968 resultados para Time-space evolution
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Desde o começo da ocupação humana no litoral centro-sul de Santa Catarina, Brasil, a articulação entre processos naturais e antrópicos modelou uma paisagem fortemente domesticada, marcada pela construção massiva de concheiros de dimensões monumentais e pela permanência milenar. Na planície costeira entre Passagem da Barra (município de Laguna) e lago Figueirinha (município de Jaguaruna), 76 sambaquis foram mapeados, dos quais 48 possuem datação. O levantamento sistemático de sítios e datações permitiu identificar padrões de distribuição espacial nos sambaquis da região, quanto a contexto sedimentar da época de construção, estratigrafia e idade. Desse modo, reconheceram-se nos sítios da região: cinco contextos geológico-geomorfológicos de localização; três padrões estratigráficos; e quatro fases de ocupação sambaquieira baseadas na quantidade de sítios e no tipo de padrão construtivo dominante. O modelo integrado de evolução sedimentar e distribuição tempo-espacial de sambaquis indica que estes sítios eram construídos em áreas já emersas e pouco alagáveis, e que sítios interiores, afastados dos corpos lagunares, podem não se ter preservado ou não estarem expostos devido ao processo de assoreamento contínuo que caracterizou a região após a máxima transgressão holocênica. O cruzamento de dados aqui proposto evidencia a importância de abordagens integradas entre arqueologia e geociências no estudo da evolução das paisagens.
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This article presents Monte Carlo techniques for estimating network reliability. For highly reliable networks, techniques based on graph evolution models provide very good performance. However, they are known to have significant simulation cost. An existing hybrid scheme (based on partitioning the time space) is available to speed up the simulations; however, there are difficulties with optimizing the important parameter associated with this scheme. To overcome these difficulties, a new hybrid scheme (based on partitioning the edge set) is proposed in this article. The proposed scheme shows orders of magnitude improvement of performance over the existing techniques in certain classes of network. It also provides reliability bounds with little overhead.
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Inbreeding depression is one of the main forces opposing the evolution of self-fertilization. Of central importance is the hypothesis that inbreeding depression and selfing coevolve antagonistically, generating either low selfing rate and high inbreeding depression or vice versa. However, there is limited evidence for this coevolution within species. We investigated this topic in the hermaphroditic snail Physa acuta. In this species, isolated individuals delay the onset of egg laying compared to individuals having access to mates. Longer delays (''waiting times'') indicate more intense selfing avoidance. We measured inbreeding depression and waiting time in a large quantitative-genetic experiment (281 outbred families derived from 26 natural populations). We observed large genetic variance for both traits and a strong positive genetic covariance between them, most of which resided within rather than among populations. It means that, within populations, individuals with higher mutation load avoided selfing more strongly on average. This genetic covariance may result from pleiotropy and/or linkage disequilibrium. Whatever its genetic architecture, the fact it emerges specifically when individuals are deprived of mates suggests it is not fortuitous and rather reflects the action of natural selection. We conclude that a diversity of mating strategies can arise within populations subjected to variation in inbreeding depression.
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Bimodal dispersal probability distributions with characteristic distances differing by several orders of magnitude have been derived and favorably compared to observations by Nathan [Nature (London) 418, 409 (2002)]. For such bimodal kernels, we show that two-dimensional molecular dynamics computer simulations are unable to yield accurate front speeds. Analytically, the usual continuous-space random walks (CSRWs) are applied to two dimensions. We also introduce discrete-space random walks and use them to check the CSRW results (because of the inefficiency of the numerical simulations). The physical results reported are shown to predict front speeds high enough to possibly explain Reid's paradox of rapid tree migration. We also show that, for a time-ordered evolution equation, fronts are always slower in two dimensions than in one dimension and that this difference is important both for unimodal and for bimodal kernels
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To evaluate the clinical evolution of sacral stress fractures in relation to the scintigraphic pattern and the presence of additional pelvic fractures. METHODS--This was a retrospective study of 14 patients with sacral fractures. RESULTS--Six patients had additional pelvic fractures. Four bone scintigraphic patterns were found. The resolution of symptoms was longer in patients with associated pelvic fractures (30 weeks v three weeks). No relation was found between the bone scintigraphic pattern and the time of evolution. CONCLUSION--Associated pelvic fractures delay the resolution of symptoms in patients with sacral fractures, regardless of scintigraphic pattern.
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To evaluate the clinical evolution of sacral stress fractures in relation to the scintigraphic pattern and the presence of additional pelvic fractures. METHODS--This was a retrospective study of 14 patients with sacral fractures. RESULTS--Six patients had additional pelvic fractures. Four bone scintigraphic patterns were found. The resolution of symptoms was longer in patients with associated pelvic fractures (30 weeks v three weeks). No relation was found between the bone scintigraphic pattern and the time of evolution. CONCLUSION--Associated pelvic fractures delay the resolution of symptoms in patients with sacral fractures, regardless of scintigraphic pattern.
