2,394 research outputs found

    Sampling schemes for validating service level agreements

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    Level Agreements (SLAs) specify the network Quality of Service (QoS) that providers are expected to deliver. Providers have to verify if the actual quality of the network traffic complies with the SLA. Ideally this should be done without introducing significant additional network load and the operational costs should be small. In this paper we propose a novel approach for the passive validation of SLAs based on direct samples of the customer traffic. The SLA contains pre-defined thresholds for QoS metrics, the maximum violation proportion and accuracy boundaries. We model the validation problem as proportion estimation of non-conformant traffic. Then we compare different sampling schemes according to their sampling errors and present a novel solution for estimating the error prior to the sampling. Finally we derive a solution for finding the optimum sample rate based on the SLA parameters

    Consequences of critical interchain couplings and anisotropy on a Haldane chain

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    Effects of interchain couplings and anisotropy on a Haldane chain have been investigated by single crystal inelastic neutron scattering and density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the model compound SrNi2_2V2_2O8_8. Significant effects on low energy excitation spectra are found where the Haldane gap (Δ0≈0.41J\Delta_0 \approx 0.41J; where JJ is the intrachain exchange interaction) is replaced by three energy minima at different antiferromagnetic zone centers due to the complex interchain couplings. Further, the triplet states are split into two branches by single-ion anisotropy. Quantitative information on the intrachain and interchain interactions as well as on the single-ion anisotropy are obtained from the analyses of the neutron scattering spectra by the random phase approximation (RPA) method. The presence of multiple competing interchain interactions is found from the analysis of the experimental spectra and is also confirmed by the DFT calculations. The interchain interactions are two orders of magnitude weaker than the nearest-neighbour intrachain interaction JJ = 8.7~meV. The DFT calculations reveal that the dominant intrachain nearest-neighbor interaction occurs via nontrivial extended superexchange pathways Ni--O--V--O--Ni involving the empty dd orbital of V ions. The present single crystal study also allows us to correctly position SrNi2_2V2_2O8_8 in the theoretical DD-J⊥J_{\perp} phase diagram [T. Sakai and M. Takahashi, Phys. Rev. B 42, 4537 (1990)] showing where it lies within the spin-liquid phase.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables PRB (accepted). in Phys. Rev. B (2015

    Are we choosing the right flagships? The bird species and traits Australians find most attractive

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    Understanding what people like about birds can help target advocacy for bird conservation. However, testing preferences for characteristics of birds is methodologically challenging, with bias difficult to avoid. In this paper we test whether preferred characteristics of birds in general are shared by the individual bird species the same people nominate as being those they consider most attractive. We then compare these results with the birds which appear most frequently in the imagery of conservation advocates. Based on a choice model completed by 638 general public respondents from around Australia, we found a preference for small colourful birds with a melodious call. However, when the same people were asked which five birds they found most attractive, 48% named no more than three, mostly large well-known species. Images displayed by a leading Australian bird conservation organisation also favoured large colourful species. The choice model results suggest conservation advocates can promote a much wider range of bird types as flagships, particularly smaller species that might otherwise be neglected

    SEREEGA: Simulating Event-Related EEG Activity

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    Abstract Electroencephalography (EEG) is a popular method to monitor brain activity, but it can be difficult to evaluate EEG-based analysis methods because no ground-truth brain activity is available for comparison. Therefore, in order to test and evaluate such methods, researchers often use simulated EEG data instead of actual EEG recordings, ensuring that it is known beforehand which e ects are present in the data. As such, simulated data can be used, among other things, to assess or compare signal processing and machine learn-ing algorithms, to model EEG variabilities, and to design source reconstruction methods. In this paper, we present SEREEGA, short for Simulating Event-Related EEG Activity . SEREEGA is a MATLAB-based open-source toolbox dedicated to the generation of sim-ulated epochs of EEG data. It is modular and extensible, at initial release supporting ve different publicly available head models and capable of simulating multiple different types of signals mimicking brain activity. This paper presents the architecture and general work ow of this toolbox, as well as a simulated data set demonstrating some of its functions. Highlights Simulated EEG data has a known ground truth, which can be used to validate methods. We present a general-purpose open-source toolbox to simulate EEG data. It provides a single framework to simulate many different types of EEG recordings. It is modular, extensible, and already includes a number of head models and signals. It supports noise, oscillations, event-related potentials, connectivity, and more

    Trends in stratospheric minor constituents

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    Photochemical models predict that increasing source gas concentrations are also expected to lead to changes in the concentrations of both catalytically active radical species (such as NO2, ClO, and OH) and inactive reservoir species (such as HNO3, HCl, and H2O). For simplicity, we will refer to all these as trace species. Those species that are expected to have increasing concentration levels are investigated. Additionally, the trace species concentration levels are monitored for unexpected changes on the basis of the measure increase in source gases. Carrying out these investigations is difficult due to the limited data base of measurements of stratospheric trace species. In situ measurements are made only infrequently, and there are few satelliteborne measurements, most over a time space insufficient for trend determination. Instead, ground-based measurements of column content must be used for many species, and interpretation is complicated by contributions from the troposphere or mesosphere or both. In this chapter, we examine existing measurements as published or tabulated

    Threatened bird valuation in Australia

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    Threatened species programs need a social license to justify public funding. A contingent valuation survey of a broadly representative sample of the Australian public found that almost two thirds (63%) supported funding of threatened bird conservation. These included 45% of a sample of 645 respondents willing to pay into a fund for threatened bird conservation, 3% who already supported bird conservation in another form, and 15% who could not afford to pay into a conservation fund but who nevertheless thought that humans have a moral obligation to protect threatened birds. Only 6% explicitly opposed such payments. Respondents were willing to pay about AUD 11 annually into a conservation fund (median value), including those who would pay nothing. Highest values were offered by young or middle aged men, and those with knowledge of birds and those with an emotional response to encountering an endangered bird. However, the prospect of a bird going extinct alarmed almost everybody, even most of those inclined to put the interests of people ahead of birds and those who resent the way threatened species sometimes hold up development. The results suggest that funding for threatened birds has widespread popular support among the Australian population. Conservatively they would be willing to pay about AUD 14 million per year, and realistically about AUD 70 million, which is substantially more than the AUD 10 million currently thought to be required to prevent Australian bird extinctions

    Design of test flows to investigate binary scaling in high enthalpy CO2-N2 mixtures

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    Binary scaling is a similitude law that facilitates the study of hypersonic flows around blunt bodies. It conserves the Reynolds number and the binary (two-body) reaction rates, which are mainly present in the nonequilibrium layer, and scales properly the convective heat transfer. It requires duplication of the product of density and a length scale of the flow, σL, as well as the free-stream enthalpy, H . Its use for ground-to-flight extrapolation depends on the fractional extent of regions of the flow where higher order reactions become important. This paper presents the design of flow conditions relevant to the study of binary scaling for the X2 super-orbital expansion tube. Flows conditions with similar free-stream enthalpy but distinct free-stream densities were obtained. With the help of numerical simulation, it was confirmed that those conditions were suitable to isolate the effect of binary scaling from the uncertainties and scattering of free-stream conditions
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