8,284 research outputs found
Combined effect of neolamarckia cadamba leaves and electroporation method on hela cell anti- proliferation process
This study suggests that natural sources may become
an important tool in treating cancer. Neolamarckia cadamba
(NC) leaves also well-known as “Anthocephalus Cadamba”, is
a precious plant in Ayurvedic medicine. HeLa cells are one of
the examples of eukaryotic cells type. It is derived from human
cervical cancer cells. This experiment is conducted in different
concentrations of NC Leaves (1μg/ml, 5μg/ml, 10μg/ml,
20μg/ml, 30μg/ml, 40μg/ml, 50μg/ml, 60μg/ml, 70μg/ml,
80μg/ml, 90μg/ml and 100μg/ml) for 48 hours. This
experiment’s result proves that the anti-cancer properties of
the extract of NC leaves are by increasing the concentration of
extract, the numbers of cell viability will decrease. For
contribution, the process of NC leaves extract will be combined
with the electroporation process to investigate the effect on
HeLa cell. Electroporation parameters used for this study were
(voltage 600v/cm, pulse duration 5ms, single pulse)
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Testing for delay defects utilizing test data compression techniques
textAs technology shrinks new types of defects are being discovered and new fault models are being created for those defects. Transition delay and path delay fault models are two such models that have been created, but they still fall short in that they are unable to obtain a high test coverage of smaller delay defects; these defects can cause functional behavior to fail and also indicate potential reliability issues. The first part of this dissertation addresses these problems by presenting an enhanced timing-based delay fault testing technique that incorporates the use of standard delay ATPG, along with timing information gathered from standard static timing analysis. Utilizing delay fault patterns typically increases the test data volume by 3-5X when compared to stuck-at patterns. Combined with the increase in test data volume associated with the increase in gate count that typically accompanies the miniaturization of technology, this adds up to a very large increase in test data volume that directly affect test time and thus the manufacturing cost. The second part of this dissertation presents a technique for improving test compression and reducing test data volume by using multiple expansion ratios while determining the configuration of the scan chains for each of the expansion ratios using a dependency analysis procedure that accounts for structural dependencies as well as free variable dependencies to improve the probability of detecting faults. Finally, this dissertation addresses the problem of unknown values (X’s) in the output response data corrupting the data and degrading the performance of the output response compactor and thus the overall amount of test compression. Four techniques are presented that focus on handling response data with large percentages of X’s. The first uses X-canceling MISR architecture that is based on deterministically observing scan cells, and the second is a hybrid approach that combines a simple X-masking scheme with the X-canceling MISR for further gains in test compression. The third and fourth techniques revolve around reiterative LFSR X-masking, which take advantage of LFSR-encoded masks that can be reused for multiple scan slices in novel ways.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
DPP-PMRF: Rethinking Optimization for a Probabilistic Graphical Model Using Data-Parallel Primitives
We present a new parallel algorithm for probabilistic graphical model
optimization. The algorithm relies on data-parallel primitives (DPPs), which
provide portable performance over hardware architecture. We evaluate results on
CPUs and GPUs for an image segmentation problem. Compared to a serial baseline,
we observe runtime speedups of up to 13X (CPU) and 44X (GPU). We also compare
our performance to a reference, OpenMP-based algorithm, and find speedups of up
to 7X (CPU).Comment: LDAV 2018, October 201
Satellite on-board processing for earth resources data
Results of a survey of earth resources user applications and their data requirements, earth resources multispectral scanner sensor technology, and preprocessing algorithms for correcting the sensor outputs and for data bulk reduction are presented along with a candidate data format. Computational requirements required to implement the data analysis algorithms are included along with a review of computer architectures and organizations. Computer architectures capable of handling the algorithm computational requirements are suggested and the environmental effects of an on-board processor discussed. By relating performance parameters to the system requirements of each of the user requirements the feasibility of on-board processing is determined for each user. A tradeoff analysis is performed to determine the sensitivity of results to each of the system parameters. Significant results and conclusions are discussed, and recommendations are presented
Cockpit Ocular Recording System (CORS)
