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Dive into the research topics where David J. Kedziora is active.

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Featured researches published by David J. Kedziora.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2010

Mammalian Sleep Dynamics: How Diverse Features Arise from a Common Physiological Framework

Andrew J. K. Phillips; P. A. Robinson; David J. Kedziora; Romesh G. Abeysuriya

Mammalian sleep varies widely, ranging from frequent napping in rodents to consolidated blocks in primates and unihemispheric sleep in cetaceans. In humans, rats, mice and cats, sleep patterns are orchestrated by homeostatic and circadian drives to the sleep–wake switch, but it is not known whether this system is ubiquitous among mammals. Here, changes of just two parameters in a recent quantitative model of this switch are shown to reproduce typical sleep patterns for 17 species across 7 orders. Furthermore, the parameter variations are found to be consistent with the assumptions that homeostatic production and clearance scale as brain volume and surface area, respectively. Modeling an additional inhibitory connection between sleep-active neuronal populations on opposite sides of the brain generates unihemispheric sleep, providing a testable hypothetical mechanism for this poorly understood phenomenon. Neuromodulation of this connection alone is shown to account for the ability of fur seals to transition between bihemispheric sleep on land and unihemispheric sleep in water. Determining what aspects of mammalian sleep patterns can be explained within a single framework, and are thus universal, is essential to understanding the evolution and function of mammalian sleep. This is the first demonstration of a single model reproducing sleep patterns for multiple different species. These wide-ranging findings suggest that the core physiological mechanisms controlling sleep are common to many mammalian orders, with slight evolutionary modifications accounting for interspecies differences.


Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2013

Rogue wave modes for the long wave-short wave resonance model

Kwok Wing Chow; Hiu Ning Chan; David J. Kedziora; R. Grimshaw

The long wave–short wave resonance model arises physically when the phase velocity of a long wave matches the group velocity of a short wave. It is a system of nonlinear evolution equations solvable by the Hirota bilinear method and also possesses a Lax pair formulation. ‘‘Rogue wave’’ modes, algebraically localized entities in both space and time, are constructed from the breathers by a singular limit involving a ‘‘coalescence’’ of wavenumbers in the long


Physical Review C | 2010

New inverse quasifission mechanism to produce neutron-rich transfermium nuclei

David J. Kedziora; C. Simenel

Based on time-dependent Hartree-Fock theory, a new inverse quasifission mechanism is proposed to produce neutron-rich transfermium nuclei in the collision of prolate deformed actinides. Calculations show that the collision of the tip of one nucleus with the side of the other results in a nucleon flux toward the latter. The roles of nucleon evaporation and impact parameter, as well as collision time, are discussed.


Chaos | 2015

Integrable equations of the infinite nonlinear Schrödinger equation hierarchy with time variable coefficients

David J. Kedziora; Adrian Ankiewicz; Atiqur Chowdury; Nail Akhmediev

We present an infinite nonlinear Schrödinger equation hierarchy of integrable equations, together with the recurrence relations defining it. To demonstrate integrability, we present the Lax pairs for the whole hierarchy, specify its Darboux transformations and provide several examples of solutions. These resulting wavefunctions are given in exact analytical form. We then show that the Lax pair and Darboux transformation formalisms still apply in this scheme when the coefficients in the hierarchy depend on the propagation variable (e.g., time). This extension thus allows for the construction of complicated solutions within a greatly diversified domain of generalised nonlinear systems.


Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2012

Physiologically based quantitative modeling of unihemispheric sleep.

David J. Kedziora; Romesh G. Abeysuriya; Andrew J. K. Phillips; P. A. Robinson

Unihemispheric sleep has been observed in numerous species, including birds and aquatic mammals. While knowledge of its functional role has been improved in recent years, the physiological mechanisms that generate this behavior remain poorly understood. Here, unihemispheric sleep is simulated using a physiologically based quantitative model of the mammalian ascending arousal system. The model includes mutual inhibition between wake-promoting monoaminergic nuclei (MA) and sleep-promoting ventrolateral preoptic nuclei (VLPO), driven by circadian and homeostatic drives as well as cholinergic and orexinergic input to MA. The model is extended here to incorporate two distinct hemispheres and their interconnections. It is postulated that inhibitory connections between VLPO nuclei in opposite hemispheres are responsible for unihemispheric sleep, and it is shown that contralateral inhibitory connections promote unihemispheric sleep while ipsilateral inhibitory connections promote bihemispheric sleep. The frequency of alternating unihemispheric sleep bouts is chiefly determined by sleep homeostasis and its corresponding time constant. It is shown that the model reproduces dolphin sleep, and that the sleep regimes of humans, cetaceans, and fur seals, the latter both terrestrially and in a marine environment, require only modest changes in contralateral connection strength and homeostatic time constant. It is further demonstrated that fur seals can potentially switch between their terrestrial bihemispheric and aquatic unihemispheric sleep patterns by varying just the contralateral connection strength. These results provide experimentally testable predictions regarding the differences between species that sleep bihemispherically and unihemispherically.


