6,357 research outputs found
A live vaccine against Neospora caninum abortions in cattle
CommentaryMichael P. Reichel, Dadín P. Moore, Andrew Hemphill, Luis M. Ortega-Mora, J.P. Dubey, John T. Elli
Dutch parallel corpus: a balanced parallel corpus for Dutch-English and Dutch-French
status: publishe
Recommended from our members
Queues don't matter when you can JUMP them!
QJUMP is a simple and immediately deployable approach
to controlling network interference in datacenter
networks. Network interference occurs when congestion
from throughput-intensive applications causes queueing
that delays traffic from latency-sensitive applications.
To mitigate network interference, QJUMP applies Internet
QoS-inspired techniques to datacenter applications.
Each application is assigned to a latency sensitivity level
(or class). Packets from higher levels are rate-limited
in the end host, but once allowed into the network can
“jump-the-queue” over packets from lower levels. In settings
with known node counts and link speeds, QJUMP
can support service levels ranging from strictly bounded
latency (but with low rate) through to line-rate throughput
(but with high latency variance).
We have implemented QJUMP as a Linux Traffic Control
module. We show that QJUMP achieves bounded
latency and reduces in-network interference by up to
300×, outperforming Ethernet Flow Control (802.3x),
ECN (WRED) and DCTCP. We also show that QJUMP
improves average flow completion times, performing
close to or better than DCTCP and pFabric.This work was supported
by a Google Fellowship, EPSRC INTERNET Project
EP/H040536/1, Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA) and Air Force Research Laboratory
(AFRL), under contract FA8750-11-C-0249.This is the final published version. It first appeared at https://www.usenix.org/conference/nsdi15/technical-sessions/presentation/grosvenor
Systematic review of the behavioural assessment of pain in cats
Objectives The objectives were to review systematically the range of assessment tools used in cats to detect the
behavioural expression of pain and the evidence of their quality; and to examine behavioural metrics (considering
both the sensory and affective domains) used to assess pain.
Methods A search of PubMed and ScienceDirect, alongside articles known to the authors, from 2000 onwards, for
papers in English was performed. This was followed by a manual search of the references within the primary data
sources. Only peer-reviewed publications that provided information on the assessment tool used to evaluate the
behavioural expression of pain in cats, in conscious animals (not anaesthetised cats), were included.
Results No previous systematic reviews were identified. One hundred papers were included in the final assessment.
Studies were primarily related to the assessment of pain in relation to surgical procedures, and no clear distinction
was made concerning the onset of acute and chronic pain. Ten broad types of instrument to assess pain were
identified, and generally the quality of evidence to support the use of the various instruments was poor. Only
one specific instrument (UNESP-Botucatu scale) had published evidence of validity, reliability and sensitivity at
the level of a randomised control trial, but with a positive rather than placebo control, and limited to its use in the
ovariohysterectomy situation. The metrics used within the tools appeared to focus primarily on the sensory aspect
of pain, with no study clearly discriminating between the sensory and affective components of pain.
Conclusions and relevance Further studies are required to provide a higher quality of evidence for methods used
to assess pain in cats. Furthermore, a consistent definition for acute and chronic pain is needed. Tools need to
be validated that can detect pain in a range of conditions and by different evaluators (veterinary surgeons and
owners), which consider both the sensory and emotional aspects of pain
Evidence for a fractional quantum Hall state with anisotropic longitudinal transport
At high magnetic fields, where the Fermi level lies in the N=0 lowest Landau
level (LL), a clean two-dimensional electron system (2DES) exhibits numerous
incompressible liquid phases which display the fractional quantized Hall effect
(FQHE) (Das Sarma and Pinczuk, 1997). These liquid phases do not break
rotational symmetry, exhibiting resistivities which are isotropic in the plane.
In contrast, at lower fields, when the Fermi level lies in the third
and several higher LLs, the 2DES displays a distinctly different class of
collective states. In particular, near half filling of these high LLs the 2DES
exhibits a strongly anisotropic longitudinal resistance at low temperatures
(Lilly et al., 1999; Du et al., 1999). These "stripe" phases, which do not
exhibit the quantized Hall effect, resemble nematic liquid crystals, possessing
broken rotational symmetry and orientational order (Koulakov et al., 1996;
Fogler et al., 1996; Moessner and Chalker, 1996; Fradkin and Kivelson, 1999;
Fradkin et al, 2010). Here we report a surprising new observation: An
electronic configuration in the N=1 second LL whose resistivity tensor
simultaneously displays a robust fractionally quantized Hall plateau and a
strongly anisotropic longitudinal resistance resembling that of the stripe
phases.Comment: Nature Physics, (2011
5D gravity and the discrepant G measurements
It is shown that 5D Kaluza-Klein theory stabilized by an external bulk scalar
field may solve the discrepant laboratory G measurements. This is achieved by
an effective coupling between gravitation and the geomagnetic field.
