975 resultados para parametric duration models


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Along the recent years, several moving object detection strategies by non-parametric background-foreground modeling have been proposed. To combine both models and to obtain the probability of a pixel to belong to the foreground, these strategies make use of Bayesian classifiers. However, these classifiers do not allow to take advantage of additional prior information at different pixels. So, we propose a novel and efficient alternative Bayesian classifier that is suitable for this kind of strategies and that allows the use of whatever prior information. Additionally, we present an effective method to dynamically estimate prior probability from the result of a particle filter-based tracking strategy.

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Different methods to reduce the high suction caused by conical vortices have been reported in the literature: vertical parapets, either solid or porous, placed at the roof edges being the most analysed configuration. Another method for alleviating the high suction peaks due to conical vortices is the use of some non-standard parapet configuration like cantilever parapets. In this paper the influence of roof curvature on the conical vortex pattern appearing on a curved roof (Fig. 1) when subject to oblique winds is experimentally analysed by testing the mean pressure distribution on the curved roofs of low-rise building models in a wind tunnel. Also, the efficiency of cantilever parapets to reduce mean suction loads on curved roofs is experimentally checked. Very high suction loads have been measured on curved roofs, the magnitude of these high suction loads being significantly decreased when cantilever parapets are used. Thus, the suitability of these parapets to reduce wind pressure loads on curved roofs is demonstrated.

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Los modelos de simulación de cultivos permiten analizar varias combinaciones de laboreo-rotación y explorar escenarios de manejo. El modelo DSSAT fue evaluado bajo condiciones de secano en un experimento de campo de 16 años en la semiárida España central. Se evaluó el efecto del sistema de laboreo y las rotaciones basadas en cereales de invierno, en el rendimiento del cultivo y la calidad del suelo. Los modelos CERES y CROPGRO se utilizaron para simular el crecimiento y rendimiento del cultivo, mientras que el modelo DSSAT CENTURY se utilizó en las simulaciones de SOC y SN. Tanto las observaciones de campo como las simulaciones con CERES-Barley, mostraron que el rendimiento en grano de la cebada era mas bajo para el cereal continuo (BB) que para las rotaciones de veza (VB) y barbecho (FB) en ambos sistemas de laboreo. El modelo predijo más nitrógeno disponible en el laboreo convencional (CT) que en el no laboreo (NT) conduciendo a un mayor rendimiento en el CT. El SOC y el SN en la capa superficial del suelo, fueron mayores en NT que en CT, y disminuyeron con la profundidad en los valores tanto observados como simulados. Las mejores combinaciones para las condiciones de secano estudiadas fueron CT-VB y CT-FB, pero CT presentó menor contenido en SN y SOC que NT. El efecto beneficioso del NT en SOC y SN bajo condiciones Mediterráneas semiáridas puede ser identificado por observaciones de campo y por simulaciones de modelos de cultivos. La simulación del balance de agua en sistemas de cultivo es una herramienta útil para estudiar como el agua puede ser utilizado eficientemente. La comparación del balance de agua de DSSAT , con una simple aproximación “tipping bucket”, con el modelo WAVE más mecanicista, el cual integra la ecuación de Richard , es un potente método para valorar el funcionamiento del modelo. Los parámetros de suelo fueron calibrados usando el método de optimización global Simulated Annealing (SA). Un lisímetro continuo de pesada en suelo desnudo suministró los valores observados de drenaje y evapotranspiración (ET) mientras que el contenido de agua en el suelo (SW) fue suministrado por sensores de capacitancia. Ambos modelos funcionaron bien después de la optimización de los parámetros de suelo con SA, simulando el balance de agua en el suelo para el período de calibración. Para el período de validación, los modelos optimizados predijeron bien el contenido de agua en el suelo y la evaporación del suelo a lo largo del tiempo. Sin embargo, el drenaje fue predicho mejor con WAVE que con DSSAT, el cual presentó mayores errores en los valores acumulados. Esto podría ser debido a la naturaleza mecanicista de WAVE frente a la naturaleza más funcional de DSSAT. Los buenos resultados de WAVE indican que, después de la calibración, este puede ser utilizado como "benchmark" para otros modelos para periodos en los que no haya medidas de campo del drenaje. El funcionamiento de DSSAT-CENTURY en la simulación de SOC y N depende fuertemente del proceso de inicialización. Se propuso como método alternativo (Met.2) la inicialización de las fracciones de SOC a partir de medidas de mineralización aparente del suelo (Napmin). El Met.2 se comparó con el método de inicialización de Basso et al. (2011) (Met.1), aplicando ambos métodos a un experimento de campo de 4 años en un área en regadío de España central. Nmin y Napmin fueron sobreestimados con el Met.1, ya que la fracción estable obtenida (SOC3) en las capas superficiales del suelo fue más baja que con Met.2. El N lixiviado simulado fue similar en los dos métodos, con buenos resultados en los tratamientos de barbecho y cebada. El Met.1 subestimó el SOC en la capa superficial del suelo cuando se comparó con una serie observada de 12 años. El crecimiento y rendimiento del cultivo fueron adecuadamente simulados con ambos métodos, pero el N en la parte aérea de la planta y en el grano fueron sobreestimados con el Met.1. Los resultados variaron significativamente con las fracciones iniciales de SOC, resaltando la importancia del método de inicialización. El Met.2 ofrece una alternativa para la inicialización del modelo CENTURY, mejorando la simulación de procesos de N en el suelo. La continua emergencia de nuevas variedades de híbridos modernos de maíz limita la aplicación de modelos de simulación de cultivos, ya que estos nuevos híbridos necesitan ser calibrados en el campo para ser adecuados para su uso en los