113 research outputs found
Sensor Fusion Algorithm and Calibration for a Gyroscope-free IMU
AbstractThis paper presents a gyroscope-free inertial measurement unit (IMU) that only consists of linear acceleration sensors. Only a simple matrix multiplication has to be performed in order to calculate the complete relative movement of a body. However, the precise positions and orientations of the sensors within the body frame have to be known in order to calculate the exact movement of the body. A simple and effective calibration algorithm developed in this paper can be applied to determine these parameters entirely even without any previous knowledge. Measurements on a 3D-rotation table were carried out to demonstrate the accuracy improvements after the calibration. Thereby, the RMS error of the angular rate was reduced by a factor of 2.8
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Metabolism of Nonesterified and Esterified Hydroxycinnamic Acids in Red Wines by Brettanomyces bruxellensis
While Brettanomyces can metabolize nonesterified hydroxycinnamic acids found in grape musts/wines (caffeic, p-coumaric, and ferulic acids), it was not known whether this yeast could utilize the corresponding tartaric acid esters (caftaric, p-coutaric, and fertaric acids, respectively). Red wines from Washington and Oregon were inoculated with B. bruxellensis, while hydroxycinnamic acids were monitored by HPLC. Besides consuming p-coumaric and ferulic acids, strains I1a, B1b, and E1 isolated from Washington wines metabolized 40−50% of caffeic acid, a finding in contrast to strains obtained from California wines. Higher molar recoveries of 4-ethylphenol and 4-ethylguaiacol synthesized from p-coumaric and ferulic acids, respectively, were observed in Washington Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah but not Merlot. This finding suggested that Brettanomyces either (a) utilized vinylphenols formed during processing of some wines or (b) metabolized other unidentified phenolic precursors. None of the strains of Brettanomyces studied metabolized caftaric or p-coutaric acids present in wines from Washington or Oregon.Keywords: Volatile phenols, Cinnamates, Hydroxycinnamic acids, Brettanomyces, Phenolic acidsKeywords: Volatile phenols, Cinnamates, Hydroxycinnamic acids, Brettanomyces, Phenolic acid
Cloud-scale VM Deflation for Running Interactive Applications On Transient Servers
Transient computing has become popular in public cloud environments for
running delay-insensitive batch and data processing applications at low cost.
Since transient cloud servers can be revoked at any time by the cloud provider,
they are considered unsuitable for running interactive application such as web
services. In this paper, we present VM deflation as an alternative mechanism to
server preemption for reclaiming resources from transient cloud servers under
resource pressure. Using real traces from top-tier cloud providers, we show the
feasibility of using VM deflation as a resource reclamation mechanism for
interactive applications in public clouds. We show how current hypervisor
mechanisms can be used to implement VM deflation and present cluster deflation
policies for resource management of transient and on-demand cloud VMs.
Experimental evaluation of our deflation system on a Linux cluster shows that
microservice-based applications can be deflated by up to 50\% with negligible
performance overhead. Our cluster-level deflation policies allow overcommitment
levels as high as 50\%, with less than a 1\% decrease in application
throughput, and can enable cloud platforms to increase revenue by 30\%.Comment: To appear at ACM HPDC 202
Rationale and design: telepsychology service delivery for depressed elderly veterans
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Older adults who live in rural areas experience significant disparities in health status and access to mental health care. "Telepsychology," (also referred to as "telepsychiatry," or "telemental health") represents a potential strategy towards addressing this longstanding problem. Older adults may benefit from telepsychology due to its: (1) utility to address existing problematic access to care for rural residents; (2) capacity to reduce stigma associated with traditional mental health care; and (3) utility to overcome significant age-related problems in ambulation and transportation. Moreover, preliminary evidence indicates that telepsychiatry programs are often less expensive for patients, and reduce travel time, travel costs, and time off from work. Thus, telepsychology may provide a cost-efficient solution to access-to-care problems in rural areas.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We describe an ongoing four-year prospective, randomized clinical trial comparing the effectiveness of an empirically supported treatment for major depressive disorder, Behavioral Activation, delivered either via in-home videoconferencing technology ("Telepsychology") or traditional face-to-face services ("Same-Room"). Our hypothesis is that in-homeTelepsychology service delivery will be equally effective as the traditional mode (Same-Room). Two-hundred twenty-four (224) male and female elderly participants will be administered protocol-driven individual Behavioral Activation therapy for depression over an 8-week period; and subjects will be followed for 12-months to ascertain longer-term effects of the treatment on three outcomes domains: (1) clinical outcomes (symptom severity, social functioning); (2) process variables (patient satisfaction, treatment credibility, attendance, adherence, dropout); and (3) economic outcomes (cost and resource use).</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Results from the proposed study will provide important insight into whether telepsychology service delivery is as effective as the traditional mode of service delivery, defined in terms of clinical, process, and economic outcomes, for elderly patients with depression residing in rural areas without adequate access to mental health services.</p> <p>Trial registration</p> <p>National Institutes of Health Clinical Trials Registry (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier# NCT00324701).</p
Observing Relative Motion With Three Accelerometer Triads
A gyroscope-free inertial measurement unit (GF-IMU) detects the relative motion of a body based on acceleration measurements only. It consists of multiple transducers attached at distinct locations within the body that together form an accelerometer array. In this paper, we employ only three accelerometer triads in order to completely capture the transversal and angular acceleration as well as the angular velocity. By modeling the GF-IMU as a nonlinear control system, we are able to conduct an observability analysis, which shows that this approach is capable of capturing an arbitrary spatial motion. We also show that additional triads only provide redundant information. Based on the control system formulation, we derive the models required to employ a nonlinear Kalman filter as a state observer. As the system description is of a general form they are suitable for any accelerometer array regardless of the number and placement of the transducers. Hence, the presented Kalman filter approach is applicable to all observable GF-IMU configurations. The measurements taken with a prototype on a 3-D rotation table confirm the observability analysis. The evaluations also show that the approach using three accelerometer triads achieves an estimation accuracy comparable with that of arrays employing a higher number of triads
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