193 research outputs found
Distributed Database Management Techniques for Wireless Sensor Networks
Authors and/or their employers shall have the right to post the accepted version of IEEE-copyrighted articles on their own
personal servers or the servers of their institutions or employers without permission from IEEE, provided that the posted version includes a prominently
displayed IEEE copyright notice and, when published, a full citation to the original IEEE publication, including a link to the article abstract in IEEE
Xplore. Authors shall not post the final, published versions of their papers.In sensor networks, the large amount of data generated by sensors greatly influences the lifetime of the network. In order to manage this amount of sensed data in an energy-efficient way, new methods of storage and data query are needed. In this way, the distributed database approach for sensor networks is proved as one of the most energy-efficient data storage and query techniques. This paper surveys the state of the art of the techniques used to manage data and queries in wireless sensor networks based on the distributed paradigm. A classification of these techniques is also proposed. The goal of this work is not only to present how data and query management techniques have advanced nowadays, but also show their benefits and drawbacks, and to identify open issues providing guidelines for further contributions in this type of distributed architectures.This work was partially supported by the Instituto de Telcomunicacoes, Next Generation Networks and Applications Group (NetGNA), Portugal, by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion, through the Plan Nacional de I+D+i 2008-2011 in the Subprograma de Proyectos de Investigacion Fundamental, project TEC2011-27516, by the Polytechnic University of Valencia, though the PAID-05-12 multidisciplinary projects, by Government of Russian Federation, Grant 074-U01, and by National Funding from the FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia through the Pest-OE/EEI/LA0008/2013 Project.Diallo, O.; Rodrigues, JJPC.; Sene, M.; Lloret, J. (2013). Distributed Database Management Techniques for Wireless Sensor Networks. IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems. PP(99):1-17. https://doi.org/10.1109/TPDS.2013.207S117PP9
Etude de la productivité et de la sensibilité de diverses variétés de tomate (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill) à la virose du jaunissement et de l’enroulement en cuillère des feuilles au Sénégal
Après l’oignon, la tomate est le plus important légume au Sénégal. Elle est très sensible au virus Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl (TYLCV). Quatorze variétés de tomate ont été testées pour évaluer leur productivité et leur résistance au TYLC à différents stades phénologiques (floraison, fructification et maturité) dans un dispositif en blocs complets randomisés comptant trois répétitions. Les résultats ont montré que le nombre de fruits/grappe a varié entre les variétés. La masse unitaire des fruits était plus élevée pour Bybal, Roma VF et Lety F1. La longueur des fruits de Thoriya et Lety F1 était plus importante. Roma VF et Bybal ont présenté les plus gros fruits. TY75 et Ponchita ont produit les rendements en fruits consommables les plus élevés. Roma VF et Lety F1 ont produit les rendements non consommables les plus élevés. Globalement, TY75 et Roma VF ont été plus productives. Une résistance au virus a été observée chez douze variétés et une forte sensibilité chez deux autres (Roma VF et Xina). Ces résultats pourraient intéresser les sélectionneurs, les firmes semencières et les agriculteurs dans leur choix de variétés de tomate à cultiver.Mots clés : Tomate, Lycopersicon esculentum, TYLCV, Sénéga
Nonlinear geometric analysis of a mistuned bladed disk
This paper deals with the dynamical analysis and uncertainty quantification of a mistuned industrial rotating integrally bladed disk, for which the operating regime under consideration takes into account the nonlinear geometric effects induced by large displacements and deformations. First, a dedicated mean nonlinear reduced-order model of the tuned structure is explicitly constructed using three-dimensional solid finite elements. The random nature of the mistuning is then modeled by using the onparametric probabilistic approach extended to the nonlinear geometric context. Such a computational strategy provides an efficient tool, which is applied to a computational model of an industrial centrifugal compressor with a large number of degrees of freedom. This allows for putting in evidence some new complex dynamical behaviors
Les Cyanophyceae marines de l’île de Ngor (Sénégal)
La présente étude a été initiée dans le but de déterminer la composition taxonomique et la structure des peuplements de Cyanophyceae au niveau de l’ile de Ngor. Durant les travaux, une description basée sur des caractères morphologiques du thalle (cellule, colonie ou filament) des taxa a été effectuée. Aussi une classification et un inventaire systématique de ces taxa ont été réalisés. Six prélèvements ont été effectués entre juillet 2009 et août 2010 dans les eaux marines de l’île de Ngor située à 800 m de la côte dakaroise (Sénégal). L’observation des différents échantillons prélevés a permis de répertorier au niveau de cet écosystème 38 taxa de Cyanophyceae dont 28 identifiées jusqu’au niveau spécifique, réparties en 18 genres et 11 familles. Sur ces 11 familles, seules trois d’entre elles regroupent plus de la moitié des taxa présents. Ce sont les Oscillatoriaceae avec 31,56%, les Phormidiaceae et les Pseudanabaenaceae avec chacune 15,79%. Les Merismopediaceae représentent 10,53% des taxa, les Chroococcaceae 7,89%, et les Synechococcaceae 5,26%. Les familles des Borziaceae, des Xenococcaceae, des Hyellaceae, des Microcystaceae et des Rivulariaceae ne représentent chacune que 2,63%. Pour ce qui est des genres, Oscillatoria Vaucher est le plus représenté avec 7 taxa, suivi des genres Lyngbya C. Agardh et Phormidium Kütz. Ex Gom. avec chacun 4 taxa. Sur les 28 taxa identifiés jusqu’au niveau espèce, 17 ont été décrits pour la 1ere fois au Sénégal.Mots-clés : Cyanophyceae, composition taxonomique, structure, île de Ngor, Sénéga
