scholarly journals Analytical Predictions of the Air Gap Response of Floating Structures

2001 ◽  
Vol 123 (3) ◽  
pp. 112-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lance Manuel ◽  
Bert Sweetman ◽  
Steven R. Winterstein

Two separate studies are presented here that deal with analytical predictions of the air gap for floating structures. 1) To obtain an understanding of the importance of first and second-order incident and diffracted wave effects as well as to determine the influence of the structure’s motions on the instantaneous air gap, statistics of the air gap response are studied under various modeling assumptions. For these detailed studies, a single field point is studied here—one at the geometric center (in plan) of the Troll semi-submersible. 2) A comparison of the air gap at different locations is studied by examining response statistics at different field points for the semi-submersible. These include locations close to columns of the four-columned semi-submersible. Analytical predictions, including first and second-order diffracted wave effects, are compared with wave tank measurements at several locations. In particular, the gross root-mean-square response and the 3-h extreme response are compared.

1970 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 612-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. L. Bucciarelli ◽  
C. Kuo

The mean-square response of a lightly damped, second-order system to a type of non-stationary random excitation is determined. The forcing function on the system is taken in the form of a product of a well-defined, slowly varying envelope function and a noise function. The latter is assumed to be white or correlated as a narrow band process. Taking advantage of the slow variation of the envelope function and the small damping of the system, relatively simple integrals are obtained which approximate the mean-square response. Upper bounds on the mean-square response are also obtained.


2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S179-S179
Author(s):  
Mei San Ang ◽  
Gurpreet Rekhi ◽  
Jimmy Lee

Abstract Background The conceptualization of negative symptoms has been refined in the past decades. Two-factor model comprising Motivation and Pleasure (MAP) and Emotional Expressivity (EE), five-factor model representing five domains of negative symptoms and second-order five-factor model incorporating the two-factor and five-factor models (Anhedonia, Asociality and Avolition regressed on MAP; Blunted Affect and Alogia regressed on EE) have been suggested as latent structure of negative symptoms. In most studies, the item “Lack of Normal Distress” in the Brief Negative Symptom Scale (BNSS) did not fit well in factor models. Nevertheless, the reported correlation and item-total correlation of Distress with other negative symptom domains and BNSS items were not negligible. Emotion deficit was also discussed as a part of negative symptoms conceptualization. As a single item may not be sufficient to represent an underlying construct that is potentially abstract and complex, the Schedule for the Deficit Syndrome (SDS) which comprises “Diminished Emotional Range” that is conceptually relevant to the BNSS Distress was employed. The study aimed to reexamine the conceptualization of negative symptoms by examining the model fit of several models when BNSS Distress and SDS Emotion (EMO) were included in the models using confirmatory factor analyses (CFA). Methods Two-hundred and seventy-four schizophrenia outpatients aged 21–65 were assessed on the BNSS and SDS. In the two-factor models, Restricted Affect, Diminished Emotional Range and Poverty of Speech in SDS and all items in BNSS Blunted Affect and Alogia subscales were regressed on EE, Curbing of Interests, Diminished Sense of Purpose and Diminished Social Drive in SDS and all items in BNSS Anhedonia, Asociality and Avolition subscales were regressed on MAP, without EMO, or with EMO regressed on either EE or MAP. Five-factor models and second-order five-factor models were examined, with or without EMO. Lastly, a six-factor model with EMO manifested by the sixth factor and second-order six-factor models in which EMO was regressed on either EE or MAP were tested. Root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) <0.08, comparative fit index (CFI) >0.95, the Tucker-Lewis Index (TLI) >0.95, and weighted root-mean-square residual (WRMR) <1.0 indicate good model fit. CFAs were conducted using Mplus version 7.4. Results The two-factor models did not yield adequate fit indices. Five-factor model and second-order five-factor model without EMO had good model fit; five-factor model: RMSEA=0.056 (0.044–0.068), CFI=0.996, TFI=0.995, WRMR=0.718; second-order five-factor model: RMSEA=0.049 (0.036–0.061), CFI=0.997, TFI=0.996, WRMR=0.758. When EMO was included as indicator in one of the factors in the five-factor models, only the model in which EMO was regressed on Alogia yielded adequate fit. Similarly, in the second-order five-factor models, adequate fit indices were observed only when EMO was regressed on Alogia and Blunted Affect. The six-factor model fitted the data well, RMSEA=0.053 (0.042–0.064), CFI=0.996, TFI=0.995, WRMR=0.711. Second-order six-factor model with EMO regressed on EE yielded better model fit than MAP, RMSEA=0.050 (0.039–0.061), CFI=0.996, TFI=0.995, WRMR=0.849. Discussion In line with previous studies, five-factor and second-order five-factor models without EMO fitted the data well. When EMO was included, a six-factor model and a second-order six-factor model in which the sixth factor was regressed on EE showed good model fit. Emotion, motivation and behavior are intertwined. Our results showed that diminished emotion may also be one of the components of negative symptoms, which had higher association with EE than MAP.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (19) ◽  
pp. 3200
Author(s):  
Tobias Ullmann ◽  
Georg Stauch

This study demonstrates an application-oriented approach to estimate area-wide surface roughness from Sentinel-1 time series in the semi-arid environment of the Orog Nuur Basin (southern Mongolia) to support recent geomorphological mapping efforts. The relation of selected mono- and multi-temporal SAR features and roughness is investigated by using an empirical multi-model approach and selected 1D and 2D surface roughness indices. These indices were obtained from 48 high-resolution ground-based photogrammetric digital elevation models, which were acquired during a single field campaign. The analysis is backed by a time series analysis, comparing Sentinel-1 features to temporal-corresponding observations and reanalysis datasets on soil moisture conditions, land surface temperature, occurrence of precipitation events, and presence and development of vegetation. Results show that Sentinel-1 features are hardly sensitive to the changing surface conditions over none to sparsely vegetated land, indicating very dry conditions throughout the year. Consequently, surface roughness is the dominating factor altering SAR intensity. The best correlation is found for the combined surface roughness index Z-Value (ratio between the root mean square height and the correlation length) and the mean summer VH intensity with an r2 coefficient of 0.83 and an Root-Mean-Square Error of 0.032.


