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Advances in virus research.

9780123850348 (electronic bk.)




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A hierarchical dependent Dirichlet process prior for modelling bird migration patterns in the UK

Alex Diana, Eleni Matechou, Jim Griffin, Alison Johnston.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 473--493.

Abstract:
Environmental changes in recent years have been linked to phenological shifts which in turn are linked to the survival of species. The work in this paper is motivated by capture-recapture data on blackcaps collected by the British Trust for Ornithology as part of the Constant Effort Sites monitoring scheme. Blackcaps overwinter abroad and migrate to the UK annually for breeding purposes. We propose a novel Bayesian nonparametric approach for expressing the bivariate density of individual arrival and departure times at different sites across a number of years as a mixture model. The new model combines the ideas of the hierarchical and the dependent Dirichlet process, allowing the estimation of site-specific weights and year-specific mixture locations, which are modelled as functions of environmental covariates using a multivariate extension of the Gaussian process. The proposed modelling framework is extremely general and can be used in any context where multivariate density estimation is performed jointly across different groups and in the presence of a continuous covariate.




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A hierarchical Bayesian model for predicting ecological interactions using scaled evolutionary relationships

Mohamad Elmasri, Maxwell J. Farrell, T. Jonathan Davies, David A. Stephens.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 221--240.

Abstract:
Identifying undocumented or potential future interactions among species is a challenge facing modern ecologists. Recent link prediction methods rely on trait data; however, large species interaction databases are typically sparse and covariates are limited to only a fraction of species. On the other hand, evolutionary relationships, encoded as phylogenetic trees, can act as proxies for underlying traits and historical patterns of parasite sharing among hosts. We show that, using a network-based conditional model, phylogenetic information provides strong predictive power in a recently published global database of host-parasite interactions. By scaling the phylogeny using an evolutionary model, our method allows for biological interpretation often missing from latent variable models. To further improve on the phylogeny-only model, we combine a hierarchical Bayesian latent score framework for bipartite graphs that accounts for the number of interactions per species with host dependence informed by phylogeny. Combining the two information sources yields significant improvement in predictive accuracy over each of the submodels alone. As many interaction networks are constructed from presence-only data, we extend the model by integrating a correction mechanism for missing interactions which proves valuable in reducing uncertainty in unobserved interactions.




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Hierarchical infinite factor models for improving the prediction of surgical complications for geriatric patients

Elizabeth Lorenzi, Ricardo Henao, Katherine Heller.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2637--2661.

Abstract:
Nearly a third of all surgeries performed in the United States occur for patients over the age of 65; these older adults experience a higher rate of postoperative morbidity and mortality. To improve the care for these patients, we aim to identify and characterize high risk geriatric patients to send to a specialized perioperative clinic while leveraging the overall surgical population to improve learning. To this end, we develop a hierarchical infinite latent factor model (HIFM) to appropriately account for the covariance structure across subpopulations in data. We propose a novel Hierarchical Dirichlet Process shrinkage prior on the loadings matrix that flexibly captures the underlying structure of our data while sharing information across subpopulations to improve inference and prediction. The stick-breaking construction of the prior assumes an infinite number of factors and allows for each subpopulation to utilize different subsets of the factor space and select the number of factors needed to best explain the variation. We develop the model into a latent factor regression method that excels at prediction and inference of regression coefficients. Simulations validate this strong performance compared to baseline methods. We apply this work to the problem of predicting surgical complications using electronic health record data for geriatric patients and all surgical patients at Duke University Health System (DUHS). The motivating application demonstrates the improved predictive performance when using HIFM in both area under the ROC curve and area under the PR Curve while providing interpretable coefficients that may lead to actionable interventions.




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Bayesian indicator variable selection to incorporate hierarchical overlapping group structure in multi-omics applications

Li Zhu, Zhiguang Huo, Tianzhou Ma, Steffi Oesterreich, George C. Tseng.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2611--2636.

