10 research outputs found

    Modellierung von On-Chip-Trace-Architekturen für eingebettete Systeme

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    Das als Trace bezeichnete nicht-invasive Aufzeichnen von Systemzuständen, während ein eingebettetes System unter realen Einsatzbedingungen in Echtzeit läuft und mit der Systemumgebung interagiert, ist ein wichtiger Teil von Softwaretests. Die Notwendigkeit für den On-Chip-Trace resultiert aus der rückläufigen Einsetzbarkeit etablierter Werkzeuge für den Off-Chip-Trace. Ein wesentlicher Bestandteil von On-Chip-Trace-Architekturen ist die Volumenreduktion der Tracedaten in deren Entstehungsgeschwindigkeit direkt auf dem Chip. Der Schwerpunkt liegt auf dem Trace des Instruktionsflusses von Prozessoren. Der aktuelle Stand der Forschung zeigt zwei Ausprägungen. Bei einfachen Lösungen ist der Kompressionsfaktor zu klein. Aufwendigere Lösungen liefern einen unvollständigen Instruktionstrace, wenn auch sequentielle Befehle bedingt ausgeführt werden. Bisher existieren keine Lösungen, die einen vollständigen Instruktionstrace mit hoher Kompression realisieren. Diese Lücke wird in der vorliegenden Arbeit geschlossen. Der systematische Entwurf der neuen On-Chip-Trace-Architektur beginnt mit der umfassenden Analyse typischer Benchmarkprogramme. Aus den Ergebnissen werden grundlegende Entwurfsentscheidungen abgeleitet. Diese Bitsequenzen von Ausführungsbits, die bei der bedingten Befehlsausführung entstehen, und die Zieladressen ausgeführter indirekter Sprünge werden in unabhängigen Kompressoren verarbeitet. Ein nachgeschalteter Kompressor für die Messages der anderen beiden Kompressoren ist optional und kann die Kompression weiter steigern. Diese Aufteilung stellt ein architektonisches Novum dar. Die Kompression von Bitsequenzen ist bisher ein weitestgehend unbehandeltes Feld. Implementiert worden ist hierfür ein gleitendes Wörterbuch mit der Granularität von Einzelbits. Die Vergleiche mit den untersuchten existierenden Architekturen zeigen die Überlegenheit der neuen Architektur bei der Kompression. Ein vollständiger Instruktionstrace ist für Prozessoren mit und ohne bedingt ausführbaren sequentiellen Befehlen realisiert worden

    Data bases and data base systems related to NASA's aerospace program. A bibliography with indexes

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    This bibliography lists 1778 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system, 1975 through 1980

    Brain Injury

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    The present two volume book "Brain Injury" is distinctive in its presentation and includes a wealth of updated information on many aspects in the field of brain injury. The Book is devoted to the pathogenesis of brain injury, concepts in cerebral blood flow and metabolism, investigative approaches and monitoring of brain injured, different protective mechanisms and recovery and management approach to these individuals, functional and endocrine aspects of brain injuries, approaches to rehabilitation of brain injured and preventive aspects of traumatic brain injuries. The collective contribution from experts in brain injury research area would be successfully conveyed to the readers and readers will find this book to be a valuable guide to further develop their understanding about brain injury

    Remote Sensing of Earth Resources: A literature survey with indexes (1970 - 1973 supplement). Section 1: Abstracts

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    Abstracts of reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system between March 1970 and December 1973 are presented in the following areas: agriculture and forestry, environmental changes and cultural resources, geodesy and cartography, geology and mineral resources, oceanography and marine resources, hydrology and water management, data processing and distribution systems, instrumentation and sensors, and economic analysis

    11th International Coral Reef Symposium Proceedings

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    A defining theme of the 11th International Coral Reef Symposium was that the news for coral reef ecosystems are far from encouraging. Climate change happens now much faster than in an ice-age transition, and coral reefs continue to suffer fever-high temperatures as well as sour ocean conditions. Corals may be falling behind, and there appears to be no special silver bullet remedy. Nevertheless, there are hopeful signs that we should not despair. Reef ecosystems respond vigorously to protective measures and alleviation of stress. For concerned scientists, managers, conservationists, stakeholders, students, and citizens, there is a great role to play in continuing to report on the extreme threat that climate change represents to earth’s natural systems. Urgent action is needed to reduce CO2 emissions. In the interim, we can and must buy time for coral reefs through increased protection from sewage, sediment, pollutants, overfishing, development, and other stressors, all of which we know can damage coral health. The time to act is now. The canary in the coral-coal mine is dead, but we still have time to save the miners. We need effective management rooted in solid interdisciplinary science and coupled with stakeholder buy in, working at local, regional, and international scales alongside global efforts to give reefs a chance.https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_icrs/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Medical-Data-Models.org:A collection of freely available forms (September 2016)

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    MDM-Portal (Medical Data-Models) is a meta-data repository for creating, analysing, sharing and reusing medical forms, developed by the Institute of Medical Informatics, University of Muenster in Germany. Electronic forms for documentation of patient data are an integral part within the workflow of physicians. A huge amount of data is collected either through routine documentation forms (EHRs) for electronic health records or as case report forms (CRFs) for clinical trials. This raises major scientific challenges for health care, since different health information systems are not necessarily compatible with each other and thus information exchange of structured data is hampered. Software vendors provide a variety of individual documentation forms according to their standard contracts, which function as isolated applications. Furthermore, free availability of those forms is rarely the case. Currently less than 5 % of medical forms are freely accessible. Based on this lack of transparency harmonization of data models in health care is extremely cumbersome, thus work and know-how of completed clinical trials and routine documentation in hospitals are hard to be re-used. The MDM-Portal serves as an infrastructure for academic (non-commercial) medical research to contribute a solution to this problem. It already contains more than 4,000 system-independent forms (CDISC ODM Format, www.cdisc.org, Operational Data Model) with more than 380,000 dataelements. This enables researchers to view, discuss, download and export forms in most common technical formats such as PDF, CSV, Excel, SQL, SPSS, R, etc. A growing user community will lead to a growing database of medical forms. In this matter, we would like to encourage all medical researchers to register and add forms and discuss existing forms
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