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Second Version (second + version)
Selected AbstractsSolving the block,Toeplitz least-squares problem in parallelCONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 1 2005P. Alonso Abstract In this paper we present two versions of a parallel algorithm to solve the block,Toeplitz least-squares problem on distributed-memory architectures. We derive a parallel algorithm based on the seminormal equations arising from the triangular decomposition of the product TTT. Our parallel algorithm exploits the displacement structure of the Toeplitz-like matrices using the Generalized Schur Algorithm to obtain the solution in O(mn) flops instead of O(mn2) flops of the algorithms for non-structured matrices. The strong regularity of the previous product of matrices and an appropriate computation of the hyperbolic rotations improve the stability of the algorithms. We have reduced the communication cost of previous versions, and have also reduced the memory access cost by appropriately arranging the elements of the matrices. Furthermore, the second version of the algorithm has a very low spatial cost, because it does not store the triangular factor of the decomposition. The experimental results show a good scalability of the parallel algorithm on two different clusters of personal computers. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Effects of age and competence type on the emotions: Focusing on sadness and angerJAPANESE PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2007TOSHIHIKO HAYAMIZU Abstract:, The effects of age and competence type on emotional reactions were demonstrated in this study. Participants: (362 junior high-school students, 658 senior high-school students, 407 undergraduates, and 1027 adults) were asked to rate the Assumed-competence Scale, second version (ACS-2) and Rosenberg's Self-esteem Scale, which were prepared to classify the participants into four competence types: Omnipotent, Assumed, Self-respective, and Atrophy. They also rated their perceived emotional reactions toward negative personal and social events, and the responses were compared among age groups and competence types. Remarkable results showed that the Assumed and the Atrophy types were prominent in junior and senior high-school students. They tend to get angry toward negative personal events, and they also tend not to respond emotionally toward social events. Another result was that people in the Assumed and Omnipotent types were likely to get angry toward both personal and social events, and they were also less responsive toward social events. [source] An ontology of human developmental anatomyJOURNAL OF ANATOMY, Issue 4 2003Amy Hunter Human developmental anatomy has been organized as structured lists of the major constituent tissues present during each of Carnegie stages 1,20 (E1,E50, ,8500 anatomically defined tissue items). For each of these stages, the tissues have been organized as a hierarchy in which an individual tissue is catalogued as part of a larger tissue. Such a formal representation of knowledge is known as an ontology and this anatomical ontology can be used in databases to store, organize and search for data associated with the tissues present at each developmental stage. The anatomical data for compiling these hierarchies comes from the literature, from observations on embryos in the Patten Collection (Ann Arbor, MI, USA) and from comparisons with mouse tissues at similar stages of development. The ontology is available in three versions. The first gives hierarchies of the named tissues present at each Carnegie stage (http://www.ana.ed.ac.uk/anatomy/database/humat/) and is intended to help analyse both normal and abnormal human embryos; it carries hyperlinked notes on some ambiguities in the literature that have been clarified through analysing sectioned material. The second contains many additional subsidiary tissue domains and is intended for handling tissue-associated data (e.g. gene-expression) in a database. This version is available at the humat site and at http://genex.hgu.mrc.ac.uk/Resources/intro.html/), and has been designed to be interoperable with the ontology for mouse developmental anatomy, also available at the genex site. The third gives the second version in GO ontology syntax (with standard IDs for each tissue) and can be downloaded from both the genex and the Open Biological Ontology sites (http://obo.sourceforge.net/) [source] HATODAS II , heavy-atom database system with potentiality scoringJOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 3 2009Michihiro Sugahara HATODAS II is the second version of HATODAS (the Heavy-Atom Database System), which suggests potential heavy-atom reagents for the derivatization of protein crystals. The present expanded database contains 3103 heavy-atom binding sites, which is four times more than the previous version. HATODAS II has three new criteria to evaluate the feasibility of the search results: (1) potentiality scoring for the predicted heavy-atom reagents, (2) exclusion of the disordered amino acid residues based on the secondary structure prediction and (3) consideration of the solvent accessibility of amino acid residues from a homology model. In the point mutation option, HATODAS II suggests possible mutation sites into reactive amino acid residues such as Met, Cys and His, on the basis of multiple