471 research outputs found

    Analytical performance modeling of elastic optical links with aligned spectrum allocation

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    Abstract Elastic optical networking has recently been proposed for use in optical transport networks to cope with increasingly heterogeneous and dynamic demand patterns. In this paper, we study the blocking performance of a multi-class elastic optical link for which a demand needs to be allocated a contiguous subset of the entire spectrum. This problem is different than the well-known blocking problem in multi-class multi-server loss systems due to the contiguous allocation constraint. We first propose a non-work-conserving aligned spectrum allocation policy which is shown to outperform the conventional first fit-based work-conserving allocation policy without alignment. Subsequently, for blocking performance of an aligned elastic optical link with up to three different traffic classes, we propose a novel and systematic order reduction procedure for MMPPs (Markov Modulated Poisson Process) and use this procedure as the numerical engine to approximately obtain the blocking probabilities. The proposed numerical algorithm is validated under various system and traffic parameters and is shown to be effectively usable as an instrument to dimension elastic optical links. © 2015 Elsevier B.V

    Optical coherence tomography angiography of foveal hypoplasia

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    AIMS: To discuss foveal development in the context of detailed retinal vasculature imaging in foveal hypoplasia using optical coherence tomography angiography. METHODS: In this case series, the optical coherence tomography angiography results of four patients with idiopathic foveal hypoplasia and two patients with foveal hypoplasia secondary to oculocutaneous albinism are presented. RESULTS: Cases with intact visual acuity demonstrated lower grades of foveal hypoplasia on optical coherence tomography, while those with poor vision demonstrated high grades of foveal hypoplasia. The superficial retinal capillary plexus was intact in the foveal area in all cases, with no demonstrable foveal avascular zone. The deep retinal capillary plexus was absent to variable degrees in most cases, but was most persistent in those cases with reduced vision. CONCLUSIONS: The superficial retinal capillary plexus is present in cases with foveal hypoplasia, while the deep retinal capillary plexus is absent to varying degrees. Our findings support the hypothesis that an intact foveal avascular zone of the deep capillary plexus allows for outer retinal photoreceptor specialisation to occur unimpeded, resulting in preserved visual acuity, while this process may be inhibited by an absent deep capillary foveal avascular zone with resultant poor vision

    New multi-proxy record shows potential impacts of precipitation on the rise and ebb of Bronze Age and imperial Persian societies in southeastern Iran

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    The Achaemenids and Sasanian ‘Persian’ Empires were significant political, economic, and social forces in the Late Bronze Age and Late Antiquity Eurasia, respectively, which have left marks on the heritage of the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern world. While attention is often focused on military and political conditions when discussing the prosperity and decline of these imperial powers, their realms, which crossed a variety of environmental settings, were highly dependent on the predictability of rainfall that drove agriculture and effective provisioning. Here, we present a multi-proxy sedimentological, geochemical, and palynological record from a 2.5-m long peat deposit near the excavation site in Konar Sandal near Jiroft in southeastern Iran, covering 4000-850 cal yr BP. Around 3950 cal yr BP a wet period prevailed based on elemental ratios, stable C isotope, pollen, and diagnostic lipids. Between 3900 and 3300 cal yr BP, wet/semi-wet conditions developed with the appearance of Cerealia-type pollen. Dry and windy conditions followed (ca. 3300-2900 cal yr BP), which coincided with the Siberian anticyclones and climatic shifts developing in the Eastern Mediterranean region. Consequently, the Bronze Age settlements around Jiroft, dependent on agriculture, underwent a steady decline. A prolonged wet period followed (ca. 2900-2300 cal yr BP) with the abundance of Sparganium-type pollen and the aquatic lipid proxy (Paq). This change coincided with intensive agricultural practices and the flourishing of the powerful Median and Achaemenid empires. The shift to high Ti/Al ratios coeval with the lowest δ13COM values suggests an increase in aeolian activity and dry conditions ca. 2100-1650 cal yr BP. The Jiroft valley again experienced wet conditions between 1550 and 1300 cal yr BP, which overlapped with the economic prosperity of the middle to late Sasanian empire. The paleoenvironmental reconstruction indicates that wet periods and intensive agriculture coincide with the Persian empires' zenith, political influence, and economic affluence. Therefore, contextualized and detailed paleoenvironmental records are desirable to explore the interplay of political and climatic factors in the development and fragmentation of the ancient settlements and imperial powers in Eurasian history.1. Introduction 2. Geographical setting 3. Materials and methods 3.1. Sampling, magnetic susceptibility, and grain size analysis 3.2. Radiocarbon analyses 3.3. Elemental and mineralogical analyses 3.4. C/N and stable isotope analyses 3.4.1. Lipid extraction 3.5. Pollen analysis 4. Results 4.1. Age-depth model and chronology 4.2. Units 4.2.1. Unit 1 (U 1; 250-189 cm; ca. 4000-3550 cal yr BP) 4.2.2. Unit 2 (U 2; 189-164 cm; ca. 3550-3300 cal yr BP) 4.2.3. Unit 3 (U 3; 164-134 cm; ca. 3300-2900 cal yr BP) 4.2.4. Unit 4 (U 4; 134-106 cm; ca. 2900-2300 cal yr BP) 4.2.5. Unit 5 (U 5; 106-61 cm; ca. 2300-1550 cal yr BP) 4.2.6. Unit 6 (U 6; 61-10 cm; ca. 1550-850 cal yr BP) 5. Discussion 5.1. Paleoclimate preceding the decline of the Jiroft civilization 5.2. The Late Bronze Age decline in Jiroft 5.3. Rise and fall of the Persian Empire 5.3.1. The pre-Islamic period and recent times 6. Conclusion

