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2013

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Articles 10891 - 10920 of 11462

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Estimating Variations In Locking Depth For The Mojave Segment Of The San Andreas Fault Over The Past 1500 Years From Paleoseismic Stress Drop, Teira Solis Jan 2013

Estimating Variations In Locking Depth For The Mojave Segment Of The San Andreas Fault Over The Past 1500 Years From Paleoseismic Stress Drop, Teira Solis

Open Access Theses & Dissertations

The most fundamental model for characterizing earthquake occurrence [Reid, 1910] assumes a constant stress accumulation rate on a locked fault segment, which eventually fails at a threshold stress level. While this model provides a conceptual framework for investigating the conditions that prepare a fault for failure, there is little evidence that faults rupture periodically or at a uniform threshold stress. Moreover, this model fails to explain the large differences in earthquake recurrence intervals and paleoseismic slip for segments of major fault systems: why do some faults rupture on the order of 10's of years, while others require 100's of years …


Automatic Elucidation Of Gpi Molecular Structures With Grid Computing Technology, Juan Clemente Aguilar Bonavides Jan 2013

Automatic Elucidation Of Gpi Molecular Structures With Grid Computing Technology, Juan Clemente Aguilar Bonavides

Open Access Theses & Dissertations

Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are involved in many biological processes and are of medical importance. The identification and analysis of the entire collection of free and protein-linked GPIs within an organism (i.e., GPIomics) requires highly sensitive instruments. At present, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS or -MSn) is the most efficient laboratory technique for these tasks. As a typical MSn experiment produces hundreds of thousands of spectra, the data analysis creates a major bottleneck in high-throughput GPIomic projects. Yet, no computational tool for characterizing the chemical structures of GPI is available to date. We propose a library-search algorithm to …


Number Representation And Calculation: An Overview Of Chapter 4 Of Thinking Mathematically, Emily Pawlicki Jan 2013

Number Representation And Calculation: An Overview Of Chapter 4 Of Thinking Mathematically, Emily Pawlicki

A with Honors Projects

A presentation providing an overview of numeration systems and using different bases in calculations.


Effects Of Retarder On Cement, Reuben James Jan 2013

Effects Of Retarder On Cement, Reuben James

A with Honors Projects

Applying chemical analysis gained from taking a chemistry class, the author reflects on his summer employment at a chemical plant where he tested the effect of tartaric acid had on one of the company's products, Redline Speed Crete.


On Equivalent Characterizations Of Convexity Of Functions, Eleftherios Gkioulekas Jan 2013

On Equivalent Characterizations Of Convexity Of Functions, Eleftherios Gkioulekas

School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

A detailed development of the theory of convex functions, not often found in complete form in most textbooks, is given. We adopt the strict secant line definition as the definitive definition of convexity. We then show that for differentiable functions, this definition becomes logically equivalent with the first derivative monotonicity definition and the tangent line definition. Consequently, for differentiable functions, all three characterizations are logically equivalent.


Analytic Matrix Elements Of The Schrödinger Equation, Muhammad I. Bhatti Jan 2013

Analytic Matrix Elements Of The Schrödinger Equation, Muhammad I. Bhatti

School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

A previously defined analytic technique of constructing matrix elements from the Bernstein-polynomials (B-poly) has been applied to Schr¨odinger equation. This method after solving generalized eigenvalue problem yields very accurate eigenenergies and eigenvectors. The numerical eigenvectors and eigenvalues obtained from this process agree well with exact results of the hydrogen-like systems. Furthermore, accuracy of the numerical spectrum of hydrogen equation depends on the number of B-polys being used to construct the analytical matrix elements. Validity of eigenvalues and quality of the constructed wavefunctions is verified by evaluating the Thomas-Reiche-Kuhn (TRK) sum rules. Excellent numerical agreement is seen with exact results of …


The Two-Phase Arterial Blood Flow With Or Without A Catheter And In The Presence Of A Single Or Multi Stenosis, Ani E. Garcia, Daniel N. Riahi Jan 2013

The Two-Phase Arterial Blood Flow With Or Without A Catheter And In The Presence Of A Single Or Multi Stenosis, Ani E. Garcia, Daniel N. Riahi

School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

We consider the problem of blood flow in an artery with or without a catheter and in the presence of single or multi stenosis whose shape is based on the available experimental data for the stenosis in a human’s artery. The presence of stenosis in the artery, which locally narrows portion of the artery, can be a result of fatty materials such as cholesterol in the blood. The use of catheter is important as a standard tool for diagnosis and treatment in patience whose blood flow passage in the artery is affected adversely by the presence of the stenosis within …


Biodiversity Heritage Library, Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Deanna Marcum Jan 2013

Biodiversity Heritage Library, Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Deanna Marcum

Copyright, Fair Use, Scholarly Communication, etc.

