1,470 research outputs found

    Zombie Theory, a Reader, sous la direction de Sarah Juliet Lauro

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    Depuis la seconde moitié du vingtième siècle, la figure du zombie a envahi la culture populaire. Entre Night of the Living Dead de Romero (1968) et la très récente série The Walking Dead, le zombie s'est propagé et a connu de nombreuses transformations. S'il est presque toujours cette créature anthropophage, dénuée de conscience et animée par un insatiable appétit, les questions que soulèvent son apparition varient. La façon dont il brouille les limites physiques et conceptuelles entre la vie..

    Thermal traits for reproduction and recruitment differ between Arctic and Atlantic kelp Laminaria digitata

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    The plasticity of different kelp populations to heat stress has seldom been investigated excluding environmental effects due to thermal histories, by raising a generation under common garden conditions. Comparisons of populations in the absence of environmental effects allow unbiased quantification of the meta-population adaptive potential and resolution of population-specific differentiation. Following this approach, we tested the hypothesis that genetically distinct arctic and temperate kelp exhibit different thermal phenotypes, by comparing the capacity of their microscopic life stages to recover from elevated temperatures. Gametophytes of Laminaria digitata (Arctic and North Sea) grown at 15°C for 3 years were subjected to common garden conditions with static or dynamic (i.e., gradual) thermal treatments ranging between 15 and 25°C and also to darkness. Gametophyte growth and survival during thermal stress conditions, and subsequent sporophyte recruitment at two recovery temperatures (5 and 15°C), were investigated. Population-specific responses were apparent; North Sea gametophytes exhibited higher growth rates and greater sporophyte recruitment than those from the Arctic when recovering from high temperatures, revealing differential thermal adaptation. All gametophytes performed poorly after recovery from a static 8-day exposure at 22.5°C compared to the response under a dynamic thermal treatment with a peak temperature of 25°C, demonstrating the importance of gradual warming and/or acclimation time in modifying thermal limits. Recovery temperature markedly affected the capacity of gametophytes to reproduce following high temperatures, regardless of the population. Recovery at 5°C resulted in higher sporophyte production following a 15°C and 20°C static exposure, whereas recovery at 15°C was better for gametophyte exposures to static 22.5°C or dynamic heat stress to 25°C. The subtle performance differences between populations originating from sites with contrasting local in situ temperatures support our hypothesis that their thermal plasticity has diverged over evolutionary time scales.FCT: PTDC/MAR-EST/6053/2014/ UID/Multi/04326/2019/ BIODIVERSA/0004/2015/ SFRH/BPD/122567/2016/ DL 57/2016/CP1361/CT0039/ SFRH/BSAB/150485/2019info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Snakebites and COVID-19: two crises, one research and development opportunity.

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    Despite inherent differences, Snakebite Envenoming and COVID- 19 have much in common in terms of research and development (R&D) challenges and opportunities. Both crises require a diversified portfolio of R&D solutions, ranging from diagnostics to treatments, that can effectively work and be accessible in different resource settings. Collaborative clinical research and streamlined regulatory pathways are critical to accelerate these candidates in the R&D pipeline. Transformative progress is possible with a concerted approach that aligns strong political will, coordinated financing and the needs of the most marginalised communities

    Metal-silicate silicon isotopic fractionation and the composition of the bulk Earth

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    F. M. acknowledges funding from the European Research Council under the H2020 framework program/ERC grant agreement (#637503-Pristine).PostprintPeer reviewe

    X-shooter, NACO, and AMBER observations of the LBV Pistol Star \footnote{Based on ESO runs 85.D-0182A, 085.D-0625AC}

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    We present multi-instruments and multi-wavelengths observations of the famous LBV star Pistol Star. These observations are part of a larger program about early O stars at different metallicities. The Pistol star has been claimed as the most massive star known, with 250 solar masses. We present the preliminary results based on X-Shooter spectra, as well as the observations performed with the VLTI-AMBER and the VLT-NACO adaptive optics. The X-shooter spectrograph allows to obtain simultaneously a spectrum from the UV to the K-band with a resolving power of \sim15000. The preliminary results obtained indicate that Pistol Star has similar properties of Eta Car, including shells of matter, but also the binarity. Other objects of the program, here briefly presented, were selected for their particular nature: early O stars with mass discrepancies between stellar evolution models and observations, discrepancies with the wind momentum luminosity relation.Comment: Poster at the 39th LIAC, submitted version of the proceeding

    Note on the noise growth of the RNS variants of the BFV scheme

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    In a recent work, Al Badawi et al. have noticed a different behaviour of the noise growth in practice between the two RNS variants of BFV from Bajard et al. and Halevi et al. Their experiments, based on the PALISADE and SEAL libraries, have shown that the multiplicative depth reached, in practice, by the first one was considerably smaller than the second one while theoretically equivalent in the worst-case. Their interpretation of this phenomenon was that the approximations used by Bajard et al. made the expansion factor behave differently than what the Central Limit Theorem would predict. We have realized that this difference actually comes from the implementation of the SmMRq procedure of Bajard et al. in SEAL and PALISADE which is slightly different than what Bajard et al. had proposed. In this note we show that by fixing this small difference, the multiplicative depth of both variants is actually the same in practice

    An HPR variant of the FV scheme: Computationally Cheaper, Asymptotically Faster

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    State-of-the-art implementations of homomorphic encryption exploit the Fan and Vercauteren (FV) scheme and the Residue Number System (RNS). While the RNS breaks down large integer arithmetic into smaller independent channels, its non-positional nature makes operations such as division and rounding hard to implement, and makes the representation of small values inefficient. In this work, we propose the application of the Hybrid Position-Residues Number System representation to the FV scheme. This is a positional representation of large radix where the digits are represented in RNS. It inherits the benefits from RNS and allows to accelerate the critical division and rounding operations while also making the representation of smaller values more compact. This directly benefits the decryption and the homomorphic multiplication procedures, reducing their asymptotic complexity, in dimension nn, from O(n2logn)\mathcal{O} (n^2 \log n) to O(nlogn)\mathcal{O} (n \log n) and from O(n3logn)\mathcal{O}(n^3 \log n) to O(n3)\mathcal{O} (n^{3}), respectively. This has also resulted in noticeable speedups when experimentally compared to related art RNS implementations
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