6,396 research outputs found

    Architecture for Survivable System Processing (ASSP)

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    The Architecture for Survivable System Processing (ASSP) Program is a multi-phase effort to implement Department of Defense (DOD) and commercially developed high-tech hardware, software, and architectures for reliable space avionics and ground based systems. System configuration options provide processing capabilities to address Time Dependent Processing (TDP), Object Dependent Processing (ODP), and Mission Dependent Processing (MDP) requirements through Open System Architecture (OSA) alternatives that allow for the enhancement, incorporation, and capitalization of a broad range of development assets. High technology developments in hardware, software, and networking models, address technology challenges of long processor life times, fault tolerance, reliability, throughput, memories, radiation hardening, size, weight, power (SWAP) and security. Hardware and software design, development, and implementation focus on the interconnectivity/interoperability of an open system architecture and is being developed to apply new technology into practical OSA components. To insure for widely acceptable architecture capable of interfacing with various commercial and military components, this program provides for regular interactions with standardization working groups (e.g.) the International Standards Organization (ISO), American National Standards Institute (ANSI), Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE), and Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). Selection of a viable open architecture is based on the widely accepted standards that implement the ISO/OSI Reference Model

    Topographic Shear and the Relation of Ocular Dominance Columns to Orientation Columns in Prime and Cat Visual Cortex

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    Shear has been known to exist for many years in the topographic structure of prirnary visual cortex, but has received little attention in the modeling literature. Although the topographic map of V1 is largely conformal (i.e. zero shear), several groups have observed topographic shear in the region of the V1/V2 border. Furthennore, shear has also been revealed by anisotropy of cortical magnification factor within a single ocular dominance colunm. In the present paper, we make a functional hypothesis: the major axis of the topographic shear tensor provides cortical neurons with a preferred direction of orientation tuning. We demonstrate that isotropic neuronal summation of a sheared topographic map, in the presence of additional random shear can provide the major features of corlical functional architecture with the ocular dominance column system acting as the principal source of the shear tensor. The major principal axis of the shear tensor determines the direction and its eigenvalues the relative strength of cortical orientation preference. This hypothesis is then shown to be qualitatively consistent with a variety of experimental results on cat and monkey orientation column properties obtained from optical recording and from other anatomical and physiological techniques. In addition, we show that a recent result of (Das and Gilbert, 1997) is consistent with an infinite set of parameterized solutions for the cortical map. We exploit this freedom to choose a particular instance of the Das-Gilbert solution set which is consistent with the full range of local spatial structure in V1. These results suggest that further relationships between ocular dominance columns, orientation columns, and local topography may be revealed by experimental testing

    An Appreciative Response to Corey Beals and Jeff Dudiak

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    Cold Body - Hot Assets: Entity and Aggregate Partnership Theories in Conflict; Treatment of IRC § 751(c) Unrealized Receivables Upon the Death of a Partner

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    The question of proper tax treatment of unrealized receivables of a partnership upon the death of a partner is used as a vehicle to explore the tension between entity and aggregate partnership theories. The death of a partner, and the subsequent disposition of his or her partnership interest, triggers the application of several sections of the Internal Revenue Code. The tax implications that follow such a disposition are examined for the purpose of determining which theory best describes the result required under the Code. Tax theory is then applied to determine how specific partnership unrealized receivables should be taxed consistent with the aggregate or entity partnership principles

    Supreme Court Jurisprudence of Tax Fairness

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    A Neural Model of Biased Oscillations in Aplysia Head-Waving Behavior

