918 research outputs found

    Understanding customers' holistic perception of switches in automotive human–machine interfaces

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    For successful new product development, it is necessary to understand the customers' holistic experience of the product beyond traditional task completion, and acceptance measures. This paper describes research in which ninety-eight UK owners of luxury saloons assessed the feel of push-switches in five luxury saloon cars both in context (in-car) and out of context (on a bench). A combination of hedonic data (i.e. a measure of ‘liking’), qualitative data and semantic differential data was collected. It was found that customers are clearly able to differentiate between switches based on the degree of liking for the samples' perceived haptic qualities, and that the assessment environment had a statistically significant effect, but that it was not universal. A factor analysis has shown that perceived characteristics of switch haptics can be explained by three independent factors defined as ‘Image’, ‘Build Quality’, and ‘Clickiness’. Preliminary steps have also been taken towards identifying whether existing theoretical frameworks for user experience may be applicable to automotive human–machine interfaces

    Validation of Various Antimicrobial Solutions on the Reductions of Surface Microbial Load of E. Coli O157:H7 on Lean Beef

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    A study was conducted to examine the effectiveness of several antimicrobial products of differing chemistries in order to determine the most effective solutions that can be applied to varying industry situations. Antimicrobials (n=14) were tested for effectiveness on lean beef surfaces (5.08 cm diameter, 0.4 cm thick) within a Ross TC 700MC tenderizer (Ross Industries, Midland, VA) equipped with a Dosatron (Clearwater, FL) custom-built spray cabinet. Lean beef wafers (n=80) for each antimicrobial, which were fabricated from boneless top butt sirloins (IMPS #184), were subjected to spray treatment within this piece of equipment. Prior to treatment, samples were inoculated with 0.1 mL of 2 X 108 CFU/ml of E. coli O157:H7 cocktail (ATCC 43890, ATCC 43894, ATCC 43895, ATCC 35150). After processing samples were plated in order to achieve surface reduction effectiveness of each antimicrobial at 1 h, 1 d, 7 d, and 14 d post treatment. BeefXide was the most effective (P < 0.05) antimicrobial at 1 hr post processing. AvGard-Xp, AFTEC 3000, and Cytoguard Plus were the most effective (P < 0.05) antimicrobials at surface reduction after 1 day of vacuum-sealed, refrigerated storage (2o C). After 7 days of storage (2o C) under the same conditions AvGard-XP was the most effective (P < 0.05) at reduction of E. coli O157:H7, AvGard-XP remained the most effective (P < 0.05) antimicrobial tested after 14 days of storage.Department of Animal Scienc

    Real-Time Big Data: the JUNIPER Approach

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    REACTION 2014. 3rd International Workshop on Real-time and Distributed Computing in Emerging Applications. Rome, Italy. December 2nd, 2014.Cloud computing offers the possibility for Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) to offload computation and utilise large stored data sets in order to increase the overall system utility. However, for cloud platforms and applications to be effective for CPS, they need to exhibit real-time behaviour so that some level of performance can be guaranteed to the CPS. This paper considers the infrastructure developed by the EU JUNIPER project for enabling real-time big data systems to be built so that appropriate guarantees can be given to the CPS components. The technologies developed include a real-time Java programming approach, hardware acceleration to provide performance, and operating system resource manage-ment (time and disk) based upon resource reservation in order to enhance timeliness.This work is partially funded by the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement FP7-ICT-611731Publicad

    The prevalence of, and factors associated with, paying for sex among men resident in Britain: findings from the third national survey of sexual attitudes and lifestyles (Natsal-3)