modelos. El desarrollo de relaciones basadas en la duración del ciclo, simplificaría los requerimientos de calibración facilitando la rápida incorporación de nuevos cultivares en DSSAT. Seis híbridos de maiz (FAO 300 hasta FAO 700) fueron cultivados en un experimento de campo de dos años en un área semiárida de regadío en España central. Los coeficientes genéticos fueron obtenidos secuencialmente, comenzando con los parámetros de desarrollo fenológico (P1, P2, P5 and PHINT), seguido de los parámetros de crecimiento del cultivo (G2 and G3). Se continuó el procedimiento hasta que la salida de las simulaciones estuvo en concordancia con las observaciones fenológicas de campo. Después de la calibración, los parámetros simulados se ajustaron bien a los parámetros observados, con bajos RMSE en todos los casos. Los P1 y P5 calibrados, incrementaron con la duración del ciclo. P1 fue una función lineal del tiempo térmico (TT) desde emergencia hasta floración y P5 estuvo linealmente relacionada con el TT desde floración a madurez. No hubo diferencias significativas en PHINT entre híbridos de FAO-500 a 700 , ya que tuvieron un número de hojas similar. Como los coeficientes fenológicos estuvieron directamente relacionados con la duración del ciclo, sería posible desarrollar rangos y correlaciones que permitan estimar dichos coeficientes a partir de la clasificación del ciclo. ABSTRACT Crop simulation models allow analyzing various tillage-rotation combinations and exploring management scenarios. DSSAT model was tested under rainfed conditions in a 16-year field experiment in semiarid central Spain. The effect of tillage system and winter cereal-based rotations on the crop yield and soil quality was evaluated. The CERES and CROPGRO models were used to simulate crop growth and yield, while the DSSAT CENTURY was used in the SOC and SN simulations. Both field observations and CERES-Barley simulations, showed that barley grain yield was lower for continuous cereal (BB) than for vetch (VB) and fallow (FB) rotations for both tillage systems. The model predicted higher nitrogen availability in the conventional tillage (CT) than in the no tillage (NT) leading to a higher yield in the CT. The SOC and SN in the top layer, were higher in NT than in CT, and decreased with depth in both simulated and observed values. The best combinations for the dry land conditions studied were CT-VB and CT-FB, but CT presented lower SN and SOC content than NT. The beneficial effect of NT on SOC and SN under semiarid Mediterranean conditions can be identified by field observations and by crop model simulations. The simulation of the water balance in cropping systems is a useful tool to study how water can be used efficiently. The comparison of DSSAT soil water balance, with a simpler “tipping bucket” approach, with the more mechanistic WAVE model, which integrates Richard’s equation, is a powerful method to assess model performance. The soil parameters were calibrated by using the Simulated Annealing (SA) global optimizing method. A continuous weighing lysimeter in a bare fallow provided the observed values of drainage and evapotranspiration (ET) while soil water content (SW) was supplied by capacitance sensors. Both models performed well after optimizing soil parameters with SA, simulating the soil water balance components for the calibrated period. For the validation period, the optimized models predicted well soil water content and soil evaporation over time. However, drainage was predicted better by WAVE than by DSSAT, which presented larger errors in the cumulative values. That could be due to the mechanistic nature of WAVE against the more functional nature of DSSAT. The good results from WAVE indicate that, after calibration, it could be used as benchmark for other models for periods when no drainage field measurements are available. The performance of DSSAT-CENTURY when simulating SOC and N strongly depends on the initialization process. Initialization of the SOC pools from apparent soil N mineralization (Napmin) measurements was proposed as alternative method (Met.2). Method 2 was compared to the Basso et al. (2011) initialization method (Met.1), by applying both methods to a 4-year field experiment in a irrigated area of central Spain. Nmin and Napmin were overestimated by Met.1, since the obtained stable pool (SOC3) in the upper layers was lower than from Met.2. Simulated N leaching was similar for both methods, with good results in fallow and barley treatments. Method 1 underestimated topsoil SOC when compared with a 12-year observed serial. Crop growth and yield were properly simulated by both methods, but N in shoots and grain were overestimated by Met.1. Results varied significantly with the initial SOC pools, highlighting the importance of the initialization procedure. Method 2 offers an alternative to initialize the CENTURY model, enhancing the simulation of soil N processes. The continuous emergence of new varieties of modern maize hybrids limits the application of crop simulation models, since these new hybrids should be calibrated in the field to be suitable for model use. The development of relationships based on the cycle duration, would simplify the calibration requirements facilitating the rapid incorporation of new cultivars into DSSAT. Six maize hybrids (FAO 300 through FAO 700) were grown in a 2-year field experiment in a semiarid irrigated area of central Spain. Genetic coefficients were obtained sequentially, starting with the phenological development parameters (P1, P2, P5 and PHINT), followed by the crop growth parameters (G2 and G3). The procedure was continued until the simulated outputs were in good agreement with the field phenological observations. After calibration, simulated parameters matched observed parameters well, with low RMSE in most cases. The calibrated P1 and P5 increased with the duration of the cycle. P1 was a linear function of the thermal time (TT) from emergence to silking and P5 was linearly related with the TT from silking to maturity . There were no significant differences in PHINT between hybrids from FAO-500 to 700 , as they had similar leaf number. Since phenological coefficients were directly related with the cycle duration, it would be possible to develop ranges and correlations which allow to estimate such coefficients from the cycle classification.

