942 resultados para Low-resolution Force Field
Resumo:
We present a method for characterizing microscopic optical force fields. Two dimensional vector force maps are generated by measuring the optical force applied to a probe particle for a grid of particle positions. The method is used to map Out the force field created by the beam from a lensed fiber inside a liquid filled microdevice. We find transverse gradient forces and axial scattering forces on the order of 2 pN per 10 mW laser power which are constant over a considerable axial range (> 35 mu m). These findings suggest Future useful applications of lensed fibers for particle guiding/sorting. The propulsion of a small particle at a constant velocity of 200 mu m s(-1) is shown.
Resumo:
In this paper, we demonstrate a digital signal processing (DSP) algorithm for improving spatial resolution of images captured by CMOS cameras. The basic approach is to reconstruct a high resolution (HR) image from a shift-related low resolution (LR) image sequence. The aliasing relationship of Fourier transforms between discrete and continuous images in the frequency domain is used for mapping LR images to a HR image. The method of projection onto convex sets (POCS) is applied to trace the best estimate of pixel matching from the LR images to the reconstructed HR image. Computer simulations and preliminary experimental results have shown that the algorithm works effectively on the application of post-image-captured processing for CMOS cameras. It can also be applied to HR digital image reconstruction, where shift information of the LR image sequence is known.
Resumo:
This paper describes a novel algorithm for tracking the motion of the urethra from trans-perineal ultrasound. Our work is based on the structure-from-motion paradigm and therefore handles well structures with ill-defined and partially missing boundaries. The proposed approach is particularly well-suited for video sequences of low resolution and variable levels of blurriness introduced by anatomical motion of variable speed. Our tracking method identifies feature points on a frame by frame basis using the SURF detector/descriptor. Inter-frame correspondence is achieved using nearest-neighbor matching in the feature space. The motion is estimated using a non-linear bi-quadratic model, which adequately describes the deformable motion of the urethra. Experimental results are promising and show that our algorithm performs well when compared to manual tracking.
Resumo:
This paper describes a novel algorithm for tracking the motion of the urethra from trans-perineal ultrasound. Our work is based on the structure-from-motion paradigm and therefore handles well structures with ill-defined and partially missing boundaries. The proposed approach is particularly well-suited for video sequences of low resolution and variable levels of blurriness introduced by anatomical motion of variable speed. Our tracking method identifies feature points on a frame by frame basis using the SURF detector/descriptor. Inter-frame correspondence is achieved using nearest-neighbor matching in the feature space. The motion is estimated using a non-linear bi-quadratic model, which adequately describes the deformable motion of the urethra. Experimental results are promising and show that our algorithm performs well when compared to manual tracking.
Resumo:
Le simulazioni atomiche dei canali ionici del K+ mettono in evidenza una significativa inaccuratezza: i valori di conduttanza del canale stimati sono molto distanti dai valori sperimentali. Per tentare di migliorare le simulazioni e i loro risultati, è necessario modificare il modello di Force Field impiegato. Si è scelto di adottare il modello di Force Field AMBER, uno dei più utilizzati per simulazioni di molecole biologiche in dinamica molecolare, e di agire sui valori dei parametri di Lennard-Jones cercando un set di valori che permetta di minimizzare la distanza tra la conduttanza stimata e la conduttanza sperimentale delle soluzioni saline. L’analisi ha dimostrato che non è possibile riprodurre in modo quantitativo i valori sperimentali di conduttanza di soluzioni saline di Na+ e K+ in simulazioni atomiche basate su un modello di Force Field additivo.
