4,312 research outputs found
The Complexity of Helly- EPG Graph Recognition
Golumbic, Lipshteyn, and Stern defined in 2009 the class of EPG graphs, the
intersection graph class of edge paths on a grid. An EPG graph is a graph
that admits a representation where its vertices correspond to paths in a grid
, such that two vertices of are adjacent if and only if their
corresponding paths in have a common edge. If the paths in the
representation have at most bends, we say that it is a -EPG
representation. A collection of sets satisfies the Helly property when
every sub-collection of that is pairwise intersecting has at least one
common element. In this paper, we show that given a graph and an integer
, the problem of determining whether admits a -EPG representation
whose edge-intersections of paths satisfy the Helly property, so-called
Helly--EPG representation, is in NP, for every bounded by a polynomial
function of . Moreover, we show that the problem of recognizing
Helly--EPG graphs is NP-complete, and it remains NP-complete even when
restricted to 2-apex and 3-degenerate graphs
Pemphigus Vulgaris and Skin Grafting**From the Tel Hashomer Government Hospital, Israel. (Chief, Dermatological Department. Assistant Dermatological Department. Chief, Plastic Surgery Department.)
The metabolic vascular syndrome - guide to an individualized treatment
In ancient Greek medicine the concept of a distinct syndrome (going together) was used to label 'a group of signs and symptoms' that occur together and 'characterize a particular abnormality and condition'. The (dys)metabolic syndrome is a common cluster of five pre-morbid metabolic-vascular risk factors or diseases associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity, fatty liver disease and risk of cancer. The risk for major complications such as cardiovascular diseases, NASH and some cancers develops along a continuum of risk factors into clinical diseases. Therefore we still include hyperglycemia, visceral obesity, dyslipidemia and hypertension as diagnostic traits in the definition according to the term 'deadly quartet'. From the beginning elevated blood pressure and hyperglycemia were core traits of the metabolic syndrome associated with endothelial dysfunction and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Thus metabolic and vascular abnormalities are in extricable linked. Therefore it seems reasonable to extend the term to metabolic-vascular syndrome (MVS) to signal the clinical relevance and related risk of multimorbidity. This has important implications for integrated diagnostics and therapeutic approach. According to the definition of a syndrome the rapid global rise in the prevalence of all traits and comorbidities of the MVS is mainly caused by rapid changes in life-style and sociocultural transition resp. with over- and malnutrition, low physical activity and social stress as a common soil
Long-term stability of language performance in very preterm, moderate-late preterm, and term children
Objective
To investigate whether children born very preterm, moderate-late preterm, and term differ in their average level and individual-difference stability in language performance over time.
Study design
Language was assessed at 5 and 20 months and 4, 6, and 8 years of age in 204 very preterm (<32 weeks' gestation), 276 moderate-late preterm (32-36 weeks' gestation), and 268 term (37-41 weeks' gestation) children from the Bavarian Longitudinal Study.
Results
Very preterm children consistently performed worse than term-born children, and moderate-late preterm children scored in between. Language performance was stable from 5 months through 8 years in all gestation groups combined, and stability increased between each succeeding wave. Stability was stronger between 5 months and 4 years in very preterm than moderate-late preterm and term groups, but this differential stability attenuated when covariates (child nonverbal intelligence and family socioeconomic status) were controlled.
Conclusions
Preterm children, even moderate-late preterm, are at risk for poorer language performance than term-born children. Because individual differences in language performance are increasingly stable from 20 months to 8 years in all gestation groups, pediatricians who attend to preterm children and observe language delays should refer them to language intervention at the earliest age seen
Injecting Artificial Memory Errors Into a Running Computer Program
Single-event upsets (SEUs) or bitflips are computer memory errors caused by radiation. BITFLIPS (Basic Instrumentation Tool for Fault Localized Injection of Probabilistic SEUs) is a computer program that deliberately injects SEUs into another computer program, while the latter is running, for the purpose of evaluating the fault tolerance of that program. BITFLIPS was written as a plug-in extension of the open-source Valgrind debugging and profiling software. BITFLIPS can inject SEUs into any program that can be run on the Linux operating system, without needing to modify the program s source code. Further, if access to the original program source code is available, BITFLIPS offers fine-grained control over exactly when and which areas of memory (as specified via program variables) will be subjected to SEUs. The rate of injection of SEUs is controlled by specifying either a fault probability or a fault rate based on memory size and radiation exposure time, in units of SEUs per byte per second. BITFLIPS can also log each SEU that it injects and, if program source code is available, report the magnitude of effect of the SEU on a floating-point value or other program variable
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