14,500 research outputs found

    Packet reordering, high speed networks and transport protocol performance

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    We performed end-to-end measurements of UDP/IP flows across an Internet backbone network. Using this data, we characterized the packet reordering processes seen in the network. Our results demonstrate the high prevalence of packet reordering relative to packet loss, and show a strong correlation between packet rate and reordering on the network we studied. We conclude that, given the increased parallelism in modern networks and the demands of high performance applications, new application and protocol designs should treat packet reordering on an equal footing to packet loss, and must be robust and resilient to both in order to achieve high performance

    After the games are over: life-history trade-offs drive dispersal attenuation following range expansion.

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    Increased dispersal propensity often evolves on expanding range edges due to the Olympic Village effect, which involves the fastest and fittest finding themselves together in the same place at the same time, mating, and giving rise to like individuals. But what happens after the ranges leading edge has passed and the games are over? Although empirical studies indicate that dispersal propensity attenuates following range expansion, hypotheses about the mechanisms driving this attenuation have not been clearly articulated or tested. Here, we used a simple model of the spatiotemporal dynamics of two phenotypes, one fast and the other slow, to propose that dispersal attenuation beyond preexpansion levels is only possible in the presence of trade-offs between dispersal and life-history traits. The Olympic Village effect ensures that fast dispersers preempt locations far from the ranges previous limits. When trade-offs are absent, this preemptive spatial advantage has a lasting impact, with highly dispersive individuals attaining equilibrium frequencies that are strictly higher than their introduction frequencies. When trade-offs are present, dispersal propensity decays rapidly at all locations. Our models results about the postcolonization trajectory of dispersal evolution are clear and, in principle, should be observable in field studies. We conclude that empirical observations of postcolonization dispersal attenuation offer a novel way to detect the existence of otherwise elusive trade-offs between dispersal and life-history traits

    Scaling Properties of Paths on Graphs

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    Let GG be a directed graph on finitely many vertices and edges, and assign a positive weight to each edge on GG. Fix vertices uu and vv and consider the set of paths that start at uu and end at vv, self-intersecting in any number of places along the way. For each path, sum the weights of its edges, and then list the path weights in increasing order. The asymptotic behaviour of this sequence is described, in terms of the structure and type of strongly connected components on the graph. As a special case, for a Markov chain the asymptotic probability of paths obeys either a power law scaling or a weaker type of scaling, depending on the structure of the transition matrix. This generalizes previous work by Mandelbrot and others, who established asymptotic power law scaling for special classes of Markov chains.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figure

    Experiences with high definition interactive video conferencing

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    We review the design and implementation of UltraGrid, a new high definition video conferencing system, and present some experimental results. UltraGrid was the first system to support gigabit rate high definition interactive video conferencing on commodity systems and networks, and we present measurements to illustrate behavior of production networks subject to such real time traffic. We illustrate the benefits of hybrid IP/provisioned optical networks over best effort IP networks for this class of traffic, and motivate the development of congestion control algorithms for interactive conferencing on best effort IP networks

    Temperature-controlled resistor

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    Electrical resistance of a carbon-pile resistor is controlled by the compression or relaxation of a pile of carbon disks by a thermally actuated bimetallic spring. The concept is advantageous in that it is direct-acting, can cover a wide range of controllable characteristics, and can handle considerable power directly

    Chloroplast DNA phylogenetics of the North American chestnuts and chinquapins (Castanea Mill., Fagaceae)

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    Evolutionary relationships and genetic structure of the North American Castanea were investigated using chloroplast DNA sequence data. Six plastome loci were PCR-amplified and sequenced in 77 accessions representing the three currently recognized North American Castanea species. Diagnostic morphological character states and a unique haplotype were shared among C. pumila and a plant tentatively identified as C. dentata in one sympatric site, suggesting past hybridization and chloroplast capture. Surprisingly, the cpDNA phylogeny did not agree with previous taxonomic treatments. The inability to distinguish between deep coalescence and interspecific hybridization as the causes of haplotype sharing makes phylogenetic reconstruction of the North American Castanea species difficult. Although non-D haplotypes were previously reported as diagnostic for C. pumila and hybrids, multiple non-D haplotype C. dentata were documented in the Southern Appalachians and Piedmont. The diversity of haplotypes observed in southern C. dentata populations provides further impetus to conserve C. dentata in the Southeast

    Formosa China and the United Nations Formosa in the World Community

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