No image available
· 2015
The initial purpose of this study is to research the phenotypic differences between Chinese cabbage and Pak choi, and investigate the expression levels of some heading related genes through their developmental stages.
No image available
No image available
No image available
No image available
· 2006
Much information can be obtained from knowing what tasks the user does on his or her cell phone. This paper describes GuiDE, an automated user-activity recognition system on the mobile phone. GuiDE's unique approach to activity recognition exploits GUI screenshots taken as the individual interacts with their cell phone. These screenshots are aggregated into a graph to help probabilistically determine whether or not a set of screenshots can be considered a user-level activity. A frequency count of different sets of screenshots is also kept to act as a sanity check against the probabilistic result. GuiDE is just a partial step towards a much more powerful tool that can correlate GUI information with other services to provide a better understanding of user activity.
No image available
Model tests aimed at investigating the wave-induced pore pressure responses of a silty clay seabed around a vertical caisson breakwater were conducted with a large-scale bespoke wave-breakwater-seabed system. The effects of water depth, wave parameters, and seabed consolidation conditions on oscillatory pore pressure were investigated. The residual pore pressure development against the number of cycles was also examined. The test results indicated that the oscillatory pore pressure was generally greater in the upper part of the seabed around the caisson at a large water depth and peaked at the front of the caisson at a small water depth. The oscillatory pore pressure increased with wave height and generally remained stable with an increasing number of cycles. In addition, the oscillatory pore pressure showed varying degrees of declination in the silty clay underneath the rubble after a pause period. The residual pore pressure observed in most areas of the seabed was concentrated in the silty clay underneath the caisson and increased with the number of cycles. These experimental observations will contribute to a better understanding of pore pressure responses in silty clay seabeds under vertical caissons and may have practical implications.
No image available