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A handbook of nuclear applications in humans' lives

Tabbakh, Farshid, author.
9781527544512 (electronic bk.)




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Fill Management Plan PIC




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Intrinsic Riemannian functional data analysis

Zhenhua Lin, Fang Yao.

Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 47, Number 6, 3533--3577.

Abstract:
In this work we develop a novel and foundational framework for analyzing general Riemannian functional data, in particular a new development of tensor Hilbert spaces along curves on a manifold. Such spaces enable us to derive Karhunen–Loève expansion for Riemannian random processes. This framework also features an approach to compare objects from different tensor Hilbert spaces, which paves the way for asymptotic analysis in Riemannian functional data analysis. Built upon intrinsic geometric concepts such as vector field, Levi-Civita connection and parallel transport on Riemannian manifolds, the developed framework applies to not only Euclidean submanifolds but also manifolds without a natural ambient space. As applications of this framework, we develop intrinsic Riemannian functional principal component analysis (iRFPCA) and intrinsic Riemannian functional linear regression (iRFLR) that are distinct from their traditional and ambient counterparts. We also provide estimation procedures for iRFPCA and iRFLR, and investigate their asymptotic properties within the intrinsic geometry. Numerical performance is illustrated by simulated and real examples.




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A smeary central limit theorem for manifolds with application to high-dimensional spheres

Benjamin Eltzner, Stephan F. Huckemann.

Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 47, Number 6, 3360--3381.

Abstract:
The (CLT) central limit theorems for generalized Fréchet means (data descriptors assuming values in manifolds, such as intrinsic means, geodesics, etc.) on manifolds from the literature are only valid if a certain empirical process of Hessians of the Fréchet function converges suitably, as in the proof of the prototypical BP-CLT [ Ann. Statist. 33 (2005) 1225–1259]. This is not valid in many realistic scenarios and we provide for a new very general CLT. In particular, this includes scenarios where, in a suitable chart, the sample mean fluctuates asymptotically at a scale $n^{alpha }$ with exponents $alpha <1/2$ with a nonnormal distribution. As the BP-CLT yields only fluctuations that are, rescaled with $n^{1/2}$, asymptotically normal, just as the classical CLT for random vectors, these lower rates, somewhat loosely called smeariness, had to date been observed only on the circle. We make the concept of smeariness on manifolds precise, give an example for two-smeariness on spheres of arbitrary dimension, and show that smeariness, although “almost never” occurring, may have serious statistical implications on a continuum of sample scenarios nearby. In fact, this effect increases with dimension, striking in particular in high dimension low sample size scenarios.




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semantics

Intended meaning. In computing, semantics is the assumed or explicit set of understandings used in a system to give meaning to data. One of the biggest challenges when integrating separate computer systems and applications is to correctly match up the intended meanings within each system. Simple metadata classifications such as 'price' or 'location' may have wildly different meanings in each system, while apparently different terms, such as 'client' and 'patient' may turn out to be effectively equivalent.




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Estimating causal effects in studies of human brain function: New models, methods and estimands

Michael E. Sobel, Martin A. Lindquist.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 452--472.

Abstract:
Neuroscientists often use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to infer effects of treatments on neural activity in brain regions. In a typical fMRI experiment, each subject is observed at several hundred time points. At each point, the blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response is measured at 100,000 or more locations (voxels). Typically, these responses are modeled treating each voxel separately, and no rationale for interpreting associations as effects is given. Building on Sobel and Lindquist ( J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 109 (2014) 967–976), who used potential outcomes to define unit and average effects at each voxel and time point, we define and estimate both “point” and “cumulated” effects for brain regions. Second, we construct a multisubject, multivoxel, multirun whole brain causal model with explicit parameters for regions. We justify estimation using BOLD responses averaged over voxels within regions, making feasible estimation for all regions simultaneously, thereby also facilitating inferences about association between effects in different regions. We apply the model to a study of pain, finding effects in standard pain regions. We also observe more cerebellar activity than observed in previous studies using prevailing methods.




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Measuring human activity spaces from GPS data with density ranking and summary curves

Yen-Chi Chen, Adrian Dobra.

Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 409--432.

Abstract:
Activity spaces are fundamental to the assessment of individuals’ dynamic exposure to social and environmental risk factors associated with multiple spatial contexts that are visited during activities of daily living. In this paper we survey existing approaches for measuring the geometry, size and structure of activity spaces, based on GPS data, and explain their limitations. We propose addressing these shortcomings through a nonparametric approach called density ranking and also through three summary curves: the mass-volume curve, the Betti number curve and the persistence curve. We introduce a novel mixture model for human activity spaces and study its asymptotic properties. We prove that the kernel density estimator, which at the present time, is one of the most widespread methods for measuring activity spaces, is not a stable estimator of their structure. We illustrate the practical value of our methods with a simulation study and with a recently collected GPS dataset that comprises the locations visited by 10 individuals over a six months period.




