Search results for "TLE"

showing 10 items of 2417 documents

Optimizing PolyACO Training with GPU-Based Parallelization

2016

A central part of Ant Colony Optimisation (ACO) is the function calculating the quality and cost of solutions, such as the distance of a potential ant route. This cost function is used to deposit an opportune amount of pheromones to achieve an apt convergence, and in an active ACO implementation a significant part of the runtime is spent in this part of the code. In some cases, the cost function accumulates up towards 94 % in its run time making it a performance bottle neck.

Computer scienceMathematicsofComputing_NUMERICALANALYSISSignificant part02 engineering and technologyParallel computingFunction (mathematics)Ant colonyComputingMethodologies_ARTIFICIALINTELLIGENCEBottle neck030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciencesAutomatic parallelization0302 clinical medicineConvergence (routing)0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringCode (cryptography)020201 artificial intelligence & image processing
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Advanced C++11 Multithreading

2018

Abstract The previous chapter introduced the basic concepts of multithreading using the C++11 threading API starting with basic spawn and join approaches, while finishing with non-trivial synchronization based on mutexes and condition variables. However, the major bottleneck of application performance is usually caused by contention for a shared resource. In case of mutex-based programming all participating threads usually try to acquire the same lock in parallel which effectively serializes the program for lightweight operations such as increment/decrement or updates of a single scalar value. Fortunately, modern CPUs provide dedicated commands that allow for the efficient execution of unin…

Computer scienceMonitorMultithreadingThreading (manufacturing)Operating systemSemaphorecomputer.software_genreData typecomputerBottleneckSpawn (computing)Shared resource
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The RFID technology for neurosciences: feasibility of limbs' monitoring in sleep diseases.

2009

This contribution investigates the feasibility of the passive UHF RF identification technology for the wireless monitoring of human body movements in some common sleep disorders by means of passive tags equipped with inertial switches. Electromagnetic and mechanical models as well as preliminary experimentations are introduced to analyze all the significant issues concerning the required power, the tag antenna design, the read distance, and the expected biosignals collected by the interrogation device.

Computer scienceRemote patient monitoringRadio WavesPolysomnographytag antennaRFID sensor Human health monitoringAccelerometerRF identification (RFID)MotionRestless Legs SyndromemedicineWirelessHumansTelemetryaccelerometer; RF identification (RFID); sensor network; sleep disorder; tag antennaElectrical and Electronic Engineeringsensor networksleep disorderSleep disorderbusiness.industrySettore ING-INF/02 - Campi ElettromagneticiExtremitiesGeneral MedicineModels Theoreticalmedicine.diseaseComputer Science ApplicationsNocturnal Myoclonus SyndromeaccelerometerRadio frequencySleep (system call)TelecommunicationsbusinessWireless sensor networkComputer hardwareAlgorithmsBiotechnologyIEEE transactions on information technology in biomedicine : a publication of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
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Dog-bite-related attacks: A new forensic approach

2020

Dog attacks today represent a health hazard considering that prevention strategies have not always been successful. The identification of the dog that attacked the victim is necessary, considering the civil or criminal consequences for the animal's owner. An accurate scene analysis must be performed collecting a series of important information.Forensic investigations in dog attacks involve different methods, such as the evaluating of the canine Short Tandem Repeat (STR) typing in saliva traces on wounds or bite mark analysis, however, these techniques cannot always be applied. The effort to find new methods to identify the dog that attacked the victim represents a very interesting field for…

Computer scienceSample (material)Sensitivity and Specificity01 natural sciencesdog attacksCattle genotypingForensic pathologyPathology and Forensic MedicineGenetic profile03 medical and health sciencesDogs0302 clinical medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansShort tandem repeatBites and Stings030216 legal & forensic medicineSalivacattle genotyping; dog attacks; dog identification; forensic pathology; forensic science; short tandem repeat; tgla122; tgla53Dog attackScene analysisdog identification010401 analytical chemistrytgla53DNAForensic Medicinemedicine.diseaseTGLA53.DNA FingerprintingDog bitePedigree0104 chemical sciencesForensic scienceIdentification (information)TGLA122Reference sampleForensic scienceMedical emergencyDog attackLawForensic Science International
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Some comments on the experimental behavior of FRC beams in flexure

2008

In the present paper the experimental results, recently obtained by the authors, regarding the monotonic and the cyclic flexural response of normal and high-strength concrete beams reinforced with steel bars and discontinuous fibers, are shown. From the experimental results, all referred to low values of shear-to-depth ratios, it emerges clearly that the shear failure is brittle especially under cyclic actions highlighting the role of the fibers in the flexural behavior of the beams. The cyclic action produces a significant decay in the stiffness and in the strength capacity of the beams, and the addition of fibers reduces these negative effects. Form theoretical point of view good agreemen…

Concrete beamsMaterials scienceDeformation (mechanics)business.industrydesignStiffnessStructural engineeringshear and flexural strengthshearPhysics and Astronomy (all)Settore ICAR/09 - Tecnica Delle CostruzioniBrittlenessShear (geology)Flexural strengthCreepsteel fibermedicinebeammedicine.symptombusinesscyclic action
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Behavior in compression of concrete cylinders externally wrapped with basalt fibers

