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2005

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Articles 481 - 510 of 5573

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Screech Owl Reasoner - Scalable Approximate Abox Reasoning With Owl, Pascal Hitzler, Denny Vrandecic Nov 2005

The Screech Owl Reasoner - Scalable Approximate Abox Reasoning With Owl, Pascal Hitzler, Denny Vrandecic

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

We present a preliminary version of the approximate OWL reasoning system SCREECH. It builds on the KAON2 system and performs OWL ABox reasoning in an approximate manner. It trades soundness of reasoning for efficiency, with resulting polynomial worst-case data complexity. It has been developed for use in time-critical applications where quick response time is more important than a full guarantee of correctness of answers. The theoretical background for the system is explained in [Hitzler and Vrandecic, 2005] and is being presented at the conference.


Detection Of Covert Channel Encoding In Network Packet Delays, Vincent Berk, Annarita Giani, George Cybenko Nov 2005

Detection Of Covert Channel Encoding In Network Packet Delays, Vincent Berk, Annarita Giani, George Cybenko

Computer Science Technical Reports

Covert channels are mechanisms for communicating information in ways that are difficult to detect. Data exfiltration can be an indication that a computer has been compromised by an attacker even when other intrusion detection schemes have failed to detect a successful attack. Covert timing channels use packet inter-arrival times, not header or payload embedded information, to encode covert messages. This paper investigates the channel capacity of Internet-based timing channels and proposes a methodology for detecting covert timing channels based on how close a source comes to achieving that channel capacity. A statistical approach is then used for the special case …


Dlp Isn't So Bad After All, Peter Haase, Markus Krotzsch, York Sure, Rudi Studer, Pascal Hitzler Nov 2005

Dlp Isn't So Bad After All, Peter Haase, Markus Krotzsch, York Sure, Rudi Studer, Pascal Hitzler

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

We discuss some of the recent controversies concerning the DLP fragment of OWL. We argue that it is a meaningful fragment and can serve as a basic interoperability layer between OWL and logic programming-based ontology languages.


The N2k Consortium. Ii. A Transiting Hot Saturn Around Hd 149026 With A Large Dense Core, Bun'ei Sato, Debra A. Fischer, Gregory W. Henry, Gregory Laughlin, R. Paul Butler, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Steve Vogt, Peter Bodenheimer, Shigeru Ida, Eri Toyota, Aaron S. Wolf, Jeff A. Valenti, Louis J. Boyd, John A. Johnson, Jason T. Wright, Mark Ammons, Sarah E. Robinson, Jay Strader, Chris Mccarthy, Kok Leong Tah, Dante Minniti Nov 2005

The N2k Consortium. Ii. A Transiting Hot Saturn Around Hd 149026 With A Large Dense Core, Bun'ei Sato, Debra A. Fischer, Gregory W. Henry, Gregory Laughlin, R. Paul Butler, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Steve Vogt, Peter Bodenheimer, Shigeru Ida, Eri Toyota, Aaron S. Wolf, Jeff A. Valenti, Louis J. Boyd, John A. Johnson, Jason T. Wright, Mark Ammons, Sarah E. Robinson, Jay Strader, Chris Mccarthy, Kok Leong Tah, Dante Minniti

Information Systems and Engineering Management Research Publications

Doppler measurements from Subaru and Keck have revealed radial velocity variations in the V = 8.15, G0 IV star HD 149026 consistent with a Saturn-mass planet in a 2.8766 day orbit. Photometric observations at Fairborn Observatory have detected three complete transit events with depths of 0.003 mag at the predicted times of conjunction. HD 149026 is now the second-brightest star with a transiting extrasolar planet. The mass of the star, based on interpolation of stellar evolutionary models, is 1.3 ± 0.1 M☉; together with the Doppler amplitude K1 = 43.3 m s-1, we derive a planet mass M sin i …


Blind Speech Separation Using A Joint Model Of Speech Production, Daniel Smith, Jason Lukasiak, Ian Burnett Nov 2005

