Influence of the degree of isolation of the cutpoint on the number of states of a probabilistic automaton

1988 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 639-643
Author(s):  
F. M. Ablaev
Author(s):  
G. T. Watkins

Abstract Full duplex (FD) could potentially double wireless communications capacity by allowing simultaneous transmission and reception on the same frequency channel. A single antenna architecture is proposed here based on a modified rat-race coupler to couple the transmit and receive paths to the antenna while providing a degree of isolation. To allow the self-interference cancellation (SiC) to be maximized, the rat-race coupler was made tuneable. This compensated for both the limited isolation of the rat race and self-interference caused by antenna mismatch. Tuneable operation was achieved by removing the fourth port of the rat race and inserting a variable attenuator and variable phase shifter into the loop. In simulation with a 50 Ω load on the antenna port, better than −65 dB narrowband SiC was achieved over the whole 2.45 GHz industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band. Inserting the S-parameters of a commercially available sleeve dipole antenna into the simulation, better than −57 dB narrowband SiC could be tuned over the whole band. Practically, better than −58 dB narrowband tuneable SiC was achieved with a practical antenna. When excited with a 20 MHz Wi-Fi signal, −42 dB average SiC could be achieved with the antenna.


2012 ◽  
Vol 60 (7) ◽  
pp. 643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Gibson ◽  
Colin Yates ◽  
Margaret Byrne ◽  
Margaret Langley ◽  
Rujiporn Thavornkanlapachai

Calothamnus quadrifidus subsp. teretifolius A.S.George & N.Gibson is a short-range endemic shrub whose habitat has been greatly reduced by clearing for agriculture. Reproductive output was high in all populations sampled, although there were large differences among populations in fruit set, the number of seeds per fruit and seed germination. These traits showed no relationship to population size, degree of isolation, or fragment size, which contrasts strongly with the patterns found in a widespread congener. Demographic studies in remnants with an intact understorey showed stable adult populations with continuous seedling recruitment. In contrast, there was consistent widespread failure of seedling and juvenile recruitment in degraded roadside remnants that also showed significant mortality of reproductive adults. In these degraded remnants, recruitment failure appears to be the primary cause of species decline.


2019 ◽  
pp. 200-221
Author(s):  
Paul Humphreys

It is argued that understanding is an epistemically more important concept than explanation. Two kinds of understanding are discussed, that based on analysis of the explanandum and a kind that is based on a synthetic method. The distinction between primary and secondary understanding shows that who is asking the why question is of central importance. A problem for causation is introduced that revolves around the degree of isolation that is needed to identify a causal factor and to distinguish causes from their carriers. It is shown that the analytic and synthetic approach can deal with partial understanding, that there can be an increase in understanding without an explanation, and that laws are not necessary for understanding.


1981 ◽  
Vol 38 (12) ◽  
pp. 1507-1514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fred W. Allendorf ◽  
Stevan R. Phelps

Development of electrophoretic techniques has allowed the estimation of allelic frequencies at many isozyme loci in populations of fish. The pattern of allelic frequency divergence in salmonid populations has been used to describe the pattern of genetic exchange and degree of isolation among local geographic units. Our goal is to determine how much genetic exchange among subpopulations will yield observed patterns of allelic divergence. We approach this goal using population genetics theory and a series of computer simulations.The amount of allelic divergence between subpopulations is a function of the absolute number of migrant individuals exchanged, and not the proportion of individuals exchanged. Therefore, some knowledge of population sizes is needed to estimate degree of reproductive isolation from allelic frequency data. Second, statistically significant allelic divergence will often be present even when there is substantial exchange among subpopulations. For example, significant allelic divergence was present in our simulations over 50% of the time with 20 subpopulations exchanging 50 individuals per generation. Third, allelic frequencies estimated from fry should be used with caution when drawing conclusions about the significance of allelic divergence in the reproducing adults.Key words: allelic divergence, reproductive isolation, gene flow, genetic drift, computer simulations


2019 ◽  
pp. 53-62
Author(s):  
S. A. Tarkhov

The level of topological complexity of land transport networks (including roads, railways and winter seasonal roads) of 27 regions of Siberia and the Far East is analyzed on the basis of 16 topomorphometric parameters. The main types of topological defects in the structure of regional land transport networks were identified: spatial isolation (rupture), an increased level of branching, the presence of several cyclic cores and isolated cyclic elements, and multi-core topological tiers of cyclic cores. The highest degree of isolation is revealed in the transport networks of Kamchatka Territory, Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Khabarovsk Territory and Tomsk Oblast. Transport networks of the Republic of Altai, the Kamchatka Territory, the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, the Republics of Tuva and Buryatia, the Jewish Autonomous Okrug and of the Island of Sakhalin, as well as the main cyclic skeleton of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug’s winter seasonal roads have the highest level of branching. Multi- layeredness is characteristic of the transport network of the Khanty-Mansiysk and Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Districts, the Kemerovo Oblast, the Khabarovsk Territory and Buryatia. The multifocal nature of the second topological tier of the cyclic skeleton is a distinctive feature of land transport networks in the south of the Krasnoyarsk Territory, the Irkutsk Oblast, the Republic of Yakutia, Kemerovo and Novosibirsk Oblasts. The same feature is characteristic for the third topological tier of the communications’ network in the Altai Territory. According to the level of spatial reliability (vulnerability) of the topological structure, the following types of regional transport networks are distinguished: the most reliable (4 regions), highly reliable (8), medium reliable (5), highly vulnerable with a low level of spatial reliability (5), the most vulnerable with a minimum level of spatial reliability (5 regions).


