969 research outputs found

    Virtual competitors influence rowers

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    Highly immersive environments for sports simulation can help elucidate if and how athletes perform under high pressure situations. We used a rowing simulator with a CAVE setup to test the influence of virtual competitors on 10 experienced rowers. All participants were using the simulator for the first time. The objective was to assess the degree of presence by quantifying how the actions of the virtual competitors triggered behavioral changes in the experienced rowers. The participants completed a virtual 2000 m race with two competing boats, one being behind and one ahead of the participant. For two trials, each boat would come closer to the participant without overtaking, resulting in four experimental conditions. The behavior of the participants was assessed with biomechanical variables, questionnaires, and an interview after the race. Behavioral changes were detected with statistically significant differences in the extracted variables of oar angles, timing variables, velocities, and work. The results for biomechanical variables indicate individual response patterns depending on perception of competitors and self-confidence. Self-reporting indicated a high degree of presence for most participants. Overall, the experimental paradigm worked but was compromised by perceptive and subjective factors. In future, the setup will be used to investigate rowing performance further with a focus on motor learning and training of pressure situations

    A plug and play spoken dialogue interface for smart environments

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-24630-5_44Proceedings of 5th International Conference, CICLing 2004 Seoul, Korea, February 15-21, 2004In this paper we present a plug and play dialogue system for smart environments. The environment description and its state are stored on a domain ontology. This ontology is formed by entities that represent real world contextual information and abstract concepts. This information is complemented with linguistic parts that allow to automatically create a spoken interface for the environment. The spoken interface is based on multiple dialogues, related to every ontology entity with linguistic information. Firstly, the dialogue system creates appropriate grammars for the dialogues. Secondly, it creates the dialogue parts, employing a tree structure. Grammars support the recognition process and the dialogue tree supports the interpretation and generation processes. The system is being tested with a prototype formed by a living room. Users may interact with and modify the physical state of this living room environment by means of the spoken dialogue interface.This paper has been sponsored by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology, project number TIC2000-046

    GTP analogs suppress uptake but not transport of d-glucose analogs in Glut1 glucose transporter-expressing Xenopus oocytes

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    AbstractA Xenopus oocyte expression-co-injection system was used to study the influence of guanine nucleotides on D-glucose uptake. GTP analogs like GTPγS and GppNHp had no effect on 3-O-methylglucose transport determined by zero-trans uptake or equilibrium exchange, but suppressed 2-deoxyglucose uptake into Glutl glucose transporter-expressing oocytes by up to 86%. Both GTP analogs showed concentration dependence of their effectiveness, with GTPγS being more potent than GppNHp. No statistically significant differences were observed between groups of oocytes co-injected with water or GDPβS (250 and 500 μM intracellular concentration). Glut1 transporter expression in plasma membrane was not different between water or GTPγS-co-injected oocytes. Thus, inhibition of hexokinase catalytic activity is the most likely causative factor for down-regulation of 2-deoxyglucose uptake

    Frustrated Drift of an Anchored Scroll-Wave Filament and the Geodesic Principle

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    We investigate anchored scroll-wave filaments in an excitable medium whose diffusivity matrix, including its determinant, is spatially nonuniform. The study is motivated by cardiological applications where scroll-wave behavior in the presence of diffusivity gradients is believed to play an important role in the development of severe arrhythmias. A diffusivity gradient is expected to make the filament drift, unless drift is prevented ( frustrated ) by anchoring to localized defects in the propagation medium. The resulting stationary filament is a geodesic curve, as demonstrated here in the case of a nonzero but constant gradient. That is, the diffusivity matrix has a determinant that varies in space, in contrast to what was assumed in earlier work. Here, we show that the filament shape results from a metric tensor of the form (det D)D{-1} , where D is the diffusivity tensor. The filament\u27s shape is solely determined by the diffusivity tensor and is independent of the equation\u27s reaction terms. We derive the analytic solution for the filament and determine conditions for the existence of that solution. The theory is in excellent agreement with numerical simulations

    Refraction of Scroll-Wave Filaments at the Boundary between Two Reaction-Diffusion Media

