199 research outputs found
Penerapan Algoritma Apriori dan FP-Growth untuk Market Basket Analisis pada Data Transaksi Non Promo
Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mencari aturan asosiasi berdasarkan transaksi member
Aksesmu pada item non promo. Metode pada penelitian ini menggunakan Association rules dengan menggunakan algoritma apriori dan FP-Growth untuk mendapatkan Frequent Itemset. Tahap analisis data dilakukan mulai dari Exploratory Data Analysis, Pre-Processing Data, Transformation Data, Data Mining, hingga mengevaluasi hasil aturan asosiasi yang terbentuk. Peneliti melakukan 4 kali percobaan dengan minimal support 0.02 dan minimal confidence 0.25 pada apriori dan FP-Growth merupakan yang terbaik dengan menghasilkan 52 frequent itemset dan 17 aturan asosiasi. Dengan dataset berjumlah 379.635, apriori lebih cepat dalam memproses frequent itemset dengan waktu 1.10 detik sedangkan FP-Growth dengan 1.86 detik. Apriori dan FP-Growth menghasilkan frequent itemset yang sama yaitu kategori tertinggi diperoleh SKT dengan support 0.32 dan SKM dengan support 0.26, tetapi untuk aturan asosiasi terbaik dihasilkan oleh kategori Extruded & Pellet dan Sweetened Condensed Milk dengan confidence 0.47.This research aims to find association rules based on the transactions of Aksesmu members on non-promo items. The method in this study uses Association rules using the a priori algorithm and FP-Growth to obtain Frequent Itemsets. The data analysis phase is carried out starting with Exploratory Data Analysis, Pre-Processing Data, Transformation Data, and Data Mining, to evaluate the results of the formed association rules. Researchers conducted 4 experiments with a minimum support of 0.02 and a minimum confidence of 0.25 on a priori and FP-Growth was the best by producing 52 frequent itemsets and 17 association rules. With a dataset of 379,635, a priori is faster in processing frequent itemsets with a time of 1.10 seconds while FP-Growth is with 1.86 seconds. Apriori and FP-Growth produce the same frequent itemset, namely the highest category is obtained by SKT with a support of 0.32 and SKM with a support of 0.26, but the best association rules are produced by the Extruded & Pellet and Sweetened Condensed Milk categories with a confidence of 0.47
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Progress in Large Period Multilayer Coatings for High Harmonic and Solar Applications
Multilayer coatings for normal incidence optics designed for the long wavelength region (25 nm < {lambda} < 50 nm) are particularly challenging due to the few number of layers that can be utilized in the reflection. Recently, Mg/SiC multilayers have been fabricated with normal incidence reflectivity in the vicinity of 40% for wavelengths near the He-II line at 30.4 nm. Motivated by this success we have investigated the use of a tri-band multilayer to increase the bandwidth while maintaining the reflectivity. The multilayers were deposited by conventional magnetron sputtering. Using Mg/SiC bilayers a reflectivity of 45% was achieved at 27 to 32 nm at an angle of 5 deg from normal. The Mg/Sc/SiC multilayer systems have also been investigated. It obtained a near normal incidence reflectivity of 35% while increasing the bandwidth by a factor of 2. These results are very encouraging for the possibility of more widespread applications of normal incidence optics in high harmonic applications
Progress and Poverty—1965 Version
The first hard X-ray laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), produces 120 shots per second. Particles injected into the X-ray beam are hit randomly and in unknown orientations by the extremely intense X-ray pulses, where the femtosecond-duration X-ray pulses diffract from the sample before the particle structure is significantly changed even though the sample is ultimately destroyed by the deposited X-ray energy. Single particle X-ray diffraction experiments generate data at the FEL repetition rate, resulting in more than 400,000 detector readouts in an hour, the data stream during an experiment contains blank frames mixed with hits on single particles, clusters and contaminants. The diffraction signal is generally weak and it is superimposed on a low but continually fluctuating background signal, originating from photon noise in the beam line and electronic noise from the detector. Meanwhile, explosion of the sample creates fragments with a characteristic signature. Here, we describe methods based on rapid image analysis combined with ion Time-of-Flight (ToF) spectroscopy of the fragments to achieve an efficient, automated and unsupervised sorting of diffraction data. The studies described here form a basis for the development of real-time frame rejection methods, e. g. for the European XFEL, which is expected to produce 100 million pulses per hour. (C)2014 Optical Society of Americ
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Metrologies for the Phase Characterization of Attosecond
EUV optics play a key role in attosecond science since only with higher photon energies is it possible to achieve the wide spectral bandwidth required for ultrashort pulses. Multilayer EUV mirrors have been proposed and are being developed to temporally shape (compress) attosecond pulses. To fully characterize a multilayer optic for pulse applications requires not only knowledge of the reflectivity, as a function of photon energy, but also the reflected phase of the mirror. This work develops the metrologies to determine the reflected phase of an EUV multilayer mirror using the photoelectric effect. The proposed method allows one to determine the optic's impulse response and hence its pulse characteristics
Femtosecond x-ray diffraction from an aerosolized beam of protein nanocrystals
We demonstrate near-atomic-resolution Bragg diffraction from aerosolized
single granulovirus crystals using an x-ray free-electron laser. The form of
the aerosol injector is nearly identical to conventional liquid-microjet
nozzles, but the x-ray-scattering background is reduced by several orders of
magnitude by the use of helium carrier gas rather than liquid. This approach
provides a route to study the weak diffuse or lattice-transform signal arising
from small crystals. The high speed of the particles is particularly well
suited to upcoming MHz-repetition-rate x-ray free-electron lasers
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Absolute sensitivity calibration of extreme ultraviolet photoresists