Cybernetics ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 759-765
Author(s):  
N. Ya. Parshenkov ◽  
V. M. Chentsov

2000 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-73
Author(s):  
Stuart Campbell

Because of the climate and the nature of the sites, most archaeological material in the Near East has survived the passage of time in a reasonably well preserved state (at least, until recent decades). It remains true, however, that occasional deposits with exceptional preservation provide a level of detail that opens up new areas of interpretation to archaeologists. The classic examples are, perhaps, Çatalhöyük and Nahal Hemar. The ‘Burnt Village’ at Sabi Abyad is proving to be another where the new evidence is leading to a series of publications offering interpretations of the settlement which will have profound implications for our perception of the late Neolithic in northern Mesopotamia. This stimulating article amplifies one area of discussion, attempting to bring some of the most striking features of the ‘Burnt Village’ into a single, unified interpretation. Importantly, this unified interpretation draws on a range of contemporary approaches to understanding the past and, given the tendency of near eastern archaeologists to function in a degree of isolation from wider archaeological trends, this article is to be particularly welcomed. Inevitably it can be criticised in certain areas and it might have gone further in others but these comments start from the basis of welcoming, enjoying and being stimulated by this piece of work.


1997 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin C. Brace ◽  
Jon Hornbuckle ◽  
James W. Pearce-Higgins

SummaryAn annotated compendium of all those bird species known to have occurred in the lowland “Man and Biosphere” Beni Biological Station (B.B.S.) reserve is provided. Previous checklists are reviewed, together with sightings accumulated over the 1992–1995 period during which approximately 70 new species have been added to the reserve inventory, bringing the total to 478. Occurrence across the 12 delineated habitats, relative abundance and sighting documentation are given for each species. The avifauna of the B.B.S. is mixed biogeographically; in addition to a substantial component of lowland birds widespread throughout South America, it is composed of Amazonian, cerrado and chaco elements also. Representation from the Bolivian Yungas is minimal. Significantly, no less than four threatened and 15 near-threatened species have occurred, including the little known Bolivian endemic Unicoloured Thrush Turdus haplochrous, and the enigmatic White-winged Nightjar Caprimulgus candicans, known until recently only from Emas National Park (Brazil). Short accounts are provided detailing records of all of these species. Birds of the reserve core, consisting largely of humid tropical forest formations inundated during the austral summer, appear not to be subjected currently to any serious environmental degradation, although some subsistence clearance by Chimane Indians in the northern reaches of the reserve gives some cause for concern. Of much greater import, however, are changes occurring outside the confines of the B.B.S. These include increasing urbanization immediately to the west (and associated road upgrading) and forest fragmentation to the south brought about by logging. The latter is especially worrying because linkage of the B.B.S. forest block to surrounding forest is already physically tenuous, and therefore it is imperative that future logging activities be geared to minimize isolation occurring and the damaging restriction of gene flow. Monitoring in rainforest immediately south of the reserve should become routine to warn of putative avifaunal impoverishments. Extensive surveying of the 2,500-ha El Porvenir éstancia (savanna and related forest islands) due to be assimilated shortly into the B.B.S., which constitutes less than 2% of the area under consideration, has shown that it is used by no less than three threatened and up to nine near-threatened species. In the absence of data relating to other savanna areas (c. 15%) at present, the exact status of each species at the B.B.S. remains imprecise and begs for further research to be undertaken. Unfortunately, present management of the El Porvenir savanna is not conducive to the long-term maximization of populations of these species, several of which have local strongholds in this part of Beni. We recommend that the current policy of cattle ranching adopted by this éstancia should cease or be reduced dramatically, to minimize grazing and trampling damage, and that measures should be taken to reduce incursions of fires started wilfully in neighbouring properties. The Academia Nacional de Ciencias de Bolivia, which administers the reserve, should be encouraged to safeguard and enhance the savanna complement further by ensuring that the impending ratification of El Porvenir proceeds as quickly as possible, and by purchasing additional tracts of land to the south of the present southern reserve boundary, where feasible. Such actions should not only secure the future of the biota of the savanna habitat within the B.B.S. but also should ameliorate the degree of isolation which has occurred already by preserving the “curiches” (former river beds) and forest islands which act as access corridors for forest-dwelling and other birds.


1951 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Butler

The pelt collection figures for colored fox in the province of Quebec were examined. The figures for the central and southern part of the province show a typical nine-year cycle. In the northern sections the data show that until 1930 there was a nine-year cycle in colored fox coexisting with a four-year cycle in white fox. After 1930 the four-year and nine-year cycles exist simultaneously with the four-year gradually dominating the scene. In the Upper James Bay region the typical nine-year cycle shows a supplementary peak corresponding with the four-year peak observed in the regions to the north. The coat color phase ratios cannot be explained by monohybrid equilibrium but they are consistent with the view that the population consists of isolates. A partial breakdown of isolate barriers would account for the ratios observed without the necessity of the large unexplained gene frequency changes which occur if panmixia is postulated. Migration causes the breakdown of isolate barriers and this accounts for the sudden shift in gene frequency and explains the long term trends which have resulted in a lower percentage of the silver phase. The degree of isolation changes with the population pressures. The cause of the cycles appears to be resident in the respective area in which the animal breeds. Both the cycle and the color phase data indicate that northward migrations have taken place.


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