15,077 research outputs found

    A comparison of linear and calendar travel itinerary visualizations for personal digital assistants

    Get PDF
    Various graphical travel itinerary visualization systems have in recent years been developed to allow making easier references between different events such as flights and hotel bookings on a travel itinerary, thereby addressing a problem with tabular itineraries which list travel events in a chronological order of date and time, and only allow referencing consecutive events. These graphical travel itinerary systems are based on a linear visualization of travel events. Although this linear visualization deals with some of the problems associated with tabular itineraries, it is not the only form of visualization which might be capable of addressing these issues. This paper introduces a new visualization of travel itineraries, called the calendar visualization, which relies on a more familiar concept of calendars to depict the relationships between travel events. This paper also describes an empirical study undertaken to compare the calendar and linear itinerary visualizations

    Supporting searching on small screen devices using summarisation

    Get PDF
    In recent years, small screen devices have seen widespread increase in their acceptance and use. Combining mobility with their increased technological advances many such devices can now be considered mobile information terminals. However, user interactions with small screen devices remain a challenge due to the inherent limited display capabilities. These challenges are particularly evident for tasks, such as information seeking. In this paper we assess the effectiveness of using hierarchical-query biased summaries as a means of supporting the results of an information search conducted on a small screen device, a PDA. We present the results of an experiment focused on measuring users' perception of relevance of displayed documents, in the form of automatically generated summaries of increasing length, in response to a simulated submitted query. The aim is to study experimentally how users' perception of relevance varies depending on the length of summary, in relation to the characteristics of the PDA interface on which the content is presented. Experimental results suggest that hierarchical query-biased summaries are useful and assist users in making relevance judgments

    A robust digital image watermarking using repetition codes against common attacks

    Get PDF
    Digital watermarking is hiding the information inside a digital media to protect for such documents against malicious intentions to change such documents or even claim the rights of such documents. Currently the capability of repetition codes on various attacks in not sufficiently studied. In this project, a robust frequency domain watermarking scheme has been implemented using Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT). The idea of this scheme is to embed an encoded watermark using repetition code (3, 1) inside the cover image pixels based on Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) embedding technique. The proposed methods have undergone several simulation attacks tests in order to check up and compare their robustness against various attacks, like salt and pepper, speckle, compress, Gaussian, image contrast, resizing and cropping attack. The robustness of the watermarking scheme has been calculated using Peak Signal-To-Noise Ratio (PSNR), Mean Squared Error (MSE) and Normalized Correlations (NC). In our experiments, the results show that the robustness of a watermark with repetition codes is much better than without repetition code

    Error analysis and corrections to pupil diameter measurements with Langley Research Center's oculometer

    Get PDF
    Factors that can affect oculometer measurements of pupil diameter are: horizontal (azimuth) and vertical (elevation) viewing angle of the pilot; refraction of the eye and cornea; changes in distance of eye to camera; illumination intensity of light on the eye; and counting sensitivity of scan lines used to measure diameter, and output voltage. To estimate the accuracy of the measurements, an artificial eye was designed and a series of runs performed with the oculometer system. When refraction effects are included, results show that pupil diameter is a parabolic function of the azimuth angle similar to the cosine function predicted by theory: this error can be accounted for by using a correction equation, reducing the error from 6% to 1.5% of the actual diameter. Elevation angle and illumination effects were found to be negligible. The effects of counting sensitivity and output voltage can be calculated directly from system documentation. The overall accuracy of the unmodified system is about 6%. After correcting for the azimuth angle errors, the overall accuracy is approximately 2%

    Delineating the role of Ī²IV-Tubulins in pancreatic cancer: Ī²IVb-tubulin inhibition sensitizes pancreatic cancer cells to vinca alkaloids

    Get PDF
    Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a lethal disease which is characterized by chemoresistance. Components of the cell cytoskeleton are therapeutic targets in cancer. Ī²IV-tubulin is one such component that has two isotypesā€”Ī²IVa and Ī²IVb. Ī²IVa and Ī²IVb isotypes only differ in two amino acids at their C-terminus. Studies have implicated Ī²IVa-tubulin or Ī²IVb-tubulin expression with chemoresistance in prostate, breast, ovarian and lung cancer. However, no studies have examined the role of Ī²IV-tubulin in PC or attempted to identify isotype specific roles in regulating cancer cell growth and chemosensitivity. We aimed to determine the role of Ī²IVa- or Ī²IVb-tubulin on PC growth and chemosensitivity. PC cells (MiaPaCa-2, HPAF-II, AsPC1) were treated with siRNA (control, Ī²IVa-tubulin or Ī²IVb-tubulin). The ability of PC cells to form colonies in the presence or absence of chemotherapy was measured by clonogenic assays. Inhibition of Ī²IVa-tubulin in PC cells had no effect chemosensitivity. In contrast, inhibition of Ī²IVb-tubulin in PC cells sensitized to vinca alkaloids (Vincristine, Vinorelbine and Vinblastine), which was accompanied by increased apoptosis and enhanced cell cycle arrest. We show for the first time that Ī²IVb-tubulin, but not Ī²IVa-tubulin, plays a role in regulating vinca alkaloid chemosensitivity in PC cells. The results from this study suggest Ī²IVb-tubulin may be a novel therapeutic target and predictor of vinca alkaloid sensitivity for PC and warrants further investigation