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    Objectives Men who pay for sex (MPS) are considered a bridging population for sexually transmitted infections (STI). However, the extent, characteristics and role of MPS in transmission is poorly understood. We investigate these questions using data from Britain's third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3). Methods We performed complex survey analyses of data from 6293 men aged 16–74 years resident in Britain who completed Natsal-3, a probability sample survey undertaken during 2010–2012, using computer-assisted personal interviewing and computer-assisted self-interview. Results 11.0% (95% CI10.1% to 11.9%) of all men reported ever paying for sex. Among MPS, 18.4% (95% CI 18.2% to 18.7%) of their lifetime sexual partners were paid. 3.6% (95% CI 3.1% to 4.2%) of men had paid for sex in the past 5 years. Partners of MPS constitute 14.7% of all reported partners and MPS report 15.6% of all reported STI diagnoses in the past 5 years. Paying for sex in the past 5 years was strongly associated with reporting larger numbers of sexual partners (adjusted OR, AOR for 5+ partners, past 5 years, 31.50, 95% CI 18.69 to 53.09). After adjusting for partner numbers, paying for sex remained strongly associated with reporting new foreign partners outside the UK (AOR 7.96; 95% CI 4.97 to 12.73) and STI diagnosis/es (AOR 2.34; 95% CI 1.44 to 3.81), all in the past 5 years. Among men ever paying for sex, 62.6% (95% CI 58.3% to 66.8%) reported paying for sex outside the UK, most often in Europe and Asia. Conclusions MPS in Britain remain at greater risk of STI acquisition and onward transmission than men who do not. They report high numbers of partners, but the minority are paid partners. They are an important core group in STI transmission

    Sexual behaviour in Britain: partnerships, practices, and HIV risk behaviours.

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    BACKGROUND: Sexual behaviour is a major determinant of sexual and reproductive health. We did a National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal 2000) in 1999-2001 to provide population estimates of behaviour patterns and to compare them with estimates from 1990-91 (Natsal 1990). METHODS: We did a probability sample survey of men and women aged 16-44 years who were resident in Britain, using computer-assisted interviews. Results were compared with data from respondents in Natsal 1990. FINDINGS: We interviewed 11161 respondents (4762 men, 6399 women). Patterns of heterosexual and homosexual partnership varied substantially by age, residence in Greater London, and marital status. In the past 5 years, mean numbers of heterosexual partners were 3.8 (SD 8.2) for men, and 2.4 (SD 4.6) for women; 2.6% (95% CI 2.2-3.1) of both men and women reported homosexual partnerships; and 4.3% (95% CI 3.7-5.0) of men reported paying for sex. In the past year, mean number of new partners varied from 2.04 (SD 8.4) for single men aged 25-34 years to 0.05 (SD 0.3) for married women aged 35-44 years. Prevalence of many reported behaviours had risen compared with data from Natsal 1990. Benefits of greater condom use were offset by increases in reported partners. Changes between surveys were generally greater for women than men and for respondents outside London. INTERPRETATION: Our study provides updated estimates of sexual behaviour patterns. The increased reporting of risky sexual behaviours is consistent with changing cohabitation patterns and rising incidence of sexually transmitted infections. Observed differences between Natsal 1990 and Natsal 2000 are likely to result from a combination of true change and greater willingness to report sensitive behaviours in Natsal 2000 due to improved survey methodology and more tolerant social attitudes

    Improving the predictability of distributed stream processors

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    Next generation real-time applications demand big-data infrastructures to process huge and continuous data volumes under complex computational constraints. This type of application raises new issues on current big-data processing infrastructures. The first issue to be considered is that most of current infrastructures for big-data processing were defined for general purpose applications. Thus, they set aside real-time performance, which is in some cases an implicit requirement. A second important limitation is the lack of clear computational models that could be supported by current big-data frameworks. In an effort to reduce this gap, this article contributes along several lines. First, it provides a set of improvements to a computational model called distributed stream processing in order to formalize it as a real-time infrastructure. Second, it proposes some extensions to Storm, one of the most popular stream processors. These extensions are designed to gain an extra control over the resources used by the application in order to improve its predictability. Lastly, the article presents some empirical evidences on the performance that can be expected from this type of infrastructure.This work has been partially supported by HERMES (Healthy and Efficient Routes in Massive open-data basEd Smart cities). It has been also partially financed by Distributed Java Infrastructure for Real-Time Big Data (CAS14/00118). It has been also partially funded by eMadrid (S2013/ICE-2715) and by European Union’s 7th Framework Programme ​under Grant Agreement FP7-IC6-318763