The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), created in 2006, is the result of a collaboration of ten natural history museum and botanical garden libraries seeking to digitize core taxonomic literature and to make it free and openly available throughout the world. Today, the BHL includes fifteen member institutions whose efforts have shaped a collection of over 60,000 titles. It is supported through a combination of membership dues, in-kind support from member institutions, contributions from the user community, and direct support from the Smithsonian Institution Libraries, and it reaches tens of thousands of users each year. While managing the complex partnership has …


Mathematical Modelling At Secondary School: The Macsi-Clongowes Wood College Experience, J.P.F. Charpin, S. O'Hara, Dana Mackey Jan 2013

Mathematical Modelling At Secondary School: The Macsi-Clongowes Wood College Experience, J.P.F. Charpin, S. O'Hara, Dana Mackey

Articles

In Ireland, to encourage the study of STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) subjects and particularly mathematics, the Mathematics Applications Consortium for Science and Industry (MACSI) and Clongowes Wood College (County Kildare, Ireland) organized a mathematical modelling workshop for senior cycle secondary school students. Participants developed simple mathematical models for everyday life problems with an open-ended answer. The format and content of the workshop are described and feedback from both students and participating teachers is provided. For nearly all participants, this workshop was an enjoyable experience which showed mathematics and other STEM components in a very positive way.


Non-Equilibrium Pressure Control Of The Height Of A Large-Scale, Ground-Coupled, Rotating Fluid Column, R. L. Ash, I. R. Zardadhkan Jan 2013

Non-Equilibrium Pressure Control Of The Height Of A Large-Scale, Ground-Coupled, Rotating Fluid Column, R. L. Ash, I. R. Zardadhkan

Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications

When a ground-coupled, rotating fluid column is modeled incorporating non-equilibrium pressure forces in the Navier-Stokes equations, a new exact solution results. The solution has been obtained in a similar manner to the classical equilibrium solution. Unlike the infinite-height, classical solution, the non-equilibrium pressure solution yields a ground-coupled rotating fluid column of finite height. A viscous, non-equilibrium Rankine vortex velocity distribution, developed previously, was used to demonstrate how the viscous and non-equilibrium pressure gradient forces, arising in the vicinity of the velocity gradient discontinuity that is present in the classical Rankine vortex model, effectively isolate the rotating central fluid column from …


Distal Placement Of An End-To-Side Bypass Graft Anastomosis: A 3d Computational Study, John Di Cicco, Ayodeji Demuren Jan 2013

Distal Placement Of An End-To-Side Bypass Graft Anastomosis: A 3d Computational Study, John Di Cicco, Ayodeji Demuren

Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications

A three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics study of shear rates around distal end-to-side anastomoses has been conducted. Three 51% and three 75% cross-sectional area-reduced 6 mm cylinders were modeled each with a bypass cylinder attached at a 30-degree angle at different placements distal to the constriction. Steady, incompressible, Newtonian blood flow was assumed, and the full Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations, turbulent kinetic energy, and specific dissipation rate equations were solved on a locally structured multiblock mesh with hexahedral elements. Consequently, distal placement of an end-to-side bypass graft anastomosis was found to have an influence on the shear rate magnitudes. For the …


Using Architecture Models To Design Adaptive Socio-Technical Systems, Holly A. H. Handley Jan 2013

Using Architecture Models To Design Adaptive Socio-Technical Systems, Holly A. H. Handley

Engineering Management & Systems Engineering Faculty Publications

An architecture framework is used to capture the overall design and structure of a complex system. The Human Viewpoint was developed to augment existing architectural frameworks with additional information relevant to the human component in the system. The Human View models collect and organize social parameters in order to understand the way that humans interact with other elements of the system; the Human View models define the socio-technological boundaries of the system. Analyses performed with the architectural data provide information regarding the congruence, or fit of the human and the system. For example, different key thread analyses identify problematic paths …


Antifragility Analysis And Measurement Framework For Systems Of Systems, John Johnson, Adrian V. Gheorghe Jan 2013

Antifragility Analysis And Measurement Framework For Systems Of Systems, John Johnson, Adrian V. Gheorghe

