2,160 research outputs found
Massive MIMO Full-Duplex Relaying with Optimal Power Allocation for Independent Multipairs
With the help of an in-band full-duplex relay station, it is possible to
simultaneously transmit and receive signals from multiple users. The
performance of such system can be greatly increased when the relay station is
equipped with a large number of antennas on both transmitter and receiver
sides. In this paper, we exploit the use of massive arrays to effectively
suppress the loopback interference (LI) of a decode-and-forward relay (DF) and
evaluate the performance of the end-to-end (e2e) transmission. This paper
assumes imperfect channel state information is available at the relay and
designs a minimum mean-square error (MMSE) filter to mitigate the interference.
Subsequently, we adopt zero-forcing (ZF) filters for both detection and
beamforming. The performance of such system is evaluated in terms of bit error
rate (BER) at both relay and destinations, and an optimal choice for the
transmission power at the relay is shown. We then propose a complexity
efficient optimal power allocation (OPA) algorithm that, using the channel
statistics, computes the minimum power that satisfies the rate constraints of
each pair. The results obtained via simulation show that when both MMSE
filtering and OPA method are used, better values for the energy efficiency are
attained.Comment: Accepted to the 16th IEEE International Workshop on Signal Processing
Advances in Wireless Communications - SPAWC, Stockholm, Sweden 201
Backbone chemical shift assignments of human 14-3-3
14-3-3 proteins are a group of seven dimeric adapter proteins that exert
their biological function by interacting with hundreds of phosphorylated
proteins, thus influencing their sub-cellular localization, activity or
stability in the cell. Due to this remarkable interaction network, 14-3-3
proteins have been associated with several pathologies and the protein-protein
interactions established with a number of partners are now considered promising
drug targets. The activity of 14-3-3 proteins is often isoform specific and to
our knowledge only one out of seven isoforms, 14-3-3, has been assigned.
Despite the availability of the crystal structures of all seven isoforms of
14-3-3, the additional NMR assignments of 14-3-3 proteins are important for
both biological mechanism studies and chemical biology approaches. Herein, we
present a robust backbone assignment of 14-3-3, which will allow
advances in the discovery of potential therapeutic compounds. This assignment
is now being applied to the discovery of both inhibitors and stabilizers of
14-3-3 protein-protein interactions
Soil Microbial Biomass And Activity In A Cork Oak Savanna
Cork oak savannas are composed by a sparse tree canopy (30-70 trees/ha) and a grassland understory predominantly composed of C3 annuals that survive the hot and dry Mediterranean summers as seeds in the soil. Microbial communities can be more or less efficient at converting organic substrates into microbial biomass carbon depending on the quantity and quality of organic matter inputs. The cork oak savannas have two distinct types of plant litter that can affect soil microbial biomass and activity differently: herbaceous litter and the more recalcitrant woody plant litter resulting from the trees. Spatial variability of soil microbial biomass and activity due to the tree-grassland component of cork oak savannas were evaluated in order to better understand the soil carbon dynamics of these systems.

To quantify changes in soil microbial biomass and activity, measurements were performed in a Cork oak savanna in Southern Portugal. At this site 8 plots were randomly established under mature cork oak trees and paired with 8 open grassland plots. During one year soil cores (0-10 cm) were monthly collected at each site for measuring soil microbial biomass C and other eco-physiology parameters.


Results/Conclusion

Soil microbial biomass carbon (Cmic) and nitrogen (Nmic) were always higher under the tree canopy than in the open grasslands. Organic carbon (Corg) was also higher under the tree canopies. The Cmic/Corg ratio relates to the microbial activity and its potential to mineralize organic substances. The Cmic/Corg ratio was lower under the tree canopies than in the open grasslands. Less microbial biomass was supported per unit of Corg. Basal activity was always higher under the canopy than in the open grassland.

Trees scattered in the savanna function as islands inducing larger soil microbial communities and higher basal activity under the canopies. Lower Cmic/Corg ratio under the tree canopies suggests a more recalcitrant nature of the litter and a decrease in relative availability of organic matter under the trees.

D-ADMM: A Communication-Efficient Distributed Algorithm For Separable Optimization
We propose a distributed algorithm, named Distributed Alternating Direction
Method of Multipliers (D-ADMM), for solving separable optimization problems in
networks of interconnected nodes or agents. In a separable optimization problem
there is a private cost function and a private constraint set at each node. The
goal is to minimize the sum of all the cost functions, constraining the
solution to be in the intersection of all the constraint sets. D-ADMM is proven
to converge when the network is bipartite or when all the functions are
strongly convex, although in practice, convergence is observed even when these
conditions are not met. We use D-ADMM to solve the following problems from
signal processing and control: average consensus, compressed sensing, and
support vector machines. Our simulations show that D-ADMM requires less
communications than state-of-the-art algorithms to achieve a given accuracy
level. Algorithms with low communication requirements are important, for
example, in sensor networks, where sensors are typically battery-operated and
communicating is the most energy consuming operation.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
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