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Los sistemas empotrados han sido concebidos tradicionalmente como sistemas de procesamiento específicos que realizan una tarea fija durante toda su vida útil. Para cumplir con requisitos estrictos de coste, tamaño y peso, el equipo de diseño debe optimizar su funcionamiento para condiciones muy específicas. Sin embargo, la demanda de mayor versatilidad, un funcionamiento más inteligente y, en definitiva, una mayor capacidad de procesamiento comenzaron a chocar con estas limitaciones, agravado por la incertidumbre asociada a entornos de operación cada vez más dinámicos donde comenzaban a ser desplegados progresivamente. Esto trajo como resultado una necesidad creciente de que los sistemas pudieran responder por si solos a eventos inesperados en tiempo diseño tales como: cambios en las características de los datos de entrada y el entorno del sistema en general; cambios en la propia plataforma de cómputo, por ejemplo debido a fallos o defectos de fabricación; y cambios en las propias especificaciones funcionales causados por unos objetivos del sistema dinámicos y cambiantes. Como consecuencia, la complejidad del sistema aumenta, pero a cambio se habilita progresivamente una capacidad de adaptación autónoma sin intervención humana a lo largo de la vida útil, permitiendo que tomen sus propias decisiones en tiempo de ejecución. Éstos sistemas se conocen, en general, como sistemas auto-adaptativos y tienen, entre otras características, las de auto-configuración, auto-optimización y auto-reparación. Típicamente, la parte soft de un sistema es mayoritariamente la única utilizada para proporcionar algunas capacidades de adaptación a un sistema. Sin embargo, la proporción rendimiento/potencia en dispositivos software como microprocesadores en muchas ocasiones no es adecuada para sistemas empotrados. En este escenario, el aumento resultante en la complejidad de las aplicaciones está siendo abordado parcialmente mediante un aumento en la complejidad de los dispositivos en forma de multi/many-cores; pero desafortunadamente, esto hace que el consumo de potencia también aumente. Además, la mejora en metodologías de diseño no ha sido acorde como para poder utilizar toda la capacidad de cómputo disponible proporcionada por los núcleos. Por todo ello, no se están satisfaciendo adecuadamente las demandas de cómputo que imponen las nuevas aplicaciones. La solución tradicional para mejorar la proporción rendimiento/potencia ha sido el cambio a unas especificaciones hardware, principalmente usando ASICs. Sin embargo, los costes de un ASIC son altamente prohibitivos excepto en algunos casos de producción en masa y además la naturaleza estática de su estructura complica la solución a las necesidades de adaptación. Los avances en tecnologías de fabricación han hecho que la FPGA, una vez lenta y pequeña, usada como glue logic en sistemas mayores, haya crecido hasta convertirse en un dispositivo de cómputo reconfigurable de gran potencia, con una cantidad enorme de recursos lógicos computacionales y cores hardware empotrados de procesamiento de señal y de propósito general. Sus capacidades de reconfiguración han permitido combinar la flexibilidad propia del software con el rendimiento del procesamiento en hardware, lo que tiene la potencialidad de provocar un cambio de paradigma en arquitectura de computadores, pues el hardware no puede ya ser considerado más como estático. El motivo es que como en el caso de las FPGAs basadas en tecnología SRAM, la reconfiguración parcial dinámica (DPR, Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration) es posible. Esto significa que se puede modificar (reconfigurar) un subconjunto de los recursos computacionales en tiempo de ejecución mientras el resto permanecen activos. Además, este proceso de reconfiguración puede ser ejecutado internamente por el propio dispositivo. El avance tecnológico en dispositivos hardware reconfigurables se encuentra recogido bajo el campo conocido como Computación Reconfigurable (RC, Reconfigurable Computing). Uno de los campos de aplicación más exóticos y menos convencionales que ha posibilitado la computación reconfigurable es el conocido como Hardware Evolutivo (EHW, Evolvable Hardware), en el cual se encuentra enmarcada esta tesis. La idea principal del concepto consiste en convertir hardware que es adaptable a través de reconfiguración en una entidad evolutiva sujeta a las fuerzas de un proceso evolutivo inspirado en el de las especies biológicas naturales, que guía la dirección del cambio. Es una aplicación más del campo de la Computación Evolutiva (EC, Evolutionary Computation), que comprende una serie de algoritmos de optimización global conocidos como Algoritmos Evolutivos (EA, Evolutionary Algorithms), y que son considerados como algoritmos universales de resolución de problemas. En analogía al proceso biológico de la evolución, en el hardware evolutivo el sujeto de la evolución es una población de circuitos que intenta adaptarse a su entorno mediante una adecuación progresiva generación tras generación. Los individuos pasan a ser configuraciones de circuitos en forma de bitstreams caracterizados por descripciones de circuitos reconfigurables. Seleccionando aquellos que se comportan mejor, es decir, que tienen una mejor adecuación (o fitness) después de ser evaluados, y usándolos como padres de la siguiente generación, el algoritmo evolutivo crea una nueva población hija usando operadores genéticos como la mutación y la recombinación. Según se van sucediendo generaciones, se espera que la población en conjunto se aproxime a la solución óptima al problema de encontrar una configuración del circuito adecuada que satisfaga las especificaciones. El estado de la tecnología de reconfiguración después de que la familia de FPGAs XC6200 de Xilinx fuera retirada y reemplazada por las familias Virtex a finales de los 90, supuso un gran obstáculo para el avance en hardware evolutivo; formatos de bitstream cerrados (no conocidos públicamente); dependencia de herramientas del fabricante con soporte limitado de DPR; una velocidad de reconfiguración lenta; y el hecho de que modificaciones aleatorias del bitstream pudieran resultar peligrosas para la integridad del dispositivo, son algunas de estas razones. Sin embargo, una propuesta a principios de los años 2000 permitió mantener la investigación en el campo mientras la tecnología de DPR continuaba madurando, el Circuito Virtual Reconfigurable (VRC, Virtual Reconfigurable Circuit). En esencia, un VRC en una FPGA es una capa virtual que actúa como un circuito reconfigurable de aplicación específica sobre la estructura nativa de la FPGA que reduce la complejidad del proceso reconfiguración y aumenta su velocidad (comparada con la reconfiguración nativa). Es un array de nodos computacionales especificados usando descripciones HDL estándar que define recursos reconfigurables ad-hoc: multiplexores de rutado y un conjunto de elementos de procesamiento configurables, cada uno de los cuales tiene implementadas todas las funciones requeridas, que pueden seleccionarse a través de multiplexores tal y como ocurre en una ALU de un microprocesador. Un registro grande actúa como memoria de configuración, por lo que la reconfiguración del VRC es muy rápida ya que tan sólo implica la escritura de este registro, el cual controla las señales de selección del conjunto de multiplexores. Sin embargo, esta capa virtual provoca: un incremento de área debido a la implementación simultánea de cada función en cada nodo del array más los multiplexores y un aumento del retardo debido a los multiplexores, reduciendo la frecuencia de funcionamiento máxima. La naturaleza del hardware evolutivo, capaz de optimizar su propio comportamiento computacional, le convierten en un buen candidato para avanzar en la investigación sobre sistemas auto-adaptativos. Combinar un sustrato de cómputo auto-reconfigurable capaz de ser modificado dinámicamente en tiempo de ejecución con un algoritmo empotrado que