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    We explore the shape and the dynamics of scroll-wave filaments in excitable media with an abruptly changing diffusion tensor, important for cardiac applications. We show that, similar to a beam of light, the filament refracts at the boundary separating domains with different diffusion. We derive the laws of filament refraction and test their validity in computational experiments. We discovered that at small angles to the interface, the filament can become unstable and develop oscillations. The nature of the observed instabilities, as well as overall theoretical and experimental significance of the findings, is discussed

    An Automated Meeting Assistant: A Tangible Mixed Reality Interface for the AMIDA Automatic Content Linking Device

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    We describe our approach to support ongoing meetings with an automated meeting assistant. The system based on the AMIDA Content Linking Device aims at providing relevant documents used in previous meetings for the ongoing meeting based on automatic speech recognition. Once the content linking device finds documents linked to a discussion about a similar subject in a previous meeting, it assumes they may be relevant for the current discussion as well. We believe that the way these documents are offered to the meeting participants is equally important as the way they are found. We developed a mixed reality, projection based user interface that lets the documents appear on the table tops in front of the meeting participants. They can hand them over to others or bring them onto the shared projection screen easily if they consider them relevant. Yet, irrelevant documents don't draw too much attention from the discussion. In this paper we describe the concept and implementation of this user interface and provide some preliminary results

    Pore fluid modeling approach to identify recent meltwater signals on the west Antarctic Peninsula

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    The sensitivity of sea level to melting from polar ice sheets and glaciers during recent natural and anthropogenic climate fluctuations is poorly constrained beyond the period of direct observation by satellite. We have investigated glacial meltwater events during the Anthropocene by adapting the pioneering approach of modeling trends in d18O in the pore waters of deep‐sea cores, previously used to constrain the size of ice sheets during the Last Glacial Maximum. We show that during recent warm periods, meltwater from glacier retreat drains into the coastal fjords, leaving a signature of depleted d18O values and low Cl concentrations in the pore water profiles of rapidly accumulating sediments. Here we model such pore water profiles in a piston core to constrain the timing and magnitude of an ice sheet retreat event at Caley Glacier on the west Antarctic Peninsula, and the result is compared with local ice front movement. This approach of pore water modeling was then applied in another kasten core and tested by a series of sensitivity analyses. The results suggest that our approach may be applied in fjords of different sedimentary settings to reconstruct the glacier history and allow insight into the sensitivity of polar glaciers to abrupt warming events

    Optimal Concentration of Information Content For Log-Concave Densities

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    An elementary proof is provided of sharp bounds for the varentropy of random vectors with log-concave densities, as well as for deviations of the information content from its mean. These bounds significantly improve on the bounds obtained by Bobkov and Madiman ({\it Ann. Probab.}, 39(4):1528--1543, 2011).Comment: 15 pages. Changes in v2: Remark 2.5 (due to C. Saroglou) added with more general sufficient conditions for equality in Theorem 2.3. Also some minor corrections and added reference

    Inconsistency of the MLE for the joint distribution of interval censored survival times and continuous marks

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    This paper considers the nonparametric maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) for the joint distribution function of an interval censored survival time and a continuous mark variable. We provide a new explicit formula for the MLE in this problem. We use this formula and the mark specific cumulative hazard function of Huang and Louis (1998) to obtain the almost sure limit of the MLE. This result leads to necessary and sufficient conditions for consistency of the MLE which imply that the MLE is inconsistent in general. We show that the inconsistency can be repaired by discretizing the marks. Our theoretical results are supported by simulations.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figure

    Automatic detection of protected health information from clinic narratives

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    This paper presents a natural language processing (NLP) system that was designed to participate in the 2014 i2b2 de-identification challenge. The challenge task aims to identify and classify seven main Protected Health Information (PHI) categories and 25 associated sub categories. A hybrid model was proposed which combines machine learning techniques with keyword-based and rule based approaches to deal with the complexity inherent in PHI categories. Our proposed approaches exploit a rich set of linguistic features, both syntactic and word surface-oriented, which are further enriched by task specific features and regular expression template patterns to characterize the semantics of various PHI categories. Our system achieved promising accuracy on the challenge test data with an overall micro-averaged F measure of 93.6%, which was the winner of this de-identification challenge
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