16,915 research outputs found
A Pragmatic Approach to DHT Adoption
Despite the peer-to-peer community's obvious wish to have its systems adopted, specific mechanisms to facilitate incremental adoption have not yet received the same level of attention as the many other practical concerns associated with these systems. This paper argues that ease of adoption should be elevated to a first-class concern and accordingly presents HOLD, a front-end to existing DHTs that is optimized for incremental adoption. Specifically, HOLD is backwards-compatible: it leverages DNS to provide a key-based routing service to existing Internet hosts without requiring them to install any software. This paper also presents applications that could benefit from HOLD as well as the trade-offs that accompany HOLD. Early implementation experience suggests that HOLD is practical
Finite time distributions of stochastically modeled chemical systems with absolute concentration robustness
Recent research in both the experimental and mathematical communities has
focused on biochemical interaction systems that satisfy an "absolute
concentration robustness" (ACR) property. The ACR property was first discovered
experimentally when, in a number of different systems, the concentrations of
key system components at equilibrium were observed to be robust to the total
concentration levels of the system. Followup mathematical work focused on
deterministic models of biochemical systems and demonstrated how chemical
reaction network theory can be utilized to explain this robustness. Later
mathematical work focused on the behavior of this same class of reaction
networks, though under the assumption that the dynamics were stochastic. Under
the stochastic assumption, it was proven that the system will undergo an
extinction event with a probability of one so long as the system is
conservative, showing starkly different long-time behavior than in the
deterministic setting. Here we consider a general class of stochastic models
that intersects with the class of ACR systems studied previously. We consider a
specific system scaling over compact time intervals and prove that in a limit
of this scaling the distribution of the abundances of the ACR species converges
to a certain product-form Poisson distribution whose mean is the ACR value of
the deterministic model. This result is in agreement with recent conjectures
pertaining to the behavior of ACR networks endowed with stochastic kinetics,
and helps to resolve the conflicting theoretical results pertaining to
deterministic and stochastic models in this setting
Rangifer and human interests
This article reviews biological and anthropological literatute on wild and tame Rangifer to demonstrate the powerful effect that this species has had on the imaginations of biologists, social scientists and local hunters. Through identifying a general 'human interest' in Rangifer, the author argues that there is great potential for these three communities to work together. To demonstrate this idea, the paper reviews several examples of successful and unsuccessful 'alliances' between local peoples and both natural and social scientists which have had a fundamental impact upon the history of these sciences. The paper examines recent theorerical models which suggest that human action is a major factor in the behaviour and ecology of the animals. The paper also analyses the ideas of many indigenous people for whom there is no categorical difference between semi-domesticated, semi-sedentary and migratory Rangifer through comparison with many 'anomalous' texts in English and Russian language wildlife biology. By reviewing the history of scholarly interest in Rangifer, the author argues that contemporary models of Rangifer behaviour and identity could be 'revitalised' and 'recalibrated' through the establishment of that dialogue between scientists and local peoples which so characterised the 19th century. Such a dialogue, it is argued, would help mediate many of the political conflicts now appearing in those districts where Rangifer migrate
An Archeological Survey of the Proposed Access Road, Terminal, and Parking Areas on Myrtle Beach Air Force Base, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
At the request of the Horry County Airport Commission, the Institute of Archeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, conducted an archeological survey on the grounds of a proposed terminal building, access road, and auto parking area on land presently within the confines of the United States Air Force\u27s Myrtle Beach, South Carolina Base. The survey was conducted on April 9, 1975, and indicated that there were no significant historic or prehistoric archeological sites in or near the areas to be affected by construction. No additional investigations of the impacted area, and no secondary mitigation recommendations or proposals are considered necessary.https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/archanth_books/1062/thumbnail.jp
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