Engineering Management & Systems Engineering Faculty Publications

The twenty-first century is defined by the social and technical hazards we face. A hazardous situation is a condition, or event, that threatens the well-being of people, organizations, societies, environments, and property. The most extreme of the hazards are considered X-Events and are an exogenous source of extreme stress to a system. X-Events can also be the unintended outputs of a system with both positive (serendipitous) and negative (catastrophic) consequences. Systems can vary in their ability to withstand these stress events. This ability exists on a continuum of fragility that ranges from fragile (degrading with stress), to robust (unchanged by …


The Root Cause Of Failure In Complex It Projects: Complexity Itself, Kaitlynn M. Whitney, Charles B. Daniels Jan 2013

The Root Cause Of Failure In Complex It Projects: Complexity Itself, Kaitlynn M. Whitney, Charles B. Daniels

Engineering Management & Systems Engineering Faculty Publications

Increased demand for better technology and perpetual global expansion continue to provide developers with many project opportunities for success, as well as failure. While no industry is immune from project failure, the Information Technology (IT) industry is shown to be more susceptible to risk and failure than those of other industries. Agile project management, which facilitates adaptation to changing circumstances and alleviates rigid formal controls, has become more popular in the software development industry though is not entirely compatible with traditional project management approaches.In this paper we will examine the primary causes of IT project management failure stated in modern …


Employing Learning To Improve The Performance Of Meta-Raps, Fatemah Al-Duoli, Ghaith Rabadi Jan 2013

Employing Learning To Improve The Performance Of Meta-Raps, Fatemah Al-Duoli, Ghaith Rabadi

Engineering Management & Systems Engineering Faculty Publications

In their search for satisfactory solutions to complex combinatorial problems, metaheuristics methods are expected to intelligently explore the solution space. Various forms of memory have been used to achieve this goal and improve the performance of metaheuristics, which warranted the development of the Adaptive Memory Programming (AMP) framework [1]. This paper follows this framework by integrating Machine Learning (ML) concepts into metaheuristics as a way to guide metaheuristics while searching for solutions. The target metaheuristic method is Meta-heuristic for Randomized Priority Search (Meta-RaPS). Similar to most metaheuristics, Meta-RaPS consists of construction and improvement phases. Randomness coupled with a greedy heuristic …


A Comparative Study Of The Effect Of Sensor Noise On Activity Recognition Models, Robert J. Ross, John D. Kelleher Jan 2013

A Comparative Study Of The Effect Of Sensor Noise On Activity Recognition Models, Robert J. Ross, John D. Kelleher

Conference papers

To provide a better understanding of the relative strengths of Machine Learning based Activity Recognition methods, in this paper we present a comparative analysis of the robustness of three popular methods with respect to sensor noise. Specifically we evaluate the robustness of Naive Bayes classifier, Support Vector Machine, and Random Forest based activity recognition models in three cases which span sensor errors from dead to poorly calibrated sensors. Test data is partially synthesized from a recently annotated activity recognition corpus which includes both interleaved activities and a range of both temporally long and short activities. Results demonstrate that the relative …


Electronic Two-Transition-Induced Enhancement Of Emission Efficiency In Polymer Light-Emitting Diodes, Thomas George, R.-A. Chen, C. Wang, S. Li Jan 2013

Electronic Two-Transition-Induced Enhancement Of Emission Efficiency In Polymer Light-Emitting Diodes, Thomas George, R.-A. Chen, C. Wang, S. Li

Chemistry & Biochemistry Faculty Works

With the development of experimental techniques, effective injection and transportation of electrons is proven as a way to obtain polymer light-emitting diodes (PLEDs) with high quantum efficiency. This paper reveals a valid mechanism for the enhancement of quantum efficiency in PLEDs. When an external electric field is applied, the interaction between a negative polaron and triplet exciton leads to an electronic two-transition process, which induces the exciton to emit light and thus improve the emission efficiency of PLEDs.