Abstract:
Variable selection is a pervasive problem in modern high-dimensional data analysis where the number of features often exceeds the sample size (a.k.a. small-n-large-p problem). Incorporation of group structure knowledge to improve variable selection has been widely studied. Here, we consider prior knowledge of a hierarchical overlapping group structure to improve variable selection in regression setting. In genomics applications, for instance, a biological pathway contains tens to hundreds of genes and a gene can be mapped to multiple experimentally measured features (such as its mRNA expression, copy number variation and methylation levels of possibly multiple sites). In addition to the hierarchical structure, the groups at the same level may overlap (e.g., two pathways can share common genes). Incorporating such hierarchical overlapping groups in traditional penalized regression setting remains a difficult optimization problem. Alternatively, we propose a Bayesian indicator model that can elegantly serve the purpose. We evaluate the model in simulations and two breast cancer examples, and demonstrate its superior performance over existing models. The result not only enhances prediction accuracy but also improves variable selection and model interpretation that lead to deeper biological insight of the disease.




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A hierarchical curve-based approach to the analysis of manifold data

Liberty Vittert, Adrian W. Bowman, Stanislav Katina.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2539--2563.

Abstract:
One of the data structures generated by medical imaging technology is high resolution point clouds representing anatomical surfaces. Stereophotogrammetry and laser scanning are two widely available sources of this kind of data. A standardised surface representation is required to provide a meaningful correspondence across different images as a basis for statistical analysis. Point locations with anatomical definitions, referred to as landmarks, have been the traditional approach. Landmarks can also be taken as the starting point for more general surface representations, often using templates which are warped on to an observed surface by matching landmark positions and subsequent local adjustment of the surface. The aim of the present paper is to provide a new approach which places anatomical curves at the heart of the surface representation and its analysis. Curves provide intermediate structures which capture the principal features of the manifold (surface) of interest through its ridges and valleys. As landmarks are often available these are used as anchoring points, but surface curvature information is the principal guide in estimating the curve locations. The surface patches between these curves are relatively flat and can be represented in a standardised manner by appropriate surface transects to give a complete surface model. This new approach does not require the use of a template, reference sample or any external information to guide the method and, when compared with a surface based approach, the estimation of curves is shown to have improved performance. In addition, examples involving applications to mussel shells and human faces show that the analysis of curve information can deliver more targeted and effective insight than the use of full surface information.




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Fitting a deeply nested hierarchical model to a large book review dataset using a moment-based estimator

Ningshan Zhang, Kyle Schmaus, Patrick O. Perry.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2260--2288.

Abstract:
We consider a particular instance of a common problem in recommender systems, using a database of book reviews to inform user-targeted recommendations. In our dataset, books are categorized into genres and subgenres. To exploit this nested taxonomy, we use a hierarchical model that enables information pooling across across similar items at many levels within the genre hierarchy. The main challenge in deploying this model is computational. The data sizes are large and fitting the model at scale using off-the-shelf maximum likelihood procedures is prohibitive. To get around this computational bottleneck, we extend a moment-based fitting procedure proposed for fitting single-level hierarchical models to the general case of arbitrarily deep hierarchies. This extension is an order of magnitude faster than standard maximum likelihood procedures. The fitting method can be deployed beyond recommender systems to general contexts with deeply nested hierarchical generalized linear mixed models.




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A hierarchical Bayesian model for single-cell clustering using RNA-sequencing data

Yiyi Liu, Joshua L. Warren, Hongyu Zhao.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 3, 1733--1752.

Abstract:
Understanding the heterogeneity of cells is an important biological question. The development of single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) technology provides high resolution data for such inquiry. A key challenge in scRNA-seq analysis is the high variability of measured RNA expression levels and frequent dropouts (missing values) due to limited input RNA compared to bulk RNA-seq measurement. Existing clustering methods do not perform well for these noisy and zero-inflated scRNA-seq data. In this manuscript we propose a Bayesian hierarchical model, called BasClu, to appropriately characterize important features of scRNA-seq data in order to more accurately cluster cells. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method with extensive simulation studies and applications to three real scRNA-seq datasets.




