10,509 research outputs found

    Clustered-loss retransmission protocol over wireless TCP

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    Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) performs well in traditional wired networks where the packet loss rate is low. However, in heterogeneous wired/wireless networks, the high packet loss rate over wireless links may result in excessive invocation of the congestion control algorithm, thus deteriorating the performance of TCP. In this paper, a novel localized link layer retransmission protocol, called Clustered-loss Retransmission Protocol (CLRP), is proposed. CLRP consists of three protocol components, namely, TCP-FH deployed on a fixed host, TCP-MH deployed on a mobile host and CLRP-BS deployed on a base station. CLRP can provide not only explicit distinction between congestion and packet corruption losses, and effective multiple wireless loss information for retransmissions, but also better retransmission control for wireless losses. Thus it is well suited to wireless networks, in which packet loss and bursty packet corruption is a serious problem. Moreover, CLRP does not require any modifications to TCP deployed on fixed hosts. © 2005 IEEE.published_or_final_versio

    A multi-commodity discrete/continuum model for a traffic equilibrium system

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    We consider a city with several highly compact central business districts (CBDs). The commuters’ origins are continuously dispersed. The travel demand to each CBD, which is considered to be a distinct commodity of traffic movements, is dependent on the total travel cost to that CBD. The transportation system is divided into two layers: major freeways and a dense network of surface streets. Whereas the major freeway network is modelled according to the conventional discrete-network approach, the dense surface streets are approximated as a continuum. Travellers to each CBD can either travel within the continuum (surface streets) and then transfer to the discrete network (freeways) at an interchange (ramp) before moving to the CBD on the discrete network, or they can travel directly to the CBD within the continuum. Specific travel cost-flow relationships for the two layers of transportation facilities are considered. We develop a traffic equilibrium model for this discrete/continuum transportation system in which, for each origin–destination pair, no traveller can reduce his or her individual travel cost by unilaterally changing routes. The problem is formulated as a simultaneous optimisation programme with two sub-problems. One sub-problem is a traffic assignment problem from the interchanges to the CBD in the discrete network, and the other is a traffic assignment problem within a continuum system with multiple centres (i.e. the interchange points and the CBDs). A Newtonian algorithm based on sensitivity analyses of the two sub-problems is proposed to solve the resultant simultaneous optimisation programme. A numerical example is given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.postprin

    Estimation of productivity in Korean electric power plants : a semiparametric smooth coefficient model

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    This paper analyzes the impact of load factor, facility and generator types on the productivity of Korean electric power plants. In order to capture important differences in the effect of load policy on power output, we use a semiparametric smooth coefficient (SPSC) model that allows us to model heterogeneous performances across power plants and over time by allowing underlying technologies to be heterogeneous. The SPSC model accommodates both continuous and discrete covariates. Various specification tests are conducted to assess the performance of the SPSC model. Using a unique generator level panel dataset spanning the period 1995–2006, we find that the impact of load factor, generator and facility types on power generation varies substantially in terms of magnitude and significance across different plant characteristics. The results have strong implications for generation policy in Korea as outlined in this study

    Large Extra Dimension effects through Light-by-Light Scattering at the CERN LHC

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    Observing light-by-light scattering at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has received quite some attention and it is believed to be a clean and sensitive channel to possible new physics. In this paper, we study the diphoton production at the LHC via the process pppγγppγγp\rm pp\rightarrow p\gamma\gamma p\rightarrow p\gamma\gamma p through graviton exchange in the Large Extra Dimension (LED) model. Typically, when we do the background analysis, we also study the Double Pomeron Exchange (DPE) of γγ\gamma\gamma production. We compare its production in the quark-quark collision mode to the gluon-gluon collision mode and find that contributions from the gluon-gluon collision mode are comparable to the quark-quark one. Our result shows, for extra dimension δ=4\delta=4, with an integrated luminosity L=200fb1\rm {\cal L} = 200 fb^{-1} at the 14 TeV LHC, that diphoton production through graviton exchange can probe the LED effects up to the scale MS=5.06(4.51,5.11)TeV\rm M_S=5.06 (4.51, 5.11) TeV for the forward detector acceptance ξ1(ξ2,ξ3)\xi_1 (\xi_2, \xi_3), respectively, where 0.0015<ξ1<0.50.0015<\xi_1<0.5, 0.1<ξ2<0.50.1<\xi_2<0.5 and 0.0015<ξ3<0.150.0015<\xi_3<0.15.Comment: 25 pages. 7 figs. Change some grammatical error

