Search results for "Autocorrelation"

showing 10 items of 146 documents

A Geometry-Based Underwater Acoustic Channel Model Allowing for Sloped Ocean Bottom Conditions

2017

This paper proposes a new geometry-based channel model for shallow-water ocean environments, in which the ocean bottom can slope gently down/up. The need for developing such an underwater acoustic (UWA) channel model is driven by the fact that the standard assumption of a flat ocean bottom does not hold in many realistic scenarios. Starting from a geometrical model, we develop a stochastic channel model for wideband single-input single-output vehicle-to-vehicle UWA channels using the ray theory assuming smooth ocean surface and bottom. We investigate the effect of the ocean-bottom slope angle on the distribution of the channel envelope, instantaneous channel capacity, temporal autocorrelati…

010505 oceanographyApplied MathematicsAutocorrelation020206 networking & telecommunicationsGeometry02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesComputer Science ApplicationsDelay spreadChannel capacity0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringElectrical and Electronic EngineeringWidebandUnderwaterPower delay profileGeologyCoherence bandwidthComputer Science::Information Theory0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCommunication channelIEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
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A Nonisovelocity Geometry-Based Underwater Acoustic Channel Model

2018

This paper proposes a new geometry-based shallow underwater acoustic (UWA) channel model allowing for nonisovelocity ocean conditions. The fact that the isovelocity assumption does not hold in many real-world scenarios motivates the need for developing channel models for nonisovelocity UWA propagation environments. Starting from a geometrical model, we develop a stochastic channel model for a single-input single-output (SISO) vehicle-to-vehicle UWA channel assuming that the ocean surface and bottom are rough and that the speed of sound varies with depth. The effect of the nonisovelocity condition has been assessed regarding its influence on the temporal autocorrelation function, the frequen…

010505 oceanographyComputer Networks and CommunicationsComputer scienceAutocorrelationAerospace Engineering020206 networking & telecommunicationsGeometry02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesDelay spreadAutomotive Engineering0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringElectrical and Electronic EngineeringUnderwaterUnderwater acousticsPower delay profileUnderwater acoustic communicationCoherence bandwidth0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCommunication channelIEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology
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A hierarchical Bayesian Beta regression approach to study the effects of geographical genetic structure and spatial autocorrelation on species distri…

2019

Global climate change (GCC) may be causing distribution range shifts in many organisms worldwide. Multiple efforts are currently focused on the development of models to better predict distribution range shifts due to GCC. We addressed this issue by including intraspecific genetic structure and spatial autocorrelation (SAC) of data in distribution range models. Both factors reflect the joint effect of ecoevolutionary processes on the geographical heterogeneity of populations. We used a collection of 301 georeferenced accessions of the annual plant Arabidopsis thaliana in its Iberian Peninsula range, where the species shows strong geographical genetic structure. We developed spatial and nonsp…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineHierarchical Bayesian modelsArabidopsis thalianaRange (biology)Bayesian probabilitySpecies distributionArabidopsisGenetic admixtureBiologyResidual010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesAfrica NorthernStatisticsGeneticsSpatial analysisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSpatial AnalysisPortugalPlant DispersalGenetic heterogeneityGlobal climate changePhylogeographyGenetics Population030104 developmental biologySpainGenetic structureGeographic genetic structureMaxentPeptidesSpatial autocorrelationBiotechnology
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Extinction risk under coloured environmental noise

2000

Positively autocorrelated red environmental noise is characterized by a strong dependence of expected sample variance on sample length. This dependence has to be taken into account when assessing extinction risk under red and white uncorrelated environmental noise. To facilitate a comparison between red and white noise, their expected variances can be scaled to be equal, but only at a chosen time scale. We show with a simple one-dimensional population dynamics model that the different but equally reasonable choices of the time scale yield qualitatively different results on the dependence of extinction risk on the colour of environmental noise: extinction risk might increase as well as decre…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyExtinctionScale (ratio)EcologyAutocorrelationPopulationWhite noiseBiological Sciences010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences010601 ecology03 medical and health sciencesNoiseStatisticsSample varianceeducationEnvironmental noiseAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyMathematicsEcography
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Fine-scale spatial genetic structure and gene dispersal in Silene latifolia

2010

Plants are sessile organisms, often characterized by limited dispersal. Seeds and pollen are the critical stages for gene flow. Here we investigate spatial genetic structure, gene dispersal and the relative contribution of pollen vs seed in the movement of genes in a stable metapopulation of the white campion Silene latifolia within its native range. This short-lived perennial plant is dioecious, has gravity-dispersed seeds and moth-mediated pollination. Direct measures of pollen dispersal suggested that large populations receive more pollen than small isolated populations and that most gene flow occurs within tens of meters. However, these studies were performed in the newly colonized rang…

0106 biological sciencesGene FlowChloroplast DnaPollinationSeed dispersalSeed dispersalHadena-Bicrurismedicine.disease_causeGenes Plant010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesPollinatorPollenGeneticsmedicineSilene latifoliaSileneGenetics (clinical)030304 developmental biologyIsolation by distance2. Zero hunger0303 health sciences[SDV.GEN.GPO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]biologyEcologyta1184Plant-population sizeGenetic Variationfood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationY-ChromosomeDioica CaryophyllaceaeGynodioecious plantF-StatisticsGenetic structureSeedsPollen dispersalta1181Biological dispersalPollenAutocorrelation analysisOriginal ArticleMicrosatellite Repeats
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Identifying potential areas of expansion for the endangered brown bear (Ursus arctos) population in the cantabrian mountains (NW Spain)

