44 research outputs found
Information security methodology, replication studies and information security education
International audienc
Toward an experimental proof of superhydrophobicity enhanced by quantum fluctuations freezing on a broadband-absorber metamaterial
Previous theoretical works suggested that superhydrophobicity could be
enhanced through partial inhibition of the quantum vacuum modes at the surface
of a broadband-absorber metamaterial which acts in the extreme ultraviolet
frequency domain. This effect would then compete with the classical
Cassie-Baxter interpretation of superhydrophobicity. In this article, we first
theoretically establish the expected phenomenological features related to such
a kind of "quantum" superhydrophobicity. Then, relying on this theoretical
framework, we experimentally study patterned silicon surfaces on which
organosilane molecules were grafted, all the coated surfaces having similar
characteristic pattern sizes but different profiles. Some of these surfaces can
indeed freeze quantum photon modes while others cannot. While the latter ones
allow hydrophobicity, only the former ones allow for superhydrophobicity. We
believe these results lay the groundwork for further complete assessment of
superhydrophobicity induced by quantum fluctuations freezing.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, final version, accepted for publication in
Journal of Applied Physic
On improving 5G internet of radio light security based on led fingerprint identification method
Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. In this paper, a novel device identification method is proposed to improve the security of Visible Light Communication (VLC) in 5G networks. This method extracts the fingerprints of Light-Emitting Diodes (LEDs) to identify the devices accessing the 5G network. The extraction and identification mechanisms have been investigated from the theoretical perspective as well as verified experimentally. Moreover, a demonstration in a practical indoor VLC-based 5G network has been carried out to evaluate the feasibility and accuracy of this approach. The fingerprints of four identical white LEDs were extracted successfully from the received 5G NR (New Radio) signals. To perform identification, four types of machine-learning-based classifiers were employed and the resulting accuracy was up to 97.1%.EU Horizon 2020 program towards the Internet of Radio-Light project H2020-ICT 761992
Expertise in surgical neuro-oncology. Results of a survey by the EANS neuro-oncology section
Introduction: Technical advances and the increasing role of interdisciplinary decision-making may warrant formal definitions of expertise in surgical neuro-oncology. Research question: The EANS Neuro-oncology Section felt that a survey detailing the European neurosurgical perspective on the concept of expertise in surgical neuro-oncology might be helpful. Material and methods: The EANS Neuro-oncology Section panel developed an online survey asking questions regarding criteria for expertise in neuro-oncological surgery and sent it to all individual EANS members. Results: Our questionnaire was completed by 251 respondents (consultants: 80.1%) from 42 countries. 67.7% would accept a lifetime caseload of >200 cases and 86.7% an annual caseload of >50 as evidence of neuro-oncological surgical expertise. A majority felt that surgeons who do not treat children (56.2%), do not have experience with spinal fusion (78.1%) or peripheral nerve tumors (71.7%) may still be considered experts. Majorities believed that expertise requires the use of skull-base approaches (85.8%), intraoperative monitoring (83.4%), awake craniotomies (77.3%), and neuro-endoscopy (75.5%) as well as continuing education of at least 1/year (100.0%), a research background (80.0%) and teaching activities (78.7%), and formal interdisciplinary collaborations (e.g., tumor board: 93.0%). Academic vs. non-academic affiliation, career position, years of neurosurgical experience, country of practice, and primary clinical interest had a minor influence on the respondentsâ opinions. Discussion and conclusion: Opinions among neurosurgeons regarding the characteristics and features of expertise in neuro-oncology vary surprisingly little. Large majorities favoring certain thresholds and qualitative criteria suggest a consensus definition might be possible
Expertise in surgical neuro-oncology. Results of a survey by the EANS neuro-oncology section
