1,031 research outputs found
Triggering and event building results using the C104 packet routing chip
The C104 is an asynchronous 32-way dynamic packet routing chip. It has a 264Mbytes/s bi-directional bandwidth and a 1 µsec switching latency. It offers high-density cost- effective commodity communications, which allow large switching networks to be con- structed. Results are presented on the performance of this switching technology within the context of future High Energy Physics level II and level III trigger data traffic patterns
Combined Active Noise Control and noise reduction in Hearing Aids
International audienceThis paper presents a combined active noise control and noise reduction scheme for hearing aids to tackle secondary path effects and effects of signal leakage through the fitting. While such leakage contributions and the secondary accoustic path from the reciever to the tympanic membrane are usually not taken into account in standard noise reduction systems, they appear to have a non-negligible impact on the final signal quality. Integrating an active noise control system in the existing noise reduction algorithm helps to compensate for these effects. A Filtered-x Multichannel Wiener Filter is presented and compared experimentally with a classic Multichannel Wiener Filter in a noise reduction framework
Brief report: Follow-up outcomes of Multisystemic Therapy for adolescents with intellectual disabilities and the influence of parental intellectual disability
Research on follow‐up outcomes of systemic interventions for family members with an intellectual disability is scarce. In this study, short‐term and long‐term follow‐up outcomes of multisystemic therapy for adolescents with antisocial or delinquent behaviour and an intellectual disability (MST‐ID) are reported. In addition, the role of parental intellectual disability was examined. Outcomes of 55 families who had received MST‐ID were assessed at the end of treatment and at 6‐month, 12‐month and 18‐month follow‐up. Parental intellectual disability was used as a predictor of treatment outcomes. Missing data were handled using multiple imputation. Rule‐breaking behaviour of adolescents declined during treatment and stabilized until 18 months post‐treatment. The presence or absence of parental intellectual disability did not predict treatment outcomes. This study was the first to report long‐term outcomes of MST‐ID. The intervention achieved similar results in families with and without parents with an intellectual disability
Shimura varieties in the Torelli locus via Galois coverings of elliptic curves
We study Shimura subvarieties of obtained from families of
Galois coverings where is a smooth complex
projective curve of genus and . We give the complete list
of all such families that satisfy a simple sufficient condition that ensures
that the closure of the image of the family via the Torelli map yields a
Shimura subvariety of for and for all and
for and . In a previous work of the first and second author
together with A. Ghigi [FGP] similar computations were done in the case .
Here we find 6 families of Galois coverings, all with and
and we show that these are the only families with satisfying this
sufficient condition. We show that among these examples two families yield new
Shimura subvarieties of , while the other examples arise from
certain Shimura subvarieties of already obtained as families of
Galois coverings of in [FGP]. Finally we prove that if a family
satisfies this sufficient condition with , then .Comment: 18 pages, to appear in Geometriae Dedicat
Evaluation of the throughput computed with a dataflow model : a case study
Providing real-time guarantees in complex, heterogeneous, and embedded multiprocessor systems is an important issue because they affect the perceived quality. Digital signal processing algorithms are often modeled with dataflow models. A guaranteed minimum throughput can be computed from such dataflow model. In this paper we analyze three causes for the difference between the computed and measured throughput. We measure the throughput with a cycle accurate simulation. For our channel equalizer application the measured throughput is 10.1% higher than the computed minimum throughput
Adaptive NLMS Partial Crosstalk Cancellation in Digital Subscriber Lines
Crosstalk is a major limitation to achieving high data-rates in next generation VDSL systems. Whilst crosstalk cancellation can be applied to completely remove crosstalk, it is often too complex for application in typical VDSL binders, which can contain up to hundreds of lines. A practical alternative, known as partial cancellation limits the cancellation to crosstalkers that cause severe interference to the other lines within the binder. In real VDSL systems, the crosstalk environment changes rapidly as new lines come online; old lines go offline, and the crosstalk channels change with fluctuations in ambient temperature. Therefore, adaptive crosstalk cancellers are often required. In this paper, we propose a new detection guided adaptive NLMS method for Adaptive Partial Crosstalk Cancellation that detects significant crosstalkers and tracks variations in their crosstalk channels. This exploits the sparse and column-wise diagonal dominant properties of the crosstalk channel matrix and leads to fast convergence, accurate crosstalk channel tracking, with a lower update complexity. The end result is an adaptive Partial Crosstalk Cancellation algorithm that has lower run-time complexity than prior state-of-the-art whilst yielding comparatively high data-rates and reliable service
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