Hydraphiles: A Rigorously Studied Class Of Synthetic Channel Compounds With In Vivo Activity, Saeedeh Negin, Bryan Smith, Alexandra Unger, W. Leevy, George Gokel Jan 2013

Hydraphiles: A Rigorously Studied Class Of Synthetic Channel Compounds With In Vivo Activity, Saeedeh Negin, Bryan Smith, Alexandra Unger, W. Leevy, George Gokel

Chemistry & Biochemistry Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Parameter Estimation For Compact Binary Coalescence Signals With The First Generation Gravitational-Wave Detector Network, J. Aasi, J. Abadie, Matthew Benacquista, R. Biswas, G. Cagnoli, Teviet Creighton, H. Daveloza, Mario C. Diaz, S. R. Morriss, Soma Mukherjee, M. E. Normandin, Volker Quetschke, Malik Rakhmanov, Robert Stone, A. S. Stroeer, Cristina V. Torres Jan 2013

Parameter Estimation For Compact Binary Coalescence Signals With The First Generation Gravitational-Wave Detector Network, J. Aasi, J. Abadie, Matthew Benacquista, R. Biswas, G. Cagnoli, Teviet Creighton, H. Daveloza, Mario C. Diaz, S. R. Morriss, Soma Mukherjee, M. E. Normandin, Volker Quetschke, Malik Rakhmanov, Robert Stone, A. S. Stroeer, Cristina V. Torres

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications and Presentations

Compact binary systems with neutron stars or black holes are one of the most promising sources for ground-based gravitational-wave detectors. Gravitational radiation encodes rich information about source physics; thus parameter estimation and model selection are crucial analysis steps for any detection candidate events. Detailed models of the anticipated waveforms enable inference on several parameters, such as component masses, spins, sky location and distance, that are essential for new astrophysical studies of these sources. However, accurate measurements of these parameters and discrimination of models describing the underlying physics are complicated by artifacts in the data, uncertainties in the waveform models and …


Zero-Bounded Limits As A Special Case Of The Squeeze Theorem For Evaluating Single-Variable And Multivariable Limits, Eleftherios Gkioulekas Jan 2013

Zero-Bounded Limits As A Special Case Of The Squeeze Theorem For Evaluating Single-Variable And Multivariable Limits, Eleftherios Gkioulekas

School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

Many limits, typically taught as examples of applying the ‘squeeze’ theorem, can be evaluated more easily using the proposed zero-bounded limit theorem. The theorem applies to functions defined as a product of a factor going to zero and a factor that remains bounded in some neighborhood of the limit. This technique is immensely useful for both single-variable limits and multidimensional limits. A comprehensive treatment of multidimensional limits and continuity is also outlined.


Characterizations Of Exponential Distribution Based On Sample Of Size Three, George Yanev, Santanu Chakraborty Jan 2013

Characterizations Of Exponential Distribution Based On Sample Of Size Three, George Yanev, Santanu Chakraborty

School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

Two characterizations of the exponential distribution based on equalities among order statistics in a random sample of size three are proved. This proves two conjectures stated recently in Arnold and Villasenor [4].


Winter Habitat Use By Juvenile Greater Sage-Grouse On Parker Mountain, Utah: Implications For Sagebrush Management, Danny Caudill, Terry A. Messmer, Brent Bibles, Michael R. Guttery Jan 2013

Winter Habitat Use By Juvenile Greater Sage-Grouse On Parker Mountain, Utah: Implications For Sagebrush Management, Danny Caudill, Terry A. Messmer, Brent Bibles, Michael R. Guttery

Human–Wildlife Interactions

Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus; hereafter, sage-grouse) are entirely dependent on sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) for food and cover during winter. Loss or fragmentation of important wintering areas could have a disproportionate affect on population size. We radio-marked and monitored 91 juvenile sage-grouse in south-central Utah from 2008 to 2010. Thirty-four individuals survived to winter (January to March) and were used to evaluate winter habitat use. Resource use was calculated using kernel density estimation of radio-marked individuals and compared to available habitat using a G-test. We found that juvenile sage-grouse used winter habitats characterized by 0 to 5% slopes …


Response To Perryman Comment On Siemer Et Al. (2013), William F. Siemer, Daniel J. Decker, Sandra A. Jonker Jan 2013

Response To Perryman Comment On Siemer Et Al. (2013), William F. Siemer, Daniel J. Decker, Sandra A. Jonker

Human–Wildlife Interactions

No abstract provided.


