Publications by authors named "B Tingley"

Image analysis of subcellular structures and biological processes relies on specific, context-dependent pipelines, which are labor-intensive, constrained by the intricacies of the specific biological system, and inaccessible to broader applications. Here we introduce the application of dispersion indices, a statistical tool traditionally employed by economists, to analyze the spatial distribution and heterogeneity of subcellular structures. This computationally efficient high-throughput approach, termed GRID (Generalized Readout of Image Dispersion), is highly generalizable, compatible with open-source image analysis software, and adaptable to diverse biological scenarios.

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Simulations predict that hot super-Earth sized exoplanets can have their envelopes stripped by photoevaporation, which would present itself as a lack of these exoplanets. However, this absence in the exoplanet population has escaped a firm detection. Here we demonstrate, using asteroseismology on a sample of exoplanets and exoplanet candidates observed during the Kepler mission that, while there is an abundance of super-Earth sized exoplanets with low incident fluxes, none are found with high incident fluxes.

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Of the over 400 known exoplanets, there are about 70 planets that transit their central star, a situation that permits the derivation of their basic parameters and facilitates investigations of their atmospheres. Some short-period planets, including the first terrestrial exoplanet (CoRoT-7b), have been discovered using a space mission designed to find smaller and more distant planets than can be seen from the ground. Here we report transit observations of CoRoT-9b, which orbits with a period of 95.

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