One of the major challenges facing the commercialization of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography remains simultaneously achieving resist sensitivity, line-edge roughness, and resolution requirement. Sensitivity is of particular concern owing to its direct impact on source power requirements. Most current EUV exposure tools have been calibrated against a resist standard with the actual calibration of the standard resist dating back to EUV exposures at Sandia National Laboratories in the mid 1990s. Here they report on an independent sensitivity calibration of two baseline resists from the SEMATECH Berkeley MET tool performed at the Advanced Light Source Calibrations and Standards beamline. The results show the baseline resists to be approximately 1.9 times faster than previously thought based on calibration against the long standing resist standard
Tomography of a Cryo-immobilized Yeast Cell Using Ptychographic Coherent X-Ray Diffractive Imaging
The structural investigation of noncrystalline, soft biological matter using x-rays is of rapidly increasing interest. Large-scale x-ray sources, such as synchrotrons and x-ray free electron lasers, are becoming ever brighter and make the study of such weakly scattering materials more feasible. Variants of coherent diffractive imaging (CDI) are particularly attractive, as the absence of an objective lens between sample and detector ensures that no x-ray photons scattered by a sample are lost in a limited-efficiency imaging system. Furthermore, the reconstructed complex image contains quantitative density information, most directly accessible through its phase, which is proportional to the projected electron density of the sample. If applied in three dimensions, CDI can thus recover the sample's electron density distribution. As the extension to three dimensions is accompanied by a considerable dose applied to the sample, cryogenic cooling is necessary to optimize the structural preservation of a unique sample in the beam. This, however, imposes considerable technical challenges on the experimental realization. Here, we show a route toward the solution of these challenges using ptychographic CDI (PCDI), a scanning variant of coherent imaging. We present an experimental demonstration of the combination of three-dimensional structure determination through PCDI with a cryogenically cooled biological sample—a budding yeast cell (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)—using hard (7.9 keV) synchrotron x-rays. This proof-of-principle demonstration in particular illustrates the potential of PCDI for highly sensitive, quantitative three-dimensional density determination of cryogenically cooled, hydrated, and unstained biological matter and paves the way to future studies of unique, nonreproducible biological cells at higher resolution
Strongly aligned gas-phase molecules at Free-Electron Lasers
We demonstrate a novel experimental implementation to strongly align
molecules at full repetition rates of free-electron lasers. We utilized the
available in-house laser system at the coherent x-ray imaging beamline at the
Linac Coherent Light Source. Chirped laser pulses, i. e., the direct output
from the regenerative amplifier of the Ti:Sa chirped pulse amplification laser
system, were used to strongly align 2,5-diiodothiophene molecules in a
molecular beam. The alignment laser pulses had pulse energies of a few mJ and a
pulse duration of 94 ps. A degree of alignment of
\left = 0.85 was measured, limited by the
intrinsic temperature of the molecular beam rather than by the available laser
system. With the general availability of synchronized chirped-pulse-amplified
near-infrared laser systems at short-wavelength laser facilities, our approach
allows for the universal preparation of molecules tightly fixed in space for
experiments with x-ray pulses.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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Digital Quantification of Gene Expression in Sequential Breast Cancer Biopsies Reveals Activation of an Immune Response
Advancements in molecular biology have unveiled multiple breast cancer promoting pathways and potential therapeutic targets. Large randomized clinical trials remain the ultimate means of validating therapeutic efficacy, but they require large cohorts of patients and are lengthy and costly. A useful approach is to conduct a window of opportunity study in which patients are exposed to a drug pre-surgically during the interval between the core needle biopsy and the definitive surgery. These are non-therapeutic studies and the end point is not clinical or pathological response but rather evaluation of molecular changes in the tumor specimens that can predict response. However, since the end points of the non-therapeutic studies are biologic, it is critical to first define the biologic changes that occur in the absence of treatment. In this study, we compared the molecular profiles of breast cancer tumors at the time of the diagnostic biopsy versus the definitive surgery in the absence of any intervention using the Nanostring nCounter platform. We found that while the majority of the transcripts did not vary between the two biopsies, there was evidence of activation of immune related genes in response to the first biopsy and further investigations of the immune changes after a biopsy in early breast cancer seem warranted
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Comparing serial X-ray crystallography and microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED) as methods for routine structure determination from small macromolecular crystals.
Innovative new crystallographic methods are facilitating structural studies from ever smaller crystals of biological macromolecules. In particular, serial X-ray crystallography and microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED) have emerged as useful methods for obtaining structural information from crystals on the nanometre to micrometre scale. Despite the utility of these methods, their implementation can often be difficult, as they present many challenges that are not encountered in traditional macromolecular crystallography experiments. Here, XFEL serial crystallography experiments and MicroED experiments using batch-grown microcrystals of the enzyme cyclophilin A are described. The results provide a roadmap for researchers hoping to design macromolecular microcrystallography experiments, and they highlight the strengths and weaknesses of the two methods. Specifically, we focus on how the different physical conditions imposed by the sample-preparation and delivery methods required for each type of experiment affect the crystal structure of the enzyme
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