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Articles 68971 - 69000 of 302419

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Rethinking The Weakness Of Stream Ciphers And Its Application To Encrypted Malware Detection, William Stone, Daeyoung Kim, Victor Youdom Kemmoe, Mingon Kang, Junggab Son Oct 2020

Rethinking The Weakness Of Stream Ciphers And Its Application To Encrypted Malware Detection, William Stone, Daeyoung Kim, Victor Youdom Kemmoe, Mingon Kang, Junggab Son

Computer Science Faculty Research

One critical vulnerability of stream ciphers is the reuse of an encryption key. Since most stream ciphers consist of only a key scheduling algorithm and an Exclusive OR (XOR) operation, an adversary may break the cipher by XORing two captured ciphertexts generated under the same key. Various cryptanalysis techniques based on this property have been introduced in order to recover plaintexts or encryption keys; in contrast, this research reinterprets the vulnerability as a method of detecting stream ciphers from the ciphertexts it generates. Patterns found in the values (characters) expressed across the bytes of a ciphertext make the ciphertext distinguishable …


Topology-Guided Roadmap Construction With Dynamic Region Sampling, Read Sandström, Diane Uwacu, Jory Denny, Nancy M. Amato Oct 2020

Topology-Guided Roadmap Construction With Dynamic Region Sampling, Read Sandström, Diane Uwacu, Jory Denny, Nancy M. Amato

Department of Math & Statistics Faculty Publications

Many types of planning problems require discovery of multiple pathways through the environment, such as multi-robot coordination or protein ligand binding. The Probabilistic Roadmap (PRM) algorithm is a powerful tool for this case, but often cannot efficiently connect the roadmap in the presence of narrow passages. In this letter, we present a guidance mechanism that encourages the rapid construction of well-connected roadmaps with PRM methods. We leverage a topological skeleton of the workspace to track the algorithm's progress in both covering and connecting distinct neighborhoods, and employ this information to focus computation on the uncovered and unconnected regions. We demonstrate …


Incorporation And Measurement Of Uncertainty In Clustered And Spatial Data, Yuan Hong Oct 2020

Incorporation And Measurement Of Uncertainty In Clustered And Spatial Data, Yuan Hong

Theses and Dissertations

Analyzing population representative datasets for local estimation and predictions over time is important for monitoring related public health issues, however, there are many statistical challenges associated with such analyses. Mixed effect models are one of the common options which can incorporate time and spatial effect in the model and related inference is well established.

In the first part of this dissertation, to estimate area-level prevalence using individuallevel data, small area estimation (SAE) with post-stratified mixed effect models were used where sampling weights were also incorporated into it. However, if poststratification which requires more computation effort can improve estimation accuracy is …


Asymptotically-Optimal Topological Nearest-Neighbor Filtering, Read Sandström, Jory Denny, Nancy M. Amato Oct 2020

Asymptotically-Optimal Topological Nearest-Neighbor Filtering, Read Sandström, Jory Denny, Nancy M. Amato

Department of Math & Statistics Faculty Publications

Nearest-neighbor finding is a major bottleneck for sampling-based motion planning algorithms. The cost of finding nearest neighbors grows with the size of the roadmap, leading to a significant computational bottleneck for problems which require many configurations to find a solution. In this work, we develop a method of mapping configurations of a jointed robot to neighborhoods in the workspace that supports fast search for configurations in nearby neighborhoods. This expedites nearest-neighbor search by locating a small set of the most likely candidates for connecting to the query with a local plan. We show that this filtering technique can preserve asymptotically-optimal …


Detection Of Reconnection Signatures In Solar Flares, Taylor R. Whitney Aegerter, Daniel J. Emmons Ii, Robert D. Loper Oct 2020

Detection Of Reconnection Signatures In Solar Flares, Taylor R. Whitney Aegerter, Daniel J. Emmons Ii, Robert D. Loper

