5,865 research outputs found

    Considerations for human-machine interfaces in tele-operations

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    Numerous factors impact on the efficiency of tele-operative manipulative work. Generally, these are related to the physical environment of the tele-operator and how he interfaces with robotic control consoles. The capabilities of the operator can be influenced by considerations such as temperature, eye strain, body fatigue, and boredom created by repetitive work tasks. In addition, the successful combination of man and machine will, in part, be determined by the configuration of the visual and physical interfaces available to the teleoperator. The design and operation of system components such as full-scale and mini-master manipulator controllers, servo joysticks, and video monitors will have a direct impact on operational efficiency. As a result, the local environment and the interaction of the operator with the robotic control console have a substantial effect on mission productivity

    Wind Energy Collaboration is Great Idea

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    Proceedings of a Joint Meeting held between The Norwegian Society of Infectious Diseases and the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Oslo, 20th June 2008

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    The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (RSTMH) has a tradition of holding joint meetings with fellow European Societies, providing opportunities to facilitate discussion, exchange information, foster mutual interests and develop collaboration between the societies’ members and fellows. This paper presents the proceedings from a scientific meeting that was held between The RSTMH and the Norwegian Infectious Diseases Society at Ulleval University Hospital, Oslo on 20th June 2008. Three speakers from each society gave state-of-the-art lectures in their areas of expertise and the meeting ended with a series of case presentations

    The Capacity of Smartphone Peer-To-Peer Networks

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    We study three capacity problems in the mobile telephone model, a network abstraction that models the peer-to-peer communication capabilities implemented in most commodity smartphone operating systems. The capacity of a network expresses how much sustained throughput can be maintained for a set of communication demands, and is therefore a fundamental bound on the usefulness of a network. Because of this importance, wireless network capacity has been active area of research for the last two decades. The three capacity problems that we study differ in the structure of the communication demands. The first problem is pairwise capacity, where the demands are (source, destination) pairs. Pairwise capacity is one of the most classical definitions, as it was analyzed in the seminal paper of Gupta and Kumar on wireless network capacity. The second problem we study is broadcast capacity, in which a single source must deliver packets to all other nodes in the network. Finally, we turn our attention to all-to-all capacity, in which all nodes must deliver packets to all other nodes. In all three of these problems we characterize the optimal achievable throughput for any given network, and design algorithms which asymptotically match this performance. We also study these problems in networks generated randomly by a process introduced by Gupta and Kumar, and fully characterize their achievable throughput. Interestingly, the techniques that we develop for all-to-all capacity also allow us to design a one-shot gossip algorithm that runs within a polylogarithmic factor of optimal in every graph. This largely resolves an open question from previous work on the one-shot gossip problem in this model

    On Bioelectric Algorithms

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    Cellular bioelectricity describes the biological phenomenon in which cells in living tissue generate and maintain patterns of voltage gradients across their membranes induced by differing concentrations of charged ions. A growing body of research suggests that bioelectric patterns represent an ancient system that plays a key role in guiding many important developmental processes including tissue regeneration, tumor suppression, and embryogenesis. This paper applies techniques from distributed algorithm theory to help better understand how cells work together to form these patterns. To do so, we present the cellular bioelectric model (CBM), a new computational model that captures the primary capabilities and constraints of bioelectric interactions between cells and their environment. We use this model to investigate several important topics from the relevant biology research literature. We begin with symmetry breaking, analyzing a simple cell definition that when combined in single hop or multihop topologies, efficiently solves leader election and the maximal independent set problem, respectively - indicating that these classical symmetry breaking tasks are well-matched to bioelectric mechanisms. We then turn our attention to the information processing ability of bioelectric cells, exploring upper and lower bounds for approximate solutions to threshold and majority detection, and then proving that these systems are in fact Turing complete - resolving an open question about the computational power of bioelectric interactions

    Trade-offs between Selection Complexity and Performance when Searching the Plane without Communication

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    We consider the ANTS problem [Feinerman et al.] in which a group of agents collaboratively search for a target in a two-dimensional plane. Because this problem is inspired by the behavior of biological species, we argue that in addition to studying the {\em time complexity} of solutions it is also important to study the {\em selection complexity}, a measure of how likely a given algorithmic strategy is to arise in nature due to selective pressures. In more detail, we propose a new selection complexity metric χ\chi, defined for algorithm A{\cal A} such that χ(A)=b+log\chi({\cal A}) = b + \log \ell, where bb is the number of memory bits used by each agent and \ell bounds the fineness of available probabilities (agents use probabilities of at least 1/21/2^\ell). In this paper, we study the trade-off between the standard performance metric of speed-up, which measures how the expected time to find the target improves with nn, and our new selection metric. In particular, consider nn agents searching for a treasure located at (unknown) distance DD from the origin (where nn is sub-exponential in DD). For this problem, we identify loglogD\log \log D as a crucial threshold for our selection complexity metric. We first prove a new upper bound that achieves a near-optimal speed-up of (D2/n+D)2O()(D^2/n +D) \cdot 2^{O(\ell)} for χ(A)3loglogD+O(1)\chi({\cal A}) \leq 3 \log \log D + O(1). In particular, for O(1)\ell \in O(1), the speed-up is asymptotically optimal. By comparison, the existing results for this problem [Feinerman et al.] that achieve similar speed-up require χ(A)=Ω(logD)\chi({\cal A}) = \Omega(\log D). We then show that this threshold is tight by describing a lower bound showing that if χ(A)<loglogDω(1)\chi({\cal A}) < \log \log D - \omega(1), then with high probability the target is not found within D2o(1)D^{2-o(1)} moves per agent. Hence, there is a sizable gap to the straightforward Ω(D2/n+D)\Omega(D^2/n + D) lower bound in this setting.Comment: appears in PODC 201

    Bounds on Contention Management in Radio Networks

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    The local broadcast problem assumes that processes in a wireless network are provided messages, one by one, that must be delivered to their neighbors. In this paper, we prove tight bounds for this problem in two well-studied wireless network models: the classical model, in which links are reliable and collisions consistent, and the more recent dual graph model, which introduces unreliable edges. Our results prove that the Decay strategy, commonly used for local broadcast in the classical setting, is optimal. They also establish a separation between the two models, proving that the dual graph setting is strictly harder than the classical setting, with respect to this primitive
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