180 research outputs found

    Designing Secure Ethereum Smart Contracts: A Finite State Machine Based Approach

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    The adoption of blockchain-based distributed computation platforms is growing fast. Some of these platforms, such as Ethereum, provide support for implementing smart contracts, which are envisioned to have novel applications in a broad range of areas, including finance and Internet-of-Things. However, a significant number of smart contracts deployed in practice suffer from security vulnerabilities, which enable malicious users to steal assets from a contract or to cause damage. Vulnerabilities present a serious issue since contracts may handle financial assets of considerable value, and contract bugs are non-fixable by design. To help developers create more secure smart contracts, we introduce FSolidM, a framework rooted in rigorous semantics for designing con- tracts as Finite State Machines (FSM). We present a tool for creating FSM on an easy-to-use graphical interface and for automatically generating Ethereum contracts. Further, we introduce a set of design patterns, which we implement as plugins that developers can easily add to their contracts to enhance security and functionality

    Leguminous lectins as tools for studying the role of sugar residues in leukocyte recruitment.

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    The natural physiological ligands for selectins are oligosaccharides found in glycoprotein or glycolipid molecules in cell membranes. In order to study the role of sugar residues in the in vivo lectin anti-inflammatory effect, we tested three leguminous lectins with different carbohydrate binding affinities in the peritonitis and paw oedema models induced by carrageenin in rats. L. sericeus lectin was more anti-inflammatory than D. virgata lectin, the effects being reversed by their specific binding sugars (N-acetylglucosamine and alpha-methylmannoside, respectively). However, V. macrocarpa, a galactose-specific lectin, was not anti-inflammatory. The proposed anti-inflammatory activity of lectins could be due to a blockage of neutrophil-selectin carbohydrate ligands. Thus, according to the present data, we suggest an important role for N-acetylglucosamine residue as the major ligand for selectins on rat neutrophil membranes

    SAT-based Explicit LTL Reasoning

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    We present here a new explicit reasoning framework for linear temporal logic (LTL), which is built on top of propositional satisfiability (SAT) solving. As a proof-of-concept of this framework, we describe a new LTL satisfiability tool, Aalta\_v2.0, which is built on top of the MiniSAT SAT solver. We test the effectiveness of this approach by demonnstrating that Aalta\_v2.0 significantly outperforms all existing LTL satisfiability solvers. Furthermore, we show that the framework can be extended from propositional LTL to assertional LTL (where we allow theory atoms), by replacing MiniSAT with the Z3 SMT solver, and demonstrating that this can yield an exponential improvement in performance

    Efeito alelopático do extrato bruto de Brachiaria decumbens na germinação e no vigor de sementes e de plântulas de Brachiaria brizantha.

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    Objetivou-se identificar os possíveis efeitos alelopáticos produzidos pelo extrato bruto de um acesso da coleção de Brachiaria spp da Embrapa Gado de Corte, denominado Brachiaria decumbens BRA001996 na germinação, no vigor de sementes e no vigor de plântulas de três cultivares de B. brizantha (cvs. Marandu, BRS Piatã e Xaraés). As sementes das cultivares foram semeadas em papel germitest, colocadas em gerbox e incubadas em câmara climática com fotoperíodo controlado. Utilizaram-se quatro repetições de 100 sementes para os testes de germinação e vigor e 25 sementes para o teste de vigor de plântulas. O extrato bruto foi obtido das folhas da gramínea, por meio de técnica laboratorial utilizada para detecção e quantificação de avaliação de saponinas esteroidais. Foram avaliadas duas testemunhas: uma somente com água destilada e outra com água destilada e acrescida de 1% de DMSO e quatro concentrações: 1,85g/mL (10%); 3,7g/mL (20%); 5,55g/mL (30%) e 9,25 mg/mL (50%), totalizando seis tratamentos. Observou-se efeito ?dose-resposta? inibitório significativo (P<0,05) em todos as variáveis avaliadas, nas sementes das três cultivares estudadas. Sabendo-se que os compostos hormonais agem estimulando ou inibindo o metabolismo celular, sugere-se que os efeitos alelopáticos observados no presente trabalho possam estar relacionados ao efeito direto das saponinas esteroidais nas células das sementes e das plântulas das B. brizantha avaliadas. Conclui-se que o extrato bruto de Brachiaria decumbens BRA001996 reduz o vigor e a germinação das sementes, bem como o vigor das plântulas de Brachiaria brizantha, cultivares Xaraés, Piatã e Marandu.bitstream/item/68749/1/DOC188.pd

    A Functional Architecture of Optic Flow in the Inferior Parietal Lobule of the Behaving Monkey

