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Articles 1 - 30 of 194
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
U.S. - Canadian Border Traffic Prediction, Colin Middleton
U.S. - Canadian Border Traffic Prediction, Colin Middleton
WWU Honors College Senior Projects
Mathematical discussion and analysis of several prediction methods which use real time data to predict traffic flow at the U.S. - Canadian Border crossings.
Homogenization Techniques For Population Dynamics In Strongly Heterogeneous Landscapes, Brian P. Yurk, Christina A. Cobbold
Homogenization Techniques For Population Dynamics In Strongly Heterogeneous Landscapes, Brian P. Yurk, Christina A. Cobbold
Faculty Publications
An important problem in spatial ecology is to understand how population-scale patterns emerge from individual-level birth, death, and movement processes. These processes, which depend on local landscape characteristics, vary spatially and may exhibit sharp transitions through behavioural responses to habitat edges, leading to discontinuous population densities. Such systems can be modelled using reaction–diffusion equations with interface conditions that capture local behaviour at patch boundaries. In this work we develop a novel homogenization technique to approximate the large-scale dynamics of the system. We illustrate our approach, which also generalizes to multiple species, with an example of logistic growth within a periodic …
Multivariate Statistical Analyses Of Air Pollutants And Meteorology In Chicago During Summers 2010–2012, Katrina Binaku, Martina Schmeling
Multivariate Statistical Analyses Of Air Pollutants And Meteorology In Chicago During Summers 2010–2012, Katrina Binaku, Martina Schmeling
Chemistry: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Aerosol, trace gas, and meteorological data were collected in Chicago, Illinois during 2010–2012 summer air studies. Ozone, nitrogen oxides, acetate, formate, chloride, nitrate, sulfate, and oxalate concentrations as well as temperature, wind speed, wind direction, and humidity data were explored by both principal component analysis (PCA) and canonical correlation analysis (CCA). Multivariate statistical techniques were applied to uncover existing relationships between meteorology and air pollutant concentrations and also reduce data dimensions.
In PCA, principal components (PC) revealed a relationship of ozone and nitrate concentrations with respect to temperature and humidity, coupled with transport of species from the south in relation …
Flow Anisotropy Due To Thread-Like Nanoparticle Agglomerations In Dilute Ferrofluids, Alexander Cali, Wah-Keat Lee, A. David Trubatch, Philip Yecko
Flow Anisotropy Due To Thread-Like Nanoparticle Agglomerations In Dilute Ferrofluids, Alexander Cali, Wah-Keat Lee, A. David Trubatch, Philip Yecko
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
Improved knowledge of the magnetic field dependent flow properties of nanoparticle-based magnetic fluids is critical to the design of biomedical applications, including drug delivery and cell sorting. To probe the rheology of ferrofluid on a sub-millimeter scale, we examine the paths of 550 μm diameter glass spheres falling due to gravity in dilute ferrofluid, imposing a uniform magnetic field at an angle with respect to the vertical. Visualization of the spheres’ trajectories is achieved using high resolution X-ray phase-contrast imaging, allowing measurement of a terminal velocity while simultaneously revealing the formation of an array of long thread-like accumulations of magnetic …
Introduction To The Usu Library Of Solutions To The Einstein Field Equations, Ian M. Anderson, Charles G. Torre
Introduction To The Usu Library Of Solutions To The Einstein Field Equations, Ian M. Anderson, Charles G. Torre
Tutorials on... in 1 hour or less
This is a Maple worksheet providing an introduction to the USU Library of Solutions to the Einstein Field Equations. The library is part of the DifferentialGeometry software project and is a collection of symbolic data and metadata describing solutions to the Einstein equations.
