9,062 research outputs found
Secret Sharing Based on a Hard-on-Average Problem
The main goal of this work is to propose the design of secret sharing schemes
based on hard-on-average problems. It includes the description of a new
multiparty protocol whose main application is key management in networks. Its
unconditionally perfect security relies on a discrete mathematics problem
classiffied as DistNP-Complete under the average-case analysis, the so-called
Distributional Matrix Representability Problem. Thanks to the use of the search
version of the mentioned decision problem, the security of the proposed scheme
is guaranteed. Although several secret sharing schemes connected with
combinatorial structures may be found in the bibliography, the main
contribution of this work is the proposal of a new secret sharing scheme based
on a hard-on-average problem, which allows to enlarge the set of tools for
designing more secure cryptographic applications
Decision analytic model for evaluation of suspected coronary disease with stress testing and coronary CT angiography.
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to apply a decision analytic model for the evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD) to define the optimal utilization of coronary computed tomographic angiography (cCTA) and stress testing.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The model tested in this study assumes that CAD is evaluated with a stress test and/or cCTA and that a patient with positive evaluation results undergoes cardiac catheterization. On the basis of values of sensitivity, specificity, and radiation dose from the published literature and test costs from the Medicare fee schedule, a decision tree model was constructed as a function of disease prevalence.
RESULTS: The false-negative rate is lowest when cCTA is used as an isolated test. The false-positive rate is minimized when cCTA is used in combination with stress echocardiography. Effective radiation is minimized by use of stress electrocardiography or stress echocardiography alone or prior to cCTA. When the pretest probability of CAD is low, a strategy that uses stress echocardiography followed by cCTA minimizes the false-positive rate and effective radiation exposure, with relatively low imaging costs and with a false-negative rate only slightly higher than a strategy including stress myocardial scintigraphy. As the pretest probability of CAD increases above 20%, the false-negative rate of stress echocardiography followed by cCTA increases by \u3e5% relative to cCTA alone.
CONCLUSION: Effective radiation dose and imaging costs for the workup of CAD may be minimized by an appropriate combination of stress testing and cCTA. A strategy that uses stress echocardiography followed by cCTA is most appropriate for the evaluation of low-risk patients with CAD with a pretest probability \u3c 20%, while cCTA alone may be more appropriate in intermediate-risk patients
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Five hundred years of anthropogenic mercury: spatial and temporal release profiles
When released to the biosphere, mercury (Hg) is very mobile and can take millennia to be returned to a secure, long-term repository. Understanding where and when Hg was released as a result of human activities allows better quantification of present-day reemissions and future trajectories of environmental concentrations. In this work, we estimate the time-varying releases of Hg in seven world regions over the 500 year period, 1510–2010. By our estimation, this comprises 95% of all-time anthropogenic releases. Globally, 1.47 Tg of Hg were released in this period, 23% directly to the atmosphere and 77% to land and water bodies. Cumulative releases have been largest in Europe (427 Gg) and North America (413 Gg). In some world regions (Africa/Middle East and Oceania), almost all (>99%) of the Hg is relatively recent (emitted since 1850), whereas in South America it is mostly of older vintage (63% emitted before 1850). Asia was the greatest-emitting region in 2010, while releases in Europe and North America have declined since the 1970s, as recognition of the risks posed by Hg have led to its phase-out in commercial usage. The continued use of Hg in artisanal and small-scale gold mining means that the Africa/Middle East region is now a major contributor. We estimate that 72% of cumulative Hg emissions to air has been in the form of elemental mercury (Hg0), which has a long lifetime in the atmosphere and can therefore be transported long distances. Our results show that 83% of the total Hg has been released to local water bodies, onto land, or quickly deposited from the air in divalent (HgII) form. Regionally, this value ranges from 77% in Africa/Middle East and Oceania to 89% in South America. Results from global biogeochemical modeling indicate improved agreement of the refined emission estimates in this study with archival records of Hg accumulation in estuarine and deep ocean sediment
Use of Trusted Software Modules for Emergency-Integrity Display
This report provides summary of the interface, mechanisms and semantics for high integrity display of information in a secure computer system, based on the use of a high assurance separation kernel and trusted software modules in both the application domain and the trusted software domain.Grant number: CNS-0430566 and CNS-0430598.Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
Circles in the Sky: Finding Topology with the Microwave Background Radiation
If the universe is finite and smaller than the distance to the surface of
last scatter, then the signature of the topology of the universe is writ large
on the microwave background sky. We show that the microwave background will be
identified at the intersections of the surface of last scattering as seen by
different ``copies'' of the observer. Since the surface of last scattering is a
two-sphere, these intersections will be circles, regardless of the background
geometry or topology. We therefore propose a statistic that is sensitive to all
small, locally homogeneous topologies. Here, small means that the distance to
the surface of last scatter is smaller than the ``topology scale'' of the
universe.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, IOP format. This paper is a direct descendant
of gr-qc/9602039. To appear in a special proceedings issue of Class. Quant.
