8,508 research outputs found
A Bilinear Equalizer for Massive MIMO Systems
We present a novel approach for low-complexity equalizer design well-suited
for cellular massive MIMO systems. Our design allows to exploit the channel
structure in terms of covariance matrices to improve the performance in the
face of pilot-contamination, while basically keeping the complexity of a
matched filter. This is achieved by restricting the equalizer to functions
which are bilinear in the received data signals and the observations from a
training phase. The proposed design generalizes several previous approaches to
equalizer design for massive MIMO. We show by asymptotic analysis that with the
proposed design the achievable rate grows without bound for growing numbers of
antennas even in the presence of pilot-contamination. We demonstrate with
numerical results that the proposed design is competitive with more complex
approaches in a practical cellular setup
The Effect of a Reduced-Calorie Diet on alpha-2 Adrenergic Receptor Responsiveness in Abdominal Adipose Tissue in Obese Men During Exercise
There is at present an imperfect understanding of the effect of diet on availability of inhibitory receptors in fat cells during exercise among obese men. 

*Objective:* The purpose of this study was to determine whether diet results in downregulation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor ([alpha]~2-AR~) messenger RNA (mRNA), improving metabolism in exercise in obese men. 

*Design:* One group, pre-test, post-test design.

*Measurements:* Subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue was tested for physiologic response, such as changes in catecholamines and other markers of lipolysis measured during periods of exercise, before and after a 12-week diet. Plasma markers of lipolysis/antilipolytic activity (catecholamines [adrenaline and noradrenaline], NEFA, lactate, glucose, hematocrit, or insulin levels) were analyzed at four points in time in order to determine the effect of exercise on [alpha]~2-AR~ and [beta]-AR responsiveness to sympathetic stimulation.

*Subjects:* Otherwise healthy 18 to 45 year old obese men (defined as a body mass index (BMI) over 33 kg/m^2^).

*Results:* The 12-week reduced calorie diet did not result in improved metabolism. Instead, upregulation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor ([alpha]~2-AR~) messenger RNA (mRNA) was observed. On average, [alpha]~2-AR~ mRNA levels (ratio of [alpha]~2-AR~ to cyclophilin) in subjects increased by 0.022-0.023 after the diet. The average differences in of [alpha]~2-AR~ mRNA and [beta]-AR mRNA measured before and after diet were both insignificant (M = 0.015) t(4) = -0.911; _P_ > 0.05; (M = 0.0139; t(4) = 0.077; _P_ > 0.05). 

*Conclusion:* The observed direction of change in [alpha]~2-AR~ mRNA levels, when viewed together with the stability of [beta]-AR mRNA levels, suggests that upregulation of [alpha]~2-AR~ rather than downregulation occurred. Downregulation would account for decreased lipolytic activity during exercise, future study is needed
Turbulent Mixing in Stars: Theoretical Hurdles
A program is outlined, and first results described, in which fully
three-dimensional, time dependent simulations of hydrodynamic turbulence are
used as a basis for theoretical investigation of the physics of turbulence in
stars. The inadequacy of the treatment of turbulent convection as a diffusive
process is discussed. A generalization to rotation and magnetohydrodynamics is
indicated, as are connection to simulations of 3D stellar atmospheres.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, IAU Symposium 265, 200
Computing with Noise - Phase Transitions in Boolean Formulas
Computing circuits composed of noisy logical gates and their ability to
represent arbitrary Boolean functions with a given level of error are
investigated within a statistical mechanics setting. Bounds on their
performance, derived in the information theory literature for specific gates,
are straightforwardly retrieved, generalized and identified as the
corresponding typical-case phase transitions. This framework paves the way for
obtaining new results on error-rates, function-depth and sensitivity, and their
dependence on the gate-type and noise model used.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
The heartbreak of depression: 'Psycho-cardiac' coupling in myocardial infarction
Ample evidence identifies strong links between major depressive disorder (MDD) and both risk of ischemic or coronary heart disease (CHD) and resultant morbidity and mortality. The molecular mechanistic bases of these linkages are poorly defined. Systemic factors linked to MDD, including vascular dysfunction, atherosclerosis, obesity and diabetes, together with associated behavioral changes, all elevate CHD risk. Nonetheless, experimental evidence indicates the myocardium is also directly modified in depression, independently of these factors, impairing infarct tolerance and cardioprotection. It may be that MDD effectively breaks the heart's intrinsic defense mechanisms. Four extrinsic processes are implicated in this psycho-cardiac coupling, presenting potential targets for therapeutic intervention if causally involved: sympathetic over-activity vs. vagal under-activity, together with hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and immuno-inflammatory dysfunctions. However, direct evidence of their involvement remains limited, and whether targeting these upstream mediators is effective (or practical) in limiting the cardiac consequences of MDD is unknown. Detailing myocardial phenotype in MDD can also inform approaches to cardioprotection, yet cardiac molecular changes are similarly ill defined. Studies support myocardial sensitization to ischemic insult in models of MDD, including worsened oxidative and nitrosative damage, apoptosis (with altered Bcl-2 family expression) and infarction. Moreover, depression may de-sensitize hearts to protective conditioning stimuli. The mechanistic underpinnings of these changes await delineation. Such information not only advances our fundamental understanding of psychological determinants of health, but also better informs management of the cardiac consequences of MDD and implementing cardioprotection in this cohort.Griffith Health, School of Medical ScienceNo Full Tex
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