1,736 research outputs found

    Alien Registration- Vaillancourt, Joseph M. (Lewiston, Androscoggin County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/27021/thumbnail.jp

    The effect of signal acquisition and processing choices on ApEn values: Towards a “gold standard” for distinguishing effort levels from isometric force records

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    Approximate Entropy (ApEn) is frequently used to identify changes in the complexity of isometric force records with ageing and disease. Different signal acquisition and processing parameters have been used, making comparison or confirmation of results difficult. This study determined the effect of sampling and parameter choices by examining changes in ApEn values across a range of submaximal isometric contractions of the First Dorsal Interosseus. Reducing the sample rate by decimation changed both the value and pattern of ApEn values dramatically. The pattern of ApEn values across the range of effort levels was not sensitive to the filter cut-off frequency, or the criterion used to extract the section of data for analysis. The complexity increased with increasing effort levels using a fixed ‘r’ value (which accounts for measurement noise) but decreased with increasing effort level when ‘r’ was set to 0.1 of the standard deviation of force. It is recommended isometric force records are sampled at frequencies >200 Hz, template length (‘m’) is set to 2, and 'r' set to measurement system noise or 0.1 SD depending on physiological process to be distinguished. It is demonstrated that changes in ApEn across effort levels are related to changes in force gradation strategy

    Investing in Health Infrastructure: How Decentralization Matters

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    This paper examines the infrastructure–decentralization nexus in the production of health services with a particular emphasis on the issue of health infrastructure. The first part of the paper presents evidence on health services and infrastructure spending in health for various countries or groups of countries showing the importance of infrastructure spending in the provision of health services. The second part of the paper examines why and how health services are joint production with collective and private characteristics. These characteristics affect the decentralization of such services and thus the decentralization of health infrastructure; it also raises the issue of who should finance what in health care. The third part examines case studies and policy choices in USA, Canada and Switzerland related to various aspects of health care and health infrastructure financing

    Placing Confidence Limits on Polarization Measurements

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    The determination of the true source polarization given a set of measurements is complicated by the requirement that the polarization always be positive. This positive bias also hinders construction of upper limits, uncertainties, and confidence regions, especially at low signal-to-noise levels. We generate the likelihood function for linear polarization measurements and use it to create confidence regions and upper limits. This is accomplished by integrating the likelihood function over the true polarization (parameter space), rather than the measured polarization (data space). These regions are valid for both low and high signal-to-noise measurements.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, submitted to PAS

    A construction of multiwavelets

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    AbstractA class of r-regular multiwavelets, depending on the smoothness of the multiwavelet functions, is introduced with the appropriate notation and definitions. Oscillation properties of orthonormal systems are obtained in Lemma 1 and Corollary 1 without assuming any vanishing moments for the scaling functions, and in Theorem 1 the existence of r-regular multiwavelets in L2(Rn) is established. In Theorem 2, a particular r-regular multiresolution analysis for multiwavelets is obtained from an r-regular multiresolution analysis for uniwavelets. In Theorem 3, an r-regular multiresolution analysis of split-type multiwavelets, which are perhaps the simplest multiwavelets, is easily obtained by using an r-regular multiresolution analysis for uniwavelets and a (2n − 1)-fold regular multiresolution analysis for uniwavelets. For some split-type multiwavelets, the support or width of the wavelets is shorter than the support or width of the scaling functions without loss of regularity nor of vanishing moments. Examples of split-type multiwavelets in L2(R) are constructed and illustrated by means of figures. Symmetry and antisymmetry are preserved in the case of infinite support

    To make available data for development

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    French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Diffusion des données sur le développemen

    Convolution Theorems for Clifford Fourier Transform and Properties

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    The non-commutativity of the Clifford multiplication gives different aspects from the classical Fourier analysis.We establish main properties of convolution theorems for the Clifford Fourier transform. Some properties of these generalized convolutionsare extensions of the corresponding convolution theorems of the classical Fourier transform.DOI : http://dx.doi.org/10.22342/jims.20.2.143.125-14

    On the Stability of Oscillatory Pipe Flows

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    The linear stability of pure oscillatory pipe flow is investigated by solving the linearized disturbance equations as an initial value problem. The importance of the initial conditions on transient dynamics of the flow is analyzed. It is shown that transient growth can play an important role in the development of flow instability. The accuracy of the quasi-steady assumption is assessed. It is shown that the growth rates obtained with this assumption deviate considerably from the results obtained with a direct numerical solution of the linearized initial value problem

    Magnetic Field Structure around Low-Mass Class 0 Protostars: B335, L1527 and IC348-SMM2

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    We report new 350 micron polarization observations of the thermal dust emission from the cores surrounding the low-mass, Class 0 YSOs L1527, IC348-SMM2 and B335. We have inferred magnetic field directions from these observations, and have used them together with results in the literature to determine whether magnetically regulated core-collapse and star-formation models are consistent with the observations. These models predict a pseudo-disk with its symmetry axis aligned with the core magnetic field. The models also predict a magnetic field pinch structure on a scale less than or comparable to the infall radii for these sources. In addition, if the core magnetic field aligns (or nearly aligns) the core rotation axis with the magnetic field before core collapse, then the models predict the alignment (or near alignment) of the overall pinch field structure with the bipolar outflows in these sources. We show that if one includes the distorting effects of bipolar outflows on magnetic fields, then in general the observational results for L1527 and IC348-SMM2 are consistent with these magnetically regulated models. We can say the same for B335 only if we assume the distorting effects of the bipolar outflow on the magnetic fields within the B335 core are much greater than for L1527 and IC348-SMM2. We show that the energy densities of the outflows in all three sources are large enough to distort the magnetic fields predicted by magnetically regulated models.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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