Introduction: Technical advances and the increasing role of interdisciplinary decision-making may warrant formal definitions of expertise in surgical neuro-oncology. Research question: The EANS Neuro-oncology Section felt that a survey detailing the European neurosurgical perspective on the concept of expertise in surgical neuro-oncology might be helpful. Material and methods: The EANS Neuro-oncology Section panel developed an online survey asking questions regarding criteria for expertise in neuro-oncological surgery and sent it to all individual EANS members. Results: Our questionnaire was completed by 251 respondents (consultants: 80.1%) from 42 countries. 67.7% would accept a lifetime caseload of >200 cases and 86.7% an annual caseload of >50 as evidence of neuro-oncological surgical expertise. A majority felt that surgeons who do not treat children (56.2%), do not have experience with spinal fusion (78.1%) or peripheral nerve tumors (71.7%) may still be considered experts. Majorities believed that expertise requires the use of skull-base approaches (85.8%), intraoperative monitoring (83.4%), awake craniotomies (77.3%), and neuro-endoscopy (75.5%) as well as continuing education of at least 1/year (100.0%), a research background (80.0%) and teaching activities (78.7%), and formal interdisciplinary collaborations (e.g., tumor board: 93.0%). Academic vs. non-academic affiliation, career position, years of neurosurgical experience, country of practice, and primary clinical interest had a minor influence on the respondentsâ opinions. Discussion and conclusion: Opinions among neurosurgeons regarding the characteristics and features of expertise in neuro-oncology vary surprisingly little. Large majorities favoring certain thresholds and qualitative criteria suggest a consensus definition might be possible
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A Scaleable and License Free 5G Internet of Radio Light Architecture for Services in Train Stations
In this paper we present a 5G Internet Radio-
Light (IoRL) architecture for underground train stations that
can be readily deployed because it utilizes unlicensed visible light
and millimeter wave part of the spectrum, which does not require
Mobile Network Operator (MNO) permission to deploy and
which is used to provide travelers with accurate location,
interaction, access to Internet and Cloud based Services, such as
high resolution video on a Tablet PC. The paper describes the
train station use cases and the IoRL architecture.European Commissio
A Scalable and License Free 5G Internet of Radio Light Architecture for Services in Homes & Businesses
In this paper we present a 5G Internet Radio-Light
(IoRL) architecture for homes that can be readily deployed
because it utilizes unlicensed visible light and millimeter wave
part of the spectrum, which does not require Mobile Network
Operator (MNO) permission to deploy and which is used to
provide inhabitants of houses with accurate location, interaction,
access to Internet and Cloud based services such as high
resolution video on a Tablet PC. The paper describes the home
use cases and the IoRL architecture.EU Horizon 202
A blood atlas of COVID-19 defines hallmarks of disease severity and specificity.
Treatment of severe COVID-19 is currently limited by clinical heterogeneity and incomplete description of specific immune biomarkers. We present here a comprehensive multi-omic blood atlas for patients with varying COVID-19 severity in an integrated comparison with influenza and sepsis patients versus healthy volunteers. We identify immune signatures and correlates of host response. Hallmarks of disease severity involved cells, their inflammatory mediators and networks, including progenitor cells and specific myeloid and lymphocyte subsets, features of the immune repertoire, acute phase response, metabolism, and coagulation. Persisting immune activation involving AP-1/p38MAPK was a specific feature of COVID-19. The plasma proteome enabled sub-phenotyping into patient clusters, predictive of severity and outcome. Systems-based integrative analyses including tensor and matrix decomposition of all modalities revealed feature groupings linked with severity and specificity compared to influenza and sepsis. Our approach and blood atlas will support future drug development, clinical trial design, and personalized medicine approaches for COVID-19
Attempts at DNP isolation from callus and tumour tissues of Nicotiana tabacum
This paper deals with a preliminary investigation of ONP originating from tumour and callus tissues of Nicotiana tabacum. DNP preparations from tumour tissue contained on the average: 54.88% of protein, 38.4% of DNA and 2,9% of RNA. The N/P ratio value fluctuated within the limits 4.8â5.8. The respective mean values for DNP preparations from callus tissue were: 57.3; 21.6 and 13.l%. The NAP ratio was 4.7-6.6