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Papers

Total Posts 48
48

On the solution of a multi-additive functional equation and its stability

Park, Won-Gil; Bae, Jae-Hyeong | Journal of applied mathematics & informatics 22/1 (2006)

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47

On the solution of a multi-variable bi-additive functional equation

Park, Won-Gil; Bae, Jae-Hyeong | The Pure and Applied Mathematics (한국수학교육학회지시리즈B:순수및응용수학) 13/4 (2006)

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46

On the solution of a bi-Jensen functional equation and its stability

Bae, Jae-Hyeong; Park, Won-Gil | Bulletin of the Korean Mathematical Society (대한수학회보) 43/3 (2006)

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45

Exact artificial boundary conditions for continuum and discrete elasticity

Lee, Sunmi, Caflisch, Russel E., Lee, Young-Ju | SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics 66/5 (2006)

For the continuum and discrete elastic equations, we derive exact artificial boundary conditions (ABCs), often referred to as transparent boundary conditions, that can be applied at a planar interface below which there are no forces. Solution of the elasticity equations can then be performed using this interface as an artificial boundary, often with greatly reduced computational effort, but without loss of accuracy. A general solvability requirement is presented for the existence of an artificial boundary operator for discrete systems (such as discrete elasticity) on an unbounded (semi-infinite) domain. The solvability requirement is validated by introducing a sum-of-exponentials ansatz for the solution below the artificial boundary. We also derive a new expression for the total energy for the system, involving only the region above the artificial boundary. Numerical examples are provided to confirm and illustrate the accuracy and effectiveness of the results.

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44

Local regularity of the ∂-neumann operator

Mijoung Kim | Houston Journal of Mathematics 32/3 (2006)

Abstract. Using the vector field method, we find a more general condition than finite type that implies a local regularity result for the ∂-Neumann operator. In our result, it is possible for an analytic disk to be on the part of the boundary where we have local regularity. 1.

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43

ADGO: analysis of differentially expressed gene sets using composite GO annotation

Dougu Nam, Sang-Bae Kim, Seon-Kyu Kim, Sungjin Yang, Seon-Young Kim, In-Sun Chu | Bioinformatics 22/18 (2006)

Motivation: Genes are typically expressed in modular manners in biological processes. Recent studies reflect such features in analyzing gene expression patterns by directly scoring gene sets. Gene annotations have been used to define the gene sets, which have served to reveal specific biological themes from expression data. However, current annotations have limited analytical power, because they are classified by single categories providing only unary information for the gene sets. Results: Here we propose a method for discovering composite biological themes from expression data. We intersected two annotated gene sets from different categories of Gene Ontology (GO). We then scored the expression changes of all the single and intersected sets. In this way, we were able to uncover, for example, a gene set with the molecular function F and the cellular component C that showed significant expression change, while the changes in individual gene sets were not significant. We provided an exemplary analysis for HIV-1 immune response. In addition, we tested the method on 20 public datasets where we found many ‘filtered’ composite terms the number of which reached ∼34% (a strong criterion, 5% significance) of the number of significant unary terms on average. By using composite annotation, we can derive new and improved information about disease and biological processes from expression data. Availability: We provide a web application (ADGO: ) for the analysis of differentially expressed gene sets with composite GO annotations. The user can analyze Affymetrix and dual channel array (spotted cDNA and spotted oligo microarray) data for four species: human, mouse, rat and yeast.

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42

Steiner ratio for hyperbolic surface

Nobuhiro Innami and Byung Hak Kim | Proceedings of the Japan Academy, Ser. A Mathematical Sciences 82/6 (2006)

We prove that the Steiner ratio for hyperbolic surfaces is 1/2.

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41

Exotic smooth structure on $\Bbb {CP}^2\sharp 13 \overline {\Bbb {CP}}^2$(eng)

Yong Seung Cho, Yoon Hi Hong | KOREAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY 43/4 (2006)

In this paper, we construct a new exotic smooth 4-manifold X which is homeomorphic, but not diffeomorphic, to CP2#13 (CP) over bar (2). Moreover the manifold X has vanishing Seiberg-Witten invariants for all Spin(c)-structures of X and has no symplectic structure.

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40

Fourth-order partial differential equations for image enhancement

이덕균 | Applied Mathematics and Computation 175-1 (2006)

Second-order partial differential equations have been studied as a useful tool for noise removal. The Perona?Malik model [P. Perona, Malik, Scale space and edge detection using anisotropic diffusion, IEEE Trans. Pattern Anal. Mach. Intell. 12 (1990) 629? 639] has an edge preserving property but have sometimes the undesirable red effect. In this paper, we propose improved models by combining Catte? et al.s model [F. Catte, P.L. Lions, J.M. Morel, T. Coll, Image selective smoothing and edge detection by nonlinear diffusion, SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 129 (1992) 182?193] with fourth-order terms. We prove the existence and uniqueness of the proposed models. Then, we show numerical evidence of the power of resolution of these models with respect to other known models as the Perona?Malik model, the Catte? et al.s model, the modified total variation model by Chan et al. [T. Chan, A. Marquina, P. Mulet, Second order differential functionals in total variation-based image restoration. Available from : http:www.math.ucla.edu chan, etc.

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39

Shooting methods for numerical solutions of exact controllability problems constrained by linear and semilinear wave equations with local distributed controls

Sung-Dae Yang | Applied Mathematics and Computation 177/1 (2006)

Numerical solutions of exact controllability problems for linear and semilinear wave equations with distributed controls are studied. Exact controllability problems can be solved by the corresponding optimal control problems. The optimal control problem is reformulated as a system of equations (an optimality system) that consists of an initial value problem for the underlying (linear or semilinear) wave equation and a terminal value problem for the adjoint wave equation. The discretized optimality system is solved by a shooting method. The convergence properties of the numerical shooting method in the context of exact controllability are illustrated through computational experiments.

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