proporcione una dirección de cambio, puede ayudar a satisfacer los requisitos de adaptación autónoma de sistemas empotrados basados en FPGA. La propuesta principal de esta tesis está por tanto dirigida a contribuir a la auto-adaptación del hardware de procesamiento de sistemas empotrados basados en FPGA mediante hardware evolutivo. Esto se ha abordado considerando que el comportamiento computacional de un sistema puede ser modificado cambiando cualquiera de sus dos partes constitutivas: una estructura hard subyacente y un conjunto de parámetros soft. De esta distinción, se derivan dos lineas de trabajo. Por un lado, auto-adaptación paramétrica, y por otro auto-adaptación estructural. El objetivo perseguido en el caso de la auto-adaptación paramétrica es la implementación de técnicas de optimización evolutiva complejas en sistemas empotrados con recursos limitados para la adaptación paramétrica online de circuitos de procesamiento de señal. La aplicación seleccionada como prueba de concepto es la optimización para tipos muy específicos de imágenes de los coeficientes de los filtros de transformadas wavelet discretas (DWT, DiscreteWavelet Transform), orientada a la compresión de imágenes. Por tanto, el objetivo requerido de la evolución es una compresión adaptativa y más eficiente comparada con los procedimientos estándar. El principal reto radica en reducir la necesidad de recursos de supercomputación para el proceso de optimización propuesto en trabajos previos, de modo que se adecúe para la ejecución en sistemas empotrados. En cuanto a la auto-adaptación estructural, el objetivo de la tesis es la implementación de circuitos auto-adaptativos en sistemas evolutivos basados en FPGA mediante un uso eficiente de sus capacidades de reconfiguración nativas. En este caso, la prueba de concepto es la evolución de tareas de procesamiento de imagen tales como el filtrado de tipos desconocidos y cambiantes de ruido y la detección de bordes en la imagen. En general, el objetivo es la evolución en tiempo de ejecución de tareas de procesamiento de imagen desconocidas en tiempo de diseño (dentro de un cierto grado de complejidad). En este caso, el objetivo de la propuesta es la incorporación de DPR en EHW para evolucionar la arquitectura de un array sistólico adaptable mediante reconfiguración cuya capacidad de evolución no había sido estudiada previamente. Para conseguir los dos objetivos mencionados, esta tesis propone originalmente una plataforma evolutiva que integra un motor de adaptación (AE, Adaptation Engine), un motor de reconfiguración (RE, Reconfiguration Engine) y un motor computacional (CE, Computing Engine) adaptable. El el caso de adaptación paramétrica, la plataforma propuesta está caracterizada por: • un CE caracterizado por un núcleo de procesamiento hardware de DWT adaptable mediante registros reconfigurables que contienen los coeficientes de los filtros wavelet • un algoritmo evolutivo como AE que busca filtros wavelet candidatos a través de un proceso de optimización paramétrica desarrollado específicamente para sistemas caracterizados por recursos de procesamiento limitados • un nuevo operador de mutación simplificado para el algoritmo evolutivo utilizado, que junto con un mecanismo de evaluación rápida de filtros wavelet candidatos derivado de la literatura actual, asegura la viabilidad de la búsqueda evolutiva asociada a la adaptación de wavelets. En el caso de adaptación estructural, la plataforma propuesta toma la forma de: • un CE basado en una plantilla de array sistólico reconfigurable de 2 dimensiones compuesto de nodos de procesamiento reconfigurables • un algoritmo evolutivo como AE que busca configuraciones candidatas del array usando un conjunto de funcionalidades de procesamiento para los nodos disponible en una biblioteca accesible en tiempo de ejecución • un RE hardware que explota la capacidad de reconfiguración nativa de las FPGAs haciendo un uso eficiente de los recursos reconfigurables del dispositivo para cambiar el comportamiento del CE en tiempo de ejecución • una biblioteca de elementos de procesamiento reconfigurables caracterizada por bitstreams parciales independientes de la posición, usados como el conjunto de configuraciones disponibles para los nodos de procesamiento del array Las contribuciones principales de esta tesis se pueden resumir en la siguiente lista: • Una plataforma evolutiva basada en FPGA para la auto-adaptación paramétrica y estructural de sistemas empotrados compuesta por un motor computacional (CE), un motor de adaptación (AE) evolutivo y un motor de reconfiguración (RE). Esta plataforma se ha desarrollado y particularizado para los casos de auto-adaptación paramétrica y estructural. • En cuanto a la auto-adaptación paramétrica, las contribuciones principales son: – Un motor computacional adaptable mediante registros que permite la adaptación paramétrica de los coeficientes de una implementación hardware adaptativa de un núcleo de DWT. – Un motor de adaptación basado en un algoritmo evolutivo desarrollado específicamente para optimización numérica, aplicada a los coeficientes de filtros wavelet en sistemas empotrados con recursos limitados. – Un núcleo IP de DWT auto-adaptativo en tiempo de ejecución para sistemas empotrados que permite la optimización online del rendimiento de la transformada para compresión de imágenes en entornos específicos de despliegue, caracterizados por tipos diferentes de señal de entrada. – Un modelo software y una implementación hardware de una herramienta para la construcción evolutiva automática de transformadas wavelet específicas. • Por último, en cuanto a la auto-adaptación estructural, las contribuciones principales son: – Un motor computacional adaptable mediante reconfiguración nativa de FPGAs caracterizado por una plantilla de array sistólico en dos dimensiones de nodos de procesamiento reconfigurables. Es posible mapear diferentes tareas de cómputo en el array usando una biblioteca de elementos sencillos de procesamiento reconfigurables. – Definición de una biblioteca de elementos de procesamiento apropiada para la síntesis autónoma en tiempo de ejecución de diferentes tareas de procesamiento de imagen. – Incorporación eficiente de la reconfiguración parcial dinámica (DPR) en sistemas de hardware evolutivo, superando los principales inconvenientes de propuestas previas como los circuitos reconfigurables virtuales (VRCs). En este trabajo también se comparan originalmente los detalles de implementación de ambas propuestas. – Una plataforma tolerante a fallos, auto-curativa, que permite la recuperación funcional online en entornos peligrosos. La plataforma ha sido caracterizada desde una perspectiva de tolerancia a fallos: se proponen modelos de fallo a nivel de CLB y de elemento de procesamiento, y usando el motor de reconfiguración, se hace un análisis sistemático de fallos para un fallo en cada elemento de procesamiento y para dos fallos acumulados. – Una plataforma con calidad de filtrado dinámica que permite la adaptación online a tipos de ruido diferentes y diferentes comportamientos computacionales teniendo en cuenta los recursos de procesamiento disponibles. Por un lado, se evolucionan filtros con comportamientos no destructivos, que permiten esquemas de filtrado en cascada escalables; y por otro, también se evolucionan filtros escalables teniendo en cuenta requisitos computacionales de filtrado cambiantes dinámicamente. Este documento está organizado en cuatro partes y nueve capítulos. La primera parte contiene el capítulo 1, una introducción y motivación sobre este trabajo de tesis. A continuación, el marco de referencia en el que se enmarca esta tesis se analiza en la segunda parte: el capítulo 2 contiene una introducción a los conceptos de auto-adaptación y computación autonómica (autonomic computing) como un campo de investigación más general que el muy específico de este trabajo; el capítulo 3 introduce la computación evolutiva como la técnica para dirigir la adaptación; el capítulo 4 analiza las