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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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Exponential integrability and exit times of diffusions on sub-Riemannian and metric measure spaces

Anton Thalmaier, James Thompson.

Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 2202--2225.

Abstract:
In this article, we derive moment estimates, exponential integrability, concentration inequalities and exit times estimates for canonical diffusions firstly on sub-Riemannian limits of Riemannian foliations and secondly in the nonsmooth setting of $operatorname{RCD}^{*}(K,N)$ spaces. In each case, the necessary ingredients are Itô’s formula and a comparison theorem for the Laplacian, for which we refer to the recent literature. As an application, we derive pointwise Carmona-type estimates on eigenfunctions of Schrödinger operators.




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Busemann functions and semi-infinite O’Connell–Yor polymers

Tom Alberts, Firas Rassoul-Agha, Mackenzie Simper.

Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 1927--1955.

Abstract:
We prove that given any fixed asymptotic velocity, the finite length O’Connell–Yor polymer has an infinite length limit satisfying the law of large numbers with this velocity. By a Markovian property of the quenched polymer this reduces to showing the existence of Busemann functions : almost sure limits of ratios of random point-to-point partition functions. The key ingredients are the Burke property of the O’Connell–Yor polymer and a comparison lemma for the ratios of partition functions. We also show the existence of infinite length limits in the Brownian last passage percolation model.




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On the best constant in the martingale version of Fefferman’s inequality

Adam Osękowski.

Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 1912--1926.

Abstract:
Let $X=(X_{t})_{tgeq 0}in H^{1}$ and $Y=(Y_{t})_{tgeq 0}in{mathrm{BMO}} $ be arbitrary continuous-path martingales. The paper contains the proof of the inequality egin{equation*}mathbb{E}int _{0}^{infty }iglvert dlangle X,Y angle_{t}igrvert leq sqrt{2}Vert XVert _{H^{1}}Vert YVert _{mathrm{BMO}_{2}},end{equation*} and the constant $sqrt{2}$ is shown to be the best possible. The proof rests on the construction of a certain special function, enjoying appropriate size and concavity conditions.




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Kernel and wavelet density estimators on manifolds and more general metric spaces

Galatia Cleanthous, Athanasios G. Georgiadis, Gerard Kerkyacharian, Pencho Petrushev, Dominique Picard.

Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 1832--1862.

Abstract:
We consider the problem of estimating the density of observations taking values in classical or nonclassical spaces such as manifolds and more general metric spaces. Our setting is quite general but also sufficiently rich in allowing the development of smooth functional calculus with well localized spectral kernels, Besov regularity spaces, and wavelet type systems. Kernel and both linear and nonlinear wavelet density estimators are introduced and studied. Convergence rates for these estimators are established and discussed.




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A Feynman–Kac result via Markov BSDEs with generalised drivers

Elena Issoglio, Francesco Russo.

Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 1, 728--766.

Abstract:
In this paper, we investigate BSDEs where the driver contains a distributional term (in the sense of generalised functions) and derive general Feynman–Kac formulae related to these BSDEs. We introduce an integral operator to give sense to the equation and then we show the existence of a strong solution employing results on a related PDE. Due to the irregularity of the driver, the $Y$-component of a couple $(Y,Z)$ solving the BSDE is not necessarily a semimartingale but a weak Dirichlet process.




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The Thomson family : fisherman in Buckhaven, retailers in Kapunda / compiled by Elizabeth Anne Howell.

Thomson (Family)




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Fuhlbohm family history : a collection of memorabilia of our ancestors and families in Germany, USA, and Australia / by Oscar Fuhlbohm.

Fuhlbohm (Family)




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From Westphalia to South Australia : the story of Franz Heinrich Ernst Siekmann / by Peter Brinkworth.

Siekmann, Francis Heinrich Ernst, 1830-1917.




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A family history Siglin to Siegele 1530 to 2019 : from Ditzingen, Germany over land and sea / Ian G. Siegele.

Germans -- South Australia.




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Descendants of John & Barbara Cheesman, 1839-1999 / Gary Cheesman.

Cheesman, John -- Family.




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Traegers in Australia. 3, Ernst's story : the story of Ernst Wilhelm Traeger and Johanne Dorothea nee Lissmann, and their descendants, 1856-2018.

Traeger, Ernst Wilhelm, 1805-1874.




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Fuhlbohm family history : a collection of memorabilia of our ancestors and families in Germany, USA, and Australia / by Oscar Fuhlbohm.

Fuhlbohm (Family)




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Geoff Nixon, man of the land : a history of Gunniguldrie and the Nixon family / Robert Nixon.

Nixon, Geoffrey Owen, 1921-2011.