Blind Speech Separation Using A Joint Model Of Speech Production, Daniel Smith, Jason Lukasiak, Ian Burnett

Faculty of Informatics - Papers (Archive)

We propose a new blind signal separation (BSS)technique, developed specifically for speech, that exploits a priori knowledge of speech production mechanisms. In our approach, the autoregressive (AR) structure and fundamental frequency ( 0) production mechanisms of speech are jointly modeled. We compare the separation performance of our joint AR-F0 algorithm to existing BSS algorithms that model either speech’s AR structure [1] or 0 [2] individually. Experimental results indicate that the joint algorithm demonstrates superior separation performance to both the individual AR algorithm (up to 77% improvement) and F0 (up to 50% improvement) algorithms. This suggests that speech separation performance is …


Hippocratic Data Streams-Concepts, Architectures And Issues, M. H. Ali, M. Y. Eltabakh, Elisa Bertino Nov 2005

Hippocratic Data Streams-Concepts, Architectures And Issues, M. H. Ali, M. Y. Eltabakh, Elisa Bertino

Department of Computer Science Technical Reports

No abstract provided.


Functional Characterization Of Core Promoter Elements: The Downstream Core Element Is Recognized By Taf1, Dong-Hoon Lee, Naum I. Gershenzon, Malavika Gupta, Ilya P. Ioshikhes, Danny Reinberg, Brian A. Lewis Nov 2005

Functional Characterization Of Core Promoter Elements: The Downstream Core Element Is Recognized By Taf1, Dong-Hoon Lee, Naum I. Gershenzon, Malavika Gupta, Ilya P. Ioshikhes, Danny Reinberg, Brian A. Lewis

Physics Faculty Publications

Downstream elements are a newly appreciated class of core promoter elements of RNA polymerase II-transcribed genes. The downstream core element (DCE) was discovered in the human β-globin promoter, and its sequence composition is distinct from that of the downstream promoter element (DPE). We show here that the DCE is a bona fide core promoter element present in a large number of promoters and with high incidence in promoters containing a TATA motif. Database analysis indicates that the DCE is found in diverse promoters, supporting its functional relevance in a variety of promoter contexts. The DCE consists of …


Evidence For Native-Defect Donors In N-Type Zno, David C. Look, Gary C. Farlow, Pakpoom Reunchan, Sukit Limpijumnong, S. B. Zhang, K. Nordlund Nov 2005

Evidence For Native-Defect Donors In N-Type Zno, David C. Look, Gary C. Farlow, Pakpoom Reunchan, Sukit Limpijumnong, S. B. Zhang, K. Nordlund

Physics Faculty Publications

Recent theory has found that native defects such as the O vacancy VO and Zn interstitial ZnI have high formation energies in n-type ZnO and, thus, are not important donors, especially in comparison to impurities such as H. In contrast, we use both theory and experiment to show that, under N ambient, the complex ZnI-NO is a stronger candidate than H or any other known impurity for a 30 meV donor commonly found in bulk ZnO grown from the vapor phase. Since the Zn vacancy is also the dominant acceptor in such material, we must …


The First-Optical-Vla Survey For Lensed Radio Lobes, Deborah B. Haarsma, Joshua N. Winn, Emilio E. Falco, Christopher S. Kochanek Nov 2005

The First-Optical-Vla Survey For Lensed Radio Lobes, Deborah B. Haarsma, Joshua N. Winn, Emilio E. Falco, Christopher S. Kochanek

University Faculty Publications and Creative Works

We present results from a survey for gravitationally lensed radio lobes. Lensed lobes are a potentially richer source of information about galaxy mass distributions than lensed point sources, which have been the exclusive focus of other recent surveys. Our approach is to identify radio lobes in the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty cm (FIRST) catalog and then search optical catalogs for coincident foreground galaxies, which are candidate lensing galaxies. We then obtain higher resolution images of these targets at both optical and radio wavelengths and obtain optical spectra for the most promising candidates. We present maps of …


