12,277 research outputs found
Short Paper
In Building Automation Systems contextual information about sensors is frequently missing or hard-coded in the control code. Retrieving this data is time consuming and error-prone, but necessary to write any type of control application. Automating metadata acquisition is a new and active area of research. Methods to infer metadata from sensor labels or from recorded data have been previously proposed. However, these methods are ineffective in uncovering the association between HVAC components. In fact, measured variables (pressures, temperatures, flows, valve positions) have slow and attenuated responses to changes in input variables, thus impairing the efficacy of correlation methods. In addition, sensor readings are frequently constrained between physical limits and kept around setpoints by nested control loops. For this reason, pure statistical methods fail to capture the differences between sensor streams and are unable to classify them. In this article, we propose a new method for discovering functional relationships between Air Handling Units and Variable-Air-Volume Boxes from sensor data. The method utilizes perturbations of subsystem variables, while guaranteeing that the building zones remain within comfort boundaries. When applied to an existing building, our proposed method reveals correct associations in ∼80% of the cases, and outperforms other methods
L'autore ineffabile : Good Old Neon e i paradossi del linguaggio
L’articolo tratta innanzitutto del racconto Good Old Neon, di David Foster Wallace: da alcune osservazioni narratologiche sull’enunciazione narrativa, sulla difficoltà di individuare narratore e narratario e sullo statuto problematico del David Wallace che appare nel finale, si passa a una più ampia considerazione della paradossalità del racconto, per la quale si ri-chiamano Jonathan Culler e la unnatural narratology. Ciò conduce a discutere prima della poetica di Wallace, che insiste sulla relazione fra autore e lettore, e poi del rapporto fra individuo e linguaggio, sulla scorta di Hans Georg Gadamer, ovvero di come il medium in cui autore e lettore possono incontrarsi – il linguaggio – sia anche quello in cui l’individualità apparentemente si perde
Evolution of cooperation among tumor cells
The evolution of cooperation has a well established theoretical framework based on game theory. This approach has made valuable contributions to a wide variety of disciplines, including political science, economics, and evolutionary biology. Existing cancer theory suggests that individual clones of cancer cells evolve independently from one another, acquiring all of the genetic traits or hallmarks necessary to form a malignant tumor. It is also now recognized that tumors are heterotypic, with cancer cells interacting with normal stromal cells within the issue microenvironment, including endothelial, stromal, and nerve cells. This tumor cell???stromal cell interaction in itself is a form of commensalism, because it has been demonstrated that these nonmalignant cells support and even enable tumor growth. Here, we add to this theory by regarding tumor cells as game players whose interactions help to determine their Darwinian fitness. We marshal evidence that tumor cells overcome certain host defenses by means of diffusible products. Our original contribution is to raise the possibility that two nearby cells can protect each other from a set of host defenses that neither could survive alone. Cooperation can evolve as byproduct mutualism among genetically diverse tumor cells. Our hypothesis supplements, but does not supplant, the traditional view of carcinogenesis in which one clonal population of cells develops all of the necessary genetic traits independently to form a tumor. Cooperation through the sharing of diffusible products raises new questions about tumorigenesis and has implications for understanding observed phenomena, designing new experiments, and developing new therapeutic approaches.Author manuscript. Published in final edited form as: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 September 5; 103(36): 13474-13479.The final published version of this article is located at: www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0606053103NIH U56 CA113004; to David E. AxelrodR.A. was supported by National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant SES-0240852. D.E.A. was supported by NSF Grant IIS-0312953, National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant U56 CA113004, and New Jersey Commission on Cancer Research Grant 1076-CCR-SO. K.J.P. is an American Cancer Society Clinical Research Professor and is supported by NIH Grants CA69568, CA102872, and CA093900.NIH CA69568; to Kenneth J. PientaNIH CA102872; to Kenneth J. PientaNIH CA093900; to Kenneth J. PientaNSF SES-0240852; to Robert AxelrodNJ Commission on Cancer Research 1076-CCR-SO; to David E. AxelrodAlso available in PubMed Central. PMCID: PMC155738
Colon_Crypt_Model_041321.nlogo
Title: Colon_Crypt_Model_041321.nlogo
Research genre: Computer program
Creator: Axelrod, David E.