Experimental considerations are also addressed.Comment: 13 pages, to be published in: Proceedings of the 18th Course of the
School on Cosmology and Gravitation: The gravitational Constant. Generalized
gravitational theories and experiments (30 April-10 May 2003, Erice). Ed. by
G. T. Gillies, V. N. Melnikov and V. de Sabbata, (Kluwer), 13pp. (in print)
(2003
Predictors of failed attendances in a multi-specialty outpatient centre using electronic databases.
BACKGROUND: Failure to keep outpatient medical appointments results in inefficiencies and costs. The objective of this study is to show the factors in an existing electronic database that affect failed appointments and to develop a predictive probability model to increase the effectiveness of interventions. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted on outpatient clinic attendances at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore from 2000 to 2004. 22864 patients were randomly sampled for analysis. The outcome measure was failed outpatient appointments according to each patient's latest appointment. RESULTS: Failures comprised of 21% of all appointments and 39% when using the patients' latest appointment. Using odds ratios from the mutliple logistic regression analysis, age group (0.75 to 0.84 for groups above 40 years compared to below 20 years), race (1.48 for Malays, 1.61 for Indians compared to Chinese), days from scheduling to appointment (2.38 for more than 21 days compared to less than 7 days), previous failed appointments (1.79 for more than 60% failures and 4.38 for no previous appointments, compared with less than 20% failures), provision of cell phone number (0.10 for providing numbers compared to otherwise) and distance from hospital (1.14 for more than 14 km compared to less than 6 km) were significantly associated with failed appointments. The predicted probability model's diagnostic accuracy to predict failures is more than 80%. CONCLUSION: A few key variables have shown to adequately account for and predict failed appointments using existing electronic databases. These can be used to develop integrative technological solutions in the outpatient clinic
Unary probabilistic and quantum automata on promise problems
We continue the systematic investigation of probabilistic and quantum finite
automata (PFAs and QFAs) on promise problems by focusing on unary languages. We
show that bounded-error QFAs are more powerful than PFAs. But, in contrary to
the binary problems, the computational powers of Las-Vegas QFAs and
bounded-error PFAs are equivalent to deterministic finite automata (DFAs).
Lastly, we present a new family of unary promise problems with two parameters
such that when fixing one parameter QFAs can be exponentially more succinct
than PFAs and when fixing the other parameter PFAs can be exponentially more
succinct than DFAs.Comment: Minor correction
Characterization of Shewanella oneidensis MtrC: a cell-surface decaheme cytochrome involved in respiratory electron transport to extracellular electron acceptors
MtrC is a decaheme c-type cytochrome associated with the outer cell membrane of Fe(III)-respiring species of the Shewanella genus. It is proposed to play a role in anaerobic respiration by mediating electron transfer to extracellular mineral oxides that can serve as terminal electron acceptors. The present work presents the first spectropotentiometric and voltammetric characterization of MtrC, using protein purified from Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. Potentiometric titrations, monitored by UV–vis absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, reveal that the hemes within MtrC titrate over a broad potential range spanning between approximately +100 and approximately -500 mV (vs. the standard hydrogen electrode). Across this potential window the UV–vis absorption spectra are characteristic of low-spin c-type hemes and the EPR spectra reveal broad, complex features that suggest the presence of magnetically spin-coupled low-spin c-hemes. Non-catalytic protein film voltammetry of MtrC demonstrates reversible electrochemistry over a potential window similar to that disclosed spectroscopically. The voltammetry also allows definition of kinetic properties of MtrC in direct electron exchange with a solid electrode surface and during reduction of a model Fe(III) substrate. Taken together, the data provide quantitative information on the potential domain in which MtrC can operate
Temporal dynamics of aquatic communities and implications for pond conservation
Conservation through the protection of particular habitats is predicated on the assumption that the conservation value of those habitats is stable. We test this assumption for ponds by investigating temporal variation in macroinvertebrate and macrophyte communities over a 10-year period in northwest England. We surveyed 51 ponds in northern England in 1995/6 and again in 2006, identifying all macrophytes (167 species) and all macroinvertebrates (221 species, excluding Diptera) to species. The alpha-diversity, beta-diversity and conservation value of these ponds were compared between surveys. We find that invertebrate species richness increased from an average of 29. 5 species to 39. 8 species between surveys. Invertebrate gamma-diversity also increased between the two surveys from 181 species to 201 species. However, this increase in diversity was accompanied by a decrease in beta-diversity. Plant alpha-, beta and gamma-diversity remained approximately constant between the two periods. However, increased proportions of grass species and a complete loss of charophytes suggests that the communities are undergoing succession. Conservation value was not correlated between sampling periods in either plants or invertebrates. This was confirmed by comparing ponds that had been disturbed with those that had no history of disturbance to demonstrate that levels of correlation between surveys were approximately equal in each group of ponds. This study has three important conservation implications: (i) a pond with high diversity or high conservation value may not remain that way and so it is unwise to base pond conservation measures upon protecting currently-speciose habitats; (ii) maximising pond gamma-diversity requires a combination of late and early succession ponds, especially for invertebrates; and (iii) invertebrate and plant communities in ponds may require different management strategies if succession occurs at varying rates in the two groups
- …