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Les logiciels sont de plus en plus complexes et leur développement est souvent fait par des équipes dispersées et changeantes. Par ailleurs, de nos jours, la majorité des logiciels sont recyclés au lieu d’être développés à partir de zéro. La tâche de compréhension, inhérente aux tâches de maintenance, consiste à analyser plusieurs dimensions du logiciel en parallèle. La dimension temps intervient à deux niveaux dans le logiciel : il change durant son évolution et durant son exécution. Ces changements prennent un sens particulier quand ils sont analysés avec d’autres dimensions du logiciel. L’analyse de données multidimensionnelles est un problème difficile à résoudre. Cependant, certaines méthodes permettent de contourner cette difficulté. Ainsi, les approches semi-automatiques, comme la visualisation du logiciel, permettent à l’usager d’intervenir durant l’analyse pour explorer et guider la recherche d’informations. Dans une première étape de la thèse, nous appliquons des techniques de visualisation pour mieux comprendre la dynamique des logiciels pendant l’évolution et l’exécution. Les changements dans le temps sont représentés par des heat maps. Ainsi, nous utilisons la même représentation graphique pour visualiser les changements pendant l’évolution et ceux pendant l’exécution. Une autre catégorie d’approches, qui permettent de comprendre certains aspects dynamiques du logiciel, concerne l’utilisation d’heuristiques. Dans une seconde étape de la thèse, nous nous intéressons à l’identification des phases pendant l’évolution ou pendant l’exécution en utilisant la même approche. Dans ce contexte, la prémisse est qu’il existe une cohérence inhérente dans les évènements, qui permet d’isoler des sous-ensembles comme des phases. Cette hypothèse de cohérence est ensuite définie spécifiquement pour les évènements de changements de code (évolution) ou de changements d’état (exécution). L’objectif de la thèse est d’étudier l’unification de ces deux dimensions du temps que sont l’évolution et l’exécution. Ceci s’inscrit dans notre volonté de rapprocher les deux domaines de recherche qui s’intéressent à une même catégorie de problèmes, mais selon deux perspectives différentes.
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In genannter Schrift soll versucht werden, einen aus der Kantschen und Fichteschen Erkenntnistheorie erfolgenden allgemeinen Zusammenhang herzustellen zwischen dem kategorialen Denken hinsichtlich Denken und Anschauen und dem Problem von Raum und Zeit, wie es sich mit der Entwicklung der modernen Physik durch die Relativitäts- und Quantentheorie deutlich aufdrängt. Es wird gezeigt, dass F.W.J. Schelling grundlegende Lösungsansätze hierzu bereitstellt, welche auf dem Gebiet der Logik, der Epistomologie und Naturphilosophie in der Nachfolge von Kant, Fichte und Spinoza stattfinden, jedoch weit über seine Zeit hinausreichen. Diese Ansätze werden von Schelling selbst unter den Begriff einer „Identität der Identität und Differenz“ gesetzt. In der genannten Dissertation sollen Denkbewegungen dargestellt werden, die eine Anbindung der Schellingschen Naturphilosophie an die sich mit den genannten unterschiedlichen Theorien bzw. deren problematischer Vereinheitlichung beschäftigende Physik zu erreichen versuchen. Der formelle Aufbau der Arbeit gehorcht der inhaltlichen Struktur dieser Anbindungsbemühung, insofern unterstellt wird, dass diese rein nur aus einem dialektischen Denken (sowohl in der Erkenntnistheorie, als auch Naturphilosophie) heraus überhaupt erreicht werden kann. So werden sowohl die Tätigkeiten des Verstandes als die des Anschauens in ihrem Zusammenspiel, wie aber auch die Verstandes- und Anschauungstätigkeiten an sich selbst betrachtet, dialektisch vermittelt dargestellt, was innerhalb der formellen Deduktion der Kantschen Kategorien und der korrespondierenden Anschauungsformen selbst durchgeführt wird. Schellings Intention seines späteren Denkens, die philosophischen Probleme auf die Geschichtlichkeit, die Freiheit und den Erfahrungsbezug des Menschen zu beziehen, wird nicht als Gegenposition zu den frühen Ansätze der Logik und Transzendentalphilosophie gedeutet, sondern selbst als Endpunkt einer dialektischen Entwicklung des Schellingschen Denkens gefasst. Dies ergibt folgenden formellen Aufbau der Arbeit: Zunächst wird in einem einleitenden Abschnitt über die Aufgabe der Philosophie selbst und ihrer Darstellbarkeit im Zusammenhang mit der Hegel-Schelling-Kontroverse gearbeitet, um Schelling als adäquaten Bezugspunkt für unsere moderne Diskussion auf der methodischen und sprachlichen Ebene einzuführen. Im Hauptteil werden die wesentlichen Momente der für Schelling wichtigen Transzendentalphilosophie der Jahrhundertwende dargestellt, um diese dann an den späteren phänomenologisch-epistemologischen Ansätzen zu spiegeln. Von der theoretischen Seite kommend werden die Hauptmomente der praktischen Philosophie Schellings aufgezeigt, um dann den Menschen in einem dritten Schritt Symbol der Ununterschiedenheit von logischen und freien Tätigkeiten bzw. von Leib und Seele zu deuten. Diese Resultate bleiben zunächst einmal liegen, um in dem zweiten Hauptabschnitt auf grundlegende naturphilosophische Voraussetzungen und Resultate derjenigen Physik einzugehen, welche die prinzipiellen Verständnisschwierigkeiten der Physik des frühen 20. Jahrhundert in die heutige kosmologische und atomistische Diskussion mitbringt. Der dritte Hauptabschnitt stellt den Versuch dar, Schellings Naturphilosophie an symptomatische Anschauungen der Physik heranzuführen, um ihn als zeitgenössischen Kritiker einzuführen, wie aber auch als einen, der bestimmte moderne naturwissenschaftliche bzw. physikalische Resultate im Besonderen vorwegzunehmen vermochte. Die Einführung seiner Philosophie in aktuelle naturphilosophische Diskussion wird als unabdingbare Voraussetzung zu einem zukünftigen Verständnis des Natur, des Kosmos´ und des Menschen gefordert.
