Search results for "Speed"
showing 10 items of 876 documents
Measurement of the group velocity of light in sea water at the ANTARES site
2012
The group velocity of light has been measured at eight different wavelengths between 385 nm and 532 nm in the Mediterranean Sea at a depth of about 2.2 km with the ANTARES optical beacon systems. A parametrisation of the dependence of the refractive index on wavelength based on the salinity, pressure and temperature of the sea water at the ANTARES site is in good agreement with these measurements.
Speed in cognitive tasks as an indicator of second/foreign language reading and writing skills
2013
In a cross-sectional study 823 Finnish school children were tested to examine the relation between speed of performance in cognitive and linguistic tasks and second/foreign language reading and writing. Participants were Finnish-speakers with English as foreign language and Russian-speakers with Finnish as second language which made it possible to compare the results across these two language groups. The Finnish group was furthermore divided into three groups by age to see how speed develops with age and education. Groups were tested with a number of cognitive instruments that included measures of speed of performance. Overall, performance on the speed measures improved with age; often, the…
Real-time Control of Metallurgic Processes
1996
The careful control of the liquid metal solidification and the solid shell growth is of central importance in all metallurgic processes. These have a considerable influence on the formation of cracks and other defects which can be formed in the cast material. To ensure defect free products, the liquid metal is to be cooled down according to a pattern which depends i.e. on metal grade, product dimension, cooling speed and machine design. On the other hand, the control of the liquid/solid interface is a key element in optimising the liquid solidification with respect to good productivity. So, the heat transfer plays a very important role in metallurgic casting processes, especially when casti…
XLCS: A New Bit-Parallel Longest Common Subsequence Algorithm on Xeon Phi Clusters
2019
Finding the longest common subsequence (LCS) of two strings is a classical problem in bioinformatics. A basic approach to solve this problem is based on dynamic programming. As the biological sequence databases are growing continuously, bit-parallel sequence comparison algorithms are becoming increasingly important. In this paper, we present XLCS, a new parallel implementation to accelerate the LCS algorithm on Xeon Phi clusters by performing bit-wise operations. We have designed an asynchronous IO framework to improve the data transfer efficiency. To make full use of the computing resources of Xeon Phi clusters, we use three levels of parallelism: node-level, thread-level and vector-level.…
Is processing speed a valid neurocognitive endophenotype in bipolar disorder? Evidence from a longitudinal, family study.
2021
[Background] Substantial evidence supports the existence of neurocognitive endophenotypes in bipolar disorder (BD), but very few longitudinal studies have included unaffected relatives. In a 5-year, follow-up, family study, we have recently suggested that deficits in manual motor speed and visual memory could be endophenotype candidates for BD. We aimed to explore whether this also applies to processing speed.
LYON PART DIEU, HUB METROPOLITANO CONTEMPORANEO
2014
Lyon Part Dieu, contemporary metropolitan hub. By François Decoster, Djamel Klouche and Caroline Poulin. This article introduces a series of concepts developed by the AUC in its research on the theme of mobility, transportation, and stations in contemporary cities. The “inexorable station” in fact debates the need, for contemporary stations and more in general transportation venues, to evolve as projects for open spaces, to be porous with respect to the city while establishing with it an organic relationship. Stations are not just specialized venues dedicated to transportation, but more than ever they are becoming “initiators”, essential levers for urban development and regeneration in toda…
An Automatic Sleep Scoring Toolbox : Multi-modality of Polysomnography Signals’ Processing
2019
Sleep scoring is a fundamental but time-consuming process in any sleep laboratory. To speed up the process of sleep scoring without compromising accuracy, this paper develops an automatic sleep scoring toolbox with the capability of multi-signal processing. It allows the user to choose signal types and the number of target classes. Then, an automatic process containing signal pre-processing, feature extraction, classifier training (or prediction) and result correction will be performed. Finally, the application interface displays predicted sleep structure, related sleep parameters and the sleep quality index for reference. To improve the identification accuracy of minority stages, a layer-w…
A linear regression-based machine learning pipeline for the discovery of clinically relevant correlates of gait speed reserve from multiple physiolog…
2021
Frailty in older adults is characterized by reduced physiological reserve. Gait speed reserve (GSR: maximum minus usual gait speed) could help identify frailty and act as a proxy for physiological reserve. Utilizing data from 2397 participants aged 50+ from wave 3 of The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, we developed a stepwise linear regression-based machine learning pipeline to select the most important GSR predictors from 34 manually selected features across multiple domains. Variables were selected one at a time such that they maximized the mean adjusted r-squared score from a 5-fold cross-validation. A peak score of (0.16 +/- 0.03) was achieved with 14 variables (giving adjusted-r-sq…
Effects of different strength training frequencies on maximum strength, body composition and functional capacity in healthy older individuals
2017
There is controversy in the literature regarding the dose-response relationship of strength training in healthy older participants. The present study determined training frequency effects on maximum strength, muscle mass and functional capacity over 6 months following an initial 3-month preparatory strength training period. One-hundred and six 64–75 year old volunteers were randomly assigned to one of four groups; performing strength training one (EX1), two (EX2), or three (EX3) times per week and a non-training control (CON) group. Whole-body strength training was performed using 2–5 sets and 4–12 repetitions per exercise and 7–9 exercises per session. Before and after the intervention, ma…
Mobility-Related Fatigue, Walking Speed, and Muscle Strength in Older People
2011
Background. Fatigue is an important early marker of functional decline among older people, but the mechanisms underlying this association are not fully understood. The purpose of the present study was to examine the association between mobility-related fatigue and walking speed and to test the degree to which muscle strength accounts for this association. Methods. The study is based on baseline (n = 523) and 5-year follow-up data (n = 292) from a cohort of 75-year-old persons. Standardized assessments include self-report measures of mobility-related fatigue (score range 0–6) and medical history, as well as performance-based assessment of walking speed and maximal isometric strength of knee …