224 research outputs found

    A Computation Core for Communication Refinement of Digital Signal Processing Algorithms

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    International audienceThe most popular Moore's law formulation, which states the number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles every 18 months, is said to hold for at least another two decades. According to this prediction, if we want to take advantage of technological evolutions, designer's productivity has to increase in the same proportions. To take up this challenge, system level design solutions have been set up, but many efforts have still to be done on system modelling and synthesis. In this paper we propose a computation core synthesis methodology that can be integrated on the communication refinement steps of electronic system level design tools. In the proposed approach, computation cores used for digital signal processing application specifications relying on coarse grain communications and synchronizations (e.g. matrix) can be refined into computation cores which can handle fine grain communications and synchronizations (e.g. scalar). Its originality is its ability to synthesize computation cores which can handle fine grain data consumptions and productions which respect the intrinsic partial orders of the algorithms while preserving their original functionalities. Such cores can be used to model fine grain input output overlapping or iteration pipelining. Our flow is based on the analysis of a fine grain signal flow graph used to extract fine grain synchronizations and algorithmic expressions

    Design exploration and HW/SW rapid prototyping for real-time system design

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    Embedded signal processing systems are usually associated with real-time constraints and/or high data rates such that fully software implementation are often not satisfactory. In that case, mixed hardware/software implementations are to be investigated. However the increasing complexity of current applications makes classical design processes time consuming and consequently incompatible with an efficient design space exploration. To address this problem, we propose a system-level design based methodology that aims at unifying the design flow from the functional description to the physical HW/SW implementation through functional and architectural flexibility. Our approach consists in automatically refining high abstraction level models through the use of an electronic system-level (ESL) design tool according to function models from the one hand and prototyping platform models from the other hand. We illustrate our methodology with the design of a wireless communication system. We provide design results showing the variety of dedicated architectures that can be investigated with this design flow

    Electroweak Baryogenesis in the Presence of an Isosinglet Quark

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    We consider the possibility of electroweak baryogenesis in a simple extension of the standard model with an extra singlet complex scalar and a vector-like down quark. We show that in the present model the first-order electroweak phase transition can be strong enough to avoid the baryon asymmetry washout by sphalerons and that the CP-violating effects can be sufficient to explain the observed baryon-to-entropy ratio nB/s ~ 10^(-10). Other appealing features of the model include the generation of a CKM phase from spontaneous CP breaking at a high energy scale and a possible solution of the strong CP problem through the natural suppression of the parameter theta.Comment: LaTeX, 19 pages, 2 EPS figures, uses epsf, amsmath, amsfonts, amssym

    Hardware communication refinement in digital signal processing, modelling issues

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    In this paper we present the different modelling problems which a Digital Signal Processing (DSP) application designer has to tackle while refining an abstract specification relying on coarse grain data (e.g. matrices) toward a hardware implementation model relying on fine grain data (e.g. scalar). To address this problematic, we propose a modelling framework which can be used to refine an algorithm specified with coarse grain interfaces to a form which allow, from the functionnality point of view, to model all its fine grain hardware implmentation

    Granite intrusion in a metamorphic core complex: The example of the Mykonos laccolith (Cyclades, Greece)

