Letter: On uniform distance property of multilevel block 8-PSK modulation

2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 615-618
Author(s):  
Karl Heinrich Hofmann
1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 459-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sidney A. Morris ◽  
Peter Nickolas

Author(s):  
Adedotun Oluwakanyinsola Owojori ◽  
Ibukunoluwa A. Adebanjo ◽  
Samson A. Oyetunji

Considering a system capable of identifying abnormalities in people's walking conditions in real-time, simply by studying his/her walking profile over a short period of time is a phenomenal breakthrough in the field of biotechnology. Such abnormalities could be as a result of injury, old age, or disease termed gait which could be analyzed using the pressure mapping technology. Pressure points in the feet of an injured person as he/she walks is analyzed by sets of sensors (capacitive sensors) carefully design with a rectangular 5.1cm by 2cm parallel aluminium plate and placed on developed footwear with a uniform distance of 1cm across the dielectric material. The output of the pre-processing stage gives varying values which are calibrated and sent to the microcontroller. All placed on a portable sized Printed Circuit Board (PCB) making it moveable from one place to another (that is, mobile), is the pre-processing circuit that converts measured or evaluated result to the transmittable signal through a Mobile Communication System which can be received on a Personal Computer (PC) in form of a periodic chat and/ or report. The result of the analysis is shown both in simulation and hardware implementation of the system


2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-192
Author(s):  
William Sayers

Common Romance terms underlie naval maneuvering in the thirteenth-century Mediterranean, although a distinctive Catalan vocabulary emerged early on. Afrenellar was used of linking galleys at stem and stern by cables in order to keep ships at a uniform distance. Historians have speculated that this notion of “bridling” was extended to oar handling. Galley oars would have been drawn in amidships, reversed, then extended to adjacent vessels and lashed in place to create impromptu fighting platforms and block the passage of enemy ships. Yet in the documented instances, the bridle or check in question is a simple device placed over the looms to hold the raised oar at a uniform height from the sea surface, prompting the Venetian image of a galley as a double comb. Historical speculation on the naval encounters of the War of the Sicilian Vespers must be informed by an accurate understanding of the technical vocabulary.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 1970 ◽  
Author(s):  
María Consuelo Sáiz Manzanares ◽  
Juan José Rodríguez Diez ◽  
Raúl Marticorena Sánchez ◽  
María José Zaparaín Yáñez ◽  
Rebeca Cerezo Menéndez

The use of learning environments that apply Advanced Learning Technologies (ALTs) and Self-Regulated Learning (SRL) is increasingly frequent. In this study, eye-tracking technology was used to analyze scan-path differences in a History of Art learning task. The study involved 36 participants (students versus university teachers with and without previous knowledge). The scan-paths were registered during the viewing of video based on SRL. Subsequently, the participants were asked to solve a crossword puzzle, and relevant vs. non-relevant Areas of Interest (AOI) were defined. Conventional statistical techniques (ANCOVA) and data mining techniques (string-edit methods and k-means clustering) were applied. The former only detected differences for the crossword puzzle. However, the latter, with the Uniform Distance model, detected the participants with the most effective scan-path. The use of this technique successfully predicted 64.9% of the variance in learning results. The contribution of this study is to analyze the teaching–learning process with resources that allow a personalized response to each learner, understanding education as a right throughout life from a sustainable perspective.


Author(s):  
Srinivas C. Tadepalli ◽  
Kiran H. Shivanna ◽  
Vincent A. Magnotta ◽  
Nicole M. Grosland

Articular cartilage is a critical component in the movement of one bone against another. It possesses unique chemical properties allowing it to serve as a bearing surface, capable of transferring loads from one bone to another while simultaneously allowing the load bearing surfaces to articulate with low friction. Patient-specific finite element (FE) models incorporating articular cartilage provide insight into articular joint mechanics [1, 2]. To date, the methods/tools available to create accurate FE mesh definitions of the articular cartilage are limited. Semi-automated morphing methods have been developed, but many intermediate steps have to be performed to get the final cartilage mesh definition [3]. Commercially available software [4] is capable of generating tetrahedral/shell/pyramid element based meshes of the cartilage from the underlying bony surface, but hexahedral meshes are preferred over tetrahedral meshes [5]. IA-FEMesh currently provides the ability to project a pre-defined set of elements a uniform distance [6]. This technique has been adopted in several models [1, 2]. Cartilage does not necessarily exist as such; rather the thickness of the cartilage is non-uniform and varies over the surface. Consequently an accurate representation of the articular cartilage is crucial for an accurate contact FE analysis. The goal of this study was to develop an algorithm that will aid in the generation of anatomically accurate cartilage FE mesh definitions in a reliable manner based on patient-specific image data.


Symmetry ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 731 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vojtěch Uher ◽  
Petr Gajdoš ◽  
Václav Snášel ◽  
Yu-Chi Lai ◽  
Michal Radecký

Space-filling curves (SFCs) represent an efficient and straightforward method for sparse-space indexing to transform an n-dimensional space into a one-dimensional representation. This is often applied for multidimensional point indexing which brings a better perspective for data analysis, visualization and queries. SFCs are involved in many areas such as big data analysis and visualization, image decomposition, computer graphics and geographic information systems (GISs). The indexing methods subdivide the space into logic clusters of close points and they differ in various parameters including the cluster order, the distance metrics, and the pattern shape. Beside the simple and highly preferred triangular and square uniform grids, the hexagonal uniform grids have gained high interest especially in areas such as GISs, image processing and data visualization for the uniform distance between cells and high effectiveness of circle coverage. While the linearization of hexagons is an obvious approach for memory representation, it seems there is no hexagonal SFC indexing method generally used in practice. The main limitation of hexagons lies in lacking infinite decomposition into sub-hexagons and similarity of tiles on different levels of hierarchy. Our research aims at defining a fast and robust hexagonal SFC method. The Gosper fractal is utilized to preserve the benefits of hexagonal grids and to efficiently and hierarchically linearize points in a hexagonal grid while solving the non-convex shape and recursive transformation issues of the fractal. A comparison to other SFCs and grids is conducted to verify the robustness and effectiveness of our hexagonal method.


1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (04) ◽  
pp. 853-863
Author(s):  
Moshe Shaked

In a series of recent papers, Heyde (1975), Heyde and Leslie (1976), Hall (1979) and Brown (1980) obtained upper bounds on the uniform distance of a scale mixture from its parent distribution. Using a different technique we obtain further bounds which are more meaningful and superior in some applications. The new technique is then applied to obtain bounds on the uniform distance of a location mixture from its parent distribution. Comparison of the new bounds and the earlier ones is given.


2011 ◽  
Vol 124 (0) ◽  
pp. 243-248
Author(s):  
Kenji FURUKAWA ◽  
Kinji TAKEUCHI ◽  
Hideki NOGUCHI ◽  
Ko IGARASHI

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document