3,280 research outputs found
Automatic instantiation of abstract tests on specific configurations for large critical control systems
Computer-based control systems have grown in size, complexity, distribution
and criticality. In this paper a methodology is presented to perform an
abstract testing of such large control systems in an efficient way: an abstract
test is specified directly from system functional requirements and has to be
instantiated in more test runs to cover a specific configuration, comprising
any number of control entities (sensors, actuators and logic processes). Such a
process is usually performed by hand for each installation of the control
system, requiring a considerable time effort and being an error prone
verification activity. To automate a safe passage from abstract tests, related
to the so called generic software application, to any specific installation, an
algorithm is provided, starting from a reference architecture and a state-based
behavioural model of the control software. The presented approach has been
applied to a railway interlocking system, demonstrating its feasibility and
effectiveness in several years of testing experience
Traveling Trends: Social Butterflies or Frequent Fliers?
Trending topics are the online conversations that grab collective attention
on social media. They are continually changing and often reflect exogenous
events that happen in the real world. Trends are localized in space and time as
they are driven by activity in specific geographic areas that act as sources of
traffic and information flow. Taken independently, trends and geography have
been discussed in recent literature on online social media; although, so far,
little has been done to characterize the relation between trends and geography.
Here we investigate more than eleven thousand topics that trended on Twitter in
63 main US locations during a period of 50 days in 2013. This data allows us to
study the origins and pathways of trends, how they compete for popularity at
the local level to emerge as winners at the country level, and what dynamics
underlie their production and consumption in different geographic areas. We
identify two main classes of trending topics: those that surface locally,
coinciding with three different geographic clusters (East coast, Midwest and
Southwest); and those that emerge globally from several metropolitan areas,
coinciding with the major air traffic hubs of the country. These hubs act as
trendsetters, generating topics that eventually trend at the country level, and
driving the conversation across the country. This poses an intriguing
conjecture, drawing a parallel between the spread of information and diseases:
Do trends travel faster by airplane than over the Internet?Comment: Proceedings of the first ACM conference on Online social networks,
pp. 213-222, 201
Random Walks on Directed Networks: the Case of PageRank
PageRank, the prestige measure for Web pages used by Google, is the
stationary probability of a peculiar random walk on directed graphs, which
interpolates between a pure random walk and a process where all nodes have the
same probability of being visited. We give some exact results on the
distribution of PageRank in the cases in which the damping factor q approaches
the two limit values 0 and 1. When q -> 0 and for several classes of graphs the
distribution is a power law with exponent 2, regardless of the in-degree
distribution. When q -> 1 it can always be derived from the in-degree
distribution of the underlying graph, if the out-degree is the same for all
nodes.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Minor modifications, references added, final
version to appear in the Special Issue "Complex Networks' Structure and
Dynamics'' of the International Journal of Bifurcation and Chao
Defining and identifying Sleeping Beauties in science
A Sleeping Beauty (SB) in science refers to a paper whose importance is not
recognized for several years after publication. Its citation history exhibits a
long hibernation period followed by a sudden spike of popularity. Previous
studies suggest a relative scarcity of SBs. The reliability of this conclusion
is, however, heavily dependent on identification methods based on arbitrary
threshold parameters for sleeping time and number of citations, applied to
small or monodisciplinary bibliographic datasets. Here we present a systematic,
large-scale, and multidisciplinary analysis of the SB phenomenon in science. We
introduce a parameter-free measure that quantifies the extent to which a
specific paper can be considered an SB. We apply our method to 22 million
scientific papers published in all disciplines of natural and social sciences
over a time span longer than a century. Our results reveal that the SB
phenomenon is not exceptional. There is a continuous spectrum of delayed
recognition where both the hibernation period and the awakening intensity are
taken into account. Although many cases of SBs can be identified by looking at
monodisciplinary bibliographic data, the SB phenomenon becomes much more
apparent with the analysis of multidisciplinary datasets, where we can observe
many examples of papers achieving delayed yet exceptional importance in
disciplines different from those where they were originally published. Our
analysis emphasizes a complex feature of citation dynamics that so far has
received little attention, and also provides empirical evidence against the use
of short-term citation metrics in the quantification of scientific impact.Comment: 40 pages, Supporting Information included, top examples listed at
http://qke.github.io/projects/beauty/beauty.htm
Prácticas de obtención de bienes de prestigio en el Antiguo Egipto durante el Reino Medio : (CA. 2050-1640 A.C.)
Existe cierto consenso académico en atribuir el origen de los intercambios de larga distancia, a la necesidad por parte de las elites locales de abastecerse de bienes de prestigio. En este trabajo discerniremos las prácticas implementadas por el Estado egipcio durante el Reino Medio en procura de obtener esa clase de bienes.Many researchers pointed out that the origin of long distance exchanges is related to the local elites' need of supplying themselves with prestige goods. In this paper we shall discern the practices the Egyptian State applied to obtain such goods during the Middle Kingdom.Fil: Flammini, Roxana.
Universidad Católica Argentin
Finding Streams in Knowledge Graphs to Support Fact Checking
The volume and velocity of information that gets generated online limits
current journalistic practices to fact-check claims at the same rate.
Computational approaches for fact checking may be the key to help mitigate the
risks of massive misinformation spread. Such approaches can be designed to not
only be scalable and effective at assessing veracity of dubious claims, but
also to boost a human fact checker's productivity by surfacing relevant facts
and patterns to aid their analysis. To this end, we present a novel,
unsupervised network-flow based approach to determine the truthfulness of a
statement of fact expressed in the form of a (subject, predicate, object)
triple. We view a knowledge graph of background information about real-world
entities as a flow network, and knowledge as a fluid, abstract commodity. We
show that computational fact checking of such a triple then amounts to finding
a "knowledge stream" that emanates from the subject node and flows toward the
object node through paths connecting them. Evaluation on a range of real-world
and hand-crafted datasets of facts related to entertainment, business, sports,
geography and more reveals that this network-flow model can be very effective
in discerning true statements from false ones, outperforming existing
algorithms on many test cases. Moreover, the model is expressive in its ability
to automatically discover several useful path patterns and surface relevant
facts that may help a human fact checker corroborate or refute a claim.Comment: Extended version of the paper in proceedings of ICDM 201
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