Multiscale Probability Density Function Analysis: Non-Gaussian and Scale-Invariant Fluctuations of Healthy Human Heart Rate

2006 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Kiyono ◽  
Z.R. Struzik ◽  
N. Aoyagi ◽  
Y. Yamamoto
2006 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. 603-613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeng Luen Liou ◽  
Jen Fin Lin

In the present study, the fractal theory is applied to modify the conventional model (the Greenwood and Williamson model) established in the statistical form for the microcontacts of two contact surfaces. The mean radius of curvature (R) and the density of asperities (η) are no longer taken as constants, but taken as variables as functions of the related parameters including the fractal dimension (D), the topothesy (G), and the mean separation of two contact surfaces. The fractal dimension and the topothesy varied by differing the mean separation of two contact surfaces are completely obtained from the theoretical model. Then the mean radius of curvature and the density of asperities are also varied by differing the mean separation. A numerical scheme is thus developed to determine the convergent values of the fractal dimension and topothesy corresponding to a given mean separation. The topographies of a surface obtained from the theoretical prediction of different separations show the probability density function of asperity heights to be no longer the Gaussian distribution. Both the fractal dimension and the topothesy are elevated by increasing the mean separation. The density of asperities is reduced by decreasing the mean separation. The contact load and the total contact area results predicted by variable D, G*, and η as well as non-Gaussian distribution are always higher than those forecast with constant D, G*, η, and Gaussian distribution.


2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 937-953 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fenwick C. Cooper ◽  
Peter H. Haynes

Abstract The fluctuation–dissipation theorem (FDT) has been suggested as a method of calculating the response of the climate system to a small change in an external parameter. The simplest form of the FDT assumes that the probability density function of the unforced system is Gaussian and most applications of the FDT have made a quasi-Gaussian assumption. However, whether or not the climate system is close to Gaussian remains open to debate, and non-Gaussianity may limit the usefulness of predictions of quasi-Gaussian forms of the FDT. Here we describe an implementation of the full non-Gaussian form of the FDT. The principle of the quasi-Gaussian FDT is retained in that the response to forcing is predicted using only information available from observations of the unforced system, but in the non-Gaussian case this information must be used to estimate aspects of the probability density function of the unforced system. Since this estimate is implemented using the methods of nonparametric statistics, the new form is referred to herein as a “nonparametric FDT.” Application is demonstrated to a sequence of simple models including a stochastic version of the three-component Lorenz model. The authors show that the nonparametric FDT gives accurate predictions in cases where the quasi-Gaussian FDT fails. Practical application of the nonparametric FDT may require optimization of the method set out here for higher-dimensional systems.


2008 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeng Luen Liou ◽  
Jen Fin Lin

Most statistical contact analyses assume that asperity height distributions (g(z*)) follow a Gaussian distribution. However, engineered surfaces are frequently non-Gaussian with the type dependent on the material and surface state being evaluated. When two rough surfaces experience contact deformations, the original topography of the surfaces varies with different loads, and the deformed topography of the surfaces after unloading and elastic recovery is quite different from surface contacts under a constant load. A theoretical method is proposed in the present study to discuss the variations of the topography of the surfaces for two contact conditions. The first kind of topography is obtained during the contact of two surfaces under a normal load. The second kind of topography is obtained from a rough contact surface after elastic recovery. The profile of the probability density function is quite sharp and has a large peak value if it is obtained from the surface contacts under a normal load. The profile of the probability density function defined for the contact surface after elastic recovery is quite close to the profile before experiencing contact deformations if the plasticity index is a small value. However, the probability density function for the contact surface after elastic recovery is closer to that shown in the contacts under a normal load if a large initial plasticity index is assumed. How skewness (Sk) and kurtosis (Kt), which are the parameters in the probability density function, are affected by a change in the dimensionless contact load, the initial skewness (the initial kurtosis is fixed in this study) or the initial plasticity index of the rough surface is also discussed on the basis of the topography models mentioned above. The behavior of the contact parameters exhibited in the model of the invariant probability density function is different from the behavior exhibited in the present model.


Complexity ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Hongjian Wang ◽  
Ying Wang ◽  
Cun Li ◽  
Juan Li ◽  
Qing Li ◽  
...  

The Gaussian mixture filter can solve the non-Gaussian problem of target tracking in complex environment by the multimode approximation method, but the weights of the Gaussian component of the conventional Gaussian mixture filter are only updated with the arrival of the measurement value in the measurement update stage. When the nonlinear degree of the system is high or the measurement value is missing, the weight of the Gauss component remains unchanged, and the probability density function of the system state cannot be accurately approximated. To solve this problem, this paper proposes an algorithm to update adaptive weights for the Gaussian components of a Gaussian mixture cubature Kalman filter (CKF) in the time update stage. The proposed method approximates the non-Gaussian noise by splitting the system state, process noise, and observation noise into several Gaussian components and updates the weight of the Gaussian components in the time update stage. The method contributes to obtaining a better approximation of the posterior probability density function, which is constrained by the substantial uncertainty associated with the measurements or ambiguity in the model. The estimation accuracy of the proposed algorithm was analyzed using a Taylor expansion. A series of extensive trials was performed to assess the estimation precision corresponding to various algorithms. The results based on the data pertaining to the lake trial of an unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) demonstrated the superiority of the proposed algorithm in terms of its better accuracy and stability compared to those of conventional tracking algorithms, along with the associated reasonable computational time that could satisfy real-time tracking requirements.


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