Faculty Publications

Solar flare forecasting is limited by the current understanding of mechanisms that govern magnetic reconnection, the main physical phenomenon associated with these events. As a result, forecasting relies mainly on climatological correlations to historical events rather than the underlying physics principles. Solar physics models place the neutral point of the reconnection event in the solar corona. Correspondingly, studies of photospheric magnetic fields indicate changes during solar flares—particularly in relation to the field helicity—on the solar surface as a result of the associated magnetic reconnection. This study utilizes data from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) and …


Shift In The Paradigm For Gssp Boundary Definition, V. I. Davydov Oct 2020

Shift In The Paradigm For Gssp Boundary Definition, V. I. Davydov

Geosciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

For over 200 years the use of biotic events as the basis for the establishment of chronostratigraphic boundaries has been the only approach successfully utilized for international and national chronostratigraphy. The traditional biostratigraphic method provides relatively high resolution, averaging 1 Ma or sometimes less. This biochronological evolutionary approach to the Global Boundary Stratotype section and Point (GSSP) utilizes biotic Primary Markers (PM), with a few exceptions, encompasses the integrated PM and other non-PM markers as the general principles for defining GSSP boundaries and is a reasonably reliable mechanism for global correlation and a relatively stable International Geologic Time Scale (IGTS). …


Constructing A Time Scale Of Biotic Recovery Across The Cretaceous–Paleogene Boundary, Corral Bluffs, Denver Basin, Colorado, U.S.A., Vincent Isakson, Mark D. Schmitz Oct 2020

Constructing A Time Scale Of Biotic Recovery Across The Cretaceous–Paleogene Boundary, Corral Bluffs, Denver Basin, Colorado, U.S.A., Vincent Isakson, Mark D. Schmitz

Geosciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

The Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) boundary interval represents one of the most significant mass extinctions and ensuing biotic recoveries in Earth history. Earliest Paleocene fossil mammal faunas corresponding to the Puercan North American Land Mammal Age (NALMA) are thought to be highly endemic and potentially diachronous, necessitating precise chronostratigraphic controls at key fossil localities to constrain recovery dynamics in continental biotas following the K–Pg mass extinction. The Laramide synorgenic sedimentary deposits within the Denver Basin in east-central Colorado preserve one of the most continuous and fossiliferous records of the K–Pg boundary interval in North America. Poor exposure in much of the Denver …


Using Saoimage Ds9 & Hubble Space Telescope Data To Identify Globular Clusters In Ic 219, Emily Spicer, Alice Jacques, Benne Holwerda Oct 2020

Using Saoimage Ds9 & Hubble Space Telescope Data To Identify Globular Clusters In Ic 219, Emily Spicer, Alice Jacques, Benne Holwerda

Undergraduate Research Events

Globular clusters are tightly bound spherical clusters of stars located within the halo of elliptical and spiral galaxies. They are among the oldest stars found in a galaxy, and their presence and abundance in a galaxy’s halo offer insight on the age, composition, and formation of the galaxy.1 I used a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image and SAOImage DS9, a powerful imaging tool used to analyze astronomical data, to identify the size and locate the position of globular cluster (GC) candidates in IC 219.


2020 Celebration Of Scholarship, Creativity, And Engagement, Todd Bruns, Beth Heldebrandt Oct 2020

2020 Celebration Of Scholarship, Creativity, And Engagement, Todd Bruns, Beth Heldebrandt

Programs

The 2020-2021 academic year is truly extraordinary and higher education’s new, hopefully temporary, normal began on rather short notice in Spring 2020. While our environment has changed, we, as a shared community, are pleased that the important work of faculty continues and evolves as faculty broaden and redefine the boundaries of scholarship, creativity, and innovation in accelerating hybrid and remote environments. And, as new forms and strategies for scholarship and creativity emerge, the core principles of faculty life and student learning remain central to the mission of Eastern Illinois University.

