2,384 research outputs found
Offloading Real-Time Tasks in IIoT Environments under Consideration of Networking Uncertainties
Offloading is a popular way to overcome the resource and power constraints of
networked embedded devices, which are increasingly found in industrial
environments. It involves moving resource-intensive computational tasks to a
more powerful device on the network, often in close proximity to enable
wireless communication. However, many Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)
applications have real-time constraints. Offloading such tasks over a wireless
network with latency uncertainties poses new challenges.
In this paper, we aim to better understand these challenges by proposing a
system architecture and scheduler for real-time task offloading in wireless
IIoT environments. Based on a prototype, we then evaluate different system
configurations and discuss their trade-offs and implications. Our design showed
to prevent deadline misses under high load and network uncertainties and was
able to outperform a reference scheduler in terms of successful task
throughput. Under heavy task load, where the reference scheduler had a success
rate of 5%, our design achieved a success rate of 60%.Comment: 2nd International Workshop on Middleware for the Edge (MiddleWEdge
'23). 2023. AC
Grading Policy and Student Retention
This article discuses two policies that work at cross purposes to one another which university administrators and faculty works collaboratively with. Schools are actively resisting grade inflation trends while at the same time seeking to retain students. The article describes the borderline student, a category of at risk student often overlooked, yet numerous. It is found that academic performance was the highest ranked risk factor, accounting for approximately 20% of the variance, while behavior and coping skills was a distant second, accounting for only 6% of the risk factor variance. Borderline students can be efficiently rescued with modest outlays of additional institutional resources and are more likely to persist than students with less ability or more pernicious learning difficulties
Dynamic alpha power modulations and slow negative potentials track natural shifts of spatio‐temporal attention
Alpha power modulations and slow negative potentials have previously been associated with anticipatory processes in spatial and temporal top-down attention. In typical experimental designs, however, neural responses triggered by transient stimulus onsets can interfere with attention-driven activity patterns and our interpretation of such. Here, we investigated these signatures of spatio-temporal attention in a dynamic paradigm free from potentially confounding stimulus-driven activity using electroencephalography. Participants attended the cued side of a bilateral stimulus rotation and mentally counted how often one of two remembered sample orientations (i.e., the target) was displayed while ignoring the uncued side and non-target orientation. Afterwards, participants performed a delayed match-to-sample task, in which they indicated if the orientation of a probe stimulus matched the corresponding sample orientation (previously target or non-target). We observed dynamic alpha power reductions and slow negative waves around task-relevant points in space and time (i.e., onset of the target orientation in the cued hemifield) over posterior electrodes contralateral to the locus of attention. In contrast to static alpha power lateralization, these dynamic signatures correlated with subsequent memory performance (primarily detriments for matching probes of the non-target orientation), suggesting a preferential allocation of attention to task-relevant locations and time points at the expense of reduced resources and impaired performance for information outside the current focus of attention. Our findings suggest that humans can naturally and dynamically focus their attention at relevant points in space and time and that such spatio-temporal attention shifts can be reflected by dynamic alpha power modulations and slow negative potentials
Plasticity of microvascular oxygenation control in rat fast-twitch muscle: effects of experimental creatine depletion
Aging, heart failure and diabetes each compromise the matching of O2 delivery (QO2)-to-metabolic requirements (O2 uptake, VO2) in skeletal muscle such that the O2 pressure driving blood-myocyte O2 flux (microvascular PO2, PmvO2) is reduced and contractile function impaired. In contrast, β-guanidinopropionic acid (β-GPA) treatment improves muscle contractile function, primarily in fast-twitch muscle (Moerland and Kushmerick, 1994). We tested the hypothesis that β-GPA (2% wt/BW in rat chow, 8 wk; n=14) would improve QO2-to-VO2 matching (elevated PmvO2) during contractions (4.5 V @ 1 Hz) in mixed (MG) and white (WG) portions of the gastrocnemius, both predominantly fast-twitch). Compared with control (CON), during contractions PmvO2 fell less following β-GPA (MG -54%, WG -26%, p<0.05), elevating steady-state PmvO2 (CON, MG: 10±2, WG: 9±1; β-GPA, MG 16±2, WG 18±2 mmHg, P<0.05). This reflected an increased QO2/VO2 ratio due primarily to a reduced VO2 in β-GPA muscles. It is likely that this adaptation helps facilitate the β-GPA-induced enhancement of contractile function in fast-twitch muscles
Electron microscopic mapping of deletions on a streptococcal plasmid carrying extraordinarily long inverted repeats
Deletions [Delta]101, [Delta]102, and [Delta]103 which occurred within the extraordinarily long inverted repeats of the self-ligated large EcoRI fragment of the Streptococcal MLS (macrolides, lincosamides, streptogramin B)-resistance plasmid pSM19035 led to the formation of plasmids pDB101, pDB102, and pDB103. Their molecular lengths were determined by contour length measurements to be 17.8, 17.4, and 13.9 kb, respectively. Electron microscopic examination of self-annealed molecules revealed stem-loop structures with inverted repeats comprising 41 to 91% of the mass of plasmids. Two unique sequences (US1 and US2) separated the inverted repeats in the case of pDB101 and pDB103, while in pDB102 the repeats were joined at one end and separated at the other by a unique sequence (US2). The size of the unique sequence US2 was identical for all three plasmids, and the location of the resistance determinant was determined by electron microscopic examination of self-annealed molecules of the recombinant plasmid pDB201. Mapping of the deletion termini, accomplished by combining electron microscopic and HindIII restriction data, suggested that deletions may occur at preferential sites.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/23151/1/0000076.pd
- …