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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: This is a list of codes generated from ancient egyptian texts. The codes are used for a correspondence analysis (CA). Codes and CA software are available from the linked webpage.
    Language: English
    Type: researchdata , doc-type:ResearchData
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In this paper, we explore the relationship patterns between Ancient Egyptian texts of the corpus ``Synodal decrees'', which are originating between 243 and 185 BCE, during the Ptolemaic period. Particularly, we are interested in analyzing the grammatical features of the different texts. Conventional data analysis methods such as correspondence Analysis are very useful to explore the patterns of statistical interdependence between categories of variables. However, it is based on a PCA-like dimension-reduction method and turned out to be unsuitable for our dataset due to the high dimensionality of our data representations. Additionally, the similarity between pairs of texts and pairs of grammatical features is observed through the distance between their representation, but the degree of association between a particular grammatical feature and a text is not. Here, we applied a qualitative Euclidean embedding method that provides a new Euclidean representation of the categories of variables. This new representation of the categories is constructed in such a way that all the patterns of statistical interdependence, similarity, and association, are seen through the Euclidean distance between them. Nevertheless, the PCA-like dimension-reduction method also performed poorly on our new representation. Therefore, we obtained a two-dimensional visualization using non-linear methods such UMAP or t-SNE. Although these dimension-reduction methods reduced the interpretability of interpoint distances, we were still able to identify important similarity patterns between the Synodal text as well as their association patterns with the grammatical features.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: We consider two disjoint sets of points with a distance metric, or a proximity function, associated with each set. If each set can be separately embedded into separate Euclidean spaces, then we provide sufficient conditions for the two sets to be jointly embedded in one Euclidean space. In this joint Euclidean embedding, the distances between the points are generated by a specific relation-preserving function. Consequently, the mutual distances between two points of the same set are specific qualitative transformations of their mutual distances in their original space; the pairwise distances between the points of different sets can be constructed from an arbitrary proximity function (might require scaling).
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The symbiotic relationship between corals and photosynthetic algae is the foundation of coral reef ecosystems. This relationship breaks down, leading to coral death, when sea temperature exceeds the thermal tolerance of the coral-algae complex. While acclimation via phenotypic plasticity at the organismal level is an important mechanism for corals to cope with global warming, community-based shifts in response to acclimating capacities may give valuable indications about the future of corals at a regional scale. Reliable regional-scale predictions, however, are hampered by uncertainties on the speed with which coral communities will be able to acclimate. Here we present a trait-based, acclimation dynamics model, which we use in combination with observational data, to provide a first, crude estimate of the speed of coral acclimation at the community level and to investigate the effects of different global warming scenarios on three iconic reef ecosystems of the tropics: Great Barrier Reef, South East Asia, and Caribbean. The model predicts that coral acclimation may confer some level of protection by delaying the decline of some reefs such as the Great Barrier Reef. However, the current rates of acclimation will not be sufficient to rescue corals from global warming. Based on our estimates of coral acclimation capacities, the model results suggest substantial declines in coral abundances in all three regions, ranging from 12% to 55%, depending on the region and on the climate change scenario considered. Our results highlight the importance and urgency of precise assessments and quantitative estimates, for example through laboratory experiments, of the natural acclimation capacity of corals and of the speed with which corals may be able to acclimate to global warming.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Due to the increase in accessibility and robustness of sequencing technology, single cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) data has become abundant. The technology has made significant contributions to discovering novel phenotypes and heterogeneities of cells. Recently, there has been a push for using single-- or multiple scRNA-seq snapshots to infer the underlying gene regulatory networks (GRNs) steering the cells' biological functions. To date, this aspiration remains unrealised. In this paper, we took a bottom-up approach and curated a stochastic two gene interaction model capturing the dynamics of a complete system of genes, mRNAs, and proteins. In the model, the regulation was placed upstream from the mRNA on the gene level. We then inferred the underlying regulatory interactions from only the observation of the mRNA population through~time. We could detect signatures of the regulation by combining information of the mean, covariance, and the skewness of the mRNA counts through time. We also saw that reordering the observations using pseudo-time did not conserve the covariance and skewness of the true time course. The underlying GRN could be captured consistently when we fitted the moments up to degree three; however, this required a computationally expensive non-linear least squares minimisation solver. There are still major numerical challenges to overcome for inference of GRNs from scRNA-seq data. These challenges entail finding informative summary statistics of the data which capture the critical regulatory information. Furthermore, the statistics have to evolve linearly or piece-wise linearly through time to achieve computational feasibility and scalability.
    Language: English
    Type: reportzib , doc-type:preprint
    Format: application/pdf
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