Dynamic Child Growth Prediction: A Comparative Methods Approach, Andrada Ivanescu, Ciprian M. Crainiceanu, William Checkley
Dynamic Child Growth Prediction: A Comparative Methods Approach, Andrada Ivanescu, Ciprian M. Crainiceanu, William Checkley
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
We introduce a class of dynamic regression models designed to predict the future of growth curves based on their historical dynamics. This class of models incorporates both baseline and time-dependent covariates, start with simple regression models and build up to dynamic function-on-function regressions. We compare the performance of the dynamic prediction models in a variety of signal-to-noise scenarios and provide practical solutions for model selection. We conclude that (a) prediction performance increases substantially when using the entire growth history relative to using only the last and first observation; (b) smoothing incorporated using functional regression approaches increases prediction performance; and (c) …
Hemodynamic Characteristics Of Ruptured And Unruptured Multiple Aneurysms At Mirror And Ipsilateral Locations, Ravi Doddasomayajula, Bong Jae Chung, Fernando Mut, Carlos M. Jimenez, Farid Hamzei-Sichani, Christopher M. Putman, Juan R. Cebral
Hemodynamic Characteristics Of Ruptured And Unruptured Multiple Aneurysms At Mirror And Ipsilateral Locations, Ravi Doddasomayajula, Bong Jae Chung, Fernando Mut, Carlos M. Jimenez, Farid Hamzei-Sichani, Christopher M. Putman, Juan R. Cebral
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Different hemodynamic patterns have been associated with aneurysm rupture. The objective was to test whether hemodynamic characteristics of the ruptured aneurysm in patients with multiple aneurysms were different from those in unruptured aneurysms in the same patient.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-four mirror and 58 ipsilateral multiple aneurysms with 1 ruptured and the others unruptured were studied. Computational fluid dynamics models were created from 3D angiographies. Case-control studies of mirror and ipsilateral aneurysms were performed with paired Wilcoxon tests.
RESULTS: In mirror pairs, the ruptured aneurysm had more oscillatory wall shear stress (P = .007) than the …
Variational Geometric Approach To Generalized Differential And Conjugate Calculi In Convex Analysis, Boris S. Mordukhovich, Nguyen Mau Nam, R. Blake Rector, T. Tran
Variational Geometric Approach To Generalized Differential And Conjugate Calculi In Convex Analysis, Boris S. Mordukhovich, Nguyen Mau Nam, R. Blake Rector, T. Tran
Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications and Presentations
This paper develops a geometric approach of variational analysis for the case of convex objects considered in locally convex topological spaces and also in Banach space settings. Besides deriving in this way new results of convex calculus, we present an overview of some known achievements with their unified and simplified proofs based on the developed geometric variational schemes. Key words. Convex and variational analysis, Fenchel conjugates, normals and subgradients, coderivatives, convex calculus, optimal value functions.
Neutrosophic Hough Transform, Florentin Smarandache, Umit Budak, Yanhui Guo, Abdulkadir Sengur
Neutrosophic Hough Transform, Florentin Smarandache, Umit Budak, Yanhui Guo, Abdulkadir Sengur
Branch Mathematics and Statistics Faculty and Staff Publications
Hough transform (HT) is a useful tool for both pattern recognition and image processing communities. In the view of pattern recognition, it can extract unique features for description of various shapes, such as lines, circles, ellipses, and etc. In the view of image processing, a dozen of applications can be handled with HT, such as lane detection for autonomous cars, blood cell detection in microscope images, and so on. As HT is a straight forward shape detector in a given image, its shape detection ability is low in noisy images. To alleviate its weakness on noisy images and improve its …
Infinite-Dimensional Measure Spaces And Frame Analysis, Palle Jorgensen, Myung-Sin Song
Infinite-Dimensional Measure Spaces And Frame Analysis, Palle Jorgensen, Myung-Sin Song
SIUE Faculty Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity
We study certain infinite-dimensional probability measures in connection with frame analysis. Earlier work on frame-measures has so far focused on the case of finite-dimensional frames. We point out that there are good reasons for a sharp distinction between stochastic analysis involving frames in finite vs. infinite dimensions. For the case of infinite-dimensional Hilbert space ℋ, we study three cases of measures. We first show that, for ℋ infinite dimensional, one must resort to infinite dimensional measure spaces which properly contain ℋ. The three cases we consider are: (i) Gaussian frame measures, (ii) Markov path-space measures, and (iii) determinantal measures.
Linking Taxonomic Diversity And Trophic Function: A Graph-Based Theoretical Approach, Marcella M. Jurotich, Kaitlyn Dougherty, Barbara Hayford, Sally Clark
Linking Taxonomic Diversity And Trophic Function: A Graph-Based Theoretical Approach, Marcella M. Jurotich, Kaitlyn Dougherty, Barbara Hayford, Sally Clark
Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences and Affiliated Societies
The purpose of this study is to develop a novel, visual method in analyzing complex functional trait data in freshwater ecology. We focus on macroinvertebrates in stream ecosystems under a gradient of habitat degradation and employ a combination of taxonomic and functional trait diversity analyses. Then we use graph theory to link changes in functional trait diversity to taxonomic richness and habitat degradation. We test the hypotheses that: 1) taxonomic diversity and trophic functional trait diversity both decrease with increased habitat degradation; 2) loss of taxa leads to a decrease in trophic function as visualized using a bipartite graph; and …
Differential Equations Of Dynamical Order, Andrei Ludu, Harihar Khanal
Differential Equations Of Dynamical Order, Andrei Ludu, Harihar Khanal
Publications
No abstract provided.