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    International audienceThe Aegean domain is a well-suited place to study the formation of metamorphic core complex (MCC) and to investigate the role of syn-tectonic granites on their development. In the northern Cyclades, the Mykonos-Delos-Rhenia MCC is characterised by the intrusion of a kilometer-scale Late Miocene pluton of I-type granitoids within a migmatitic gneiss dome. New combined AMS (Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility) and microstructural studies on the Mykonos granitoids together with recently published thermochronological data allow us to use the granitoids as strain markers. The Mykonos granitoids form a laccolith-like intrusion with a N70°E long axis. The laccolith is strongly asymmetric with an outlying root zone to the SW and a major body mainly developed to the NE. The laccolith construction is due to successive pulses of more or less differentiated magma that intruded the Cycladic Blueschist Unit. The attitude of stretching markers suggests an important (about 60°) vertical-axis local rotation phenomenon in the cycladic upper crust during the exhumation of the Mykonos MCC. Structural data suggest a four-stage evolution of the Mykonos MCC: (i) a first stage characterized by flat shearing toward the N-NE and by the formation of a domal structure in migmatitic paragneisses with multi-scale generation of folds with axes either perpendicular or parallel to the regional stretching, as a result of the interplay between regional N20E°-directed extension and EW shortening; (ii) a second stage marked by the emplacement of the Mykonos laccolith at 13.5 ± 0.3 Ma at the top of the migmatitic paragneisses; (iii) the third stage corresponding to the development of protomylonitic foliations and lineations in the whole laccolith in high to medium temperature conditions; (iv) the late stage marked by an acceleration of the exhumation of the Mykonos MCC. This exhumation was accommodated by important rotations of upper crustal blocks. During the end of the exhumation processes, around 10 Ma, deformation localized at the top of the laccolith in semi-ductile conditions and then in brittle conditions in the major detachment plane. Our study shows that the Cycladic plutonism event had no role on the initiation of the MCC. However, the geometry of the Mykonos intrusion supports that the magmas are "sucked" into the direction of regional extension and that the intrusion of magmas has caused an acceleration of the last stages of the MCC development. This acceleration was marked by a very fast exhumation of the laccolith after its emplacement

    The North Cycladic Detachment System

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    International audienceLow-angle normal faults accommodate a large part of continental post-orogenic extension. Besides the intrinsic rheological characteristics of the continental crust that may lead to the formation of shallow-dipping shear zones at the brittle–ductile transition, the role of pre-existing low-angle structures such as large thrusts has been proposed by several authors. We explore this question with the example of the North Cycladic Detachment System (NCDS) that is composed of a series of distinct detachments cropping out on the islands of Andros, Tinos and Mykonos, separating the Cycladic Blueschists in the footwall from the Upper Cycladic Nappe in the hanging wall. We show that these extensional structures are part of a single large-scale structure (more than 200 km along strike) that reactivates the Vardar suture zone. It extends eastward on Ikaria and westward offshore Evia and Thessalia where it probably connects to recent shallow-dipping normal faults evidenced on published seismic reflection profiles. The NCDS started its activity in the Oligocene concommitantly with the Aegean extension, and was still active in the Late Miocene. It has exhumed a series of metamorphic domes from southern Evia to Mykonos below low-angle detachment systems, made of low-angle normal faults and low-angle ductile shear zones. The ductile shear zones and the faults were created with a low dip and they kept the same attitude throughout their exhumation. We identify three main detachments that are part of a continuum of extension on the NCDS : Tinos detachment, Livada detachment and Mykonos detachment. A fourth detachment (Vari detachment) is the reactivation of an Eocene exhumation-related structure. Deformation in the footwall is characterized by intense stretching and flattening. Using the spatial evolution observed along strike from Andros to Mykonos we construct a history of formation of the NCDS starting with the reactivation of former thrusts leading to the exhumation of high-temperature metamorphic domes. The Aegean example shows that reactivation of earlier shallow-dipping discontinuities can play a fundamental role in continental post-orogenic extension

    Tumour biology of colorectal liver metastasis is a more important factor in survival than surgical margin clearance in the era of modern chemotherapy regimens

