Optimizing thermal block length during infrared neural inhibition to minimize temperature thresholds

Author(s):  
Jeremy Ford ◽  
Mohit Ganguly ◽  
Junqi Zhuo ◽  
Matthew McPheeters ◽  
Michael W Jenkins ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy B. Ford ◽  
Mohit Ganguly ◽  
Megan E. Poorman ◽  
William A. Grissom ◽  
Michael W. Jenkins ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 867
Author(s):  
Dharmendra Sharma ◽  
Jari Rehu ◽  
Klaus Känsälä ◽  
Heikki Ailisto

This paper presents a software-based modular and hierarchical building energy management system (BEMS) to control the power consumption in sensor-equipped buildings. In addition, the need of this type of solution is also highlighted by presenting the worldwide trends of thermal energy end use in buildings and peak power problems. Buildings are critical component of smart grid environments and bottom-up BEMS solutions are need of the hour to optimize the consumption and to provide consumption side flexibility. This system is able to aggregate the controls of the all-controllable resources in building to realize its flexible power capacity. This system provides a solution for consumer to aggregate the controls of ‘behind-the-meter’ small loads in short response and provide ‘deep’ demand-side flexibility. This system is capable of discovery, status check, control and management of networked loads. The main novelty of this solution is that it can handle the heterogeneity of the installed hardware system along with time bound changes in the load device network and its scalability; resulting in low maintenance requirements after deployment. The control execution latency (including data logging) of this BEMS system for an external control signal is less than one second per connected load. In addition, the system is capable of overriding the external control signal in order to maintain consumer coziness within the comfort temperature thresholds. This system provides a way forward in future for the estimation of the energy stored in the buildings in the form of heat/temperature and use buildings as temporary batteries when electricity supply is constrained or abundant.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura A. Tugwell ◽  
Marion E. England ◽  
Simon Gubbins ◽  
Christopher J. Sanders ◽  
Jessica E. Stokes ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Culicoides biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) are biological vectors of internationally important arboviruses and inflict biting nuisance on humans, companion animals and livestock. In temperate regions, transmission of arboviruses is limited by temperature thresholds, in both replication and dissemination of arboviruses within the vector and in the flight activity of adult Culicoides. This study aims to determine the cold-temperature thresholds for flight activity of Culicoides from the UK under laboratory conditions. Methods Over 18,000 Culicoides adults were collected from the field using 4 W down-draught miniature ultraviolet Centers for Disease Control traps. Populations of Culicoides were sampled at three different geographical locations within the UK during the summer months and again in the autumn at one geographical location. Activity at constant temperatures was assessed using a bioassay that detected movement of adult Culicoides towards an ultraviolet light source over a 24-h period. Results The proportion of active adult Culicoides increased with temperature but cold temperature thresholds for activity varied significantly according to collection season and location. Populations dominated by the subgenus Avaritia collected in South East England had a lower activity threshold temperature in the autumn (4 °C) compared with populations collected in the summer (10 °C). Within the subgenus Avaritia, Culicoides scoticus was significantly more active across all temperatures tested than Culicoides obsoletus within the experimental setup. Populations of Culicoides impunctatus collected in the North East of England were only active once temperatures reached 14 °C. Preliminary data suggested flight activity of the subgenus Avaritia does not differ between populations in South East England and those in the Scottish Borders. Conclusions These findings demonstrate seasonal changes in temperature thresholds for flight and across different populations of Culicoides. These data, alongside that defining thresholds for virus replication within Culicoides, provide a primary tool for risk assessment of arbovirus transmission in temperate regions. In addition, the study also provides a comparison with thermal limits derived directly from light-suction trapping data, which is currently used as the main method to define adult Culicoides activity during surveillance.


i-Perception ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 204166952110200
Author(s):  
Abhilasha R. Jagtap ◽  
Jan W. Brascamp

When observers view a perceptually bistable stimulus, their perception changes stochastically. Various studies have shown across-observer correlations in the percept durations for different bistable stimuli including binocular rivalry stimuli and bistable moving plaids. Previous work on binocular rivalry posits that neural inhibition in the visual hierarchy is a factor involved in the perceptual fluctuations in that paradigm. Here, in order to investigate whether between-observer variability in cortical inhibition underlies correlated percept durations between binocular rivalry and bistable moving plaid perception, we used center-surround suppression as a behavioral measure of cortical inhibition. We recruited 217 participants in a test battery that included bistable perception paradigms as well as a center-surround suppression paradigm. While we were able to successfully replicate the correlations between binocular rivalry and bistable moving plaid perception, we did not find a correlation between center-surround suppression strength and percept durations for any form of bistable perception. Moreover, the results from a mediation analysis indicate that center-surround suppression is not the mediating factor in the correlation between binocular rivalry and bistable moving plaids. These results do not support the idea that cortical inhibition can explain the between-observer correlation in mean percept duration between binocular rivalry and bistable moving plaid perception.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Steven Kisseleff ◽  
Wallace A. Martins ◽  
Symeon Chatzinotas ◽  
Bjorn Ottersten

2006 ◽  
Vol 54 (6) ◽  
pp. 1143-1143
Author(s):  
A. Graell i Amat ◽  
S. Benedetto ◽  
G. Montorsi ◽  
D. Vogrig ◽  
A. Neviani ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 257-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony F.G. Dixon ◽  
Alois Honěk ◽  
Petr Keil ◽  
Mohamed Ali A. Kotela ◽  
Arnošt L. Šizling ◽  
...  

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