706 research outputs found
Drymus brunneus (Sahlberg) (Hemiptera: Rhyparochromidae): a seed bug introduced into North America
The occurrence of the adventive Drymus brunneus (Sahlberg) in North America is documented, and characteristics to distinguish this Old World species from D. unus (Say) are described and illustrated. A revised key to the Western Hemisphere species of Drymus is included
Seed, Expand and Constrain: Three Principles for Weakly-Supervised Image Segmentation
We introduce a new loss function for the weakly-supervised training of
semantic image segmentation models based on three guiding principles: to seed
with weak localization cues, to expand objects based on the information about
which classes can occur in an image, and to constrain the segmentations to
coincide with object boundaries. We show experimentally that training a deep
convolutional neural network using the proposed loss function leads to
substantially better segmentations than previous state-of-the-art methods on
the challenging PASCAL VOC 2012 dataset. We furthermore give insight into the
working mechanism of our method by a detailed experimental study that
illustrates how the segmentation quality is affected by each term of the
proposed loss function as well as their combinations.Comment: ECCV 201
Large parallel and perpendicular electric fields on electron spatial scales in the terrestrial bow shock
Large parallel ( 100 mV/m) and perpendicular ( 600 mV/m) electric
fields were measured in the Earth's bow shock by the vector electric field
experiment on the Polar satellite. These are the first reported direct
measurements of parallel electric fields in a collisionless shock. These fields
exist on spatial scales comparable to or less than the electron skin depth (a
few kilometers) and correspond to magnetic field-aligned potentials of tens of
volts and perpendicular potentials up to a kilovolt. The perpendicular fields
are amongst the largest ever measured in space, with energy densities of
of order 10%. The measured parallel electric field
implies that the electrons can be demagnetized, which may result in stochastic
(rather than coherent) electron heating
(1R*,2R*,4S*,5R*,6R*,8S*)-4,8-Dimethyl-2,6-diphenylbicyclo[3.3.1]nonane-2,6-diol
The racemic title compound, C23H28O2, crystallizes in the space group C2/c as a layered structure in which a centrosymmetric three hydrogen bond sequence links four molecules. Both hydroxy groups are involved in this arrangement, but they differ in that one participates in two hydrogen bonds while the other takes part in only one. Between layers, the aromatic rings take part in edge-face interactions [shortest C—H⋯C distances 3.04, 3.10 and 3.12 Å and angle between normal to planes 86.7(2)°], forming a centrosymmetric dimer. The lattice is further stabilized by C—H⋯π interactions involving both methyl (shortest C⋯C 3.82 and 3.97 Å) and methylene (shortest C⋯C 3.60 Å) groups
Weakly- and Semi-Supervised Panoptic Segmentation
We present a weakly supervised model that jointly performs both semantic- and
instance-segmentation -- a particularly relevant problem given the substantial
cost of obtaining pixel-perfect annotation for these tasks. In contrast to many
popular instance segmentation approaches based on object detectors, our method
does not predict any overlapping instances. Moreover, we are able to segment
both "thing" and "stuff" classes, and thus explain all the pixels in the image.
"Thing" classes are weakly-supervised with bounding boxes, and "stuff" with
image-level tags. We obtain state-of-the-art results on Pascal VOC, for both
full and weak supervision (which achieves about 95% of fully-supervised
performance). Furthermore, we present the first weakly-supervised results on
Cityscapes for both semantic- and instance-segmentation. Finally, we use our
weakly supervised framework to analyse the relationship between annotation
quality and predictive performance, which is of interest to dataset creators.Comment: ECCV 2018. The first two authors contributed equall
MeV magnetosheath ions energized at the bow shock
A causal relationship between midlatitude magnetosheath energetic ions and bow shock magnetic geometry was previously established for ion energy up to 200 keV e−1 for the May 4, 1998, storm event. This study demonstrates that magnetosheath ions with energies above 200 keV up to 1 MeV simply extend the ion spectrum to form a power law tail. Results of cross-correlation analysis suggest that these ions also come directly from the quasi-parallel bow shock, not the magnetosphere. This is confirmed by a comparison of energetic ion fluxes simultaneously measured in the magnetosheath and at the quasi-parallel bow shock when both regions are likely connected by the magnetic field lines. We suggest that ions are accelerated at the quasi-parallel bow shock to energies as high as 1 MeV and subsequently transported into the magnetosheath during this event
Differentiating Hydrothermal, Pedogenic, and Glacial Weathering in a Cold Volcanic Mars-Analog Environment
Although the current cold, dry environment of Mars extends back through much of its history, its earliest periods experienced significant water- related surface activity. Both geomorphic features (e.g., paleolakes, deltas, and river valleys) and hydrous mineral detections (e.g., clays and salts) have historically been interpreted to imply a "warm and wet" early Mars climate. More recently, atmospheric modeling studies have struggled to produce early climate conditions with temperatures above 0degC, leading some studies to propose a "cold and icy" early Mars dominated by widespread glaciation with transient melting. However, the alteration mineralogy produced in subglacial environments is not well understood, so the extent to which cold climate glacial weathering can produce the diverse alteration mineralogy observed on Mars is unknown. This summer, we will be conducting a field campaign in a glacial weathering environment in the Cascade Range, OR in order to determine the types of minerals that these environments produce. However, we must first disentangle the effects of glacial weathering from other significant alteration processes. Here we attempt a first understanding of glacial weathering by differentiating rocks and sediments weathered by hydrothermal, pedogenic, and glacial weathering processes in the Cascades volcanic range
Drymus brunneus (Sahlberg) (Hemiptera: Rhyparochromidae): a seed bug introduced into North America
The occurrence of the adventive Drymus brunneus (Sahlberg) in North America is documented, and characteristics to distinguish this Old World species from D. unus (Say) are described and illustrated. A revised key to the Western Hemisphere species of Drymus is included
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