scholarly journals Evaluation of Landslide Susceptibility Using Scientific Investigation and Quantitative Evaluation

Author(s):  
Young-Karb Song ◽  
Jeongrim Oh ◽  
Young-Jin Son ◽  
MinSu Jung
2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 2229-2236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristian Valeriu Patriche ◽  
Ionut Vasiliniuc ◽  
Gabriela Biali

2011 ◽  
Vol 312-315 ◽  
pp. 265-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Golabczak ◽  
Andrzej Konstantynowicz

The Raman effect has been widely used for years for carbon layers analysis for qualitative analysis of samples as well as quantitative. Two main lines of attitude to the quantitative analysis of the Raman spectra have been de¬ve¬lo¬ped. The first one is applied mainly in forensic investigations when one has pre¬pa¬red comparative samples which consist of known substances with known concentration. This is the ba¬se for comparison of spectra from unknown sample. A tool used in these in¬ves¬ti¬ga¬tions is the Voigt profile based on Faddeeva function, allowing a very precise com¬pa¬rison of spectra with elimination of individuality of me¬a¬s¬u¬re¬ment equipment. This at¬ti¬tu¬de seems not to be the best solution when one has not comparative samples and the sam¬p¬le un¬der test is unique – the situations often meet in scientific investigation. Using Voigt profiles may cause a loss of in¬for¬ma¬tion car¬¬ried with the spec¬trum, especially related with small quantities of nanotubes or ful¬le¬renes generated in the process of imposing diamond layers in plas¬ma arc. Another function for approximation shape of the Raman peak based on Breit-Figner-Fano curve is frequently used but difficulties arise when iden¬ti¬fy¬ing physical meaning of parameters and subtracting idle pedestal from the ex¬pe¬ri¬men¬tal spec¬t¬rum. A different attitude based on simple Gaussian peak approximation is pre¬sen¬ted as better solution. Use of this procedure as a metrological tool has been dis¬cus¬sed leading to the conclusion that engaging more advanced and so¬p¬hi¬s¬ti¬ca¬ted me¬thods does not provide automatically better results.


Physica ◽  
1952 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 1147-1150
Author(s):  
D MAEDER ◽  
V WINTERSTEIGER

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Serra ◽  
Andrea Spoto ◽  
Marta Ghisi ◽  
Giulio Vidotto

2000 ◽  
Vol 05 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-138
Author(s):  
Robert A. Luhm ◽  
Daniel B. Bellissimo ◽  
Arejas J. Uzgiris ◽  
William R. Drobyski ◽  
Martin J. Hessner

1987 ◽  
Vol 26 (06) ◽  
pp. 234-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Stirner ◽  
J. Dahl ◽  
R. Uebis ◽  
E. Kleinhans ◽  
M. Biedermann ◽  
...  

ROI-based polar maps (33 ROIs) were employed to evaluate quantitatively stress/rest myocardial 201TI SPECT in 108 patients with angiographically proven coronary heart disease (CHD) in comparison with 30 controls. Sensitivity in detecting a CHD with stenoses of > 50% of luminal diameter was determined versus normal regional values (± 2.5 SD) employing vitality (VI) and wash-out corrected redistribution (RD). The method was evaluated referring to the severity of the disease, to the number of ROIs displaying changes [(a) 1 ROI, (b) >2 ROIs], to validity of VI, RD or a combination thereof, and for specificity. Wash-out values were found to depend on degree of stress individually achieved and thus were not used as a threshold criterion. Sensitivity in supply areas with old myocardial infarctions was 95% (a) and 86% (b), resp. With no infarction, it was 96% (a) and 79% (b), resp. VI in stenosis > 75% was more sensitive than RD. However, combined evaluation of VI and RD yielded sensitivities from 91-100% (a) and 77-94% (b), resp. for different main supply areas. In stenosis < 50% with normal VI, RD was positive in 18-31 %. Specificity turned out to be 91 % (a) and 97% (b), resp. We conclude that the method presented is reliable to quantify numerically 201TI kinetics in myocardial SPECT, aimed at detecting and describing CHD.


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