sequence alignments of homologous proteins. These new features allow the user to make a well informed decision as to the possible heavy-atom derivatization experiments of protein crystals. [source] Equations to predict precipitation onset and bubblepoint pressures of asphaltenic reservoir fluidsAICHE JOURNAL, Issue 7 2009J. M. del Rio Abstract A set of algebraic equations to predict upper onset-of-precipitation and bubble-point pressures of asphaltene-containing reservoir fluids in wide temperature ranges are proposed. In developing the equations, laboratory data of 11 Mexican and 12 more live oils have been analyzed, and a correlation of these data with temperature has been found. A modified least-squares regression method has been used to develop two versions of the proposed equations. In one version, a single pressure/temperature data point is required to predict the entire onset/bubble-point curves at any temperature. For oils with no experimental precipitation data available at all, a second version of the proposed expressions employs standard chromatographic data of the reservoir fluid to provide a reasonable prediction. The average absolute deviations in calculated onset and bubble-point pressures by the proposed equations are 2.53 and 0.45MPa by the one-point correlations, respectively, and 3.96 and 1.62 MPa by the compositionally-based correlations, respectively. The developed expressions are simple and can be used to provide reasonable predictions of upper onset and bubble-point pressures of asphaltenic live oils in cases where laboratory data are scarce. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2009 [source] Integrating Hume's Accounts of Belief and JustificationPHILOSOPHY AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL RESEARCH, Issue 2 2001LOUIS E. LOEB Hume's claim that a state is a belief is often intertwined,though without his remarking on this fact,with epistemic approval of the state. This requires explanation. Beliefs, in Hume's view, are steady dispositions (not lively ideas), nature's provision for a steady influence on the will and action. Hume's epistemic distinctions call attention to circumstances in which the presence of conflicting beliefs undermine a belief's influence and thereby its natural function. On one version of this interpretation, to say that a belief is justified, ceteris paribus, is to say that for all that has been shown the belief would be steady in its influence under suitable reflection. On a second version, it is to say that prima facie justification is an intrinsic property of the state, in virtue of its steadiness. These versions generate different understandings of the relationship between Parts iii and iv of Book I of the Treatise. [source] EARLY EXPERIENCE WITH CLINICAL INDICATORS IN SURGERYANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 6 2000B. T. Collopy Background: In 1997 a set of 53 clinical indicators developed by the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) and the Australian Council on Healthcare Standards (ACHS) Care Evaluation Programme (CEP), was introduced into the ACHS Evaluation and Quality Improvement Programme (EQuIP). The clinical indicators covered 20 different conditions or procedures for eight specialty groups and were designed to act as flags to possible problems in surgical care. Methods: The development process took several years and included a literature review, field testing, and revision of the indicators prior to approval by the College council. In their first year 155 health-care organizations (HCO) addressed the indicators and this rose to 210 in 1998. Data were received from all states and both public and private facilities. Results: The collected data for 1997 and 1998 for some of the indicators revealed rates which were comparable with those reported in the international literature. For example, the rates of bile duct injury in laparoscopic cholecystectomy were 0.7 and 0.53%, respectively; the mortality rates for coronary artery graft surgery were 2.5 and 2.1%, respectively; the mortality rates after elective abdominal aortic aneurysm repair were 2.5 and 3.7%, respectively; and the post-tonsillectomy reactionary haemorrhage rates were 0.9 and 1.3%, respectively. Results for some indicators differed appreciably from other reports, flagging the need for further investigation; for example, the negative histology rates for appendectomy in children were 18.6 and 21.2%, respectively, and the rates for completeness of excision of malignant skin tumours were 90.7 and 90%, respectively. The significance of these figures, however, depends upon validation of the data and their reliability and reproducibility. Because reliability can be finally determined only at the hospital level they are of limited value for broader comparison. Conclusion: The process of review established for the indicator set has led to refinement of some indicators through improvement of definitions, and to a considerable reduction in the number of indicators to 29 (covering 18 procedures), for the second version of the indicators (which was introduced for use from January 1999). The clinical indicator programme, as it has with other disciplines, hopefully will provide a stimulus to the modification and improvement of surgical practice. Clinician ownership should enhance the collection of reliable data and hence their usefulness. [source] |