109 research outputs found
Geographic Centroid Routing for Vehicular Networks
A number of geolocation-based Delay Tolerant Networking (DTN) routing
protocols have been shown to perform well in selected simulation and mobility
scenarios. However, the suitability of these mechanisms for vehicular networks
utilizing widely-available inexpensive Global Positioning System (GPS) hardware
has not been evaluated. We propose a novel geolocation-based routing primitive
(Centroid Routing) that is resilient to the measurement errors commonly present
in low-cost GPS devices. Using this notion of Centroids, we construct two novel
routing protocols and evaluate their performance with respect to positional
errors as well as traditional DTN routing metrics. We show that they outperform
existing approaches by a significant margin.Comment: 6 page
Implementation of Epidemic Routing with IP Convergence Layer in ns-3
We present the Epidemic routing protocol implementation in ns-3. It is a
full-featured DTN protocol in that it supports the message abstraction and
store-and-haul behavior. We compare the performance of our Epidemic routing
ns-3 implementation with the existing implementation of Epidemic in the ONE
simulator, and discuss the differences
End-to-End Resilience Mechanisms for Network Transport Protocols
The universal reliance on and hence the need for resilience in network communications has been well established. Current transport protocols are designed to provide fixed mechanisms for error remediation (if any), using techniques such as ARQ, and offer little or no adaptability to underlying network conditions, or to different sets of application requirements. The ubiquitous TCP transport protocol makes too many assumptions about underlying layers to provide resilient end-to-end service in all network scenarios, especially those which include significant heterogeneity. Additionally the properties of reliability, performability, availability, dependability, and survivability are not explicitly addressed in the design, so there is no support for resilience. This dissertation presents considerations which must be taken in designing new resilience mechanisms for future transport protocols to meet service requirements in the face of various attacks and challenges. The primary mechanisms addressed include diverse end-to-end paths, and multi-mode operation for changing network conditions
A Distributed Platform for High-Speed Active Network Topology Discovery
Sponsored Research ArticleNaval Postgraduate School Cyber Academic Grou
Gateway router and method for application-aware automatic network selection
PatentAn Application-Aware Automatic Network Selection (ANS)
router and method for automatic network selection, translation
of data between networks, and application-specific feedback.
In one embodiment, the router and method select
between an Internet Protocol (IP) network and a Delay Tolerant
Networking (DTN) network, monitoring the state of
both networks, intercepting IP packets which could otherwise
not be delivered, responding to the application that sent the
packet, and translating a group of such packets into a DTN
bundle; the software implementing this system resides on a
network router that functions as a node on both the IP and
DTN networks. In other embodiments, the system and
method select between or among mobile ad hoc networks,
sensor networks, vehicular networks, and satellite and deep
space networks
Effective C2 Comms to the Tactical Edge in Challenged, Disrupted, and Denied Environments
Native IP networks are ill-equipped to handle the communication challenges found in wireless comms environments, resulting in communications outages that degrade C2 data flow and subject the user to disconnection, timeouts, and repeated login requests. We counter these limitations by integrating DTN (Disruption-Tolerant Networking) technology into the IP network using software+hardware or software-only solutions as appropriate. This work evaluates the tradeoffs between the currently available DTN software implementations and seeks to identify the one with the highest technical readiness level, as well as any barriers to adoption that may be present. We find that no current implementation is fully ready, and that each have particular pros and cons to adoption.Naval Research ProgramPrepared for Topic Sponsor: Maj Jeffrey Sykes, USMC, HQMC Aviation; Research Sponsor HQMC Aviation; Research POC Name: Maj Scott CuomoN16-M343-
Whale of a crowd: Quantifying the effectiveness of crowd-sourced serious games
Abstract—In this paper we analyze several Crowd-Sourced Serious Games (CSSGs), a new genre focused on advancing widely respected causes such as social equality and science. We observe that the general effectiveness of these games has remained largely unknown. Existing performance analyses have been limited to documenting experiences with individual systems. More importantly, existing game analytics approaches are designed for games that provide personal experience and entertainment. In contrast, CSSGs attract participants by evoking their sense of social responsibility and sympathy for others. Intuitively, social awareness and sympathy alone may not result in the same level of consistent participation as personal achievement, or fun. Consequently, the success of a CSSG may be more tightly linked to the contributions of few highly-dedicated players (whales)
Bioinformatics process management: information flow via a computational journal
This paper presents the Bioinformatics Computational Journal (BCJ), a framework for conducting and managing computational experiments in bioinformatics and computational biology. These experiments often involve series of computations, data searches, filters, and annotations which can benefit from a structured environment. Systems to manage computational experiments exist, ranging from libraries with standard data models to elaborate schemes to chain together input and output between applications. Yet, although such frameworks are available, their use is not widespread–ad hoc scripts are often required to bind applications together. The BCJ explores another solution to this problem through a computer based environment suitable for on-site use, which builds on the traditional laboratory notebook paradigm. It provides an intuitive, extensible paradigm designed for expressive composition of applications. Extensive features facilitate sharing data, computational methods, and entire experiments. By focusing on the bioinformatics and computational biology domain, the scope of the computational framework was narrowed, permitting us to implement a capable set of features for this domain. This report discusses the features determined critical by our system and other projects, along with design issues. We illustrate the use of our implementation of the BCJ on two domain-specific examples
Genomic regions associated with kyphosis in swine
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A back curvature defect similar to kyphosis in humans has been observed in swine herds. The defect ranges from mild to severe curvature of the thoracic vertebrate in split carcasses and has an estimated heritability of 0.3. The objective of this study was to identify genomic regions that affect this trait.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations performed with 198 SNPs and microsatellite markers in a Duroc-Landrace-Yorkshire resource population (U.S. Meat Animal Research Center, USMARC resource population) of swine provided regions of association with this trait on 15 chromosomes. Positional candidate genes, especially those involved in human skeletal development pathways, were selected for SNP identification. SNPs in 16 candidate genes were genotyped in an F2 population (n = 371) and the USMARC resource herd (n = 1,257) with kyphosis scores. SNPs in <it>KCNN2 </it>on SSC2, <it>RYR1 </it>and <it>PLOD1 </it>on SSC6 and <it>MYST4 </it>on SSC14 were significantly associated with kyphosis in the resource population of swine (<it>P </it>≤ 0.05). SNPs in <it>CER1 </it>and <it>CDH7 </it>on SSC1, <it>PSMA5 </it>on SSC4, <it>HOXC6 </it>and <it>HOXC8 </it>on SSC5, <it>ADAMTS18 </it>on SSC6 and <it>SOX9 </it>on SSC12 were significantly associated with the kyphosis trait in the F2 population of swine (<it>P </it>≤ 0.05).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These data suggest that this kyphosis trait may be affected by several loci and that these may differ by population. Carcass value could be improved by effectively removing this undesirable trait from pig populations.</p
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