478 research outputs found
Which Conference Is That? A Case Study in Computer Science
Conferences play a major role in some disciplines such as computer science and are often used in research quality evaluation exercises. Differently from journals and books, for which ISSN and ISBN codes provide unambiguous keys, recognizing the conference series in which a paper was published is a rather complex endeavor: There is no unique code assigned to conferences, and the way their names are written may greatly vary across years and catalogs. In this article, we propose a technique for the entity resolution of conferences based on the analysis of different semantic parts of their names. We present the results of an investigation of our technique on a dataset of 42,395 distinct computer science conference names excerpted from the DBLP computer science repository,1 which we automatically link to different authority files. With suitable data cleaning, the precision of our record linkage algorithm can be as high as 94%. A comparison with results obtainable using state-of-the-art general-purpose record linkage algorithms rounds off the article, showing that our ad hoc solution largely outperforms them in terms of the quality of the results
Fast atom diffraction inside a molecular beam epitaxy chamber, a rich combination
Two aspects of the contribution of grazing incidence fast atom diffraction
(GIFAD) to molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) are reviewed here: the ability of GIFAD
to provide \emph{in-situ} a precise description of the atomic-scale surface
topology, and its ability to follow larger-scale changes in surface roughness
during layer-by-layer growth. Recent experimental and theoretical results
obtained for the He atom beam incident along the highly corrugated direction of the (24) reconstructed GaAs(001) surface are
summarized and complemented by the measurements and calculations for the beam
incidence along the weakly corrugated [010] direction where a periodicity twice
smaller as expected is observed. The combination of the experiment, quantum
scattering matrix calculations, and semiclassical analysis allows in this case
to reveal structural characteristics of the surface. For the in situ
measurements of GIFAD during molecular beam epitaxy of GaAs on GaAs surface we
analyse the change in elastic and inelastic contributions in the scattered
beam, and the variation of the diffraction pattern in polar angle scattering.
This analysis outlines the robustness, the simplicity and the richness of the
GIFAD as a technique to monitor the layer-by-layer epitaxial growth
Selecting Technologies for Sour and Ultra-Sour Gas Treating
As the cleanest fossil fuel, natural gas plays a key role in the path towards renewables. Considering the increasing gas demand, rich CO2 and H2S gas reserves, in the past considered economically unviable, are becoming fruitful. However, the non-conventional nature of this kind of gases, in addition to the potentially higher production cost, raises the need of new strategies for their monetization, bypassing the conventional approaches. Starting from the huge number of novel large-scale projects for the exploitation of rich-H2S gas fields, this paper overviews the current tendencies in sour and ultra-sour natural gas production, focusing on the removal of sulfur-based compounds, together with H2S and CO2. At first, available technologies for ultra-sour gas treatment are discussed. Then, simulations of the absorption processes based on a real case-study are carried out, in order to verify the effectiveness of the proposed alternatives for the removal of mercaptans, as well as CO2 and H2S. Results are critically analyzed, in view of providing a practical guide of industrial interest for the selection of the most suitable method
Shock-Wave Heating Model for Chondrule Formation: Prevention of Isotopic Fractionation
Chondrules are considered to have much information on dust particles and
processes in the solar nebula. It is naturally expected that protoplanetary
disks observed in present star forming regions have similar dust particles and
processes, so study of chondrule formation may provide us great information on
the formation of the planetary systems.
Evaporation during chondrule melting may have resulted in depletion of
volatile elements in chondrules. However, no evidence for a large degree of
heavy-isotope enrichment has been reported in chondrules. In order to meet this
observed constraint, the rapid heating rate at temperatures below the silicate
solidus is required to suppress the isotopic fractionation.
We have developed a new shock-wave heating model taking into account the
radiative transfer of the dust thermal continuum emission and the line emission
of gas molecules and calculated the thermal history of chondrules. We have
found that optically-thin shock waves for the thermal continuum emission from
dust particles can meet the rapid heating constraint, because the dust thermal
emission does not keep the dust particles high temperature for a long time in
the pre-shock region and dust particles are abruptly heated by the gas drag
heating in the post-shock region. We have also derived the upper limit of
optical depth of the pre-shock region using the radiative diffusion
approximation, above which the rapid heating constraint is not satisfied. It is
about 1 - 10.Comment: 58 pages, including 5 tables and 15 figures, accepted for publication
in The Astrophysical Journa
External Carotid Artery Shunting During Carotid Endarterectomy: An Alternative for Cerebral Protection?