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RCRnorm: An integrated system of random-coefficient hierarchical regression models for normalizing NanoString nCounter data

Gaoxiang Jia, Xinlei Wang, Qiwei Li, Wei Lu, Ximing Tang, Ignacio Wistuba, Yang Xie.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 3, 1617--1647.

Abstract:
Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples have great potential for biomarker discovery, retrospective studies and diagnosis or prognosis of diseases. Their application, however, is hindered by the unsatisfactory performance of traditional gene expression profiling techniques on damaged RNAs. NanoString nCounter platform is well suited for profiling of FFPE samples and measures gene expression with high sensitivity which may greatly facilitate realization of scientific and clinical values of FFPE samples. However, methodological development for normalization, a critical step when analyzing this type of data, is far behind. Existing methods designed for the platform use information from different types of internal controls separately and rely on an overly-simplified assumption that expression of housekeeping genes is constant across samples for global scaling. Thus, these methods are not optimized for the nCounter system, not mentioning that they were not developed for FFPE samples. We construct an integrated system of random-coefficient hierarchical regression models to capture main patterns and characteristics observed from NanoString data of FFPE samples and develop a Bayesian approach to estimate parameters and normalize gene expression across samples. Our method, labeled RCRnorm, incorporates information from all aspects of the experimental design and simultaneously removes biases from various sources. It eliminates the unrealistic assumption on housekeeping genes and offers great interpretability. Furthermore, it is applicable to freshly frozen or like samples that can be generally viewed as a reduced case of FFPE samples. Simulation and applications showed the superior performance of RCRnorm.




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The Klemm family : descendants of Johann Gottfried Klemm and Anna Louise Klemm : these forebears are honoured and remembered at a reunion at Gruenberg, Moculta 11th-12th March 1995.

Klemm (Family)




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GEDmatch : tools for DNA & genealogy research / by Kerry Farmer.

Genetic genealogy -- Handbooks, manuals, etc.




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Item 13: Swallow 1767, A journal of the proceedings on Board His Majesty's Sloop Swallow, commencing the 1st of March 1767 and Ended the 7th of July 1767




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Smart research for HSC students: Better searching with online resources

In this online session, we simplify searching for you so that the skills you need in one resource will work wherever you are.




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Smart research for HSC students: Citing your work and avoiding plagiarism

This session brings together the key resources for HSC subjects, including those that are useful for studying Advanced and Extension courses.




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Smart research for HSC students: Essential Library resources for your research and study

This session brings together the key resources for HSC subjects, including those that are useful for studying Advanced and Extension courses.




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Anarchy in Venezuela's jails laid bare by massacre over food

Three weeks before he was shot dead, Miguel Calderon, an inmate in the lawless Los Llanos jail on Venezuela's central plains, sent a voice message to his father. Like many of the prisoners in Venezuela's overcrowded and violent penitentiaries, Los Llanos's 4,000 inmates normally subsist on food relatives bring them. The guards, desperate themselves amid national shortages, began stealing the little food getting behind bars, inmates said, forcing some prisoners to turn to eating stray animals.





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High-Dimensional Posterior Consistency for Hierarchical Non-Local Priors in Regression

Xuan Cao, Kshitij Khare, Malay Ghosh.

Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 15, Number 1, 241--262.

Abstract:
The choice of tuning parameters in Bayesian variable selection is a critical problem in modern statistics. In particular, for Bayesian linear regression with non-local priors, the scale parameter in the non-local prior density is an important tuning parameter which reflects the dispersion of the non-local prior density around zero, and implicitly determines the size of the regression coefficients that will be shrunk to zero. Current approaches treat the scale parameter as given, and suggest choices based on prior coverage/asymptotic considerations. In this paper, we consider the fully Bayesian approach introduced in (Wu, 2016) with the pMOM non-local prior and an appropriate Inverse-Gamma prior on the tuning parameter to analyze the underlying theoretical property. Under standard regularity assumptions, we establish strong model selection consistency in a high-dimensional setting, where $p$ is allowed to increase at a polynomial rate with $n$ or even at a sub-exponential rate with $n$ . Through simulation studies, we demonstrate that our model selection procedure can outperform other Bayesian methods which treat the scale parameter as given, and commonly used penalized likelihood methods, in a range of simulation settings.




