440 research outputs found
Incubation under fluctuating light conditions provides values much closer to real <i>in situ</i> primary production
Comparison of measured primary production, by radioactive carbonate incorporation or oxygen production, with diel variations of oxygen, inorganic carbon and particulate carbon, shows that the net in situ production often exceeds the measured activity, especially in deeper marine ecosystems. In vitro incubations under fluctuating light conditions provide higher values of primary production at low light intensities, both with cultures and with natural populations. The same results are obtained with in situ incubations, by varying the depth of incubation. This method allows reevaluation of primary productivity at low light intensities and provides results in agreement with the in situ variations of oxygen, inorganic carbon and particulate carbon. It can explain why primary productivity in the ocean is higher than previously calculated
An Experimental Microarchitecture for a Superconducting Quantum Processor
Quantum computers promise to solve certain problems that are intractable for
classical computers, such as factoring large numbers and simulating quantum
systems. To date, research in quantum computer engineering has focused
primarily at opposite ends of the required system stack: devising high-level
programming languages and compilers to describe and optimize quantum
algorithms, and building reliable low-level quantum hardware. Relatively little
attention has been given to using the compiler output to fully control the
operations on experimental quantum processors. Bridging this gap, we propose
and build a prototype of a flexible control microarchitecture supporting
quantum-classical mixed code for a superconducting quantum processor. The
microarchitecture is based on three core elements: (i) a codeword-based event
control scheme, (ii) queue-based precise event timing control, and (iii) a
flexible multilevel instruction decoding mechanism for control. We design a set
of quantum microinstructions that allows flexible control of quantum operations
with precise timing. We demonstrate the microarchitecture and microinstruction
set by performing a standard gate-characterization experiment on a transmon
qubit.Comment: 13 pages including reference. 9 figure
Rapid detection of snakes modulates spatial orienting in infancy
Recent evidence for an evolved fear module in the brain comes from studies showing that adults, children and infants detect evolutionarily threatening stimuli such as snakes faster than non-threatening ones. A decisive argument for a threat detection system efficient early in life would come from data showing, in young infants, a functional threat-detection mechanism in terms of “what” and “where” visual pathways. The present study used a variant of Posner’s cuing paradigm, adapted to 7–11-month-olds. On each trial, a threat-irrelevant or a threat-relevant cue was presented (a flower or a snake, i.e., “what”). We measured how fast infants detected these cues and the extent to which they further influenced the spatial allocation of attention (“where”). In line with previous findings, we observed that infants oriented faster towards snake than flower cues. Importantly, a facilitation effect was found at the cued location for flowers but not for snakes, suggesting that these latter cues elicit a broadening of attention and arguing in favour of sophisticated “what–where” connections. These results strongly support the claim that humans have an early propensity to detect evolutionarily threat-relevant stimuli
hArtes: Hardware-Software Codesign for Heterogeneous Multicore Platforms
Developing heterogeneous multicore platforms requires choosing the best hardware configuration for mapping the application, and modifying that application so that different parts execute on the most appropriate hardware component. The hArtes toolchain provides the option of automatic or semi-automatic support for this mapping. During test and validation on several computation-intensive applications, hArtes achieved substantial speedups and drastically reduced development times
Kruisvaart organische materie: april 1978. Excretie en primaire productie bepaling in de Noordzee
Refined clothespin relocation test and assessment of motion
Background: Advancements in upper limb prosthesis design have focused on providing increased degrees of freedom for the end effector through multiple articulations of a prosthetic hand, wrist and elbow. Measuring improvement in patient function with these devices requires development of appropriate assessment tools.
Objectives: This study presents a refined clothespin relocation test for measuring performance and assessing compensatory motion between able-bodied subjects and subjects with upper limb impairments.
Study Design: Comparative analysis
Methods: Trunk and head motions of 13 able-bodied subjects who performed the refined clothespin relocation test were compared to the motion of a transradial prosthesis user with a single degree of freedom hand.
Results: There were observable differences between the prosthesis user and the able-bodied group. The assessment used provided a clear indication of the differences in motion through analysis of compensatory motion.
Conclusion: The refined clothespin relocation test provides additional benefits over the standard clothespin assessment and makes identification of compensatory motions easily identifiable to the researcher. While this paper establishes the method for the new assessment, further validation will need to be performed with more users
The hArtes Tool Chain
This chapter describes the different design steps needed to go from legacy code to a transformed application that can be efficiently mapped on the hArtes platform
Modelling home care organisations from an operations management perspective
Home Care (HC) service consists of providing care to patients in their homes. During the last decade, the HC service industry experienced significant growth in many European countries. This growth stems from several factors, such as governmental pressure to reduce healthcare costs, demographic changes related to population ageing, social changes, an increase in the number of patients that suffer from chronic illnesses, and the development of new home-based services and technologies. This study proposes a framework that will enable HC service providers to better understand HC operations and their management. The study identifies the main processes and decisions that relate to the field of HC operations management. Hence, an IDEF0 (Integrated Definition for Function Modelling) activity-based model describes the most relevant clinical, logistical and organisational processes associated with HC operations. A hierarchical framework for operations management decisions is also proposed. This analysis is derived from data that was collected by nine HC service providers, which are located in France and Italy, and focuses on the manner in which operations are run, as well as associated constraints, inputs and outputs. The most challenging research areas in the field of HC operations management are also discussed
- …
