751 research outputs found
Security in Wireless Sensor Networks: Issues and Challenges
Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is an emerging technology that shows great
promise for various futuristic applications both for mass public and military.
The sensing technology combined with processing power and wireless
communication makes it lucrative for being exploited in abundance in future.
The inclusion of wireless communication technology also incurs various types of
security threats. The intent of this paper is to investigate the security
related issues and challenges in wireless sensor networks. We identify the
security threats, review proposed security mechanisms for wireless sensor
networks. We also discuss the holistic view of security for ensuring layered
and robust security in wireless sensor networks.Comment: 6 page
Fast Algorithms for the Real Discrete Fourier Transform
Fast algorithms for the computation of the real discrete Fourier transform (RDFT) are discussed. Implementations based on the RDFT are always efficient whereas the implementations based on the DFT are efficient only when signals to be processed are complex. The fast real Fourier (FRFT) algorithms discussed are the radix-2 decimation-in-time (DIT), the radix-2 decimation-in-frequency (DIF), the radix-4 DIT, the split-radix DIT, the split-radix DIF, the prime-factor, the Rader prime, and the Winograd FRFT algorithms
Recommended from our members
Bicarbonate Resensitization of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus to β-Lactam Antibiotics.
Endovascular infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are a major health care concern, especially infective endocarditis (IE). Standard antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) defines most MRSA strains as "resistant" to β-lactams, often leading to the use of costly and/or toxic treatment regimens. In this investigation, five prototype MRSA strains, representing the range of genotypes in current clinical circulation, were studied. We identified two distinct MRSA phenotypes upon AST using standard media, with or without sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) supplementation: one highly susceptible to the antistaphylococcal β-lactams oxacillin and cefazolin (NaHCO3 responsive) and one resistant to such agents (NaHCO3 nonresponsive). These phenotypes accurately predicted clearance profiles of MRSA from target tissues in experimental MRSA IE treated with each β-lactam. Mechanistically, NaHCO3 reduced the expression of two key genes involved in the MRSA phenotype, mecA and sarA, leading to decreased production of penicillin-binding protein 2a (that mediates methicillin resistance), in NaHCO3-responsive (but not in NaHCO3-nonresponsive) strains. Moreover, both cefazolin and oxacillin synergistically killed NaHCO3-responsive strains in the presence of the host defense antimicrobial peptide (LL-37) in NaHCO3-supplemented media. These findings suggest that AST of MRSA strains in NaHCO3-containing media may potentially identify infections caused by NaHCO3-responsive strains that are appropriate for β-lactam therapy
Visual Analytics in Software Maintenance:Challenges and Opportunities
Visual analytics (VA) is an emerging science at the crossroads of data and information visualization, graphics, data min-ing, and knowledge representation, with many successful applications in engineering, business and finance, security, geo-sciences, and e-governance and health. Tools using visualization, data mining, and data analysis are also prominently present in a different field: software maintenance. However, an integrated VA is relatively new for this field. In this paper, we discuss the specific challenges and particularities of applying VA in software engineering, highlight the added value of a VA approach, as distilled by us from several large-scale software engineering industrial projects. 1
Ultra-High-Resolution Marine 2D-3D Seismic Investigation of the Liman Tepe/Karantina Island Archaeological Site (Urla/Turkey)
Cataloged from PDF version of article.2D and 3D high-resolution seismic investigations were performed on submerged coastal archaeological sites
at Iskele and near to Karantina Island in the Bay of Izmir in western Turkey. Tectonic subsidence of the
coastline has submerged a number of archaeological features associated with an important Early Bronze
Archaic settlement (Liman Tepe) and the classical Ionian city of Clazomenae. Seismic surveys were focused
on imaging of an Archaic harbour structure and other submerged Hellenistic and Roman architectural
features. Seismic data were acquired with the SEAMAP-3D ultra-high-resolution 3D marine seismic
acquisition system developed for detailed archaeological site investigation.
A 2D reconnaissance survey was performed over a 2 km2 area around Karantina Island to evaluate the
seismic penetrability and to locate sites for further 3D investigation. This survey predominantly revealed
marine sediment layers covering the local bedrock, which is characterized by scattering of seismic energy
showing its rocky nature.
Two ultra-high-resolution 3D seismic surveys were performed. The first covered a 350 m × 30 m area in the
modern harbour targeting a prominent Archaic harbour structure. The second was acquired across a
120 m × 40 m area on the southeast shore of the Karantina Island close to a Roman architectural feature. The
3D surveys were acquired with nominal line spacings of 1 m, using a 8× 4 pseudo-rigid hydrophone array
and a Boomer source firing at 3 Hz shot frequency. Automated processing of the seismic data using a portable
Linux cluster provided stacked 3D seismic volumes with 25 cm × 25 cm bin size on-site.
The 3D seismic survey of the harbour clearly imaged the submerged Archaic structure and the underlying
sediment sequence. The seismic time slices reveal two seismic anomalies (2–3 m in diameter) in the harbour
basin sediments. The 3D surveys southeast of Karantina identified a thicker marine sediment sequence
overlying steeply dipping bedrock reflectors. The sediment sequence records the rapid accumulation and
progradation of the coastline following the construction the Alexander causeway linking the mainland with
the island in 334 B.C
- …