3,575 research outputs found
Parallel processing for digital picture comparison
In picture processing an important problem is to identify two digital pictures of the same scene taken under different lighting conditions. This kind of problem can be found in remote sensing, satellite signal processing and the related areas. The identification can be done by transforming the gray levels so that the gray level histograms of the two pictures are closely matched. The transformation problem can be solved by using the packing method. Researchers propose a VLSI architecture consisting of m x n processing elements with extensive parallel and pipelining computation capabilities to speed up the transformation with the time complexity 0(max(m,n)), where m and n are the numbers of the gray levels of the input picture and the reference picture respectively. If using uniprocessor and a dynamic programming algorithm, the time complexity will be 0(m(3)xn). The algorithm partition problem, as an important issue in VLSI design, is discussed. Verification of the proposed architecture is also given
Studying Micro-Processes in Software Development Stream
In this paper we propose a new streaming technique to study software development. As we observed software development consists of a series of activities such as edit, compilation, testing, debug and deployment etc. All these activities contribute to development stream, which is a collection of software development activities in time order. Development stream can help us replay and reveal software development process at a later time without too much hassle. We developed a system called Zorro to generate and analyze development stream at Collaborative Software Development Laboratory in University of Hawaii. It is built on the top of Hackystat, an in-process automatic metric collection system developed in the CSDL. Hackystat sensors continuously collect development activities and send them to a centralized data store for processing. Zorro reads in all data of a project and constructs stream from them. Tokenizers are chained together to divide development stream into episodes (micro iteration) for classification with rule engine. In this paper we demonstrate the analysis on Test-Driven Development (TDD) with this framework
Probing New Physics using top quark polarization in the e+e- -> t \bar{t} process at future Linear Colliders
We investigate the sensitivity to new physics of the process e+e- -> t bar{t}
when the top polarization is analyzed using leptonic final states e+e- -> t
\bar{t} -> l+l- b \bar{b} nu_l \bar{nu}_l. We first show that the kinematical
reconstruction of the complete kinematics is experimentally tractable for this
process. Then we apply the matrix element method to study the sensitivity to
the Vt\bar{t} coupling (V being a vector gauge boson), at the tree level and in
the narrow width approximation. Assuming the ILC baseline configuration,
sqrt{S}=500 GeV, and a luminosity of 500 fb^{-1}, we conclude that this optimal
analysis allows to determine simultaneously the ten form factors that
parameterize the Vt\bar{t} coupling, below the percent level. We also discuss
the effects of the next leading order (NLO) electroweak corrections using the
GRACE program with polarized beams. It is found that the NLO corrections to
different beam polarization lead to significantly different patterns of
contributions.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings for the TYL-FJPPL workshops on "Top
Physics at ILC
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Complete recovery from anxiety disorders following Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in children and adolescents: a meta analysis
Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) is a well-established treatment for childhood anxiety disorders. Meta-analyses have concluded that approximately 60% of children recover following treatment, however these include studies using a broad range of diagnostic indices to assess outcomes including whether children are free of the one anxiety disorder that causes most interference (i.e. the primary anxiety disorder) or whether children are free of all anxiety disorders. We conducted a meta-analysis to establish the efficacy of CBT in terms of absence of all anxiety disorders. Where available we compared this rate to outcomes based on absence of primary disorder. Of 56 published randomized controlled trials, 19 provided data on recovery from all anxiety disorders (n = 635 CBT, n = 450 control participants). There was significant heterogeneity across those studies with available data and full recovery rates varied from 47.6 to 66.4% among children without autistic spectrum conditions (ASC) and 12.2 to 36.7% for children with ASC following treatment, compared to up to 20.6% and 21.3% recovery in waitlist and active treatment comparisons. The lack of consistency in diagnostic outcomes highlights the urgent need for consensus on reporting in future RCTs of childhood anxiety disorders for the meaningful synthesis of data going forwards
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