    Design of SNACK mechanism for wireless TCP with New Snoop

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    TCP is the most widely adopted transport layer communication protocol. In heterogeneous wired/wireless networks, however, the high packet loss rate over wireless links can trigger unnecessary execution of TCP congestion control algorithms, resulting in performance degradation. TCP performs poorly on wireless links with bursts losses, when it is forced to rely on limited information available from batched acknowledgements, (i.e., multiple packets are acknowledged with one acknowledgment packet). In this paper, a Selective Negative Acknowledgement (SNACK) mechanism is designed to overcome the limitation of batched acknowledgments. A new link layer retransmission protocol, called, SNACK-NS (New Snoop), is proposed. Through the detection and retransmission functions that are provided by the two protocol components of SNACK-NS, namely, SNACK-Snoop and SNACK-TCP, the transmission performance of TCP over wireless network is greatly enhanced in both fixed host (FH) to mobile host (MH) and MH to FH transmissions.published_or_final_versio

    Modelling the mode choice behaviour of visitors to Expo 2010

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    The purpose of the present study was to obtain a better understanding of the mode choice behaviour of visitors to Expo 2010 Shanghai and the effectiveness of various traffic management policies to reduce private transport use. Due to the possible range of survey respondents, a two-stage gradual stated preference survey method was used. Based on a large-scale stated preference survey conducted among tourists in an airport, a train station and highway service stations in Shanghai, three versions of a mixed logit model for local and out-of-town visitors were developed. The results suggest that local visitors were more sensitive to travel cost than total travel time, whereas out-of-town visitors were particularly concerned about total travel time. A scenario analysis reveals that establishing a restricted traffic zone, adjusting parking rates and providing priority lanes for Expo buses had different effects on trip mode choice. These policies should thus be implemented in combination to achieve the aim of reducing private transport use to less than 10%. An additional finding is that the Expo shuttle bus is a more attractive public transport mode than the subway among Expo visitors.published_or_final_versio

    A brown-world cascade in the dung decomposer food web of an alpine meadow: effects of predator interactions and warming

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    Top-down control has been extensively documented in food webs based on living plants, where predator limitation of herbivores can cascade to facilitate plant growth (the green-world hypothesis), particularly in grasslands and aquatic systems. Yet the ecosystem role of predators in detrital food webs is less explored, as is the potential effect of climate warming on detritus-based communities. We here show that predators have a brown-world role in decomposer communities via a cascading top-down control on plant growth, based on the results of an experiment that factorially manipulated presence and size of two predator species as well as temperature (warmed vs. unwarmed). The inclusion of predatory beetles significantly decreased abundance of coprophagous beetles and thus the rate of dung decomposition and productivity of plants growing surrounding the dung. Moreover, the magnitude of these decreases differed between predator species and, for dung loss, was temperature dependent. At ambient temperature, the larger predators tended to more strongly influence the dung loss rate than did the smaller predators; when both predators were present, the dung loss rate was higher relative to the treatments with the smaller predators but comparable to those with the larger ones, suggesting an antagonistic effect of predator interaction. However, warming substantially reduced dung decomposition rates and eliminated the effects of predation on dung decomposition. Although warming substantially decreased dung loss rates, warming only modestly reduced primary productivity. Consistent with these results, a second experiment exploring the influence of the two predator species and warming on dung loss over time revealed that predatory beetles significantly decreased the abundance of coprophagous beetles, which was positively correlated with dung loss rates. Moreover, experimental warming decreased the water content of dung and hence the survival of coprophagous beetles. These results confirm that the brown-world effect of predator beetles was due to cascading top-down control through coprophagous beetles to nutrient cycling and primary productivity. Our results also highlight potentially counterintuitive effects of climate warming. For example, global warming might significantly decrease animal-mediated decomposition of organic matter and recycling of nutrients in a future warmed world

    PCV172 TREATMENT PATTERNS AMONG PATIENTS WITH HYPERTENSION: RESULTS OF A US SURVEY

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    Deformation of the Fermi surface in the extended Hubbard model

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    The deformation of the Fermi surface induced by Coulomb interactions is investigated in the t-t'-Hubbard model. The interplay of the local U and extended V interactions is analyzed. It is found that exchange interactions V enhance small anisotropies producing deformations of the Fermi surface which break the point group symmetry of the square lattice at the Van Hove filling. This Pomeranchuck instability competes with ferromagnetism and is suppressed at a critical value of U(V). The interaction V renormalizes the t' parameter to smaller values what favours nesting. It also induces changes on the topology of the Fermi surface which can go from hole to electron-like what may explain recent ARPES experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 ps figure
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