3,125 research outputs found
Prototyping Virtual Data Technologies in ATLAS Data Challenge 1 Production
For efficiency of the large production tasks distributed worldwide, it is
essential to provide shared production management tools comprised of
integratable and interoperable services. To enhance the ATLAS DC1 production
toolkit, we introduced and tested a Virtual Data services component. For each
major data transformation step identified in the ATLAS data processing pipeline
(event generation, detector simulation, background pile-up and digitization,
etc) the Virtual Data Cookbook (VDC) catalogue encapsulates the specific data
transformation knowledge and the validated parameters settings that must be
provided before the data transformation invocation. To provide for local-remote
transparency during DC1 production, the VDC database server delivered in a
controlled way both the validated production parameters and the templated
production recipes for thousands of the event generation and detector
simulation jobs around the world, simplifying the production management
solutions.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 5 pages, 3 figures, pdf. PSN TUCP01
POOL File Catalog, Collection and Metadata Components
The POOL project is the common persistency framework for the LHC experiments
to store petabytes of experiment data and metadata in a distributed and grid
enabled way. POOL is a hybrid event store consisting of a data streaming layer
and a relational layer. This paper describes the design of file catalog,
collection and metadata components which are not part of the data streaming
layer of POOL and outlines how POOL aims to provide transparent and efficient
data access for a wide range of environments and use cases - ranging from a
large production site down to a single disconnected laptops. The file catalog
is the central POOL component translating logical data references to physical
data files in a grid environment. POOL collections with their associated
metadata provide an abstract way of accessing experiment data via their logical
grouping into sets of related data objects.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 4 pages, 1 eps figure, PSN MOKT00
Individual Differences in the Experience of Cognitive Workload
This study investigated the roles of four psychosocial variables – anxiety, conscientiousness, emotional intelligence, and Protestant work ethic – on subjective ratings of cognitive workload as measured by the Task Load Index (TLX) and the further connections between the four variables and TLX ratings of task performance. The four variables represented aspects of an underlying construct of elasticity versus rigidity in response to workload. Participants were 141 undergraduates who performed a vigilance task under different speeded conditions while working on a jigsaw puzzle for 90 minutes. Regression analysis showed that anxiety and emotional intelligence were the two variables most proximally related to TLX ratings. TLX ratings contributed to the prediction of performance on the puzzle, but not the vigilance task. Severity error bias was evident in some of the ratings. Although working in pairs improved performance, it also resulted in higher ratings of temporal demand and perceived performance pressure
Stochastic comparisons of series and parallel systems with randomized independent components
Consider a series or parallel system of independent components and assume that the components are randomly chosen from two different batches, with the components of the first batch being more reliable than those of the second. In this note it is shown that the reliability of the system increases, in usual stochastic order sense, as the random number of components chosen from the first batch increases in increasing convex order. As a consequence, we establish a result analogous to the Parrondo's paradox, which shows that randomness in the number of components extracted from the two batches improves the reliability of the series syste
Interventions for Improving Occupational Performance Post-Concussion in Children and Adolescents: A Scoping Review
Objectives of Presentation:
● Recognize the significant impact of concussion on immediate and long-term mental and physical well being in the pediatric population.
● Identify the need for novel and effective interventions that address the impact of pediatric concussions.
● Describe current concussion interventions and management practices and the gap that exists in the literature.
● Discuss interventions within the scope of OT practice to address occupational performance in children and adolescents post-concussion.
Clinical Question: What interventions within the scope of occupational therapy practice are indicated in the current literature to improve occupational performance in children and adolescents who have experienced a concussion?
Presentation: 55 minute
Assessment of algorithms for mitosis detection in breast cancer histopathology images
The proliferative activity of breast tumors, which is routinely estimated by counting of mitotic figures in hematoxylin and eosin stained histology sections, is considered to be one of the most important prognostic markers. However, mitosis counting is laborious, subjective and may suffer from low inter-observer agreement. With the wider acceptance of whole slide images in pathology labs, automatic image analysis has been proposed as a potential solution for these issues.
In this paper, the results from the Assessment of Mitosis Detection Algorithms 2013 (AMIDA13) challenge are described. The challenge was based on a data set consisting of 12 training and 11 testing subjects, with more than one thousand annotated mitotic figures by multiple observers. Short descriptions and results from the evaluation of eleven methods are presented. The top performing method has an error rate that is comparable to the inter-observer agreement among pathologists
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