Date Created: 2021
Extent: 1 digital file (393 KB)
Intended Audience: Science
Description: Computer program that simulates and plots the dynamics of stem cells, transient amplifying cells, differentiated cells, and mutant cells in normal human colon crypts and early colon cancer. It has been calibrated with measurements of human biopsy specimens. Includes graphical user interface, detailed information text, and annotated code. Experiments can be run from the GUI without knowledge of coding, or from the Behavior Space Tool using example code or modified code. It has been used to simulate human colon cancer initiation, therapy, and prevention. Different chemotherapy or prevention intermittent dose schedules can be input. Chemotherapy of heterogeneous and drug resistant early colon cancers can be simulated. Circadian cell proliferation can be selected to investigate chronomodulated chemotherapy dose schedules. Simulated output can be saved in spreadsheet format, or as images of plots of cell numbers as function of time.
The model was developed in the application NetLogo version 5.3.1, and revisions made to also run in NetLogo version 6.2.0. The model will not run on the Web version of NetLogo. NetLogo is a multi-agent programmable modeling environment. It is authored by Uri Wilenski and developed at The Center for Connected Learning (CCL) and Computer-Based Modeling. It is multi-platform (Mac, Windows, or Linux) open source application.
NetLogo version 6.2.0, can be downloaded at http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/download.shtml. To download the computer program click on the red link “NLOGO" to the left.
Earlier versions of the model and its use have been described in the following publications: Theoret Biol Med Model. 2013;10:66-89. Cancer Chemother Pharmcol 2017;79:889-898. Converg Sci Phys Oncol 2017;3:035004. Cancer Inform 2019;18:1-8. JCO Clin Cancer Inform 2020;4:514-520. A forthcoming publication will describe results of circadian-timed chemotherapy.
Research Domain: Science
Subjects: Chronotherapy: Circadian: Colorectal cancer: Chemotherapy: Agent-based model
Rights statement: The author owns the copyright to this work
Managing parallelism and resources in scientific dataflow programs
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1989.Vita.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 227-233).by David E. Culler.Ph.D
Disputatio philosophica de dependentia creaturae a Deo in esse, fieri, et operari
quam auspice Deo , sub praesidio Dn. Ioh. Rod. Ottii ... amico examini subiicit David Holzhalbius author & respondens ...Diss. Hohe Schule Zürich, 169
Cult: A Composite Novel
Cult (redacted)
The first component of the thesis is a composite novel called Cult which falls into two parts with seven narratives in each. Part 1 tracks the protagonist, Ellen, from her first involvement with the cult through to her eventually leaving it. Although fiction, the first half of the book answers the kinds of questions the author is asked when people discover that she was once a sannyasin (a follower of the guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh). While the experiences of meditation, group therapy and communal living are all faithfully rendered within the stories, the need for strong characters, narrative drive and a lightness of touch takes precedence.
Part 2 picks up Ellen’s story some twenty or so years later and explores what becomes of her in middle age. It also looks at other groups in society, such as academia, the law and the internet dating community which each have their own jargon, hierarchies, rituals and rules but are not considered to be cults.
The book examines the question raised in the Epigraph, ‘how do we be together when we feel so alone’ with a focus on relationships other than the familial and the romantic.
Collisions, Chasms and Connections: a Performative Exploration of the Composite Novel Form
The second part of the thesis is both a critical and creative response to three contemporary American books: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout; A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan; and Legend of a Suicide by David Vann. The critical element comprises a close reading of the three books; a chronological reconstruction of their overarching storylines; and a consideration of what their authors have said about writing the books. It concludes that, in the composite novel, the simultaneous presentation of multiple views and storylines operate much like a 3D image to give the impression of depth to the characters and situations rendered. The creative element of the essay is a playful and personal response to the texts
E-book : Industrial Transformation In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David P. Angel)
Arsip Kuliah Online 2010: E-book : Industrial Transformation In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David P. Angel
E-book : "industrial Transformations In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David. P Angel)
Arsip Kuliah Online 2010: E-book : "industrial Transformations In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David. P Angel
Landsat MSS classification of fire fuel types in Wood Buffalo National Park, northern Canada
J1: Global Ecology & Biogeography Letters; M3: Article; Milne, David Franklin, Steven E. Wilson, Bradley A. Ghitter, Geoff Heathcott, Mark McCaffrey, Thomas M. Ow, Charlotte F. Y.; Source Information: Mar1994, Vol. 4 Issue 2, p33; Subject Term: FOREST fires; Author-Supplied Keyword: Canada (Wood Buffalo National Park); Author-Supplied Keyword: Forest fire; Author-Supplied Keyword: Fuel type classification; Author-Supplied Keyword: Landsat data; Number of Pages: 0p; Document Type: Articl
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