plataformas de computación reconfigurables como la tecnología para albergar hardware auto-adaptativo; y finalmente, el capítulo 5 define, clasifica y hace un sondeo del campo del hardware evolutivo. Seguidamente, la tercera parte de este trabajo contiene la propuesta, desarrollo y resultados obtenidos: mientras que el capítulo 6 contiene una declaración de los objetivos de la tesis y la descripción de la propuesta en su conjunto, los capítulos 7 y 8 abordan la auto-adaptación paramétrica y estructural, respectivamente. Finalmente, el capítulo 9 de la parte 4 concluye el trabajo y describe caminos de investigación futuros. ABSTRACT Embedded systems have traditionally been conceived to be specific-purpose computers with one, fixed computational task for their whole lifetime. Stringent requirements in terms of cost, size and weight forced designers to highly optimise their operation for very specific conditions. However, demands for versatility, more intelligent behaviour and, in summary, an increased computing capability began to clash with these limitations, intensified by the uncertainty associated to the more dynamic operating environments where they were progressively being deployed. This brought as a result an increasing need for systems to respond by themselves to unexpected events at design time, such as: changes in input data characteristics and system environment in general; changes in the computing platform itself, e.g., due to faults and fabrication defects; and changes in functional specifications caused by dynamically changing system objectives. As a consequence, systems complexity is increasing, but in turn, autonomous lifetime adaptation without human intervention is being progressively enabled, allowing them to take their own decisions at run-time. This type of systems is known, in general, as selfadaptive, and are able, among others, of self-configuration, self-optimisation and self-repair. Traditionally, the soft part of a system has mostly been so far the only place to provide systems with some degree of adaptation capabilities. However, the performance to power ratios of software driven devices like microprocessors are not adequate for embedded systems in many situations. In this scenario, the resulting rise in applications complexity is being partly addressed by rising devices complexity in the form of multi and many core devices; but sadly, this keeps on increasing power consumption. Besides, design methodologies have not been improved accordingly to completely leverage the available computational power from all these cores. Altogether, these factors make that the computing demands new applications pose are not being wholly satisfied. The traditional solution to improve performance to power ratios has been the switch to hardware driven specifications, mainly using ASICs. However, their costs are highly prohibitive except for some mass production cases and besidesthe static nature of its structure complicates the solution to the adaptation needs. The advancements in fabrication technologies have made that the once slow, small FPGA used as glue logic in bigger systems, had grown to be a very powerful, reconfigurable computing device with a vast amount of computational logic resources and embedded, hardened signal and general purpose processing cores. Its reconfiguration capabilities have enabled software-like flexibility to be combined with hardware-like computing performance, which has the potential to cause a paradigm shift in computer architecture since hardware cannot be considered as static anymore. This is so, since, as is the case with SRAMbased FPGAs, Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration (DPR) is possible. This means that subsets of the FPGA computational resources can now be changed (reconfigured) at run-time while the rest remains active. Besides, this reconfiguration process can be triggered internally by the device itself. This technological boost in reconfigurable hardware devices is actually covered under the field known as Reconfigurable Computing. One of the most exotic fields of application that Reconfigurable Computing has enabled is the known as Evolvable Hardware (EHW), in which this dissertation is framed. The main idea behind the concept is turning hardware that is adaptable through reconfiguration into an evolvable entity subject to the forces of an evolutionary process, inspired by that of natural, biological species, that guides the direction of change. It is yet another application of the field of Evolutionary Computation (EC), which comprises a set of global optimisation algorithms known as Evolutionary Algorithms (EAs), considered as universal problem solvers. In analogy to the biological process of evolution, in EHW the subject of evolution is a population of circuits that tries to get adapted to its surrounding environment by progressively getting better fitted to it generation after generation. Individuals become circuit configurations representing bitstreams that feature reconfigurable circuit descriptions. By selecting those that behave better, i.e., with a higher fitness value after being evaluated, and using them as parents of the following generation, the EA creates a new offspring population by using so called genetic operators like mutation and recombination. As generations succeed one another, the whole population is expected to approach to the optimum solution to the problem of finding an adequate circuit configuration that fulfils system objectives. The state of reconfiguration technology after Xilinx XC6200 FPGA family was discontinued and replaced by Virtex families in the late 90s, was a major obstacle for advancements in EHW; closed (non publicly known) bitstream formats; dependence on manufacturer tools with highly limiting support of DPR; slow speed of reconfiguration; and random bitstream modifications being potentially hazardous for device integrity, are some of these reasons. However, a proposal in the first 2000s allowed to keep investigating in this field while DPR technology kept maturing, the Virtual Reconfigurable Circuit (VRC). In essence, a VRC in an FPGA is a virtual layer acting as an application specific reconfigurable circuit on top of an FPGA fabric that reduces the complexity of the reconfiguration process and increases its speed (compared to native reconfiguration). It is an array of computational nodes specified using standard HDL descriptions that define ad-hoc reconfigurable resources; routing multiplexers and a set of configurable processing elements, each one containing all the required functions, which are selectable through functionality multiplexers as in microprocessor ALUs. A large register acts as configuration memory, so VRC reconfiguration is very fast given it only involves writing this register, which drives the selection signals of the set of multiplexers. However, large overheads are introduced by this virtual layer; an area overhead due to the simultaneous implementation of every function in every node of the array plus the multiplexers, and a delay overhead due to the multiplexers, which also reduces maximum frequency of operation. The very nature of Evolvable Hardware, able to optimise its own computational behaviour, makes it a good candidate to advance research in self-adaptive systems. Combining a selfreconfigurable computing substrate able to be dynamically changed at run-time with an embedded algorithm that provides a direction for change, can help fulfilling requirements for autonomous lifetime adaptation of FPGA-based embedded systems. The main proposal of this thesis is hence directed to contribute to autonomous self-adaptation of the underlying computational hardware of FPGA-based embedded systems by means of Evolvable Hardware. This is tackled by considering that the computational behaviour of a system can be modified by changing any of its two constituent parts: an underlying hard structure and a set of soft parameters. Two main lines of work derive from this distinction. On