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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
421

Nelokální korelace v teorii funkcionálu hustoty / Nonlocal correlation in density functional theory

Hermann, Jan January 2013 (has links)
e van der Waals (vdW) interactions, or dispersion forces, are crucial in many chem- ical, physical and biological processes and received much attention from developers of density functional theory (DFT) methods. e most popular non-empirical DFT method for treating vdW interactions is the vdW density functional by Dion et al. (vdW-DF). Despite its success, vdW-DF is not accurate enough for many chemical applications. Here, we investigate two possible ways how to improve its accuracy. First, we reoptimize the only weakly speci ed parameter of vdW-DF for several semi-local functionals. On the S benchmark database set, we nd that revPBE is the best performer, decreasing the error from . % to . %. Second, a system-speci c but very accurate (∼ . kcal/mol) DFT correction scheme is proposed for precise calcula- tions of adsorbent−adsorbate interactions by combining vdW-DF and the empirical DFT/CC correction scheme. e new approach is applied to small molecules (CH , CO , H , H O, N ) interacting with a quartz surface and a lamella of UTL zeolite. e very high accuracy of the new scheme and its relatively easy use and numerical stability compared to the earlier DFT/CC scheme o er a straightforward solution for obtaining reliable predictions of adsorption energies.
422

PERFORMANCE STUDY OF SOW-AND-GROW: A NEW CLUSTERING ALGORITHM FOR BIG DATA

Maier, Joshua 01 May 2020 (has links)
DBSCAN is a density-based clustering algorithm that is known for being able to cluster irregular shaped clusters and can handle noise points as well. For very large sets of data, however, this algorithm becomes inefficient because it must go through each and every point and look at its neighborhood in order to determine the clusters. Also, DBSCAN is hard to implement in parallel due to the structure of the data and its sequential data access. The Sow and Grow algorithm is a parallel, density-based clustering algorithm. It utilizes a concept of growing points in order to more efficiently find clusters as opposed to going through every point in the dataset in a sequential order. We create an initial seed set of variable size based on user input and a dynamic growing points vector to cluster the data. Our algorithm is designed for shared memory and can be run in parallel using threads. For our experiments, multiple datasets were used with a varying number of points and dimensions. We used this dataset to show the significant speedup the Sow-and-Grow algorithm produces as compared to other parallel, density-based clustering algorithms. On some datasets, Sow-and-Grow achieves a speedup of 8 times faster than another density-based algorithm. We also looked at how changing the number of seeds affects the results in terms of runtime and clusters discovered.
423

Variability and Stability of a Dragonfly Assemblage

Crowley, P. H., Johnson, D. M. 01 May 1992 (has links)
Using 12 years of monthly sweep-net data from 9-12 permanent sampling stations, we evaluated the variability and stability of the dragonfly assemblage in Bays Mountain Lake (northeastern Tennessee, USA). To do this, we adopted the view that a stable assemblage (i.e. one capable of recovering quickly from disturbances) should have low variability (i.e. high persistence of taxa, relatively constant densities, and high rank concordance), except with disturbances more intense and frequent than those in this system. Moreover, a stable assemblage should contain populations that exhibit density dependence and should tend to remain within a restricted range of densities (boundedness), shifting toward a narrow density interval between generations (attraction). To test some specific predictions derived from these views, we analyzed 12-year sequences of larval population sizes just before the onset of emergence for the 13 dominant dragonfly taxa in the lake. Most but not all of the 13 dominant taxa persisted during the 12-year period. Variabilities of taxon densities, measured as standard deviations across generations of log-transformed population sizes, were representative of the broad range for other invertebrates but somewhat higher than those of terrestrial vertebrates. There were fewer than three significant abundance trends over the 12-year period, and rank concordance between generations was high (W=0.716). Density dependence was detected among some of the dragonfly density sequences by five different methods. Using techniques presented in the companion paper, we found strong indications of both boundedness and attraction in the whole assemblage. We conclude tentatively that an assemblage consisting of at least 11 of the 13 dominant dragonfly taxa at Bays Mountain Lake has low-to-moderate variability and is stable, but that the complete 29-species assemblage is probably not stable at the scale of this single lake. We emphasize the need for coupling such long-term descriptive analyses with studies of responses to experimental disturbances.
424

