4,212 research outputs found
Composite Fading Models based on Inverse Gamma Shadowing: Theory and Validation
We introduce a general approach to characterize composite fading models based
on inverse gamma (IG) shadowing. We first determine to what extent the IG
distribution is an adequate choice for modeling shadow fading, by means of a
comprehensive test with field measurements and other distributions
conventionally used for this purpose. Then, we prove that the probability
density function and cumulative distribution function of any IG-based composite
fading model are directly expressed in terms of a Laplace-domain statistic of
the underlying fast fading model and, in some relevant cases, as a mixture of
wellknown state-of-the-art distributions. Also, exact and asymptotic
expressions for the outage probability are provided, which are valid for any
choice of baseline fading distribution. Finally, we exemplify our approach by
presenting several application examples for IG-based composite fading models,
for which their statistical characterization is directly obtained in a simple
form.Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE for publication. Copyright
may be transferred without notice, after which this version may no longer be
accessibl
Backing off from rayleigh and rice: Achieving perfect secrecy in wireless fading channels
We show that for a legitimate communication under multipath quasi-static fading with a reduced number of scatter- ers, it is possible to achieve perfect secrecy even in the presence of a passive eavesdropper for which no channel state information is available. Specifically, we show that the outage probability of secrecy capacity (OPSC) is zero for a given range of average signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) at the legitimate and eavesdropper’s receivers. As an application example, we analyze the OPSC for the case of two scatterers, explicitly deriving the relationship between the average SNRs, the secrecy rate RS and the fading model parameters required for achieving perfect secrecy.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (TEC2017-87913R)
Consejería de Innovación y Ciencia (P18-RT-3175
Study of the preparation process and variation of wall components in chia (Salvia hispanica L.) oil microencapsulation
A study of the microencapsulation process of omega-3 rich oil extracted from chia (Salvia hispanica L.) seeds was carried out, which included a comparative analysis of the microcapsules obtained by the spray- and freeze-drying methods using isolated soy proteins and maltodextrin as wall materials at different proportions. Color characterization of the obtained powders was performed and revealed a darker and yellower appearance of the freeze-dried samples compared with the spray-dried ones. Moisture content was measured for each sample and all presented values around 3.5%. The SEM micrographs revealed that spray-dried microcapsules can occur individually or may form clusters or aggregates, with the particles exhibiting a size range varying from 4 to 10 µm. Encapsulation efficiency was measured, with no significant differences found between drying methods or on varying the proportion of wall components (all samples presented values of aproximately 60%). The oxidative stability of microencapsulated oils under accelerated oxidative conditions revealed protection factors 2-fold higher for all samples. In addition, microencapsulated oil stored under 25 ºC revealed lower hydroperoxide values than those of unencapsulated oil throughout the whole storage test. Finally, oil encapsulated in SPI microcapsules also showed lower HPV values than that of the acceptable limit for virgin and cold-pressed vegetable oils (15 meq. O2/kg oil) during the storage test, while unencapsulated oil attained the acceptable limit in 62 days. This result represents an increase in the time of the oil shelf life of between 30 and 48%.Fil: González, Agustín. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Químicas. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba; ArgentinaFil: Martinez, Marcela Lilian. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas Físicas y Naturales. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal; ArgentinaFil: Paredes, Alejandro Javier. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Unidad de Investigación y Desarrollo en Tecnología Farmacéutica. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Químicas. Unidad de Investigación y Desarrollo en Tecnología Farmacéutica; ArgentinaFil: Leon, Alberto Edel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Químicas. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba; ArgentinaFil: Ribotta, Pablo Daniel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Químicas. Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba; Argentin
Efficient Object Detection in Autonomous Driving using Spiking Neural Networks: Performance, Energy Consumption Analysis, and Insights into Open-set Object Discovery
Besides performance, efficiency is a key design driver of technologies
supporting vehicular perception. Indeed, a well-balanced trade-off between
performance and energy consumption is crucial for the sustainability of
autonomous vehicles. In this context, the diversity of real-world contexts in
which autonomous vehicles can operate motivates the need for empowering
perception models with the capability to detect, characterize and identify
newly appearing objects by themselves. In this manuscript we elaborate on this
threefold conundrum (performance, efficiency and open-world learning) for
object detection modeling tasks over image data collected from vehicular
scenarios. Specifically, we show that well-performing and efficient models can
be realized by virtue of Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs), reaching competitive
levels of detection performance when compared to their non-spiking counterparts
at dramatic energy consumption savings (up to 85%) and a slightly improved
robustness against image noise. Our experiments herein offered also expose
qualitatively the complexity of detecting new objects based on the preliminary
results of a simple approach to discriminate potential object proposals in the
captured image.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, presented at ITSC202
Physical Layer Security of Large Reflecting Surface Aided Communications with Phase Errors
The physical layer security (PLS) performance of a wireless communication
link through a large reflecting surface (LRS) with phase errors is analyzed.
