8,673 research outputs found

    Prospects and challenges of big data in construction waste management: A Hong Kong study

    Get PDF
    Big Data has shown great potentials in improving management discretion in many areas. However, its applications in construction waste management (CWM) are still in infant stage. This research aims to investigate the prospects and challenges of big data in CWM, by focusing on Hong Kong where a big dataset is made available recently. This study first conducted a comprehensive literature review of big data to understand its definitions, applications, and general challenges of using big data in various sectors. Next, the data collected from Hong Kong government was analyzed to explore the prospects and challenges of Big Data in CWM. Except for the general challenges, big data in CWM has specific challenges mainly due to the specificity of public sectors implementing schemes of CWM. Possible strategies are raised to deal with the challenges so as to embrace the prospects of big data in CWM and relevant domains. This study not only provides government and other sectors in CWM and relevant domains with a clearer understanding of the prospects and challenges of big data that they are facing and corresponding strategies, but also acts as a driving force to stimulate the adoption and proper utilization of big data in sectors involved in CWM.preprin

    The Cardiac Timing Toolbox (CaTT): Testing for physiologically plausible effects of cardiac timing on behaviour

    Get PDF
    There is a long history of, and renewed interest in, cardiac timing effects on behaviour and cognition. Cardiac timing effects may be identified by expressing events as a function of their location in the cardiac cycle, and applying circular (i.e. directional) statistics to test cardiac time-behaviour associations. Typically this approach ‘stretches’ all points in the cardiac cycle equally, but this is not necessarily physiologically valid. Moreover, many tests impose distributional assumptions that are not met by such data. We present a set of statistical techniques robust to this, instantiated within our new Cardiac Timing Toolbox (CaTT) for MATLAB: A physiologically-motivated method of wrapping behaviour to the cardiac cycle; and a set of non-parametric statistical tests that control for common confounds and distributional characteristics of these data. Using a reanalysis of previously published data, we guide readers through analyses using CaTT, aiding researchers in identifying physiologically plausible associations between heart-timing and cognition

    Adventitious shoot regeneration from in vitro stem explants of Phellodendron amurense

    Get PDF
    An efficient in vitro plant regeneration system from stem explants was established in Phellodendron amurense. Factors influencing shoot regeneration from stems including culture medium type, combinations of plant growth regulators and carbon source in the medium were investigated. Adventitious shoot regeneration was significantly influenced by the type of medium. Murashige and Skoog medium (MS) was the best for promoting shoot regeneration, followed by Gamborg medium (B5) and woody plant medium (WPM). The combination of 6-benzyladenine (BA) and naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) produced better results for shoot regeneration. The optimum shoot regeneration frequency (74.5%) and number of shoots per explant (12.3) was achieved using MS medium supplemented with 29.7 M BA and 5.8 M NAA. High concentrations of BA and NAA in the medium inhibited shoot formation. Among the three sugars tested, 20 g dm-3 glucose was the optimum for shoot regeneration. Rooting of regenerated shoots was successful on 1/4-strength MS medium with the addition of 15.4 M IBA. Almost 100% plantlets survived acclimatization after transferred to soil.Key words: Phellodendron amurense, callus, shoot regeneration, stem explants

    Optically pumped ultraviolet lasing from nitride nanopillars at room temperature

    Get PDF
    A vertical cavity structure composing of an in situ grown bottom Al x Ga 1-x N/Al y Ga 1-y N distributed Bragg reflector and a top SiO 2 / HfO 2 dielectric mirror for ultraviolet (UV) emission has been demonstrated. Close-packed nanopillars with diameters of around 500 nm have been achieved by the route of nanosphere lithography combined with inductively-coupled plasma etching. Optically-pumped UV lasing at a wavelength of 343.7 nm (3.608 eV) was observed at room temperature, with a threshold excitation density of 0.52 MW/ cm 2. The mechanism of the lasing action is discussed in detail. Our investigation indicates promising possibilities in nitride-based resonant cavity devices, particularly toward realizing the UV nitride-based vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser. © 2010 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio

    Naming Objects in BIM: A Convention and a Semiautomatic Approach

    Get PDF
    A consistent and easily recognizable name is the primary identifier of an object in building information modeling (BIM). Existing naming conventions vary significantly and require extensive manual work that is often tedious and error-prone. This study (1) develops a standardized naming convention for BIM objects and (2) devises a semiautomatic naming approach for saving manual work. In the proposed naming convention, each segment is included by referencing BIM standards with a consideration of BIM users’ actual needs, and the semiautomatic approach is formalized for both completed and ongoing BIM models. Validated by a control experiment and feedback from the project manager and BIM engineers of a real-life project, this research can be immediately applied to realize standardized BIM object names. This study also generates practical implications for BIM-based project management, where standardized BIM object names are required for supporting object identification and information incorporation throughout a project lifecycle. - See more at: http://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/%28ASCE%29CO.1943-7862.0001314#sthash.XOoOaKep.dpufpostprin

    The tradeoff analysis in RF-powered backscatter cognitive radio networks

    Full text link
    © 2016 IEEE. In this paper, we introduce a new model for RF-powered cognitive radio networks with the aim to improve the performance for secondary systems. In our proposed model, when the primary channel is busy, the secondary transmitter is able either to backscatter the primary signals to transmit data to the secondary receiver or to harvest RF energy from the channel. The harvested energy then will be used to transmit data to the receiver when the channel becomes idle. We first analyze the tradeoff between backscatter communication and harvest-then-transmit protocol in the network. To maximize the overall transmission rate of the secondary network, we formulate an optimization problem to find time ratio between taking backscatter and harvest-thentransmit modes. Through numerical results, we show that under the proposed model can achieve the overall transmission rate higher than using either the backscatter communication or the harvest-then-transmit protocol

    Competition between ferromagnetic metallic and paramagnetic insulating phases in manganites

    Get PDF
    La 0.67Ca 0.33Mn 1-xCu xO 3 (x=0 and 0.15) epitaxial thin films were grown on the (100) LaAlO 3 substrates, and the temperature dependence of their resistivity was measured in magnetic fields up to 12 T by a four-probe technique. We found that the competition between the ferromagnetic metallic (FM) and paramagnetic insulating (PI) phases plays an important role in the observed colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) effect. Based on a scenario that the doped manganites approximately consist of phase-separated FM and PI regions, a simple phenomenological model was proposed to describe the CMR effect. Using this model, we calculated the resistivity as functions of temperature and magnetic field. The model not only qualitatively accounts for some main features related to the CMR effect, but also quantitatively agrees with the experimental observations. © 2002 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio

    Thickness dependence of microstructures in La0.8Ca0.2MnO3 thin films

    Get PDF
    The thickness dependence of microstructures of La0.8Ca0.2MnO3 (LCMO)/SrTiO3 (STO) thin films was investigated by high-resolution x-ray diffraction, small angle x-ray reflection, grazing incidence x-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy. The results show that all the LCMO films are well oriented in (00l) direction perpendicular to the substrate surface. Self-organized crystalline grains with a tetragonal shape are uniformly distributed on the film surface, indicating the deposition condition being of benefit to the formation of the crystalline grains. With increasing the film thickness, the crystalline quality of the LCMO film is improved, while the surface becomes rougher. There exists a nondesigned cap layer on the upper surface of the LCMO layer for all the samples. The mechanism is discussed briefly.published_or_final_versio
    • …
    corecore