59 research outputs found

    A low-power receiver with switched-capacitor summation DFE

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    A low power receiver with a one tap DFE was fabricated in 90mm CMOS technology. The speculative equalization is performed using switched-capacitor-based addition directly at the front-end sample-hold circuit. In order to further reduce the power consumption, an analog multiplexer is used in the speculation technique implementation. A quarter-rate-clocking scheme facilitates the use of low-power front-end circuitry and CMOS clock buffers. At 10Gb/s data rate, the receiver consumes less than 6.0mW from a 1.0V supply

    A superconducting bandpass delta-sigma modulator for direct analog-to-digital conversion of microwave radio

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2003.Includes bibliographical references (p. 291-305).This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Direct analog-to-digital conversion of multi-GHz radio frequency (RF) signals is the ultimate goal in software radio receiver design but remains a daunting challenge for any technology. This thesis examines the potential of superconducting technology for realizing RF analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) with improved performance. A bandpass delta-sigma (AE) modulator is an attractive architecture for digitizing narrowband signals with high linearity and a large signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The design of a superconducting bandpass AE modulator presented here exploits several advantages of superconducting electronics: the high quality factor of resonators, the high sampling rates of comparators realized with Josephson junctions, natural quantization of voltage pulses, and high circuit sensitivity. Demonstration of a superconducting circuit operating at clock rates in the tens of GHz is often hindered by the difficulty of high speed interfacing with room-temperature test equipment. In this work, a test chip with integrated acquisition memory is used to simplify high speed testing in a cryogenic environment. The small size (256 bits) of the on-chip memory severely limits the frequency resolution of spectra based on standard fast Fourier transforms. Higher resolution spectra are obtained by "segmented correlation", a new method for testing ADCs. Two different techniques have been found for clocking the superconducting modulator at frequencies in the tens of GHz. In the first approach, an optical clocking technique was developed, in which picosecond laser pulses are delivered via optical fiber to an on-chip metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) photodiode, whose output current pulses trigger the Josephson circuitry. In the second approach, the superconducting modulator is clocked by an on-chip Josephson oscillator.(cont.) These testing methods have been applied in the successful demonstration of a super-conducting bandpass AE modulator fabricated in a niobium integrated circuit process with 1 kA/cm2 critical current density for the Josephson junctions. At a 42.6 GHz sampling rate, the center frequency of the experimental modulator is 2.23 GHz, the measured SNR is 49 dB over a 20.8 MHz bandwidth, and a full-scale (FS) input is -17.4 dBm. At a 40.2 GHz sampling rate, the measured in-band noise is -57 dBFS over a 19.6 MHz bandwidth.by John Francis Bulzacchelli.Ph.D

    The burden of disease and injury in the United States 1996

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    Background: Burden of disease studies have been implemented in many countries using the Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY) to assess major health problems. Important objectives of the study were to quantify intra-country differentials in health outcomes and to place the United States situation in the international context. Methods: We applied methods developed for the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) to data specific to the United States to compute Disability-Adjusted Life Years. Estimates are provided by age and gender for the general population of the United States and for each of the four official race groups: White; Black; American Indian or Alaskan Native; and Asian or Pacific Islander. Several adjustments of GBD methods were made: the inclusion of race; a revised list of causes; and a revised algorithm to allocate cardiovascular disease garbage codes to ischaemic heart disease. We compared the results of this analysis to international estimates published by the World Health Organization for developed and developing regions of the world. Results: In the mid-1990s the leading sources of premature death and disability in the United States, as measured by DALYs, were: cardiovascular conditions, breast and lung cancers, depression, osteoarthritis, diabetes mellitus, and alcohol use and abuse. In addition, motor vehicle-related injuries and the HIV epidemic exacted a substantial toll on the health status of the US population, particularly among racial minorities. The major sources of death and disability in these latter populations were more similar to patterns of burden in developing rather than developed countries. Conclusion: Estimating DALYs specifically for the United States provides a comprehensive assessment of health problems for this country compared to what is available using mortality data alone

    Eight Americas: Investigating Mortality Disparities across Races, Counties, and Race-Counties in the United States

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    BACKGROUND: The gap between the highest and lowest life expectancies for race-county combinations in the United States is over 35 y. We divided the race-county combinations of the US population into eight distinct groups, referred to as the “eight Americas,” to explore the causes of the disparities that can inform specific public health intervention policies and programs. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The eight Americas were defined based on race, location of the county of residence, population density, race-specific county-level per capita income, and cumulative homicide rate. Data sources for population and mortality figures were the Bureau of the Census and the National Center for Health Statistics. We estimated life expectancy, the risk of mortality from specific diseases, health insurance, and health-care utilization for the eight Americas. The life expectancy gap between the 3.4 million high-risk urban black males and the 5.6 million Asian females was 20.7 y in 2001. Within the sexes, the life expectancy gap between the best-off and the worst-off groups was 15.4 y for males (Asians versus high-risk urban blacks) and 12.8 y for females (Asians versus low-income southern rural blacks). Mortality disparities among the eight Americas were largest for young (15–44 y) and middle-aged (45–59 y) adults, especially for men. The disparities were caused primarily by a number of chronic diseases and injuries with well-established risk factors. Between 1982 and 2001, the ordering of life expectancy among the eight Americas and the absolute difference between the advantaged and disadvantaged groups remained largely unchanged. Self-reported health plan coverage was lowest for western Native Americans and low-income southern rural blacks. Crude self-reported health-care utilization, however, was slightly higher for the more disadvantaged populations. CONCLUSIONS: Disparities in mortality across the eight Americas, each consisting of millions or tens of millions of Americans, are enormous by all international standards. The observed disparities in life expectancy cannot be explained by race, income, or basic health-care access and utilization alone. Because policies aimed at reducing fundamental socioeconomic inequalities are currently practically absent in the US, health disparities will have to be at least partly addressed through public health strategies that reduce risk factors for chronic diseases and injuries

    Identifying work related injuries: comparison of methods for interrogating text fields

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    Background: Work-related injuries in Australia are estimated to cost around $57.5 billion annually, however there are currently insufficient surveillance data available to support an evidence-based public health response. Emergency departments (ED) in Australia are a potential source of information on work-related injuries though most ED’s do not have an ‘Activity Code’ to identify work-related cases with information about the presenting problem recorded in a short free text field. This study compared methods for interrogating text fields for identifying work-related injuries presenting at emergency departments to inform approaches to surveillance of work-related injury.---------- Methods: Three approaches were used to interrogate an injury description text field to classify cases as work-related: keyword search, index search, and content analytic text mining. Sensitivity and specificity were examined by comparing cases flagged by each approach to cases coded with an Activity code during triage. Methods to improve the sensitivity and/or specificity of each approach were explored by adjusting the classification techniques within each broad approach.---------- Results: The basic keyword search detected 58% of cases (Specificity 0.99), an index search detected 62% of cases (Specificity 0.87), and the content analytic text mining (using adjusted probabilities) approach detected 77% of cases (Specificity 0.95).---------- Conclusions The findings of this study provide strong support for continued development of text searching methods to obtain information from routine emergency department data, to improve the capacity for comprehensive injury surveillance
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