183 research outputs found

    Fault-tolerance techniques for hybrid CMOS/nanoarchitecture

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    The authors propose two fault-tolerance techniques for hybrid CMOS/nanoarchitecture implementing logic functions as look-up tables. The authors compare the efficiency of the proposed techniques with recently reported methods that use single coding schemes in tolerating high fault rates in nanoscale fabrics. Both proposed techniques are based on error correcting codes to tackle different fault rates. In the first technique, the authors implement a combined two-dimensional coding scheme using Hamming and Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem (BCH) codes to address fault rates greater than 5. In the second technique, Hamming coding is complemented with bad line exclusion technique to tolerate fault rates higher than the first proposed technique (up to 20). The authors have also estimated the improvement that can be achieved in the circuit reliability in the presence of Don-t Care Conditions. The area, latency and energy costs of the proposed techniques were also estimated in the CMOS domain

    The opposites task: Using general rules to test cognitive flexibility in preschoolers

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    A brief narrative description of the journal article, document, or resource. Executive functions play an important role in cognitive development, and during the preschool years especially, children's performance is limited in tasks that demand flexibility in their behavior. We asked whether preschoolers would exhibit limitations when they are required to apply a general rule in the context of novel stimuli on every trial (the "opposites" task). Two types of inhibitory processing were measured: response interference (resistance to interference from a competing response) and proactive interference (resistance to interference from a previously relevant rule). Group data show 3-year-olds have difficulty inhibiting prepotent tendencies under these conditions, whereas 5-year-olds' accuracy is near ceiling in the task. (Contains 4 footnotes and 1 table.

    Positive Affect Facilitates Task Switching in the Dimension Change Card Sort Task: Implications for the Shifting Aspect of Executive Functions

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    Ministry of Education, Singapore under its Academic Research Funding Tier 1; Singapore Management Universit

    Cognitive and neural underpinnings of goal maintenance in young children

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    Active maintenance of goal representations is an integral part of our mental regulatory processes. Previous developmental studies have highlighted goal neglect, which is the phenomenon caused by a failure to maintain goal representations, and demonstrated developmental changes of the ability to maintain goal representations among preschoolers. Yet, few studies have explored the cognitive mechanisms underlying preschoolers' development of goal maintenance. The first aim of this study was to test whether working memory capacity and inhibitory control contribute to goal maintenance using a paradigm for measuring goal neglect. Moreover, although recent studies have shown that preschoolers recruit lateral prefrontal regions in performing executive functions tasks, they could not specify the neural underpinnings of goal maintenance. Thus, the second aim was to examine whether lateral prefrontal regions played a key role in maintaining goal representations using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Our results showed that developmental differences in inhibitory control predicted the degree of goal neglect. It was also demonstrated that activation in the right prefrontal region was associated with children's successful avoidance of goal neglect. These findings offer important insights into the cognitive and neural underpinnings of goal maintenance in preschoolers

    Impact of drug discount contracts on pharmacies and on patients' drug supply

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    Since April 2007, health insurance companies in Germany have been entitled to negotiate drug discount contracts (DDCs) with pharmaceutical manufacturers for particular drugs. DDCs commit pharmacists to dispense the drug made by this manufacturer. The aim of this study was to examine how DDCs are implemented in pharmacy routines and what implications DDCs have for the everday drug supply. Methods: A standardized questionnaire on DDCs and their impact on the drug supply was developed according to the previous literature, piloted and distributed to pharmacies in Baden-Württemberg. Results: Eight hundred four pharmacists and pharmaceutical assistants participated in the study. The implementation of DDCs implies significant extra work for pharmacists, particulary the additional need for customer counseling and education (99.1%), additional logistical requirements and more complex data processing needs. Patients are reported to get confused (97%) and angry (96.9%) about non-transparent drug substitutions, and medication errors occur (60.1%). Conclusion: DDCs, besides having implications for prescibers and patients, also have a substantial impact on pharmacists and pharmacies. Adverse effects on the drug supply and medication safety are possible or likely
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