65 research outputs found

    The Green Computing Observatory: a data curation approach for green IT

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    International audienceThe first barrier to improved energy efficiency is the difficulty of collecting data on the energy consumption of individual components of data centers, and the lack of overall data collection. GCO collects monitoring data on energy consumption of a large computing center, and publish them through the Grid Observatory. These data include the detailed monitoring of the processors and motherboards, as well as the global site information, such as overall consumption and overall cooling. A second barrier is making the collected data usable. The difficulty is to make the data readily consistent and complete, as well as understandable for further exploitation. For this purpose, GCO opts for an ontological approach in order to rigorously define the semantics of the data (what is measured) and the context of their production (how are they acquired and/or calculated). The Green Computing Observatory (GCO) addresses the previous issues within the framework of a production infrastructure dedicated to e-science, providing a unique facility for the Computer Science and Engineering community. The overall goal is to create a full-fledged data curation process. This paper reports on the first achievements, specifically acquisition and ontology

    Infrastructure Operations Final Report

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    This document serves as a final report of the activities and achievements of WP5 throughout the whole duration of the project. The document covers the areas of infrastructure operation, service provisioning, support, testing and benchmarking. In addition, the document provides a record of the practical knowledge accumulated during the provision of various public cloud services over a period of almost two years

    Comparative study of meningitis dynamics across nine African countries: a global perspective

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Meningococcal meningitis (MM) represents an important public health problem especially in the "meningitis belt" in Africa. Although seasonality of epidemics is well known with outbreaks usually starting in the dry season, pluri-annual cycles are still less understood and even studied. In this context, we aimed at study MM cases time series across 9 sahelo-sudanian countries to detect pluri-annual periodicity and determine or not synchrony between dynamics. This global and comparative approach allows a better understanding of MM evolution in time and space in the long-term.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We used the most adapted mathematical tool to time series analyses, the wavelet method. We showed that, despite a strong consensus on the existence of a global pluri-annual cycle of MM epidemics, it is not the case. Indeed, even if a clear cycle is detected in all countries, these cycles are not as permanent and regular as generally admitted since many years. Moreover, no global synchrony was detected although many countries seemed correlated.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These results of the first large-scale study of MM dynamics highlight the strong interest and the necessity of a global survey of MM in order to be able to predict and prevent large epidemics by adapted vaccination strategy. International cooperation in Public Health and cross-disciplines studies are highly recommended to hope controlling this infectious disease.</p

    The Grid Observatory

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    International audienceThe goal of the Grid Observatory project (GO) is to contribute to an experimental theory of large grid systems by integrating the collection of data on the behaviour of the flagship European Grid Infrastructure (EGI) and its users, the development of models, and an ontology for the domain knowledge. The GO gives access to a database of grid usage traces available to the wider computer science community without the need of grid credentials. The paper presents the architecture of the digital curation process enacted by the GO and examples of their exploitation.L'objectif du projet Grid Observatoiry (GO) est de contribuer à une théorie expérimentale de systèmes globalisés à grande échelle en intégrant l'acquisition de données sur le comportement de l'infrastructure de la grille européenne phare (EGI) et de ses utilisateurs, avec le développement de modèles, et d'une ontologie du domaine. Le GO donne accès à une base de données des traces d'utilisation de la grille, mise à la disposition de la communauté scientifique. L'article présente l'architecture du processus de conservation numérique adoptée par le GO et des exemples de l'exploitation des traces collectées

    Security analyst networks, performance and career outcomes

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    Authors' draft. Final version to be published in The Journal of Finance. Available online at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/Using a sample of 42,376 board directors and 10,508 security analysts we construct a social network, mapping the connections between analysts and directors, between directors, and between analysts. We use social capital theory and techniques developed in social network analysis to measure the analyst’s level of connectedness and investigate whether these connections provide any information advantage to the analyst. We find that better-connected (better-networked) analysts make more accurate, timely, and bold forecasts. Moreover, analysts with better network positions are less likely to lose their job, suggesting that these analysts are more valuable to their brokerage houses. We do not find evidence that analyst innate forecasting ability predicts an analyst’s future network position. In contrast, past forecast optimism has a positive association with building a better network of connections

    The Precipitation Inferred from Soil Moisture (PrISM) Near Real-Time Rainfall Product: Evaluation and Comparison

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    Near real-time precipitation is essential to many applications. In Africa, the lack of dense rain-gauge networks and ground weather radars makes the use of satellite precipitation products unavoidable. Despite major progresses in estimating precipitation rate from remote sensing measurements over the past decades, satellite precipitation products still suffer from quantitative uncertainties and biases compared to ground data. Consequently, almost all precipitation products are provided in two modes: a real-time mode (also called early-run or raw product) and a corrected mode (also called final-run, adjusted or post-processed product) in which ground precipitation measurements are integrated in algorithms to correct for bias, generally at a monthly timescale. This paper describes a new methodology to provide a near-real-time precipitation product based on satellite precipitation and soil moisture measurements. Recent studies have shown that soil moisture intrinsically contains information on past precipitation and can be used to correct precipitation uncertainties. The PrISM (Precipitation inferred from Soil Moisture) methodology is presented and its performance is assessed for five in situ rainfall measurement networks located in Africa in semi-arid to wet areas: Niger, Benin, Burkina Faso, Central Africa, and East Africa. Results show that the use of SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) satellite soil moisture measurements in the PrISM algorithm most often improves the real-time satellite precipitation products, and provides results comparable to existing adjusted products, such as TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission), GPCC (Global Precipitation Climatology Centre) and IMERG (Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM), which are available a few weeks or months after their detection

    Nurses' perceptions of aids and obstacles to the provision of optimal end of life care in ICU

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    Contains fulltext : 172380.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access

    Bacterial chromosomic gene specific of species or the end of myth ! Examples of ß-lactamases

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    Philippon Alain, Arlet Guillaume. Gène chromosomique bactérien spécifique d’espèce ou la fin du mythe ! Exemples de β-lactamases. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 155 n°1-2, 2002. pp. 59-66
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