2,775 research outputs found
Music Reactive LED Lights
This project enhances the user’s music listening experience by not only adding but also synchronizing visuals to the music. The project digitally analyzes music being played back and controls LEDs to give an audio-visual experience. This report describes the materials and knowledge used to create a proof of concept for a wireless and portable music reactive LED lighting system
Learning Contextual Bandits in a Non-stationary Environment
Multi-armed bandit algorithms have become a reference solution for handling
the explore/exploit dilemma in recommender systems, and many other important
real-world problems, such as display advertisement. However, such algorithms
usually assume a stationary reward distribution, which hardly holds in practice
as users' preferences are dynamic. This inevitably costs a recommender system
consistent suboptimal performance. In this paper, we consider the situation
where the underlying distribution of reward remains unchanged over (possibly
short) epochs and shifts at unknown time instants. In accordance, we propose a
contextual bandit algorithm that detects possible changes of environment based
on its reward estimation confidence and updates its arm selection strategy
respectively. Rigorous upper regret bound analysis of the proposed algorithm
demonstrates its learning effectiveness in such a non-trivial environment.
Extensive empirical evaluations on both synthetic and real-world datasets for
recommendation confirm its practical utility in a changing environment.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, To appear on ACM Special Interest Group on
Information Retrieval (SIGIR) 201
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An unfolded protein-induced conformational switch activates mammalian IRE1.
The unfolded protein response (UPR) adjusts the cell's protein folding capacity in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) according to need. IRE1 is the most conserved UPR sensor in eukaryotic cells. It has remained controversial, however, whether mammalian and yeast IRE1 use a common mechanism for ER stress sensing. Here, we show that similar to yeast, human IRE1α's ER-lumenal domain (hIRE1α LD) binds peptides with a characteristic amino acid bias. Peptides and unfolded proteins bind to hIRE1α LD's MHC-like groove and induce allosteric changes that lead to its oligomerization. Mutation of a hydrophobic patch at the oligomerization interface decoupled peptide binding to hIRE1α LD from its oligomerization, yet retained peptide-induced allosteric coupling within the domain. Importantly, impairing oligomerization of hIRE1α LD abolished IRE1's activity in living cells. Our results provide evidence for a unifying mechanism of IRE1 activation that relies on unfolded protein binding-induced oligomerization
Tail Separation and Density Effects on the Underwater Trajectory of the JDAM
Ninth Monterey International Symposium on Technology and Mine Problems, Society for Counter-Ordnance TechnologyThe Navy is in need of an organic, inexpensive, swift method to neutralize
or sweep waterborne mines. This paper presents an alternative to current mine
countermeasure technologies that fulfill this criteria - the use of the Joint Direct
Attack Munition (JDAM) to clear a minefield. Our experimental and modeling
study strongly suggest high efficiency of the JABS for mine clearance in the very
shallow water (depth less than 12.2 m)
Collecting, analyzing and archiving of ground based infrared solar spectra obtained from several locations
The infrared solar spectrum as observed from the ground under high resolution contains thousands of absorption lines. The majority of these lines are due to compounds that are present in the Earth's atmosphere. Ground based infrared solar spectra contain information concerning the composition of the atmosphere at the time the spectra were obtained. The objective of this program is to record solar spectra from various ground locations, and to analyze and archive these spectra. The analysis consists of determining, for as many of the absorption lines as possible, the molecular species responsible for the absorption, and to verify that current models of infrared transmission match the observed spectra. Archiving is an important part of the program, since a number of the features in the spectra have not been identified. At some later time, when the features are identified, it will be possible to determine the amount of that compound that was present in the atmosphere at the time the spectrum was taken
Invariant sets for discontinuous parabolic area-preserving torus maps
We analyze a class of piecewise linear parabolic maps on the torus, namely
those obtained by considering a linear map with double eigenvalue one and
taking modulo one in each component. We show that within this two parameter
family of maps, the set of noninvertible maps is open and dense. For cases
