101 research outputs found
Managing Work Within a Virtual Enterprise - Revising Project Planning Practice
This paper presents the findings of an empirical study into the management of projects within a virtual environment. In a virtual project, co-workers can be both geographically and temporally dispersed. The control and co-ordination of the work output of the virtual project team is a key process for business success. Traditional project management techniques have been found wanting when applied to virtual projects. New techniques need to be developed. This paper identifies key factors in the control and co-ordination of virtual projects and proposes a project management process for virtual projects
Pressure screening in the interior of primary shells in double-wall carbon nanotubes
The pressure response of double-wall carbon nanotubes has been investigated
by means of Raman spectroscopy up to 10 GPa. The intensity of the radial
breathing modes of the outer tubes decreases rapidly but remain observable up
to 9 GPa, exhibiting a behavior similar (but less pronounced) to that of
single-wall carbon nanotubes, which undergo a shape distortion at higher
pressures. In addition, the tangential band of the external tubes broadens and
decreases in amplitude. The corresponding Raman features of the internal tubes
appear to be considerably less sensitive to pressure. All findings lead to the
conclusion that the outer tubes act as a protection shield for the inner tubes
whereas the latter increase the structural stability of the outer tubes upon
pressure application.Comment: PDF with 15 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; submitted to Physical Review
Raman spectra of MgB2 at high pressure and topological electronic transition
Raman spectra of the MgB2 ceramic samples were measured as a function of
pressure up to 32 GPa at room temperature. The spectrum at normal conditions
contains a very broad peak at ~590 cm-1 related to the E2g phonon mode. The
frequency of this mode exhibits a strong linear dependence in the pressure
region from 5 to 18 GPa, whereas beyond this region the slope of the
pressure-induced frequency shift is reduced by about a factor of two. The
pressure dependence of the phonon mode up to ~ 5GPa exhibits a change in the
slope as well as a "hysteresis" effect in the frequency vs. pressure behavior.
These singularities in the E2g mode behavior under pressure support the
suggestion that MgB2 may undergo a pressure-induced topological electronic
transition.Comment: 2 figure
Optimization viewpoint on Kalman smoothing, with applications to robust and sparse estimation
In this paper, we present the optimization formulation of the Kalman
filtering and smoothing problems, and use this perspective to develop a variety
of extensions and applications. We first formulate classic Kalman smoothing as
a least squares problem, highlight special structure, and show that the classic
filtering and smoothing algorithms are equivalent to a particular algorithm for
solving this problem. Once this equivalence is established, we present
extensions of Kalman smoothing to systems with nonlinear process and
measurement models, systems with linear and nonlinear inequality constraints,
systems with outliers in the measurements or sudden changes in the state, and
systems where the sparsity of the state sequence must be accounted for. All
extensions preserve the computational efficiency of the classic algorithms, and
most of the extensions are illustrated with numerical examples, which are part
of an open source Kalman smoothing Matlab/Octave package.Comment: 46 pages, 11 figure
Automated office blood pressure measurements in primary care are misleading in more than one third of treated hypertensives: The VALENTINE-Greece Home Blood Pressure Monitoring study
Abstract Background This study assessed the diagnostic reliability of automated office blood pressure (OBP) measurements in treated hypertensive patients in primary care by evaluating the prevalence of white coat hypertension (WCH) and masked uncontrolled hypertension (MUCH) phenomena. Methods Primary care physicians, nationwide in Greece, assessed consecutive hypertensive patients on stable treatment using OBP (1 visit, triplicate measurements) and home blood pressure (HBP) measurements (7 days, duplicate morning and evening measurements). All measurements were performed using validated automated devices with bluetooth capacity (Omron M7 Intelli-IT). Uncontrolled OBP was defined as ≥140/90 mmHg, and uncontrolled HBP was defined as ≥135/85 mmHg. Results A total of 790 patients recruited by 135 doctors were analyzed (age: 64.5 ± 14.4 years, diabetics: 21.4%, smokers: 20.6%, and average number of antihypertensive drugs: 1.6 ± 0.8). OBP (137.5 ± 9.4/84.3 ± 7.7 mmHg, systolic/diastolic) was higher than HBP (130.6 ± 11.2/79.9 ± 8 mmHg; difference 6.9 ± 11.6/4.4 ± 7.6 mmHg, p Conclusions In primary care, automated OBP measurements are misleading in approximately 40% of treated hypertensive patients. HBP monitoring is mandatory to avoid overtreatment of subjects with WCH phenomenon and prevent undertreatment and subsequent excess cardiovascular disease in MUCH
Cardiac disease in patients with mucopolysaccharidosis: presentation, diagnosis and management
The mucopolysaccharidoses (MPSs) are inherited lysosomal storage disorders caused by the absence of functional enzymes that contribute to the degradation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). The progressive systemic deposition of GAGs results in multi-organ system dysfunction that varies with the particular GAG deposited and the specific enzyme mutation(s) present. Cardiac involvement has been reported in all MPS syndromes and is a common and early feature, particularly for those with MPS I, II, and VI. Cardiac valve thickening, dysfunction (more severe for left-sided than for right-sided valves), and hypertrophy are commonly present; conduction abnormalities, coronary artery and other vascular involvement may also occur. Cardiac disease emerges silently and contributes significantly to early mortality
Hodges-Lehmann optimality of tests
At several places in the literature there are indications that many tests are optimal in the sense of Hodges-Lehmann efficiency. It is argued here that shrinkage of the acceptance regions of the tests to the null set in a coarse way is already enough to ensure optimality. This type of argument can be used to show optimality of e.g. Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, Cramér-von Mises tests, and likelihood ratio tests and many other tests in exponential families
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