3,768 research outputs found
Are Muslims the New Catholics? Europe’s Headscarf Laws in Comparative Historical Perspective
In this paper a biologically-inspired model for partly occluded patterns is proposed. The model is based on the hypothesis that in human visual system occluding patterns play a key role in recognition as well as in reconstructing internal representation for a pattern’s occluding parts. The proposed model is realized with a bidirectional hierarchical neural network. In this network top-down cues, generated by direct connections from the lower to higher levels of hierarchy, interact with the bottom-up information, generated from the un-occluded parts, to recognize occluded patterns. Moreover, positional cues of the occluded as well as occluding patterns, that are computed separately but in the same network, modulate the top-down and bottom-up processing to reconstruct the occluded patterns. Simulation results support the presented hypothesis as well as effectiveness of the model in providing a solution to recognition of occluded patterns. The behavior of the model is in accordance to the known human behavior on the occluded patterns
Range-only benthic Rover localization off the central California coast
Nowadays, the use of autonomous vehicles for
ocean research has increased, since these vehicles have a better
cost/performance ratio than crewed vessels or oceanographic
ships. For example, autonomous surface vehicles can be used to
localize underwater targets. This paper describes a mission to find
a crawling robot - Benthic Rover - on the abyssal plain in the north
eastern Pacific, using single-beacon localization from onboard a
Wave Glider autonomous surface vehicle. While the Wave Glider
is moving around the surface in the target zone, it takes ranges
between the target and itself using acoustic modems. With these
ranges it can compute the target location, as a Long Baseline
(LBL) system. The benefit of this approach is the reduction of cost
and complexity relative to deployment of a traditional shipboard
LBL system. Additionally, this is a mobile system, and can cover
long distances, and can geolocate multiple targets over a large
area.Postprint (author's final draft
Range-only underwater target localization : error characterization
Locating a target from range measurements
using only one mobile transducer has been increased
over the last years. This method allows us to reduce the
high costs of deployment and maintenance of
traditional fixed systems on the seafloor such as Long
Baseline. The range-only single-beacon is one of the
new architectures developed using the new capabilities
of modern acoustic underwater modems, which can be
time synchronization, time stamp, and range
measurements.
This document presents a method to estimate the
sources of error in this type of architecture so as to
obtain a mathematical model which allows us to
develop simulations and study the best localization
algorithms. Different simulations and real field tests
have been carried out in order to verify a good
performance of the model proposed.Postprint (published version
Effect of Simulated Cracks on Lap Splice Strength of Reinforcing Bars
The effect of preexisting cracks, oriented in the plane of and parallel to the reinforcing
steel, on the strength of No. 11-bar lap splices was investigated by testing six beams – three with
a splice length of 79 in. and three with a splice length of 120 in. One of the beams with a 79-in.
splice was cast monolithically and loaded monotonically to failure. To simulate the cracks, the
other five beams were cast with a cold joint at the mid-height of the reinforcing steel. Two beams
(one with a 79-in. splice and one with a 120-in. splice) with a cold joint were loaded
monotonically to failure. The other three beams were preloaded to develop horizontal cracks in
the face of the cold joint, unloaded and then loaded to failure; those beams developed horizontal
cracks with widths of 20, 30 and 35 mils (0.02, 0.03, 0.035 in.) during the first cycle of loading
and just prior to unloading. The nominal concrete compressive strength was 5000 psi.
