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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Expression Of Wnt-Signaling Pathway Genes And Their Associations With Mirnas In Colorectal Cancer, Martha L. Slattery, Lila E. Mullany, Lori C. Sakoda, Wade S. Samowitz, Roger K. Wolff, John R. Stevens, Jennifer S. Herrick Dec 2017

Expression Of Wnt-Signaling Pathway Genes And Their Associations With Mirnas In Colorectal Cancer, Martha L. Slattery, Lila E. Mullany, Lori C. Sakoda, Wade S. Samowitz, Roger K. Wolff, John R. Stevens, Jennifer S. Herrick

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

The Wnt-signaling pathway functions in regulating cell growth and thus is involved in the carcinogenic process of several cancers, including colorectal cancer. We tested the hypothesis that multiple genes in this signaling pathway are dysregulated and that miRNAs are associated with these dysregulated genes. We used data from 217 colorectal cancer (CRC) cases to evaluate differences in Wnt-signaling pathway gene expression between paired CRC and normal mucosa and identify miRNAs that are associated with these genes. Gene expression data from RNA-Seq and miRNA expression data from Agilent Human miRNA Microarray V19.0 were analyzed. We focused on genes most strongly associated …


Introduction To The Usu Library Of Solutions To The Einstein Field Equations, Ian M. Anderson, Charles G. Torre Dec 2017

Introduction To The Usu Library Of Solutions To The Einstein Field Equations, Ian M. Anderson, Charles G. Torre

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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.


A Universal Genus-Two Curve From Siegel Modular Forms, Andreas Malmendier, Tony Shaska Nov 2017

A Universal Genus-Two Curve From Siegel Modular Forms, Andreas Malmendier, Tony Shaska

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

Let p be any point in the moduli space of genus-two curves M2 and K its field of moduli. We provide a universal equation of a genus-two curve Cα,β defined over K(α, β), corresponding to p, where α and β satisfy a quadratic α2 + bβ2 = c such that b and c are given in terms of ratios of Siegel modular forms. The curve Cα,β is defined over the field of moduli K if and only if the quadratic has a K-rational point (α, β). We discover some interesting …


Stability Of Equilibria In Quantitative Genetic Models Based On Modified-Gradient Systems, Benjamin J. Ridenhour, Jerry R. Ridenhour Nov 2017

Stability Of Equilibria In Quantitative Genetic Models Based On Modified-Gradient Systems, Benjamin J. Ridenhour, Jerry R. Ridenhour

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

Motivated by questions in biology, we investigate the stability of equilibria of the dynamical system x′ = P(t)∇f(x) which arise as critical points of f, under the assumption that P(t) is positive semi-definite. It is shown that the condition ∫λ1(P(t)) dt = ∞, where λ1(P(t)) is the smallest eigenvalue of P(t), plays a key role in guaranteeing uniform asymptotic stability and in providing information on the basis of attraction of those equilibria.


A Bivariate Hypothesis Testing Approach For Mapping The Trait-Influential Gene, Garrett Saunders, Matthew D. Meng, John R. Stevens Oct 2017

A Bivariate Hypothesis Testing Approach For Mapping The Trait-Influential Gene, Garrett Saunders, Matthew D. Meng, John R. Stevens

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

The linkage disequilibrium (LD) based quantitative trait loci (QTL) model involves two indispensable hypothesis tests: the test of whether or not a QTL exists, and the test of the LD strength between the QTaL and the observed marker. The advantage of this two-test framework is to test whether there is an influential QTL around the observed marker instead of just having a QTL by random chance. There exist unsolved, open statistical questions about the inaccurate asymptotic distributions of the test statistics. We propose a bivariate null kernel (BNK) hypothesis testing method, which characterizes the joint distribution of the two test …


Collaborative Research: Mathematics Of Doing, Understanding, Learning And Educating For Secondary Schools, Brynja R. Kohler Sep 2017

Collaborative Research: Mathematics Of Doing, Understanding, Learning And Educating For Secondary Schools, Brynja R. Kohler

Funded Research Records

No abstract provided.


Frg: Collaborative Research: Homotopy Renormalization Of Topological Field Theories, Nathan Geer Aug 2017

Frg: Collaborative Research: Homotopy Renormalization Of Topological Field Theories, Nathan Geer

Funded Research Records

No abstract provided.


Physiological Health Parameters Among College Students To Promote Chronic Disease Prevention And Health Promotion, David R. Black, Daniel C. Coster, Samantha R. Paige May 2017

Physiological Health Parameters Among College Students To Promote Chronic Disease Prevention And Health Promotion, David R. Black, Daniel C. Coster, Samantha R. Paige

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

This study aimed to provide physiologic health risk parameters by gender and age among college students enrolled in a U.S. Midwestern University to promote chronic disease prevention and ameliorate health. A total of 2615 college students between 18 and 25 years old were recruited annually using a series of cross-sectional designs during the spring semester over an 8-year period. Physiologic parameters measured included body mass index (BMI), percentage body fat (%BF), blood serum cholesterol (BSC), and systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure. These measures were compared to data from NHANES to identify differences in physiologic parameters among 18-25 year …


A Comparison Of Multiple Testing Adjustment Methods With Block-Correlation Positively-Dependent Tests, John R. Stevens, Abdullah Al Masud, Anvar Suyundikov Apr 2017

A Comparison Of Multiple Testing Adjustment Methods With Block-Correlation Positively-Dependent Tests, John R. Stevens, Abdullah Al Masud, Anvar Suyundikov

