33,738 research outputs found
Functional Properties of Through Put in Tandem Lines with Unreliable Servers and Finite Buffers
MODLEACH: A Variant of LEACH for WSNs
Wireless sensor networks are appearing as an emerging need for mankind.
Though, Such networks are still in research phase however, they have high
potential to be applied in almost every field of life. Lots of research is done
and a lot more is awaiting to be standardized. In this work, cluster based
routing in wireless sensor networks is studied precisely. Further, we modify
one of the most prominent wireless sensor network's routing protocol "LEACH" as
modified LEACH (MODLEACH) by introducing \emph{efficient cluster head
replacement scheme} and \emph{dual transmitting power levels}. Our modified
LEACH, in comparison with LEACH out performs it using metrics of cluster head
formation, through put and network life. Afterwards, hard and soft thresholds
are implemented on modified LEACH (MODLEACH) that boast the performance even
more. Finally a brief performance analysis of LEACH, Modified LEACH (MODLEACH),
MODLEACH with hard threshold (MODLEACHHT) and MODLEACH with soft threshold
(MODLEACHST) is undertaken considering metrics of throughput, network life and
cluster head replacements.Comment: IEEE 8th International Conference on Broadband and Wireless
Computing, Communication and Applications (BWCCA'13), Compiegne, Franc
Metabolomics : a tool for studying plant biology
In recent years new technologies have allowed gene expression, protein and metabolite profiles in different tissues and developmental stages to be monitored. This is an emerging field in plant science and is applied to diverse plant systems in order to elucidate the regulation of growth and development. The goal in plant metabolomics is to analyze, identify and quantify all low molecular weight molecules of plant organisms. The plant metabolites are extracted and analyzed using various sensitive analytical techniques, usually mass spectrometry (MS) in combination with chromatography. In order to compare the metabolome of different plants in a high through-put manner, a number of biological, analytical and data processing steps have to be performed. In the work underlying this thesis we developed a fast and robust method for routine analysis of plant metabolite patterns using Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS). The method was performed according to Design of Experiment (DOE) to investigate factors affecting the extraction and derivatization of the metabolites from leaves of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The outcome of metabolic analysis by GC/MS is a complex mixture of approximately 400 overlapping peaks. Resolving (deconvoluting) overlapping peaks is time-consuming, difficult to automate and additional processing is needed in order to compare samples. To avoid deconvolution being a major bottleneck in high through-put analyses we developed a new semi-automated strategy using hierarchical methods for processing GC/MS data that can be applied to all samples simultaneously. The two methods include base-line correction of the non-processed MS-data files, alignment, time-window determinations, Alternating Regression and multivariate analysis in order to detect metabolites that differ in relative concentrations between samples. The developed methodology was applied to study the effects of the plant hormone GA on the metabolome, with specific emphasis on auxin levels in Arabidopsis thaliana mutants defective in GA biosynthesis and signalling. A large series of plant samples was analysed and the resulting data were processed in less than one week with minimal labour; similar to the time required for the GC/MS analyses of the samples
Analysis of a novel life-duration related gene which was discovered by high-through-put generation of deletion mutants
科学研究費助成事業(科学研究費補助金)研究成果報告書:基盤研究(C)2010-2012課題番号:2251020
Improving the Students\u27 EFL Writing Ability Through “Put Yourself in the Picture” Strategy
This Action research was intended to improve the students\u27 EFL writing ability through “Put Yourself in the Picture” strategy. This research involved 33 first year managemen major of students A of Muhammadiyah University of Ponorogo in the academic year 2015/2016. This research was conducted in two cycles by following the procedures of the action research, namely, planning, implementing, observing, and reflecting. Each cycle of the research encompassed three meetings. The data of the research were gathered through observation checklists, field notes, questionnaire, and portfolio. The findings of research showed that “Put Yourself in the Picture” strategy has proven effectively to improve the student\u27 writing ability. The improvement could be seen from the increase of the students\u27 average writing score. Besides, “Put Yourself in the Picture” strategy can increase the students\u27 participation during the process of writing
A fast edge charge exchange recombination spectroscopy system at the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak
In this work, a new type of high through-put Czerny-Turner spectrometer has been developed which
allows us to acquire multiple channels simultaneously with a repetition time on the order of 10
μ
s
at different wavelengths. The spectrometer has been coupled to the edge charge exchange recom-
bination system at ASDEX Upgrade which has been recently refurbished with new lines of sight.
