10,964 research outputs found

    Detection of abnormal recordings in Irish milk recorded data

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    peer-reviewedThe objective of this study was to detect abnormal recordings of milk yield, fat concentration and protein concentration in Irish milk-recorded data. The data consisted of 14,956 records from both commercial and experimental herds with 92% of the recordings recorded manually and the remainder recorded electronically. The method used in this paper was a modified version of the method employed by the Animal Improvement Programs Laboratory in Maryland, USA and conformed with the guidelines outlined by the International Committee of Animal Recording. The results illustrate the effectiveness of detecting abnormal recordings in Irish milk records. The method described in this paper, defines the upper and lower limits for each production trait and these limits along with the slope parameters were used to determine if a recording was abnormal or not. Three percent of milk yield recordings, 5% of fat concentration recordings and less than 1% of protein concentration recordings were found to be abnormal. The proportion of values declared abnormal in manually recorded and electronically recorded data were examined and found to be significantly different for fat concentration

    Evidence for massive bulk Dirac Fermions in Pb1−x_{1-x}Snx_xSe from Nernst and thermopower experiments

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    The lead chalcogenides (Pb,Sn)Te and (Pb,Sn)Se are the first examples of topological crystalline insulators (TCI) predicted \cite{Fu,Hsieh} (and confirmed \cite{Hasan,Story,Takahashi}) to display topological surface Dirac states (SDS) that are protected by mirror symmetry. A starting premise \cite{Hsieh} is that the SDS arise from bulk states describable as massive Dirac states \cite{Wallis,Svane}, but this assumption is untested. Here we show that the thermoelectric response of the bulk states display features specific to the Dirac spectrum. We show that, in the quantum limit, the lowest Landau Level (LL) is singly spin-degenerate, whereas higher levels are doubly degenerate. The abrupt change in spin degeneracy leads to a large step-decrease in the thermopower SxxS_{xx}. In the lowest LL, SxxS_{xx} displays a striking linear increase vs. magnetic field. In addition, the Nernst signal undergoes an anomalous sign change when the bulk gap inverts at 180 K.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure

    Fronto-striatal cognitive deficits at different stages of Parkinson's disease

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    Groups of patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease, either medicated or unmedicated, were compared with matched groups of normal controls on a computerized battery previously shown to be sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction, including tests of planning, spatial working memory and attentional set-shifting. In a series of problems based on the 'Tower of London' test, medicated patients with Parkinson's disease were shown to be impaired in the amount of time spent thinking about (planning) the solution to each problem. Additionally, an impairment in terms of the accuracy of the solution produced on this test was only evident in those patients with more severe clinical symptoms and was accompanied by deficits in an associated test of spatial short-term memory. Medicated patients with both mild and severe clinical symptoms were also impaired on a related test of spatial working memory. In contrast, a group of patients who were unmedicated and 'early in the course' of the disease were unimpaired in all three of these tests. However, all three Parkinson's disease groups were impaired in the test of attentional set-shifting ability, although unimpaired in a test of pattern recognition which is insensitive to frontal lobe damage. These data are compared with those previously published from a group of young neurosurgical patients with localized excisions of the frontal lobes and are discussed in terms of the specific nature of the cognitive deficit at different stages of Parkinson's disease

    Visualizing probabilistic models: Intensive Principal Component Analysis

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    Unsupervised learning makes manifest the underlying structure of data without curated training and specific problem definitions. However, the inference of relationships between data points is frustrated by the `curse of dimensionality' in high-dimensions. Inspired by replica theory from statistical mechanics, we consider replicas of the system to tune the dimensionality and take the limit as the number of replicas goes to zero. The result is the intensive embedding, which is not only isometric (preserving local distances) but allows global structure to be more transparently visualized. We develop the Intensive Principal Component Analysis (InPCA) and demonstrate clear improvements in visualizations of the Ising model of magnetic spins, a neural network, and the dark energy cold dark matter ({\Lambda}CDM) model as applied to the Cosmic Microwave Background.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Correlation of Crystal Quality and Extreme Magnetoresistance of WTe2_2

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    High quality single crystals of WTe2_2 were grown using a Te flux followed by a cleaning step involving self-vapor transport. The method is reproducible and yields consistently higher quality single crystals than are typically obtained via halide assisted vapor transport methods. Magnetoresistance (MR)values at 9 Tesla and 2 Kelvin as high as 1.75 million \%, nearly an order of magnitude higher than previously reported for this material, were obtained on crystals with residual resistivity ratio (RRR) of approximately 1250. The MR follows a near B2^2 law (B = 1.95(1)) and, assuming a semiclassical model, the average carrier mobility for the highest quality crystal was found to be ~167,000 cm2^2/Vs at 2 K. A correlation of RRR, MR ratio and average carrier mobility (μavg\mu_{avg}) is found with the cooling rate during the flux growth.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl

