252,616 research outputs found
Consistency in Multi-Viewpoint Architectural Design of Enterprise Information Systems
Different stakeholders in the design of an enterprise information system have their own view on that design. To help produce a coherent design this paper presents a framework that aids in specifying relations between such views. To help produce a consistent design the framework also aids in specifying consistency rules that apply to the view relations and in checking the consistency according to those rules. The framework focuses on the higher levels of abstraction in a design, we refer to design at those levels of abstraction as architectural design. The highest level of abstraction that we consider is that of business process design and the lowest level is that of software component design. The contribution of our framework is that it provides a collection of basic concepts that is common to viewpoints in the area of enterprise information systems. These basic concepts aid in relating viewpoints by providing: (i) a common terminology that helps stakeholders to understand each others concepts; and (ii) a basis for defining re-usable consistency rules. In particular we define re-usable rules to check consistency between behavioural views that overlap or are a refinement of each other. We also present an architecture for a tool suite that supports our framework. We show that our framework can be applied, by performing a case study in which we specify the relations and consistency rules between the RM-ODP enterprise, computational and information viewpoints
Analysis of time-to-event for observational studies: Guidance to the use of intensity models
This paper provides guidance for researchers with some mathematical
background on the conduct of time-to-event analysis in observational studies
based on intensity (hazard) models. Discussions of basic concepts like time
axis, event definition and censoring are given. Hazard models are introduced,
with special emphasis on the Cox proportional hazards regression model. We
provide check lists that may be useful both when fitting the model and
assessing its goodness of fit and when interpreting the results. Special
attention is paid to how to avoid problems with immortal time bias by
introducing time-dependent covariates. We discuss prediction based on hazard
models and difficulties when attempting to draw proper causal conclusions from
such models. Finally, we present a series of examples where the methods and
check lists are exemplified. Computational details and implementation using the
freely available R software are documented in Supplementary Material. The paper
was prepared as part of the STRATOS initiative.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures. For associated Supplementary material, see
http://publicifsv.sund.ku.dk/~pka/STRATOSTG8
A simple method for estimating the fractal dimension from digital images: The compression dimension
Producción CientíficaThe fractal structure of real world objects is often analyzed using digital images. In this context, the compression fractal dimension is put forward. It provides a simple method for the direct estimation of the dimension of fractals stored as digital image files. The computational scheme can be implemented using readily available free software. Its simplicity also makes it very interesting for introductory elaborations of basic concepts of fractal geometry, complexity, and information theory. A test of the computational scheme using limited-quality images of well-defined fractal sets obtained from the Internet and free software has been performed. Also, a systematic evaluation of the proposed method using computer generated images of the Weierstrass cosine function shows an accuracy comparable to those of the methods most commonly used to estimate the dimension of fractal data sequences applied to the same test problem.Junta de Castilla y León Regional Grant VA089U1
Joint Density-Functional Theory of the Electrode-Electrolyte Interface: Application to Fixed Electrode Potentials, Interfacial Capacitances, and Potentials of Zero Charge
This work explores the use of joint density-functional theory, a new form of
density-functional theory for the ab initio description of electronic systems
in thermodynamic equilibrium with a liquid environment, to describe
electrochemical systems. After reviewing the physics of the underlying
fundamental electrochemical concepts, we identify the mapping between commonly
measured electrochemical observables and microscopically computable quantities
within an, in principle, exact theoretical framework. We then introduce a
simple, computationally efficient approximate functional which we find to be
quite successful in capturing a priori basic electrochemical phenomena,
including the capacitive Stern and diffusive Gouy-Chapman regions in the
electrochemical double layer, quantitative values for interfacial capacitance,
and electrochemical potentials of zero charge for a series of metals. We
explore surface charging with applied potential and are able to place our ab
initio results directly on the scale associated with the Standard Hydrogen
Electrode (SHE). Finally, we provide explicit details for implementation within
standard density-functional theory software packages at negligible
computational cost over standard calculations carried out within vacuum
environments.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures. Initially presented at APS March Meeting 2010.
Accepted for publication in Physical Review B on Jul. 27, 201
Advanced piloted aircraft flight control system design methodology. Volume 2: The FCX flight control design expert system
The development of a comprehensive and electric methodology for conceptual and preliminary design of flight control systems is presented and illustrated. The methodology is focused on the design states starting with the layout of system requirements and ending when some viable competing system architectures (feedback control structures) are defined. The approach is centered on the human pilot and the aircraft as both the sources of, and the keys to the solution of, many flight control problems. The methodology relies heavily on computational procedures which are highly interactive with the design engineer. To maximize effectiveness, these techniques, as selected and modified to be used together in the methodology, form a cadre of computational tools specifically tailored for integrated flight control system preliminary design purposes. The FCX expert system as presently developed is only a limited prototype capable of supporting basic lateral-directional FCS design activities related to the design example used. FCX presently supports design of only one FCS architecture (yaw damper plus roll damper) and the rules are largely focused on Class IV (highly maneuverable) aircraft. Despite this limited scope, the major elements which appear necessary for application of knowledge-based software concepts to flight control design were assembled and thus FCX represents a prototype which can be tested, critiqued and evolved in an ongoing process of development
ESSEX: Equipping Sparse Solvers for Exascale
The ESSEX project investigates computational issues arising at exascale for large-scale sparse eigenvalue problems and develops programming concepts and numerical methods for their solution. The project pursues a coherent co-design of all software layers where a holistic performance engineering process guides code development
across the classic boundaries of application, numerical method and basic kernel library. Within ESSEX the numerical methods cover both widely applicable solvers such as classic Krylov, Jacobi-Davidson or recent FEAST methods as well as domain specific iterative schemes relevant for the ESSEX quantum physics application. This report introduces the project structure and presents selected results which demonstrate the potential impact of ESSEX for efficient sparse solvers on highly scalable heterogeneous supercomputers
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