146 research outputs found
FLSys: Toward an Open Ecosystem for Federated Learning Mobile Apps
This paper presents the design, implementation, and evaluation of FLSys, a
mobile-cloud federated learning (FL) system that supports deep learning models
for mobile apps. FLSys is a key component toward creating an open ecosystem of
FL models and apps that use these models. FLSys is designed to work with mobile
sensing data collected on smart phones, balance model performance with resource
consumption on the phones, tolerate phone communication failures, and achieve
scalability in the cloud. In FLSys, different DL models with different FL
aggregation methods in the cloud can be trained and accessed concurrently by
different apps. Furthermore, FLSys provides a common API for third-party app
developers to train FL models. FLSys is implemented in Android and AWS cloud.
We co-designed FLSys with a human activity recognition (HAR) in the wild FL
model. HAR sensing data was collected in two areas from the phones of 100+
college students during a five-month period. We implemented HAR-Wild, a CNN
model tailored to mobile devices, with a data augmentation mechanism to
mitigate the problem of non-Independent and Identically Distributed (non-IID)
data that affects FL model training in the wild. A sentiment analysis (SA)
model is used to demonstrate how FLSys effectively supports concurrent models,
and it uses a dataset with 46,000+ tweets from 436 users. We conducted
extensive experiments on Android phones and emulators showing that FLSys
achieves good model utility and practical system performance.Comment: The first two authors contributed equally to this wor
Environmental variables, habitat discontinuity and life history shaping the genetic structure of Pomatoschistus marmoratus
Coastal lagoons are semi-isolated ecosystems
exposed to wide fluctuations of environmental conditions
and showing habitat fragmentation. These features may
play an important role in separating species into different
populations, even at small spatial scales. In this study, we
evaluate the concordance between mitochondrial (previous
published data) and nuclear data analyzing the genetic
variability of Pomatoschistus marmoratus in five localities,
inside and outside the Mar Menor coastal lagoon (SE
Spain) using eight microsatellites. High genetic diversity
and similar levels of allele richness were observed across
all loci and localities, although significant genic and
genotypic differentiation was found between populations
inside and outside the lagoon. In contrast to the FST values
obtained from previous mitochondrial DNA analyses
(control region), the microsatellite data exhibited significant
differentiation among samples inside the Mar Menor
and between lagoonal and marine samples. This pattern
was corroborated using Cavalli-Sforza genetic distances.
The habitat fragmentation inside the coastal lagoon and
among lagoon and marine localities could be acting as a
barrier to gene flow and contributing to the observed
genetic structure. Our results from generalized additive
models point a significant link between extreme lagoonal
environmental conditions (mainly maximum salinity) and
P. marmoratus genetic composition. Thereby, these environmental
features could be also acting on genetic structure
of coastal lagoon populations of P. marmoratus favoring
their genetic divergence. The mating strategy of P. marmoratus
could be also influencing our results obtained from
mitochondrial and nuclear DNA. Therefore, a special
consideration must be done in the selection of the DNA
markers depending on the reproductive strategy of the
species
Robustly Safe Compilation
Secure compilers generate compiled code that withstands many target-level attacks such as alteration of control flow, data leaks or memory corruption. Many existing secure compilers are proven to be fully abstract, meaning that they reflect and preserve observational equivalence. Fully abstract compilation is strong and useful but, in certain cases, comes at the cost of requiring expensive runtime constructs in compiled code. These constructs may have no relevance for security, but are needed to accommodate differences between the source and target languages that fully abstract compilation necessarily needs
The Dutch Y-chromosomal landscape