    What factors are associated with reporting lacking interest in sex and how do these vary by gender? Findings from the third British national survey of sexual attitudes and lifestyles

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    OBJECTIVES: To investigate factors associated with reporting lacking interest in sex and how these vary by gender. SETTING: British general population. DESIGN: Complex survey analyses of data collected for a cross-sectional probability sample survey, undertaken 2010-2012, specifically logistic regression to calculate age-adjusted OR (AOR) to identify associated factors. PARTICIPANTS: 4839 men and 6669 women aged 16-74 years who reported ≥1 sexual partner (opposite-sex or same-sex) in the past year for the third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Lacking interest in sex for ≥3 months in the past year. RESULTS: Overall, 15.0% (13.9-16.2) of men and 34.2% (32.8-35.5) of women reported lacking interest in sex. This was associated with age and physical and mental health for both men and women, including self-reported general health and current depression. Lacking interest in sex was more prevalent among men and women reporting sexually transmitted infection diagnoses (ever), non-volitional sex (ever) and holding sexual attitudes related to normative expectations about sex. Some gender similarities in associated relationship and family-related factors were evident, including partner having had sexual difficulties in the last year (men: AOR 1.41 (1.07-1.86); women: AOR 1.60 (1.32-1.94)), not feeling emotionally close to partner during sex (men: 3.74 (1.76-7.93); women: 4.80 (2.99-7.69) and ease of talking about sex (men: 1.53 (1.23-1.90);women: 2.06 (1.77-2.39)). Among women only, lack of interest in sex was higher among those in a relationship of >1 year in duration and those not sharing the same level of interest (4.57 (3.87-5.38)) or preferences (2.91 (2.22-3.83)) with a partner. CONCLUSIONS: Both gender similarities and differences were found in factors associated with lacking interest in sex, with the most marked differences in relation to some relationship variables. Findings highlight the need to assess, and if appropriate, treat lacking interest in sex in a holistic and relationship-specific way

    Forming new sex partnerships while overseas: findings from the third British National Survey of Sexual Attitudes & Lifestyles (Natsal-3)

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    Objectives: Travelling away from home presents opportunities for new sexual partnerships, which may be associated with sexually transmitted infection (STI) risk. We examined the prevalence of, and factors associated with, reporting new sexual partner(s) while overseas, and whether this differed by partners’ region of residence. Methods: We analysed data from 12 530 men and women aged 16–74 years reporting ≥1 sexual partner(s) in the past 5 years in Britain's third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3), a probability survey undertaken 2010–2012. Results: 9.2% (95% CI 8.3% to 10.1%) of men and 5.3% (4.8% to 5.8%) of women reported new sexual partner(s) while overseas in the past 5 years. This was strongly associated with higher partner numbers and other sexual and health risk behaviours. Among those with new partners while overseas, 72% of men and 58% of women reported partner(s) who were not UK residents. Compared with those having only UK partners while abroad, these people were more likely to identify as ‘White Other’ or ‘Non-White’ (vs White British ethnicity), report higher partner numbers, new partners from outside the UK while in the UK and paying for sex (men only) all in the past 5 years. There was no difference in reporting STI diagnosis/es during this time period. Conclusions: Reporting new partners while overseas was associated with a range of sexual risk behaviours. Advice on sexual health should be included as part of holistic health advice for all travellers, regardless of age, destination or reason for travel