2015

Abstract This paper gives additional information on the use of new class of composites constituted by Basalt Fiber Reinforced Polymer (BFRP) bonded with epoxy resin to concrete specimens as an alternative confinement material for compressed concrete members with respect to carbon or glass fibers. From the experimental point of view, concrete cylinders are wrapped with continuous fibers, in the form of sheets, applying both full and partial discrete wrapping with BFRP straps, and then tested in compression. For comparison, few other concrete cylinders are wrapped with Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer (CFRP) sheets and tested in compression. The number and type of plies (full or partial wrappi…

Concrete cylinders; Basalt fibers; Carbon fibers; Monotonic tests; Cyclic testsMaterials scienceGlass fiberIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringConcrete cylindersBrittlenessMonotonic testCarbon fibersFiberComposite materialCarbon fiber reinforced polymerCyclic testsBasalt fiberbusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringStructural engineeringEpoxyCompression (physics)Basalt fibersSettore ICAR/09 - Tecnica Delle CostruzioniSettore ING-IND/22 - Scienza E Tecnologia Dei MaterialiCompressive strengthMechanics of Materialsvisual_artBasalt fiberCeramics and Compositesvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCarbon fiberConcrete cylinderbusinessMonotonic testsComposites Part B: Engineering
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Crack bifurcations in a strained lattice

1996

Dynamic crack propagation in a strained, granular, and brittle material is investigated by modeling the material as a lattice network of elastic beams. By tuning the strain and the ratio of axial to bending stiffness of the beams, a crack propagates either straight, or it branches, or it bifurcates. The crack tip velocity is calculated approximately for cracks that propagate straight. In a bifurcated crack the number of broken beams follows a scaling law. The shape of the branches is found to be the same as in recent experiments.

Condensed Matter::Materials ScienceScaling lawBrittlenessMaterials scienceLattice (order)Bending stiffnessPhysics::Accelerator PhysicsFracture mechanicsMechanicsPhysics::Classical PhysicsLattice networkPhysics::GeophysicsPhysical Review B
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The effect of energy feedbacks on continental strength

2005

The classical strength profile of continents is derived from a quasi-static view of their rheological response to stress--one that does not consider dynamic interactions between brittle and ductile layers. Such interactions result in complexities of failure in the brittle-ductile transition and the need to couple energy to understand strain localization. Here we investigate continental deformation by solving the fully coupled energy, momentum and continuum equations. We show that this approach produces unexpected feedback processes, leading to a significantly weaker dynamic strength evolution. In our model, stress localization focused on the brittle-ductile transition leads to the spontaneo…

Condensed Matter::Materials ScienceTectonicsMultidisciplinaryBrittlenessMathematical modelLithosphereMetamorphic core complexContinental crustCrustMechanicsMantle (geology)GeologyPhysics::GeophysicsNature
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Functional consequences of prey acclimation to ocean acidification for the prey and its predator

2016

Ocean acidification is the suite of chemical changes to the carbonate system of seawater as a consequence of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Despite a growing body of evidences demonstrating the negative effects of ocean acidification on marine species, the consequences at the ecosystem level are still unclear. One factor limiting our ability to upscale from species to ecosystem is the poor mechanistic understanding of the functional consequences of the observed effects on organisms. This is particularly true in the context of species interactions. The aim of this work was to investigate the functional consequence of the exposure of a prey (the mussel Brachidontes pharaonis) t…

Condition indexRegistration number of speciesSalinityTemperateBottles or small containers/Aquaria (<20 L)inorganicAlkalinityBrachidontes pharaonisIncubation durationExperimentTemperature waterCarbon inorganic dissolvedAssimilation efficiencyEriphia verrucosaBreaking loadCalculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al 2010Aragonite saturation stateAlkalinity totalBottles or small containers Aquaria 20 LtotalpHTemperaturePartial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air) standard errordissolvedCarbonate ionLaboratory experimentPartial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)standard errorEarth System ResearchUniform resource locator link to referenceanimal structuresCalcite saturation stateArthropodaLengthwaterGrowth MorphologyFigureBenthosUniform resource locator/link to referenceMediterranean SeaAnimaliaBehaviourBicarbonate ionTime in secondsTypeTemperature water standard errorCalculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. (2010)SpeciespH standard errorCalcite saturation state standard errorGrowth rateBottles or small containers/Aquaria (&lt;20 L)Calculated using CO2SYSfungiCarbonate system computation flagFugacity of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)CarbonTreatmentAragonite saturation state standard errorPartial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet airCarbon dioxideMolluscaGrowth/MorphologyBenthic animalsFugacity of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet airCoast and continental shelfSpecies interaction
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Conservation genetics of highly isolated populations of the xerothermic beetleCrioceris quatuordecimpunctata(Chrysomelidae)

2012

Xerothermic species are rare and threatened in central and eastern Europe. In light of the continuing loss of steppe-like habitats due to anthropogenic fragmentation and degradation, the evaluation of genetic variation in populations inhabiting them is of immediate importance if appropriate conservation measures are to be undertaken. Here we report on the genetic diversity of the rare leaf beetle Crioceris quatuordecimpunctata, whose populations in central and eastern Europe inhabit highly geographically isolated areas. All of the studied populations (in Poland, Ukraine, and Slovakia) were differentiated at the mitochondrial marker COI. However, with respect to the nuclear marker ITS1, Poli…

Conservation geneticsGenetic diversitybiologyEcologyThreatened speciesGenetic variationZoologyPopulation geneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyWolbachiabiology.organism_classificationSelective sweepLeaf beetleInvertebrate Biology
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