Minimum Power Configuration For Wireless Communication In Sensor Networks, Guoliang Xing, Chenyang Lu, Ying Zhang, Qingfeng Huang, Robert Pless Nov 2005

Minimum Power Configuration For Wireless Communication In Sensor Networks, Guoliang Xing, Chenyang Lu, Ying Zhang, Qingfeng Huang, Robert Pless

All Computer Science and Engineering Research

This paper proposes the Minimum Power Configuration (MPC) approach to power management in wireless sensor networks. In contrast to earlier research that treats different radio states (transmission/reception/idle) in isolation, MPC integrates them in a joint optimization problem that depends on both the set of active nodes and the transmission power. We propose four approximation algorithms with provable performance bounds and two practical routing protocols. Simulations based on realistic radio models show that the MPC approach can conserve more energy than existing minimum power routing and topology control protocols. Furthermore, it can flexibly adapt to network workload and radio platforms.


End-To-End Scheduling Strategies For Aperiodic Tasks In Middleware, Yuanfang Zhang, Chenyang Lu, Christopher Gill, Patrick Lardieri, Gautum Thaker Nov 2005

End-To-End Scheduling Strategies For Aperiodic Tasks In Middleware, Yuanfang Zhang, Chenyang Lu, Christopher Gill, Patrick Lardieri, Gautum Thaker

All Computer Science and Engineering Research

Many mission-critical distributed real-time applicationsmust handle aperiodic tasks with hard end-to-end dead-lines. Existing middleware such as RT-CORBA lacksschedulability analysis and run-time scheduling mecha-nisms that can provide real-time guarantees to aperiodictasks. This paper makes the following contributions to thestate of the art for end-to-end aperiodic scheduling in mid-dleware. First, we compare two approaches to aperiodicscheduling, the deferrable server and the aperiodic utiliza-tion bound, using representative workloads. Numerical re-sults show that the deferrable server analysis is less pes-simistic than the aperiodic utilization bounds when appliedoffline. Second, we propose a practical approach to tuningdeferrable servers for end-to-end tasks. Third, we describedeferrable server mechanisms …


Stabilizers: Safe Lightweight Check- Pointing For Concurrent Programs, Lukasz Ziarek, Philip Schatz, Suresh Jagannathan Nov 2005

Stabilizers: Safe Lightweight Check- Pointing For Concurrent Programs, Lukasz Ziarek, Philip Schatz, Suresh Jagannathan

Department of Computer Science Technical Reports

No abstract provided.


Ft-Rc4: A Robust Security Mechanism For Data Stream Systems, Mohamed Ali, Mohamed Eltabakh, Cristina Nita-Rotaru Nov 2005

Ft-Rc4: A Robust Security Mechanism For Data Stream Systems, Mohamed Ali, Mohamed Eltabakh, Cristina Nita-Rotaru

Department of Computer Science Technical Reports

No abstract provided.


Neotectonic Activity Of Eski̇şehi̇r Fault Zone In Vicinity Of İnönü – Dodurga Area, Fatma Tokay, Erhan Altunel Nov 2005

Neotectonic Activity Of Eski̇şehi̇r Fault Zone In Vicinity Of İnönü – Dodurga Area, Fatma Tokay, Erhan Altunel

Bulletin of the Mineral Research and Exploration

No abstract provided.