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    AbstractBackgroundThe aim of the authors was to reassess the impact of a positive surgical margin (R1) after a liver resection for colorectal liver metastases (CLMs) on survival in the era of modern chemotherapy, through their own experience and a literature review.MethodsInclusion criteria were: R1 or R0 resection with no local treatment modalities, extra‐hepatic metastases or other cancer.ResultsAmong 337 patients operated between 2000 and 2010, 273 patients were eligible (214 R0/59 R1). The mean follow‐up was 43 ± 29 months. Compared with a R0 resection, a R1 resection offered a lower 5‐year overall (39.1% versus 54.2%, P = 0.010), disease‐free (15.2% versus 31.1%, P = 0.021) and progression‐free (i.e. time to the first non‐curable recurrence; 33.1% versus 47.3%, P = 0.033) survival rates. Metastases in the R1 group were more numerous, larger and more frequently synchronous. Independent factors of poor survival were: number, size and short‐time interval of CLM occurrence, N status, rectal primary, absence of adjuvant chemotherapy, but not a R1 resection. With the more‐systematic administration of chemotherapy since 2005, the intergroup difference in progression‐free survival disappeared (P = 0.264).ConclusionA R1 resection had no prognostic value per se but reflected a more severe disease. The recent change in the prognostic value of a R1 resection may be linked to the beneficial effect of chemotherapy

    Séquenceur mémoire pour applications multimédias temps réel gérant les séquences d'accÚs indéterministes

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    Dans le domaine du traitement du signal et de l'image, les applications multimédias sont souvent caractérisées par un grand nombre d'accÚs aux données. Pour la plupart de ces applications, les accÚs aux données structurées (tableaux, vecteurs) sont réguliers et périodiques. Dans ces conditions, il est possible et efficace de générer des contrÎleurs pipeline d'accÚs à la mémoire. Cette technique est utilisée afin d'améliorer les accÚs en mode pipeline autorisés par les mémoires actuelles. On utilise pour cela des composants matériels dédiés pour générer les adresses et pour packer/dépacker les données. Dans cet article nous présentons l'architecture d'un séquenceur mémoire qui permet de prendre en compte de maniÚre efficace les accÚs prédictibles aussi bien que les séquences d'accÚs non prédictibles (calculs d'adresses dynamiques) de maniÚre pipeline

    Symptomatic postoperative compressive pneumocephalus after cholecystectomy

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    A 75-year-old woman with a history of chronic hydrocephalus due to stenosis of the aqueduct of Sylvius was examined at the emergency department for altered mental status. There was placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt in 1970 complicated by meningitis, leading to removal of the material and ventriculociternostomy as definitive treatment in 2004. About one month previously, she had undergone a laparoscopic cholecystectomy complicated by an intra-abdominal collection. Clinical examination at the emergency department revealed a Glasgow score of 8 (E3 V1 M4). In the emergency department the patient presented a tonic-clonic seizure before a cerebral CT scan was performed showing a massive compressive pneumocephalus, then a second seizure. The patient was finally admitted to the neurosurgery department and underwent surgery

    Comparison of the Effectiveness of Four Bariatric Surgery Procedures in Obese Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Retrospective Study

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    Aim. The aim of the present retrospective study was to evaluate the efficacy of four bariatric surgical procedures to induce diabetes remission and lower cardiovascular risk factors in diabetic obese patients. Moreover, the influence of surgery on weight evolution in the diabetic population was compared with that observed in a nondiabetic matched population. Methods. Among 970 patients who were operated on in our center since 2001, 81 patients were identified as type 2 diabetes. Laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (GB), intervention type Mason (MA), gastric bypass (RYGB), and sleeve gastrectomy (SG) were performed, respectively, in 25%, 17%, 28%, and 30% of this diabetic population. Results. The resolution rate of diabetes one year after surgery was significantly higher after SG than GB (62.5% versus 20%, P < 0.01), but not significantly different between SG and RYGB. In terms of LDL-cholesterol reduction, RYGB was equivalent to SG and superior to CGMA or GB. Considering the other cardiovascular risk factors, there was no significant difference according to surgical procedures. The weight loss was not statistically different between diabetic and nondiabetic matched patients regardless of the surgical procedures used. Conclusion. Our data confirm that the efficacy of surgery to treat diabetes is variable among the diverse procedures and SG might be an interesting option in this context
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