The overall goal was the development of a Cockpit Ocular Recording System (CORS). Four tasks were used: (1) the development of the system; (2) the experimentation and improvement of the system; (3) demonstrations of the working system; and (4) system documentation. Overall, the prototype represents a workable and flexibly designed CORS system. For the most part, the hardware use for the prototype system is off-the-shelf. All of the following software was developed specifically: (1) setup software that the user specifies the cockpit configuration and identifies possible areas in which the pilot will look; (2) sensing software which integrates the 60 Hz data from the oculometer and heat orientation sensing unit; (3) processing software which applies a spatiotemporal filter to the lookpoint data to determine fixation/dwell positions; (4) data recording output routines; and (5) playback software which allows the user to retrieve and analyze the data. Several experiments were performed to verify the system accuracy and quantify system deficiencies. These tests resulted in recommendations for any future system that might be constructed
Efficient reconfigurable architectures for 3D medical image compression
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Recently, the more widespread use of three-dimensional (3-D) imaging modalities,
such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), positron
emission tomography (PET), and ultrasound (US) have generated a massive amount
of volumetric data. These have provided an impetus to the development of other
applications, in particular telemedicine and teleradiology. In these fields, medical
image compression is important since both efficient storage and transmission of data
through high-bandwidth digital communication lines are of crucial importance.
Despite their advantages, most 3-D medical imaging algorithms are computationally intensive with matrix transformation as the most fundamental operation involved in the transform-based methods. Therefore, there is a real need for high-performance systems, whilst keeping architectures exible to allow
for quick upgradeability with real-time applications. Moreover, in order to obtain
efficient solutions for large medical volumes data, an efficient implementation of
these operations is of significant importance. Reconfigurable hardware, in the form of field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) has been proposed as viable system
building block in the construction of high-performance systems at an economical price.
Consequently, FPGAs seem an ideal candidate to harness and exploit their inherent
advantages such as massive parallelism capabilities, multimillion gate counts, and
special low-power packages. The key achievements of the work presented in this thesis are summarised as follows. Two architectures for 3-D Haar wavelet transform (HWT) have been proposed based on transpose-based computation and partial reconfiguration suitable for 3-D medical imaging applications. These applications require continuous hardware servicing, and as a result dynamic partial reconfiguration (DPR) has been introduced. Comparative study for both non-partial and partial reconfiguration implementation has shown that DPR offers many advantages and leads to a compelling solution for implementing computationally intensive applications such as 3-D medical image compression. Using DPR, several large systems are mapped to small hardware resources, and the area, power consumption as well as maximum frequency are
optimised and improved. Moreover, an FPGA-based architecture of the finite Radon transform (FRAT)with three design strategies has been proposed: direct implementation of pseudo-code with a sequential or pipelined description, and block random access memory (BRAM)- based method. An analysis with various medical imaging modalities has been carried out. Results obtained for image de-noising implementation using FRAT exhibits
promising results in reducing Gaussian white noise in medical images. In terms of
hardware implementation, promising trade-offs on maximum frequency, throughput
and area are also achieved. Furthermore, a novel hardware implementation of 3-D medical image compression system with context-based adaptive variable length coding (CAVLC)
has been proposed. An evaluation of the 3-D integer transform (IT) and the discrete
wavelet transform (DWT) with lifting scheme (LS) for transform blocks reveal that
3-D IT demonstrates better computational complexity than the 3-D DWT, whilst
the 3-D DWT with LS exhibits a lossless compression that is significantly useful for
medical image compression. Additionally, an architecture of CAVLC that is capable
of compressing high-definition (HD) images in real-time without any buffer between
the quantiser and the entropy coder is proposed. Through a judicious parallelisation, promising results have been obtained with limited resources. In summary, this research is tackling the issues of massive 3-D medical volumes data that requires compression as well as hardware implementation to accelerate the
slowest operations in the system. Results obtained also reveal a significant achievement in terms of the architecture efficiency and applications performance.Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia (MOHE),
Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia (UTHM) and the British Counci
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