17 research outputs found

    A Programming Language for Web Service Development

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    There is now widespread acceptance of Web services and service-oriented architectures. But despite the agreement on key Web services standards there remain many challenges. Programming environments based on WSDL support go some way to facilitating Web service development. However Web services fundamentally rely on XML and Schema, not on contemporary programming language type systems such as those of Java or .NET. Moreover, Web services are based on a messaging paradigm and hence bring forward the traditional problems of messaging systems including concurrency control and message correlation. It is easy to write simple synchronous Web services using traditional programming languages; however more realistic scenarios are surprisingly difficult to implement. To alleviate these issues we propose a programming language which directly supports Web service development. The language leverages XQuery for native XML processing, supports implicit message correlation and has high level join calculus-style concurrency control. We illustrate the features of the language through a motivating example

    GPSL : A Programming Language for Service Implementation

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    At present, there is a dichotomy of approaches to supporting web service implementation: extending mainstream programming languages with libraries and metadata notations vs. designing new languages. While the former approach has proven suitable for interconnecting services on a simple point-to-point fashion, it turns to be unsuitable for coding concurrent, multi-party, and interrelated interactions requiring extensive XML manipulation. As a result, various web service programming languages have been proposed, most notably (WS-)BPEL. However, these languages still do not meet the needs of highly concurrent and dynamic interactions due to their bias towards statically-bounded concurrency. In this paper we introduce a new web service programming language with a set of features designed to address this gap. We describe the implementations in this language of non-trivial scenarios of service interaction and contrast them to the corresponding BPEL implementations. We also define a formal semantics for the language by translation to the join calculus. A compiler for the language has been implemented based on this semantics

    Mobile Agents Make for Flexible Web Services

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    Hanging Services: An Investigation of Context-Sensitivity and Mobile Code for Localised Services

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    As Web service technology evolves, the idea of context-aware services gains more interest. An idea is that different sets of services will dynamically drop into the mobile users ’ devices depending on their contexts. To do this effectively requires location modelling and representation as well as spontaneity in downloading and executing the service interface on a mobile device. This paper introduces the concept and an implementation of Hanging Services that supports proactive and ad hoc context-aware services in mobile environments. This system works on top of an 802.11b Wireless network. The prototype implementation is done using Web services and highly compact mobile code applications using Microsoft.NET Compact Framework. 1

    The Outcomes of Emergency Admissions With Ulcerative Colitis Between 2007 and 2017 in England.

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    BACKGROUND AND AIMS Patients with ulcerative colitis [UC] may present as emergencies and require rapid escalation of therapy. This study aimed to assess the mortality, colectomy, and readmission risks, during and following a first emergency admission with UC. METHODS Using Hospital Episode Statistics, subjects aged between 18 and 60 years, coded with a first emergency admission with UC, were identified between 2007 and 2017. Influences of demographic factors, comorbidity, anti-tumour necrosis factor [TNF] therapy, and provider UC activity on mortality and colectomy were examined. RESULTS A total of 10 051 subjects (46% female; median age 33 years [interquartile range [IQR] 25-44]) were identified. Mortality was 0.2% in hospital and 0.5% at 12 months and, following colectomy during acute admission, it was 1.4% in hospital and 2.1% at 12 months. Females had reduced risk of colectomy during admission: odds ratio [OR] 0.73 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.62-0.85). Comparing the period 2007-2011 with 2012-2017, the rate of colectomy fell during acute admissions: OR 0.85 [0.72-0.99], p = 0.038 and at 12 months after admission: OR 0.73 [0.61-0.87]. Anti-TNF therapy increased 4-fold in acute UC admissions from 2007-2017. Those receiving anti-TNF therapy had a 70% increased risk of colectomy during index admission compared with those not receiving anti-TNF: OR 1.72 [1.29-2.31]. Increased time to colectomy during first admission was associated with female sex: hazard ratio [HR] 0.84 [0.72-0.98] and Asian ethnicity: HR 0.61 [0.44-0.85], whereas reduced time was associated with increased comorbidity, lower deprivation, and high provider volume of colectomies for UC: HR 1.59 [1.31-1.93]. CONCLUSIONS Mortality following colectomy was 1.4% in hospital and 2.1% at 12 months, and no significant change over time was observed. Colectomy during emergency admission for UC was less common in females. Rates of anti-TNF therapy during emergency admission for UC have increased and overall colectomy rates have fallen. PODCAST This article has an associated podcast which can be accessed at https://academic.oup.com/ecco-jcc/pages/podcast

    New Zealand Bitter Hops Extract Reduces Hunger During a 24 h Water Only Fast

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    Intermittent fasting improves metabolic and cardiac health. However, increased hunger towards the end of the fasting period may affect compliance and limit its application. Our aim was to determine the effect of anorexigenic agent co-therapy on subjective ratings of appetite during the 16–24 h period of a day-long water-only intermittent fast. Thirty adult men were recruited and required to fast for 24 h from 18:00 h to 18:00 h on the same day of the week for three subsequent weeks. Treatments of either a placebo or one of two doses (high dose; HD: 250 mg or low dose; LD: 100 mg) of a bitter hops-based appetite suppressant (Amarasate®) were given twice per day at 16 and 20 h into the fast. From 18–24 h of the 24 h fast, both the HD and LD treatment groups exhibited a statistically significant (p < 0.05) > 10% reduction in hunger. Additionally, the expected lunchtime increase in hunger that was present in the placebo group (12:00 h) was absent in both the HD and LD groups. These data suggest that appetite suppressant co-therapy may be useful in reducing hunger during intermittent fasting, and show that bitter compounds may regulate appetite independently of meal timing

    Activation of thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue and dysregulated lipid metabolism associated with cancer cachexia in mice

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    Cancer cachexia/anorexia is a complex syndrome that involves profound metabolic imbalances and is directly implicated as a cause of death in at least 20% to 30% of all cancers. Brown adipose tissue (BAT) plays a key role in thermogenesis and energy balance and potentially contributes to the physiologic perturbations associated with cachexia. In this study, we investigated the impact of cachexia-inducing colorectal tumor on BAT in mice. We found that brown adipocytes were smaller and exhibited profound delipidation in cachectic tumor–bearing mice. Diurnal expression profiling of key regulators of lipid accumulation and fatty acid ?-oxidation and their corresponding target genes revealed dramatic molecular changes indicative of active BAT. Increased Ucp1, Pbe, and Cpt1? expression at specific points coincided with higher BAT temperatures during the dark cycle, suggestive of a temporal stimulation of thermogenesis in cachexia. These changes persisted when cachectic mice were acclimatized to 28°C confirming inappropriate stimulation of BAT despite thermoneutrality. Evidence of inflammatory signaling also was observed in the BAT as an energetically wasteful and maladaptive response to anorexia during the development of cachexia
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