4,817 research outputs found
PLANNING NEW FACILITIES FOR MAXIMUM PRODUCTIVITY IN SERVICING CONVENIENCE STORES
Examines the question of warehousing merchandise that Wawa sells in its stores and presents the results of an in-depth study on this subject.Agribusiness,
Virtual Reconstruction and Morphological Analysis of the Cranium of an Ancient Egyptian Mummy
A mummy of an Egyptian priestess dating from the 22nd dynasty (c. 770 BC), completely enclosed in an anthropoid (human shaped) coffin, was scanned on a CT scanner. An accurate reconstruction of the cranium was generated from 115 × 2 mm CT images using AVS/Express on a SGI computer. Linear measurements were obtained from six orthogonal cranial views and used in a morphometric analysis software package (CRANID). The analyses carried out were both linear and nearest neighbour discriminant analysis. The results show that there is a 52.9% probability that the mummy is an Egyptian female, with a 24.5% probability that mummy is an African female. Thus the technique confirms that the coffin contains an Egyptian female, which is consistent with the inscription on the coffin and the shape of the pelvic bones as revealed by plain X-rays. These results show that this technique has potential for analysing forensic cases where the bones are obscured by soft tissue and clothing. This technique may have an application in virtual autopsies
Towards a New Canadian Legal History
This article examines the process by which traditional Canadian legal history is becoming more interdisciplinary. When the external and environmental aspects of a historical period are explored, as well as the legal developments, the legal historian\u27s work is more relevant and truly historical. Recent essays are measured against Wright\u27s model of progressive legal history
Towards a New Canadian Legal History
This article examines the process by which traditional Canadian legal history is becoming more interdisciplinary. When the external and environmental aspects of a historical period are explored, as well as the legal developments, the legal historian\u27s work is more relevant and truly historical. Recent essays are measured against Wright\u27s model of progressive legal history
A statistical framework for testing functional categories in microarray data
Ready access to emerging databases of gene annotation and functional pathways
has shifted assessments of differential expression in DNA microarray studies
from single genes to groups of genes with shared biological function. This
paper takes a critical look at existing methods for assessing the differential
expression of a group of genes (functional category), and provides some
suggestions for improved performance. We begin by presenting a general
framework, in which the set of genes in a functional category is compared to
the complementary set of genes on the array. The framework includes tests for
overrepresentation of a category within a list of significant genes, and
methods that consider continuous measures of differential expression. Existing
tests are divided into two classes. Class 1 tests assume gene-specific measures
of differential expression are independent, despite overwhelming evidence of
positive correlation. Analytic and simulated results are presented that
demonstrate Class 1 tests are strongly anti-conservative in practice. Class 2
tests account for gene correlation, typically through array permutation that by
construction has proper Type I error control for the induced null. However,
both Class 1 and Class 2 tests use a null hypothesis that all genes have the
same degree of differential expression. We introduce a more sensible and
general (Class 3) null under which the profile of differential expression is
the same within the category and complement. Under this broader null, Class 2
tests are shown to be conservative. We propose standard bootstrap methods for
testing against the Class 3 null and demonstrate they provide valid Type I
error control and more power than array permutation in simulated datasets and
real microarray experiments.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-AOAS146 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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