scholarly journals Restoring the real world records in Men’s swimming without high-tech swimsuits

2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 291-300
Author(s):  
Zhenyu Gao ◽  
Yixing Li ◽  
Zhengxin Wang

AbstractThe recently concluded 2019 World Swimming Championships was another major swimming competition that witnessed some great progresses achieved by human athletes in many events. However, some world records created 10 years ago back in the era of high-tech swimsuits remained untouched. With the advancements in technical skills and training methods in the past decade, the inability to break those world records is a strong indication that records with the swimsuit bonus cannot reflect the real progressions achieved by human athletes in history. Many swimming professionals and enthusiasts are eager to know a measure of the real world records had the high-tech swimsuits never been allowed. This paper attempts to restore the real world records in Men’s swimming without high-tech swimsuits by integrating various advanced methods in probabilistic modeling and optimization. Through the modeling and separation of swimsuit bias, natural improvement, and athletes’ intrinsic performance, the result of this paper provides the optimal estimates and the 95% confidence intervals for the real world records. The proposed methodology can also be applied to a variety of similar studies with multi-factor considerations.

1976 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 503-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Craig West

Students of the origins and accomplishments of government regulation of economic activity have open suspected that the laws on which regulation is based were addressed to problems and conditions of the past that no longer prevailed, or — what is worse — assumptions about the “real world” that are highly unrealistic. This is Professor West's main conclusion about the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, especially as regards its discount rate and international exchange policies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan Heijl ◽  
Bas Vroling ◽  
Tom van den Bergh ◽  
Henk-Jan Joosten

AbstractDespite advances in the field of missense variant effect prediction, the real clinical utility of current computational approaches remains rather limited. There is a large difference in performance metrics reported by developers and those observed in the real world. Most currently available predictors suffer from one or more types of circularity in their training and evaluation strategies that lead to overestimation of predictive performance. We present a generic strategy that is independent of dataset properties and algorithms used, to deal with circularity in the training phase. This results in more robust predictors and evaluation scores that accurately reflect the real-world performance of predictive models. Additionally, we show that commonly used training methods can have an adverse impact on model performance and lead to gross overestimation of true predictive performance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 66-80
Author(s):  
Catherine Belling

Abstract The ambivalent attraction of feeling horror might explain some paradoxes regarding the consumption of representations of atrocities committed in the real world, in the past, on actual other people. How do horror fictions work in the transmission or exploitation of historical trauma? How might they function as prosthetic memories, at once disturbing and informative to readers who might otherwise not be exposed to those histories at all? What are the ethical implications of horror elicited by fictional representations of historical suffering? This article engages these questions through the reading of Mo Hayder’s 2004 novel The Devil of Nanking. Hayder exploits horror’s appeal and also—by foregrounding the acts of representation, reading, and spectatorship that generate this response—opens that process to critique. The novel may productively be understood as a work of posttraumatic fiction, both containing and exposing the concentric layers of our representational engagement with records of past atrocity. Through such a reading, a spherical rather than linear topology emerges for history itself, a structure of haunted and embodied consumption.


1992 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 310-313
Author(s):  
Jonita Sommers

“Why do I have to do this math? This is not something I need to know. I will not use it when I get out of school!” exclaimed Jesse and some of his classmates. Have you ever heard these comments? In the past, my students were learning the concepts, hut they were not associating the importance of mathematics and its uses in the real world. This year, I have tried to show the students in my eighth-grade mathematics class how mathematics will apply to their lives, whether they work on a ranch, work in the oil fields, or get a higher education after high school.


1997 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 220-224
Author(s):  
Leah P. McCoy

How will we make algebra accessible to all students? In the past, we have taught algebra as an abstract course involving manipulation of variables and numbers, which are symbolic representations. We have neglected to make a strong connection between the symbolic algebra and the underlying concrete relationships. Given the messages of the NCTM's Standards documents (1989, 1991), it is apparent that students need concrete experiences that enable them to experience algebra in the real world. In this manner, they will be able to construct an understanding of the concepts and connect the concrete with the abstract and their internal ideas.


1996 ◽  
Vol 1 (9) ◽  
pp. 688-693
Author(s):  
Bonnie S. Spence

For the past several years, i have sought out opportunities outside mathematics for personal enrichment and enjoyment. These experiences have caused me to become more aware of the connections between mathematics and other areas. As a result, I have begun developing lessons to show my students how mathematics is used in the real world. One summer I joined another teacher and twelve middle school students and decided to brave the eighteen-hour drive from Oklahoma to the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center in Co1tez, Colorado. The mathematical lesson discussed in this article emerged from one week of learning about the Anasazi culture and experiencing hands-on archaeology. Throughout the years, this lesson has been revised and expanded as both students and experience have given me new ideas.


