8,912 research outputs found

    The role of English as a lingua franca in social integration: The case of the international students of a university in Taiwan

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    Globalization and the ease of mobility across nations in the last decade or so have brought some fundamental changes to the structural organization and operation of universities worldwide. To enhance global competitiveness, East Asian universities, in particular, have seen a growth in the intake of international students. A majority of the previous studies on students studying abroad were undertaken in the context of English-speaking countries such as the UK and USA; research investigating students coming from afar to study in countries which are predominantly Chinese-speaking appears to be lacking. Even scanter is the work related to how this group of students navigates through the social way-of-life at the university. This article explores the social integration of the international students of a bilingual university located in northern Taiwan. More specifically, the role English as a lingua franca plays in the integration will be examined based on the narrative accounts of 14 informants. The findings suggest that some institutional and individual obstacles need to be overcome before English can become more widely accepted as the common medium of communication.published_or_final_versio

    A soft coarse-grained reconfigurable array based high-level synthesis methodology: Promoting design productivity and exploring extreme FPGA frequency

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    Compared to the use of a typical software development flow, the productivity of developing FPGA-based compute applications remains much lower. Although the use of high-level synthesis (HLS) tools may partly alleviate this shortcoming, the lengthy low-level FPGA implementation process remains a major obstacle to high productivity computing, limiting the number of compile-debug-edit cycles per day. Furthermore, high-level application developers often lack the intimate hardware engineering experience that is needed to achieve high performance on FPGAs, therefore undermining their usefulness as accelerators. To address the productivity and performance problems, a HLS methodology that utilizes soft coarse-grained reconfigurable arrays (SCGRAs) as an intermediate compilation step is presented. Instead of compiling high-level applications directly to circuits, the compilation process is reduced to an operation scheduling task targeting the SCGRA. © 2013 IEEE.published_or_final_versio

    A model for peak matrix performance on FPGAs

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    Computations involving matrices form the kernel of a large spectrum of computationally demanding applications for which FPGAs have actively been utilized as accelerators. The performances of such matrix operations on FPGAs are related to underlying architectural parameters such as computational resources, memory and I/O bandwidth. A model that gives bounds on the peak performance of matrix-vector and matrix-matrix multiplication operations on FPGAs based on these parameters is presented. The architecture and efficiency of existing implementations are compared against the model. Future trends in matrix performance on FPGA devices are estimated based on the performance model and system parameters from the past decade. © 2011 IEEE.published_or_final_versio

    An experimental investigation on friction characteristics of air flow in microtube with structured surface roughness

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    This paper was presented at the 3rd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2011), which was held at the Makedonia Palace Hotel, Thessaloniki in Greece. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Thessaly, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute.Experiments were conducted in this research to investigate roughness effect to flow characteristics and heat transfer coefficient of air and CO2 flow in circular micro-tubes. The internal surface of tested tube included smooth, structure helical fin surfaces and random roughness surfaces. Smooth tube is a commercial S. S. 304 tube with internal diameter of 962 μm and average roughness Ra=0.8 μm, while rough circular tubes were lab made Nickel tube with diameters ranging from 926 μm to 977 μm and roughness elements from 5.3 μm to 44.6 μm in height. The experimental results indicated that f and Nu in smooth tube was predicted very well by conventional correlations both for air and CO2. In rough tubes the friction factor was significant higher than the prediction of conventional correlations both in laminar and turbulent flow. Heat transfer enhancement in laminar flow is slightly, nevertheless, in turbulent flow the heat transfer enhancement was significant and the enhancement increases with the increasing of Re. The random rough tubes revealed a higher heat transfer enhancement than the structured helical fin tubes

    A comparison of SAR image speckle filters

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    High quality images of Earth produced by synthetic aperture radar (SAR) systems have become increasingly available, however, SAR images are difficult to interpret. Speckle reduction remains one of the major issues in SAR imaging process, although speckle has been extensively studied for decades. Many reconstruction filters have been proposed and they can be classified into two categories: multilook and/or minimum mean-square error (MMSE) despeckling using the speckle model; and maximum a posteriori (MAP) or maximum likihood (ML) despeckling using the product model. The most well known Lee, Kuan, and Frost filters belong to first category. These filters are based on conventional techniques that were originally derived for stationary signals, such as MMSE. In the second category, filters are based on the product model, such as the MAP Gaussian filter and the Gamma filter, and require knowledge of the a priori probability density function. These filters force speckle to have nonstationary Gaussian or gamma distributed intensity mean. The speckle filtering is mainly Bayesian model fitting that optimizes the MAP criteria. Scene reconstruction is performed using an inversion of the ascending chain. An objective measure is required to compare the technical merits of these filters, and Shi et al. presented a comparison 15 years ago. In this paper, a brief introduction of speckle, product, and filter models is summarized. A review of some most widely used SAR image speckle filters is given. And stationary speckle filters, like Lee, Kuan, and Frost filters, and nonstationary speckle filters like Gamma MAP filter are studied. Despeckling results on stationary and nonstationary SAR image of these speckle filters are presented. © 2009 Copyright SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering.published_or_final_versio

    Preventing Advanced Persistent Threats in Complex Control Networks

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    An Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) is an emerging attack against Industrial Control and Automation Systems, that is executed over a long period of time and is difficult to detect. In this context, graph theory can be applied to model the interaction among nodes and the complex attacks affecting them, as well as to design recovery techniques that ensure the survivability of the network. Accordingly, we leverage a decision model to study how a set of hierarchically selected nodes can collaborate to detect an APT within the network, concerning the presence of changes in its topology. Moreover, we implement a response service based on redundant links that dynamically uses a secret sharing scheme and applies a flexible routing protocol depending on the severity of the attack. The ultimate goal is twofold: ensuring the reachability between nodes despite the changes and preventing the path followed by messages from being discovered.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Pharmacologically blocking p53-dependent apoptosis protects intestinal stem cells and mice from radiation.

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    Exposure to high levels of ionizing radiation (IR) leads to debilitating and dose-limiting gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity. Using three-dimensional mouse crypt culture, we demonstrated that p53 target PUMA mediates radiation-induced apoptosis via a cell-intrinsic mechanism, and identified the GSK-3 inhibitor CHIR99021 as a potent radioprotector. CHIR99021 treatment improved Lgr5+ cell survival and crypt regeneration after radiation in culture and mice. CHIR99021 treatment specifically blocked apoptosis and PUMA induction and K120 acetylation of p53 mediated by acetyl-transferase Tip60, while it had no effect on p53 stabilization, phosphorylation or p21 induction. CHIR99021 also protected human intestinal cultures from radiation by PUMA but not p21 suppression. These results demonstrate that p53 posttranslational modifications play a key role in the pathological and apoptotic response of the intestinal stem cells to radiation and can be targeted pharmacologically

    Exploring the X-ray and γ-ray properties of the redback millisecond pulsar PSR J1723-2837

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