967 research outputs found
QUIC-FEC: Bringing the benefits of Forward Erasure Correction to QUIC
Originally implemented by Google, QUIC gathers a growing interest by
providing, on top of UDP, the same service as the classical TCP/TLS/HTTP/2
stack. The IETF will finalise the QUIC specification in 2019.
A key feature of QUIC is that almost all its packets, including most of its
headers, are fully encrypted. This prevents eavesdropping and interferences
caused by middleboxes. Thanks to this feature and its clean design, QUIC is
easier to extend than TCP. In this paper, we revisit the reliable transmission
mechanisms that are included in QUIC. More specifically, we design, implement
and evaluate Forward Erasure Correction (FEC) extensions to QUIC. These
extensions are mainly intended for high-delays and lossy communications such as
In-Flight Communications. Our design includes a generic FEC frame and our
implementation supports the XOR, Reed-Solomon and Convolutional RLC
error-correcting codes. We also conservatively avoid hindering the loss-based
congestion signal by distinguishing the packets that have been received from
the packets that have been recovered by the FEC. We evaluate its performance by
applying an experimental design covering a wide range of delay and packet loss
conditions with reproducible experiments. These confirm that our modular design
allows the protocol to adapt to the network conditions. For long data transfers
or when the loss rate and delay are small, the FEC overhead negatively impacts
the download completion time. However, with high packet loss rates and long
delays or smaller files, FEC allows drastically reducing the download
completion time by avoiding costly retransmission timeouts. These results show
that there is a need to use FEC adaptively to the network conditions.Comment: 9 pages, presented at IFIP Networking 201
Nucleation and crystallization process of silicon using Stillinger-Weber potential
We study the homogeneous nucleation process in Stillinger-Weber silicon in
the NVT ensemble. A clear first-order transition from the liquid to crystal
phase is observed thermodynamically with kinetic and structural evidence of the
transformation. At 0.75 T_m, the critical cluster size is about 175 atoms. The
lifetime distribution of clusters as a function of the maximum size their reach
follows an inverse gaussian distribution as was predicted recently from the
classical theory of nucleation (CNT). However, while there is a qualitative
agreement with the CNT, the free energy curve obtained from the simulations
differs significantly from the theoretical predictions, suggesting that the
low-density liquid phase found recently could play a role in the nucleation
process.Comment: 21 page
Co-creation processes of nature based solutions in hydrological modelling:case studies in the UK, Belgium and the Netherlands
Climate adaptation of brook catchments is much needed in the studied regions of England, Belgium and the Netherlands. With the continuous rise of global temperatures and global change, these regions suffer from the impacts of extreme weather events such as drought and flooding. Extreme weather and climate change impacts are spatially non-uniform, uncertain and can have different strengths at local and regional level. Therefore, cities and regions need to adapt to climate change in an ambiguous way. Accordingly, there is no uniformity in the adaptive capacity of individuals, groups within society, organisations and governments or how they can respond to current and future climate change impacts. To better understand the interlinkages in nature-based climate adaptation between the socio-economic and climate change drivers, we studied these drivers in the hydrological modelling in 3 pilot studies in the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium. Focus is on how co-creation, defined as active participation is incorporated in the hydrological modelling process, (1) within each brook catchment and (2) between the professionals, as cross border knowledge transfer. Data on the co-creation process was collected with workshops on each of the semi-annual partner meetings of each catchment. Data on the modelling process was collected by semi-structured interviews of the professionals and by using assessment of professional learning in the network (field trips). Findings on co-creation processes of nature based solutions in hydrological modelling will be compared in the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium. In the end, existing co-creation processes will be joined to a framework for co-creation which can be improved and adapted based on the gathered data. This would include: identification of stakeholder groups and their needs, the level of intended participation, the identified climate problem by the stakeholders and by the policy-makers, the planned modelling approach, the NbS etc
Efficient routing on complex networks
In this letter, we propose a new routing strategy to improve the
transportation efficiency on complex networks. Instead of using the routing
strategy for shortest path, we give a generalized routing algorithm to find the
so-called {\it efficient path}, which considers the possible congestion in the
nodes along actual paths. Since the nodes with largest degree are very
susceptible to traffic congestion, an effective way to improve traffic and
control congestion, as our new strategy, can be as redistributing traffic load
in central nodes to other non-central nodes. Simulation results indicate that
the network capability in processing traffic is improved more than 10 times by
optimizing the efficient path, which is in good agreement with the analysis.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Congestion and centrality in traffic flow on complex networks
The central points of communication network flow has often been identified
using graph theoretical centrality measures. In real networks, the state of
traffic density arises from an interplay between the dynamics of the flow and
