However, despite the signal coming from dark matter annihilation inside the cores of these halos being enhanced, it is still orders of magnitude smaller compared to the usually assumed UCMH profile. The upper bound on the primordial power spectrum from the nonobservation of UCMHs should therefore be reevaluated
Novel cyclic homogeneous oscillation detection method for high accuracy and specific characterization of neural dynamics
Determining the presence and frequency of neural oscillations is essential to understanding dynamic brain function. Traditional methods that detect peaks over 1
Contact processes with long-range interactions
A class of non-local contact processes is introduced and studied using
mean-field approximation and numerical simulations. In these processes
particles are created at a rate which decays algebraically with the distance
from the nearest particle. It is found that the transition into the absorbing
state is continuous and is characterized by continuously varying critical
exponents. This model differs from the previously studied non-local directed
percolation model, where particles are created by unrestricted Levy flights. It
is motivated by recent studies of non-equilibrium wetting indicating that this
type of non-local processes play a role in the unbinding transition. Other
non-local processes which have been suggested to exist within the context of
wetting are considered as well.Comment: Accepted with minor revisions by Journal of Statistical Mechanics:
Theory and experiment
Endplate calcification and cervical intervertebral disc degeneration: the role of endplate marrow contact channel occlusion
Background: The aim of this study was to determine the fundamental relationships between cervical intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration, endplate calcification, and the patency of endplate marrow contact channels (MCC). Materials and methods: Sixty cervical IVDs were excised from 30 human cadavers. After sectioning the specimens underwent micro computed tomography (microCT) â from all images the number, calibre, diameter and distribution of endplate openings were measured using ImageJ. Next, the specimens were scored for macroscopic degeneration (Thompsonâs classification), and subsequently underwent histological analysis for both IVD and endplate degeneration (Boosâs classification) and calcification. Results: The study group comprised 30 female and 30 male IVDs (mean age ± SD: 51.4 ± 19.5). Specimenâs age, macroscopic and microscopic degeneration correlated negatively with the number of MCCs (r = â0.33â(â0.95); p < 0.0001), apart from the MCCs > 300 ÎŒm in diameter (r = 0.66â0.79; p < 0.0001). The negative relationship was strongest for the MCCs 10â50 ÎŒm in diameter. Conclusions: There is a strong negative correlation between the number of endplate MCCs, and both macroscopic and microscopic cervical IVD and endplate degeneration. This could further support the thesis that endplate calcification, through the occlusion of MCCs, leads to a fall in nutrient transport to the IVD, and subsequently causes its degeneration
Non Sequential Recursive Pair Substitution: Some Rigorous Results
We present rigorous results on some open questions on NSRPS, non sequential
recursive pairs substitution method (see Grassberger in \cite{G}). In
particular, starting from the action of NSRPS on finite strings we define a
corresponding natural action on measures and we prove that the iterated measure
becomes asymptotically Markov. This certify the effectiveness of NSRPS as a
tool for data compression and entropy estimation.Comment: 20 page
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