A Single, Powerful, Nonparametric Statistic For Continuous-Data Telecommunications Parity Testing, J. D. Opdyke Nov 2005

A Single, Powerful, Nonparametric Statistic For Continuous-Data Telecommunications Parity Testing, J. D. Opdyke

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Since the enactment of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, extensive expert testimony has justified use of the modified t statistic (Brownie et al., 1990) for performing two-sample hypothesis tests comparing Bell companies’ CLEC and ILEC performance measurement data (known as parity testing). However, Opdyke (Telecommunications Policy, 2004) demonstrated this statistic to be potentially manipulable and to have literally zero power to detect inferior CLEC service provision under a wide range of relevant data conditions. This article develops a single, nonparametric statistic that is easily implemented (i.e., not computationally intensive) and typically provides dramatic power gains over the modified t while …


An Estimator Of Intervention Effect On Disease Severity, David Siev Nov 2005

An Estimator Of Intervention Effect On Disease Severity, David Siev

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

When a medical intervention prevents a dichotomous outcome, the size of its effect is often estimated with the prevented fraction. Some interventions may reduce the severity of an outcome without entirely preventing it. To quantify the effect of a severity-moderating intervention, a measure termed the mitigated fraction (MF) is proposed. MF has broad applicability, because it measures the overlap of two empirical distributions based on their stochastic ordering. It is also useful in the specific context of medical interventions, because it shares certain structural and functional features with the prevented fraction. The two measures may be applied together …


Comparison Of Statistical Tests In Logistic Regression: The Case Of Hypernatreamia, Stylianos Katsaragakis, Christos Koukouvinos, Stella Stylianou, Eleni-Maria Theodoraki, Eleni-Maria Theodoraki Nov 2005

Comparison Of Statistical Tests In Logistic Regression: The Case Of Hypernatreamia, Stylianos Katsaragakis, Christos Koukouvinos, Stella Stylianou, Eleni-Maria Theodoraki, Eleni-Maria Theodoraki

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

The logistic regression has become an integral component of any medical data analysis concerning binary responses. The main issue rising after the adaptation of the final model is its goodness-of-fit. The fit of the model is assessed via the overall measures and summary statistics and comparing them in the case of hypernateamia.


Simulation Procedure In Periodic Cancer Screening Trials, Ioana Barnicescu, Ricolindo L. Cariño Nov 2005

Simulation Procedure In Periodic Cancer Screening Trials, Ioana Barnicescu, Ricolindo L. Cariño

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

A general simulation procedure is described to validate model fitting algorithms for complex likelihood functions that are utilized in periodic cancer screening trials. Although screening programs have existed for a few decades, there are still many unsolved problems, such as how age or hormone affects the screening sensitivity, the sojourn time in the preclinical state, and the transition probability from diseasefree state to the preclinical state. Simulations are needed to check reliability or validity of the likelihood function combined with the associated effect functions. One bottleneck in the simulation procedure is the very time consuming calculations of the maximum likelihood …


Training Statisticians To Be Alert To The Dangers Of Misapplying Statistical Methods, Vance W. Berger Nov 2005

Training Statisticians To Be Alert To The Dangers Of Misapplying Statistical Methods, Vance W. Berger

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Statisticians are faced with a variety of challenges. Their ability to cope successfully with these challenges depends, in large part, on the quality of their training. It is not the purpose of this article to present a comprehensive training plan that will overhaul the standard curriculum a statistician might follow under current training regimens (i.e., in a degree program). Rather, the objective is to point out important areas that appear to be under-represented in standard curricula and correspondingly overlooked too often in practice. The hope is that these areas might be better integrated into the training of the next generation …


Maximum Tests Are Adaptive Permutation Tests, Markus Neuhäeuser, Ludwig A. Hothorn Nov 2005

Maximum Tests Are Adaptive Permutation Tests, Markus Neuhäeuser, Ludwig A. Hothorn

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

In some areas, e.g., statistical genetics, it is common to apply a maximum test, where the maximum of several competing test statistics is used as a new statistic, and the permutation distribution of the maximum is used for inference. Here, it is shown that maximum tests are special cases of adaptive permutation tests. The 30-year old idea of adaptive statistical tests is more flexible than previously thought when permutation tests are used, and the selector statistic is calculated for every permutation. Because the independence between the selector and the test statistics is no longer needed, the test statistics themselves can …