1976 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Boyce ◽  
T. J. Kozik

This paper considers the problem of the unbalanced rotating turbine as a single degree of freedom system, wherein the principal mode of vibration is a translation in the direction of the machine supports. The distance from the center of mass of the rotating mass to the geometric axis, also known as the effective eccentricity, is modeled as a random variable. The expression for the root mean square response of the rotating machine is derived and related to the statistical analog for the deterministic expression for the foundation force. These results are numerically compared to their equivalent deterministic values.


2020 ◽  
pp. 001316442096978
Author(s):  
Allison J. Ames ◽  
Aaron J. Myers

Contamination of responses due to extreme and midpoint response style can confound the interpretation of scores, threatening the validity of inferences made from survey responses. This study incorporated person-level covariates in the multidimensional item response tree model to explain heterogeneity in response style. We include an empirical example and two simulation studies to support the use and interpretation of the model: parameter recovery using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) estimation and performance of the model under conditions with and without response styles present. Item intercepts mean bias and root mean square error were small at all sample sizes. Item discrimination mean bias and root mean square error were also small but tended to be smaller when covariates were unrelated to, or had a weak relationship with, the latent traits. Item and regression parameters are estimated with sufficient accuracy when sample sizes are greater than approximately 1,000 and MCMC estimation with the Gibbs sampler is used. The empirical example uses the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health’s sexual knowledge scale. Meaningful predictors associated with high levels of extreme response latent trait included being non-White, being male, and having high levels of parental support and relationships. Meaningful predictors associated with high levels of the midpoint response latent trait included having low levels of parental support and relationships. Item-level covariates indicate the response style pseudo-items were less easy to endorse for self-oriented items, whereas the trait of interest pseudo-items were easier to endorse for self-oriented items.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lu Liu ◽  
Zhehan Jiang ◽  
Ana Xie ◽  
Weimin Wang

Background: Assessing the preparedness of junior doctors to use vancomycin is important in medical education. Preparedness is typically evaluated by self-reported confidence surveys.Materials and Methods: An eight-item vancomycin prescribing confidence questionnaire was developed, piloted, and evaluated. The questionnaire responses were collected from 195 junior doctors and a series of statistical techniques, such as principal component analysis and confirmatory factor analysis, and were implemented to examine the validity and reliability.Results: The principal component analysis supported a one-factor structure, which was fed into a confirmatory factor analysis model resulting in a good fit [comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.99, Tucker–Lewis index (TLI) = 0.99, root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.08, standardized root mean square residual (SRMR) = 0.04]. Ordinal-based α was 0.95, and various ωs were all above 0.93, indicating a high reliability level. The questionnaire responses were further proved to be robust to extreme response patterns via item response tree modeling. Jonckheere–Terpstra test results (z = 6.5237, p = 3.429e−11) showed that vancomycin prescribing confidence differed based on the experience in order (i.e., four ordinal independent groups: “≤10 times,” “11–20 times,” “21–30 times,” and “≥31 times”) and therefore provided external validity evidences for the questionnaire.Conclusions: The questionnaire is valid and reliable such that teaching hospitals can consider using it to assess junior doctors' vancomycin prescribing confidence. Further investigation of the questionnaire can point to the relationship between the prescribing confidence and the actual performance.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Samsul Hadi

Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui model konstruk dan struktural kinerja kepala sekolah. Hasil penelitian ini diharapkan dapat memberi sumbangan terhadap pengukuran kinerja kepala sekolah di masa yang akan datang. Penelitian ini merupakan penelitian expost facto dengan populasi guru dan kepala sekolah dasar di Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta. Sampel sebanyak 1239 guru dan 208 kepala sekolah dasar dipilih secara acak. Data guru dan kepala sekolah dianalisis dengan Second-Order Confirmatory Factor Analysis (Second-Order CFA) secara terpisah dan divalidasi silang dengan multi-sample CFA. Pengujian kecocokan model dilakukan menggunakan χ2 Satorra-Bentler dengan taraf signifikansi 5%, Comparative Goodness of Fit Index (CFI), dan Root Mean Square Error Approximation (RMSAE). Hasil penelitian menunjukkan hal-hal sebagai berikut. 1) Kinerja kepala sekolah mempunyai dimensi kepemimpinan, manajemen, dan kepribadian. 2) Berdasarkan data kepala sekolah, koefisien jalur dari dimensi dan muatan faktor dari indikator yang ada dalam model cukup tinggi, bernilai positif, dan signifikan. 3) Hasil validasi silang model konstruk kinerja kepala sekolah menggunakan data guru dan data kepala sekolah menunjukkan tidak ada perbedaan model. Kata kunci: model konstruk, persamaan pengukuran, persamaan struktural, kinerja kepala sekolah


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