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Hierarchical Normalized Completely Random Measures for Robust Graphical Modeling

Andrea Cremaschi, Raffaele Argiento, Katherine Shoemaker, Christine Peterson, Marina Vannucci.

Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 4, 1271--1301.

Abstract:
Gaussian graphical models are useful tools for exploring network structures in multivariate normal data. In this paper we are interested in situations where data show departures from Gaussianity, therefore requiring alternative modeling distributions. The multivariate $t$ -distribution, obtained by dividing each component of the data vector by a gamma random variable, is a straightforward generalization to accommodate deviations from normality such as heavy tails. Since different groups of variables may be contaminated to a different extent, Finegold and Drton (2014) introduced the Dirichlet $t$ -distribution, where the divisors are clustered using a Dirichlet process. In this work, we consider a more general class of nonparametric distributions as the prior on the divisor terms, namely the class of normalized completely random measures (NormCRMs). To improve the effectiveness of the clustering, we propose modeling the dependence among the divisors through a nonparametric hierarchical structure, which allows for the sharing of parameters across the samples in the data set. This desirable feature enables us to cluster together different components of multivariate data in a parsimonious way. We demonstrate through simulations that this approach provides accurate graphical model inference, and apply it to a case study examining the dependence structure in radiomics data derived from The Cancer Imaging Atlas.




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Modeling Population Structure Under Hierarchical Dirichlet Processes

Lloyd T. Elliott, Maria De Iorio, Stefano Favaro, Kaustubh Adhikari, Yee Whye Teh.

Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 2, 313--339.

Abstract:
We propose a Bayesian nonparametric model to infer population admixture, extending the hierarchical Dirichlet process to allow for correlation between loci due to linkage disequilibrium. Given multilocus genotype data from a sample of individuals, the proposed model allows inferring and classifying individuals as unadmixed or admixed, inferring the number of subpopulations ancestral to an admixed population and the population of origin of chromosomal regions. Our model does not assume any specific mutation process, and can be applied to most of the commonly used genetic markers. We present a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm to perform posterior inference from the model and we discuss some methods to summarize the MCMC output for the analysis of population admixture. Finally, we demonstrate the performance of the proposed model in a real application, using genetic data from the ectodysplasin-A receptor (EDAR) gene, which is considered to be ancestry-informative due to well-known variations in allele frequency as well as phenotypic effects across ancestry. The structure analysis of this dataset leads to the identification of a rare haplotype in Europeans. We also conduct a simulated experiment and show that our algorithm outperforms parametric methods.




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Rapport trimestriel BRI, mars 2018 - La volatilité revient sur le devant de la scène après les tensions sur les marchés d'actions

French translation of the BIS press release about the BIS Quarterly Review, March 2018




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Questions fréquemment posées sur les exigences de fonds propres en regard du risque de marché

French translation of "Frequently asked questions on market risk capital requirements" by the Basel Committee, March 2018.




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Les divergences s'accroissent sur les marchés : Rapport trimestriel de la BRI

French translation of the BIS press release about the BIS Quarterly Review, September 2018




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Le Rapport trimestriel de la BRI analyse le repli et le rebond des marchés

French translation of the BIS press release about the BIS Quarterly Review, March 2019




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Ha llegado la hora de poner en marcha todos los motores

Spanish translation of the speech by Mr Agustín Carstens, General Manager of the BIS, on the occasion of the Bank's Annual General Meeting, Basel, 30 June 2019.




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Ha llegado la hora de poner en marcha todos los motores, afirma el BPI en su Informe Económico Anual

Spanish translation of the BIS press release on the presentation of the Annual Economic Report 2019, 30 June 2019.