the underlying network structure. In this work we investigate the relationship
between centrality measures and the density of traffic for some simple particle
hopping models on networks with emerging scale-free degree distributions. We
also study how the speed of the dynamics are affected by the underlying network
structure. Among other conclusions, we find that, even at low traffic
densities, the dynamical measure of traffic density (the occupation ratio) has
a non-trivial dependence on the static centrality (quantified by "betweenness
centrality"), which non-central vertices getting a comparatively large portion
of the traffic.Comment: To appear in Advances in Complex System
Is the jury still out? Toward greater insight in policy learning in participatory decisoin processes-the case of Dutch citizens' juries on water management in the Rhine Basin
This article discusses the potential for policy learning offered by participatory processes, specifically so-called citizens' juries. We establish the need for policy learning by pointing to the increased complexity of water management tasks and challenges. A conceptual discussion subsequently distinguishes between cognitive, normative, and relational learning. The public participation literature suggests that participatory processes will contribute to various forms of learning. We assess the truth of this assumption on the basis of three case studies: citizens' juries on water management in the Dutch part of Rhine basin. We analyze whether the three forms of learning have occurred among jurors, and among policy makers. We find high levels of cognitive, normative, and relational levels of learning for the jurors, but relatively low levels of learning for policy makers. We analyze the reason for this divergence
Fluorescent Cell Barcoding as a Tool to Assess the Age-Related Development of Intracellular Cytokine Production in Small Amounts of Blood from Infants
Fluorescent Cell Barcoding (FCB) is a flow cytometric technique which has been used for assessing signaling proteins. This FCB technique has the potential to be applied in other multiparameter analyses. Since data on antigen (Ag)-specific T-cell immune responses, like intracellular cytokine production, are still lacking in infants because limited blood volumes can be obtained for analysis, the FCB technique could be very useful for this purpose. The objectives of this study were to modify the FCB method to be able to measure multiple Ag-specific cytokine reponses in T-cells upon simultaneous stimulation by various antigens and mitogens in small amounts of blood and to investigate the cytokine pattern of T-cell subsets in healthy infants aged six and twelve months. Blood samples, collected from 20 healthy infants aged six and twelve months, were stimulated in vitro with the antigens: phorbol-myristate-acetate (PMA), purified-protein-derivative (PPD), Tetanus-toxoid (TT), Staphylococcal-enterotoxin-B (SEB), and phytohemagglutinin (PHA). Each stimulus was barcoded by labelling with different intensities of fluorescent cell barcoding (FCB) markers. Intracellular production of interleukin-2, interferon-gamma, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha was measured simultaneously in just one blood sample of 600 µl whole blood. Significant age-related differences in cytokine production were shown for PMA, PHA, and TT in CD4+ T-cells, and for PMA, PHA, SEB, and TT in CD8+ T-cells. The intracellular cytokine production by CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells was higher at twelve months compared to six months of age for all antigens, except for PMA, which was lower at the age of twelve months. Based on the consistency in both T-cell subsets, we conclude that the new FCB method is a promising tool to investigate the age-related development of intracellular cytokine production in infants
Impact of bariatric surgery in the short and long term: a need for time-dependent dosing of drugs
Sparse information is available on pharmacokinetic changes of drugs over time after bariatric surgery. By reviewing the literature on the short- and long-term pharmacokinetic changes of drugs, several patterns were identified for 39 drugs. No relevant pharmacokinetic changes were identified for roughly a third of the drugs. Of the remaining drugs, levels were variable and partly unpredictable shortly after the surgery. In the long term, most of the drug levels remain altered, but in some cases they returned to preoperative values. Based on the changes and the efficacy-safety balance of each drug, clinicians may need to perform additional clinical monitoring for specific drugs, including measuring drug levels. This review provides suggestions for clinicians and pharmacists for specific time-dependent drug dosing advice.Pharmacolog
Enhancing Transport Efficiency by Hybrid Routing Strategy
Traffic is essential for many dynamic processes on real networks, such as
internet and urban traffic systems. The transport efficiency of the traffic
system can be improved by taking full advantage of the resources in the system.
In this paper, we propose a dual-strategy routing model for network traffic
system, to realize the plenary utility of the whole network. The packets are
delivered according to different "efficient routing strategies" [Yan, et al,
Phys. Rev. E 73, 046108 (2006)]. We introduce the accumulate rate of packets,
{\eta} to measure the performance of traffic system in the congested phase, and
propose the so-called equivalent generation rate of packet to analyze the
jamming processes. From analytical and numerical results, we find that, for
suitable selection of strategies, the dual- strategy system performs better
than the single-strategy system in a broad region of strategy mixing ratio. The
analytical solution to the jamming processes is verified by estimating the
number of jammed nodes, which coincides well with the result from simulation.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
- …