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Willie Neville Majoribank Chester manuscript collection, 5 November 1915 - 22 December 1918




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Arthur Leeman Fulton WWI diary, 1 January - 6 August 1916




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Item 07: A Journal of ye [the] Proceedings of his Majesty's Sloop Swallow, Captain Phillip [Philip] Carteret Commander, Commencing ye [the] 23 of July 1766 and ended [4 July 1767]




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Item 08: A Logg [Log] Book of the proceedings on Board His Majesty's Ship Swallow, Captain Philip Carteret Commander Commencing from the 20th August 1766 and Ending [21st May 1768]




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Volume 24 Item 04: William Thomas Manners and customs of Aborigines - Miscellaneous scraps, ca. 1858




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Extrinsic Gaussian Processes for Regression and Classification on Manifolds

Lizhen Lin, Niu Mu, Pokman Cheung, David Dunson.

Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 3, 907--926.

Abstract:
Gaussian processes (GPs) are very widely used for modeling of unknown functions or surfaces in applications ranging from regression to classification to spatial processes. Although there is an increasingly vast literature on applications, methods, theory and algorithms related to GPs, the overwhelming majority of this literature focuses on the case in which the input domain corresponds to a Euclidean space. However, particularly in recent years with the increasing collection of complex data, it is commonly the case that the input domain does not have such a simple form. For example, it is common for the inputs to be restricted to a non-Euclidean manifold, a case which forms the motivation for this article. In particular, we propose a general extrinsic framework for GP modeling on manifolds, which relies on embedding of the manifold into a Euclidean space and then constructing extrinsic kernels for GPs on their images. These extrinsic Gaussian processes (eGPs) are used as prior distributions for unknown functions in Bayesian inferences. Our approach is simple and general, and we show that the eGPs inherit fine theoretical properties from GP models in Euclidean spaces. We consider applications of our models to regression and classification problems with predictors lying in a large class of manifolds, including spheres, planar shape spaces, a space of positive definite matrices, and Grassmannians. Our models can be readily used by practitioners in biological sciences for various regression and classification problems, such as disease diagnosis or detection. Our work is also likely to have impact in spatial statistics when spatial locations are on the sphere or other geometric spaces.




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Stochastic Approximations to the Pitman–Yor Process

Julyan Arbel, Pierpaolo De Blasi, Igor Prünster.

Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 3, 753--771.

Abstract:
In this paper we consider approximations to the popular Pitman–Yor process obtained by truncating the stick-breaking representation. The truncation is determined by a random stopping rule that achieves an almost sure control on the approximation error in total variation distance. We derive the asymptotic distribution of the random truncation point as the approximation error $epsilon$ goes to zero in terms of a polynomially tilted positive stable random variable. The practical usefulness and effectiveness of this theoretical result is demonstrated by devising a sampling algorithm to approximate functionals of the $epsilon$ -version of the Pitman–Yor process.




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Comment: Contributions of Model Features to BART Causal Inference Performance Using ACIC 2016 Competition Data

Nicole Bohme Carnegie.

Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 1, 90--93.

Abstract:
With a thorough exposition of the methods and results of the 2016 Atlantic Causal Inference Competition, Dorie et al. have set a new standard for reproducibility and comparability of evaluations of causal inference methods. In particular, the open-source R package aciccomp2016, which permits reproduction of all datasets used in the competition, will be an invaluable resource for evaluation of future methodological developments. Building upon results from Dorie et al., we examine whether a set of potential modifications to Bayesian Additive Regression Trees (BART)—multiple chains in model fitting, using the propensity score as a covariate, targeted maximum likelihood estimation (TMLE), and computing symmetric confidence intervals—have a stronger impact on bias, RMSE, and confidence interval coverage in combination than they do alone. We find that bias in the estimate of SATT is minimal, regardless of the BART formulation. For purposes of CI coverage, however, all proposed modifications are beneficial—alone and in combination—but use of TMLE is least beneficial for coverage and results in considerably wider confidence intervals.




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Smart women don't smoke / Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Road, London SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [1989?]




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We thank you for not smoking / design : Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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'Smoke gets in your eyes' / Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stllness Rd, London, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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'Smoking is slow-motion suicide' / Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 ING) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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Smoking affects us all. / Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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If you must smoke don't exhale / design : Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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Passive smoking kills / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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Be nice to yourself and others / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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Pollution / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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Cleanair not smoke / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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No smoking no hate / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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No smoking zone / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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Heart burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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Smoking is anti-social / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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Tapadh leibh airson nach do smoc sibh / design : Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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No smoking is the norm / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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We thank you for not smoking / design : Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




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No smoking zone / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




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We thank you for not smoking / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, [1988?]




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If you must smoke don't exhale / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, [1988?]




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Muchas gracias por no fumar / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, [1988?]