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Many industrial design problems are characterized by a lack of an analytical expression defining the relationship between design variables and chosen quality metrics. Evaluating the quality of new designs is therefore restricted to running a predetermined process such as physical testing of prototypes. When these processes carry a high cost, choosing how to gather further data can be very challenging, whether the end goal is to accurately predict the quality of future designs or to find an optimal design. In the multi-fidelity setting, one or more approximations of a design’s performance are available at varying costs and accuracies. Surrogate modelling methods have long been applied to problems of this type, combining data from multiple sources into a model which guides further sampling. Many challenges still exist; however, the foremost among them is choosing when and how to rely on available low-fidelity sources. This tutorial-style paper presents an introduction to the field of surrogate modelling for multi-fidelity expensive black-box problems, including classical approaches and open questions in the field. An illustrative example using Australian elevation data is provided to show the potential downfalls in blindly trusting or ignoring low-fidelity sources, a question that has recently gained much interest in the community.
This study reports the spatial and depth distributions, occurrence and prevalence, infestation rate and intensity of the pea crab Pinnotheres pisum colonising five commercial bivalve species (Chamelea gallina, Donax semistriatus, Donax trunculus, Donax vittatus, and Spisula solida) along the south and southwest coasts of Portugal. In addition, the study also analysed the colonisation pattern, morphometric measurements and relative growth of P. pisum inhabiting those bivalve species. Overall, 33,370 bivalves were analysed, collected in 371 sampling stations at depths ranging from 3 to 25 m. A total of 102 bivalves hosted 106 P. pisum, corresponding to an infestation rate of 0.31%. Besides 13 juveniles, were recorded 60 males and 33 females of P. pisum, corresponding to a male-biased sex ratio (1M: 0.6F). Pea crabs carapace width ranged from 1.3 to 13.5 mm and males were smaller than females (hard females were also smaller than ovigerous soft females). In general, larger and heavier bivalves hosted larger and heavier P. pisum. Pea crabs morphometric relationships presented negative allometries, reflecting slower growth rates in carapace length and total weight compared to carapace width throughout the species ontogeny. Overall, this study provides valuable insights into diverse descriptors of bivalves' colonisation by P. pisum, comparing the main results and trends with analogous information available throughout the species distributional range. Although the current fairly low infestation by P. pisum does not constitute a health concern for these bivalve species, its evolution under a climate change scenario should be periodically monitored in the mid- and long-term.
The chapter analyses a small corpus of twelve Catalan folk tales voice-dramatised and radio broadcast in Majorca in 1959. Most of the lexical material studied here is elicited from the same source and from Diccionari Català-Valencià-Balear, a master work of 20th-century romance lexicography. The expressive resources used in the recordings can be analysed as actual resources in the language for they are shared by both speakers and listeners and they successfully convey a part of the meaning. Along with voice-attached resources as pitch, intensity, or speech rate, other more conventional means such as those preserved in writing (morphological, lexical, syntactic) are also analysed. The findings by Dingemanse and Akita (2017) on the (inverse) relation between expressiveness and grammatical integration are used. The chapter demonstrates the degree to which expressives can be marked by means of phonetic cues in Catalan, initially setting the border between ideophones and unconventional spoken iconicity. By comparing oral and written versions of the same tales it is proposed that fixability by writing is a good test of grammatical integration, at least a necessary condition.
La riqueza epigráfica de las ánforas olearias de la provincia Bética es bien conocida gracias a los numerosos sellos de alfarero, rótulos pintados (tituli picti) y grafitos grabados en la arcilla fresca (ante cocturam). Éstos últimos suelen contener signos y simples letras, pero a veces, también nombres de personas y fechas calendariales y consulares. En este trabajo presentamos un grafito de carácter excepcional por su contenido estrictamente literario. En él, proponemos identificar un fragmento de poema de Virgilio. Analizamos y discutimos el contexto en que se realizó, la autoría del mismo y su significación para el conocimiento del grado de alfabetización de la sociedad rural romana en el Valle del Guadalquivir. Constituye el primer caso constatado sobre ánfora romana y es de excepcional interés para arqueólogos, epigrafistas y filólogos del latín vulgar.
As a form of protest, encampments are places both where participants strive for horizontal organising and a different way of living outside the neoliberal order, and where the hierarchies, violence and inequalities of wider society are reproduced on a small scale. In my chapter, I focus on this tension as it was made visible in the anti-austerity movement in May 2011 in Spain, when thousands of people took to the streets and camped in the squares of the country’s main cities, and when feminists and queer movements were also vocal critics of the encampments’ structure. In addition, I examine the phenomenon of no mixto [non-mixed] protest camps from which men are excluded in order to build an alternative organisation governed by the logic of recognition of subaltern identities. Specifically, I analyse the feminist encampment organised in Valencia on 8 March 2020 as part of the activities commemorating International Women’s Day. The chapter aims thus to contribute to a better understanding of the boundaries of protest camps as sites of resistance and, at the same time, to explore the possibilities of ‘non-mixed’ camps as sites of recognition.
To do so, I use Judith Butler’s work (Butler, 2009, 2011) in which recognition is seen as ambivalent. On the one hand, recognition is understood as a human need; therefore the lack of it generates violence and exclusion. On the other hand, recognition is experienced as constraining or oppressive by those recognised because it assumes a hierarchy in which one (inferior) group requires the recognition of another that, in addition, sets rigid specific parameters for the recognition to happen. In that sense, for Butler, the process of intelligibility is infused with practices of violence, including ethical violence, inasmuch as the frames of understanding are imposed on others. Butler insists on the inability to offer a complete narrative about oneself. However, the recognition process is generally spurred by asking who you are. When the answer to this is not closed, when it is unfinished, contradictory or does not fit in the dominant narrative, we find a lack of recognition or of understanding of another’s point of view.
The performance of diagnostic health technologies is usually assessed by comparing them with standard care using the kappa statistic. These comparisons are made based on comprehensive clinical information (e.g., anamnesis and complementary tests). However, not all digital applications (DAs) execute over complete information, which leads to work under non-uniform distribution of values. Using kappa statistic in this situation has serious methodological limitations. Kappa assumes that the marginal values are uniformly distributed and highly weights the discordant values when calculating concordance, which underestimates the real effectiveness of DAs (i.e., observed concordance). We aimed to present the application of the B statistic to WtsWrng, a symptom triage DA for individuals.
Methods
WtsWrng was used by 382 patients at the emergency department of a hospital. Diagnoses provided by WtsWrng, given 19 symptoms, were compared with those logged in the hospital’s electronic clinical records at discharge. Observed concordance was calculated using contingency tables. The concordance using the kappa and B statistics were compared for the 12 most frequent diagnoses at hospital discharge. Sensitivity and specificity were also calculated.
Results
Real observed concordance fluctuated from 0.4 to 0.98 for the 12 most frequent diagnoses, eight of which had a concordance greater than 0.8. The results ranged from -0.005 to 0.37 when using the kappa statistic and from 0.36 to 0.99 when using the B statistic. The sensitivity and specificity of WtsWrng were greater than 0.8 for three and eight of the 12 diagnoses, respectively.
Conclusions
The results show that the B statistic is closer to the real observed concordance when kappa statistic assumptions are not fulfilled by a DA. Therefore, the B statistic is better suited for assessing the effectiveness of this type of technology. Analysis of WtsWrng using the B statistic showed that its diagnoses were close to those provided by clinicians, which were arrived at using complete clinical information. Moreover, the high specificity of the WtsWrng DA suggests that it is a good tool for determining the appropriate use of healthcare resources.