456 research outputs found

    The Extended-window Channel Estimator For Iterative Channel-and-symbol Estimation

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    The application of the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm to channel estimation results in a well-known iterative channel-and-symbol estimator (ICSE). The EM-ICSE iterates between a symbol estimator based on the forward-backward recursion (BCJR equalizer) and a channel estimator, and may provide approximate maximum-likelihood blind or semiblind channel estimates. Nevertheless, the EM-ICSE has high complexity, and it is prone to misconvergence. In this paper, we propose the extended-window (EW) estimator, a novel channel estimator for ICSE that can be used with any soft-output symbol estimator. Therefore, the symbol estimator may be chosen according to performance or complexity specifications. We show that the EW-ICSE, an ICSE that uses the EW estimator and the BCJR equalizer, is less complex and less susceptible to misconvergence than the EM-ICSE. Simulation results reveal that the EW-ICSE may converge faster than the EM-ICSE. © 2005 Hindawi Publishing Corporation.200529299Barry, J.R., Lee, E.A., Messerschmitt, D.G., (2003) Digital Communications, , Kluwer Academic Publishers, Norwell, Mass, USA, 3rd editionAyadi, J., De Carvalho, E., Slock, D.T.M., Blind and semi-blind maximum likelihood methods for FIR multichannel identification (1998) Proc. IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, Signal Processing (ICASSP'98), 6, pp. 3185-3188. , Seattle, Wash, USA, MayFeder, M., Catipovic, J.A., Algorithms for joint channel estimation and data recovery-application to equalization in underwater communications (1991) IEEE J. Oceanic Eng., 16 (1), pp. 42-55Kaleh, G.K., Vallet, R., Joint parameter estimation and symbol detection for linear or nonlinear unknown channels (1994) IEEE Trans. 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Areas Commun., 19 (9), pp. 1729-1743Lopes, R.R., Barry, J.R., Exploiting error-control coding in blind channel estimation (2001) IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM'01), 2, pp. 1317-1321. , San Antonio, Tex, USA, NovemberKrishnamurthy, V., Moore, J.B., On-line estimation of hidden Markov model parameters based on the Kullback-Leibler information measure (1993) IEEE Trans. Signal Processing, 41 (8), pp. 2557-2573White, L.B., Perreau, S., Duhamel, P., Reduced computation blind equalization for FIR channel input Markov models (1995) IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC'95), 2, pp. 993-997. , Seattle, Wash, USA, JuneShao, M., Nikias, C.L., An ML/MMSE estimation approach to blind equalization (1994) Proc. IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, Signal Processing (ICASSP'94), 4, pp. 569-572. , Adelaide, SA, Australia, AprilCirpan, H.A., Tsatsanis, M.K., Stochastic maximum likelihood methods for semi-blind channel estimation (1998) IEEE Signal Processing Lett., 5 (1), pp. 21-24Paris, B.-P., Self-adaptive maximum-likelihood sequence estimation (1993) IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM'93), 4, pp. 92-96. , Houston, Tex, USA, November-DecemberBaum, L.E., Petrie, T., Soules, G., Weiss, N., A maximization technique occurring in the statistical analysis of probabilistic functions of Markov chains (1970) Annals of Mathematics Statistics, 41 (1), pp. 164-171Dempster, A.P., Laird, N.M., Rubin, D.B., Maximum likelihood from incomplete data via the em algorithm (1977) Journal of the Royal Statistics Society, 39 (1), pp. 1-38Bahl, L.R., Cocke, J., Jelinek, F., Raviv, J., Optimal decoding of linear codes for minimizing symbol error rate (1974) IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, 20 (2), pp. 284-287Berrou, C., Glavieux, A., Thitimajshima, P., Near Shannon limit error-correcting coding and decoding: Turbo-codes (1993) IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC'93), 2, pp. 1064-1070. , Geneva, Switzerland, MayBenedetto, S., Divsalar, D., Montorsi, G., Pollara, F., Serial concatenation of interleaved codes: Performance analysis, design, and iterative decoding (1998) IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, 44 (3), pp. 909-926TĂŒchler, M., Koetter, R., Singer, A.C., Turbo equalization: Principles and new results (2002) IEEE Trans. Commun., 50 (5), pp. 754-767Lopes, R.R., Barry, J.R., Soft-output decision-feedback equalization with a priori information (2003) IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM'03), 3, pp. 1705-1709. , San Francisco, Calif, USA, DecemberPoor, H.V., (1994) An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation, , Springer-Verlag, New York, NY, USA, 2nd editionMontemayor, C.A., Flikkema, P.G., Near-optimum iterative estimation of dispersive multipath channels (1998) IEEE 48th Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC'98), 3, pp. 2246-2250. , Ottawa, ON, Canada, MaySandell, M., Luschi, C., Strauch, P., Yan, R., Iterative channel estimation using soft decision feedback (1998) IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM'98), 6, pp. 3728-3733. , Sydney, NSW, Australia, Novembe