Leveraging recent results that express the \ac{LRS}-based composite channel as
an equivalent scalar fading channel, we show that the eavesdropper's link is
Rayleigh distributed and independent of the legitimate link. The different
scaling laws of the legitimate and eavesdroppers signal-to-noise ratios with
the number of reflecting elements, and the reasonably good performance even in
the case of coarse phase quantization, show the great potential of LRS-aided
communications to enhance PLS in practical wireless set-ups.Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE for publication. Copyright
may be transferred without notice, after which this version may no longer be
accessibl
Desarrollo de máquina de perfusión para la conservación de órganos para trasplante. Modelo renal.
El trasplante renal es el tratamiento óptimo para personas que sufren estadios terminales de enfermedades renales, presentando una relación costo beneficio a favor del trasplante con respecto a la diálisis. El número de paciente que requieren ser trasplantado se incrementa año a año, pero este incremento no se ve acompañado con el aumento de los órganos disponibles. Según el SINTRA en nuestro país hay 5880 pacientes en lista de espera para recibir un trasplante renal, durante el 2011 se procuraron 1720 riñones con criterios clásicos. Es consecuencia de esta falta de órganos que se comenzó a utilizar órganos marginales, aquellos que no reúnen los criterios clásicos de donantes, el inconveniente que esto genera, es que los órganos a trasplantar presentan un mayor índice de daño celular y de rechazo. Diferentes estudios demostraron que la utilización de máquinas de perfusión en estos órganos mejora la sobrevida del órgano y disminuye el rechazo, algo que no se puede lograr con los métodos de conservación clásicos. El objetivo de este proyecto es: desarrollar y construir una máquina de perfusión renal de flujo continuo / pulsátil, con las innovaciones que consideramos pertinentes para la conservación de órganos con criterios extendidos. La máquina dispondrá de dos cámaras herméticas una dentro de la otra, la interior que contendrá al órgano el cual será conectado por medio de cánulas, a una bomba pulsátil con solución de Wisconsin o similar, estará rodeada de otra con líquido refrigerante bombeado desde una bomba refrigerante eléctrica portátil, estos sistema eléctricos serán a batería de larga duración. Nuestro prototipo aporta además nuevas innovaciones como son; un sistema (GPS) que permitirá conocer la ubicación precisa del dispositivo activado y poder coordinar de mejor manera el procedimiento quirúrgico, una computadora de a bordo con la que se controlará todos los sistemas y se almacenarán los parámetros estadísticos del órgano transportado, consolas y pantalla táctil para el control de los parámetros de funcionamiento, se construirá la carcasa con tecnología LRTM de fibra de vidrio inyectada la cual se está desarrollando en nuestra empresa para aplicaciones varias. Se desarrollarán piezas descartables de bajo costo, acorde a las disponibilidades económicas locales, para lograr de este modo la amplia utilización de esta máquina en todos los centros de trasplante y procuración de órganos del país
Application of digital image correlation at the microscale in fiber-reinforced composites
Digital image correlation (DIC) is applied to analyzing the deformation mechanisms under transverse
compression in a fiber-reinforced composite. To this end, compression tests in a direction perpendicular
to the fibers were carried out inside a scanning electron microscope and secondary electron images
obtained at different magnifications during the test. Optimum DIC parameters to resolve the displacement
and strain field were computed from numerical simulations of a model composite and they were
applied to micrographs obtained at different magnifications (250_, 2000_, and 6000_). It is shown that
DIC of low-magnification micrographs was able to capture the long range fluctuations in strain due to the
presence of matrix-rich and fiber-rich zones, responsible for the onset of damage. At higher magnification,
the strain fields obtained with DIC qualitatively reproduce the non-homogeneous deformation pattern
due to the presence of stiff fibers dispersed in a compliant matrix and provide accurate results of the
average composite strain. However, comparison with finite element simulations revealed that DIC was
not able to accurately capture the average strain in each phase
Ventricular Tachycardia and Early Fibrillation in Patients With Brugada Syndrome and Ischemic Cardiomyopathy Show Predictable Frequency-Phase Properties on the Precordial ECG Consistent With the Respective Arrhythmogenic Substrate
[EN] Background¿ Ventricular fibrillation (VF) has been proposed to be maintained by localized high-frequency sources. We tested whether spectral-phase analysis of the precordial ECG enabled identification of periodic activation patterns generated by such sources.