Density Functional Theory Study of Vibrational Spectra. 1. Performance of Several Density Functional Methods in Predicting Vibrational Frequencies

Zhou, Xuefeng, Wheeless, Christine J.M., Liu, Ruifeng 01 January 1996 (has links)
Harmonic vibrational frequencies of several small organic molecules which were used to validate the scaled quantum mechanical (SQM) force field procedure of Pulay et al. were calculated using six popular density functional (DFT) methods and compared with experimental results. The combination of Becke's exchange with either Lee-Yang-Parr (BLYP) or Perdew's correlation functional (BP86) reproduces the observed frequencies satisfactorily with deviations similar to those of the Hartree-Fock SQM methods. Three hybrid DFT methods are found to yield frequencies which were generally higher than the observed fundamental frequencies. When the calculated frequencies were compared with 'experimental' harmonic frequencies however, Becke's three-parameter hybrid method with Lee-Yang-Parr correlation functional is found to be slightly more accurate, especially for C-H stretching modes. The results indicate that BLYP calculation is a very promising approach for understanding the observed spectral features.
425

Effect of Copper Deficiency on the Plasma Clearance of Native and Acetylated Human Low Density Lipoproteins

Koo, Sung I., Lee, Christine C., Stone, William L., Scott, Robert L. 01 January 1992 (has links)
The rates of plasma clearance of human native low density lipoproteins (LDL) and acetylated human low density lipoproteins (acetyl-LDL) were compared between copper-deficient (CuD) and copper-adequate (CuA) rats. Purified human LDL (d 1.02-1.063) were labeled with 125I and injected to fasted recipient rats intravenously. At different time intervals plasma clearance of 125I radioactivity was measured. The percent of clearance was calculated based on the total plasma volume, as determined by a radioisotopic dilution method. Native human 125I-LDL were cleared at a faster rate in CuD, compared with CuA rats. The half-times (t 1 2) of 125I-LDL clearance are 4.90 ± 0.20 and 5.80 ± 0.30 hours in CuD and CuA rats, respectively. The plasma trichloroacetic acid-soluble 125I-radioactivity was significantly and steadily increased in CuD rats at each interval, reflecting the faster clearance and degradation of LDL in those rats. The plasma removal of 125I-acetyl-LDL was faster compared with that of 125I-LDL. The half-times (t 1 2) of acetyl-LDL in CuD and CuA rats are 5.20 ± 0.06 and 5.16 ± 0.08 minutes, respectively, with no significant difference between the groups. The data indicates that the uptake of LDL via the "scavenger" receptor remains unaffected in copper-deficient rats. The faster removal of the unmodified (native) LDL in CuD group suggests that the apoB,E receptor is up-regulated in copper-deficient rats and that the hypercholesterolemia observed in copper deficiency is not associated with the defective uptake of LDL by the apoB,E-receptor dependent mechanism.
426

Prevalence of Abnormal Bone Density of Pediatric Patients Prior to Blood or Marrow Transplant

Klopfenstein, Kathryn J., Clayton, Julie, Rosselet, Robin, Kerlin, Bryce, Termuhlen, Amanda, Gross, Thomas 01 October 2009 (has links)
Osteoporosis and osteopenia are long-term side effects of bone marrow transplant (BMT). The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of bone mineral density (BMD) abnormalities in pediatric patients prior to BMT. Forty-four pediatric patients were evaluated with DEXA scans. The average Z-score was -0.37. Thirty-six percent had abnormal BMD. Sixty-seven percent of ALL patients had abnormal BMD. Patients with non-malignant diseases were significantly more likely to have abnormal BMD. Patients with ALL had more defects than solid tumor patients. Females had more defects than males. These results demonstrate BMD defects are common in children prior to BMT, especially in patients with ALL.
427