    Comparison of ophthalmic training in 6 English-speaking countries

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    OBJECTIVE: To compare key characteristics of ophthalmology training programs in 6 different English-speaking countries: Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. PARTICIPANTS: Seven ophthalmologists with personal knowledge of all 6 systems contributed. METHODS: The main features examined were career pathway, duration of training, surgical training, governing bodies, and examination structure. Data were collected from the literature, online resources, and personal experience. RESULTS: Several differences were highlighted, including length of training (ranging from 4 to 9 years after medical school), number of surgical procedures such as cataracts (ranging from minimum 86 to approximately 600), and structure of fellowship training. CONCLUSIONS: As trainees increasingly seek international experience to enhance their knowledge and skills, the similarities and differences between training programs in different countries have become more relevant. Some of these differences may reflect differing needs of different patient populations and different healthcare delivery systems across the globe. However, these differences should also prompt educators to more carefully scrutinize their own training system and search for potential improvements

    Advanced micro and nano manufacturing technologies used in medical domain

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    This paper focuses on the aspects of advanced manufacturing technologies, namely micro and nano manufacturing (MNM) capabilities which are particularly relevant to medical domain. In recent years, the so called disruptive technologies have enabled engineers and clinicians to collaborate in solving complex problems which require advanced MNM capabilities to develop medical applications. As a result what was nearly impossible a few years ago, due to limitations in machining and manufacturability of micro and nano scale artefacts, are now made possible thanks to innovative manufacturing processes and technologies. The potential medical applications of the new MNM methods are immense and in this paper four potential uses, namely as medical devices, lab on chips, and brain implants are presented and discussed. These works were based on different projects undertaken by researchers at Cardiff University, UK. The manufacturing costs, though initially high, are expected to reduce over time as the technologies mature and become more widely available. Introducing these MNM technologies and disseminating these results to healthcare engineering, for a better quality of medical diagnosis and treatments with cost-effective solutions, will greatly benefit the majority of population who live in the developing countries in receiving appropriate and affordable medical care to achieve improvements in their quality of life

    Short range Coulomb correlations render massive Dirac fermions massless

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    Tight binding electrons on a honeycomb lattice are described by an effective Dirac theory at low energies. Lowering symmetry by an alternate ionic potential (Δ\Delta) generates a single-particle gap in the spectrum. We employ the dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) technique, to study the effect of on-site electron correlation (UU) on massive Dirac fermions. For a fixed mass parameter Δ\Delta, we find that beyond a critical value Uc1(Δ)U_{c1}(\Delta) massive Dirac fermions become massless. Further increasing UU beyond Uc2(Δ)U_{c2}(\Delta), there will be another phase transition to the Mott insulating state. Therefore the competition between the single-particle gap parameter, Δ\Delta, and the Hubbard UU restores the semi-metallic nature of the parent Hamiltonian. The width of the intermediate semi-metallic regime shrinks by increasing the ionic potential. However, at small values of Δ\Delta, there is a wide interval of UU values for which the system remains semi-metal.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    PARTICLES SIZE DISTRIBUTION EFFECT ON 3D PACKING OF NANOPARTICLES INTO A BOUNDED REGION

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    Abstract In this paper, the effects of two different Particle Size Distributions (PSD) on packing behavior of ideal rigid spherical nanoparticles using a novel packing model based on parallel algorithms have been reported. A mersenne twister algorithm was used to generate pseudorandom numbers for the particles initial coordinates. Also, for this purpose a nanosized tetragonal confined container with a square floor (300 * 300 nm) were used in this work. The Andreasen and the Lognormal PSDs were chosen to investigate the packing behavior in a 3D bounded region. The effects of particle numbers on packing behavior of these two PSDs have been investigated. Also the reproducibility and the distribution of packing factor of these PSDs were compared. Keyword

