Similar Concepts (similar + concept)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Evaluation of cost and reliability of power systems with large numbers of distributed generators

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING IN JAPAN, Issue 2 2009
Yutaka Sasaki
Abstract The authors have proposed the Flexible, Reliable and Intelligent ENergy Delivery System (called "FRIENDS"), which is a new concept for future power distribution systems. Also, a "micro grid" which is a similar concept to FRIENDS has been developed. In a micro grid, an independent distribution system can be constituted by a number of distributed generators. In this paper, FRIENDS, Micro grid, and conventional distribution systems are compared quantitatively in supply reliability and system cost through time sequential Monte Carlo simulations. In addition, for cost evaluation, interruption costs are included to show risk incurred by unsupplied energy. Finally, the authors search for preferable form with install and operation of distributed generators and network composition according to social cost including interruption cost and system cost. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Electr Eng Jpn, 167(2): 28,37, 2009; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/eej.20659 [source]


Influence of Solid Phase Conductivity and Cellular Structure on the Heat Transfer Mechanisms of Cellular Materials: Diverse Case Studies,

ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 10 2009
Eusebio Solórzano
An analysis on the influence of solid phase thermal conductivity and cellular structure on the heat transfer mechanisms (HTMs) by means of studding diverse case studies combining theoretical and experimental data. The radiation and conduction mechanisms have been analyzed for cellular materials based on insulating and conductive matrixes using similar concepts and models for both types of materials. [source]


Applications of novel affinity cassette methods: use of peptide fusion handles for the purification of recombinant proteins

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR RECOGNITION, Issue 6 2001
Milton T W Hearn
Abstract In this article, recent progress related to the use of different types of polypeptide fusion handles or ,tags' for the purification of recombinant proteins are critically discussed. In addition, novel aspects of the molecular cassette concept are elaborated, together with areas of potential application of these fundamental principles in molecular recognition. As evident from this review, the use of these concepts provides a powerful strategy for the high throughput isolation and purification of recombinant proteins and their derived domains, generated from functional genomic or zeomic studies, as part of the bioprocess technology leading to their commercial development, and in the study of molecular recognition phenomena per se. In addition, similar concepts can be exploited for high sensitivity analysis and detection, for the characterisation of protein bait/prey interactions at the molecular level, and for the immobilisation and directed orientation of proteins for use as biocatalysts/biosensors. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Digital artifacts as quasi-objects: Qualification, mediation, and materiality

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Issue 12 2009
Hamid R. Ekbia
Digital artifacts have novel properties that largely derive from the processes that mediate their creation, and that can be best understood by a close examination of such processes. This paper introduces the concept of "quasi-object" to characterize these objects and elucidate the activities that comprise their mediations. A case study of "bugs" is analyzed to illustrate exemplary activities of justification, qualification, and binding in the process of bug fixing in Free/Open Source Software development. The findings of the case study lead to broader reflections on the character of digital artifacts in general. The relationship of "quasi-object" to other similar concepts are explored. [source]


Approaches to Evaluate Water Quality Model Parameter Uncertainty for Adaptive TMDL Implementation,

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, Issue 6 2007
Craig A. Stow
Abstract:, The National Research Council recommended Adaptive Total Maximum Daily Load implementation with the recognition that the predictive uncertainty of water quality models can be high. Quantifying predictive uncertainty provides important information for model selection and decision-making. We review five methods that have been used with water quality models to evaluate model parameter and predictive uncertainty. These methods (1) Regionalized Sensitivity Analysis, (2) Generalized Likelihood Uncertainty Estimation, (3) Bayesian Monte Carlo, (4) Importance Sampling, and (5) Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) are based on similar concepts; their development over time was facilitated by the increasing availability of fast, cheap computers. Using a Streeter-Phelps model as an example we show that, applied consistently, these methods give compatible results. Thus, all of these methods can, in principle, provide useful sets of parameter values that can be used to evaluate model predictive uncertainty, though, in practice, some are quickly limited by the "curse of dimensionality" or may have difficulty evaluating irregularly shaped parameter spaces. Adaptive implementation invites model updating, as new data become available reflecting water-body responses to pollutant load reductions, and a Bayesian approach using MCMC is particularly handy for that task. [source]


Civiale, stones and statistics: the dawn of evidence-based medicine

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 3 2009
Harry W. Herr
The statistical research on bladder stones conducted by Paris urologist Jean Civiale in the early 19th century provided historical roots for evidence-based medicine. Translations of original documents by Civiale describing his work on treating bladder stones, and the discussion by members of the Paris Academy of Sciences that commented on his results in 1835, were reviewed. By collecting statistical data on a wide scale throughout Europe, Civiale argued that his new transurethral procedure, called lithotripsy, was superior to the more widely used but highly morbid technique, lithotomy. The Paris Academy of Sciences commented on his research and chose the occasion to debate whether or not numerical reasoning and statistics had any place in medical and surgical practice. Civiale's insights and methods espoused similar concepts and ideas driving today's new paradigm of evidence-based medicine. [source]


Assessment and Statistics of Surgically Induced Astigmatism

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue thesis1 2008
Kristian Nęser
Abstract. The aim of the thesis was to develop methods for assessment of surgically induced astigmatism (SIA) in individual eyes, and in groups of eyes. The thesis is based on 12 peer-reviewed publications, published over a period of 16 years. In these publications older and contemporary literature was reviewed1. A new method (the polar system) for analysis of SIA was developed. Multivariate statistical analysis of refractive data was described2,4. Clinical validation studies were performed. The description of a cylinder surface with polar values and differential geometry was compared. The main results were: refractive data in the form of sphere, cylinder and axis may define an individual patient or data set, but are unsuited for mathematical and statistical analyses1. The polar value system converts net astigmatisms to orthonormal components in dioptric space. A polar value is the difference in meridional power between two orthogonal meridians5,6. Any pair of polar values, separated by an arch of 45 degrees, characterizes a net astigmatism completely7. The two polar values represent the net curvital and net torsional power over the chosen meridian8. The spherical component is described by the spherical equivalent power. Several clinical studies demonstrated the efficiency of multivariate statistical analysis of refractive data4,9,11. Polar values and formal differential geometry describe astigmatic surfaces with similar concepts and mathematical functions8. Other contemporary methods, such as Long's power matrix, Holladay's and Alpins' methods, Zernike12 and Fourier analyses8, are correlated to the polar value system. In conclusion, analysis of SIA should be performed with polar values or other contemporary component systems. [source]