For that reason, our faculty, department chairs, college deans, the …


A Preliminary Exploration Of The Cooling Effect Of Tree Shade In Urban Landscapes, Qiuyan Yu, Wenjie Ji, Ruiliang Pu, Shawn Landry, Michael Acheampong, Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne, Zhibin Ren, Shakhawat H. Tanim Oct 2020

A Preliminary Exploration Of The Cooling Effect Of Tree Shade In Urban Landscapes, Qiuyan Yu, Wenjie Ji, Ruiliang Pu, Shawn Landry, Michael Acheampong, Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne, Zhibin Ren, Shakhawat H. Tanim

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

Mitigating urban heat island (UHI) effects, especially under climate change, is necessary for the promotion of urban sustainability. Shade is one of the most important functions provided by urban trees for mitigating UHI. However, the cooling effect of tree shade has not been adequately investigated. In this study, we used a simple and straightforward method to quantify the spatial and temporal variation of tree shade and examined its effect on land surface temperature (LST). We used the hillshade function in a geographic information system to quantify the spatiotemporal patterns of tree shade by integrating sun location and tree height. Relationships …


Egyptian Fractions As Approximators, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich Oct 2020

Egyptian Fractions As Approximators, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich

Departmental Technical Reports (CS)

In ancient Egypt, fractions were represented as the sum of inverses to natural numbers. Processing fractions in this representation is computationally complicated. Because of this complexity, traditionally, Egyptian fractions used to be considered an early inefficient approach. In our previous papers, we showed, however, that the Egyptian fractions actually provide an optimal solution to problems important for ancient Egypt -- such as the more efficient distribution of food between workers. In these papers, we assumed, for simplicity, that we know the exact amount of food needed for each worker -- and that this value must be maintained with absolute accuracy. …


Why Number Of Color Difference Works Better In Detecting Melanoma Than Number Of Colors: A Possible Fractal-Based Explanation, Julio Urenda, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich Oct 2020

Why Number Of Color Difference Works Better In Detecting Melanoma Than Number Of Colors: A Possible Fractal-Based Explanation, Julio Urenda, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich

Departmental Technical Reports (CS)

At present, the best way to detect melanoma based on an image of a skin spot is to count the number of different colors in this image. A recent paper has shown that the detection can improve if instead of the number of colors, we use the difference between numbers of colors computed by using different thresholds. In this paper, we provide a possible fractal-based explanation for this empirical fact.


How To Separate Absolute And Relative Error Components: Interval Case, Christian Servin, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich Oct 2020

How To Separate Absolute And Relative Error Components: Interval Case, Christian Servin, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich

Departmental Technical Reports (CS)

Usually, measurement errors contain both absolute and relative components. To correctly gauge the amount of measurement error for all possible values of the measured quantity, it is important to separate these two error components. For probabilistic uncertainty, this separation can be obtained by using traditional probabilistic techniques. The problem is that in many practical situations, we do not know the probability distribution, we only know the upper bound on the measurement error. In such situations of interval uncertainty, separation of absolute and relative error components is not easy. In this paper, we propose a technique for such a separation based …


Cold Sintering Diisopropylamonium Bromide To Form Organic Ceramic Pellets, Darren Armstrong Oct 2020

Cold Sintering Diisopropylamonium Bromide To Form Organic Ceramic Pellets, Darren Armstrong

Honors Theses

Diisopropylamonium bromide is an organic ferroelectric compound. Standard sample preparation methods either require a powder or a single crystal. Certain measurements cannot be done on powders due to equipment limitations, and single crystals are difficult and time consuming to produce and handle. Cold sintering is a relatively new process that allows the creation of ceramics. The original cold sintering process was adapted to work for diisopropylamonium bromide. This allows the creation of ceramics with a large surface area. These pellets can achieve up to 95% of the theoretical maximum density. While the pellets are currently unsuitable for electric testing at …


Tools, Techniques And Teamwork: Transferring New Technologies For Wildlife Management, Conservation And Economic Development, John Eisemann, Gail Keirn Oct 2020

Tools, Techniques And Teamwork: Transferring New Technologies For Wildlife Management, Conservation And Economic Development, John Eisemann, Gail Keirn

United States Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services: Staff Publications

Did you ever wonder who invented radio telemetry? Or breakaway snares? What about the bird repellent methyl anthranilate or the livestock protection collar? These and many other tools used in wildlife damage management resulted from creative thinking by biologists, technicians, researchers and managers working to solve complex wildlife issues. Over the past 90 years, these “aha moments” within the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services program have ranged from developing novel scare devices, traps and vaccines to exploiting an animal’s visual capabilities to stop unwanted behaviors. Once discovered, these unique ideas may lead to practical, feasible and cost-effective wildlife damage …