Exercise and bone mass in mature premenopausal women

Micklesfield, Lisa Kim January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
428

The Effects of Prey Vulnerability, Density, and Patch Replenishment in an Operant Analogue of Foraging

DeWulf, Michael James 01 May 1988 (has links)
Foraging behavior has recently become a popular area of research with which ethologists, behavioral ecologists, and experimental psychologists converge their traditionally separate disciplines into a more multidisciplinary framework. Ethologists and behavioral ecologists usually study foraging as it occurs in the natural environment or the "field," while experimental psychologists contrive laboratory simulations of foraging and make the assumption, sometimes incorrectly, that generalization occurs across settings, situations, and species. Scientific advances are now beginning to occur in the ability of laboratory researchers to better simulate foraging as it occurs in the field. Field researchers are also becoming more willing to accept these findings as important. The purpose of this dissertation was to use a laboratory analogue of foraging behavior to examine the effects of prey vulnerability, density, and prey-patch replenishment on the number of prey rejections and switches between patches. This analogue may have more biological validity than previous simulations in the operant laboratory by simulating conditions of replenishing and depleting patches under adjusting (progressive and regressive) random-ratio schedules of reinforcement. Three experiments were conducted. The first examined the effects of response-cost on acceptability of prey items offered. Results indicated that as the cost of obtaining one prey item increased while the cost of another was held constant, subjects consistently pursued the lower-cost prey and rejected higher-cost prey at increasing probability ratios of 1:3, 1:10, and 1:15. The second experiment covaried response cost (vulnerability) with the probability of encounter (density) for two prey types and evaluated their effects on the acceptability of prey. This experiment showed that when the density of the low-cost prey increased (p = .66), the subjects were more selective. Subjects were less selective when the density of the low-cost prey decreased (p = .33). In the third experiment, prey patches were replenished at reinforcer-determined (regressive random ratio) baseline rates and compared to several fixed-time schedules of patch replenishment. Results of Experiment III indicated no major differences in patch use behaviors (number of switches between patches). The validity and utility of this simulation was discussed as a useful model for the experimental analysis of foraging behavior.
429

The Development and Evaluation of a Nutrient Density Based Nutrition Education Program for Elementary Schools

Brown, Guendoline 01 May 1977 (has links)
A behavioral objective based nutrition education program for kindergarten through sixth grade which allowed nutrition education to be integrated into existing classroom programs was developed and evaluated. A nutrient density approach served as the conceptual framework for the program. Nutrient density evaluates the nutrient content of a food in relationship to the caloric content. Materials for student use, teacher use and teacher training were developed. The program was evaluated in 27 classrooms in nine public elementary schools in Utah and Idaho with 806 student participants. Pre-and post tests as well as classroom evaluations were conducted. Students, teachers and parents indicated that positive cognitive, attitudinal and behavioral effects resulted from the program.
430

Adaptive Density Estimation Based on the Mode Existence Test

Jawhar, Nizar Sami 01 May 1996 (has links)
The kernel persists as the most useful tool for density estimation. Although, in general, fixed kernel estimates have proven superior to results of available variable kernel estimators, Minnotte's mode tree and mode existence test give us newfound hope of producing a useful adaptive kernel estimator that triumphs when the fixed kernel methods fail. It improves on the fixed kernel in multimodal distributions where the size of modes is unequal, and where the degree of separation of modes varies. When these latter conditions exist, they present a serious challenge to the best of fixed kernel density estimators. Capitalizing on the work of Minnotte in detecting multimodality adaptively, we found it possible to determine the bandwidth h adaptively in a most original fashion and to estimate the mixture normals adaptively, using the normal kernel with encouraging results.

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