Construction features, calibration methods, and initial measurements obtained with the new setup will
be presented.European Commission (EUROfusion 633053
Approximations for fork/join systems with inputs from multi-server stations.
Fork/join stations are commonly used to model synchronization constraints in queuing network models of computer and manufacturing systems. This paper presents an exact analysis of a fork/join station in a closed queuing network with inputs from multi-server stations with two-phase Coxian service distributions. The underlying queue length process is analyzed exactly to determine performance measures such as through put, and distributions of the queue length at the fork/join station. By choosing suitable parameters for the two-phase Coxian distributions, the effect of variability in inputs on system performance is studied. The study reveals that for several system configurations, analysis of the simpler system with exponential inputs provides efficient approximations for performance measures. Both, the exact analysis and the simple approximations of fork/join systems constitute useful building blocks for developing efficient methods for analyzing large queuing networks with fork/join stations.queueing; fork/join; synchronization; assembly systems; closed queuing networks;
Performance metrics for consolidated servers
In spite of the widespread adoption of virtualization and consol- idation, there exists no consensus with respect to how to bench- mark consolidated servers that run multiple guest VMs on the same physical hardware. For example, VMware proposes VMmark which basically computes the geometric mean of normalized throughput values across the VMs; Intel uses vConsolidate which reports a weighted arithmetic average of normalized throughput values.
These benchmarking methodologies focus on total system through- put (i.e., across all VMs in the system), and do not take into account per-VM performance. We argue that a benchmarking methodology for consolidated servers should quantify both total system through- put and per-VM performance in order to provide a meaningful and precise performance characterization. We therefore present two performance metrics, Total Normalized Throughput (TNT) to characterize total system performance, and Average Normalized Reduced Throughput (ANRT) to characterize per-VM performance.
We compare TNT and ANRT against VMmark using published performance numbers, and report several cases for which the VM- mark score is misleading. This is, VMmark says one platform yields better performance than another, however, TNT and ANRT show that both platforms represent different trade-offs in total system throughput versus per-VM performance. Or, even worse, in a cou- ple cases we observe that VMmark yields opposite conclusions than TNT and ANRT, i.e., VMmark says one system performs better than another one which is contradicted by TNT/ANRT performance characterization
U.S./CANADA GRAIN HANDLING AND TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS
The United States and Canada have developed very different grain handling and transportation systems (GHTSs) over the last several decades to compete for global and domestic markets in Canada and the United States under CUSTA. Because the grain industries in both countries face long distance hauls, GHTSs are critically important to their operations and to producer returns. There has been considerable pressure for change in Canada's grain handling and transportation sector. Some industry trends, such as the rationalization of elevators in the Prairies and investments in new high through-put facilities, are being driven by market and competitive forces. Changes in grain handling, reciprocal access to marketing functions, and elimination of rate caps may have a significant impact on cross-border grain flows. Canadian Transport announced reforms to improve the efficiency of its GHTS. Possible multi-level effects, created by the reform package, would affect the grain flow from Canada to the United States. The most significant reforms include 'port buying' by the Canadian Wheat Board, which would remove the Board's control over internal logistics and shipping, and replacement of the current maximum railway rate scale with a cap on annual railway revenues for grain shipments.Canadian Wheat Board (CWB), Grain Trade, Grain Transportation and Handling System (GHTS), Rail Rate, Railcar Allocation, Rationalization, Rate Cap, Reciprocal Access, Regulation, Reform Package., Crop Production/Industries,
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