The methods described in this report provide a viable means of simulating a crack in the
plane of flexural reinforcement. In the presence of a simulated crack in the plane of the
reinforcing bars, the two specimens with lap-spliced No. 11 bars with a 79-in. splice length
achieved bar stresses of 62 and 57 ksi. In the presence of a simulated crack in the plane of the
reinforcing bars, the three specimens with lap-spliced No. 11 bars with a 120-in. splice length
achieved bar stresses of 72, 67, and 69 ksi
Highly conductive Sb-doped layers in strained Si
The ability to create stable, highly conductive ultrashallow doped regions is a key requirement for future silicon-based devices. It is shown that biaxial tensile strain reduces the sheet resistance of highly doped n-type layers created by Sb or As implantation. The improvement is stronger with Sb, leading to a reversal in the relative doping efficiency of these n-type impurities. For Sb, the primary effect is a strong enhancement of activation as a function of tensile strain. At low processing temperatures, 0.7% strain more than doubles Sb activation, while enabling the formation of stable, ~10-nm-deep junctions. This makes Sb an interesting alternative to As for ultrashallow junctions in strain-engineered complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor device
Anchorage of High-Strength Reinforcing Bars with Standard Hooks - Initial Tests
The effects of embedment length, side cover, quantity of confining transverse reinforcement, location of hook (inside or outside the column core), concrete compressive strength, hooked bar size, and hook bend angle on anchorage capacity are investigated using the results of 329 tests of standard hooks loaded in tension. No. 5, 8, and 11 hooks were tested in beam-column joints with concrete compressive strengths ranging from 4,300 to 13,700 psi. The results of the tests are compared with the provisions in ACI 318-11, and equations to describe the anchorage strength of 90° hooks for hooks not confined by transverse reinforcement, hooks confined by two No. 3 ties, and hooks confined by No. 3 ties spaced at 3db are developed. Hooks cast inside the column core have greater ultimate anchorage force than those cast outside the column core, hook bend angle has a negligible effect on ultimate anchorage force, and ultimate anchorage force increases as the quantity of confining transverse reinforcement increases. For hooks not confined by transverse reinforcement, the anchorage capacity increases more rapidly than embedment length. For hooks confined by transverse reinforcement, small embedment lengths develop significant anchorage forces; increases in embedment length result in additional capacity, but anchorage capacity is less than proportional to embedment length. Comparisons to the provisions in ACI 318-11 show that the ultimate anchorage force of larger hooked bars and the effect of concrete compressive strength are overpredicted by the current design requirements. Analysis of 90° hooks cast inside the column core show that there is an increase in ultimate anchorage force with an increase in bar diameter; this effect increases as the quantity of confining transverse reinforcement increases within the range of values evaluated in this study. Ultimate anchorage force also increases with an increase in cover to the center of the bar for bars not confined by transverse reinforcement; this effect decreases as the quantity of transverse reinforcement increases and has no effect for bars confined by No. 3 ties spaced at 3db
The BAD protein integrates survival signaling by EGFR/MAPK and PI3K/Akt kinase pathways in PTEN-deficient tumor cells
SummaryTumor cells with mutated PTEN proliferate in an EGFR-independent manner. Induction of PTEN sensitizes cells to EGFR inhibition, and the combination causes synergistic apoptosis. Synergy is due to inhibition of two parallel pathways that phosphorylate the proapoptotic protein BAD at distinct sites. Serine 112 phosphorylation is EGFR/MEK/MAPK dependent, whereas serine 136 phosphorylation is PI3K/Akt dependent. Either phosphorylation is sufficient to sequester BAD to 14-3-3. BAD is released and apoptosis is induced only if both serines are dephosphorylated in response to inhibition of both pathways. Reduction of BAD expression by RNA interference prevents apoptosis in response to pathway inhibition. Thus, BAD integrates the antiapoptotic effects of both pathways. Combined inhibition of EGFR and PI3K signaling may be a useful therapeutic strategy
Auger Recombination in Semiconductor Quantum Wells
The principal mechanisms of Auger recombination of nonequilibrium carriers in
semiconductor heterostructures with quantum wells are investigated. It is shown
for the first time that there exist three fundamentally different Auger
recombination mechanisms of (i) thresholdless, (ii) quasi-threshold, and (iii)
threshold types. The rate of the thresholdless Auger process depends on
temperature only slightly. The rate of the quasi-threshold Auger process
depends on temperature exponentially. However, its threshold energy essentially
varies with quantum well width and is close to zero for narrow quantum wells.
It is shown that the thresholdless and the quasi-threshold Auger processes
dominate in narrow quantum wells, while the threshold and the quasi-threshold
processes prevail in wide quantum wells. The limiting case of a
three-dimensional (3D)Auger process is reached for infinitely wide quantum
wells. The critical quantum well width is found at which the quasi-threshold
and threshold Auger processes merge into a single 3D Auger process. Also
studied is phonon-assisted Auger recombination in quantum wells. It is shown
that for narrow quantum wells the act of phonon emission becomes resonant,
which in turn increases substantially the coefficient of phonon-assisted Auger
recombination. Conditions are found under which the direct Auger process
dominates over the phonon-assisted Auger recombination at various temperatures
and quantum well widths.Comment: 38 pages, 7 figure
Dynamics of light propagation in spatiotemporal dielectric structures
Propagation, transmission and reflection properties of linearly polarized
plane waves and arbitrarily short electromagnetic pulses in one-dimensional
dispersionless dielectric media possessing an arbitrary space-time dependence
of the refractive index are studied by using a two-component, highly symmetric
version of Maxwell's equations. The use of any slow varying amplitude
approximation is avoided. Transfer matrices of sharp nonstationary interfaces
are calculated explicitly, together with the amplitudes of all secondary waves
produced in the scattering. Time-varying multilayer structures and
spatiotemporal lenses in various configurations are investigated analytically
and numerically in a unified approach. Several new effects are reported, such
as pulse compression, broadening and spectral manipulation of pulses by a
spatiotemporal lens, and the closure of the forbidden frequency gaps with the
subsequent opening of wavenumber bandgaps in a generalized Bragg reflector
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