Reproducible Research For Computing In Science & Engineering, Lorena A. Barba, George K. Thiruvathukal
Reproducible Research For Computing In Science & Engineering, Lorena A. Barba, George K. Thiruvathukal
Computer Science: Faculty Publications and Other Works
The editors of the new track for reproducible research outline the parameters for future peer review, submission, and access, highlighting the magazine’s previous work in this field and some of the challenges still to come.
Entropy Production In A Fluid-Solid System Far From Thermodynamic Equilibrium, Bong Jae Chung, Blas Ortega, Ashuwin Vaidya
Entropy Production In A Fluid-Solid System Far From Thermodynamic Equilibrium, Bong Jae Chung, Blas Ortega, Ashuwin Vaidya
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
Abstract.: The terminal orientation of a rigid body in a moving fluid is an example of a dissipative system, out of thermodynamic equilibrium and therefore a perfect testing ground for the validity of the maximum entropy production principle (MaxEP). Thus far, dynamical equations alone have been employed in studying the equilibrium states in fluid-solid interactions, but these are far too complex and become analytically intractable when inertial effects come into play. At that stage, our only recourse is to rely on numerical techniques which can be computationally expensive. In our past work, we have shown that the MaxEP is a …
Angioarchitectures And Hemodynamic Characteristics Of Posterior Communicating Artery Aneurysms And Their Association With Rupture Status, Bong Jae Chung, Ravi Doddasomayajula, Fernando Mut, Felicitas Detmer, Michael Pritz, Farid Hamzei-Sichani, Waleed Brinjikji, David F. Kallmes, Carlos M. Jimenez, Christopher Putman, Juan Cebral
Angioarchitectures And Hemodynamic Characteristics Of Posterior Communicating Artery Aneurysms And Their Association With Rupture Status, Bong Jae Chung, Ravi Doddasomayajula, Fernando Mut, Felicitas Detmer, Michael Pritz, Farid Hamzei-Sichani, Waleed Brinjikji, David F. Kallmes, Carlos M. Jimenez, Christopher Putman, Juan Cebral
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Intracranial aneurysms originating at the posterior communicating artery are known to have high rupture risk compared with other locations. We tested the hypothesis that different angioarchitectures (ie, branch point configuration) of posterior communicating artery aneurysms are associated with aneurysm hemodynamics, which in turn predisposes aneurysms to rupture.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 313 posterior communicating artery aneurysms (145 ruptured, 168 unruptured) were studied with image-based computational fluid dynamics. Aneurysms were classified into different angioarchitecture types depending on the location of the aneurysm with respect to parent artery bifurcation. Hemodynamic characteristics were compared between ruptured and unruptured …
Environmental Effects On Drosophila Brain Development And Learning, Xia Wang, Amei Amei, J. Steven De Belle, Stephen P. Roberts
Environmental Effects On Drosophila Brain Development And Learning, Xia Wang, Amei Amei, J. Steven De Belle, Stephen P. Roberts
Mathematical Sciences Faculty Research
Brain development and behavior are sensitive to a variety of environmental influences including social interactions and physicochemical stressors. Sensory input in situ is a mosaic of both enrichment and stress, yet little is known about how multiple environmental factors interact to affect brain anatomical structures, circuits and cognitive function. In this study, we addressed these issues by testing the individual and combined effects of sub-adult thermal stress, larval density and early-adult living spatial enrichment on brain anatomy and olfactory associative learning in adult Drosophila melanogaster. In response to heat stress, the mushroom bodies (MBs) were the most volumetrically impaired among …
Perfect Matchings Of Trimmed Aztec Rectangles, Tri Lai
Perfect Matchings Of Trimmed Aztec Rectangles, Tri Lai
Department of Mathematics: Faculty Publications
We consider several new families of subgraphs of the square grid whose matchings are enumerated by powers of several small prime numbers: 2, 3, 5, and 11. Our graphs are obtained by trimming two opposite corners of an Aztec rectangle. The result yields a proof of a conjecture posed by Ciucu. In addition, we reveal a hidden connection between our graphs and the hexagonal dungeons introduced by Blum.
Height Transitions, Shape Evolution, And Coarsening Of Equilibrating Quantum Nanoislands, Mikhail Khenner
Height Transitions, Shape Evolution, And Coarsening Of Equilibrating Quantum Nanoislands, Mikhail Khenner
Mathematics Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Using Microsoft Excel To Teach Simulation Concepts To Business Students, Robert F. Gordon Ph.D.
