128 research outputs found
Boundary dynamics in competing critical black hole formation
Expanding upon our previous study of competing critical phenomena in black
hole formation, we numerically investigate the behavior of dominant exponents
across the boundary separating asymptotically dispersing and collapsing regions
in a two-dimensional configuration space of initial data. We find that across
the Type II boundary section the dominant exponent remains constant, equal to
the reciprocal of Choptuik's well-known quasi-universal value, whereas across
the Type I section the exponent noticeably varies. We postulate that this
change reflects the existence of a third critical solution in addition to the
two primary competing solutions, possibly another member of the family of
metastable soliton stars constituting the Type I attractor.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, 2 table
A Simple Cellular Automaton Model for Influenza A Viral Infections
Viral kinetics have been extensively studied in the past through the use of
spatially homogeneous ordinary differential equations describing the time
evolution of the diseased state. However, spatial characteristics such as
localized populations of dead cells might adversely affect the spread of
infection, similar to the manner in which a counter-fire can stop a forest fire
from spreading. In order to investigate the influence of spatial
heterogeneities on viral spread, a simple 2-D cellular automaton (CA) model of
a viral infection has been developed. In this initial phase of the
investigation, the CA model is validated against clinical immunological data
for uncomplicated influenza A infections. Our results will be shown and
discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages, 18 EPS figures, uses document class ReTeX4, and
packages amsmath and SIunit
Relationship between Extensions and Intensions in Categorization: A Match Made in Heaven?
The present study investigated the relationship between category extension and intension for eleven different semantic categories. It is often tacitly assumed that there is a (strong) extension-intension link. However, a recent study by Hampton and Passanisi (2016) examining the patterns of stable individual differences in concepts across participants called this hypothesis into question. To conceptually replicate their findings, two studies were conducted. We employed a category judgment task to measure category extensions, whereas a property generation (in Study 1) and property judgment task (Study 2) were used to measure intensions. Using their method, that is, correlating extension and intension similarity matrices, we found non-significant correlations in both studies, supporting their conclusion that similarity between individuals for extensional judgments does not map onto similarity between individuals for intensional judgments. However, multi-level logistic regression analyses showed that the properties a person generated (Study 1) or endorsed (Study 2) better predicted her own category judgments compared to other people’s category judgments. This result provides evidence in favor of a link between extension and intension at the subject level. The conflicting findings, resulting from two different approaches, and their theoretical repercussions are discussed.status: accepte
The Ursinus Weekly, May 12, 1952
WSGA to install officers at banquet on Thursday • Sororities hold dances, elections • Ruby selects photographer • College physician, famous coach, dies • WAA gives banquet • Bus. Ad. club takes poll • Queen and court reign at May Day pageant • Commencement, Baccalaureate speakers announced • Rosicrucians to entertain new members • Curtain Club, Alpha Psi elect new presidents • Four fraternities pick new officers • Voegler to speak at Pottstown • Campus groups hold annual elections: IRC, FTA, French Club • Queen to be on TV • Editorials: Good idea; Class struggle; Capitalistic noise and smoke • Class of 1952 is invited to Alumni Association dinner • Phila. Story is grand success • Alumni group plans banquet • Pinned • Ursinus routs Pharmacy with twenty run splurge • Snell\u27s Belles win in opener • Feist hurls five hitter, Bears rout Drexel, 9-4 • Physics Department develops film loops for better teaching • Famous columnist and editor speaks to FTA • Plans of \u2752 graduates reveal varied interests • Elizabethtown wins with eight run inning, 10 to 3 • Belles trounce West Chester • Men\u27s tennis squad victor • JV softball team whips Drexel 8-3 • Ursinus cinder men lose close meet to Albright • Ursinus finishes second in track • Y plans hot dog roast for May 14 • Marine representative speaks • Engagement • Marriagehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1544/thumbnail.jp
The Ursinus Weekly, December 7, 1953
Prom to feature Johnny Austin, Sr. lord and lady • Wanamaker to give $1,000 scholarship • Sella resigns as senior prexy; Popowich unanimously chosen • Sixteenth Messiah performance to be held in Bomberger, Thursday • IRC to hear Chester Bowles at Bryn Mawr tonight • William S. Pettit named Dean of Ursinus College • MSGA hears student ideas at meeting • Raises revised by Stars and Players • Marge Merrifield wins hockey honor • Y plans party • Editorials: Honor at Ursinus; Maintenance mixup? • Cutting • Greek columns • Thespians present All my sons ; Reviewer notes fine performances • Pledge reveals fun and difficulties of informal Ursinus sorority initiation • Dorms eagerly anticipate vendors\u27 nightly visit • Hockey team ends season • JV Belles down Penn, W. Chester, Bryn Mawr • Soccermen lose to F&M; Season ends with party • Third team undefeated • Basketball season opens; Bears win, 84-66; 78-56 • Walker, Cox head 1954 football, soccer elevens • Dickinson downs Ursinus in football finale, 19-13 • Hockey-soccer game ends in 2-2 tie • Christmas vespers service to be held December 13 • Chemical society members visit chemical exposition • Truex speaks to pre-medders on opportunities in medicine • French Club holds program of vocal, piano music • Christmas dance plannedhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1484/thumbnail.jp
Influenza nucleoprotein delivered with aluminium salts protects mice from an influenza virus that expresses an altered nucleoprotein sequence
Influenza virus poses a difficult challenge for protective immunity. This virus is adept at altering its surface proteins, the proteins that are the targets of neutralizing antibody. Consequently, each year a new vaccine must be developed to combat the current recirculating strains. A universal influenza vaccine that primes specific memory cells that recognise conserved parts of the virus could prove to be effective against both annual influenza variants and newly emergent potentially pandemic strains. Such a vaccine will have to contain a safe and effective adjuvant that can be used in individuals of all ages. We examine protection from viral challenge in mice vaccinated with the nucleoprotein from the PR8 strain of influenza A, a protein that is highly conserved across viral subtypes. Vaccination with nucleoprotein delivered with a universally used and safe adjuvant, composed of insoluble aluminium salts, provides protection against viruses that either express the same or an altered version of nucleoprotein. This protection correlated with the presence of nucleoprotein specific CD8 T cells in the lungs of infected animals at early time points after infection. In contrast, immunization with NP delivered with alum and the detoxified LPS adjuvant, monophosphoryl lipid A, provided some protection to the homologous viral strain but no protection against infection by influenza expressing a variant nucleoprotein. Together, these data point towards a vaccine solution for all influenza A subtypes
The 2023 WebNLG Shared Task on Low Resource Languages. Overview and Evaluation Results (WebNLG 2023)
The WebNLG task consists of mapping a knowledge graph to a text verbalising the con- tent of that graph. The 2017 WebNLG edi- tion required participating systems to gener- ate English text from a set of DBpedia triples, while the 2020 WebNLG+ challenge addition- ally included generation into Russian and se- mantic parsing of English and Russian texts. In contrast, WebNLG 2023 focuses on four under-resourced languages which are severely under-represented in research on text genera- tion, namely Breton, Irish, Maltese and Welsh. In addition, WebNLG 2023 once again includes Russian. In this paper, we present the organi- sation of the shared task (data, timeline, eval- uation), briefly describe the participating sys- tems and summarise results for participating systems
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