Resumo:
This thesis work is devoted to the conceptual and technical development of the Adaptive Resolution Scheme (AdResS), a molecular dynamics method that allows the simulation of a system with different levels of resolution simultaneously. The simulation domain is divided into high and low resolution zones and a transition region that links them, through which molecules can freely diffuse.rnThe first issue of this work regards the thermodynamic consistency of the method, which is tested and verified in a model liquid of tetrahedral molecules. The results allow the introduction of the concept of the Thermodynamic Force, an external field able to correct spurious density fluctuations present in the transition region in usual AdResS simulations.rnThe AdResS is also applied to a system where two different representations with the same degree of resolution are confronted. This simple test extends the method from an Adaptive Resolution Scheme to an Adaptive Representation Scheme, providing a way of coupling different force fields based on thermodynamic consistency arguments. The Thermodynamic Force is successfully applied to the example described in this work as well.rnAn alternative approach of deducing the Thermodynamic Force from pressure consistency considerations allows the interpretation of AdResS as a first step towards a molecular dynamics simulation in the Grand Canonical ensemble. Additionally, such a definition leads to a practical way of determining the Thermodynamic Force, tested in the well studied tetrahedral liquid. The effects of AdResS and this correction on the atomistic domain are analyzed by inspecting the local distribution of velocities, radial distribution functions, pressure and particle number fluctuation. Their comparison with analogous results coming from purely atomistic simulations shows good agreement, which is greatly improved under the effect of the external field.rnA further step in the development of AdResS, necessary for several applications in biophysics and material science, consists of its application to multicomponent systems. To this aim, the high-resolution representation of a model binary mixture is confronted with its coarse-grained representation systematically parametrized. The Thermodynamic Force, whose development requires a more delicate treatment, also gives satisfactory results.rnFinally, AdResS is tested in systems including two-body bonded forces, through the simulation of a model polymer allowed to adaptively change its representation. It is shown that the distribution functions that characterize the polymer structure are in practice not affected by the change of resolution.rnThe technical details of the implementation of AdResS in the ESPResSo package conclude this thesis work.
Resumo:
Intraoral devices for bite-force sensing have several applications in odontology and maxillofacial surgery, as bite-force measurements provide additional information to help understand the characteristics of bruxism disorders and can also be of help for the evaluation of post-surgical evolution and for comparison of alternative treatments. A new system for measuring human bite forces is proposed in this work. This system has future applications for the monitoring of bruxism events and as a complement for its conventional diagnosis. Bruxism is a pathology consisting of grinding or tight clenching of the upper and lower teeth, which leads to several problems such as lesions to the teeth, headaches, orofacial pain and important disorders of the temporomandibular joint. The prototype uses a magnetic field communication scheme similar to low-frequency radio frequency identification (RFID) technology (NFC). The reader generates a low-frequency magnetic field that is used as the information carrier and powers the sensor. The system is notable because it uses an intra-mouth passive sensor and an external interrogator, which remotely records and processes information regarding a patient?s dental activity. This permits a quantitative assessment of bite-force, without requiring intra-mouth batteries, and can provide supplementary information to polysomnographic recordings, current most adequate early diagnostic method, so as to initiate corrective actions before irreversible dental wear appears. In addition to describing the system?s operational principles and the manufacture of personalized prototypes, this report will also demonstrate the feasibility of the system and results from the first in vitro and in vivo trials.
Resumo:
Recent experiments using electrical and N-methyl-d-aspartate microstimulation of the spinal cord gray matter and cutaneous stimulation of the hindlimb of spinalized frogs have provided evidence for a modular organization of the frog’s spinal cord circuitry. A “module” is a functional unit in the spinal cord circuitry that generates a specific motor output by imposing a specific pattern of muscle activation. The output of a module can be characterized as a force field: the collection of the isometric forces generated at the ankle over different locations in the leg’s workspace. Different modules can be combined independently so that their force fields linearly sum. The goal of this study was to ascertain whether the force fields generated by the activation of supraspinal structures could result from combinations of a small number of modules. We recorded a set of force fields generated by the electrical stimulation of the vestibular nerve in seven frogs, and we performed a principal component analysis to study the dimensionality of this set. We found that 94% of the total variation of the data is explained by the first five principal components, a result that indicates that the dimensionality of the set of fields evoked by vestibular stimulation is low. This result is compatible with the hypothesis that vestibular fields are generated by combinations of a small number of spinal modules.