Using Microsoft Excel To Teach Simulation Concepts To Business Students, Robert F. Gordon Ph.D.
Faculty Works: MCS (1984-2023)
The application of computers to solving business problems, the area of study known as decision support systems, is an important component in the education of business students today. One major type of decision support system is computer simulation, which is the technique most often used to solve queuing problems in the industry. This paper describes how to teach the concepts of computer simulation, explain the key components of simulation software, and provide hands-on experience to solve these problems by using Microsoft Excel.
Analysis And Implementation Of Numerical Methods For Solving Ordinary Differential Equations, Muhammad Sohel Rana
Analysis And Implementation Of Numerical Methods For Solving Ordinary Differential Equations, Muhammad Sohel Rana
Masters Theses & Specialist Projects
Numerical methods to solve initial value problems of differential equations progressed quite a bit in the last century. We give a brief summary of how useful numerical methods are for ordinary differential equations of first and higher order. In this thesis both computational and theoretical discussion of the application of numerical methods on differential equations takes place. The thesis consists of an investigation of various categories of numerical methods for the solution of ordinary differential equations including the numerical solution of ordinary differential equations from a number of practical fields such as equations arising in population dynamics and astrophysics. It …
Parabolic Classical Curvature Flows, Brendan Guilfoyle, Wilhelm Klingenberg
Parabolic Classical Curvature Flows, Brendan Guilfoyle, Wilhelm Klingenberg
Publications
We consider classical curvature flows: 1-parameter families of convex embeddings of the 2-sphere into Euclidean 3-space, which evolve by an arbitrary (nonhomogeneous) function of the radii of curvature (RoC). We determine conditions for parabolic flows that ensure the boundedness of various geometric quantities and investigate some examples. As a new tool, we introduce the RoC diagram of a surface and its hyperbolic or anti-de Sitter metric. The relationship between the RoC diagram and the properties of Weingarten surfaces is also discussed.
Evolution Of Superoscillations For Schrödinger Equation In A Uniform Magnetic Field, Fabrizio Colombo, Jonathan Gantner, Daniele C. Struppa
Evolution Of Superoscillations For Schrödinger Equation In A Uniform Magnetic Field, Fabrizio Colombo, Jonathan Gantner, Daniele C. Struppa
Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science Faculty Articles and Research
Aharonov-Berry superoscillations are band-limited functions that oscillate faster than their fastest Fourier component. Superoscillations appear in several fields of science and technology, such as Aharonov’s weak measurement in quantum mechanics, in optics, and in signal processing. An important issue is the study of the evolution of superoscillations using the Schrödinger equation when the initial datum is a weak value. Some superoscillatory functions are not square integrable, but they are real analytic functions that can be extended to entire holomorphic functions. This fact leads to the study of the continuity of a class of convolution operators acting on suitable spaces of …
Filtered Subspace Iteration For Selfadjoint Operators, Jay Gopalakrishnan, Luka Grubišić, Jeffrey S. Ovall
Filtered Subspace Iteration For Selfadjoint Operators, Jay Gopalakrishnan, Luka Grubišić, Jeffrey S. Ovall
Portland Institute for Computational Science Publications
We consider the problem of computing a cluster of eigenvalues (and its associated eigenspace) of a (possibly unbounded) selfadjoint operator in a Hilbert space. A rational function of the operator is constructed such that the eigenspace of interest is its dominant eigenspace, and a subspace iteration procedure is used to approximate this eigenspace. The computed space is then used to obtain approximations of the eigenvalues of interest. An eigenvalue and eigenspace convergence analysis that considers both iteration error and dis- cretization error is provided. A realization of the proposed approach for a model second-order elliptic operator is based on a …
Stochastic Quasilinear Evolution Equations In Umd Banach Spaces, Manil T. Mohan, Sivaguru S. Sritharan
Stochastic Quasilinear Evolution Equations In Umd Banach Spaces, Manil T. Mohan, Sivaguru S. Sritharan
Faculty Publications
In this work we prove the existence and uniqueness up to a stopping time for the stochastic counterpart of Tosio Kato's quasilinear evolutions in UMD Banach spaces. These class of evolutions are known to cover a large class of physically important nonlinear partial differential equations. Existence of a unique maximal solution as well as an estimate on the probability of positivity of stopping time is obtained. An example of stochastic Euler and Navier–Stokes equation is also given as an application of abstract theory to concrete models.
