3,989 research outputs found
Coz: Finding Code that Counts with Causal Profiling
Improving performance is a central concern for software developers. To locate
optimization opportunities, developers rely on software profilers. However,
these profilers only report where programs spent their time: optimizing that
code may have no impact on performance. Past profilers thus both waste
developer time and make it difficult for them to uncover significant
optimization opportunities.
This paper introduces causal profiling. Unlike past profiling approaches,
causal profiling indicates exactly where programmers should focus their
optimization efforts, and quantifies their potential impact. Causal profiling
works by running performance experiments during program execution. Each
experiment calculates the impact of any potential optimization by virtually
speeding up code: inserting pauses that slow down all other code running
concurrently. The key insight is that this slowdown has the same relative
effect as running that line faster, thus "virtually" speeding it up.
We present Coz, a causal profiler, which we evaluate on a range of
highly-tuned applications: Memcached, SQLite, and the PARSEC benchmark suite.
Coz identifies previously unknown optimization opportunities that are both
significant and targeted. Guided by Coz, we improve the performance of
Memcached by 9%, SQLite by 25%, and accelerate six PARSEC applications by as
much as 68%; in most cases, these optimizations involve modifying under 10
lines of code.Comment: Published at SOSP 2015 (Best Paper Award
Synthesis of ternary sulfide nanomaterials using dithiocarbamate complexes as single source precursors
We report the use of cheap, readily accessible and easy to handle di-isobutyl-dithiocarbamate complexes,
[M(S2CNi
Bu2)n], as single source precursors (SSPs) to ternary sulfides of ironânickel, ironâcopper and
nickelâcobalt. Varying decomposition temperature and precursor concentrations has a significant effect
on both the phase and size of the nanomaterials, and in some instances meta-stable phases are
accessible. Decomposition of [Fe(S2CNi
Bu2)3]/[Ni(S2CNi
Bu2)2] at ca. 210â230 ïżœC affords metastable
FeNi2S4 (violarite) nanoparticles, while at higher temperatures the thermodynamic product (Fe,Ni)9S8
(pentlandite) results. Addition of tetra-isobutyl-thiuram disulfide to the decomposition mixture can
significantly affect the nature of the product at any particular temperature-concentration, being
attributed to suppression of the intramolecular Fe(III) to Fe(II) reduction. Attempts to replicate this simple
approach to ternary metal sulfides of ironâindium and ironâzinc were unsuccessful, mixtures of binary
metal sulfides resulting. Oleylamine is non-innocent in these transformations, and we propose that SSP
decomposition occurs via primaryâsecondary backbone amide-exchange with primary dithiocarbamate
complexes, [M(S2CNHoleyl)n], being the active decomposition precursors
Scouting for Thrips in Orchid Flowers
Three monitoring methods are direct observation, flower shake, and the Berlese funnel, the latter being most accurate; instructions for constructing the funnel are given
Introduction to the special issue: challenges and opportunities in the fight against neglected tropical diseases: a decade from the London Declaration on NTDs
Twenty neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are currently prioritised by the World Health Organization for eradication, elimination as a public health problem, elimination of transmission or control by 2030. This issue celebrates progress made since the 2012 London Declaration on NTDs and discusses challenges currently faced to achieve these goals. It comprises 14 contributions spanning NTDs tackled by intensified disease management to those addressed by preventive chemotherapy. Although COVID-19 negatively affected NTD programmes, it also served to spur new multisectoral approaches to strengthen school-based health systems. The issue highlights the needs to improve impact survey design, evaluate new diagnostics, understand the consequences of heterogeneous prevalence and human movement, the potential impact of alternative treatment strategies and the importance of zoonotic transmission. This article is part of the theme issue 'Challenges and opportunities in the fight against neglected tropical diseases: a decade from the London Declaration on NTDs'
Anomalous tumbling of colloidal ellipsoids in Poiseuille flows
Shear flows cause aspherical colloidal particles to tumble so that their
orientations trace out complex trajectories known as Jeffery orbits. The
Jeffery orbit of a prolate ellipsoid is predicted to align the particle's
principal axis preferentially in the plane transverse to the axis of shear.
Holographic microscopy measurements reveal instead that colloidal ellipsoids'
trajectories in Poiseuille flows strongly favor an orientation inclined by
roughly relative to this plane. This anomalous observation is
consistent with at least two previous reports of colloidal rods and dimers of
colloidal spheres in Poiseuille flow and therefore appears to be a generic, yet
unexplained feature of colloidal transport at low Reynolds numbers.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
The Utilization of Healthcare Chaplains by Genetic Counselors
Healthcare chaplains prioritize the spiritual and religious care a patient and their family may need during their healthcare experience. This study investigated the current utilization of healthcare chaplains by genetic counselors, as well as the ability, in time and skill, of the healthcare chaplains to see genetic counseling patients. Lastly, the study investigated if genetic counseling patients would accept a referral to meet with a healthcare chaplain. We hypothesized that genetic counselors are not utilizing healthcare chaplains, healthcare chaplains have the ability to see genetic counseling patients, and genetic counseling patients would consider meeting with a healthcare chaplain.
This study distributed an original electronic questionnaire to healthcare chaplains. An ancillary, original, electronic and paper/printed questionnaire was distributed to prenatal, pediatric, and cancer genetic counseling patients at Prisma Health â Midlands and The Greenwood Genetic Center, Greenwood campus. A mixture of percentages and frequencies were calculated as well as themes through a content analysis approach.
Data was collected from 253 healthcare chaplains (57.1% female; 41.6% male) and 110 genetic counseling patients (37.3% cancer; 9.1% general; 12.7% pediatric; 40.9% prenatal). Only 15.45% of healthcare chaplains claimed that a genetic counselor had referred a patient to them. More than 60% of healthcare chaplains felt comfortable, very comfortable, or extremely comfortable while discussing genetic syndromes or cancer susceptibility genes with patients and over 70% felt comfortable, very comfortable, or extremely comfortable with basic genetic concepts and medical terminology. Lastly, around 45% of genetic counseling patients stated they would consider meeting with a healthcare chaplain.
Healthcare chaplains feel comfortable in their knowledge and skill to meet with genetic counseling patients but are not currently being widely used by genetic counselors as a referral. Genetic counselors should consider referring select patients who may be experiencing spiritual distress to healthcare chaplains
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