2,276 research outputs found
Systematic reviews in requirements engineering: A tertiary study
© 2014 IEEE. There has been an increasing interest in conducting Systematic Literature Reviews (SLR) among Requirements Engineering (RE) researchers in recent years. However, so far there have been no tertiary studies conducted to provide a comprehensive overview of these published SLR in RE. In this paper we present a tertiary study of SLR that focus solely on RE related topics by following the guidelines of Evidence Based Software Engineering. We have conducted both automated search of major online sources and manual search of the RE and SLR related conferences and journals. Our tertiary study has identified 53 distinct systematic reviews published from 2006 to 2014 and reported in 64 publications. We have assessed the resulting SLR for their quality, and coverage of specific RE related topics thus identifying some gaps. We have observed that the quality of SLR in RE has been decreasing over the recent years. There is a strong need to replicate some of these SLR to increase the reliability of their results for future RE research
Wireless Communication in Process Control Loop: Requirements Analysis, Industry Practices and Experimental Evaluation
Wireless communication is already used in process automation for process monitoring. The next stage of implementation of wireless technology in industrial applications is for process control. The need for wireless networked control systems has evolved because of the necessity for extensibility, mobility, modularity, fast deployment, and reduced installation and maintenance cost. These benefits are only applicable given that the wireless network of choice can meet the strict requirements of process control applications, such as latency. In this regard, this paper is an effort towards identifying current industry practices related to implementing process control over a wireless link and evaluates the suitability of ISA100.11a network for use in process control through experiments
Methodologies and tools for OSS: current state of the practice
Over the years, the Open Source Software (OSS) development has matured and strengthened, building on some established methodologies and tools. An understanding of the current state of the practice, however, is still lacking. This paper presents the results of a survey of the OSS developer community with a view to gain insight of peer review, testing and release management practices, along with the current tool sets used for testing, debugging and, build and release management. Such an insight is important to appreciate the obstacles to overcome to introduce certification and more rigour into the development process. It is hoped that the results of this survey will initiate a useful discussion and allow the community to identify further process improvement opportunities for producing better quality software
What makes service oriented requirements engineering challenging? A qualitative study
The focus of Service Oriented Software Development (SOSD) is to develop software by integrating reusable services to lower the required cost, time and effort of development and increase reusability, agility, quality and customer satisfaction. It has been recognised in the literature that SOSD faces various challenges especially in requirements engineering (RE). The objective of this study is to investigate these challenges of Service Oriented RE (SORE) from practitioners' perspectives in order to gain a deeper understanding of the related issues and to reveal potential gaps between research and practice in SORE. They present a qualitative study of the challenges and issues in SORE. The data were collected by conducting interviews with practitioners working in IT companies in Sydney, who have had substantial experience with service oriented software projects. The authors findings reveal that most of the challenges of SORE are similar to those that are faced during RE in traditional or component-based software development. According to the practitioners, the research and practice has made some advances in the technical direction but the human related issues in SORE have not been addressed adequately. © The Institution of Engineering and Technology 2014
GPU accelerated shake and rattle algorithms for systems with holonomic constraints
The dynamic of complex fluid can be described by including viscoelastic stress tensor
into the equation of Non-Newtonian fluid. Different models are used to evaluate the stress tensor at
various levels, with the multi-scale model being the most effective
Information loss in local dissipation environments
The sensitivity of entanglement to the thermal and squeezed reservoirs'
parameters is investigated regarding entanglement decay and what is called
sudden-death of entanglement, ESD, for a system of two qubit pairs. The
dynamics of information is investigated by means of the information disturbance
and exchange information. We show that for squeezed reservoir, we can keep both
of the entanglement and information survival for a long time. The sudden death
of information is seen in the case of thermal reservoir
Entanglement and teleportation via chaotic system
The dynamics of entangled state interacting with a single cavity mode is
investigated in the presence of a random parameter. We have shown that degree
of entanglement decays with time and rate of decay is defined by features of
random parameter. Quantum teleportation through dissipative channal and
teleportation fidelity as a function of damping rates has been studied. The
sensitivity of the fidelity with respect to random parameter is discussed. We
have evaluated the time interval during which one can perform the quantum
teleportation and send the information with reasonable fidelity, for a given
values of correlation length of random parameter.Comment: Accepted in Physica
Serum hepatocyte growth factor is associated with small vessel disease in Alzheimer's dementia
Background: While hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is known to exert cell growth, migration and morphogenic effects in various organs, recent studies suggest that HGF may also play a role in synaptic maintenance and cerebrovascular integrity. Although increased levels of HGF have been reported in brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), it is unclear whether peripheral HGF may be associated with cerebrovascular disease (CeVD) and dementia. In this study, we examined the association of baseline serum HGF with neuroimaging markers of CeVD in a cohort of pre-dementia (cognitive impaired no dementia, CIND) and AD patients. Methods: Serum samples from aged, Non-cognitively impaired (NCI) controls, CIND and AD subjects were measured for HGF levels. CeVD (cortical infarcts, microinfarcts, lacunes, white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and microbleeds) were assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Results: After controlling for covariates, higher levels of HGF were associated with both CIND and AD. Among the different CeVD MRI markers in CIND and AD, only small vessel disease, but not large vessel disease markers were associated with higher HGF levels. Conclusion: Serum HGF may be a useful peripheral biomarker for small vessel disease in subjects with cognitive impairment and AD
Senyawa Kalkon Baru Bersifat Anti-bakteri Dari Tumbuhan Cryptocarya Costata (Lauraceae)
Suatu kalkon telah diisolasi dari kulit batang Cryptocarya costata. Isolat diperoleh dari fraksi kloroform, setelah fraksinasi dengan teknik kromatografi yang dilanjutkan dengan rekristalisasi dalam heksana dan etilasetat, dihasilkan kristal jarum berwarna kuning dengan titik leleh 167-169oC. Elusidasi struktur isolat berdasarkan spektrum UV, IR, 1 D dan 2D NMR, maka dapat ditetapkan bahwa senyawa isolat adalah 2',4'-Dihidroksi-3',6'-dimetoksicalkon. Uji sitotoksik terhadap E.coli, menunjukkan aktivitas positif dengan nilai hambat 35,4 %, dan pertama kali ditemukan dari tumbuhan Cryptocarya
Kata kunci : Kalkon, Sitotoksik, Cryptocarya costat
A cross-center smoothness prior for variational Bayesian brain tissue segmentation
Suppose one is faced with the challenge of tissue segmentation in MR images,
without annotators at their center to provide labeled training data. One option
is to go to another medical center for a trained classifier. Sadly, tissue
classifiers do not generalize well across centers due to voxel intensity shifts
caused by center-specific acquisition protocols. However, certain aspects of
segmentations, such as spatial smoothness, remain relatively consistent and can
be learned separately. Here we present a smoothness prior that is fit to
segmentations produced at another medical center. This informative prior is
presented to an unsupervised Bayesian model. The model clusters the voxel
intensities, such that it produces segmentations that are similarly smooth to
those of the other medical center. In addition, the unsupervised Bayesian model
is extended to a semi-supervised variant, which needs no visual interpretation
of clusters into tissues.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Accepted to the International
Conference on Information Processing in Medical Imaging (2019
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