2020 ◽  
pp. 125-183
Author(s):  
Christina Schachtner

Abstract In this chapter, the empirical data are presented as a typology of narratives in which experiences and activities in virtual space and the real world are interwoven, along with ideas and wishes for the future, what has happened in the past, and what is happening in the present. They run like a subterranean web through the narrators’ lives, initiating patterns of thinking and doing which revolve around a specific focus. The following types of narrations were identified: stories about interconnectedness, self-staging, supplying and selling, managing boundaries, and transformation, as well as setting out and breaking away.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 5188-5188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esther N. Oliva ◽  
Jacob Franek ◽  
Dipen Patel ◽  
Omer Zaidi ◽  
Salem Abi Nehme ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: AML is a hematologic malignancy with a high rate of treatment failure due in part to high relapse of the disease following initial or subsequent therapy. Numerous studies have reported AML relapse rates in clinical trials and real-world settings, but systematic review and synthesis of these data are very limited. This study used a SLR to assess the real-world cumulative incidence of relapse in adult patients with AML across various treatment settings. Methods: A SLR focused on observational studies published in the past 5 years was conducted using MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Additionally, proceedings from the past 2 years of selected clinical conferences were searched. Publications prior to January 2013 were excluded to ensure studies were generalizable to the current clinical context, given the rapidly changing nature of AML risk classification, genotyping, and treatment. Predefined selection criteria were employed to ensure studies were comparable and generalizable to the overall AML population. Key study exclusion criteria included: < 50 participants, selection for special populations or risk-specific populations using defined risk criteria, pediatric- or adolescent-only populations, and lack of reported follow-up time point for relapse. Key patient demographic characteristics, clinical characteristics, and cumulative incidence of relapse were extracted and explored using scatterplots. Results: Forty-six observational studies were included. There were 29 journal articles (1 reported on 2 studies) and 16 conference abstracts; 45 studies were retrospective cohort studies and 1 was prospective. Thirty studies enrolled patients at the time of receipt of allogeneic stem cell transplant (allo-SCT), 4 at the time of autologous SCT (auto-SCT), 11 at the time of induction chemotherapy (CT), and 1 that reported a mix. The majority of studies (n = 20) were conducted in Europe, with 13 in Asia, 11 in North America, 1 in South America, and 1 defined as worldwide. The final year of study participant data collection ranged from 2008 to 2017. Study sample size range was 51-4,997, average age range was 31-68 years, and male proportion range was 41-64%. Only 5 studies provided a clinical definition of relapse, and 5 studies clearly reported that relapse was measured only in those who achieved complete remission (4 of which were CT studies). No study reported the incidence of refractory disease. Relapse incidence ranged widely from 9% to 78%, which could be explained by high heterogeneity across the interventions received, differences in the time at which relapse was reported, or differences in the study and baseline population demographics and clinical characteristics, such as differences in mean/median (depending on study) age, prior lines of therapy, or baseline risk (e.g. studies of SCT varied widely with respect to whether patients were in first complete remission [CR1], CR2, CR3+, or had active disease at the time of SCT). The incidence of relapse is presented by continuous follow-up time (Figure), while accounting for intervention received (colors), sample size (bubble size), and mean/median age ≥ 60 years (black outline). Although relapse does not appear to be influenced by continuous follow-up time, the median relapse rate in studies with ≤ 24 months follow-up time was 32% versus 42% for studies with > 24 months follow-up. Relapse was higher in studies with a mean/median age ≥ 60 years, and was higher in studies of induction CT compared with SCT (allo-SCT in particular); however, CT studies included older patients and followed patients across subsequent lines of therapy (e.g. followed patients through transplantation). Whether baseline risk can explain some of the heterogeneity in relapse incidence beyond age or other factors will be explored further. Conclusions: The real-world burden of relapse is substantial in patients following SCT and CT. Heterogeneity in interventions received, line of therapy/baseline risk, patient demographics and clinical characteristics, and a lack of clear definitions for relapse present challenges when comparing relapse incidence across studies, and result in a wide range of reported relapse rates. Authors of real-world studies should aim to clearly define relapse and its measurement. Future work will explore the impact of baseline risk such as cytogenetic risk classification on relapse. Disclosures Oliva: La Jolla: Consultancy; Janssen: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Novartis: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Celgene Corp.: Consultancy, Other: Royalties, Speakers Bureau; Sanofi: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Amgen: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau. Franek:Celgene Corp.: Consultancy. Patel:Pharmerit: Employment; Celgene Corp.: Consultancy, Research Funding. Zaidi:Celgene Corp.: Consultancy. Nehme:Celgene Corp.: Employment. Almeida:Celgene Corp.: Honoraria; Novartis: Honoraria.


Author(s):  
Abd Rauf Muhammad Amin ◽  

Al-Dharūriyyāt al-Khamsah is an important issue in the study of maqasid al-syariah. This has continued to undergo discourse enrichment since al-Juwaini and al-Gazali introduced it. In a sense, scholars from the past to the present have always tried to develop how the mechanism of its application into the real world according to the context of their respective times. Enrichment, innovation, and development of the discourse of the implementation of al-Dharūriyyāt al-Khamsah are considered necessary based on the fact that the needs of modern society are very much different from the needs of society in the past when our scholars discussed this issue. The results show that this matter has been debated in many cases at least the scholarly debate on the arrangement and concept of each item from the five matters. This paper will attempt to introduce the interpretations of contemporary scholars to the mechanism of preserving and defending religion, soul, lineage, intellect, and property.


Author(s):  
Matteo Casu ◽  
Luca Albergante

The notion of identity has been discussed extensively in the past. Leibniz was the first to present this notion in a logically coherent way, using a formulation generally recognized as “Leibniz's Law”. Although some authors criticized this formulation, Leibniz's Law is generally accepted as the definition of identity. This work interprets Leibniz's Law as a limit notion: perfectly reasonable in a <i>God's eye</i> view of reality, but very difficult to use in the real world because of the limitedness of finite agents. To illustrate our approach we use “description logics” to describe the properties of objects, and present an approach to relativize Leibniz's Law. This relativization is further developed in a semantic web context, where the utility of our approach is suggested.


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