Use of high-stakes exams in a course has been associated with gender, racial, and socioeconomic inequities. We investigated whether offering students the opportunity to retake an exam makes high-stakes exams more equitable. Following the control value theory of achievement emotions, we hypothesized that exam retakes would increase students' perceived control over their performance and decrease the value of a single exam attempt, thereby maximizing exam performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe develop a method for constructing tolerance bounds for functional data with random warping variability. In particular, we define a generative, probabilistic model for the amplitude and phase components of such observations, which parsimoniously characterizes variability in the baseline data. Based on the proposed model, we define two different types of tolerance bounds that are able to measure both types of variability, and as a result, identify when the data has gone beyond the bounds of amplitude and/or phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe phylogenetic relationships and biogeographic history of Caribbean island ameivas () are not well-known because of incomplete sampling, conflicting datasets, and poor support for many clades. Here, we use phylogenomic and mitochondrial DNA datasets to reconstruct a well-supported phylogeny and assess historical colonization patterns in the group. We obtained sequence data from 316 nuclear loci and one mitochondrial marker for 16 of 19 extant species of the Caribbean endemic genus .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: We propose two electrocardiogram (ECG)-derived markers of T-wave morphological variability in the temporal, d, and amplitude, d, domains. Two additional markers, d and d, restricted to measure the nonlinear information present within d and d are also proposed.
Methods: We evaluated the accuracy of the proposed markers in capturing T-wave time and amplitude variations in 3 situations: 1) In a simulated set up with presence of additive Laplacian noise, 2) when modifying the spatio-temporal distribution of electrical repolarization with an electro-physiological cardiac model, and 3) in ECG records from healthy subjects undergoing a tilt table test.
A well-known issue in phylogenetics is discordance among gene trees, species trees, morphology, and other data types. Gene-tree discordance is often caused by incomplete lineage sorting, lateral gene transfer, and gene duplication. Multispecies-coalescent methods can account for incomplete lineage sorting and are believed by many to be more accurate than concatenation.
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