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    The representation of navigational optic flow across the inferior parietal lobule was assessed using optical imaging of intrinsic signals in behaving monkeys. The exposed cortex, corresponding to the dorsal-most portion of areas 7a and dorsal prelunate (DP), was imaged in two hemispheres of two rhesus monkeys. The monkeys actively attended to changes in motion stimuli while fixating. Radial expansion and contraction, and rotation clockwise and counter-clockwise optic flow stimuli were presented concentric to the fixation point at two angles of gaze to assess the interrelationship between the eye position and optic flow signal. The cortical response depended upon the type of flow and was modulated by eye position. The optic flow selectivity was embedded in a patchy architecture within the gain field architecture. All four optic flow stimuli tested were represented in areas 7a and DP. The location of the patches varied across days. However the spatial periodicity of the patches remained constant across days at ∼950 and 1100 µm for the two animals examined. These optical recordings agree with previous electrophysiological studies of area 7a, and provide new evidence for flow selectivity in DP and a fine scale description of its cortical topography. That the functional architectures for optic flow can change over time was unexpected. These and earlier results also from inferior parietal lobule support the inclusion of both static and dynamic functional architectures that define association cortical areas and ultimately support complex cognitive function

    Extending nuXmv with Timed Transition Systems and Timed Temporal Properties

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    nuXmv is a well-known symbolic model checker, which implements various state-of-the-art algorithms for the analysis of finite- and infinite-state transition systems and temporal logics. In this paper, we present a new version that supports timed systems and logics over continuous super-dense semantics. The system specification was extended with clocks to constrain the timed evolution. The support for temporal properties has been expanded to include \textsc {MTL}_{0,\infty } formulas with parametric intervals. The analysis is performed via a reduction to verification problems in the discrete-time case. The internal representation of traces has been extended to go beyond the lasso-shaped form, to take into account the possible divergence of clocks. We evaluated the new features by comparing nuXmv with other verification tools for timed automata and \textsc {MTL}_{0,\infty }, considering different benchmarks from the literature. The results show that nuXmv is competitive with and in many cases performs better than state-of-the-art tools, especially on validity problems for \textsc {MTL}_{0,\infty }

    Recruitment of lateral rostral prefrontal cortex in spontaneous and task-related thoughts

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    Behavioural and neuroimaging studies suggest that spontaneous and task-related thought processes share common cognitive mechanisms and neural bases. Lateral rostral prefrontal cortex (RPFC) is a brain region that has been implicated both in spontaneous thought and in high-level cognitive control processes, such as goal/subgoal integration and the manipulation of self-generated thoughts. We therefore propose that the recruitment of lateral RPFC may follow a U-shaped function of cognitive demand: relatively high in low-demand situations conducive to the emergence of spontaneous thought, and in high-demand situations depending on processes supported by this brain region. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate brain activity while healthy participants performed two tasks, each with three levels of cognitive demands, in a block design. The frequency of task-unrelated thoughts, measured by questionnaire, was highest in the low cognitive demand condition. Low and high cognitive demand conditions were each compared to the intermediate level. Lateral RPFC and superior parietal cortex were recruited in both comparisons, with additional activations specific to each contrast. These results suggest that RPFC is involved both when (a) task demands are low, and the mind wanders, and (b) the task requires goal/subgoal integration and manipulation of self-generated thoughts

    How sharing can contribute to more sustainable cities

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    \ua9 2017 by the authors. Recently, much of the literature on sharing in cities has focused on the sharing economy, in which people use online platforms to share underutilized assets in the marketplace. This view of sharing is too narrow for cities, as it neglects the myriad of ways, reasons, and scales in which citizens share in urban environments. Research presented here by the Liveable Cities team in the form of participant workshops in Lancaster and Birmingham, UK, suggests that a broader approach to understanding sharing in cities is essential. The research also highlighted tools and methods that may be used to help to identify sharing in communities. The paper ends with advice to city stakeholders, such as policymakers, urban planners, and urban designers, who are considering how to enhance sustainability in cities through sharing

    Contributions of the Medial Prefrontal Cortex to Social Influence in Economic Decision-Making

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    Economic decisions are guided by highly subjective reward valuations (SVs). Often these SVs are overridden when individuals conform to social norms. Yet, the neural mechanisms that underpin the distinct processing of such normative reward valuations (NV) are poorly understood. The dorsomedial and ventromedial portions of the prefrontal cortex (dmPFC/vmPFC) are putatively key regions for processing social and economic information respectively. However, the contribution of these regions to economic decisions guided by social norms is unclear. Using fMRI and computational modelling we examine the neural mechanisms underlying the processing of SVs and NVs. Subjects (n = 15) indicated either their own economic preferences or made similar choices based on a social norm - learnt during a training session. We found that that the vmPFC and dmPFC make dissociable contributions to the processing of SV and NV. Regions of the dmPFC processed only the value of rewards when making normative choices. In contrast, we identify a novel mechanism in the vmPFC for the coding of value. This region signalled both subjective and normative valuations, but activity was scaled positively for SV and negatively for NV. These results highlight some of the key mechanisms that underpin conformity and social influence in economic decision-making
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