    Football in the community schemes: Exploring the effectiveness of an intervention in promoting healthful behaviour change

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    This study aims to examine the effectiveness of a Premier League football club’s Football in the Community (FitC) schemes intervention in promoting positive healthful behaviour change in children. Specifically, exploring the effectiveness of this intervention from the perspectives of the participants involved (i.e. the researcher, teachers, children and coaches). A range of data collection techniques were utilized including the principles of ethnography (i.e. immersion, engagement and observations), alongside conducting focus groups with the children. The results allude to the intervention merely ‘keeping active children active’ via (mostly) fun, football sessions. Results highlight the important contribution the ‘coach’ plays in the effectiveness of the intervention. Results relating to working practice (i.e. coaching practice and coach recruitment) are discussed and highlighted as areas to be addressed. FitC schemes appear to require a process of positive organizational change to increase their effectiveness in strategically attending to the health agenda

    Stepping into the Same River Twice: Field Evidence for the Repeatability of a CO2 Injection Test

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    A single well characterisation test was conducted at the CO2CRC Otway storage site in Victoria, Australia, in 2011 and repeated in 2014. The near-well permeability was found to have declined nearly 60% since the 2011 test, while the residual saturation inferred from a variety of techniques was lower in 2014. There was a significant change in water chemistry, suggesting an alteration of near-well reservoir properties. Possible reasons for these changes are explored, and the implications for other field tests are discussed

    Generalized partial-response targets for perpendicular recording with jitter noise

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    The price of rapid exit in venture capital-backed IPOs

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    This paper proposes an explanation for two empirical puzzles surrounding initial public offerings (IPOs). Firstly, it is well documented that IPO underpricing increases during “hot issue” periods. Secondly, venture capital (VC) backed IPOs are less underpriced than non-venture capital backed IPOs during normal periods of activity, but the reverse is true during hot issue periods: VC backed IPOs are more underpriced than non-VC backed ones. This paper shows that when IPOs are driven by the initial investor’s desire to exit from an existing investment in order to finance a new venture, both the value of the new venture and the value of the existing firm to be sold in the IPO drive the investor’s choice of price and fraction of shares sold in the IPO. When this is the case, the availability of attractive new ventures increases equilibrium underpricing, which is what we observe during hot issue periods. Moreover, I show that underpricing is affected by the severity of the moral hazard problem between an investor and the firm’s manager. In the presence of a moral hazard problem the degree of equilibrium underpricing is more sensitive to changes in the value of the new venture. This can explain why venture capitalists, who often finance firms with more severe moral hazard problems, underprice IPOs less in normal periods, but underprice more strongly during hot issue periods. Further empirical implications relating the fraction of shares sold and the degree of underpricing are presented

    Renormalization Group Running of Lepton Mixing Parameters in See-Saw Models with S4S_4 Flavor Symmetry

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    We study the renormalization group running of the tri-bimaximal mixing predicted by the two typical S4S_4 flavor models at leading order. Although the textures of the mass matrices are completely different, the evolution of neutrino mass and mixing parameters is found to display approximately the same pattern. For both normal hierarchy and inverted hierarchy spectrum, the quantum corrections to both atmospheric and reactor neutrino mixing angles are so small that they can be neglected. The evolution of the solar mixing angle Ξ12\theta_{12} depends on tan⁥ÎČ\tan\beta and neutrino mass spectrum, the deviation from its tri-bimaximal value could be large. Taking into account the renormalization group running effect, the neutrino spectrum is constrained by experimental data on Ξ12\theta_{12} in addition to the self-consistency conditions of the models, and the inverted hierarchy spectrum is disfavored for large tan⁥ÎČ\tan\beta. The evolution of light-neutrino masses is approximately described by a common scaling factor.Comment: 23 pages, 6figure