Large Sample And Bootstrap Intervals For The Gamma Scale Parameter Based On Grouped Data, Ayman Baklizi, Amjad Al-Nasser Nov 2005

Large Sample And Bootstrap Intervals For The Gamma Scale Parameter Based On Grouped Data, Ayman Baklizi, Amjad Al-Nasser

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Interval estimation of the scale parameter of the gamma distribution using grouped data is considered in this article. Exact intervals do not exist and approximate intervals are needed Recently, Chen and Mi (2001) proposed alternative approximate intervals. In this article, some bootstrap and jackknife type intervals are proposed. The performance of these intervals is investigated and compared. The results show that some of the suggested intervals have a satisfactory statistical performance in situations where the sample size is small with heavy proportion of censoring.


Bootstrap Intervals Of The Parameters Of Lognormal Distribution Using Power Rule Model And Accelerated Life Tests, Mohammed Al-Haj Ebrahem Nov 2005

Bootstrap Intervals Of The Parameters Of Lognormal Distribution Using Power Rule Model And Accelerated Life Tests, Mohammed Al-Haj Ebrahem

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Assumed that the distribution of the lifetime of any unit follows a lognormal distribution with parameters μ and σ . Also, assume that the relationship between μ and the stress level V is given by the power rule model. Several types of bootstrap intervals of the parameters were studied and their performance was studied using simulations and compared in term of attainment of the nominal confidence level, symmetry of lower and upper error rates and the expected width. Conclusions and recommendations are given.


Restricted Quasi-Independent Model Resolves Paradoxical Behaviors Of Cohen’S Kappa, Vicki Stover Hertzberg, Frank Xu, Michael Haber Nov 2005

Restricted Quasi-Independent Model Resolves Paradoxical Behaviors Of Cohen’S Kappa, Vicki Stover Hertzberg, Frank Xu, Michael Haber

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Cohen’s kappa, an index of inter-rater agreement, behaves paradoxically in 2×2 tables. λA is derived, an index from the restricted quasi-independent model for 2×2 tables. Simulation studies are used to demonstrate λA has superior performance compared to Scott’s pi. Moreover, λA does not show paradoxical behavior for 2×2 tables.


A Comparison Of The Spearman-Brown And Flanagan-Rulon Formulas For Split Half Reliability Under Various Variance Parameter Conditions, David A. Walker Nov 2005

A Comparison Of The Spearman-Brown And Flanagan-Rulon Formulas For Split Half Reliability Under Various Variance Parameter Conditions, David A. Walker

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Differences between the Spearman-Brown and Flanagan-Rulon formulas are examined when the variance parameters for two halves of a test had the following ratios: 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 2.0 and also had a correlation between the two halves of a test at 1.00, .95, .90, .80, .70, .60, .50, .40, .30, .20, .10, .05. It was found that use of the Spearman-Brown formula to estimate the population ρ when the ratio between the standard deviations on two halves of a test is disparate, or beyond .9 to 1.1, was not warranted. Applied and theoretical examples …


Statistical Methods And Artificial Neural Networks, Mammadagha Mammadov, Berna Yazici, Şenay Yolaçan, Atilla Aslanargun, Ali Fuat YüZer, Embiya Ağaoğlu Nov 2005

Statistical Methods And Artificial Neural Networks, Mammadagha Mammadov, Berna Yazici, Şenay Yolaçan, Atilla Aslanargun, Ali Fuat YüZer, Embiya Ağaoğlu

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Artificial Neural Networks and statistical methods are applied on real data sets for forecasting, classification, and clustering problems. Hybrid models for two components are examined on different data sets; tourist arrival forecasting to Turkey, macro-economic problem on rescheduling of the countries’ international debts, and grouping twenty-five European Union member and four candidate countries according to macro-economic indicators.