Previous studies indicated existing, albeit limited, genetic-geographic population substructure in the Dutch population based on genome-wide data and a lack of this for mitochondrial SNP based data. Despite the aforementioned studies, Y-chromosomal SNP data from the Netherlands remain scarce and do not cover the territory of the Netherlands well enough to allow a reliable investigation of genetic-geographic population substructure. Here we provide the first substantial dataset of detailed spatial Y-chromosomal haplogroup information in 2085 males collected across the Netherlands and supplemented with previously published data from northern Belgium. We found Y-chromosomal evidence for genetic-geographic population substructure, and several Y-haplogroups demonstrating significant clinal frequency distributions in different directions. By means of prediction surface maps we could visualize (complex) distribution patterns of individual Y-haplogroups in detail. These results highlight the value of a micro-geographic approach and are of great use for forensic and epidemiological investigations and our understanding of the Dutch population history. Moreover, the previously noted absence of genetic-geographic population substructure in the Netherlands based on mitochondrial DNA in contrast to our Y-chromosome results, hints at different population histories for women and men in the Netherlands.Molecular Technology and Informatics for Personalised Medicine and Healt
Discovery of Western European R1b1a2 Y Chromosome Variants in 1000 Genomes Project Data: An Online Community Approach
The authors have used an online community approach, and tools that were readily available via the Internet, to discover genealogically and therefore phylogenetically relevant Y-chromosome polymorphisms within core haplogroup R1b1a2-L11/S127 (rs9786076). Presented here is the analysis of 135 unrelated L11 derived samples from the 1000 Genomes Project. We were able to discover new variants and build a much more complex phylogenetic relationship for L11 sub-clades. Many of the variants were further validated using PCR amplification and Sanger sequencing. The identification of these new variants will help further the understanding of population history including patrilineal migrations in Western and Central Europe where R1b1a2 is the most frequent haplogroup. The fine-grained phylogenetic tree we present here will also help to refine historical genetic dating studies. Our findings demonstrate the power of citizen science for analysis of whole genome sequence data
Whatâs in a surname? Physique, aptitude, and sports type comparisons between Tailors and Smiths
Combined heredity of surnames and physique, coupled with past marriage patterns and trade-specific physical aptitude and selection factors, may have led to differential assortment of bodily characteristics among present-day men with specific trade-reflecting surnames (Tailor vs. Smith). Two studies reported here were partially consistent with this genetic-social hypothesis, first proposed by BĂ€umler (1980). Study 1 (N = 224) indicated significantly higher self-rated physical aptitude for prototypically strength-related activities (professions, sports, hobbies) in a random sample of Smiths. The counterpart effect (higher aptitude for dexterity-related activities among Tailors) was directionally correct, but not significant, and Tailor-Smith differences in basic physique variables were not significant. Study 2 examined two large datasets (Austria/Germany combined, and UK: N = 7001 and 20532) of menâs national high-score lists for track-and-field events requiring different physiques. In both datasets, proportions of Smiths significantly increased from light-stature over medium-stature to heavy-stature sports categories. The predicted counterpart effect (decreasing prevalences of Tailors along these categories) was not supported. Related prior findings, implicit egotism as an alternative interpretation of the evidence, and directions for further inquiry are discussed in conclusion
Methodology for Y Chromosome Capture: A complete genome sequence of Y chromosome using flow cytometry, laser microdissection and magnetic streptavidin-beads
This study is a comparison of the efficiency of three technologies used for Y chromosome capture and
the next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies applied for determining its whole sequence. Our
main findings disclose that streptavidinâbiotin magnetic particle-based capture methodology offers
better and a deeper sequence coverage for Y chromosome capture, compared to chromosome sorting
and microdissection procedures. Moreover, this methodology is less time consuming and the most
selective for capturing only Y chromosomal material, in contrast with other methodologies that result
in considerable background material from other, non-targeted chromosomes. NGS results compared
between two platforms, NextSeq 500 and SOLID 5500xl, produce the same coverage results. This is the
first study to explore a methodological comparison of Y chromosome capture and genetic analysis. Our
results indicate an improved strategy for Y chromosome research with applications in several scientific
fields where this chromosome plays an important role, such as forensics, medical sciences, molecular
anthropology and cancer sciences.Spanish Alfonso Martin Escudero Foundation for the financial support to one of the
authors of the present work (MJ Alvarez âCubero)
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