2,157 research outputs found
Academic Cloud Computing Research: Five Pitfalls and Five Opportunities
This discussion paper argues that there are five fundamental pitfalls, which
can restrict academics from conducting cloud computing research at the
infrastructure level, which is currently where the vast majority of academic
research lies. Instead academics should be conducting higher risk research, in
order to gain understanding and open up entirely new areas.
We call for a renewed mindset and argue that academic research should focus
less upon physical infrastructure and embrace the abstractions provided by
clouds through five opportunities: user driven research, new programming
models, PaaS environments, and improved tools to support elasticity and
large-scale debugging. The objective of this paper is to foster discussion, and
to define a roadmap forward, which will allow academia to make longer-term
impacts to the cloud computing community.Comment: Accepted and presented at the 6th USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in
Cloud Computing (HotCloud'14
Has the commercialisation of medical research gone too far?
Government policy has been complicit in the increasing role of commercial companies in research, which in turn have little incentive to share the benefits of research. As a result, huge swathes of medical research rely on commercialisation and related patent protection in order to thrive. There is a distinct lack of evidence that commercialisation has led to an improvement in public health, the claim of increased innovation simply does not have empirical support. Commercialisation has led to skewed benefits in favour of companies, whereby industry is using the public’s resource without adequately paying for it, this imbalance may be seen as a form of exploitation. In this paper I argue that the skewed relationship between commercial and public interest needs to be addressed in order to ensure we meet healthcare needs of our patients in the future and ensuring the healthcare remains affordable
Cloud Benchmarking for Performance
How can applications be deployed on the cloud to achieve maximum performance?
This question has become significant and challenging with the availability of a
wide variety of Virtual Machines (VMs) with different performance capabilities
in the cloud. The above question is addressed by proposing a six step
benchmarking methodology in which a user provides a set of four weights that
indicate how important each of the following groups: memory, processor,
computation and storage are to the application that needs to be executed on the
cloud. The weights along with cloud benchmarking data are used to generate a
ranking of VMs that can maximise performance of the application. The rankings
are validated through an empirical analysis using two case study applications;
the first is a financial risk application and the second is a molecular
dynamics simulation, which are both representative of workloads that can
benefit from execution on the cloud. Both case studies validate the feasibility
of the methodology and highlight that maximum performance can be achieved on
the cloud by selecting the top ranked VMs produced by the methodology.Comment: 6 pages, 6th IEEE International Conference on Cloud Computing
Technology and Science (IEEE CloudCom) 2014, Singapor
Reviews
Technology‐based Learning Environments: Psychological and Educational Foundations edited by S. Vosniadou, E. De Corte and H. Mandl, volume 137 in NATO ASI Series F (Computer and Systems Sciences), Berlin, Springer‐Verlag, ISBN: 0–387–58253–3, 1994
Protease signaling regulates apical cell extrusion, cell contacts, and proliferation in epithelia.
Mechanisms that sense and regulate epithelial morphogenesis, integrity, and homeostasis are incompletely understood. Protease-activated receptor 2 (Par2), the Par2-activating membrane-tethered protease matriptase, and its inhibitor, hepatocyte activator inhibitor 1 (Hai1), are coexpressed in most epithelia and may make up a local signaling system that regulates epithelial behavior. We explored the role of Par2b in matriptase-dependent skin abnormalities in Hai1a-deficient zebrafish embryos. We show an unexpected role for Par2b in regulation of epithelial apical cell extrusion, roles in regulating proliferation that were opposite in distinct but adjacent epithelial monolayers, and roles in regulating cell-cell junctions, mobility, survival, and expression of genes involved in tissue remodeling and inflammation. The epidermal growth factor receptor Erbb2 and matrix metalloproteinases, the latter induced by Par2b, may contribute to some matriptase- and Par2b-dependent phenotypes and be permissive for others. Our results suggest that local protease-activated receptor signaling can coordinate cell behaviors known to contribute to epithelial morphogenesis and homeostasis
A preliminary assessment of the role of ambient nitric oxide exposure in hospitalization with respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis
Some in vitro studies have indicated a possible link between respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection and exposure to Nitric Oxide (NO). However, these studies used much higher NO concentrations than normally found in the ambient environment. This preliminary study explored whether an association was present with short-term exposure to NO in the environment. RSV-related admission data between November 2011 and February 2012 were obtained from Sheffield Children’s Hospital. The dates of admission were linked to contemporaneous ambient NO derived from sentinel air monitors. The case-crossover design was used to study the relationship between daily RSV admissions and NO, controlling for temperature and relative humidity. We found little evidence of association between daily RSV admission rates and exposure to ambient NO at different lags or average exposure across several lags. The findings should, however, be viewed with caution due to the low number of events observed during the time frame. It is possible that the apparent lack of association may be accounted for by the timing of the seasonal RSV epidemic in relation to peaks in NO concentrations. A larger study incorporating a wider range of RSV and NO peaks would determine whether said peaks enhanced the number of RSV hospitalizations in children
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