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

In high dimensional data analysis (such as gene expression, spatial epidemiology, or brain imaging studies), we often test thousands or more hypotheses simultaneously. As the number of tests increases, the chance of observing some statistically significant tests is very high even when all null hypotheses are true. Consequently, we could reach incorrect conclusions regarding the hypotheses. Researchers frequently use multiplicity adjustment methods to control type I error rates—primarily the family-wise error rate (FWER) or the false discovery rate (FDR)—while still desiring high statistical power. In practice, such studies may have dependent test statistics (or p-values) as tests can be dependent …


An Adaptive Threshold Determination Method Of Feature Screening For Genomic Selection, Matthew D. Meng, Gang Wang, Aaron R. Brough Apr 2017

An Adaptive Threshold Determination Method Of Feature Screening For Genomic Selection, Matthew D. Meng, Gang Wang, Aaron R. Brough

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

Background
Although the dimension of the entire genome can be extremely large, only a parsimonious set of influential SNPs are correlated with a particular complex trait and are important to the prediction of the trait. Efficiently and accurately selecting these influential SNPs from millions of candidates is in high demand, but poses challenges. We propose a backward elimination iterative distance correlation (BE-IDC) procedure to select the smallest subset of SNPs that guarantees sufficient prediction accuracy, while also solving the unclear threshold issue for traditional feature screening approaches.

Results
Verified through six simulations, the adaptive threshold estimated by the BE-IDC performed …


Mass Action In Two-Sex Population Models: Encounters, Mating Encounters And The Associated Numerical Correction, Katherine Snyder, Brynja R. Kohler, Luis F. Gordillo Mar 2017

Mass Action In Two-Sex Population Models: Encounters, Mating Encounters And The Associated Numerical Correction, Katherine Snyder, Brynja R. Kohler, Luis F. Gordillo

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

Ideal gas models are a paradigm used in Biology for the phenomenological modelling of encounters between individuals of different types. These models have been used to approximate encounter rates given densities, velocities and distance within which an encounter certainly occurs. When using mass action in two-sex populations, however, it is necessary to recognize the difference between encounters and mating encounters. While the former refers in general to the (possibly simultaneous) collisions between particles, the latter represents pair formation that will produce offspring. The classical formulation of the law of mass action does not account this difference. In this short paper, …


Analytic Approximation Of Invasion Wave Amplitude Predicts Severity Of Insect Outbreaks, Antje R. H. Graul, James A. Powell Feb 2017

Analytic Approximation Of Invasion Wave Amplitude Predicts Severity Of Insect Outbreaks, Antje R. H. Graul, James A. Powell

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

Outbreaks of phytophagous forest insects are largely driven by host demographics and spatial effects of dispersal. We develop a structured integrodifference equation (IDE) outbreak model that tracks the demographics of sedentary hosts under insect infestation pressure. The model is appropriate for a spectrum of pests attacking the later age classes of long-lived hosts, including mountain pine beetle (MPB), spruce budworm, and spruce beetle, which, among them are responsible for more forest damage than fire. The model generates a train of periodic waves of infestation. We approximate the IDE with a partial differential equation and search for traveling wave solutions. The …


A Variant Of Clark's Theorem And Its Applications For Nonsmooth Functionals Without The Palais-Smale Condition, Shaowei Chen, Zhaoli Liu, Zhi-Qiang Wang Feb 2017

A Variant Of Clark's Theorem And Its Applications For Nonsmooth Functionals Without The Palais-Smale Condition, Shaowei Chen, Zhaoli Liu, Zhi-Qiang Wang

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

By introducing a new notion of the genus with respect to the weak topology in Banach spaces, we prove a variant of Clark's theorem for nonsmooth functionals without the Palais-Smale condition. In this new theorem, the Palais-Smale condition is replaced by a weaker assumption, and a sequence of critical points converging weakly to zero with nonpositive energy is obtained. As applications, we obtain infinitely many solutions for a quasi-linear elliptic equation which is very degenerate and lacks strict convexity, and we also prove the existence of infinitely many homoclinic orbits for a second-order Hamiltonian system for which the functional is …


Predator-Prey Coevolution Drives Productivity-Richness Relationships In Planktonic Systems, Zhichao Pu, Michael H. Cortez, Lin Jiang Jan 2017

Predator-Prey Coevolution Drives Productivity-Richness Relationships In Planktonic Systems, Zhichao Pu, Michael H. Cortez, Lin Jiang

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

The relationship between environmental productivity and species richness often varies among empirical studies, and despite much research, simple explanations for this phenomenon remain elusive. We investigated how phytoplankton and zooplankton coevolution shapes productivity-richness relationships in both phytoplankton and zooplankton, using a simple nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton model that incorporates size-dependent metabolic rates summarized from empirical studies. The model allowed comparisons of evolved species richness across productivity levels and at different evolutionary times. Our results show that disruptive selection leads to evolutionary branching of phytoplankton and zooplankton. Both the time required for evolutionary branching and the number of evolved species in phytoplankton and zooplankton …


Perihelion Precession In The General Theory Of Relativity, Charles G. Torre Jan 2017

Perihelion Precession In The General Theory Of Relativity, Charles G. Torre

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This is a relatively quick and informal sketch of a demonstration that general relativistic corrections to the bound Kepler orbits introduce a perihelion precession. Any decent textbook on the general theory of relativity will derive this result. My analysis aligns with that found in the good old text "Introduction to General Relativity", by Adler, Bazin and Schiffer.