2019

Many large carnivore populations are expanding into human-modified landscapes and the subsequent increase in coexistence between humans and large carnivores may intensify various types of conflicts. A proactive management approach is critical to successful mitigation of such conflicts. The Cantabrian Mountains in Northern Spain are home to the last remaining native brown bear (Ursus arctos) population of the Iberian Peninsula, which is also amongst the most severely threatened European populations, with an important core group residing in the province of Asturias. There are indications that this small population is demographically expanding its range. The identification of the potential are…

0106 biological sciencesRange (biology)Endangered speciesForests01 natural sciencesGeographical locationsPeninsulaGeoinformaticsUrsusCarnivoreConservation ScienceMammalseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinarygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyGeographybiologyEcologyQREukaryotaTerrestrial EnvironmentsSpatial AutocorrelationCarnivoryTrophic InteractionsHabitatsEuropeCommunity EcologyHabitatVertebratesMedicineUrsidaeResearch ArticleComputer and Information SciencesSciencePopulationBears010603 evolutionary biologyEcosystemsPopulation MetricsAnimalsHumansEuropean Union14. Life underwatereducationEcosystemPopulation DensitygeographyPopulation Biology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcology and Environmental SciencesOrganismsBiology and Life Sciences15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationSpainAmniotesThreatened speciesEarth SciencesPeople and places
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Measuring acoustic complexity in continuously varying signals: how complex is a wolf howl?

2017

Communicative complexity is a key behavioural and ecological indicator in the study of animal cognition. Much attention has been given to measures such as repertoire size and syntactic structure in both bird and mammal vocalizations, as large repertoires and complex call combinations may give an indication of the cognitive abilities both of the sender and receiver. However, many animals communicate using a continuous vocal signal that does not easily lend itself to be described by concepts such as ‘repertoire’. For example, dolphin whistles and wolf howls both have complex patterns of frequency modulation, so that no two howls or whistles are quite the same. Is there a sense in which some o…

0106 biological sciencescanidsEcologybusiness.industrycommunicationEntropy05 social sciencesLibrary science010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAutocorrelation0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologySociologyTelecommunicationsbusinesscomplexityComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Fruit body based inventories in wood-inhabiting fungi: Should we replicate in space or time?

2016

We assessed the effect of survey design on the results when conducting fruit body surveys of wood-inhabiting fungi. Our results demonstrate that the optimal design depends on the ecological question to be addressed, as well as the group of fungal species under research. If the aim is to record the total species richness in a dead wood unit or to estimate the population size of a species, repeating the survey over time is generally necessary. However, if the aim is to estimate the total species richness in the forest or to assess how environmental covariates influence species richness or community composition, it is generally more efficient to increase the number of dead wood units than to r…

0106 biological sciencesdata collectiontemporal autocorrelationDead woodPlant ScienceBiologyspatial autocorrelation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesstudy designPolyporalesSpatial analysisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcologysampling methodEcologyEcological ModelingPopulation sizeSurvey researchReplicate15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationwood-decaying fungiCommunity compositionpolyporalesta1181Species richnessfungal community010606 plant biology & botanyFungal Ecology
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The influence of temperature model assumptions on the prognosis accuracy of extinction risk

2000

Abstract For a species whose abundance is well-known to correlate on the degree of heat different temperature model assumptions may affect the prognosis accuracy of persistence. Likewise, year-to-year autocorrelations in weather fluctuations are known to decrease extinction risk. Thus, we investigated the grey bush cricket Platycleis albopunctata . For this species is known that growth and reproduction is mainly influenced by temperature. We developed a stochastic individual based model for the bush cricket. This day–degree model described the demographic growth of the species that depends on temperature. Daily temperatures were generated by five different methods: (i) temperatures were seq…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyExtinction010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesStochastic modellingEcologyEcological ModelingPopulationAutocorrelation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDegree (temperature)Normal distribution13. Climate actionMinimum viable populationAbundance (ecology)Statisticseducation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMathematicsEcological Modelling
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The European Regional Convergence Process, 1980-1995: Do Spatial Regimes and Spatial Dependence Matter?

2002

International audience; The authors show that spatial dependence and spatial heterogeneity matter in the estimation of the ß-convergence process among 138 European regions over the 1980 to 1995 period. Using spatial econometrics tools, the authors detect both spatial dependence and spatial heterogeneity in the form of structural instability across spatial convergence clubs. The estimation of the appropriate spatial regimes spatial error model shows that the convergence process is different across regimes. The authors also estimate a strongly significant spatial spillover effect: the average growth rate of per capita GDP of a given region is positively affected by the average growth rate of …

AERES A Economie Gestion - CoNRS37-R2 - EconLitspatial dependence0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyjel:C21Gross domestic productconvergence club convergence spatial econometrics European regions spatial regimes spatial autocorrelation050602 political science & public administrationEconometricsEconomics[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesGrowth rateSpatial dependence[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSpatial analysisComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSGeneral Environmental ScienceConvergence clubsconvergence05 social sciencesjel:C51General Social Sciences021107 urban & regional planningConvergence (economics)[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financespatial regimes0506 political scienceSpatial heterogeneityspatial econometricsSpatial econometricsjel:R11geographic spilloversjel:R15
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