arXiv: Nuclear Theory | 2011

Actinide collisions for QED and superheavy elements with the time-dependent Hartree-Fock theory and the Balian-Veneroni variational principle

C. Simenel; Cedric Golabek; David J. Kedziora

Collisions of actinide nuclei form, during very short times of few zs (


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2018

How should HIV resources be allocated? Lessons learnt from applying Optima HIV in 23 countries

Robyn M Stuart; Laura Grobicki; Hassan Haghparast-Bidgoli; Jasmina Panovska-Griffiths; Jolene Skordis; Olivia Keiser; Janne Anton Markus Estill; Zofia Baranczuk; Sherrie L Kelly; Iyanoosh Reporter; David J. Kedziora; Andrew J. Shattock; Janka Petravic; S Azfar Hussain; Kelsey Grantham; Richard Gray; Xiao F Yap; Rowan Martin-Hughes; Clemens Benedikt; Nicole Fraser-Hurt; Emiko Masaki; David Wilson; Marelize Gorgens; Elizabeth Mziray; Nejma Cheikh; Zara Shubber; Cliff C. Kerr

10^{-21}


Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2012

Frequency-based quantum computers from a Chemist's perspective

Laura K. McKemmish; David J. Kedziora; Graham White; Noel S. Hush; Jeffrey R. Reimers

s), the heaviest ensembles of interacting nucleons available on Earth. Such collisions are used to produce super-strong electric fields by the huge number of interacting protons to test spontaneous positron-electron pair emission (vacuum decay) predicted by the quantum electrodynamics (QED) theory. Multi-nucleon transfer in actinide collisions could also be used as an alternative way to fusion in order to produce neutron-rich heavy and superheavy elements thanks to inverse quasifission mechanisms. Actinide collisions are studied in a dynamical quantum microscopic approach. The three-dimensional time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) code {\textsc{tdhf3d}} is used with a full Skyrme energy density functional to investigate the time evolution of expectation values of one-body operators, such as fragment position and particle number. This code is also used to compute the dispersion of the particle numbers (e.g., widths of fragment mass and charge distributions) from TDHF transfer probabilities, on the one hand, and using the Balian-Veneroni variational principle, on the other hand. A first application to test QED is discussed. Collision times in


The Lancet HIV | 2018

The global Optima HIV allocative efficiency model: targeting resources in efforts to end AIDS

Sherrie L Kelly; Rowan Martin-Hughes; Robyn M Stuart; Xiao F Yap; David J. Kedziora; Kelsey Grantham; S Azfar Hussain; Iyanoosh Reporter; Andrew J. Shattock; Laura Grobicki; Hassan Haghparast-Bidgoli; Jolene Skordis-Worrall; Zofia Baranczuk; Olivia Keiser; Janne Anton Markus Estill; Janka Petravic; Richard Gray; Clemens Benedikt; Nicole Fraser; Marelize Gorgens; David Wilson; Cliff C. Kerr; David P. Wilson

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PLOS ONE | 2017

Getting it right when budgets are tight: Using optimal expansion pathways to prioritize responses to concentrated and mixed HIV epidemics.

Robyn M Stuart; Cliff C. Kerr; Hassan Haghparast-Bidgoli; Janne Estill; Laura Grobicki; Zofia Baranczuk; Lorena Prieto; Vilma Montañez; Iyanoosh Reporter; Richard Gray; Jolene Skordis-Worrall; Olivia Keiser; Nejma Cheikh; Krittayawan Boonto; Sutayut Osornprasop; Fernando Lavadenz; Clemens Benedikt; Rowan Martin-Hughes; S Azfar Hussain; Sherrie L Kelly; David J. Kedziora; David Wilson

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Adrian Ankiewicz

Australian National University

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Nail Akhmediev

Australian National University

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Atiqur Chowdury

Australian National University

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Robyn M Stuart

University of Copenhagen

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R. Grimshaw

University College London

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