90,496 research outputs found
On the Swimming of \textit{Dictyostelium} amoebae
Traditionally, the primary mode for locomotion of amoeboid cells was thought
to be crawling on a substrate. Recently, it has been experimentally shown that
\textit{Dictostelium} amoeba and neutrophils can also swim in a directed
fashion. The mechanisms for amoeboid crawling and swimming were hypothesized to
be similar. In this letter, we show that the shape changes generated by a
crawling \textit{D. discoideum} cell are consistent with swimming.Comment: letter submitted to PNA
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Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
The onset of hands-and-knees crawling during the latter half of the first year of life heralds pervasive changes in a range of psychological functions. Chief among these changes is a clear shift in visual proprioception, evident in the way infants use patterns of optic flow in the peripheral field of view to regulate their postural sway. This shift is thought to result from consistent exposure in the newly crawling infant to different patterns of optic flow in the central field of view and the periphery and the need to concurrently process information about self-movement, particularly postural sway, and the environmental layout during crawling. Researchers have hypothesized that the demands on the infant's visual system to concurrently process information about self-movement and the environment press the infant to differentiate and functionalize peripheral optic flow for the control of balance during locomotion so that the central field of view is freed to engage in steering and monitoring the surface and potentially other tasks. In the current experiment, we tested whether belly crawling, a mode of locomotion that places negligible demands on the control of balance, leads to the same changes in the functional utilization of peripheral optic flow for the control of postural sway as hands-and-knees crawling. We hypothesized that hands-and-knees crawlers (n = 15) would show significantly higher postural responsiveness to movements of the side walls and ceiling of a moving room than same-aged pre-crawlers (n = 19) and belly crawlers (n = 15) with an equivalent amount of crawling experience. Planned comparisons confirmed the hypothesis. Visual-postural coupling in the hands-and-knees crawlers was significantly higher than in the belly crawlers and pre-crawlers. These findings suggest that the balance demands associated with hands-and-knees crawling may be an important contributor to the changes in visual proprioception that have been demonstrated in several experiments to follow hands-and-knees crawling experience. However, we also consider that belly crawling may have less potent effects on visual proprioception because it is an effortful and attention-demanding mode of locomotion, thus leaving less attentional capacity available to notice changing relations between the self and the environment
The credibility of the Venezuela crawling-band system
This paper studies the credibility of the Venezuela crawling-band exchange rate regime during the period July, 1996-February, 2002. We show that, introducing some modifications, the credibility analysis widely applied to target zone regimes can also be used in studying the credibility of crawling- band regimes. In analyzing the credibility of the Venezuela crawling band, first we use the so-called simple credibility tests developed by Svensson (1991). Additionally, we estimate the expected rate of realignment using the drift- adjustment method. Both the credibility tests and the drift-adjustment method give similar results, showing that the crawling-band system was highly credible during the period.crawling band exchange rate system, credibility, realignments
Do we really need to catch them all? A new User-guided Social Media Crawling method
With the growing use of popular social media services like Facebook and
Twitter it is challenging to collect all content from the networks without
access to the core infrastructure or paying for it. Thus, if all content cannot
be collected one must consider which data are of most importance. In this work
we present a novel User-guided Social Media Crawling method (USMC) that is able
to collect data from social media, utilizing the wisdom of the crowd to decide
the order in which user generated content should be collected to cover as many
user interactions as possible. USMC is validated by crawling 160 public
Facebook pages, containing content from 368 million users including 1.3 billion
interactions, and it is compared with two other crawling methods. The results
show that it is possible to cover approximately 75% of the interactions on a
Facebook page by sampling just 20% of its posts, and at the same time reduce
the crawling time by 53%. In addition, the social network constructed from the
20% sample contains more than 75% of the users and edges compared to the social
network created from all posts, and it has similar degree distribution
Exchange rate dynamics in crawling-band systems
In this note we show that an exchange rate crawling-band system can borrow a portion of those aspects of a target zone that lead to its stabilizing effects on the exchange rate, depending on the relationship between the crawl rate and the drift of the fundamentals process. If the crawl rate is sufficiently high (with respect to the drift), the crawling-band is similar to a free float regime. As the crawl rate decreases, the crawling-band system collapses to a standard target zone.crawling band
Towards using web-crawled data for domain adaptation in statistical machine translation
This paper reports on the ongoing work focused on domain adaptation of statistical machine translation using domain-specific data obtained by domain-focused web crawling. We present a strategy for crawling monolingual and parallel data and their exploitation for testing, language modelling, and system tuning in a phrase--based machine translation framework. The proposed approach is evaluated on the domains of Natural Environment and Labour Legislation and two language
pairs: English–French and English–Greek
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