104 research outputs found

    smt: a Matlab structured matrices toolbox

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    We introduce the smt toolbox for Matlab. It implements optimized storage and fast arithmetics for circulant and Toeplitz matrices, and is intended to be transparent to the user and easily extensible. It also provides a set of test matrices, computation of circulant preconditioners, and two fast algorithms for Toeplitz linear systems.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure, 1 typo corrected in the abstrac

    Business process variant analysis based on mutual fingerprints of event logs

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    Comparing business process variants using event logs is a common use case in process mining. Existing techniques for process variant analysis detect statistically-significant differences between variants at the level of individual entities (such as process activities) and their relationships (e.g. directly-follows relations between activities). This may lead to a proliferation of differences due to the low level of granularity in which such differences are captured. This paper presents a novel approach to detect statistically-significant differences between variants at the level of entire process traces (i.e. sequences of directly-follows relations). The cornerstone of this approach is a technique to learn a directly-follows graph called mutual fingerprint from the event logs of the two variants. A mutual fingerprint is a lossless encoding of a set of traces and their duration using discrete wavelet transformation. This structure facilitates the understanding of statistical differences along the control-flow and performance dimensions. The approach has been evaluated using real-life event logs against two baselines. The results show that at a trace level, the baselines cannot always reveal the differences discovered by our approach, or can detect spurious differences.This research is partly funded by the Australian Research Council (DP180102839) and Spanish funds MINECO and FEDER (TIN2017-86727-C2-1-R).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    The role of cranial CT in the investigation of meningitis

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    More patients with meningitis are undergoing CT and the number of inappropriate requests are increasing. There are few abnormal CT scans presenting a contraindication for lumbar puncture and the majority of these patients usually have clinical signs to suggest raised intracranial pressure

    First Phase 1 Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Rectal Microbicide Trial Using UC781 Gel with a Novel Index of Ex Vivo Efficacy

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    Objectives: Successful control of the HIV/AIDS pandemic requires reduction of HIV-1 transmission at sexually-exposed mucosae. No prevention studies of the higher-risk rectal compartment exist. We report the first-in-field Phase 1 trial of a rectally-applied, vaginally-formulated microbicide gel with the RT-inhibitor UC781 measuring clinical and mucosal safety, acceptability and plasma drug levels. A first-in-Phase 1 assessment of preliminary pharmacodynamics was included by measuring changes in ex vivo HIV-1 suppression in rectal biopsy tissue after exposure to product in vivo. Methods: HIV-1 seronegative, sexually-abstinent men and women (N = 36) were randomized in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial comparing UC781 gel at two concentrations (0.1%, 0.25%) with placebo gel (1:1:1). Baseline, single-dose exposure and a separate, 7-day at-home dosing were assessed. Safety and acceptability were primary endpoints. Changes in colorectal mucosal markers and UC781 plasma drug levels were secondary endpoints; ex vivo biopsy infectibility was an ancillary endpoint. Results: All 36 subjects enrolled completed the 7-14 week trial (100% retention) including 3 flexible sigmoidoscopies, each with 28 biopsies (14 at 10 cm; 14 at 30 cm). There were 81 Grade 1 adverse events (AEs) and 8 Grade 2; no Grade 3, 4 or procedure-related AEs were reported. Acceptability was high, including likelihood of future use. No changes in mucosal immunoinflammatory markers were identified. Plasma levels of UC781 were not detected. Ex vivo infection of biopsies using two titers of HIV-1 BaL showed marked suppression of p24 in tissues exposed in vivo to 0.25% UC781; strong trends of suppression were seen with the lower 0.1% UC781 concentration. Conclusions: Single and 7-day topical rectal exposure to both concentrations of UC781 were safe with no significant AEs, high acceptability, no detected plasma drug levels and no significant mucosal changes. Ex vivo biopsy infections demonstrated marked suppression of HIV infectibility, identifying a potential early biomarker of efficacy. (Registered at ClinicalTrials.gov; #NCT00408538). © 2011 Anton et al

    A three-dimensional human atrial model with fiber orientation. Electrograms and arrhythmic activation patterns relationship