Instability Of Glucocorticoid Metabolites In Coyote Scats: Implications For Field Sampling, Erika T. Stevenson, Eric M. Gese, Lorin A. Neuman-Lee, Susannah S. French Oct 2020

Instability Of Glucocorticoid Metabolites In Coyote Scats: Implications For Field Sampling, Erika T. Stevenson, Eric M. Gese, Lorin A. Neuman-Lee, Susannah S. French

United States Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services: Staff Publications

Studying physiologic stress responses can assist in understanding the welfare of animals. One method of measuring the physiologic stress response is evaluating concentrations of glucocorticoid metabolites in feces. Previously, using an adrenocorticotropic hormone challenge, we found fecal glucocorticoid metabolite levels were a reliable indicator of physiologic stress response in coyotes (Canis latrans). We determine whether glucocorticoid metabolite concentrations remain stable when collecting feces over a 2-week period, a timeframe commonly used in scat surveys for wild canids. We collected feces from 6 captive coyotes maintained at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Predator …


A Framework For Pore‐Scale Simulation Of Effective Electrical Conductivity And Permittivity Of Porous Media In The Frequency Range From 1 Mhz To 1 Ghz, Qifei Niu, Chi Zhang, Manika Prasad Oct 2020

A Framework For Pore‐Scale Simulation Of Effective Electrical Conductivity And Permittivity Of Porous Media In The Frequency Range From 1 Mhz To 1 Ghz, Qifei Niu, Chi Zhang, Manika Prasad

Geosciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

Geoelectrical methods are broadly used in earth sciences for various purposes. To correctly interpret field geoelectrical data, it is essential to have a mechanistic understanding of the effective electrical conductivity and permittivity of geological materials over a broad frequency range. Recently, the pore‐scale numerical simulation, which utilizes the digital microstructural images of the material, has become a powerful tool in studying the effective electrical properties of geological media. However, it is still difficult to incorporate surface‐related electrochemical processes in a pore‐scale simulation. In this study, we develop a general framework to consider these electrochemical processes in pore‐scale simulations, which enable …


Within‐Stand Boundary Effects On Snow Water Equivalent Distribution In Forested Areas, H.P. Marshall Oct 2020

Within‐Stand Boundary Effects On Snow Water Equivalent Distribution In Forested Areas, H.P. Marshall

Geosciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

Forested areas exhibit high spatial variability in the distribution of snow water equivalent (SWE). Previous work has focused on forested areas with respect to snow accumulation in adjacent clearings. There is generally less snow in forested areas with greater variability relative to open areas due to the influence of tree canopies. However, the length scale of the transition from open areas to forested conditions is uncertain. Hence, the goal of this paper is to determine the length scales associated with forest boundary effects on SWE accumulation distribution patterns within forest stands. To accomplish this, we utilize a unique ground‐penetrating radar …


Reconstruction Of Events Recorded With The Surface Detector Of The Pierre Auger Observatory, A. Aab, P. Abreu, M. Aglietta, J. M. Albury, I. Allekotte, A. Almela, J. Alvarez Castillo, J. Alvarez-Muñiz, R. Alves Batista, G. A. Anastasi, L. Anchordoqui, B. Andrada, B. Fick, D. F. Nitz, A. Puyleart, Et. Al. Oct 2020

Reconstruction Of Events Recorded With The Surface Detector Of The Pierre Auger Observatory, A. Aab, P. Abreu, M. Aglietta, J. M. Albury, I. Allekotte, A. Almela, J. Alvarez Castillo, J. Alvarez-Muñiz, R. Alves Batista, G. A. Anastasi, L. Anchordoqui, B. Andrada, B. Fick, D. F. Nitz, A. Puyleart, Et. Al.