one side, parametric self-adaptation and, on the other side, structural self-adaptation. The goal pursued in the case of parametric self-adaptation is the implementation of complex evolutionary optimisation techniques in resource constrained embedded systems for online parameter adaptation of signal processing circuits. The application selected as proof of concept is the optimisation of Discrete Wavelet Transforms (DWT) filters coefficients for very specific types of images, oriented to image compression. Hence, adaptive and improved compression efficiency, as compared to standard techniques, is the required goal of evolution. The main quest lies in reducing the supercomputing resources reported in previous works for the optimisation process in order to make it suitable for embedded systems. Regarding structural self-adaptation, the thesis goal is the implementation of self-adaptive circuits in FPGA-based evolvable systems through an efficient use of native reconfiguration capabilities. In this case, evolution of image processing tasks such as filtering of unknown and changing types of noise and edge detection are the selected proofs of concept. In general, evolving unknown image processing behaviours (within a certain complexity range) at design time is the required goal. In this case, the mission of the proposal is the incorporation of DPR in EHW to evolve a systolic array architecture adaptable through reconfiguration whose evolvability had not been previously checked. In order to achieve the two stated goals, this thesis originally proposes an evolvable platform that integrates an Adaptation Engine (AE), a Reconfiguration Engine (RE) and an adaptable Computing Engine (CE). In the case of parametric adaptation, the proposed platform is characterised by: • a CE featuring a DWT hardware processing core adaptable through reconfigurable registers that holds wavelet filters coefficients • an evolutionary algorithm as AE that searches for candidate wavelet filters through a parametric optimisation process specifically developed for systems featured by scarce computing resources • a new, simplified mutation operator for the selected EA, that together with a fast evaluation mechanism of candidate wavelet filters derived from existing literature, assures the feasibility of the evolutionary search involved in wavelets adaptation In the case of structural adaptation, the platform proposal takes the form of: • a CE based on a reconfigurable 2D systolic array template composed of reconfigurable processing nodes • an evolutionary algorithm as AE that searches for candidate configurations of the array using a set of computational functionalities for the nodes available in a run time accessible library • a hardware RE that exploits native DPR capabilities of FPGAs and makes an efficient use of the available reconfigurable resources of the device to change the behaviour of the CE at run time • a library of reconfigurable processing elements featured by position-independent partial bitstreams used as the set of available configurations for the processing nodes of the array Main contributions of this thesis can be summarised in the following list. • An FPGA-based evolvable platform for parametric and structural self-adaptation of embedded systems composed of a Computing Engine, an evolutionary Adaptation Engine and a Reconfiguration Engine. This platform is further developed and tailored for both parametric and structural self-adaptation. • Regarding parametric self-adaptation, main contributions are: – A CE adaptable through reconfigurable registers that enables parametric adaptation of the coefficients of an adaptive hardware implementation of a DWT core. – An AE based on an Evolutionary Algorithm specifically developed for numerical optimisation applied to wavelet filter coefficients in resource constrained embedded systems. – A run-time self-adaptive DWT IP core for embedded systems that allows for online optimisation of transform performance for image compression for specific deployment environments characterised by different types of input signals. – A software model and hardware implementation of a tool for the automatic, evolutionary construction of custom wavelet transforms. • Lastly, regarding structural self-adaptation, main contributions are: – A CE adaptable through native FPGA fabric reconfiguration featured by a two dimensional systolic array template of reconfigurable processing nodes. Different processing behaviours can be automatically mapped in the array by using a library of simple reconfigurable processing elements. – Definition of a library of such processing elements suited for autonomous runtime synthesis of different image processing tasks. – Efficient incorporation of DPR in EHW systems, overcoming main drawbacks from the previous approach of virtual reconfigurable circuits. Implementation details for both approaches are also originally compared in this work. – A fault tolerant, self-healing platform that enables online functional recovery in hazardous environments. The platform has been characterised from a fault tolerance perspective: fault models at FPGA CLB level and processing elements level are proposed, and using the RE, a systematic fault analysis for one fault in every processing element and for two accumulated faults is done. – A dynamic filtering quality platform that permits on-line adaptation to different types of noise and different computing behaviours considering the available computing resources. On one side, non-destructive filters are evolved, enabling scalable cascaded filtering schemes; and on the other, size-scalable filters are also evolved considering dynamically changing computational filtering requirements. This dissertation is organized in four parts and nine chapters. First part contains chapter 1, the introduction to and motivation of this PhD work. Following, the reference framework in which this dissertation is framed is analysed in the second part: chapter 2 features an introduction to the notions of self-adaptation and autonomic computing as a more general research field to the very specific one of this work; chapter 3 introduces evolutionary computation as the technique to drive adaptation; chapter 4 analyses platforms for reconfigurable computing as the technology to hold self-adaptive hardware; and finally chapter 5 defines, classifies and surveys the field of Evolvable Hardware. Third part of the work follows, which contains the proposal, development and results obtained: while chapter 6 contains an statement of the thesis goals and the description of the proposal as a whole, chapters 7 and 8 address parametric and structural self-adaptation, respectively. Finally, chapter 9 in part 4 concludes the work and describes future research paths.

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There has been much debate on the contribution of processes such as the persistence of antigens, cross-reactive stimulation, homeostasis, competition between different lineages of lymphocytes, and the rate of cell turnover on the duration of immune memory and the maintenance of the immune repertoire. We use simple mathematical models to investigate the contributions of these various processes to the longevity of immune memory (defined as the rate of decline of the population of antigen-specific memory cells). The models we develop incorporate a large repertoire of immune cells, each lineage having distinct antigenic specificities, and describe the dynamics of the individual lineages and total population of cells. Our results suggest that, if homeostatic control regulates the total population of memory cells, then, for a wide range of parameters, immune memory will be long-lived in the absence of persistent antigen (T1/2 > 1 year). We also show that the longevity of memory in this situation will be insensitive to the relative rates of cross-reactive stimulation, the rate of turnover of immune cells, and the functional form of the term for the maintenance of homeostasis.