    Binomial Spin Glass

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    To establish a unified framework for studying both discrete and continuous coupling distributions, we introduce the {\it binomial} spin glass, a class of models where the couplings are sums of mm identically distributed Bernoulli random variables. In the continuum limit mm \to \infty, the class reduces to one with Gaussian couplings, while m=1m=1 corresponds to the ±J\pm J spin glass. We demonstrate that for short-range Ising models on dd-dimensional hypercubic lattices the ground-state entropy density for NN spins is bounded from above by (d/2m+1/N)ln2(\sqrt{d/2m} + 1/N)\ln2, and further show that the actual entropies follow the scaling behavior implied by this bound. We thus uncover a fundamental non-commutativity of the thermodynamic and continuous coupling limits that leads to the presence or absence of degeneracies depending on the precise way the limits are taken. Exact calculations of defect energies reveal a crossover length scale L(m)LκL^\ast(m) \sim L^\kappa below which the binomial spin glass is indistinguishable from the Gaussian system. Since κ=1/(2θ)\kappa = -1/(2\theta), where θ\theta is the spin-stiffness exponent, discrete couplings become irrelevant at large scales for systems with a finite-temperature spin-glass phase

    Long-term safety and outcome of a temporary self-expanding metallic stent for achalasia: a prospective study with a 13-year single-center experience

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    To prospectively evaluate the long-term clinical safety and efficacy of a newly designed self-expanding metallic stent (SEMS) in the treatment of patients with achalasia. Seventy-five patients with achalasia were treated with a temporary SEMS with a 30-mm diameter. The SEMSs were placed under fluoroscopic guidance and removed by gastroscopy 4–5 days after stent placement. Follow-up data focused on dysphagia score, technique and clinical success, clinical remissions and failures, and complications and was performed at 6 months, 1 year, and within 3 to 5 years, 5 to 8 years, 8 to 10 years, and >10 years postoperatively. Stent placement was technically successful in all patients. Complications included stent migration (n = 4, 5.33%), chest pain (n = 28, 38.7%), reflux (n = 15, 20%), and bleeding (n = 9, 12%). No perforation or 30-day mortality occurred. Clinical success was achieved in all patients 1 month after stent removal. The overall remission rates at 6 months, 1, 1–3, 3–5, 5–8, 8–10, and >10 year follow-up periods were 100%, 96%, 93.9%, 90.9%, 100%, 100%, and 83.3%, respectively. Stent treatment failed in six patients, and the overall remission rate in our series was 92%. The median and mean primary patencies were 2.8 ± 0.28 years (95% CI: 2.25–3.35) and 4.28 ± 0.40 years (95% CI: 3.51–5.05), respectively. The use of temporary SEMSs with 30-mm diameter proved to be a safe and effective approach for managing achalasia with a long-term satisfactory clinical remission rate

    FLT3-ITD compared with DNMT3A R882 mutation is a more powerful independent inferior prognostic factor in adult acute myeloid leukemia patients after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: A retrospective cohort study Allojenik hematopoetik kök hücre nakli sonrası yeti�kin akut myeloid lösemi hastalarında, FLT3-ITD, DNMT3A R882 mutasyonu ile kar�ıla�tırıldı�ında daha güçlü bir ba�ımsız kötü prognostik faktördür: Retrospektif kohort çalı�ması

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    Objective: This study aimed to evaluate DNMT3A exon 23 mutations and their prognostic impacts in the presence of NPM1 and FLT3 mutations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients who underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Materials and Methods: This study comprised 128 adult AML patients referred to the Hematology-Oncology and Stem Cell Research Center of Shariati Hospital. NPM1 and FLT3-ITD mutations were detected by fragment analysis. For DNMT3A exon 23 mutation analysis, we used Sanger sequencing. Overall survival (OS) and relapse-free survival (RFS) curves were estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test was used to calculate differences between groups. Results: The prevalence of DNMT3A exon 23 mutations was 15.6 and hotspot region R882 mutations were prominent. RFS and OS were compared in patients with and without DNMT3A exon 23 mutations using univariate analysis and there was no significant difference between these groups of patients. On the contrary, the FLT3-ITD mutation significantly reduced the OS (p=0.009) and RFS (p=0.006) in AML patients after allogeneic HSCT. In the next step, patients with AML were divided into four groups regarding FLT3-ITD and DNMT3A mutations. Patients with DNMT3A R882mut/FLT3-ITDpos had the worst OS and RFS. These results indicate that DNMT3A mutations alone do not affect the clinical outcomes of AML patients undergoing allogeneic HSCT, but when accompanied by FLT3-ITD mutations, the OS was significantly reduced (5-year OS 0 for DNMT3A R882mut/ FLT3-ITDpos patients vs. 62 DNMT3A R882wt/FLT3-ITDneg, p=0.025) and the relapse rate increased. Conclusion: It can be deduced that DNMT3A R882mut/FLT3-ITDpos is an unfavorable prognostic factor in AML patients even after allogeneic HSCT. © 2018 by Turkish Society of Hematology
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