Methods and Results¿Precordial ECGs were recorded from 15 ischemic cardiomyopathy and 15 Brugada syndrome (type 1 ECG) patients during induced VF and analyzed in the frequency-phase domain. Despite temporal variability, induced VF episodes lasting 19.6±7.9 s displayed distinctly high power at a common frequency (shared frequency, 5.7±1.1 Hz) in all leads about half of the time. In patients with Brugada syndrome, phase analysis of shared frequency showed a V1¿V6 sequence as would be expected from patients displaying a type 1 ECG pattern (P<0.001). Hilbert-based phases
confirmed that the most stable sequence over the whole VF duration was V1¿V6. Analysis of shared frequency in ischemic cardiomyopathy patients with anteroseptal (n=4), apical (n=3), and inferolateral (n=4) myocardial infarction displayed a sequence starting at V1¿V2, V3¿V4, and V5¿V6, respectively, consistent with an activation origin at the scar location (P=0.005). Sequences correlated with the Hilbert-based phase analysis (P<0.001). Posterior infarction (n=4) displayed no specific sequence. On paired comparison, phase sequences during monomorphic ventricular tachycardia correlated moderately with VF (P<0.001). Moreover, there was a dominant frequency gradient from precordial leads facing the scar region to the contralateral leads (5.8±0.8 versus 5.4±1.1 Hz; P=0.004).
Conclusions¿Noninvasive analysis of ventricular tachycardia and early VF in patients with Brugada syndrome and ischemic cardiomyopathy shows a predictable sequence in the frequency-phase domain, consistent with anatomic location of the arrhythmogenic substrate.This study was supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (P01-HL039707, P01-HL087226 R01-HL118304); the Spanish Society of Cardiology, Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology Section; the Leducq Foundation, Paris, France; Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas, Madrid, Spain; Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain (PROMETEO/2012/030); VI Plan Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica, Desarrollo e Innovacion Tecnologica from the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain (TIN2012-37546-C03-01); and the European Commission (European Regional Development Funds [ERDF]-FEDER)Calvo, D.; Atienza, F.; Saiz Rodríguez, FJ.; Martinez, L.; Ávila, P.; Rubín, J.; Herreros, B.... (2015). 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Mecanismos de Deformación en laminados de matriz polimérica correlación digital de imágenes y micromecánica computacional
Se ha realizado un estudio micromecánico experimental del comportamiento de laminados unidireccionales sometidos a compresión en la dirección perpendicular a las fibras. Se ha empleado la técnica de correlación digital de imágenes para observar la evolución de los campos de desplazamientos y deformaciones en la microestructura del material compuesto. En los contornos de deformación obtenidos experimentalmente se ha comprobado como las fibras tienen una deformación muy pequeña, mientras que las mayores deformaciones se concentran en las zonas de matriz de menor fracción volumétrica de fibras. Simulando por elementos finitos la microestructura estudiada se han reproducido los resultados experimentales, obteniendo distribuciones de campos de desplazamientos y deformaciones muy similares a las observadas experimentalmente
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