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Engineering researcher’s non-invasive aid to monitoring pressure in the skull wins gold medal




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Academy welcomes budget announcements on infrastructure and research




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EndeavourOS 2020: Possibly the Best Arch Linux Option

EndeavourOS is a rolling release Arch Linux-based distribution with some handy new features that improve the user experience. This latest version comes with graphical install options and preconfigured desktop environments. Several new in-house utilities improve package management and error reporting. There are lots of installation tips with the Calamares installer, which has a new look and feel.




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Architect Robert A.M. Stern: Presence of the Past




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BIS Quarterly Review, March 2020 - media remarks

On-the-record remarks of the March 2020 Quarterly Review media briefing by Mr Claudio Borio, Head of the Monetary and Economic Department, and Mr Hyun Song Shin, Economic Adviser and Head of Research, 28 February 2020.




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UPDATE: the Farmers' Market has been postponed for Friday 6 March and until further notice.

The Farmers’ Market has been postponed for Friday 6 March and until further notice.




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FE Archive Volume 11, Number 13




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U.K. Storms Unearth Bones From Historic Scottish Cemetery—and Archaeologists Are Worried

The burial site, which contains remains from both the Picts and the Norse, is at risk of disappearing due to coastal erosion




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In a First, Researchers Record Penguins Vocalizing Under Water

But the scientists still aren’t sure what the birds are saying




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Your Butterfly Photos Could Help Monarch Conservation

As monarchs leave their winter hideaways, conservationists are seeking assistance in studying their migration routes




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Community-Researcher Collaboration Reveals Ancient Maya Capital in Backyard

A recent excavation located the first physical evidence of the capital of the Maya kingdom of Sak Tz'i', founded in 750 B.C.




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Archaeologists Unearth Remnants of Kitchen Behind Oldest House Still Standing in Maui

The missionary who lived in the house during the mid-1800s delivered vaccinations to locals during a smallpox epidemic




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COVID-19 Could Threaten Great Ape Populations, Researchers Warn

No SARS-CoV-2 infections have yet been detected in our closest living relatives. But there is precedent for viruses jumping from people to other great apes




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Archaeologists in Leeds Unearth 600 Lead-Spiked, 19th-Century Beer Bottles

The liquid inside is 3 percent alcohol by volume—and contains 0.13 milligrams of lead per liter




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Researcher Identifies the Last Known Survivor of the Transatlantic Slave Trade

Matilda McCrear was just 2 when she was captured and brought to Alabama on the "Clotilda"




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Archaeologists Reveal the Hidden Horrors of Only Nazi SS Camp on British Soil

New research details the first forensic investigation of the Sylt concentration camp, located on the Channel Island of Alderney, since the end of WWII




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New Tool for Biomedical Research Was Invented in Ancient Egypt

The bright blue pigment that adorns the Bust of Nefertiti’s crown can now be used to study molecular biology




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The Fallout of a Medieval Archbishop's Murder Is Recorded in Alpine Ice

Traces of lead pollution frozen in a glacier confirm that British lead production waned just before the death of Thomas Becket




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Researchers Find Two Fornicating Flies Enshrined in 41-Million-Year-Old Amber

A treasure trove of new fossils unearthed in Australia reveals some raunchily-positioned bugs




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Archaeologists Discover Paintings of Goddess in 3,000-Year-Old Mummy's Coffin

Researchers lifted the ancient Egyptian mummy out of her coffin for the first time in 100 years and, to their surprise, uncovered the ancient artworks




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Researchers Calculated a Whale Shark’s Age Based on Cold War-Era Bomb Tests

Nuclear bomb tests caused a spike in a radioactive form of carbon that accumulated in living things




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Hand-Reared Monarch Butterflies Are Weaker Than Their Wild Cousins

In the wild, only about one in 20 caterpillars grows up to be a butterfly




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How COVID-19 Interferes With Weather Forecasts and Climate Research

'The break in the scientific record is probably unprecedented,' one ecologist says




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Artificial Intelligence Gives Researchers the Scoop on Ancient Poop

The computer program can identify canine versus human feces based on DNA sequences in samples