Intermittent Screening and Treatment versus Intermittent Preventive Treatment of Malaria in Pregnancy: A Randomised Controlled Non-Inferiority Trial
BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) may be compromised by the spread of resistance to sulphadoxine/pyrimethamine (SP) across Africa. But little information exists on alternative drugs for IPTp or alternative strategies for the prevention of malaria in pregnancy. Therefore, we have investigated whether screening with a rapid diagnostic test and treatment of those who are positive (IST) at routine antenatal clinic attendances is as effective and as safe as SP-IPTp in pregnant women. METHODS AND FINDINGS: During antenatal clinic sessions in six health facilities in Ghana held between March 2007 and September 2007, 3333 pregnant women who satisfied inclusion criteria were randomised into three intervention arms (1) standard SP-IPTp, (2) IST and treatment with SP or (3) IST and treatment with amodiaquine+artesunate (AQ+AS). All women received a long-lasting insecticide treated net. Study women had a maximum of three scheduled follow-up visits following enrollment. Haemoglobin concentration and peripheral parasitaemia were assessed between 36 and 40 weeks of gestation. Birth weight was measured at delivery or within 72 hours for babies delivered at home. Parasite prevalence at enrollment in primigravidae and in multigravidae was 29.6% and 10.2% respectively. At 36-40 weeks of gestation the prevalence of asymptomatic parasitaemia was 12.1% in study women overall and was very similar in all treatment groups. The risk of third trimester severe anaemia or low birth weight did not differ significantly between the three treatment groups regardless of gravidity. IST with AQ+AS or SP was not inferior to SP-IPTp in reducing the risk of low birth weight (RD  =  -1.17[95%CI; -4.39-1.02] for IST-SP vs. SP-IPTp and RD = 0.78[95%CI; -2.11-3.68] for IST-AQAS vs. SP-IPTp); third trimester severe anaemia (RD = 0.29[95%CI; -0.69-1.30] for IST-SP vs. SP-IPTp and RD  =  -0.36[95%CI;-1.12-0.44] for IST-AQAS vs. SP-IPTp). CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggest that in an area of moderately high malaria transmission, IST with SP or AS+AQ may be a safe and effective strategy for the control of malaria in pregnancy. However, it is important that these encouraging findings are confirmed in other geographical areas and that the impact of IST on placental malaria is investigated. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00432367 [NCT00432367]
Recommended from our members
Ins and outs of the cultural polis: informality, culture and governance in the global South
This paper provides an epistemological critique of informality by focusing on cultural governance in two cities of the global South, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Dakar, Senegal. Aiming to enrich debates about urban creativity and urban cultural policy, which are still mainly focused on and articulated from the global North, we consider the broad field of ‘informality’ research as an entry point for such a discussion. Using case studies from African and Latin American contexts, we focus on the interstices of cultural policy and the borderlands of (in)formality, examining how governmental institutions are entangled in informal processes, and how grassroots cultural interventions become part of mainstream cultural circuits. The analysis sheds light on how these creative spaces of cultural production, located in Southern contexts of urban extremes, contribute to the vitality of informal urbanisms and unsettle predominant views that see them merely as sites ofinfrastructural poverty and social exclusion. The paper suggests that a creative remapping of informality, through an inquiry of the ‘ins’ and ‘outs’ of the cultural polis, could improve our translating capacity of academic discourse into institutional/policy-related operations
Affine term structure models : a time-changed approach with perfect fit to market curves
We address the so-called calibration problem which consists of fitting in a
tractable way a given model to a specified term structure like, e.g., yield or
default probability curves. Time-homogeneous jump-diffusions like Vasicek or
Cox-Ingersoll-Ross (possibly coupled with compounded Poisson jumps, JCIR), are
tractable processes but have limited flexibility; they fail to replicate actual
market curves. The deterministic shift extension of the latter (Hull-White or
JCIR++) is a simple but yet efficient solution that is widely used by both
academics and practitioners. However, the shift approach is often not
appropriate when positivity is required, which is a common constraint when
dealing with credit spreads or default intensities. In this paper, we tackle
this problem by adopting a time change approach. On the top of providing an
elegant solution to the calibration problem under positivity constraint, our
model features additional interesting properties in terms of implied
volatilities. It is compared to the shift extension on various credit risk
applications such as credit default swap, credit default swaption and credit
valuation adjustment under wrong-way risk. The time change approach is able to
generate much larger volatility and covariance effects under the positivity
constraint. Our model offers an appealing alternative to the shift in such
cases.Comment: 44 pages, figures and table
The effectiveness and perception of the use of sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine in intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy programme in Offinso district of ashanti region, Ghana
- …