16,058 research outputs found
A Security Monitoring Framework For Virtualization Based HEP Infrastructures
High Energy Physics (HEP) distributed computing infrastructures require
automatic tools to monitor, analyze and react to potential security incidents.
These tools should collect and inspect data such as resource consumption, logs
and sequence of system calls for detecting anomalies that indicate the presence
of a malicious agent. They should also be able to perform automated reactions
to attacks without administrator intervention. We describe a novel framework
that accomplishes these requirements, with a proof of concept implementation
for the ALICE experiment at CERN. We show how we achieve a fully virtualized
environment that improves the security by isolating services and Jobs without a
significant performance impact. We also describe a collected dataset for
Machine Learning based Intrusion Prevention and Detection Systems on Grid
computing. This dataset is composed of resource consumption measurements (such
as CPU, RAM and network traffic), logfiles from operating system services, and
system call data collected from production Jobs running in an ALICE Grid test
site and a big set of malware. This malware was collected from security
research sites. Based on this dataset, we will proceed to develop Machine
Learning algorithms able to detect malicious Jobs.Comment: Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Computing in High
Energy and Nuclear Physics, CHEP 2016, 10-14 October 2016, San Francisco.
Submitted to Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS
Label-free electrical detection of DNA hybridization using carbon nanotubes and graphene
The interface between biosystems and nanomaterials is emerging for detection of various biomolecules and subtle cellular activities. In particular, the development of cost-effective and sequence-selective DNA detection is urgent for the diagnosis of genetic or pathogenic diseases. Graphene-based nanocarbon materials, such as carbon nanotubes and thin graphene layers, have been employed as biosensors because they are biocompatible, extraordinarily sensitive, and promising for large-area detection. Electrical and label-free detection of DNA can be achieved by monitoring the conductance change of devices fabricated from these carbon materials. Here, the recent advances in this research area are briefly reviewed. The key issues and perspectives of future development are also discussed
L1CAM binds ErbB receptors through Ig-like domains coupling cell adhesion and neuregulin signalling.
During nervous system development different cell-to-cell communication mechanisms operate in parallel guiding migrating neurons and growing axons to generate complex arrays of neural circuits. How such a system works in coordination is not well understood. Cross-regulatory interactions between different signalling pathways and redundancy between them can increase precision and fidelity of guidance systems. Immunoglobulin superfamily proteins of the NCAM and L1 families couple specific substrate recognition and cell adhesion with the activation of receptor tyrosine kinases. Thus it has been shown that L1CAM-mediated cell adhesion promotes the activation of the EGFR (erbB1) from Drosophila to humans. Here we explore the specificity of the molecular interaction between L1CAM and the erbB receptor family. We show that L1CAM binds physically erbB receptors in both heterologous systems and the mammalian developing brain. Different Ig-like domains located in the extracellular part of L1CAM can support this interaction. Interestingly, binding of L1CAM to erbB enhances its response to neuregulins. During development this may synergize with the activation of erbB receptors through L1CAM homophilic interactions, conferring diffusible neuregulins specificity for cells or axons that interact with the substrate through L1CAM
Corrosion studies of different ferrous alloys for rolling cylinders
peer reviewedThe aim of this work is to study the corrosion behaviour in chloride media of a high chromium iron alloy. The influence of the surface finishing as well as the heat treatment was analysed. The technique employed for measuring the corrosion behaviour was the Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy, an electrochemical technique that allows the observation not only of the corrosion rates but also the changes on the corrosion mechanism of the alloy. The results showed that it is worth performing a double tempering and a having smoother surface finishing only for long exposure periods. A comparison between different oxidising conditions was also performed simulating the life in service of the hot rolling cylinders and revealed an increase in the protective properties as the oxidising time increased due to the chromium present on the alloy (18%). (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
X-chromosomal haplotype frequencies of four linkage groups in a population of Argentina
DNA samples of hundred ten unrelated anonymized male individuals living in province of Entre Rios, Argentina, were genotyped using Investigador Argus X-12 system (Qiagen) for 12 STRs in four haplogroups. The frequency of most common haplotype was 0.02727, 0.06364, 0.03636, and 0.03636 for haplogroups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The Match Probability was 6.0E-08 and the mean exclusion chance was 0.999999936. This work presents the first haplotype frequency data for Investigator Argus X-12 system in a population of Argentina
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