1,558 research outputs found

    Modelling the Requirements and Benefits of Mosquito Control Interventions in the Presence of Mosquito Dispersal

    Get PDF
    Vector control methods are widely used as a means to control malaria, however, the role of spatial arrangement when deploying these interventions is not well known. Understanding the effects of spatial distribution and clustering of interventions on mosquito populations can provide a guide to strategically deploying interventions to effectively maximize benefits. A recently developed discrete-space continuous-time mathematical model of mosquito population dynamics and dispersal was extended to incorporate vector control interventions of insecticide residual spraying (IRS), larviciding and insecticide treated bednets (ITNs). Model simulations were used to determine intervention deployment strategies, for certain coverage levels, which maximize the benefits of interventions. Assuming homogeneous distribution of water resources and humans, then clustering of IRS and larviciding interventions, when only low coverage is possible, is more beneficial than random deployment. However, with moderate coverage of these interventions, there is no added benefit with clustering compared to random deployment. For low coverage of ITNs, clustering their distribution lowers the\ud benefits. Surprisingly, with moderate coverage of ITNs then random deployment of ITNs to humans is more beneficial than clustering. There is evidence that the effectiveness of an intervention is highly dependent on its spatial distribution. Although the results presented here are based on model\ud assumptions, the findings are useful to consider when designing modes of deployment of interventions to offer maximal benefits.\u

    Tagging single muons and other long-flying relativistic charged particles by ultra-fast timing in air Cherenkov telescopes

    Get PDF
    Atmospheric air Cherenkov telescopes are successfully used for ground-based, very high-energy (VHE) gamma ray astronomy. Triggers from the so-called single muon and other long-flying relativistic charged particle events are an unwanted background for the Cherenkov telescope. Because of low rate at TeV energies the muon background is unimportant. It is much more intense for telescopes with high photon sensitivity and low energy threshold. Below a few hundred GeV energy, the so-called muon background becomes so intense, that it can deteriorate the sensitivity of telescopes (the so-called muon-wall problem). From general considerations it can be anticipated that the signature of these particles should be a light pulse with a narrow time structure. In fact, simulations show that the pulses from muons have a very narrow time profile that is well below the time resolutions of nearly all currently operating telescopes. In this report we elaborate on the time profile of Cherenkov light from the so-called single muons and show that a telescope with ultra-fast time response can open a new dimension allowing one to tag and to reject those events.Comment: Accepted by Astroparticle Physic

    On Directed Feedback Vertex Set parameterized by treewidth

    Get PDF
    We study the Directed Feedback Vertex Set problem parameterized by the treewidth of the input graph. We prove that unless the Exponential Time Hypothesis fails, the problem cannot be solved in time 2o(tlogt)nO(1)2^{o(t\log t)}\cdot n^{\mathcal{O}(1)} on general directed graphs, where tt is the treewidth of the underlying undirected graph. This is matched by a dynamic programming algorithm with running time 2O(tlogt)nO(1)2^{\mathcal{O}(t\log t)}\cdot n^{\mathcal{O}(1)}. On the other hand, we show that if the input digraph is planar, then the running time can be improved to 2O(t)nO(1)2^{\mathcal{O}(t)}\cdot n^{\mathcal{O}(1)}.Comment: 20

    Directed Subset Feedback Vertex Set Is Fixed-Parameter Tractable

    Get PDF
    Given a graph GG and an integer kk, the Feedback Vertex Set (FVS) problem asks if there is a vertex set TT of size at most kk that hits all cycles in the graph. The fixed-parameter tractability status of FVS in directed graphs was a long-standing open problem until Chen et al. (STOC '08) showed that it is FPT by giving a 4kk!nO(1)4^{k}k!n^{O(1)} time algorithm. In the subset versions of this problems, we are given an additional subset SS of vertices (resp., edges) and we want to hit all cycles passing through a vertex of SS (resp. an edge of SS). Recently, the Subset Feedback Vertex Set in undirected graphs was shown to be FPT by Cygan et al. (ICALP '11) and independently by Kakimura et al. (SODA '12). We generalize the result of Chen et al. (STOC '08) by showing that Subset Feedback Vertex Set in directed graphs can be solved in time 2O(k3)nO(1)2^{O(k^3)}n^{O(1)}. By our result, we complete the picture for feedback vertex set problems and their subset versions in undirected and directed graphs. Besides proving the fixed-parameter tractability of Directed Subset Feedback Vertex Set, we reformulate the random sampling of important separators technique in an abstract way that can be used for a general family of transversal problems. Moreover, we modify the probability distribution used in the technique to achieve better running time; in particular, this gives an improvement from 22O(k)2^{2^{O(k)}} to 2O(k2)2^{O(k^2)} in the parameter dependence of the Directed Multiway Cut algorithm of Chitnis et al. (SODA '12).Comment: To appear in ACM Transactions on Algorithms. A preliminary version appeared in ICALP '12. We would like to thank Marcin Pilipczuk for pointing out a missing case in the conference version which has been considered in this version. Also, we give an single exponential FPT algorithm improving on the double exponential algorithm from the conference versio