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The main objective of this paper is twofold: on the one hand, to analyse the impact that the announcement of the opening of a new hotel has on the performance of its chain by carrying out an event study, and on the other hand, to compare the results of two different approaches to this method: a parametric specification based on the autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity models to estimate the market model, and a nonparametric approach, which implies employing Theil’s nonparametric regression technique, which in turn, leads to the so-called complete nonparametric approach to event studies. The results that the empirical application arrives at are noteworthy as, on average, the reaction to such news releases is highly positive, both approaches reaching the same level of significance. However, a word of caution must be said when one is not only interested in detecting whether the market reacts, but also in obtaining an exhaustive calculation of the abnormal returns to further examine its determining factors.

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This letter presents a method to model propagation channels for estimation, in which the sampling scheme can be arbitrary. Additionally, the method yields accurate models, with a size that converges to the channel duration, measured in Nyquist periods. It can be viewed as an improvement on the usual discretization based on regular sampling at the Nyquist rate. The method is introduced in the context of multiple delay estimation using the MUSIC estimator, and is assessed through a numerical example.

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High-impact, localized intense rainfall episodes represent a major socio-economic problem for societies worldwide, and at the same time these events are notoriously difficult to simulate properly in climate models. Here, the authors investigate how horizontal resolution and model formulation influence this issue by applying the HARMONIE regional climate model (HCLIM) with three different setups; two using convection parameterization at 15 and 6.25 km horizontal resolution (the latter within the “grey-zone” scale), with lateral boundary conditions provided by ERA-Interim reanalysis and integrated over a pan-European domain, and one with explicit convection at 2 km resolution (HCLIM2) over the Alpine region driven by the 15 km model. Seven summer seasons were sampled and validated against two high-resolution observational data sets. All HCLIM versions underestimate the number of dry days and hours by 20-40%, and overestimate precipitation over the Alpine ridge. Also, only modest added value were found of “grey-zone” resolution. However, the single most important outcome is the substantial added value in HCLIM2 compared to the coarser model versions at sub-daily time scales. It better captures the local-to-regional spatial patterns of precipitation reflecting a more realistic representation of the local and meso-scale dynamics. Further, the duration and spatial frequency of precipitation events, as well as extremes, are closer to observations. These characteristics are key ingredients in heavy rainfall events and associated flash floods, and the outstanding results using HCLIM in convection-permitting setting are convincing and encourage further use of the model to study changes in such events in changing climates.

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A comparison of a constant (continuous delivery of 4% FiO(2)) and a variable (initial 5% FiO(2) with adjustments to induce low amplitude EEG (LAEEG) and hypotension) hypoxic/ischemic insult was performed to determine which insult was more effective in producing a consistent degree of survivable neuropathological damage in a newborn piglet model of perinatal asphyxia. We also examined which physiological responses contributed to this outcome. Thirty-nine 1-day-old piglets were subjected to either a constant hypoxic/ischemic insult of 30- to 37-min duration or a variable hypoxic/ischemic insult of 30-min low peak amplitude EEG (LAEEG < 5 mu V) including 10 min of low mean arterial blood pressure (MABP < 70% of baseline). Control animals (n = 6) received 21% FiO(2) for the duration of the experiment. At 72 h, the piglets were euthanased, their brains removed and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and assessed for hypoxic/ischemic injury by histological analysis. Based on neuropathology scores, piglets were grouped as undamaged or damaged; piglets that did not survive to 72 h were grouped separately as dead. The variable insult resulted in a greater number of piglets with neuropathological damage (undamaged = 12.5%, damaged = 68.75%, dead = 18.75%) while the constant insult resulted in a large proportion of undamaged piglets (undamaged = 50%, damaged = 22.2%, dead = 27.8%). A hypoxic insult varied to maintain peak amplitude EEG < 5 mu V results in a greater number of survivors with a consistent degree of neuropathological damage than a constant hypoxic insult. Physiological variables MABP, LAEEG, pH and arterial base excess were found to be significantly associated with neuropathological outcome. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Background and Aims Plants regulate their architecture strongly in response to density, and there is evidence that this involves changes in the duration of leaf extension. This questions the approximation, central in crop models, that development follows a fixed thermal time schedule. The aim of this research is to investigate, using maize as a model, how the kinetics of extension of grass leaves change with density, and to propose directions for inclusion of this regulation in plant models. • Methods Periodic dissection of plants allowed the establishment of the kinetics of lamina and sheath extension for two contrasting sowing densities. The temperature of the growing zone was measured with thermocouples. Two-phase (exponential plus linear) models were fitted to the data, allowing analysis of the timing of the phase changes of extension, and the extension rate of sheaths and blades during both phases. • Key Results The duration of lamina extension dictated the variation in lamina length between treatments. The lower phytomers were longer at high density, with delayed onset of sheath extension allowing more time for the lamina to extend. In the upper phytomers—which were shorter at high density—the laminae had a lower relative extension rate (RER) in the exponential phase and delayed onset of linear extension, and less time available for extension since early sheath extension was not delayed. • Conclusions The relative timing of the onset of fast extension of the lamina with that of sheath development is the main determinant of the response of lamina length to density. Evidence is presented that the contrasting behaviour of lower and upper phytomers is related to differing regulation of sheath ontogeny before and after panicle initiation. A conceptual model is proposed to explain how the observed asynchrony between lamina and sheath development is regulated.