Jmasm25: Computing Percentiles Of Skew-Normal Distributions, Sikha Bagui, Subhash Bagui Nov 2005

Jmasm25: Computing Percentiles Of Skew-Normal Distributions, Sikha Bagui, Subhash Bagui

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

An algorithm and code is provided for computing percentiles of skew-normal distributions with parameter λ using Monte Carlo methods. A critical values table was created for various parameter values of λ at various probability levels of α . The table will be useful to practitioners as it is not available in the literature.


W Production At Large Transverse Momentum At The Large Hadron Collider, Richard J. Gonsalves, Nikolaos Kidonakis, Agustín Sabio Vera Nov 2005

W Production At Large Transverse Momentum At The Large Hadron Collider, Richard J. Gonsalves, Nikolaos Kidonakis, Agustín Sabio Vera

Faculty Articles

We study the production of W bosons at large transverse momentum in pp collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). We calculate the complete next-to-leading order (NLO) corrections to the differential cross section. We find that the NLO corrections provide a large increase to the cross section but, surprisingly, do not reduce the scale dependence relative to leading order (LO). We also calculate next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) soft-gluon corrections and find that, although they are small, they significantly reduce the scale dependence thus providing a more stable theoretical prediction.


Refuge Update – November/December 2005, Volume 2, Number 6 Nov 2005

Refuge Update – November/December 2005, Volume 2, Number 6

RefugeUpdate (USFWS-NWRS)

Table of Contents:

Make Way for Ducklings, page 4 With help from refuge experts, roads and bridges can be built to accommodate wildlife.

Katrina Heroes, pages 8-9 Extraordinary diaries from refuge staffers who were there when Katrina came calling.

Focus on…Reaching Youth , page 10-15 Refuges give young people a chance to learn art, poetry, native culture, service – and stewardship.

Nisqually: Growing and Restoring, page 17 The Outstanding Refuge Plan of 2005 opens the door to the largest estuary restoration project in the Pacific Northwest.


Large-Scale Molecular-Dynamics Simulation Of Nanoscale Hydrophobic Interaction And Nanobubble Formation, Takahiro Koishi, Kenji Yasuoka, Toshikazu Ebisuzaki, S. Yoo, Xiao Cheng Zeng Nov 2005

Large-Scale Molecular-Dynamics Simulation Of Nanoscale Hydrophobic Interaction And Nanobubble Formation, Takahiro Koishi, Kenji Yasuoka, Toshikazu Ebisuzaki, S. Yoo, Xiao Cheng Zeng

Xiao Cheng Zeng Publications

We performed large-scale molecular-dynamics simulation of nanoscale hydrophobic interaction manifested by the formation of nanobubble between nanometer-sized hydrophobic clusters at constrained equilibrium. Particular attention is placed on the tendency of formation and stability of nanobubbles in between model nanoassemblies which are composed of hydrophobic clusters (or patches) embedded in a hydrophilic substrate. On the basis of physical behavior of nanobubble formation, we observed a change from short-range molecular hydrophobic interaction to midrange nanoscopic interaction when the length scale of hydrophobe approaches to about 1 nm. We investigated the behavior of nanobubble formation with several different patterns of nonpolar-site distribution on …


Intra-Atomic Aspects Of Magnon-Plasmon Interactions, Ralph Skomski, Peter A. Dowben Nov 2005

Intra-Atomic Aspects Of Magnon-Plasmon Interactions, Ralph Skomski, Peter A. Dowben

Peter Dowben Publications

Magnon-plasmon interactions are modeled by considering the spin-dependent dielectric response of atoms placed in crystalline environment. Hund's exchange rules favor parallel spin alignment, but the strength of the exchange depends on the displacement of the centers of gravity of the atomic spin-up and spin-down electron charge clouds. The intra-atomic exchange is modeled by considering a Hubbard-type interaction, and interatomic interaction then yields a k-space dispersion. The eigenmodes of the plasma are a mixture of spin-up and spin-down degrees of freedom, described by a 2×2 interaction matrix. Minority and majority bands yield different plasmon frequencies. However, these modes are not orthogonal …