1,161 research outputs found
A toolkit of mechanism and context independent widgets
Most human-computer interfaces are designed to run on a static platform (e.g. a workstation with a monitor) in a static environment (e.g. an office). However, with mobile devices becoming ubiquitous and capable of running applications similar to those found on static devices, it is no longer valid to design static interfaces. This paper describes a user-interface architecture which allows interactors to be flexible about the way they are presented. This flexibility is defined by the different input and output mechanisms used. An interactor may use different mechanisms depending upon their suitability in the current context, user preference and the resources available for presentation using that mechanism
Human Tâcell lymphotrophic virus in solidâorgan transplant recipients: Guidelines from the American society of transplantation infectious diseases community of practice
These updated guidelines from the Infectious Diseases Community of Practice of the American Society of Transplantation review the diagnosis, prevention, and management of Human Tâcell lymphotrophic virus 1 (HTLV)â1 in the preâ and postâtransplant period. HTLVâ1 is an oncogenic human retrovirus rare in North America but endemic in the Caribbean and parts of Africa, South America, Asia, and Oceania. While most infected persons do not develop disease, <5% will develop adult Tâcell leukemia/lymphoma or neurological disease. No proven antiviral treatment for established HTLVâ1 infection is available. The effect of immunosuppression on the development of HTLVâ1âassociated disease in asymptomatically infected recipients is not well characterized, and HTLVâ1âinfected individuals should be counseled that immunosuppression may increase the risk of developing HTLVâ1âassociated disease and they should be monitored postâtransplant for HTLVâ1âassociated disease. Currently approved screening assays do not distinguish between HTLVâ1 and HTLVâ2, and routine screening of deceased donors without risk factors in low seroprevalence areas is likely to result in significant organ wastage and is not recommended. Targeted screening of donors with risk factors for HTLVâ1 infection and of living donors (as time is available to perform confirmatory tests) is reasonable.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151899/1/ctr13575.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151899/2/ctr13575_am.pd
Using cascading Bloom filters to improve the memory usage for de Brujin graphs
De Brujin graphs are widely used in bioinformatics for processing
next-generation sequencing data. Due to a very large size of NGS datasets, it
is essential to represent de Bruijn graphs compactly, and several approaches to
this problem have been proposed recently. In this work, we show how to reduce
the memory required by the algorithm of [3] that represents de Brujin graphs
using Bloom filters. Our method requires 30% to 40% less memory with respect to
the method of [3], with insignificant impact to construction time. At the same
time, our experiments showed a better query time compared to [3]. This is, to
our knowledge, the best practical representation for de Bruijn graphs.Comment: 12 pages, submitte
Recommendation model based on opinion diffusion
Information overload in the modern society calls for highly efficient
recommendation algorithms. In this letter we present a novel diffusion based
recommendation model, with users' ratings built into a transition matrix. To
speed up computation we introduce a Green function method. The numerical tests
on a benchmark database show that our prediction is superior to the standard
recommendation methods.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Interaction of Al layers with polycrystalline Si
Auger electron spectroscopy, MeV 4He + backscattering spectrometry and scanning electron microscopy have been used to investigate interactions between Al films and polycrystalline layers of CVD Si deposited on SiO2. Depth profiling techniques showed that intermixing of the Al and Si occurred in the 400â560 °C temperature range (i.e., below the eutectic). Dissolution of the poly Si into the Al film occurs followed by nucleation and growth of Si crystallites in the Al film. The morphology of the final structure depends on the relative thicknesses of the as-deposited Al and Si layers. In the case of the original Al thickness being greater than that of the Si, the Si forms large precipitates in the Al matrix. For Al layers thinner than those of the Si, a nearly continuous Si film is formed on the outer surface. The thickness of this final Si film is approximately that of the original Al layer. The remaining Si and the Al form a two-phase layer between the outer Si film and the SiO2 substrate
On Functionality of Visibly Pushdown Transducers
Visibly pushdown transducers form a subclass of pushdown transducers that
(strictly) extends finite state transducers with a stack. Like visibly pushdown
automata, the input symbols determine the stack operations. In this paper, we
prove that functionality is decidable in PSpace for visibly pushdown
transducers. The proof is done via a pumping argument: if a word with two
outputs has a sufficiently large nesting depth, there exists a nested word with
two outputs whose nesting depth is strictly smaller. The proof uses technics of
word combinatorics. As a consequence of decidability of functionality, we also
show that equivalence of functional visibly pushdown transducers is
Exptime-Complete.Comment: 20 page
Graded contractions and bicrossproduct structure of deformed inhomogeneous algebras
A family of deformed Hopf algebras corresponding to the classical maximal
isometry algebras of zero-curvature N-dimensional spaces (the inhomogeneous
algebras iso(p,q), p+q=N, as well as some of their contractions) are shown to
have a bicrossproduct structure. This is done for both the algebra and, in a
low-dimensional example, for the (dual) group aspects of the deformation.Comment: LaTeX file, 20 pages. Trivial changes. To appear in J. Phys.
QUANTIZATION OF A CLASS OF PIECEWISE AFFINE TRANSFORMATIONS ON THE TORUS
We present a unified framework for the quantization of a family of discrete
dynamical systems of varying degrees of "chaoticity". The systems to be
quantized are piecewise affine maps on the two-torus, viewed as phase space,
and include the automorphisms, translations and skew translations. We then
treat some discontinuous transformations such as the Baker map and the
sawtooth-like maps. Our approach extends some ideas from geometric quantization
and it is both conceptually and calculationally simple.Comment: no. 28 pages in AMSTE
Solid-phase crystallization of Si films in contact with Al layers
Low-temperature (400â540 °C) crystallization of amorphous and polycrystalline Si films deposited on SiO2 and covered with an evaporated Al layer has been studied using SEM, TEM, electron diffraction, electron channeling, and MeV 4He + backscattering. Silicon deposited by evaporation and chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at 640 °C (both amorphous) was found to crystallize into islands of polycrystalline aggregates. Silicon deposited by CVD at 900 °C (polycrystalline with ~2000-Ă
grains) produced relatively large (~10 ”m) single-crystal islands. In both cases island size increased with annealing time, and the rate of crystallization increased with temperature. Crystallization rates were observed to be the same for both sources of amorphous Si, while 900 °C CVD Si was noticeably slower, consistent with the postulate that the driving force for the reaction is the free-energy difference between initial and final states. The crystallization rate for 900 °C CVD Si decreased when the Al layer thickness was reduced to a value less than the initial Si grain size. The inclusion of a native oxide layer between the deposited Si and Al layers greatly retarded the crystallization process
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