13,201 research outputs found
On the Minimum/Stopping Distance of Array Low-Density Parity-Check Codes
In this work, we study the minimum/stopping distance of array low-density
parity-check (LDPC) codes. An array LDPC code is a quasi-cyclic LDPC code
specified by two integers q and m, where q is an odd prime and m <= q. In the
literature, the minimum/stopping distance of these codes (denoted by d(q,m) and
h(q,m), respectively) has been thoroughly studied for m <= 5. Both exact
results, for small values of q and m, and general (i.e., independent of q)
bounds have been established. For m=6, the best known minimum distance upper
bound, derived by Mittelholzer (IEEE Int. Symp. Inf. Theory, Jun./Jul. 2002),
is d(q,6) <= 32. In this work, we derive an improved upper bound of d(q,6) <=
20 and a new upper bound d(q,7) <= 24 by using the concept of a template
support matrix of a codeword/stopping set. The bounds are tight with high
probability in the sense that we have not been able to find codewords of
strictly lower weight for several values of q using a minimum distance
probabilistic algorithm. Finally, we provide new specific minimum/stopping
distance results for m <= 7 and low-to-moderate values of q <= 79.Comment: To appear in IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory. The material in this paper was
presented in part at the 2014 IEEE International Symposium on Information
Theory, Honolulu, HI, June/July 201
The growth of paracoccus halodenitrificans in a defined medium
A synthetic medium, consisting of inorganic salts and any of a number of carbon sources, supported the aerobic growth of Paracoccus halodenitrificans when supplemented with thiamine. The same medium plus a nitrogenous oxide supported anaerobic growth when additionally supplemented with methionine. The observation that vitamin B12 or betaine replaced methionine suggested that P. halodenitrificans had a defect in the cobalamin dependent pathway for methionine biosynthesis, as well as the inability to synthesize betaine when growing anaerobically
The Determinants of Lateness: Evidence from British Workers
Using a sample of male and female workers from the 1992 Employment in Britain survey we estimate a generalised grouped zero-inflated Poisson regression model of employeesÕ self-reported lateness. Reflecting theoretical predictions from both psychology and economics, lateness is modelled as a function of incentives, the monitoring of and sanctions for lateness within the workplace, job satisfaction and attitudes to work. Various aspects of workplace incentive and disciplinary policies turn out to affect lateness, however, once these are controlled for, an important role for job satisfaction remains.
Improvement of Fourier Polarimetry for applications in tomographic photoelasticity
The use of the Fourier Polarimetry method has been demonstrated to extract the three characteristic parameters in integrated photoelasticity. In contrast to the phase-stepping method, it has been shown that the Fourier method is more accurate. However, the Fourier method isn't very efficient as it requires that a minimum of nine intensity images be collected during a whole revolution of a polarizer while the phase-stepping method only needs six intensity images. In this paper the Fourier transformation is used to derive the expression for determination of the characteristic parameters. Four Fourier coefficients are clearly identified to calculate the three characteristic parameters. It is found that the angular rotation ratio could be set arbitrarily. The angular rotation ratio is optimized to satisfy the requirements of efficiency and proper data accuracy, which results in data collection about three times faster than the methods suggested by previous researchers. When comparing their performance in terms of efficiency and accuracy, the simulated and experimental results show that these angular rotation ratios have the same accuracy but the optimized angular rotation ratio is significantly faster. The sensitivity to noise is also investigated and further improvement of accuracy is suggested
Trends in social capital: Membership of associations in Great Britain, 1991–98
This Note uses the British Household Panel Study (BHPS) to consider the changing volume and distribution of voluntary association membership (and hence social capital) in Great Britain. We aim to supplement Hall's study of trends in social capital published in this Journal with more recent and longitudinal data. This allows us to show that whilst the volume of social capital is not declining, it is becoming increasingly class specific, and that its relative aggregate stability masks considerable turnover at the individual level. These findings are significant for current debates on social capital
Supplementary data for “Comparisons of Staphylococcus aureus infection and other outcomes between users of angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers: lessons for COVID-19 from a nationwide cohort study”
Additional information regarding study design, baseline cohort characteristics, and results of sensitivity analyses
Velocity weakening and possibility of aftershocks in nanofriction experiments
We study the frictional behavior of small contacts as those realized in the
atomic force microscope and other experimental setups, in the framework of
generalized Prandtl-Tomlinson models. Particular attention is paid to
mechanisms that generate velocity weakening, namely a decreasing average
friction force with the relative sliding velocity.The mechanisms studied model
the possibility of viscous relaxation, or aging effects in the contact. It is
found that, in addition to producing velocity weakening, these mechanisms can
also produce aftershocks at sufficiently low sliding velocities. This provides
a remarkable analogy at the microscale, of friction properties at the
macroscale, where aftershocks and velocity weakening are two fundamental
features of seismic phenomena.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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