Vitals Rates And Seasonal Movements Of Two Isolated Greater Sage-Grouse Populations In Utah's West Desert, Jason D. Robinson, Terry A. Messmer Jan 2013

Vitals Rates And Seasonal Movements Of Two Isolated Greater Sage-Grouse Populations In Utah's West Desert, Jason D. Robinson, Terry A. Messmer

Human–Wildlife Interactions

Declines in greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus; hereafter, sage-grouse) populations in Utah over the last century parallel range-wide trends. However, little is known about the ecology of sage-grouse populations that inhabit Utah’s naturally fragmented habitats. Utah’s West Desert sage-grouse populations occupy sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) habitats that are geographically separated by the Great Salt Lake, and largely confined to the Sheeprock and Deep Creek watersheds. From 2005 to 2006, we monitored sage-grouse that were radio-collared in each watershed to determine the factors affecting the vital rates in these isolated populations. Livestock grazing by domestic cattle was the dominate land use, …


Participation In Perinatal Interventional Research: Which Characteristics Matter?, Hai-Yen T. Nguyen Md, Joanne Quiñones Md, Msce, Daniel G. Kiefer Md, Anita Kurt Phd, Rn, Felisa Saldutti, John C. Smulian Md, Mph Jan 2013

Participation In Perinatal Interventional Research: Which Characteristics Matter?, Hai-Yen T. Nguyen Md, Joanne Quiñones Md, Msce, Daniel G. Kiefer Md, Anita Kurt Phd, Rn, Felisa Saldutti, John C. Smulian Md, Mph

Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology

No abstract provided.


A Swarm Of Salesmen: Algorithmic Approaches To Multiagent Modeling, Alexandre Amlie-Wolf Jan 2013

A Swarm Of Salesmen: Algorithmic Approaches To Multiagent Modeling, Alexandre Amlie-Wolf

Honors Papers

This honors thesis describes the algorithmic abstraction of a problem modeling a swarm of Mars rovers, where many "agents" must together achieve a goal. The algorithmic formulation of this problem is based on the traveling salesman problem (TSP), and so in this thesis I offer a review of the mathematical technique of linear programming in the context of its application to the TSP, an overview of some variations of the TSP and algorithms for approximating and solving them, and formulations without solutions of two novel TSP variations which are useful for modeling the original problem.


Modules And Dialects As Objects In Grace, Michael Homer, James Noble, Kim B. Bruce, Andrew P. Black Jan 2013

Modules And Dialects As Objects In Grace, Michael Homer, James Noble, Kim B. Bruce, Andrew P. Black

Computer Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

Grace is a gradually typed, object-oriented language for use in education; consonant with that use, we have tried to keep Grace as simple and straightforward as possible. Grace needs a module system for several reasons: to teach students about modular program design, to organise large programs, especially its self-hosted implementation, to provide access to resources defined in other languages, and to support different “dialects”—language subsets, or domain specific languages, for particular parts of the curriculum. Grace already has several organising constructs; this paper describes how Grace uses two of them, objects and lexical scope, to provide modules and dialects.


Interactive Ambient Visualizations For Soft Advice, Emerson Murphy-Hill, Titus Barik, Andrew P. Black Jan 2013

Interactive Ambient Visualizations For Soft Advice, Emerson Murphy-Hill, Titus Barik, Andrew P. Black

Computer Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

Some software packages offer the user soft advice: recommendations that are intended to help the user create high quality artifacts, but which may turn out to be bad advice. It is left to the user to determine whether the soft advice really will improve quality, and to decide whether or not to adopt it. Visualizations can help the user in making this decision, but we believe that conventional visualizations are less than ideal. In this paper, we describe an interactive ambient visualization to help users identify, understand and interpret soft advice.

Our visualization was developed to help programmers interpret code …


The Grace Programming Language Draft Specification Version 0.3.1261, Andrew P. Black, Kim B. Bruce, James Noble Jan 2013

The Grace Programming Language Draft Specification Version 0.3.1261, Andrew P. Black, Kim B. Bruce, James Noble

Computer Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

This is a specification of the Grace Programming Language. This specification is notably incomplete, and everything is subject to change.


On The Role Of Shape Prototypes In Hierarchical Models Of Vision, Michael David Thomure, Melanie Mitchell, Garrett T. Kenyon Jan 2013

On The Role Of Shape Prototypes In Hierarchical Models Of Vision, Michael David Thomure, Melanie Mitchell, Garrett T. Kenyon

Computer Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

We investigate the role of learned shape-prototypes in an influential family of hierarchical neural-network models of vision. Central to these networks’ design is a dictionary of learned shapes, which are meant to respond to discriminative visual patterns in the input. While higher-level features based on such learned prototypes have been cited as key for viewpointinvariant object-recognition in these models [1], [2], we show that high performance on invariant object-recognition tasks can be obtained by using a simple set of unlearned, “shape-free” features. This behavior is robust to the size of the network. These results call into question the roles of …