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Bimodal dispersal probability distributions with characteristic distances differing by several orders of magnitude have been derived and favorably compared to observations by Nathan [Nature (London) 418, 409 (2002)]. For such bimodal kernels, we show that two-dimensional molecular dynamics computer simulations are unable to yield accurate front speeds. Analytically, the usual continuous-space random walks (CSRWs) are applied to two dimensions. We also introduce discrete-space random walks and use them to check the CSRW results (because of the inefficiency of the numerical simulations). The physical results reported are shown to predict front speeds high enough to possibly explain Reid's paradox of rapid tree migration. We also show that, for a time-ordered evolution equation, fronts are always slower in two dimensions than in one dimension and that this difference is important both for unimodal and for bimodal kernels
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This study covers a period when society changed from a pre-industrial agricultural society to a post-industrial service-producing society. Parallel with this social transformation, major population changes took place. In this study, we analyse how local population changes are affected by neighbouring populations. To do so we use the last 200 years of local population change that redistributed population in Sweden. We use literature to identify several different processes and spatial dependencies in the redistribution between a parish and its surrounding parishes. The analysis is based on a unique unchanged historical parish division, and we use an index of local spatial correlation to describe different kinds of spatial dependencies that have influenced the redistribution of the population. To control inherent time dependencies, we introduce a non-separable spatial temporal correlation model into the analysis of population redistribution. Hereby, several different spatial dependencies can be observed simultaneously over time. The main conclusions are that while local population changes have been highly dependent on the neighbouring populations in the 19th century, this spatial dependence have become insignificant already when two parishes is separated by 5 kilometres in the late 20th century. Another conclusion is that the time dependency in the population change is higher when the population redistribution is weak, as it currently is and as it was during the 19th century until the start of industrial revolution.
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A time for a quantum particle to traverse a barrier is obtained for stationary states by setting the local value of a time operator equal to a constant. This time operator, called the tempus operator because it is distinct from the time of evolution, is defined as the operator canonically conjugate to the energy operator. The local value of the tempus operator gives a complex time for a particle to traverse a barrier. The method is applied to a particle with a semiclassical wave function, which gives, in the classical limit, the correct classical traversal time. It is also applied to a quantum particle tunneling through a rectangular barrier. The resulting complex tunneling time is compared with complex tunneling times from other methods.
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Includes bibliography
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Adaptive embedded systems are required in various applications. This work addresses these needs in the area of adaptive image compression in FPGA devices. A simplified version of an evolution strategy is utilized to optimize wavelet filters of a Discrete Wavelet Transform algorithm. We propose an adaptive image compression system in FPGA where optimized memory architecture, parallel processing and optimized task scheduling allow reducing the time of evolution. The proposed solution has been extensively evaluated in terms of the quality of compression as well as the processing time. The proposed architecture reduces the time of evolution by 44% compared to our previous reports while maintaining the quality of compression unchanged with respect to existing implementations. The system is able to find an optimized set of wavelet filters in less than 2 min whenever the input type of data changes.
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2000 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary 26A33; Secondary 35S10, 86A05
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2000 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary 46F25, 26A33; Secondary: 46G20