    Fixed-parameter tractability of multicut parameterized by the size of the cutset

    Get PDF
    Given an undirected graph GG, a collection {(s1,t1),...,(sk,tk)}\{(s_1,t_1),..., (s_k,t_k)\} of pairs of vertices, and an integer pp, the Edge Multicut problem ask if there is a set SS of at most pp edges such that the removal of SS disconnects every sis_i from the corresponding tit_i. Vertex Multicut is the analogous problem where SS is a set of at most pp vertices. Our main result is that both problems can be solved in time 2O(p3)...nO(1)2^{O(p^3)}... n^{O(1)}, i.e., fixed-parameter tractable parameterized by the size pp of the cutset in the solution. By contrast, it is unlikely that an algorithm with running time of the form f(p)...nO(1)f(p)... n^{O(1)} exists for the directed version of the problem, as we show it to be W[1]-hard parameterized by the size of the cutset

    A fit to the simultaneous broadband spectrum of Cygnus X-1 using the transition disk model

    Get PDF
    We have used the transition disk model to fit the simultaneous broad band (25002-500 keV) spectrum of Cygnus X-1 from OSSE and Ginga observations. In this model, the spectrum is produced by saturated Comptonization within the inner region of the accretion disk, where the temperature varies rapidly with radius. In an earlier attempt, we demonstrated the viability of this model by fitting the data from EXOSAT, XMPC balloon and OSSE observations, though these were not made simultaneously. Since the source is known to be variable, however, the results of this fit were not conclusive. In addition, since only once set of observations was used, the good agreement with the data could have been a chance occurrence. Here, we improve considerably upon our earlier analysis by considering four sets of simultaneous observations of Cygnus X-1, using an empirical model to obtain the disk temperature profile. The vertical structure is then obtained using this profile and we show that the analysis is self- consistent. We demonstrate conclusively that the transition disk spectrum is a better fit to the observations than that predicted by the soft photon Comptonization model. Since the temperature profile is obtained by fitting the data, the unknown viscosity mechanism need not be specified. The disk structure can then be used to infer the viscosity parameter α\alpha, which appears to vary with radius and luminosity. This behavior can be understood if α\alpha depends intrinsically on the local parameters such as density, height and temperature. However, due to uncertainties in the radiative transfer, quantitative statements regarding the variation of α\alpha cannot yet be made.Comment: 8 figures. uses aasms4.sty, accepted by ApJ (Mar 98

    Comparing primary and secondary health-care use between diagnostic routes before a colorectal cancer diagnosis: Cohort study using linked data

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Survival in cancer patients diagnosed following emergency presentations is poorer than those diagnosed through other routes. To identify points for intervention to improve survival, a better understanding of patients' primary and secondary health-care use before diagnosis is needed. Our aim was to compare colorectal cancer patients' health-care use by diagnostic route. METHODS: Cohort study of colorectal cancers using linked primary and secondary care and cancer registry data (2009-2011) from four London boroughs. The prevalence of all and relevant GP consultations and rates of primary and secondary care use up to 21 months before diagnosis were compared across diagnostic routes (emergency, GP-referred and consultant/other). RESULTS: The data set comprised 943 colorectal cancers with 24% diagnosed through emergency routes. Most (84%) emergency patients saw their GP 6 months before diagnosis but their symptom profile was distinct; fewer had symptoms meeting urgent referral criteria than GP-referred patients. Compared with GP-referred, emergency patients used primary care less (IRR: 0.85 (95% CI 0.78-0.93)) and urgent care more frequently (IRR: 1.56 (95% CI 1.12; 2.17)). CONCLUSIONS: Distinct patterns of health-care use in patients diagnosed through emergency routes were identified in this cohort. Such analyses using linked data can inform strategies for improving early diagnosis of colorectal cancer

    Treatment outcome in an SI model with evolutionary resistance: a Darwinian model for the evolution of resistance

    Get PDF
    We consider a Darwinian (evolutionary game theoretic) version of a standard susceptible-infectious SI model in which the resistance of the disease causing pathogen to a treatment that prevents death to infected individuals is subject to evolutionary adaptation. We determine the existence and stability of all equilibria, both disease-free and endemic, and use the results to determine conditions under which the treatment will succeed or fail. Of particular interest are conditions under which a successful treatment in the absence of resistance adaptation (i.e. one that leads to a stable disease-free equilibrium) will succeed or fail when pathogen resistance is adaptive. These conditions are determined by the relative breadths of treatment effectiveness and infection transmission rate distributions as functions of pathogen resistance
    corecore