    Performance of Sentinel-2 NDVI for assessing the relationship between vegetation and soil moisture under extreme drought conditions

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    Initial indications are that the enhanced spatial and spectral resolution of Sentinel-2 would allow for better assess- ment of vegetation condition, and consequently improved application in conditions of moisture deficit/drought. Although NDVI and other indices are well established methods in drought monitoring, particularly at larger scales, little research has examined the suitability of Sentinel-2. While the utility of Landsat-8 NDVI in revealing local scale plant-soil dynamics has been explored, challenges around resolution have emerged. The principal aim of this study was to determine the extent to which NDVI time series reflects soil moisture conditions, and whether this offers an improvement over Landsat-8. On the basis of exposure to drought over the study period (Jul 2015-Mar 2017), availability of cloud-free imagery and measured soil moisture, five sites in South-Western United States were selected. These sites, normally dry to arid, were classified as being in various states of drought, but in general this represented extension and recession of a significant drought event. A secondary focus of the paper therefore was the performance of Sentinel-2 NDVI under extreme conditions. As far as we are aware, this represents the first study of this kind using Sentinel-2. Following supervised classification, NDVI time series for areas of 1km radius around the monitoring sta- tions were calculated. Sentinel-2 NDVI variants were calculated using Bands 8 (10m), 5, 6, 7, and 8A (20m). Landsat-8 NDVI was calculated at 30m resolution. Pearson correlation analysis was undertaken of all NDVI time series against soil moisture at all measured soil depths. In order to assess the difference in correlation strength produced from using the Sentinel-2 red-edge bands, compared to the standard NIR band, a principal component analysis (PCA) was conducted. This was performed on the combination of all Sentinel-2 bands and the combination of the red-edge bands. Performance of the Sentinel-2 red-edge NDVI time series against the standard NIR band was also evaluated using a Steiger comparison test. While no significant correlations between Landsat-8 NDVI and measured soil moisture were found, high significant correlations were present between moisture at depths of <30cm and Sentinel-2 NDVI at three sites. No significant positive correlations were found at two sites, despite similar conditions to the others. These sites were characterised by much lower vegetation cover, suggesting a minimum cover threshold of ≈30-40% is required. The PCA shows that at all sites of significant positive moisture-NDVI correlations, the linear combination of the red-edge bands produced stronger correlations than the poorer spectral, but higher spatial resolution band. NDVI calculated using the higher spectral resolution bands may therefore be of greater use in this context than the higher spatial resolution option. However, each site/measurement with a relationship present also had an individual component which out-performed the PCA combination, most likely related to the spectral characteristics of local vegetation. These results suggest high potential for the application of Sentinel-2 NDVI in drought monitoring, even in extreme environments, thus allowing us to further our understanding of local scale plant-soil dynamics under such conditions

    Cognitive performance in multiple system atrophy

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    The cognitive performance of a group of patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA) of striato-nigral predominance was compared with that of age and IQ matched control subjects, using three tests sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction and a battery sensitive to memory and learning deficits in Parkinson's disease and dementia of the Alzheimer type. The MSA group showed significant deficits in all three of the tests previously shown to be sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction. Thus, a significant proportion of patients from the MSA group failed an attentional set-shifting test, specifically at the stage when an extra-dimensional shift was required. They were also impaired in a subject-ordered test of spatial working memory. The MSA group showed deficits mostly confined to measures of speed of thinking, rather than accuracy, on the Tower of London task. These deficits were seen in the absence of consistent impairments in language or visual perception. Moreover, the MSA group showed no significant deficits in tests of spatial and pattern recognition previously shown to be sensitive to patients early in the course of probable Alzheimer's disease and only a few patients exhibited impairment on the Warrington Recognition Memory Test. There were impairments on other tests of visual memory and learning relative to matched controls, but these could not easily be related to fundamental deficits of memory or learning. Thus, on a matching-to-sample task the patients were impaired at simultaneous but not delayed matching to sample, whereas difficulties in a pattern-location learning task were more evident at its initial, easier stages. The MSA group showed no consistent evidence of intellectual deterioration as assessed from their performance on subtests of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) and the National Adult Reading Test (NART). Consideration of individual cases showed that there was some heterogeneity in the pattern of deficits in the MSA group, with one patient showing no impairment, even in the face of considerable physical disability. The results show a distinctive pattern of cognitive deficits, unlike those previously seen using the same tests in patients with Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases, and suggesting a prominent frontal-lobe-like component. The implications for concepts of 'subcortical' dementia and 'fronto-striatal' cognitive dysfunction are considered
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