AbstractObjectives: to assess the application of external carotid artery (ECA) shunting in cerebral protection during carotid endarterectomy (CEA). Design: prospective study. Materials and Methods: the study comprised 137 consecutive patients who underwent CEA under locoregional anaesthesia. Transcranial Doppler was used to monitor the mean velocity of the middle cerebral artery (mv-MCA): (1) before carotid clamping; (2) after clamping both the common and external carotid arteries; (3) after clamping the internal carotid artery alone (“ECA test”). The decision to shunt was based on the occurrence of neurological deficit during carotid clamping. If the ECA test revealed mv-MCA approaching the pre-clamping values ECA shunting was used, whereas the remaining patients in need of a shunt had a standard internal carotid artery (ICA) shunt. Results: shunting was necessary in 12/137 cases (9%). The ECA test indicated that in four cases – 3% of the whole series or 33% of the shunted cases. In these four patients ECA shunting reversed the neurological deficit, and CEA was successfully performed without any complications. Conclusions: ECA shunting could be considered as an alternative to standard ICA shunting. Suitable cases can be identified on the basis of the ECA test
How should eosinophilic cystitis be treated in patients with chronic granulomatous disease?
Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is a primary immunodeficiency resulting from the absence or malfunction of oxidative mechanism in phagocytic cells. The disease is due to a mutation in one of four genes that encode subunits of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase complex. Affected patients experience severe infections and granuloma formation due to exuberant inflammatory responses. Some evidence suggests that eosinophilic cystitis (EC) is included in the spectrum of inflammatory manifestations. EC is an inflammatory disease, rare in childhood, which may require different, nonstandardized therapeutic approaches, ranging from antihistamines to cyclosporine
gp91phox-dependent expression of platelet CD40 ligand
Background-CD40 ligand (CD40L) expression on platelets is mediated by agonists, but the underlying mechanism is still unclear. Methods and Results-CD40L expression was measured in platelets from healthy subjects both with and without the addition of antioxidants or a phospholipase A2 (PLA2) inhibitor and in platelets from 2 patients with an inherited deficiency of gp91phox. Immunoprecipitation analysis was also performed to determine whether normal platelets showed gp91phox expression. Unlike catalase and mannitol, superoxide dismutase inhibited agonist-induced platelet CD40L expression in healthy subjects. Immunoprecipitation analysis also showed that platelets from healthy subjects expressed gp91phox. In 2 male patients with inherited gp91phox deficiency, collagen-, thrombin-, and arachidonic acid-stimulated platelets showed an almost complete absence of superoxide anion (O2-) and CD40L expression. Incubation of platelets from healthy subjects with a PLA2 inhibitor almost completely prevented agonist-induced O2- and CD40L expression. Conclusions-These data provide the first evidence that platelet CD40L expression occurs via arachidonic acid-mediated gp91phox activation
The Power of Pivoting for Exact Clique Counting
Clique counting is a fundamental task in network analysis, and even the
simplest setting of -cliques (triangles) has been the center of much recent
research. Getting the count of -cliques for larger is algorithmically
challenging, due to the exponential blowup in the search space of large
cliques. But a number of recent applications (especially for community
detection or clustering) use larger clique counts. Moreover, one often desires
\textit{local} counts, the number of -cliques per vertex/edge.
Our main result is Pivoter, an algorithm that exactly counts the number of
-cliques, \textit{for all values of }. It is surprisingly effective in
practice, and is able to get clique counts of graphs that were beyond the reach
of previous work. For example, Pivoter gets all clique counts in a social
network with a 100M edges within two hours on a commodity machine. Previous
parallel algorithms do not terminate in days. Pivoter can also feasibly get
local per-vertex and per-edge -clique counts (for all ) for many public
data sets with tens of millions of edges. To the best of our knowledge, this is
the first algorithm that achieves such results.
The main insight is the construction of a Succinct Clique Tree (SCT) that
stores a compressed unique representation of all cliques in an input graph. It
is built using a technique called \textit{pivoting}, a classic approach by
Bron-Kerbosch to reduce the recursion tree of backtracking algorithms for
maximal cliques. Remarkably, the SCT can be built without actually enumerating
all cliques, and provides a succinct data structure from which exact clique
statistics (-clique counts, local counts) can be read off efficiently.Comment: 10 pages, WSDM 202
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