    Nypa Frutican Rachis as building envelope heat insulator

    Get PDF
    This research is conducted to investigate the possibility of cellulose in Nypa Frutican Rachis to achieve thermal comfort. As Malaysia was known as tropical country which has hot and humid climate, this research focus on to study the transfer of heat through Nypa Frutican Rachis as a roof. Since only Nypa leaves have been used as a roof and have been applied until now in East Malaysia, this project uses an innovation of Nypa palm by using its rachis that contain chemical material that have lower thermal conductivity value such as cellulose and lignin as a roof or building envelope heat insulator. This paper described the experimental study method by measuring the temperature of outer and inner surface of Nypa Frutican Rachis on small physical model study. The temperature was measured by using Digital Infrared Thermometer. The average outer and inner tempe rature for five consecutive days was obtained from the experiment is highlighted. Results show that the average of heat loss and heat transfer conduction for five consecutive days are 9.63 W/h and 9.86 W. This experiment shows a good result and proved that Nypa Frutican Rachis is suitable and effective to be a building envelope heat insulator

    Quantification and Visualization of Fungal Degradation of Polyurethane Foam in Homes

    Get PDF
    People spend 90% of their time in the indoor environment including homes. Homes contain many exposures that can cause harm to human health, and one harmful exposure potentially comes from the degradation of polyurethanes. This deterioration of the polymer causes the release of a carcinogenic compound called 2,4-diaminotoluene (2,4-DAT). Polyurethane foam is a common household material and is used to make many items such as mattresses, couches, insulation, and carpet backing. It is uncertain if growth of fungi on this foam can cause biodegradation to occur, which could potentially result in the release of 2,4-DAT. The goal of this study is to better understand under what conditions one common fungal species, Aureobasidium pullulans, degrades polyurethane foam. We tested the effects of nutrient availability, foam age, and relative humidity levels on the ability of Aureobasidium pullulans to degrade polyurethane foam. The effects of nutrient availability on fungal degradation were evaluated by incubating polyurethane foam with different agars and comparing weight loss of foam samples as a result. The effects of foam age were tested by obtaining 2 foam types; one new and one already used in a home and incubating them to compare weight loss as a result. The effects of relative humidity (RH) on fungal degradation of foam were evaluated by incubating foam at varying equilibrium relative humidity (ERH) levels and performing quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to quantify fungal growth. Polyurethane foam incubated with Aureobasidium pullulans was observed under a scanning electron microscope (SEM) in order to visually observe the growth of fungi on polyurethane foam. The ideal conditions for fungal degradation were foam type 1 with an additional carbon source and high RH level. The peak weight loss of foam from fungal degradation was found to be 56% and fungal growth was highest at 100% ERH. Spore chains and fruiting bodies were observed via microscopy wrapped around the foam after incubation indicating Aureobasidium pullulans can grow and reproduce on polyurethane foam given appropriate conditions. This information can be used in the future to prevent fungal degradation of polyurethane foam and potentially decrease carcinogen exposure.OSU OUR&CI Undergraduate Research Apprenticeship ProgramOSU College of Engineering Research Distinction ScholarshipNo embargoAcademic Major: Environmental Engineerin

    Commercialisation of precision agriculture technologies in the macadamia industry

    Get PDF
    A prototype vision-based yield monitor has been developed for the macadamia industry. The system estimates yield for individual trees by detecting nuts and their harvested location. The technology was developed by the National Centre for Engineering in Agriculture, University of Southern Queensland for the purpose of reducing labour and costs in varietal assessment trials where yield for individual trees are required to be measured to indicate tree performance. The project was commissioned by Horticulture Australia Limited

    Unified Forensic Methodology for the Analysis of Embedded Systems

    Get PDF
    Embedded systems are ubiquitous in society and can contain information that could be used in criminal cases for example in a serious road traffic accident where the car management systems could provide vital forensic information concerning the engine speed etc. A critical review of a number of methods and procedures for the analysis of embedded systems were compared against a ā€˜standardā€™ methodology for use in a Forensic Computing Investigation. A Unified Forensic Methodology (UFM) has been developed that is forensically sound and capable of dealing with the analysis of a wide variety of Embedded Systems
    • ā€¦
    corecore