Grav. covering the Cleveland Topology & Cosmology Worksho
Coulomb Gap and Correlated Vortex Pinning in Superconductors
The positions of columnar pins and magnetic flux lines determined from a
decoration experiment on BSCCO were used to calculate the single--particle
density of states at low temperatures in the Bose glass phase. A wide Coulomb
gap is found, with gap exponent , as a result of the long--range
interaction between the vortices. As a consequence, the variable--range hopping
transport of flux lines is considerably reduced with respect to the
non--interacting case, the effective Mott exponent being enhanced from to for this specific experiment.Comment: 10 pages, Revtex, 4 figures appended as uu-encoded postscript files,
also available as hardcopies from [email protected]
Cardiac risk factors and risk scores vs cardiac computed tomography angiography: a prospective cohort study for triage of ED patients with acute chest pain.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study is to evaluate cardiac risk factors and risk scores for prediction of coronary artery disease (CAD) and adverse outcomes in an emergency department (ED) population judged to be at low to intermediate risk for acute coronary syndrome.
METHODS: Informed consent was obtained from consecutive ED patients who presented with chest pain and were evaluated with coronary computed tomography angiography (cCTA). Cardiac risk factors, clinical presentation, electrocardiogram, and laboratory studies were recorded; the Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) and Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE) scores were tabulated. Coronary computed tomography angiography findings were rated on a 6-level plaque burden scale and classified for significant CAD (stenosis ≥50%). Adverse cardiovascular outcomes were recorded at 30 days.
RESULTS: Among 250 patients evaluated by cCTA, 143 (57%) had no CAD, 64 (26%) demonstrated minimal plaque (70% stenosis). Six patients developed adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Among traditional cardiac risk factors, only age (older) and sex (male) were significant independent predictors of CAD. Correlation with CAD was poor for the TIMI (r = 0.12) and GRACE (r = 0.09-0.23) scores. The TIMI and GRACE scores were not useful to predict adverse outcomes. Coronary computed tomography angiography identified severe CAD in all subjects with adverse outcomes.
CONCLUSION: Among ED patients who present with chest pain judged to be at low to intermediate risk for acute coronary syndrome, traditional risk factors are not useful to stratify risk for CAD and adverse outcomes. Coronary computed tomography angiography is an excellent predictor of CAD and outcome
A Theory of the Longitudinal and Hall Conductivities of the Cuprate Superconductors
We establish the applicability to transport phenomena in the cuprate
superconductors of a nearly antiferromagnetic Fermi liquid (NAFL) description
of the magnetic interaction between planar quasiparticles by using it to obtain
the temperature dependent resistivity and Hall conductivity seen experimentally
in the normal state. Following a perturbative calculation of the anisotropic
(as one goes around the Fermi surface) quasiparticle lifetimes which are the
hallmark of a NAFL, we obtain simple approximate expressions for the
longitudinal, , and Hall, , conductivities which
reflect the magnetic crossovers seen experimentally as one varies the doping
level and temperature. We present a simple phenomenological model for the
variation in mean free path around the Fermi surface, and use this to extract
from experiments on and quasiparticle lifetimes in
the hot (strongly coupled quasiparticle) and cold (weakly coupled
quasiparticle) regions of the Fermi surface which are consistent with the
perturbation theory estimates. We improve upon the latter by carrying out
direct numerical (non-variational) solutions of the Boltzmann equation for
representative members of the YBaCuO and
LaSrCuO systems, with results for transport properties in
quantitative agreement with experiment. Using the same numerical approach we
study the influence of CuO chains on the a-b plane anisotropy and find results
in agreement with experimental findings in YBaCuO.Comment: 49 pages + 24 PostScript figure
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