    Henipavirus pathogenesis in human respiratory epithelial cells

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    Hendra virus (HeV) and Nipah virus (NiV) are deadly zoonotic viruses for which no vaccines or therapeutics are licensed for human use. Henipavirus infection causes severe respiratory illness and encephalitis. Although the exact route of transmission in human is unknown, epidemiological studies and in vivo studies suggest that the respiratory tract is important for virus replication. However, the target cells in the respiratory tract are unknown, as are the mechanisms by which henipaviruses can cause disease. In this study, we characterized henipavirus pathogenesis using primary cells derived from the human respiratory tract. The growth kinetics of NiV-Malaysia, NiV-Bangladesh, and HeV were determined in bronchial/ tracheal epithelial cells (NHBE) and small airway epithelial cells (SAEC). In addition, host responses to infection were assessed by gene expression analysis and immunoassays. Viruses replicated efficiently in both cell types and induced large syncytia. The host response to henipavirus infection in NHBE and SAEC highlighted a difference in the inflammatory response between HeV and NiV strains as well as intrinsic differences in the ability to mount an inflammatory response between NHBE and SAEC. These responses were highest during HeV infection in SAEC, as characterized by the levels of key cytokines (interleukin 6 [IL-6], IL-8, IL-1α, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 [MCP-1], and colony-stimulating factors) responsible for immune cell recruitment. Finally, we identified virus strain-dependent variability in type I interferon antagonism in NHBE and SAEC: NiV-Malaysia counteracted this pathway more efficiently than NiV-Bangladesh and HeV. These results provide crucial new information in the understanding of henipavirus pathogenesis in the human respiratory tract at an early stage of infection

    The performance of surfactant mixtures at low temperatures

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    Optimising detergency at lower temperatures is of increasing interest due to environmental and economic factors, and requires a greater understanding of the effects of temperature on the adsorption of surfactant mixtures at interfaces. The adsorption properties of surfactant mixtures and biosurfactant/surfactant mixtures have been studied at room temperatures and at temperatures below ambient using surface tension and neutron reflectivity measurements. For the ternary surfactant mixture of octaethylene monododecyl ether, C12E8, sodium dodecyl 6-benzene sulfonate, LAS, and sodium dioxyethylene glycol monododecyl sulfate, SLES, the surface tension at the air-water interface increases with decreasing temperature. In contrast, there is a notable reduction in the increase in the surface tension with a decrease in temperature from 25 °C to 10 °C for the 5 component rhamnolipid/surfactant mixture of the mono-rhamnose, R1, and di-rhamnose, R2, with C12E8/LAS/SLES. The associated neutron reflectivity data for the ternary C12E8/LAS/SLES mixture and the significant observation is that the 3, 4, and 5-component mixtures containing rhamnolipids in conjunction with the other surfactants show changes in composition and adsorbed amounts of the individual components which are close to the experimental error. However the significant observation is that the neutron reflectivity data indicate that the improved surface tension tolerance at lower temperatures is associated with the dominance of the rhamnolipid adsorption in such mixtures. Hence the introduction of the rhamnolipids provides a tolerance to the adverse effects associated with reduced temperatures, and a potential for improved detergency at relatively low temperatures

    Results of Prevention of REStenosis with Tranilast and its Outcomes (PRESTO) trial

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    BACKGROUND: Restenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is a major problem affecting 15% to 30% of patients after stent placement. No oral agent has shown a beneficial effect on restenosis or on associated major adverse cardiovascular events. In limited trials, the oral agent tranilast has been shown to decrease the frequency of angiographic restenosis after PCI. METHODS AND RESULTS: In this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of tranilast (300 and 450 mg BID for 1 or 3 months), 11 484 patients were enrolled. Enrollment and drug were initiated within 4 hours after successful PCI of at least 1 vessel. The primary end point was the first occurrence of death, myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target vessel revascularization within 9 months and was 15.8% in the placebo group and 15.5% to 16.1% in the tranilast groups (P=0.77 to 0.81). Myocardial infarction was the only component of major adverse cardiovascular events to show some evidence of a reduction with tranilast (450 mg BID for 3 months): 1.1% versus 1.8% with placebo (P=0.061 for intent-to-treat population). The primary reason for not completing treatment was > or =1 hepatic laboratory test abnormality (11.4% versus 0.2% with placebo, P<0.01). In the angiographic substudy composed of 2018 patients, minimal lumen diameter (MLD) was measured by quantitative coronary angiography. At follow-up, MLD was 1.76+/-0.77 mm in the placebo group, which was not different from MLD in the tranilast groups (1.72 to 1.78+/-0.76 to 80 mm, P=0.49 to 0.89). In a subset of these patients (n=1107), intravascular ultrasound was performed at follow-up. Plaque volume was not different between the placebo and tranilast groups (39.3 versus 37.5 to 46.1 mm(3), respectively; P=0.16 to 0.72). CONCLUSIONS: Tranilast does not improve the quantitative measures of restenosis (angiographic and intravascular ultrasound) or its clinical sequelae
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