scholarly journals Robust lip-tracking using rigid flocks of selected linear predictors

Author(s):  
Eng-Jon Ong ◽  
Richard Bowden
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (17) ◽  
pp. 6984
Author(s):  
Jesús de la Fuente ◽  
Francisco Javier Peralta-Sánchez ◽  
José Manuel Martínez-Vicente ◽  
Flavia H. Santos ◽  
Salvatore Fadda ◽  
...  

The research aim of this paper was two-fold: to generate evidence that personality factors are linear predictors of the variable approaches to learning (a relevant cognitive-motivational variable of Educational Psychology); and to show that each type of learning approach differentially predicts positive or negative achievement emotions, in three learning situations: class time, study time, and testing. A total of 658 university students voluntarily completed validated questionnaires referring to these three variables. Using an ex post facto design, we conducted correlational analyses, regression analyses, and multiple structural predictions. The results showed that Conscientiousness is associated with and predicts a Deep Approach to learning, while also predicting positive achievement emotions. By contrast, Neuroticism is associated with and significantly predicts a Surface Approach to learning, as well as negative achievement emotions. There are important psychoeducational implications in the university context, both for prevention and for self-improvement, and for programs that offer psychoeducational guidance.


Author(s):  
Rafael Gadea-Girones ◽  
Agustín Ramirez-Agundis ◽  
Joaquín Cerdá-Boluda ◽  
Ricardo Colom-Palero

2014 ◽  
pp. 89-100
Author(s):  
Shai Shalev-Shwartz ◽  
Shai Ben-David
Keyword(s):  

Nonlinear forecasting was used to predict the time evolution of fluctuating concentrations of dissolved oxygen in the peroxidase-oxidase reaction. This reaction entails the oxidation of NADH with molecular oxygen as the electron acceptor. Depending upon the experimental conditions, either regular or highly irregular oscillations obtain. Previous work suggests that the latter fluctuations are almost certainly chaotic. In either case, the dynamics contain multiple timescales, which fact results in an uneven distribution of points in the phase space. Such ‘nonuniformity,’ as it is called, is a rock on which conventional methods for analysing chaotic time series often founder. The results of the present study are as follows. 1. Short-term forecasting with local linear predictors yields results that are consistent with a hypothesis of low-dimensional chaos. 2. Most of the evidence for nonlinear determinism disappears upon the addition of small amounts of observational error. 3. It is essentially impossible to make predictions over time intervals longer than the average period of oscillation for time series subject to continuous and frequent sampling. 4. Far more effective forecasting is possible for points on Poincare sections. 5. An alternative means for improving forecasting efficacy using the continuous data is to include a second variable (NADH concentration) in the analysis. Since non-uniformity is common in biological time series, we conclude that the application of nonlinear forecasting to univariate time series requires care both in implementation and interpretation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 59 (6) ◽  
pp. 1315-1326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric S. Jackson ◽  
Mark Tiede ◽  
Michael A. Riley ◽  
D. H. Whalen

Purpose Current approaches to assessing sentence-level speech variability rely on measures that quantify variability across utterances and use normalization procedures that alter raw trajectory data. The current work tests the feasibility of a less restrictive nonlinear approach—recurrence quantification analysis (RQA)—via a procedural example and subsequent analysis of kinematic data. Method To test the feasibility of RQA, lip aperture (i.e., the Euclidean distance between lip-tracking sensors) was recorded for 21 typically developing adult speakers during production of a simple utterance. The utterance was produced in isolation and in carrier structures differing just in length or in length and complexity. Four RQA indices were calculated: percent recurrence (%REC), percent determinism (%DET), stability (MAXLINE), and stationarity (TREND). Results Percent determinism (%DET) decreased only for the most linguistically complex sentence; MAXLINE decreased as a function of linguistic complexity but increased for the longer-only sentence; TREND decreased as a function of both length and linguistic complexity. Conclusions This research note demonstrates the feasibility of using RQA as a tool to compare speech variability across speakers and groups. RQA offers promise as a technique to assess effects of potential stressors (e.g., linguistic or cognitive factors) on the speech production system.


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