Showing 1581 - 1590 of 5709 Items

A Machine Learning Approach to Sector Based Market Efficiency

Date: 2023-01-01

Creator: Angus Zuklie

Access: Open access

In economic circles, there is an idea that the increasing prevalence of algorithmic trading is improving the information efficiency of electronic stock markets. This project sought to test the above theory computationally. If an algorithm can accurately forecast near-term equity prices using historical data, there must be predictive information present in the data. Changes in the predictive accuracy of such algorithms should correlate with increasing or decreasing market efficiency. By using advanced machine learning approaches, including dense neural networks, LSTM, and CNN models, I modified intra day predictive precision to act as a proxy for market efficiency. Allowing for the basic comparisons of the weak form efficiency of four sectors over the same time period: utilities, healthcare, technology and energy. Finally, Within these sectors, I was able to detect inefficiencies in the stock market up to four years closer to modern day than previous studies.


Host and symbiont-specific patterns of gene expression in response to cold stress in the temperate coral Astrangia poculata

Date: 2023-01-01

Creator: Kellie Navarro

Access: Open access

The coral Astrangia poculata inhabits hard-bottom environments from the Gulf of Mexico to Massachusetts and withstands large seasonal variation in temperature (–2 to 26 °C). This thermal range and its ability to live in a facultative symbiosis makes this species an ideal model system for investigating stress responses to ocean temperature variation. Although it has been shown that aposymbiotic A. poculata upregulates more genes in response to cold stress than heat stress, the transcriptomic response of the holobiont (coral host and symbiotic algae) to stress is unknown. In this study, we characterize changes in gene expression in both the host and symbionts under cold stress (6ºC) and ambient (12ºC) seawater temperatures. We use RNAseq to visualize how patterns of global gene expression change in response to these temperatures within the transcriptomes of replicate corals (n=10, each temperature) and their symbiont partners. By filtering the holobiont assembly for known coral host and symbiont genes, we contrasted patterns of differential expression (DE) for each partner and the functional processes for each set of DE genes. Differential gene expression analyses revealed that the cnidarian coral host responds strongly to cold stress, while algal symbionts did not have a significant stress response. In the coral host, we found up-regulation of biological processes associated with DNA repair, immunity, and maintaining cellular homeostasis as well as downregulation of mechanisms associated with DNA repair and RNA splicing, indicating inhibition of necessary cellular processes due to environmental stress.


Power Play: The President's Role in Shaping Renewable Energy Regulation and Policy

Date: 2023-01-01

Creator: Luke Bartol

Access: Open access

With the impacts of climate change becoming more and more apparent every day, finding means of effective action to mitigate its effects become increasingly critical. While localized work can play an important role, federal action is necessary to have the most widespread and effective impact, especially on interconnected issues such as clean energy. Congressional action is the avenue of change at this level, however in an increasingly partisan and divided environment, progress on this front is far short of what is needed. Looking to the president is logical here, both as a single actor more insulated from partisan fights, but also as head of the branch in charge of implementing the nation’s laws. This paper looks to explore what means of influence the president has on the action taken by federal agencies and how such methods can be made more effective. Through a principal-agent framework, the role of regulatory and appointment powers are examined with a variety of historical and contemporary case studies. While only a subset of the powers afforded to a president, the areas explored offer wide latitude for action, in areas that are particularly important for energy development. The paper concludes with some reflections for the future, suggesting how these considerations can be practically applied.


Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1938-1939

Date: 1939-01-01

Access: Open access



After Atget: Todd Webb Photographs New York and Paris

Date: 2011-01-01

Creator: Diana K. Tuite

Access: Open access

Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art Oct. 28, 2011 through January 29, 2012. Essay entitled: Signs of the city / by Diana Tuite.



Resonance in the menstrual cycle: A new model of the LH surge

Date: 2003-01-01

Creator: Mary Lou Zeeman, W. Weckesser, D. Gokhman

Access: Open access

In vertebrates, ovulation is triggered by a surge of LH from the pituitary. The precise mechanism by which rising oestradiol concentrations initiate the LH surge in the human menstrual cycle remains a fundamental open question of reproductive biology. It is well known that sampling of serum LH on a time scale of minutes reveals pulsatile release from the pituitary in response to pulses of gonadotrophin releasing hormone from the hypothalamus. The LH pulse frequency and amplitude vary considerably over the cycle, with the highest frequency and amplitude at the midcycle surge. Here a new mathematical model is presented of the pituitary as a damped oscillator (pulse generator) driven by the hypothalamus. The model LH surge is consistent with LH data on the time scales of both minutes and days. The model is used to explain the surprising pulse frequency characteristics required to treat human infertility disorders such as Kallmann's syndrome, and new experimental predictions are made.


Large N universality of the two-dimensional Yang-Mills string

Date: 1995-07-17

Creator: Michael Crescimanno, Stephen G. Naculich, Howard J. Schnitzer

Access: Open access

We exhibit the gauge-group independence ("universality") of all normalized non-intersecting Wilson loop expectation values in the large N limit of two-dimensional Yang-Mills theory. This universality is most easily understood via the string theory reformulation of these gauge theories. By constructing an isomorphism between the string maps contributing to normalized Wilson loop expectation values in the different theories, we prove the large N universality of these observables on any surface. The string calculation of the Wilson loop expectation value on the sphere also leads to an indication of the large N phase transition separating strong- and weak-coupling phases. © 1995.


Extinction in nonautonomous competitive Lotka-Volterra Systems

Date: 1996-01-01

Creator: Francisco Montes De Oca, Mary Lou Zeeman

Access: Open access

It is well known that for the two species autonomous competitive Lotka-Volterra model with no fixed point in the open positive quadrant, one of the species is driven to extinction, whilst the other population stabilises at its own carrying capacity. In this paper we prove a generalisation of this result to nonautonomous systems of arbitrary finite dimension. That is, for the n species nonautonomous competitive Lotka-Volterra model, we exhibit simple algebraic criteria on the parameters which guarantee that all but one of the species is driven to extinction. The restriction of the system to the remaining axis is a nonautonomous logistic equation, which has a unique solution u(t) that is strictly positive and bounded for all time; see Coleman (Math. Biosci. 45 (1979), 159-173) and Ahmad (Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 117 (1993), 199-205). We prove in addition that all solutions of the n-dimensional system with strictly positive initial conditions are asymptotic to u(t). © 1996 American Mathematical Society.


Construction and validation of UV-C decontamination cabinets for filtering facepiece respirators: Comment

Date: 2021-07-20

Creator: Anant Agrawal, Joyce Bor, Dale Syphers

Access: Open access

In their September 2020 paper [Appl. Opt.59, 7585 (2020)], Purschke et al . report UV-C transmittance measurements of N95 filtering facepiece respirators (FFRs), including the 3M 1860, which is one of the most widely used FFRs.We have also measured the transmittance of this FFRin our two separate laboratories with multiple FFR samples, and we have obtained transmittance values similar to one another, but very different from what Purschke et al . reported for two of the four FFR layers.