    Combining Time-Triggered Plans with Priority Scheduled Task Sets

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39083-3_13Time-triggered and concurrent priority-based scheduling are the two major approaches in use for real-time and embedded systems. Both approaches have their own advantages and drawbacks. On the one hand, priority-based systems facilitate separation of concerns between functional and timing requirements by relying on an underlying real- time operating system that takes all scheduling decisions at run time. But this is at the cost of indeterminism in the exact timing pattern of execution of activities, namely variable release jitter. On the other hand, time-triggered schedules are more intricate to design since all schedul- ing decisions must be taken beforehand in the design phase, but their advantage is determinism and more chances for minimisation of release jitter. In this paper we propose a software architecture that enables the combined and controlled execution of time-triggered plans and priority- scheduled tasks. We also describe the implementation of an Ada library supporting it. Our aim is to take advantage of the best of both ap- proaches by providing jitter-controlled execution of time-triggered tasks (e.g., control tasks), coexisting with a set of priority-scheduled tasks, with less demanding jitter requirements.This work has been partly supported by the Spanish Government’s project M2C2 (TIN2014-56158-C4-1-P-AR) and the European Commission’s project EMC2 (ARTEMIS-JU Call 2013 AIPP-5, Contract 621429).Real Sáez, JV.; Sáez Barona, S.; Crespo, A. (2016). Combining Time-Triggered Plans with Priority Scheduled Task Sets. En Reliable Software Technologies – Ada-Europe 2016. Springer. 195-212. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39083-3_13S195212Liu, C., Layland, J.: Scheduling algorithms for multiprogramming in a hard real-time environment. J. ACM 20(1), 46–61 (1973)Martí, P., Fuertes, J., Fohler, G.: Jitter compensation for real-time control systems. In: Real-Time Systems Symposium (2001)Dobrin, R.: Combining off-line schedule construction and fixed priority scheduling in real-time computer systems. Ph.D. thesis. Mälardalen University (2005)Cervin, A.: Integrated control and real-time scheduling. Ph.D. thesis. Lund Institute of Technology, April 2003Balbastre, P., Ripoll, I., Vidal, J., Crespo, A.: A task model to reduce control delays. Real-Time Syst. 27(3), 215–236 (2004)Hong, S., Hu, X., Lemmon, M.: Reducing delay jitter of real-time control tasks through adaptive deadline adjustments. In: 22nd Euromicro Conference on Real-Time Systems - ECRTS, pp. 229–238. IEEE Computer Society (2010)ISO/IEC-JTC1-SC22-WG9: Ada Reference Manual ISO/IEC 8652:2012(E) (2012). http://www.ada-europe.org/manuals/LRM-2012.pdfBaker, T.P., Shaw, A.: The cyclic executive model and Ada. In: Proceedings IEEE Real Time Systems Symposium 1988, Huntsville, Alabama, pp. 120–129 (1988)Liu, J.W.S.: Real-Time Systems. Prentice-Hall Inc., Upper Saddle River (2000)Pont, M.J.: The Engineering of Reliable Embedded Systems: LPC1769. SafeTTy Systems Limited, Skelmersdale (2014). ISBN: 978-0-9930355-0-0Aldea Rivas, M., González Harbour, M.: MaRTE OS: an Ada kernel for real-time embedded applications. In: Strohmeier, A., Craeynest, D. (eds.) Ada-Europe 2001. LNCS, vol. 2043, pp. 305–316. Springer, Heidelberg (2001)Palencia, J., González-Harbour, M.: Schedulability analysis for tasks with static and dynamic offsets. In: 9th IEEE Real-Time Systems Symposium (1998)Wellings, A.J., Burns, A.: A framework for real-time utilities for Ada 2005. Ada Lett. XXVI XXVII(2), 41–47 (2007)Real, J., Crespo, A.: Incorporating operating modes to an Ada real-time framework. Ada Lett. 30(1), 73–85 (2010)Sáez, S., Terrasa, S., Crespo, A.: A real-time framework for multiprocessor platforms using Ada 2012. In: Romanovsky, A., Vardanega, T. (eds.) Ada-Europe 2011. LNCS, vol. 6652, pp. 46–60. Springer, Heidelberg (2011
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