Michigan Tech Publications

Cosmic rays arriving at Earth collide with the upper parts of the atmosphere, thereby inducing extensive air showers. When secondary particles from the cascade arrive at the ground, they are measured by surface detector arrays. We describe the methods applied to the measurements of the surface detector of the Pierre Auger Observatory to reconstruct events with zenith angles less than 60 using the timing and signal information recorded using the water-Cherenkov detector stations. In addition, we assess the accuracy of these methods in reconstructing the arrival directions of the primary cosmic ray particles and the sizes of the induced showers.


Deep Sea Isopods From The Western Mediterranean: Distribution And Habitat, Joan E. Cartes, Diego F. Figueroa Oct 2020

Deep Sea Isopods From The Western Mediterranean: Distribution And Habitat, Joan E. Cartes, Diego F. Figueroa

School of Earth, Environmental, and Marine Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations

Isopods are a highly diversified group of deep-sea fauna, with a wide variety of shapes which must reflect a similar great variety of adaptations to the deep environments. The deep Mediterranean, however, has a low diversity of isopods related to its oligotrophy, the thermal stability of deep-water masses (∼12.8 °C below 150 - 200 m) and rather homogeneous geomorphology. The main factor defining isopod habitats in the Balearic Basin is insularity vs mainland influence. Desmosomatidae and Ischnomesidae, examples of epibenthic species (with lack of paddle-shaped legs and non/low-natatory capacity) are mainly linked to mainland areas with higher % organic matter …


Coding Overhead Of Mobile Apps, Yoonsik Cheon Oct 2020

Coding Overhead Of Mobile Apps, Yoonsik Cheon

Departmental Technical Reports (CS)

A mobile app runs on small devices such as smartphones and tablets. Perhaps, because of this, there is a common misconception that writing a mobile app is simpler than a desktop application. In this paper, we show that this is indeed a misconception, and it's the other way around. We perform a small experiment to measure the source code sizes of a desktop application and an equivalent mobile app written in the same language. We found that the mobile version is 19% bigger than the desktop version in terms of the source lines of code, and the mobile code is …


Monarch Science Observer, Volume 6, College Of Sciences, Old Dominion University Oct 2020

Monarch Science Observer, Volume 6, College Of Sciences, Old Dominion University

College of Sciences Newsletter

October-Fall 2020 issue of Monarch Science Observer, ODU College of Sciences Newsletter.


Online Traffic Signal Control Through Sample-Based Constrained Optimization, Srishti Dhamija, Alolika Gon, Pradeep Varakantham, William Yeoh Oct 2020

Online Traffic Signal Control Through Sample-Based Constrained Optimization, Srishti Dhamija, Alolika Gon, Pradeep Varakantham, William Yeoh

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Traffic congestion reduces productivity of individuals by increasing time spent in traffic and also increases pollution. To reduce traffic congestion by better handling dynamic traffic patterns, recent work has focused on online traffic signal control. Typically, the objective in traffic signal control is to minimize expected delay over all vehicles given the uncertainty associated with the vehicle turn movements at intersections. In order to ensure responsiveness in decision making, a typical approach is to compute a schedule that minimizes the delay for the expected scenario of vehicle movements instead of minimizing expected delay over the feasible vehicle movement scenarios. Such …


Revisiting The Law Of Confidence In Singapore And A Proposal For A New Tort Of Misuse Of Private Information, Cheng Lim Saw, Zheng Wen Samuel Chan, Wen Min Chai Oct 2020

Revisiting The Law Of Confidence In Singapore And A Proposal For A New Tort Of Misuse Of Private Information, Cheng Lim Saw, Zheng Wen Samuel Chan, Wen Min Chai

Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law

This article critically examines the recent Court of Appeal decision in I-Admin (Singapore) Pte Ltd v Hong Ying Ting [2020] 1 SLR 1130 and its implications for the law of confidence. The article begins by setting out the decision at first instance, and then on appeal. It argues that the Court of Appeal’s “modified approach” fails to meaningfully engage the plaintiff ’s wrongful gain interest and places the law’s emphasis primarily, if not wholly, on the plaintiff ’s wrongful loss interest. The new framework also appears to have been influenced by English jurisprudence, which has had a long but unhelpful …


Communiqué: College Of Humanities, Arts & Sciences Alumni Magazine, Volume 9, Fall 2020, University Of Northern Iowa. College Of Humanities, Arts, And Sciences. Oct 2020

Communiqué: College Of Humanities, Arts & Sciences Alumni Magazine, Volume 9, Fall 2020, University Of Northern Iowa. College Of Humanities, Arts, And Sciences.