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    A long-term bias in the exploratory head-waving behavior of Aplysia can be induced using bright lights as an aversive stimulus: coupling onset of the lights with head movements to one side results in a bias away from that side (Cook & Carew, 1986). This bias has been interpreted as a form of operant conditioning, and has previously been simulated with a neural network model based on associative synaptic facilitation (Raymond, Baxter, Buonomano, & Byrne, 1992). In this article we simulate the head-waving behavior using a recurrent gated dipole, a nonlinear dynamical neural model that has previously been used to explain various data including oscillatory behavior in biological pacemakers. Within the recurrent gated dipole, two channels operate antagonistically to generate oscillations, which drive the side-to-side head waving. The frequency of oscillations depends on transmitter mobilization dynamics, which exhibit both short- and long-term adaptation. We assume that light onset results in a nonspecific increase in arousal to both channels of the dipole. Repeated pairing of arousal increments with activation of one channel (the "reinforced" channel) of the dipole leads to a bias in transmitter dynamics, which causes the oscillation to last a shorter time on the reinforced channel than on the non-reinforced channel. Our model provides a parsimonious explanation of the observed behavior, and it avoids some of the unexpected results obtained with the Raymond et al. model. In addition, our model makes predictions concerning the rate of onset and extinction of the biases, and it suggests new lines of experimentation to test the nature of the head-waving behavior.Office of Naval Research (N00014-92-J-4015, N00014-91-J-4100, N0014-92-J-1309); Air Force Office of Scientific Research (F49620-92-J-0499); A.P. Sloan Foundation (BR-3122

    Generic architectures for future flight systems

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    Generic architecture for future flight systems must be based on open system architectures (OSA). This provides the developer and integrator the flexibility to optimize the hardware and software systems to match diverse and unique applications requirements. When developed properly OSA provides interoperability, commonality, graceful upgradability, survivability and hardware/software transportability to greatly minimize life cycle costs and supportability. Architecture flexibility can be achieved to take advantage of commercial developments by basing these developments on vendor-neutral commercially accepted standards and protocols. Rome Laboratory presently has a program that addresses requirements for OSA

    Updating predictive accident models of modern rural single carriageway A-roads

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    Reliable predictive accident models (PAMs) are essential to design and maintain safe road networks and yet the models most commonly used in the UK were derived using data collected 20 to 30 years ago. Given that the national personal injury accident total fell by some 30% in the last 25 years, while road traffic increased by over 60%, significant errors in scheme appraisal and evaluation based on the models currently in use seem inevitable. In this paper the temporal transferability of PAMs for modern rural single carriageway A-roads is investigated and their predictive performance is evaluated against a recent data set. Despite the age of these models, the PAMs for predicting the total accidents provide a remarkably good fit to recent data and these are more accurate than models where accidents are disaggregated by type. The performance of the models can be improved by calibrating them against recent data

    A Theoretical Review of Management and Information Systems Using a Critical Communications Theory

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    This paper reflects on the managerialistic orthodoxy of knowledge management in order to show that a critical communications theory is required for addressing real political and ethical shortcomings. This produces an alternative methodological perspective through an intentional synthesis of established methodological views. The paper\u27s allies in this critical quest include Jürgen Habermas, Werner Ulrich, Stanley Deetz, Geoffrey Vickers, Peter Checkland and their mentors. Information systems and knowledge systems architects and engineers and their manager clients conveniently ignore fundamental issues, including politics, power, knowledge and communication. Yet, today the more substantive issues are not technical but ethical. In raising questions about the rhetoric of knowledge management reflections on the instrumentality of much of what is said and done about management and information systems are outlined. The departure point is critical scepticism. This is motivated by concerns for the ethical status of the commercially valuable outcome of (at least) two conjoined simplistic and fundamentally dominatory conventional wisdoms. These stem from two fields that are managerialistically biased and which share a common basis in a false rationality

    A Risk Assessment Study at the University of South Alabama Libraries

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    Prior to receiving a memorandum from the Director of Risk Management that the libraries would be included in a university-wide risk assessment study, the authors’ only contacts with the director had to do with art works housed in the library and the amount of money kept on-hand at the service desks. We believed that the Risk Assessment Office was primarily concerned with highly vulnerable programs such as the hospitals, pharmacies, athletics, the bookstore, and laboratories. The challenge for us now would be to develop a comprehensive assessment of risks in library facilities and operations from acquisitions and cataloging to circulation, interlibrary loan, reference, and archives
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