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Most object-based approaches to Geographical Information Systems (GIS) have concentrated on the representation of geometric properties of objects in terms of fixed geometry. In our road traffic marking application domain we have a requirement to represent the static locations of the road markings but also enforce the associated regulations, which are typically geometric in nature. For example a give way line of a pedestrian crossing in the UK must be within 1100-3000 mm of the edge of the crossing pattern. In previous studies of the application of spatial rules (often called 'business logic') in GIS emphasis has been placed on the representation of topological constraints and data integrity checks. There is very little GIS literature that describes models for geometric rules, although there are some examples in the Computer Aided Design (CAD) literature. This paper introduces some of the ideas from so called variational CAD models to the GIS application domain, and extends these using a Geography Markup Language (GML) based representation. In our application we have an additional requirement; the geometric rules are often changed and vary from country to country so should be represented in a flexible manner. In this paper we describe an elegant solution to the representation of geometric rules, such as requiring lines to be offset from other objects. The method uses a feature-property model embraced in GML 3.1 and extends the possible relationships in feature collections to permit the application of parameterized geometric constraints to sub features. We show the parametric rule model we have developed and discuss the advantage of using simple parametric expressions in the rule base. We discuss the possibilities and limitations of our approach and relate our data model to GML 3.1. © 2006 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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The use of Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG) as a mechanism for hospital financing is a currently debated topic in Portugal. The DRG system was scheduled to be initiated by the Health Ministry of Portugal on January 1, 1990 as an instrument for the allocation of public hospital budgets funded by the National Health Service (NHS), and as a method of payment for other third party payers (e.g., Public Employees (ADSE), private insurers, etc.). Based on experience from other countries such as the United States, it was expected that implementation of this system would result in more efficient hospital resource utilisation and a more equitable distribution of hospital budgets. However, in order to minimise the potentially adverse financial impact on hospitals, the Portuguese Health Ministry decided to gradually phase in the use of the DRG system for budget allocation by using blended hospitalspecific and national DRG casemix rates. Since implementation in 1990, the percentage of each hospitals budget based on hospital specific costs was to decrease, while the percentage based on DRG casemix was to increase. This was scheduled to continue until 1995 when the plan called for allocating yearly budgets on a 50% national and 50% hospitalspecific cost basis. While all other nonNHS third party payers are currently paying based on DRGs, the adoption of DRG casemix as a National Health Service budget setting tool has been slower than anticipated. There is now some argument in both the political and academic communities as to the appropriateness of DRGs as a budget setting criterion as well as to their impact on hospital efficiency in Portugal. This paper uses a twostage procedure to assess the impact of actual DRG payment on the productivity (through its components, i.e., technological change and technical efficiency change) of diagnostic technology in Portuguese hospitals during the years 1992–1994, using both parametric and nonparametric frontier models. We find evidence that the DRG payment system does appear to have had a positive impact on productivity and technical efficiency of some commonly employed diagnostic technologies in Portugal during this time span.

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Often observations are nested within other units. This is particularly the case in the educational sector where school performance in terms of value added is the result of school contribution as well as pupil academic ability and other features relating to the pupil. Traditionally, the literature uses parametric (i.e. it assumes a priori a particular function on the production process) Multi-Level Models to estimate the performance of nested entities. This paper discusses the use of the non-parametric (i.e. without a priori assumptions on the production process) Free Disposal Hull model as an alternative approach. While taking into account contextual characteristics as well as atypical observations, we show how to decompose non-parametrically the overall inefficiency of a pupil into a unit specific and a higher level (i.e. a school) component. By a sample of entry and exit attainments of 3017 girls in British ordinary single sex schools, we test the robustness of the non-parametric and parametric estimates. We find that the two methods agree in the relative measures of the scope for potential attainment improvement. Further, the two methods agree on the variation in pupil attainment and the proportion attributable to pupil and school level.

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The results of an investigation into how stressors interact with the action of serotonergic agents in animal models of anxiety are presented. Water deprivation and restraint both increased plasma corticosterone concentrations and elevated 5-HT turnover. In the elevated X-maze, water deprivation had a duration-dependent "anxiolytic" effect. The effect of restraint was dependent on the duration of restraint and was to inhibit maze exploration. Water-deprivation did not influence the action of diazepam or any 5-HT1A ligand in the X-maze. Restraint switched the "anxiogenic" effect of 8-0H-DPAT to either "anxiolytic" or inactive, depending on the time after the restraint when testing was performed. The Vogel conflict test detected an "anxiolytic" "anxiolytic"V"anxiolytic""anxiolytic" effect of buspirone which was additive with "anxiolytic" effects of pindolol and propranolol. Diazepam and fluoxetine were also active, but 8-0H-DPAT, ipsapirone, gepirone and yohimbine were inactive. In the elevated X-maze, "anxiogenic" responses to picrotoxin, flumazenil, RU 24969, CGS 12066B, fluoxetine and 8-0H-DPAT were detected. Other 5-HT1A ligands were inactive. Diazepam and corticosterone had "anxiolytic" effects. Increasing light intensity did not change behaviour on the elevated X-maze, but was able to reverse the effect of 8- OH-DPAT to an "anxiolytic" action. This effect was attributed to a presynaptic mechanism, because it was abolished by pCPA. The occurence of different behaviours in different reglons of the maze was shown to be susceptible to modulation by "anxiolytic" and "anxiogenic" drugs. These results are discussed in the context of there being at least two separate 5-HT mechanisms which are involved in the control of anxiety.

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The research is concerned with the application of the computer simulation technique to study the performance of reinforced concrete columns in a fire environment. The effect of three different concrete constitutive models incorporated in the computer simulation on the structural response of reinforced concrete columns exposed to fire is investigated. The material models differed mainly in respect to the formulation of the mechanical properties of concrete. The results from the simulation have clearly illustrated that a more realistic response of a reinforced concrete column exposed to fire is given by a constitutive model with transient creep or appropriate strain effect The assessment of the relative effect of the three concrete material models is considered from the analysis by adopting the approach of a parametric study, carried out using the results from a series of analyses on columns heated on three sides which produce substantial thermal gradients. Three different loading conditions were used on the column; axial loading and eccentric loading both to induce moments in the same sense and opposite sense to those induced by the thermal gradient. An axially loaded column heated on four sides was also considered. The computer modelling technique adopted separated the thermal and structural responses into two distinct computer programs. A finite element heat transfer analysis was used to determine the thermal response of the reinforced concrete columns when exposed to the ISO 834 furnace environment. The temperature distribution histories obtained were then used in conjunction with a structural response program. The effect of the occurrence of spalling on the structural behaviour of reinforced concrete column is also investigated. There is general recognition of the potential problems of spalling but no real investigation into what effect spalling has on the fire resistance of reinforced concrete members. In an attempt to address the situation, a method has been developed to model concrete columns exposed to fire which incorporates the effect of spalling. A total of 224 computer simulations were undertaken by varying the amounts of concrete lost during a specified period of exposure to fire. An array of six percentages of spalling were chosen for one range of simulation while a two stage progressive spalling regime was used for a second range. The quantification of the reduction in fire resistance of the columns against the amount of spalling, heating and loading patterns, and the time at which the concrete spalls appears to indicate that it is the amount of spalling which is the most significant variable in the reduction of fire resistance.