where the entries in the matrix are rational we show that the maximal invariant
set has positive Lebesgue measure and we give bounds on the measure. For
several examples we find expressions for the measure of the invariant set but
we leave open the question as to whether there are parameters for which this
measure is zero.Comment: 19 pages in Latex (with epsfig,amssymb,graphics) with 5 figures in
eps; revised version: section 2 rewritten, new example and picture adde
Synapse-Associated Expression of an Acetylcholine Receptor-Inducing Protein, ARIA/Heregulin, and Its Putative Receptors, ErbB2 and ErbB3, in Developing Mammalian Muscle
AbstractDeveloping motor axons induce synaptic specializations in muscle fibers, including preferential transcription of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunit genes by subsynaptic nuclei. One candidate nerve-derived signaling molecule is AChR-inducing activity (ARIA)/heregulin, a ligand of the erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases. Here, we asked whether ARIA and erbB kinases are expressed in patterns compatible with their proposed signaling roles. In developing muscle, ARIA was present not only at synaptic sites, but also in extrasynaptic regions of the muscle fiber. ARIA was synthesized, rather than merely taken up, by muscle cells, as indicated by the presence of ARIA mRNA in muscle and of ARIA protein in a clonal muscle cell line. ARIA-responsive myotubes expressed both erbB2 and erbB3, but little EGFR/erbB1 or erbB4. In adults, erbB2 and erbB3 were localized to the postsynaptic membrane. ErbB3 was restricted to the postsynaptic membrane perinatally, at a time when ARIA was still broadly distributed. Thus, our data are consistent with a model in which ARIA interacts with erbB kinases on the muscle cell surface to provide a local signal that induces synaptic expression of AChR genes. However, much of the ARIA is produced by muscle, not nerve, and the spatially restricted response may result from the localization of erbB kinases as well as of ARIA. Finally, we show that erbB3 is not concentrated at synaptic sites in mutant mice that lack rapsyn, a cytoskeletal protein required for AChR clustering, suggesting that pathways for synaptic AChR expression and clustering interact
Ten Years of Experience Training Non-Physician Anesthesia Providers in Haiti.
Surgery is increasingly recognized as an effective means of treating a proportion of the global burden of disease, especially in resource-limited countries. Often non-physicians, such as nurses, provide the majority of anesthesia; however, their training and formal supervision is often of low priority or even non-existent. To increase the number of safe anesthesia providers in Haiti, Médecins Sans Frontières has trained nurse anesthetists (NAs) for over 10 years. This article describes the challenges, outcomes, and future directions of this training program. From 1998 to 2008, 24 students graduated. Nineteen (79%) continue to work as NAs in Haiti and 5 (21%) have emigrated. In 2008, NAs were critical in providing anesthesia during a post-hurricane emergency where they performed 330 procedures. Mortality was 0.3% and not associated with lack of anesthesiologist supervision. The completion rate of this training program was high and the majority of graduates continue to work as nurse anesthetists in Haiti. Successful training requires a setting with a sufficient volume and diversity of operations, appropriate anesthesia equipment, a structured and comprehensive training program, and recognition of the training program by the national ministry of health and relevant professional bodies. Preliminary outcomes support findings elsewhere that NAs can be a safe and effective alternative where anesthesiologists are scarce. Training non-physician anesthetists is a feasible and important way to scale up surgical services resource limited settings
Scaling properties of cavity-enhanced atom cooling
We extend an earlier semiclassical model to describe the dissipative motion
of N atoms coupled to M modes inside a coherently driven high-finesse cavity.
The description includes momentum diffusion via spontaneous emission and cavity
decay. Simple analytical formulas for the steady-state temperature and the
cooling time for a single atom are derived and show surprisingly good agreement
with direct stochastic simulations of the semiclassical equations for N atoms
with properly scaled parameters. A thorough comparison with standard free-space
Doppler cooling is performed and yields a lower temperature and a cooling time
enhancement by a factor of M times the square of the ratio of the atom-field
coupling constant to the cavity decay rate. Finally it is shown that laser
cooling with negligible spontaneous emission should indeed be possible,
especially for relatively light particles in a strongly coupled field
configuration.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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