133,572 research outputs found
Designing community care systems with AUML
This paper describes an approach to developing an appropriate agent environment appropriate for use in community care applications. Key to its success is that software designers collaborate with environment builders to provide the levels of cooperation and support required within an integrated agent–oriented community system. Agent-oriented Unified Modeling Language (AUML) is a practical approach to the analysis, design, implementation and management of such an agent-based system, whilst providing the power and expressiveness necessary to support the specification, design and organization of a health care service. The background of an agent-based community care application to support the elderly is described. Our approach to building agent–oriented software development solutions emphasizes the importance of AUML as a fundamental initial step in producing more general agent–based architectures. This approach aims to present an effective methodology for an agent software development process using a service oriented approach, by addressing the agent decomposition, abstraction, and organization characteristics, whilst reducing its complexity by exploiting AUML’s productivity potential. </p
On the uniform generation of modular diagrams
In this paper we present an algorithm that generates -noncrossing,
-modular diagrams with uniform probability. A diagram is a labeled
graph of degree over vertices drawn in a horizontal line with arcs
in the upper half-plane. A -crossing in a diagram is a set of
distinct arcs with the property . A diagram without any
-crossings is called a -noncrossing diagram and a stack of length
is a maximal sequence
. A diagram is
-modular if any arc is contained in a stack of length at least
. Our algorithm generates after preprocessing time,
-noncrossing, -modular diagrams in time and space
complexity.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Shapes of topological RNA structures
A topological RNA structure is derived from a diagram and its shape is
obtained by collapsing the stacks of the structure into single arcs and by
removing any arcs of length one. Shapes contain key topological, information
and for fixed topological genus there exist only finitely many such shapes. We
shall express topological RNA structures as unicellular maps, i.e. graphs
together with a cyclic ordering of their half-edges. In this paper we prove a
bijection of shapes of topological RNA structures. We furthermore derive a
linear time algorithm generating shapes of fixed topological genus. We derive
explicit expressions for the coefficients of the generating polynomial of these
shapes and the generating function of RNA structures of genus . Furthermore
we outline how shapes can be used in order to extract essential information of
RNA structure databases.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1304.739
Exploring the relative importance of crossing number and crossing angle
Recent research has indicated that human graph reading performance can be affected by the size of crossing angle. Crossing angle is closely related to another aesthetic criterion: number of edge crossings. Although crossing number has been previously identified as the most important aesthetic, its relative impact on performance of human graph reading is unknown, compared to crossing angle. In this paper, we present an exploratory user study investigating the relative importance between crossing number and crossing angle. This study also aims to further examine the effects of crossing number and crossing angle not only on task performance measured as response time and accuracy, but also on cognitive load and visualization efficiency. The experimental results reinforce the previous findings of the effects of the two aesthetics on graph comprehension. The study demonstrates that on average these two closely related aesthetics together explain 33% of variance in the four usability measures: time, accuracy, mental effort and visualization efficiency, with about 38% of the explained variance being attributed to the crossing angle. Copyright © 2010 ACM
Proton mass effects in wide-angle Compton scattering
We investigate proton mass effects in the handbag approach to wide-angle
Compton scattering. We find that theoretical uncertainties due to the proton
mass are significant for photon energies presently studied at Jefferson Lab.
With the proposed energy upgrade such uncertainties will be clearly reduced.Comment: 4 pages, uses revtex, 3 figure
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