5,325 research outputs found
Automatic vs Manual Provenance Abstractions: Mind the Gap
In recent years the need to simplify or to hide sensitive information in
provenance has given way to research on provenance abstraction. In the context
of scientific workflows, existing research provides techniques to semi
automatically create abstractions of a given workflow description, which is in
turn used as filters over the workflow's provenance traces. An alternative
approach that is commonly adopted by scientists is to build workflows with
abstractions embedded into the workflow's design, such as using sub-workflows.
This paper reports on the comparison of manual versus semi-automated approaches
in a context where result abstractions are used to filter report-worthy results
of computational scientific analyses. Specifically; we take a real-world
workflow containing user-created design abstractions and compare these with
abstractions created by ZOOM UserViews and Workflow Summaries systems. Our
comparison shows that semi-automatic and manual approaches largely overlap from
a process perspective, meanwhile, there is a dramatic mismatch in terms of data
artefacts retained in an abstracted account of derivation. We discuss reasons
and suggest future research directions.Comment: Preprint accepted to the 2016 workshop on the Theory and Applications
of Provenance, TAPP 201
Studies of hepatic synthesis in vivo of plasma proteins, including orosomucoid, transferrin, α-antitrypsin, C8, and factor B
Serum protein types were determined in eight recipients and donors in cases of hepatic homotransplantation. A change from recipient type to donor type was observed for factor B, C8, orosomucoid, haptoglobin, transferrin, α1-antitrypsin, C3 and C6, but not for Gm and Inv immunoglobulin markers. The results indicate that all the proteins studied (except immunoglobulins) are produced primarily by the liver in vivo. © 1980
Novel wireless modulation technique based on noise
In this paper, a new RF modulation technique is presented. Instead of using sinusoidal carriers as information bearer, pure noise is applied. This allows very simple radio architectures to be used. Spread-spectrum based technology is applied to modulate the noise bearer. Since the transmission bandwidth of the noise bearer can be made very wide, up to ultra-wideband regions, extremely large processing gains can be obtained. This will provide robustness in interference-prone environments. To avoid the local regeneration of the noise reference at the receiver, the Transmit-Reference (TR) concept is applied. In this concept, both the reference noise signal and the modulated noise signal are transmitted, together forming\ud
the bearer. The reference and modulated signals are separated by applying a time offset. By applying different delay times for different channels (users) a new multiple access scheme results based on delay: Delay Division Multiple Access (DDMA). A theoretical analysis is given for the link performance of a single-user and a multi-user system. A testbed has been built to demonstrate the concept. The demonstrator operates in a 50 MHz bandwidth centered at 2.4 GHz. Processing gains ranging from 10¿30 dB have been tested. The testbed confirms the basic behavior as predicted by the theory
HOW COMPETITIVE IS THE WORLD WHEAT MARKET?
Japan is one of the largest importers of wheat in the world, with imports originating from three countries, Australia, Canada, and the United States. Australia, Canada, and Japan all use a government single-desk agency to control wheat trade. Many previous studies on competition in the world grain trade have argued the market is imperfectly competitive, and they often point to the Japanese market. We study the Japanese wheat import market for this reason, but find no compelling evidence of imperfect competition.wheat trade, competition, Crop Production/Industries, International Relations/Trade, F14, L10, Q17,
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