XRONOS: A Timing Analysis Software Package

1992 ◽  
pp. 59-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Stella ◽  
L. Angelini
1991 ◽  
Vol 35 (A) ◽  
pp. 49-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.C. Taylor ◽  
R.A. Clapp

AbstractSIROQUANT is a suite of personal ccmputer programs which runs on an IBM-compatible 386 or 486 personal computer, and gives phase quantification of mineral samples hy Rietveld refinement using the full XRD profile. Eight phases can be quantified in a mineral with the 640 K RAM version and 11 in the EM version.New features have been added since the original description was written (J.C. Taylor, Powder Diffraction, 6, 2, 1991) including calculations of amorphous percentages using spiked samples, particle size calculations, use of “measured” as well as calculated patterns as standards, pre-programmed refinement “Stages” with different variables in each stage, and improved menus.Some advanced applications of the system using these new features are described.


1990 ◽  
Vol 105 ◽  
pp. 142-144
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Balonek

Our university recently purchased a liquid-nitrogen-cooled CCD camera system (from Photometrics Ltd., Tucson, Arizona) which has been installed on our campus’ 40-cm multiple access (Cassegrain/Newtonian) telescope. Images are reduced online at the observatory using Photometrics’ microcomputer-based analysis software package, which includes operations for standard data acquisition and initial stages of data reduction — including corrections for bias, dark current, and flat fielding. Images are displayed on a 256-level-gray-scale black and white monitor. Additional post-processing can be done either on the CCD system’s computer at the observatory or on IBM-AT/PC’s located both at the observatory and in the laboratory.


2008 ◽  
Vol 381-382 ◽  
pp. 599-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Velychko

According to international standards the accredited calibration and testing laboratories are required to use reliable measuring instruments and to estimate an uncertainty of measurements. The variety of software tools and the different approaches taken will almost certainly ensure that for each laboratory there is a software package which will meet the needs. In this paper, several a software packages are made according to their validation for comparison. Briefly general principles of validating uncertainty analysis software packages are described. Briefly used validation methods are described.


2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (03n04) ◽  
pp. 63-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
AMANI N. TAHAT ◽  
WA'EL SALAH ◽  
AWNI B. HALLAK

This paper describes a shell which facilitates the use of the existing PIXE analysis software package PIXAN. In this work, we designed, wrote and examined several PIXE spectra in a utility program that is called WPASS. The WPASS program merely links PIXAN modules and makes their use more convenient than before. The WPASS program handles automatically PEAKFIT (BATTY) and THICK programs. It outputs the results into several files belonging to the same data file. These include converting data files from one-column-format OCF to PIXANPC format; control, graphics, and result files from PEAKFIT; control and result files from THICK; options for graphical plotting the results on the PC and converting the graphics files for their components for publications of the results. WPASS has new features that consider the secondary interelement fluorescence. WPASS has been used successfully for the analysis of PIXE spectra and inner-shell ionization studies.


Author(s):  
Wen-Tzong Lee ◽  
Jose Cosme ◽  
Kevin Russell

General optimization models for the dimensional synthesis of defect-free Revolute-Cylindrical-Cylindrical-Cylindrical linkages with static loading are formulated and evaluated in this work. With these optimization models, Revolute-Cylindrical-Cylindrical-Cylindrical linkage dimensions required to approximate coupler positions or coupler path points while achieving static equilibrium (given coupler loads) within a maximum driver static torque are calculated. These models also include constraints that eliminate order, branch and circuit defects-defects that are common in traditional dyad-based dimensional synthesis. Therefore, the novelty of this work is the development of optimization models that permit the synthesis of order, branch and circuit defect-free Revolute-Cylindrical-Cylindrical-Cylindrical motion and path generators that also achieve static equilibrium within a maximum specified driver torque magnitude for specified coupler loads. This work conveys both the benefits and drawbacks realized when implementing these optimization models on a personal computer using the commercial mathematical analysis software package Matlab.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Bowring ◽  
Camille Maumet ◽  
Thomas E. Nichols

AbstractA wealth of analysis tools are available to fMRI researchers in order to extract patterns of task variation and, ultimately, understand cognitive function. However, this ‘methodological plurality’ comes with a drawback. While conceptually similar, two different analysis pipelines applied on the same dataset may not produce the same scientific results. Differences in methods, implementations across software packages, and even operating systems or software versions all contribute to this variability. Consequently, attention in the field has recently been directed to reproducibility and data sharing. Neuroimaging is currently experiencing a surge in initiatives to improve research practices and ensure that all conclusions inferred from an fMRI study are replicable.In this work, our goal is to understand how choice of software package impacts on analysis results. We use publically shared data from three published task fMRI neuroimaging studies, reanalyzing each study using the three main neuroimaging software packages, AFNI, FSL and SPM, using parametric and nonparametric inference. We obtain all information on how to process, analyze, and model each dataset from the publications. We make quantitative and qualitative comparisons between our replications to gauge the scale of variability in our results and assess the fundamental differences between each software package. While qualitatively we find broad similarities between packages, we also discover marked differences, such as Dice similarity coefficients ranging from 0.000 - 0.743 in comparisons of thresholded statistic maps between software. We discuss the challenges involved in trying to reanalyse the published studies, and highlight our own efforts to make this research reproducible.


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