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5 Publications

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    06/01/08 | Action recognition using ballistic dynamics.
    Vitadalevuni SN, Kellokumpu V, Davis LS
    2008 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition. 2008 Jun;2008:1-8. doi: 10.1109/CVPR.2008.4587806

    We present a Bayesian framework for action recognition through ballistic dynamics. Psycho-kinesiological studies indicate that ballistic movements form the natural units for human movement planning. The framework leads to an efficient and robust algorithm for temporally segmenting videos into atomic movements. Individual movements are annotated with person-centric morphological labels called ballistic verbs. This is tested on a dataset of interactive movements, achieving high recognition rates. The approach is also applied on a gesture recognition task, improving a previously reported recognition rate from 84% to 92%. Consideration of ballistic dynamics enhances the performance of the popular Motion History Image feature. We also illustrate the approach’s general utility on real-world videos. Experiments indicate that the method is robust to view, style and appearance variations.

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    06/01/08 | Breaking the pumping speed barrier in mass spectrometry: discontinuous atmospheric pressure interface.
    Gao L, Cooks RG, Ouyang Z
    Analytical Chemistry. 2008 Jun 1;80(11):4026-32. doi: 10.1364/AO.50.001792

    The performance of mass spectrometers with limited pumping capacity is shown to be improved through use of a discontinuous atmospheric pressure interface (DAPI). A proof-of-concept DAPI interface was designed and characterized using a miniature rectilinear ion trap mass spectrometer. The interface consists of a simple capillary directly connecting the atmospheric pressure ion source to the vacuum mass analyzer region; it has no ion optical elements and no differential pumping stages. Gases carrying ionized analytes were pulsed into the mass analyzer for short periods at high flow rates rather than being continuously introduced at lower flow rates; this procedure maximized ion transfer. The use of DAPI provides a simple solution to the problem of coupling an atmospheric pressure ionization source to a miniature instrument with limited pumping capacity. Data were recorded using various atmospheric pressure ionization sources, including electrospray ionization (ESI), nano-ESI, atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI), and desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) sources. The interface was opened briefly for ion introduction during each scan. With the use of the 18 W pumping system of the Mini 10, limits of detection in the low part-per-billion levels were achieved and unit resolution mass spectra were recorded.

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    06/01/08 | I5S: wide-field light microscopy with 100-nm-scale resolution in three dimensions.
    Shao L, Isaac B, Uzawa S, Agard DA, Sedat JW, Gustafsson MG
    Biophysical Journal. 2008 Jun;94(12):4971-83. doi: 10.1529/biophysj.107.120352

    A new type of wide-field fluorescence microscopy is described, which produces 100-nm-scale spatial resolution in all three dimensions, by using structured illumination in a microscope that has two opposing objective lenses. Illumination light is split by a grating and a beam splitter into six mutually coherent beams, three of which enter the specimen through each objective lens. The resulting illumination intensity pattern contains high spatial frequency components both axially and laterally. In addition, the emission is collected by both objective lenses coherently, and combined interferometrically on a single camera, resulting in a detection transfer function with axially extended support. These two effects combine to produce near-isotropic resolution. Experimental images of test samples and biological specimens confirm the theoretical predictions.

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    Riddiford Lab
    06/01/08 | Juvenile hormone action: a 2007 perspective.
    Riddiford LM
    Journal of Insect Physiology. 2008 Jun;54(6):895-901. doi: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2008.01.014

    Juvenile hormone (JH) is a key hormone in regulation of the insect’s life history, both in maintaining the larval state during molts and in directing reproductive maturation. This short review highlights the recent papers of the past year that lend new insight into the role of this hormone in the larva and the mechanisms whereby it achieves this role.

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    06/01/08 | Three-dimensional resolution doubling in wide-field fluorescence microscopy by structured illumination.
    Gustafsson MG, Shao L, Carlton PM, Wang CJ, Golubovskaya IN, Cande WZ, Agard DA, Sedat JW
    Biophysical Journal. 2008 Jun;94(12):4957-70. doi: 10.1529/biophysj.107.120345

    Structured illumination microscopy is a method that can increase the spatial resolution of wide-field fluorescence microscopy beyond its classical limit by using spatially structured illumination light. Here we describe how this method can be applied in three dimensions to double the axial as well as the lateral resolution, with true optical sectioning. A grating is used to generate three mutually coherent light beams, which interfere in the specimen to form an illumination pattern that varies both laterally and axially. The spatially structured excitation intensity causes normally unreachable high-resolution information to become encoded into the observed images through spatial frequency mixing. This new information is computationally extracted and used to generate a three-dimensional reconstruction with twice as high resolution, in all three dimensions, as is possible in a conventional wide-field microscope. The method has been demonstrated on both test objects and biological specimens, and has produced the first light microscopy images of the synaptonemal complex in which the lateral elements are clearly resolved.

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