418 research outputs found

    Evaluator services for optimised service placement in distributed heterogeneous cloud infrastructures

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    Optimal placement of demanding real-time interactive applications in a distributed heterogeneous cloud very quickly results in a complex tradeoff between the application constraints and resource capabilities. This requires very detailed information of the various requirements and capabilities of the applications and available resources. In this paper, we present a mathematical model for the service optimization problem and study the concept of evaluator services as a flexible and efficient solution for this complex problem. An evaluator service is a service probe that is deployed in particular runtime environments to assess the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of deploying a specific application in such environment. We discuss how this concept can be incorporated in a general framework such as the FUSION architecture and discuss the key benefits and tradeoffs for doing evaluator-based optimal service placement in widely distributed heterogeneous cloud environments

    Challenges for orchestration and instance selection of composite services in distributed edge clouds

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    Today's centralized cloud-computing infrastructures have not been designed with geo-localized, personalized, bandwidth/processing-intensive, real-time applications in mind. High network delay and low throughput can have a significant impact on the user experience. Instead, such services could be deployed in distributed service nodes at the edge of the network, closer to the user. In this paper we focus on composite services of which the components are running in different service nodes. We present a two-layer framework that provides service orchestration and instance selection. We present the orchestration mechanisms to enable the flexible re-use of components across different composite services. For the resolution layer of our framework, we present two modes of operation that combine network and service availability information for efficient per-request instance selection among a multitude of service replicas

    Service oriented networking

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    This paper introduces a new paradigm for service oriented networking being developed in the FUSION project(1). Despite recent proposals in the area of information centric networking, a similar treatment of services - where networked software functions, rather than content, are dynamically deployed, replicated and invoked - has received little attention by the network research community to date. Our approach provides the mechanisms required to deploy a replicated service instance in the network and to route client requests to the closest instance in an efficient manner. We address the main issues that such a paradigm raises including load balancing, resource registration, domain monitoring and inter-domain orchestration. We also present preliminary evaluation results of current work

    An Assessment of Food Safety Handling Practices at Farmers\u27 Markets in Rhode Island Using a Smartphone Application

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    The number of foodborne illness outbreaks increased in the US from 2001 to 2010, and 17% of them were associated with produce. Higher risk, whole produce sold at farmers\u27 markets presents unique challenges to food safety practices in regard to temperature controls, potable water, and exposure to contaminants. The purpose of this study is to use direct observations to identify unsafe food handling practices among vendors selling higher risk produce at Rhode Island farmers\u27 markets. This study used, as a tool for data acquisition, a Smartphone application developed to allow concealed direct observations of actual vendors\u27 practices at farmers\u27 markets. Observations were made at fourteen (7 state and 7 private) farmers\u27 markets to collect data on food handling practices of 26 vendors selling higher-risk produce. The results of this study will be used as guidance for education programs targeting farmers\u27 market managers and vendors that promote best practices in regard to whole produce

    Genome-wide, high-content siRNA screening identifies the Alzheimer's genetic risk factor FERMT2 as a major modulator of APP metabolism

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    Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified 19 susceptibility loci for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). However, understanding how these genes are involved in the pathophysiology of AD is one of the main challenges of the “post-GWAS” era. At least 123 genes are located within the 19 susceptibility loci; hence, a conventional approach (studying the genes one by one) would not be time- and cost-effective. We therefore developed a genome-wide, high-content siRNA screening approach and used it to assess the functional impact of gene under-expression on APP metabolism. We found that 832 genes modulated APP metabolism. Eight of these genes were located within AD susceptibility loci. Only FERMT2 (a β3-integrin co-activator) was also significantly associated with a variation in cerebrospinal fluid Aβ peptide levels in 2886 AD cases. Lastly, we showed that the under-expression of FERMT2 increases Aβ peptide production by raising levels of mature APP at the cell surface and facilitating its recycling. Taken as a whole, our data suggest that FERMT2 modulates the AD risk by regulating APP metabolism and Aβ peptide production
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