999 research outputs found
Figure 14. Right-side mating Brettus cingulatus near a in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 14. Right-side mating Brettus cingulatus near a brood that has already molted to instar II. Photographed by Hemanth Kumar H M at Belur, Hassan district, Karnataka.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 14, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
Xynobius chrysops Wu, van Achterberg, Sheng & Chen 2018
<i>Xynobius chrysops</i> Wu, van Achterberg, Sheng & Chen, 2018 (Fig. 3) <p> <b>Material examined.</b> Two females on card; India: Karnataka: Sakleshpura; sweep net; 30.xii.2022; coll. Hemanth Kumar H. M; code—NIM/ NBAIR /Hym/Brac/Opi/Xyn/30222-A & B (NIM).</p>Published as part of <i>Gupta, Ankita, Achterberg, Cornelis Van, Pattar, Rohit & Kumar, Hemanth, 2023, First report of two braconid genera Syntretus Foerster and Xynobius Foerster from India with description of one new species, pp. 582-588 in Zootaxa 5319 (4)</i> on page 586, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5319.4.8, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/8203380">http://zenodo.org/record/8203380</a>
Figure 12 in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 12. Immature Brettus cingulatus feeding on late instar I (fully pigmented) B. cingulatus spiderlings in an untended nest. It appears that the female left this brood without converting the egg nest to a brood nest, and the instar I spiderlings, now exposed and vulnerable outside of that nest, had no guardian. At this stage (instar I) it is likely that the spiderlings were still completely blind. Photographs by Hemanth Kumar H M.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 13, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
Figure 7 in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 7. Sequence of frames from a 30 fps video of the brooding female Brettus cingulatus shown in Figure 5. 1-15, Female masticating eggshell remnants with her chelicerae. 550-559, Female flicking eggshell remnant (red arrow) away from the nest with her pedipalps.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 9, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
Figure 11 in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 11. Updated distribution map for Brettus cingulatus, endemic to tropical south and southeast Asia. Published localities referenced by Ahmed et. al (2018) are shown in yellow. Localities corresponding to verified photographs posted in iNaturalist are shown in white. Other localities (green, 1-7) are referenced by source publication. Some circles cover more than one locality.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 12, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
Area Efficient Full Subtractor Based on Static 125nm CMOS Technology
A combinational logic circuit is said to be independent of time since it gives the results based on present input not past input. This research is concerned about the comparison between currently existing full subtractor IC and the subtractor which is built efficiently in the 125nm and observing the distortion and changes caused in the result of both full subtractor. The behaviour of the efficient full subtractor is designed using tanner eda tools which was useful and the currently existing full subtractor is designed using xilnx software and lastly the layout for this research is designed with the help of multisim. With help of this research many newly created circuits can designed much more smaller. G. Hemanth Kumar | K. Gopi | P. Gowtham | G. Naveen Balaji "Area Efficient Full Subtractor Based on Static 125nm CMOS Technology" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-2 | Issue-6 , October 2018, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd18860.pd
Figure 10. Adult male Brettus cingulatus. 1 in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 10. Adult male Brettus cingulatus. 1, Display with pedipalps extended to the sides. 2, Grooming, with fangs extended and chelicerae separated to reveal the endites and rostrum to the rear. Attribution and ©: 1-2, acharya_mr.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 12, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
Figure 8 in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 8. Sequence of selected (not consecutive) frames from a 30 fps video of the brooding female Brettus cingulatus shown in Figure 5. These represent a series of positions at which this female attached silk lines, mostly around the periphery of the nest. This entire sequence of attachment positions is diagrammed in frame 1410 (yellow circle to yellow circle). Note that the number of young in the nest at this stage was considerably smaller than the ~43 eggs deposited by this female.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 10, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
Immersive and interactive subjective quality assessment of dynamic volumetric meshes
Dynamic point cloud delivery can provide the required interactivity and realism to six degrees of freedom (6DoF) interactive applications. However, dynamic point cloud rendering imposes stringent requirements (e.g., frames per second (FPS) and quality) that current hardware cannot handle. A possible solution is to convert point cloud into meshes before rendering on the head-mounted display (HMD). However, this conversion can induce degradation in quality perception such as a change in depth, level of detail, or presence of artifacts. This paper, as one of the first, presents an extensive subjective study of the effects of converting point cloud to meshes with different quality representations. In addition, we provide a novel in-session content rating methodology, providing a more accurate assessment as well as avoiding post-study bias. Our study shows that both compression level and observation distance have their influence on subjective perception. However, the degree of influence is heavily entangled with the content and geometry at hand. Furthermore, we also noticed that while end users are clearly aware of quality switches, the influence on their quality perception is limited. As a result, this has the potential to open up possibilities in bringing the adaptive video streaming paradigm to the 6DoF environment
Figure 1. Brooding female Brettus cingulatus Thorell 1895. 1 in Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini)
Figure 1. Brooding female Brettus cingulatus Thorell 1895. 1, Guarding recently deposited cluster of eggs covered with silk fibers and white flecks. 2, Ten days later, guarding hatchlings (first instar). Larger white flecks represent eggshell fragments. 3, Three days later. All silk, white flecks, and eggshell fragments are gone, and except for their legs, the first instar young are now pigmented. Photographs by Abhijith A. P. C. at his Indraprastha Organic Farm, Kalalwadi Village, Karnataka, India.Published as part of Hill, David E., C., Abhijith A. P., Shenoy, Mohith & M, Hemanth Kumar H, 2022, Conversion of the egg nest to a brood nest by the female Brettus cingulatus (Araneae: Salticidae: Spartaeini), pp. 1-15 in Peckhamia 252 (2) on page 1, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.742827
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