77,368 research outputs found
Message Reduction in the LOCAL Model Is a Free Lunch
A new spanner construction algorithm is presented, working under the LOCAL model with unique edge IDs. Given an n-node communication graph, a spanner with a constant stretch and O(n^{1 + epsilon}) edges (for an arbitrarily small constant epsilon > 0) is constructed in a constant number of rounds sending O(n^{1 + epsilon}) messages whp. Consequently, we conclude that every t-round LOCAL algorithm can be transformed into an O(t)-round LOCAL algorithm that sends O(t * n^{1 + epsilon}) messages whp. This improves upon all previous message-reduction schemes for LOCAL algorithms that incur a log^{Omega (1)} n blow-up of the round complexity
F as in Fat: How Obesity Policies Are Failing in America, 2004
Examines national and state obesity rates and government policies. Focuses on setting a baseline of current policies and programs, and offers a comprehensive look at their range and quality
Gene Expression and its Discontents: Developmental disorders as dysfunctions of epigenetic cognition
Systems biology presently suffers the same mereological and sufficiency fallacies that haunt neural network models of high order cognition. Shifting perspective from the massively parallel space of gene matrix interactions to the grammar/syntax of the time series of expressed phenotypes using a cognitive paradigm permits import of techniques from statistical physics via the homology between information source uncertainty and free energy density. This produces a broad spectrum of possible statistical models of development and its pathologies in which epigenetic regulation and the effects of embedding environment are analogous to a tunable enzyme catalyst. A cognitive paradigm naturally incorporates memory, leading directly to models of epigenetic inheritance, as affected by environmental exposures, in the largest sense. Understanding gene expression, development, and their dysfunctions will require data analysis tools considerably more sophisticated than the present crop of simplistic models abducted from neural network studies or stochastic chemical reaction theory
Lurching Toward Chernobyl: Dysfunctions of Real-Time Computation
Cognitive biological structures, social organizations, and computing machines operating in real time are subject to Rate Distortion Theorem constraints driven by the homology between information source uncertainty and free energy density. This exposes the unitary structure/environment system to a relentless entropic torrent compounded by sudden large deviations causing increased distortion between intent and impact, particularly as demands escalate. The phase transitions characteristic of information phenomena suggest that, rather than graceful decay under increasing load, these structures will undergo punctuated degradation akin to spontaneous symmetry breaking in physical systems. Rate distortion problems, that also affect internal structural dynamics, can become synergistic with limitations equivalent to the inattentional blindness of natural cognitive process. These mechanisms, and their interactions, are unlikely to scale well, so that, depending on architecture, enlarging the structure or its duties may lead to a crossover point at which added resources must be almost entirely devoted to ensuring system stability -- a form of allometric scaling familiar from biological examples. This suggests a critical need to tune architecture to problem type and system demand. A real-time computational structure and its environment are a unitary phenomenon, and environments are usually idiosyncratic. Thus the resulting path dependence in the development of pathology could often require an individualized approach to remediation more akin to an arduous psychiatric intervention than to the traditional engineering or medical quick fix. Failure to recognize the depth of these problems seems likely to produce a relentless chain of the Chernobyl-like failures that are necessary, bot often insufficient, for remediation under our system
The safety case and the lessons learned for the reliability and maintainability case
This paper examine the safety case and the lessons learned for the reliability and maintainability case
Organic Food for Youth in Public Settings: Potentials and Challenges. Preliminary Recommendations from a European Study
This report contains presentations from the four explorative work packages in iPOPY. The iPOPY project –
innovative Public Organic food Procurement for Youth – is one of eight transnational research programs
initiated by the 11 European countries participating in the CORE Organic I funding body network. iPOPY aims
at increasing the consumption of organic food among young people, especially in school meal settings but
also elsewhere, e.g. at music festivals. We work towards this goal by studying how organic food as well as
the organic concept in general has been introduced in public food serving settings in various countries, and
what may be the most promising approaches. Italy, Finland, Denmark, Norway and Germany are the
countries being studied. The iPOPY work packages explore policy issues, supply chain organization and the
impact of certification, the users’ perceptions and participation in the food system, and the health impacts of
organic food implementation.
By June 2010, iPOPY will be completed. Hence, this report is linked to the last iPOPY seminar arranged
during the BioFach Trade Fair in Nuremberg, Germany. We arranged similar seminars also in 2008 and 2009.
These seminars presented the situation with respect to organic school meals in many different European
countries (2008) and in more detail in iPOPY countries as well as some relevant cases (2009). Proceedings
are available from the 2009 seminar (Nölting et al 2009), and all presentations from the 2008 seminar are
found on the iPOPY website, www.ipopy.coreportal.org.
In the seminar in 2010, we will draw a link from iPOPY results to the municipality of Nuremberg, which has
ambitious aims as to becoming an Organic Model City (BioModellstadt). This includes far reaching goals for
the share of organic and regional food served in public schools and kindergartens. Further, the project
results will be linked to the general situation for school meals in Europe. For this presentation, no written
paper is available, but we will present the slides on the website. From the project we present preliminary
recommendations and conclusions from the four explorative work packages
Recommended from our members
A practitioner's guide to 'Imagine', the systemic and prospective sustainability analysis
The purpose of the Mediterranean Action Plans Coastal Area Management Programme is to help Mediterranean countries implement a sustainable management process for their coastal areas. This in particular implies thinking collectively about possible futures by taking into account past developments and the present situation of the area in question. To do so and right from the very start, the Blue Plan has assisted teams involved in the CAMPs to use the systemic and prospective approach so as to highlight priorities, forecast negative developments and suggest action to be taken to establish sustainable development in the Mediterranean's coastal areas. What do we mean by sustainable development? The Blue Plan adheres to a definition that is a blend of what you find in the Bruntland Report and at the FAO, 'sustainable development is one that respects the environment, is technically appropriate, economically viable and socially acceptable, making it possible to meet the needs of present generations without jeopardising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs'.
In this framework the 'Imagine' analysis of systemic and prospective sustainability now proposes a set of tools and methods (a methodological corpus) to describe, assess and examine the level of sustainability of an eco-socio system in the past, present and future by means of indicators and a participatory process that considers local actors to be experts at their level
Spartan Daily, April 1, 1992
Volume 98, Issue 48https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8261/thumbnail.jp
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