Communiqué: College of Humanities, Arts & Sciences Alumni Magazine

Inside This Issue:
EVERY ISSUE
--4 Message from the Dean
--5 Donor Feature
--38 CHAS Briefs
--44 New Faculty
--46 Class Notes
FEATURES
--6 Diversity in STEM
--10 Cave Exploration
--14 Medieval Musical Manuscript
--18 Local Artist Residency
--26 Marine Adventures
--34 A Career in Conservation
STORIES
--22 Multicultural Theatre
--24 Learning with Drones
--30 Mastering Metal Casting
--32 Lessons in Slang
--33 PWR 50th Anniversary
--40 Parkinson's Research
--42 Secondary Teacher Prep
--45 Religion in the Classroom


Testing Mediation Via Indirect Effects In Pls-Sem: A Social Networking Site Illustration, Murad Moqbel, Rakesh Guduru, Ahasan Harun Oct 2020

Testing Mediation Via Indirect Effects In Pls-Sem: A Social Networking Site Illustration, Murad Moqbel, Rakesh Guduru, Ahasan Harun

Information Systems Faculty Publications and Presentations

Mediation analysis, in the context of structural equation modeling via partial least squares (PLSSEM), affords a better understanding of the relationships among independent and dependent variables, when the variables seem to not have a definite connection. In this paper, we demonstrate such an analysis in the context of social networking sites, using WarpPLS, a leading PLS-SEM software tool.


เรื่องจากปก: จุลินทรีย์สังเคราะห์แสงสีชมพูจากนาเกลือ...จุลินทรีย์ทนเค็มทนด่างที่มาพร้อมความสามารถอันหลากหลาย, ปกฉัตร ชูติวิศุทธิ์ Oct 2020

เรื่องจากปก: จุลินทรีย์สังเคราะห์แสงสีชมพูจากนาเกลือ...จุลินทรีย์ทนเค็มทนด่างที่มาพร้อมความสามารถอันหลากหลาย, ปกฉัตร ชูติวิศุทธิ์

Thai Environment

No abstract provided.


บทความ: "ไซโคลน" เครื่องมือคัดแยกฝุ่นในภาคอุตสาหกรรม, รัชชานนท์ เปี่ยมใจสว่าง Oct 2020

บทความ: "ไซโคลน" เครื่องมือคัดแยกฝุ่นในภาคอุตสาหกรรม, รัชชานนท์ เปี่ยมใจสว่าง

Thai Environment

No abstract provided.


บทความ: "แหนแดง"....แหล่งไนโตรเจนในแปลงผัก, ภาษิตา ทุ่นศิริ, ศิริรัตน์ แจ้งกรณ์, กานดา ปุ่มสิน, ฉันทนา เคนศรี, พันธ์ทิวา กระจาย Oct 2020

บทความ: "แหนแดง"....แหล่งไนโตรเจนในแปลงผัก, ภาษิตา ทุ่นศิริ, ศิริรัตน์ แจ้งกรณ์, กานดา ปุ่มสิน, ฉันทนา เคนศรี, พันธ์ทิวา กระจาย

Thai Environment

No abstract provided.


บทความ: การกำจัดสารหนูปนเปื้อนในกากโลหกรรมจากการทำเหมืองแร่ด้วยพืชพลังงานและจลนศาสตร์ไฟฟ้าอย่างยั่งยืน, อุดมศักดิ์ บุญมีรติ, พันธวัศ สัมพันธ์พานิช Oct 2020

บทความ: การกำจัดสารหนูปนเปื้อนในกากโลหกรรมจากการทำเหมืองแร่ด้วยพืชพลังงานและจลนศาสตร์ไฟฟ้าอย่างยั่งยืน, อุดมศักดิ์ บุญมีรติ, พันธวัศ สัมพันธ์พานิช

Thai Environment

No abstract provided.