Notice of Removal: High-speed, high-frequency, vector-flow imaging of in utero mouse embryos

Author(s):  
Jeffrey A. Ketterling ◽  
Orlando Aristizabal ◽  
Alfred C. H. Yu ◽  
Billy Y. S. Yiu ◽  
Daniel H. Turnbull ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey A. Ketterling ◽  
Orlando Aristizábal ◽  
Billy Y. S. Yiu ◽  
Daniel H. Turnbull ◽  
Colin K. L. Phoon ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jeffrey A. Ketterling ◽  
Akshay Shekhar ◽  
Glenn I. Fishman ◽  
Orlando Aristizabal ◽  
Colin K.L. Phoon

2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 4020-4031
Author(s):  
Hsin Huang ◽  
Pei‐Yu Chen ◽  
Chih‐Chung Huang

2021 ◽  
pp. 147387162110649
Author(s):  
Javad Yaali ◽  
Vincent Grégoire ◽  
Thomas Hurtut

High Frequency Trading (HFT), mainly based on high speed infrastructure, is a significant element of the trading industry. However, trading machines generate enormous quantities of trading messages that are difficult to explore for financial researchers and traders. Visualization tools of financial data usually focus on portfolio management and the analysis of the relationships between risk and return. Beside risk-return relationship, there are other aspects that attract financial researchers like liquidity and moments of flash crashes in the market. HFT researchers can extract these aspects from HFT data since it shows every detail of the market movement. In this paper, we present HFTViz, a visualization tool designed to help financial researchers explore the HFT dataset provided by NASDAQ exchange. HFTViz provides a comprehensive dashboard aimed at facilitate HFT data exploration. HFTViz contains two sections. It first proposes an overview of the market on a specific date. After selecting desired stocks from overview visualization to investigate in detail, HFTViz also provides a detailed view of the trading messages, the trading volumes and the liquidity measures. In a case study gathering five domain experts, we illustrate the usefulness of HFTViz.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-33
Author(s):  
Maxim Golubev ◽  
Andrey Shmakov

The work presents the results of application of panoramic interferential technique which is based on elastic layers (sensors) usage to obtain pressure distribution on the flat plate having sharp leading edge. Experiments were done in supersonic wind tunnel at Mach number M = 4. Sensitivity and response time are shown to be enough to register pressure pulsation against standing and traveling sensor surface waves. Applying high-frequency image acquiring is demonstrated to make possible to distinguish at visualization images high-speed disturbances propagating in the boundary layer from low-speed surface waves


1999 ◽  
Vol 43 (8) ◽  
pp. 1633-1643 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.J. Zampardi ◽  
K. Runge ◽  
R.L. Pierson ◽  
J.A. Higgins ◽  
R. Yu ◽  
...  

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