11,345 research outputs found
Easy on that trigger dad: a study of long term family photo retrieval
We examine the effects of new technologies for digital photography on people's longer term storage and access to collections of personal photos. We report an empirical study of parents' ability to retrieve photos related to salient family events from more than a year ago. Performance was relatively poor with people failing to find almost 40% of pictures. We analyze participants' organizational and access strategies to identify reasons for this poor performance. Possible reasons for retrieval failure include: storing too many pictures, rudimentary organization, use of multiple storage systems, failure to maintain collections and participants' false beliefs about their ability to access photos. We conclude by exploring the technical and theoretical implications of these findings
Nonexistence of an integral of the 6th degree in momenta for the Zipoy-Voorhees metric
We prove nonexistence of a nontrivial integral that is polynomial in momenta
of degree less than 7 for the Zipoy-Voorhees spacetime with the parameter
Comment: 7 pages, no figure
Ash grains of the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption as a tracer in Rose Bengal stained deep sea agglutinated foraminifera: How old is Freddy?
The use of volcanic ash particles (including dark-coloured grains) by agglutinated foraminifera that survived the 1991 eruption of Mt Pinatubo volcano provides a useful tracer to help determine growth rates and longevity in the deep sea. In the case of a specimen of Cyclammina pusilla Brady, the rate of chamber addition in this Rose Bengal stained sub-adult individual is three chambers over a timespan of five and one-half years
The Population Biology and Transmission Dynamics of Loa loa
Endemic to Central Africa, loiasis – or African eye worm (caused by the filarial nematode Loa loa) – affects more than 10 million people. Despite causing ocular and systemic symptoms, it has typically been considered a benign condition, only of public health relevance because it impedes mass drug administration-based interventions against onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis in co-endemic areas. Recent research has challenged this conception, demonstrating excess mortality associated with high levels of infection, implying that loiasis warrants attention as an intrinsic public health problem. This review summarises available information on the key parasitological, entomological, and epidemiological characteristics of the infection and argues for the mobilisation of resources to control the disease, and the development of a mathematical transmission model to guide deployment of interventions
Rigid motions: action-angles, relative cohomology and polynomials with roots on the unit circle
Revisiting canonical integration of the classical solid near a uniform
rotation, canonical action angle coordinates, hyperbolic and elliptic, are
constructed in terms of various power series with coefficients which are
polynomials in a variable depending on the inertia moments. Normal forms
are derived via the analysis of a relative cohomology problem and shown to be
obtainable without the use of ellitptic integrals (unlike the derivation of the
action-angles). Results and conjectures also emerge about the properties of the
above polynomials and the location of their roots. In particular a class of
polynomials with all roots on the unit circle arises.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur
Time-Restricted Feeding Improves Circadian Dysfunction as well as Motor Symptoms in the Q175 Mouse Model of Huntington's Disease.
Huntington's disease (HD) patients suffer from a progressive neurodegeneration that results in cognitive, psychiatric, cardiovascular, and motor dysfunction. Disturbances in sleep/wake cycles are common among HD patients with reports of delayed sleep onset, frequent bedtime awakenings, and fatigue during the day. The heterozygous Q175 mouse model of HD has been shown to phenocopy many HD core symptoms including circadian dysfunctions. Because circadian dysfunction manifests early in the disease in both patients and mouse models, we sought to determine if early intervention that improve circadian rhythmicity can benefit HD and delay disease progression. We determined the effects of time-restricted feeding (TRF) on the Q175 mouse model. At six months of age, the animals were divided into two groups: ad libitum (ad lib) and TRF. The TRF-treated Q175 mice were exposed to a 6-h feeding/18-h fasting regimen that was designed to be aligned with the middle of the time when mice are normally active. After three months of treatment (when mice reached the early disease stage), the TRF-treated Q175 mice showed improvements in their locomotor activity rhythm and sleep awakening time. Furthermore, we found improved heart rate variability (HRV), suggesting that their autonomic nervous system dysfunction was improved. Importantly, treated Q175 mice exhibited improved motor performance compared to untreated Q175 controls, and the motor improvements were correlated with improved circadian output. Finally, we found that the expression of several HD-relevant markers was restored to WT levels in the striatum of the treated mice using NanoString gene expression assays
Family memories in the home: contrasting physical and digital mementos
We carried out fieldwork to characterise and compare physical and digital mementos in the home. Physical mementos are highly valued, heterogeneous and support different types of recollection. Contrary to expectations, we found physical mementos are not purely representational, and can involve appropriating common objects and more idiosyncratic forms. In contrast, digital mementos were initially perceived as less valuable, although participants later reconsidered this. Digital mementos were somewhat limited in function and expression, largely involving representational photos and videos, and infrequently accessed. We explain these digital limitations and conclude with design guidelines for digital mementos, including better techniques for accessing and integrating these into everyday life, allowing them to acquire the symbolic associations and lasting value that characterise their physical counterparts
Speech-plans: Generating evaluative responses in spoken dialogue
Recent work on evaluation of spoken dialogue systems indicates that better algorithms are needed for the presentation of complex information in speech. Current dialogue systems often rely on presenting sets of options and their attributes sequentially. This places a large memory burden on users, who have to remember complex trade-offs between multiple options and their attributes. To address these problems we build on previous work using multiattribute decision theory to devise speech-planning algorithms that present usertailored summaries, comparisons and recommendations that allow users to focus on critical differences between options and their attributes. We discuss the differences between speech and text planning that result from the particular demands of the speech situation.
Method of constructing exactly solvable chaos
We present a new systematic method of constructing rational mappings as
ergordic transformations with nonuniform invariant measures on the unit
interval [0,1]. As a result, we obtain a two-parameter family of rational
mappings that have a special property in that their invariant measures can be
explicitly written in terms of algebraic functions of parameters and a
dynamical variable. Furthermore, it is shown here that this family is the most
generalized class of rational mappings possessing the property of exactly
solvable chaos on the unit interval, including the Ulam=Neumann map y=4x(1-x).
Based on the present method, we can produce a series of rational mappings
resembling the asymmetric shape of the experimentally obtained first return
maps of the Beloussof-Zhabotinski chemical reaction, and we can match some
rational functions with other experimentally obtained first return maps in a
systematic manner.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, REVTEX. Title was changed. Generalized Chebyshev
maps including the precise form of two-parameter generalized cubic maps were
added. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E(1997
Coordinate-invariant Path Integral Methods in Conformal Field Theory
We present a coordinate-invariant approach, based on a Pauli-Villars measure,
to the definition of the path integral in two-dimensional conformal field
theory. We discuss some advantages of this approach compared to the operator
formalism and alternative path integral approaches. We show that our path
integral measure is invariant under conformal transformations and field
reparametrizations, in contrast to the measure used in the Fujikawa
calculation, and we show the agreement, despite different origins, of the
conformal anomaly in the two approaches. The natural energy-momentum in the
Pauli-Villars approach is a true coordinate-invariant tensor quantity, and we
discuss its nontrivial relationship to the corresponding non-tensor object
arising in the operator formalism, thus providing a novel explanation within a
path integral context for the anomalous Ward identities of the latter. We
provide a direct calculation of the nontrivial contact terms arising in
expectation values of certain energy-momentum products, and we use these to
perform a simple consistency check confirming the validity of the change of
variables formula for the path integral. Finally, we review the relationship
between the conformal anomaly and the energy-momentum two-point functions in
our formalism.Comment: Corrected minor typos. To appear in International Journal of Modern
Physics
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