65 research outputs found
Performance analysis of MIMO-SESS with Alamouti scheme over Rayleigh fading channels
Las unidades fraseológicas han estado presentes en los repertorios desde los comienzos
de la lexicografÃa. Y no solamente en los diccionarios generales, sino también en las
catalogaciones especializadas, tanto de naturaleza monolingüe como bilingüe. No
obstante, siempre ha existido dificultad terminológica para la categorización de los
diferentes fenómenos del discurso repetido. Si bien esto no ha sido un inconveniente
para que se hayan publicado numerosas compilaciones, sobre todo de refranes en un
principio, ya que en la actualidad, fundamentalmente, gracias al auge de los estudios
teóricos sobre fraseologÃa, han proliferado otras obras (algunas aplicadas a la
glosodidáctica, dada su importancia hoy en dÃa) en las que se da cabida con mayor
frecuencia a enunciados de valor especÃfico y a locuciones; en unas ocasiones,
ahondando en el origen que les dio entidad y, en otras, estableciendo etiquetados
precisos que hasta el momento solÃan estar ausentes, pero con la finalidad, al fin y al
cabo, de desentrañar el sentido, dada la escasa deducibilidad que presentan estas
secuencias fijadas por la simple suma de sus elementos constitutivos. Un análisis de
estos repertorios a través de los siglos, es, por tanto, el objetivo de este trabajo.Since the beginning of lexicography, phraseological units have been included in
repertoires; not only in general dictionaries, but also in monolingual and bilingual
specialized catalogues. However, there have always been terminological difficulties for
classifying various phenomena of repeated speech. Although this has not been
inconvenient for publishing many compilations of sayings, especially at the beginning,
because nowadays they frequently include utterances with precise value and idioms,
mainly due to the rise of theoretical studies on phraseology (some applied to ASL
Linguistics, given its importance today). In them, sometimes, the origin of the
phraseological unit is included and, in others, accurate labels that were absent before are
determined in order, finally and ultimately, to unravel the meaning, given the reduced
deductibility that these sequences present from the simple sum of their constituent
elements. The objective of this work is, therefore, an analysis of these repertories
throughout the centuries
Environmental regulation induced foreign direct investment
The last decade has witnessed a renewed interest in the relationship between environmental regulations and international capital flows. However, empirical studies have so far failed to find conclusive evidence for this so-called pollution haven or race to the bottom effect where foreign direct investment (FDI) is assumed to be attracted to low regulation countries, regions or states. In this paper we present a simple theoretical framework to demonstrate that greater stringency in environmental standards can lead to a strategic increase in capital inflows which we refer to as environmental regulation induced FDI. Our result reveals a possible explanation for the mixed results in the empirical literature and provides an illustration of the conditions under which environmental regulations in the host country can affect the location decision of foreign firms
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Tilted frames of reference have similar effects on perception of the gravitational vertical and the planning of vertical saccadic eye movements
We investigated the effects of a tilted reference frame (i.e., allocentric visual context) on perception of the gravitational vertical and saccadic eye movements along a planned egocentric vertical path. Participants (n=5) in a darkened room fixated a point in the center of a circle on an LCD display, and decided which of two sequentially presented dots was closer to the unmarked ‘6 o’clock’ position on that circle (i.e., straight down towards their feet). The slope of their perceptual psychometric functions showed that participants were able to locate which dot was nearer the vertical with a precision of 1-2°. For three of the participants, a square frame centered at fixation and tilted (in the roll direction) 5.6° from the vertical caused a strong perceptual bias, manifest as a shift in the psychometric function, in the direction of the traditional ‘rod and frame’ effect, without affecting precision. The other two participants showed negligible or no equivalent biases. The same subjects participated in the saccade version of the task, in which they were instructed to shift their gaze to the 6 o’clock position as soon as the central fixation point disappeared. The participants who showed perceptual biases showed biases of similar magnitude in their saccadic end points, with a strong correlation between perceptual and saccadic biases across all subjects. Tilting of the head 5.6° reduced both perceptual and saccadic biases in all but one observer, who developed a strong saccadic bias. Otherwise, the overall pattern and significant correlations between results remained the same. We conclude that our observers' saccades-to-the-vertical were dominated by perceptual input, which outweighed any gravitational or head-centered input
Systematic design for trait introgression projects
We demonstrate an innovative approach for designing Trait Introgression (TI) projects based on optimization principles from Operations Research. If the designs of TI projects are based on clear and measurable objectives, they can be translated into mathematical models with decision variables and constraints that can be translated into Pareto optimality plots associated with any arbitrary selection strategy. The Pareto plots can be used to make rational decisions concerning the trade-offs between maximizing the probability of success while minimizing costs and time. The systematic rigor associated with a cost, time and probability of success (CTP) framework is well suited to designing TI projects that require dynamic decision making. The CTP framework also revealed that previously identified ‘best’ strategies can be improved to be at least twice as effective without increasing time or expenses
Insufficient sun exposure has become a real public health problem
This is the final version. Available on open access from MDPI via the DOI in this recordThis article aims to alert the medical community and public health authorities to accumulating evidence on health benefits from sun exposure, which suggests that insufficient sun exposure is a significant public health problem. Studies in the past decade indicate that insufficient sun exposure may be responsible for 340,000 deaths in the United States and 480,000 deaths in Europe per year, and an increased incidence of breast cancer, colorectal cancer, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, autism, asthma, type 1 diabetes and myopia. Vitamin D has long been considered the principal mediator of beneficial effects of sun exposure. However, oral vitamin D supplementation has not been convincingly shown to prevent the above conditions; thus, serum 25(OH)D as an indicator of vitamin D status may be a proxy for and not a mediator of beneficial effects of sun exposure. New candidate mechanisms include the release of nitric oxide from the skin and direct effects of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) on peripheral blood cells. Collectively, this evidence indicates it would be wise for people living outside the tropics to ensure they expose their skin sufficiently to the sun. To minimize the harms of excessive sun exposure, great care must be taken to avoid sunburn, and sun exposure during high ambient UVR seasons should be obtained incrementally at not more than 5–30 min a day (depending on skin type and UV index), in season-appropriate clothing and with eyes closed or protected by sunglasses that filter UVR.Sunshine Health Foundation (SHF
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Low-level mediation of directionally specific motion after-effects: motion perception is not necessary
Previous psychophysical experiments with normal human observers have shown that adaptation to a moving dot stream causes directionally specific repulsion in the perceived angle of a subsequently viewed, moving probe. In this paper, we used a 2AFC task with roving pedestals to determine the conditions necessary and sufficient for producing directionally specific repulsion with compound adaptors, each ofwhich contains two oppositely moving, differently colored, component streams. Experiment 1 provides a demonstration of repulsion between single-component adaptors and probes moving at approximately 90° or 270°. In Experiment 2 oppositely moving dots in the adaptor were paired to preclude the appearance of motion. Nonetheless, repulsion remained strong when the angle betweeneach probe stream and one component was approximately 30°. In Experiment 3 adapting dot-pairs were kept stationary during their limited lifetimes. Their orientation content alone proved insufficient for producing repulsion. In Experiments 4-6 the angle between probe and both adapting components was approximately 90°or 270°. Directional repulsion was found when observers were asked to visually track one of the adapting components (Experiment 6), but not when observers were asked to attentionally track it (Experiment 5), nor while passively viewing the adaptor (Experiment 4). Our results are consistent with a low-level mechanism for motion adaptation. It is not selective for stimulus color and it is not susceptible to attentional modulation.The most likely cortical locus of adaptation is area V1
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