1,866 research outputs found
Correction to: Ten years malaria trend at Arjo-Didessa sugar development site and its vicinity, Southwest Ethiopia: a retrospective study.
Following publication of the original article [1], it came to the authors' attention that unfortunately the last name of one of the authors is spelled incorrectly in the published article
Modeling and Simulation of Spark Streaming
As more and more devices connect to Internet of Things, unbounded streams of
data will be generated, which have to be processed "on the fly" in order to
trigger automated actions and deliver real-time services. Spark Streaming is a
popular realtime stream processing framework. To make efficient use of Spark
Streaming and achieve stable stream processing, it requires a careful interplay
between different parameter configurations. Mistakes may lead to significant
resource overprovisioning and bad performance. To alleviate such issues, this
paper develops an executable and configurable model named SSP (stands for Spark
Streaming Processing) to model and simulate Spark Streaming. SSP is written in
ABS, which is a formal, executable, and object-oriented language for modeling
distributed systems by means of concurrent object groups. SSP allows users to
rapidly evaluate and compare different parameter configurations without
deploying their applications on a cluster/cloud. The simulation results show
that SSP is able to mimic Spark Streaming in different scenarios.Comment: 7 pages and 13 figures. This paper is published in IEEE 32nd
International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications
(AINA 2018
What do they eat? A survey of eat-out habit of university students in Taiwan
[EN] Main purpose of this research is trying to understand food likeliness of
Taiwan college students, and probe whether these food are healthy. Three
survey steps are taken as: step 1, market survey for what kind of foods are
selling around the campuses; step 2, questionnaire investigation for students
food preference; step 3, analyzing whether these favorite foods are healthy or
not. The result shows: major consideration for students food selection are
“taste” and “price”; 63% of students are taking food or snacks late at night
at least once a week. Top three most favorite foods are: Taiwanese fries (yan
su ji), carbon grilled chicken and fried fish steaks. Quantities of these foods
are small, prices are low, and easy access from roadside food stands.
Problems of them are high calories, easy to accumulate free radical in
human body, plus insanitary food processing environment. They are harmful
to student health. We suggest Taiwan government take it seriouslyShih, K.; Wang, M.; Shih, H.; Lee, S.; Lin, T. (2020). What do they eat? A survey of eat-out habit of university students in Taiwan. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. 421-430. https://doi.org/10.4995/INN2019.2019.10562OCS42143
The impact of long-lasting microbial larvicides in reducing malaria transmission and clinical malaria incidence: study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial.
BACKGROUND: The massive scale-up of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) has led to a substantial increase in malaria vector insecticide resistance as well as in increased outdoor transmission, both of which hamper the effectiveness and efficiency of ITN and IRS. Long-lasting microbial larvicide can be a cost-effective new supplemental intervention tool for malaria control. METHODS/DESIGN: We will implement the long-lasting microbial larvicide intervention in 28 clusters in two counties in western Kenya. We will test FourStar controlled release larvicide (6 % by weight Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis and 1 % Bacillus sphaerius) by applying FourStar controlled release granule formulation, 90-day briquettes, and 180-day briquettes in different habitat types. The primary endpoint is clinical malaria incidence rate and the secondary endpoint is malaria vector abundance and transmission intensity. The intervention will be conducted as a two-step approach. First, we will conduct a four-cluster trial (two clusters per county, with one of the two clusters randomly assigned to the intervention arm) to optimize the larvicide application scheme. Second, we will conduct an open-label, cluster-randomized trial to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the larvicide. Fourteen clusters in each county will be assigned to intervention (treatment) or no intervention (control) by a block randomization on the basis of clinical malaria incidence, vector density, and human population size per site. We will treat each treatment cluster with larvicide for three rounds at 4-month intervals, followed by no treatment for the following 8 months. Next, we will switch the control and treatment sites. The former control sites will receive three rounds of larvicide treatment at appropriate time intervals, and former treatment sites will receive no larvicide. We will monitor indoor and outdoor vector abundance using CO2-baited CDC light traps equipped with collection bottle rotators. Clinical malaria data will be aggregated from government-run malaria treatment centers. DISCUSSION: Since current first-line vector intervention methods do not target outdoor transmission and will select for higher insecticide resistance, new methods beyond bed nets and IRS should be considered. Long-lasting microbial larviciding represents a promising new tool that can target both indoor and outdoor transmission and alleviate the problem of pyrethroid resistance. It also has the potential to diminish costs by reducing larvicide reapplications. If successful, it could revolutionize malaria vector control in Africa, just as long-lasting bed nets have done. TRIAL REGISTRATION: U.S. National Institute of Health, study ID NCT02392832 . Registered on 3 February 2015
Disordered Fe vacancies and superconductivity in potassium-intercalated iron selenide (K2-xFe4+ySe5)
The parent compound of an unconventional superconductor must contain unusual
correlated electronic and magnetic properties of its own. In the high-Tc
potassium intercalated FeSe, there has been significant debate regarding what
the exact parent compound is. Our studies unambiguously show that the
Fe-vacancy ordered K2Fe4Se5 is the magnetic, Mott insulating parent compound of
the superconducting state. Non-superconducting K2Fe4Se5 becomes a
superconductor after high temperature annealing, and the overall picture
indicates that superconductivity in K2-xFe4+ySe5 originates from the Fe-vacancy
order to disorder transition. Thus, the long pending question whether magnetic
and superconducting state are competing or cooperating for cuprate
superconductors may also apply to the Fe-chalcogenide superconductors. It is
believed that the iron selenides and related compounds will provide essential
information to understand the origin of superconductivity in the iron-based
superconductors, and possibly to the superconducting cuprates
Esophageal Food Impaction: A Homemade Suction Tube Attached to Esophagogastroduodenoscopy for Food Bolus Removal
The most common esophageal foreign body in adults is impacted food bolus. Polypectomy snares, Dormia baskets, retrieval nets, rat-tooth forceps, alligator forceps or polyp graspers are usually used to remove it. Here, we report the case of a 78-year-old woman whose esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) showed a firm goose liver impacted tightly in the lower esophagus; all of the above-mentioned retrieval instruments could not remove it. We used a homemade device by attaching a modified nasogastric tube to an EGD and successfully removed the goose liver by suction under endoscopic visualization. The method is very effective to remove firm and tightly impacted materials in a narrow lumen. When the usual retrieval instruments fail, a homemade suction tube attached to an EGD is an alternative
Dextromethorphan in the treatment of early myoclonic encephalopathy evolving into migrating partial seizures in infancy
Epileptic encephalopathy with suppression-burst in electroencephalography (EEG) can evolve into a few types of epileptic syndromes. We present here an unusual case of early myoclonic encephalopathy that evolved into migrating partial seizures in infancy. A female neonate initially had erratic myoclonus movements, hiccups, and a suppression-burst pattern in EEG that was compatible with early myoclonic encephalopathy. The seizures were controlled with dextromethorphan (20 mg/kg), and a suppression-burst pattern in EEG was reverted to relatively normal background activity. However, at 72 days of age, alternating focal tonic seizures, compatible with migrating partial seizures in infancy, were demonstrated by the 24-hour EEG recording. The seizures responded poorly to dextromethorphan. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of early myoclonic encephalopathy evolving into migrating partial seizure in infancy. Whether it represents another age-dependent epilepsy evolution needs more clinical observation
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