A Regression Model To Predict Stock Market Mega Movements And/Or Volatility Using Both Macroeconomic Indicators & Fed Bank Variables, Timothy A. Smith, Alcuin Rajan
A Regression Model To Predict Stock Market Mega Movements And/Or Volatility Using Both Macroeconomic Indicators & Fed Bank Variables, Timothy A. Smith, Alcuin Rajan
Publications
In finance, regression models or time series moving averages can be used to determine the value of an asset based on its underlying traits. In prior work we built a regression model to predict the value of the S&P 500 based on macroeconomic indicators such as gross domestic product, money supply, produce price and consumer price indices. In this present work this model is updated both with more data and an adjustment in the input variables to improve the coefficient of determination. A scheme is also laid out to alternately define volatility rather than using common tools such as the …
Convergence Of Media Attention Across 129 Countries, Jisun An, Hassan Aldarbesti, Haewoon Kwak
Convergence Of Media Attention Across 129 Countries, Jisun An, Hassan Aldarbesti, Haewoon Kwak
Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems
The objective of this study is to assess the longitudinal trends of media similarity and dissimilarity on the international scale. As news value has well-established political, cultural, and economic consequences, the degree to which media coverage and content is converging across countries has implications for international relations. To study this convergence, we use the daily data of the 100 topics that were over-reported in each country, compared to other countries, from March 7 to October 9, 2016. The results of this analysis indicate that two complementary patterns–globalization and domestication–explain the media attention across the countries. We conclude that this attention …
Interplay Of Quantum Size Effect, Anisotropy And Surface Stress Shapes The Instability Of Thin Metal Films, Mikhail Khenner
Interplay Of Quantum Size Effect, Anisotropy And Surface Stress Shapes The Instability Of Thin Metal Films, Mikhail Khenner
Mathematics Faculty Publications
Morphological instability of a planar surface ([111], [011], or [001]) of an ultra-thin metal film is studied in a parameter space formed by three major effects (the quantum size effect, the surface energy anisotropy and the surface stress) that influence a film dewetting. The analysis is based on the extended Mullins equation, where the effects are cast as functions of the film thickness. The formulation of the quantum size effect (Z. Zhang et al., PRL 80, 5381 (1998)) includes the oscillation of the surface energy with thickness caused by electrons confinement. By systematically comparing the effects, their contributions into the …
Evolution Of Delayed Dispersal And Subsequent Emergence Of Helping, With Implications For Cooperative Breeding., Geoff Wild, Judith Korb
Evolution Of Delayed Dispersal And Subsequent Emergence Of Helping, With Implications For Cooperative Breeding., Geoff Wild, Judith Korb
Applied Mathematics Publications
Cooperative breeding occurs when individuals help raise the offspring of others. It is widely accepted that help displayed by cooperative breeders emerged only after individuals' tendency to delay dispersal had become established. We use this idea as a basis for two inclusive-fitness models: one for the evolution of delayed dispersal, and a second for the subsequent emergence of helpful behavior exhibited by non-breeding individuals. We focus on a territorial species in a saturated environment, and allow territories to be inherited by non-breeding individuals who have delayed dispersal. Our first model predicts that increased survivorship and increased fecundity both provide an …
Math Department Newsletter, 2017, University Of Dayton. Department Of Mathematics
Math Department Newsletter, 2017, University Of Dayton. Department Of Mathematics
Department of Mathematics Newsletters
No abstract provided.
Transcriptome Of Neonatal Prebotzinger Complex Neurones In Dbx1 Reporter Mice, John A. Hayes, (…), Ronald D. Smith, Gregory D. Smith, Margaret S. Saha, Christopher A. Del Negro
Transcriptome Of Neonatal Prebotzinger Complex Neurones In Dbx1 Reporter Mice, John A. Hayes, (…), Ronald D. Smith, Gregory D. Smith, Margaret S. Saha, Christopher A. Del Negro
Arts & Sciences Articles
We sequenced the transcriptome of brainstem interneurons in the specialized respiratory rhythmogenic site dubbed preBotzinger Complex (preBotC) from newborn mice. To distinguish molecular characteristics of the core oscillator we compared preBotC neurons derived from Dbx1-expressing progenitors that are respiratory rhythmogenic to neighbouring non-Dbx1-derived neurons, which support other respiratory and non-respiratory functions. Results in three categories are particularly salient. First, Dbx1 preBotC neurons express kappa-opioid receptors in addition to mu-opioid receptors that heretofore have been associated with opiate respiratory depression, which may have clinical applications. Second, Dbx1 preBotC neurons express the hypoxia-inducible transcription factor Hif1a at levels three-times higher than non-Dbx1 …