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    The most common sustained cardiac arrhythmias in humans are atrial tachyarrhythmias, mainly atrial fibrillation. Areas of complex fractionated atrial electrograms and high dominant frequency have been proposed as critical regions for maintaining atrial fibrillation; however, there is a paucity of data on the relationship between the characteristics of electrograms and the propagation pattern underlying them. In this study, a realistic 3D computer model of the human atria has been developed to investigate this relationship. The model includes a realistic geometry with fiber orientation, anisotropic conductivity and electrophysiological heterogeneity. We simulated different tachyarrhythmic episodes applying both transient and continuous ectopic activity. Electrograms and their dominant frequency and organization index values were calculated over the entire atrial surface. Our simulations show electrograms with simple potentials, with little or no cycle length variations, narrow frequency peaks and high organization index values during stable and regular activity as the observed in atrial flutter, atrial tachycardia (except in areas of conduction block) and in areas closer to ectopic activity during focal atrial fibrillation. By contrast, cycle length variations and polymorphic electrograms with single, double and fragmented potentials were observed in areas of irregular and unstable activity during atrial fibrillation episodes. Our results also show: 1) electrograms with potentials without negative deflection related to spiral or curved wavefronts that pass over the recording point and move away, 2) potentials with a much greater proportion of positive deflection than negative in areas of wave collisions, 3) double potentials related with wave fragmentations or blocking lines and 4) fragmented electrograms associated with pivot points. Our model is the first human atrial model with realistic fiber orientation used to investigate the relationship between different atrial arrhythmic propagation patterns and the electrograms observed at more than 43000 points on the atrial surface.This work was partially supported by the Plan Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica, Desarrollo e Innovacion Tecnologica, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion of Spain (TEC2008-02090), by the Plan Avanza (Accion Estrategica de Telecomunicaciones y Sociedad de la Informacion), Ministerio de Industria Turismo y Comercio of Spain (TSI-020100-2010-469), by the Programa Prometeo 2012 of the Generalitat Valenciana and by the Programa de Apoyo a la Investigacion y Desarrollo de la Universitat Politecnica de Valencia (PAID-06-11-2002). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Tobón Zuluaga, C.; Ruiz Villa, CA.; Heidenreich, E.; Romero Pérez, L.; Hornero, F.; Saiz Rodríguez, FJ. (2013). A three-dimensional human atrial model with fiber orientation. Electrograms and arrhythmic activation patterns relationship. PLoS ONE. 8(2):1-13. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050883S11382Ho SY, Sanchez-Quintana D, Anderson RH (1998) Can anatomy define electric pathways? In: International Workshop on Computer Simulation and Experimental Assessment of Electrical Cardiac Function, Lausanne, Switzerland. 77–86.Tobón C (2009) Evaluación de factores que provocan fibrilación auricular y de su tratamiento mediante técnicas quirúrgicas. Estudio de simulación. Master Thesis Universitat Politècnica de València.Ruiz C (2010) Estudio de la vulnerabilidad a reentradas a través de modelos matemáticos y simulación de la aurícula humana. Doctoral Thesis Universitat Politècnica de València.Tobón C (2010) Modelización y evaluación de factores que favorecen las arritmias auriculares y su tratamiento mediante técnicas quirúrgicas. Estudio de simulación. Doctoral Thesis Universitat Politècnica de València.Henriquez, C. S., & Papazoglou, A. A. (1996). Using computer models to understand the roles of tissue structure and membrane dynamics in arrhythmogenesis. Proceedings of the IEEE, 84(3), 334-354. doi:10.1109/5.486738Grimm, R. A., Chandra, S., Klein, A. L., Stewart, W. J., Black, I. W., Kidwell, G. A., & Thomas, J. D. (1996). Characterization of left atrial appendage Doppler flow in atrial fibrillation and flutter by Fourier analysis. American Heart Journal, 132(2), 286-296. doi:10.1016/s0002-8703(96)90424-xMaleckar, M. M., Greenstein, J. L., Giles, W. R., & Trayanova, N. A. (2009). K+ current changes account for the rate dependence of the action potential in the human atrial myocyte. American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 297(4), H1398-H1410. doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00411.200

    In search of attributes that support self-regulation in blended learning environments

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    Three-way interaction among plants, bacteria, and coleopteran insects

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