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Radiography in Palaeopathology: Where Next?
YesRadiography has frequently been used during palaeopathological research, and plays an important role in the differential diagnosis of many diseases, including Paget¿s disease and carcinomas. Traditionally, radiographs were taken in hospitals with clinical equipment. However industrial radiography techniques have gradually become more commonly used, as their superior image quality and improved potential for diagnoses become recognised. The introduction of radiographic scanners has facilitated the digitisation of these images for dissemination and publication. However this is not all that radiographic digitisation can offer the researcher. Digital image processing (DIP) allows the researcher to focus on an area of interest and to adjust the brightness and contrast of the captured image. This allows the investigation of areas of high radio-opacity and radio-lucency, providing detailed images of the internal structures of bone and pathological lesions undetectable by the naked eye. In addition 3D effects, edge enhancement and sharpening algorithms, available through commonly used image processing software, can be very effective in enhancing the visibility of specific features. This paper will reveal how radiographic digitisation and manipulation can enhance radiographic images of palaeopathological lesions and potentially further our understanding of the bony manifestations of disease
Event detection based on generic characteristics of field-sports
In this paper, we propose a generic framework for event detection in broadcast video of multiple different field-sports. Features indicating significant events are selected, and robust detectors built. These features are rooted in generic characteristics common to all genres of field-sports. The evidence gathered by the feature detectors is combined by means of a support vector machine, which infers the occurrence of an event based on a model generated during a training phase. The system is tested across multiple genres of field-sports including soccer, rugby, hockey and Gaelic football and the results suggest that high event retrieval and content rejection statistics are achievable
Event detection in field sports video using audio-visual features and a support vector machine
In this paper, we propose a novel audio-visual feature-based framework for event detection in broadcast video of multiple different field sports. Features indicating significant events are selected and robust detectors built. These features are rooted in characteristics common to all genres of field sports. The evidence gathered by the feature detectors is combined by means of a support vector machine, which infers the occurrence of an event based on a model generated during a training phase. The system is tested generically across multiple genres of field sports including soccer, rugby, hockey, and Gaelic football and the results suggest that high event retrieval and content rejection statistics are achievable
Applying Online: Technological Innovation for Income Support Programs in Four States
A study examining the development, implementation, and best practices for online applications for public benefits programs in California, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Washington based on interviews with state agencies and community-based organizations
The Manchester occulting mask imager (MOMI) - first results on the environment of P Cygni
The design and first use of the Manchester occulting mask imager (MOMI) is
described. This device, when combined with the Cassegrain or Ritchey-Chretien
foci of large telescopes, is dedicated to the imagery of faint line emission
regions around bright central sources.
Initial observations, with MOMI on the Nordic Optical telescope (NOT), of the
V=4.8 mag P~Cygni environment, have revealed a ~5~arcmin long [NII] 6584A
emitting filament projecting from the outer nebular shell of this luminous blue
variable (LBV) star. The presence of a mono-polar lobe older than both the
inner (22 arcsec diameter) and outer (1.6 arcmin diameter) shells is suggested.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted MNRAS 1998 June 1
Two-Loop Crossover Scaling Functions of the O(N) Model
Using Environmentally Friendly Renormalization, we present an analytic
calculation of the series for the renormalization constants that describe the
equation of state for the model in the whole critical region. The
solution of the beta-function equation, for the running coupling to order two
loops, exhibits crossover between the strong coupling fixed point, associated
with the Goldstone modes, and the Wilson-Fisher fixed point. The Wilson
functions , and , and thus the
effective critical exponents associated with renormalization of the transverse
vertex functions, also exhibit non-trivial crossover between these fixed
points.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, version to appears in IJMPL
London or New York: where and when does the gold price originate?
We investigate the Information Shares (ISs) of the two main centres of gold trading, over a 25-year period, using nonoverlapping 4-month windows. We find that neither London nor New York is dominant in terms of price IS, that the dominant market switches from time to time and that these switches do not appear to be very clearly linkable to macroeconomic or political events
Comment on ``Can Disorder Induce a Finite Thermal Conductivity in 1D Lattices?''
In a recent paper [Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 63 (2001)], Li et al have reported
that the nonequilibrium heat conducting steady state of a disordered harmonic
chain is not unique. In this comment we point out that for a large class of
stochastic heat baths the uniqueness of the steady state can be proved, and
therefore the findings of Li et al could be either due to their use of
deterministic heat baths or insufficient equilibration times in the
simulations. We give a simple example where the uniquness of the steady state
can be explicitly demonstrated.Comment: 1 page, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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