303 research outputs found
Variations in the squamous part of the occipital bone in medieval and contemporary cranial series from Bulgaria
The squamous part of the occipital bone is a place of many different variations. They are a result of faulty ossification in the occipital squama or due to the presence of sutural bones in the lambda region. As their differentiation is intricate because of the various criteria used, the issue of their recognition in the adult skull still remains difficult even though they can be clearly distinguished at a younger age. The aim of the present study was to compare the frequency of interparietal, preinterparietal and sutural bones in the lambda region in medieval male and female cranial series as well as between medieval and contemporary male series from Bulgaria. We also discuss the development of the occipital squama in order to set clearer criteria for further differentiation of such variations in the adult skull. In the reviewed 3 cranial series, the variations in the squamous portion of the occipital bone were observed with a low frequency. The incidence of preinterparietal bones was more common than the interparietal ones. The sutural bones in the lambda region were numerous in the series. No statistically significant sex or intergroup differences were established. So even if these anatomical variations are relatively rare, the understanding of them is of significance for many disciplines like anthropology, comparative and developmental anatomy, clinical and forensic medicine.
Precision Measurement of 11Li moments: Influence of Halo Neutrons on the 9Li Core
The electric quadrupole moment and the magnetic moment of the 11Li halo
nucleus have been measured with more than an order of magnitude higher
precision than before, |Q| = 33.3(5)mb and mu=3.6712(3)mu_N, revealing a
8.8(1.5)% increase of the quadrupole moment relative to that of 9Li. This
result is compared to various models that aim at describing the halo
properties. In the shell model an increased quadrupole moment points to a
significant occupation of the 1d orbits, whereas in a simple halo picture this
can be explained by relating the quadrupole moments of the proton distribution
to the charge radii. Advanced models so far fail to reproduce simultaneously
the trends observed in the radii and quadrupole moments of the lithium
isotopes.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Ground-State Electromagnetic Moments of Calcium Isotopes
High-resolution bunched-beam collinear laser spectroscopy was used to measure
the optical hyperfine spectra of the Ca isotopes. The ground state
magnetic moments of Ca and quadrupole moments of Ca were
measured for the first time, and the Ca ground state spin was
determined in a model-independent way. Our results provide a critical test of
modern nuclear theories based on shell-model calculations using
phenomenological as well as microscopic interactions. The results for the
neutron-rich isotopes are in excellent agreement with predictions using
interactions derived from chiral effective field theory including three-nucleon
forces, while lighter isotopes illustrate the presence of particle-hole
excitations of the Ca core in their ground state.Comment: Accepted as a Rapid Communication in Physical Review
Spins, Electromagnetic Moments, and Isomers of 107-129Cd
The neutron-rich isotopes of cadmium up to the N=82 shell closure have been
investigated by high-resolution laser spectroscopy. Deep-UV excitation at 214.5
nm and radioactive-beam bunching provided the required experimental
sensitivity. Long-lived isomers are observed in 127Cd and 129Cd for the first
time. One essential feature of the spherical shell model is unambiguously
confirmed by a linear increase of the 11/2- quadrupole moments. Remarkably,
this mechanism is found to act well beyond the h11/2 shell
Y-Chromosome Diversity in Modern Bulgarians: New Clues about Their Ancestry
To better define the structure and origin of the Bulgarian paternal gene pool, we have examined the Y-chromosome variation in 808 Bulgarian males. The analysis was performed by high-resolution genotyping of biallelic markers and by analyzing the STR variation within the most informative haplogroups. We found that the Y-chromosome gene pool in modern Bulgarians is primarily represented by Western Eurasian haplogroups with , 40% belonging to haplogroups E-V13 and I-M423, and 20% to R-M17. Haplogroups common in the Middle East (J and G) and in South Western Asia (R-L23*) occur at frequencies of 19% and 5%, respectively. Haplogroups C, N and Q, distinctive for Altaic and Central Asian Turkic-speaking populations, occur at the negligible frequency of only 1.5%. Principal Component analyses group Bulgarians with European populations, apart from Central Asian Turkic-speaking groups and South Western Asia populations. Within the country, the genetic variation is structured in Western, Central and Eastern Bulgaria indicating that the Balkan Mountains have been permeable to human movements. The lineage analysis provided the following interesting results: (i) R-L23* is present in Eastern Bulgaria since the post glacial period; (ii) haplogroup E-V13 has a Mesolithic age in Bulgaria from where it expanded after the arrival of farming; (iii) haplogroup J-M241 probably reflects the Neolithic westward expansion of farmers from the earliest sites along the Black Sea. On the whole, in light of the most recent historical studies, which indicate a substantial proto-Bulgarian input to the contemporary Bulgarian people, our data suggest that a common paternal ancestry between the proto-Bulgarians and the Altaic and Central Asian Turkic-speaking populations either did not exist or was negligible
Corona mortis, aberrant obturator vessels, accessory obturator vessels: clinical applications in gynaecology
Corona mortis (CMOR) is a heterogeneous and often dubious term that causes much confusion in medical literature, especially in regard to its modern day significance in pelvic surgery. Some authors define CMOR as any abnormal anastomotic vessel between the external iliac and obturator vessels, whereas others define it as any vessel coursing over the superior pubic branch, regardless whether it is a vascular anastomosis, an accessory obturator vessels, an obturator vessel related to the external iliac system or a terminal small vessel. There is no standard classification of CMOR and obturator vessels variations, although there are multitudes of classifications describing the diverse variations in the obturator foramen region. We define accessory obturator, aberrant obturator vessels and CMOR as different structures, as CMOR is an anatomical term that reflects a clinical situation rather than an anatomical structure. A new clinical classification for aberrant, accessory obturator vessels and CMOR is proposed regarding the anatomical variations, and the location of vessels to the deep femoral ring. The clinical significance of accessory obturator, aberrant vessels and CMOR is delineated in oncogynaecological and urogynaecological surgery
Automatic classification of land cover from LUCAS in-situ landscape photos using semantic segmentation and a Random Forest model
Spatially explicit information on land cover (LC) is commonly derived using remote sensing, but the lack of training data still remains a major challenge for producing accurate LC products. Here, we develop a computer vision methodology to extract LC information from photos from the Land Use-Land Cover Area Frame Survey (LUCAS). Given the large number of photographs available and the comprehensive spatial coverage, the objective is to show how the automatic classification of photos could be used to develop reference data sets for training and validation of LC products as well as other purposes. We first selected a representative sample of 1120 photos covering eight major LC types across the European Union. We then applied semantic segmentation to these photos using a neural network (Deeplabv3+) trained with the ADE20k dataset. For each photo, we extracted the original LC identified by the LUCAS surveyor, the segmented objects, and the pixel count for each ADE20k class. Using the latter as input features, we then trained a Random Forest model to classify the LC of the photo. Examining the relationship between the objects/features extracted by Deeplabv3+ and the LC labels provided by the LUCAS surveyors demonstrated how the LC classes can be decomposed into multiple objects, highlighting the complexity of LC classification from photographs. The results of the classification show a mean F1 Score of 89%, increasing to 93% when the Wetland class is not considered. Based on these results, this approach holds promise for the automated retrieval of LC information from the rich source of LUCAS photographs as well as the increasing number of geo-referenced photos now becoming available through social media and sites like Mapillary or Google Street View
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