62,670 research outputs found
Origins of elastic properties in ordered nanocomposites
We predict a diblock copolymer melt in the lamellar phase with added
spherical nanoparticles that have an affinity for one block to have a lower
tensile modulus than a pure diblock copolymer system. This weakening is due to
the swelling of the lamellar domain by nanoparticles and the displacement of
polymer by elastically inert fillers. Despite the overall decrease in the
tensile modulus of a polydomain sample, the shear modulus for a single domain
increases dramatically
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The importance of incorporating technological advancements into the artificial eye process: a perspective commentary
Application of technology into healthcare has typically been targeted to high demand illnesses and treatments. However, with an increasing need to meet patientâs expectations combined with increased accessibility and reduced costs, smaller healthcare fields are starting to investigate its function and usability. Services have historically been led by skills and expertise, and recent developments are being seen by ocularists in the field of prosthetic eyes who acknowledge the potential benefit from technological advancement. Utilising the technologies recently investigated in maxillofacial prosthesis can start the evolutionary process where products are continually re-designed and re-developed to achieve excellent patient outcome and satisfaction levels
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Retinoblastoma: Identifying the Diagnostic Signs for Early Treatment
Retinoblastoma is a rare but significant cause of childhood eye cancer world-wide. The prognosis depends upon early diagnosis and treatment but also upon accurate classification of the tumours. Unilateral incidence is normally non-hereditary compared with bilateral incidence where secondary tumours are more common. Survivorship is much better for unilateral compared with bilateral and trilateral retinoblastoma. Early signs are important to detect and photography can assist in identifying no return of âred-eyeâ during flash photography and yellow appearance of the tumour. Treatment options are discussed together with new psycho-oncology approaches that address potential trauma in the survivor as well as in the family of the survivor
On the interaction of ultrasound with cracks: Applications to fatigue crack growth
Partial contact of two rough fatigue crack surfaces leads to transmission and diffraction of an acoustic signal at those contacts. Recent experimental and theoretical efforts to understand and quantify such contact in greater detail are discussed. The objective is to develop an understanding of the closure phenomenon and its application to the interpretation of fatigue data, in particular the R-ratio, spike overload/underload and threshold effects on crack propagation
Nature of fault planes in solid neutron star matter
The properties of tectonic earthquake sources are compared with those deduced
here for fault planes in solid neutron-star matter. The conclusion that
neutron-star matter cannot exhibit brittle fracture at any temperature or
magnetic field is significant for current theories of pulsar glitches, and of
the anomalous X-ray pulsars and soft-gamma repeaters.Comment: 5 AAS LaTeX pages 1 eps figur
Coz: Finding Code that Counts with Causal Profiling
Improving performance is a central concern for software developers. To locate
optimization opportunities, developers rely on software profilers. However,
these profilers only report where programs spent their time: optimizing that
code may have no impact on performance. Past profilers thus both waste
developer time and make it difficult for them to uncover significant
optimization opportunities.
This paper introduces causal profiling. Unlike past profiling approaches,
causal profiling indicates exactly where programmers should focus their
optimization efforts, and quantifies their potential impact. Causal profiling
works by running performance experiments during program execution. Each
experiment calculates the impact of any potential optimization by virtually
speeding up code: inserting pauses that slow down all other code running
concurrently. The key insight is that this slowdown has the same relative
effect as running that line faster, thus "virtually" speeding it up.
We present Coz, a causal profiler, which we evaluate on a range of
highly-tuned applications: Memcached, SQLite, and the PARSEC benchmark suite.
Coz identifies previously unknown optimization opportunities that are both
significant and targeted. Guided by Coz, we improve the performance of
Memcached by 9%, SQLite by 25%, and accelerate six PARSEC applications by as
much as 68%; in most cases, these optimizations involve modifying under 10
lines of code.Comment: Published at SOSP 2015 (Best Paper Award
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