973 resultados para business network
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State University Audit Report
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Iowa DOT savings through use of Iowa Communcations Network (ICN) videoconferencing
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Modern urban lifestyle encourages the prolongation of wakefulness, leaving less and less time for sleep. Although the exact functions of sleep remain one of the biggest mysteries in neuroscience, the society is well aware of the negative consequences of sleep loss on human physical and mental health and performance. Enhancing sleep's recuperative functions might allow shortening sleep duration while preserving the beneficial effects of sleep. During sleep, brain activity oscillates across a continuum of frequencies. Individual oscillations have been suggested to underlie distinct functions for sleep and cognition. Gaining control about individual oscillations might allow boosting their specific functions. Sleep spindles are 11 - 15 Hz oscillations characteristic for light non-rapid-eye-movement sleep (NREMS) and have been proposed to play a role in memory consolidation and sleep protection against environmental stimuli. The reticular thalamic nucleus (nRt) has been identified as the major pacemaker of spindles. Intrinsic oscillatory burst discharge in nRt neurons, arising from the interplay of low-threshold (T-type) Ca2+ channels (T channels) and small conductance type 2 (SK2) K+ channels (SK2 channels), underlies this pacemaking function. In the present work we investigated the impact of altered nRt bursting on spindle generation during sleep by studying mutant mice for SK2 channels and for CaV3.3 channels, a subtype of T channels. Using in vitro electrophysiology I showed that nRt bursting was abolished in CaV3.3 knock out (CaV3.3 KO) mice. In contrast, in SK2 channel over-expressing (SK2-OE) nRt cells, intrinsic repetitive bursting was prolonged. Compared to wildtype (WT) littermates, altered nRt burst discharge lead to weakened thalamic network oscillations in vitro in CaV3.3 KO mice, while oscillatory activity was prolonged in SK2-OE mice. Sleep electroencephalographic recordings in CaV3.3 KO and SK2-OE mice revealed that reduced or potentiated nRt bursting respectively weakened or prolonged sleep spindle activity at the NREMS - REMS transition. Furthermore, SK2-OE mice showed more consolidated NREMS and increased arousal thresholds, two correlates of good sleep quality. This thesis work suggests that CaV3.3 and SK2 channels may be targeted in order to modulate sleep spindle activity. Furthermore, it proposes a novel function for spindles in NREMS consolidation. Finally, it provides evidence that sleep quality may be improved by promoting spindle activity, thereby supporting the hypothesis that sleep quality can be enhanced by modulating oscillatory activity in the brain. Le style de vie moderne favorise la prolongation de l'éveil, laissant de moins en moins de temps pour le sommeil. Même si le rôle exact du sommeil reste un des plus grands mystères des neurosciences, la société est bien consciente des conséquences négatives que provoque un manque de sommeil, à la fois sur le plan de la santé physique et mentale ainsi qu'au niveau des performances cognitives. Augmenter les fonctions récupératrices du sommeil pourrait permettre de raccourcir la durée du sommeil tout en en conservant les effets bénéfiques. Durant le sommeil, on observe des oscillations à travers un continuum de fréquences. Il a été proposé que chaque oscillation pourrait être à l'origine de fonctions spécifiques pour le sommeil et la cognition. Pouvoir de contrôler les oscillations individuelles permettrait d'augmenter leurs fonctions respectives. Les fuseaux sont des oscillations de 11 à 15 Hz caractéristiques du sommeil à ondes lentes léger et il a été suggéré qu'elles jouent un rôle majeur pour la consolidation de la mémoire ainsi que dans la protection du sommeil contre les stimuli environnementaux. Le nucleus réticulaire du thalamus (nRt) a été identifié en tant que générateur de rythme des fuseaux. Les bouffées oscillatoires intrinsèques des neurones du nRt, provenant de l'interaction de canaux calciques à bas seuil de type T (canaux T) et de canaux potassiques à faible conductance de type 2 (canaux SK2), sont à l'origine de la fonction de générateur de rythme. Dans ce travail, j'ai étudié l'impact de la modulation de bouffées de nRT sur la génération des fuseaux pendant le sommeil en investiguant des souris génétiquement modifiées pour les canaux SK2 et les canaux CaV3.3, un sous-type de canaux T. En utilisant l'électrophysiologie in vitro j'ai démontré que les bouffées du nRT étaient abolies dans les souris knock-out du type CaV3.3 (CaV3.3 KO). D'autre part, dans les cellules nRT sur-exprimant les canaux SK2 (SK2-OE), les bouffées oscillatoires intrinsèques étaient prolongées. Par rapport aux souris wild type, les souris CaV3.3 KO ont montré un affaiblissement des oscillations thalamiques en réponse à un changement des bouffées de nRT, alors que l'activité oscillatoire était prolongée dans les souris SK2-OE. Des enregistrements EEG du sommeil dans des souris de type CaV3.3 KO et SK2-OE ont révélé qu'une réduction ou augmentation des bouffées nRT ont respectivement affaibli ou prolongé l'activité des fuseaux durant les transitions du sommeil à ondes lentes au sommeil paradoxal. De plus, les souris SK2-OE ont montré des signes de consolidation du sommeil à ondes lentes et un seuil augmenté pour le réveil, deux mesures qui corrèlent avec une bonne qualité du sommeil. Le travail de cette thèse propose que les canaux CaV3.3 et SK2 pourrait être ciblés pour moduler l'activité des fuseaux. De plus, je propose une fonction nouvelle pour les fuseaux dans la consolidation du sommeil à ondes lentes. Finalement je suggère que la qualité du sommeil peut être améliorée en promouvant l'activité des fuseaux, soutenant ainsi l'idée que la qualité du sommeil peut être améliorée en modulant l'activité oscillatoire dans le cerveau.
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Cancer genomes frequently contain somatic copy number alterations (SCNA) that can significantly perturb the expression level of affected genes and thus disrupt pathways controlling normal growth. In melanoma, many studies have focussed on the copy number and gene expression levels of the BRAF, PTEN and MITF genes, but little has been done to identify new genes using these parameters at the genome-wide scale. Using karyotyping, SNP and CGH arrays, and RNA-seq, we have identified SCNA affecting gene expression ('SCNA-genes') in seven human metastatic melanoma cell lines. We showed that the combination of these techniques is useful to identify candidate genes potentially involved in tumorigenesis. Since few of these alterations were recurrent across our samples, we used a protein network-guided approach to determine whether any pathways were enriched in SCNA-genes in one or more samples. From this unbiased genome-wide analysis, we identified 28 significantly enriched pathway modules. Comparison with two large, independent melanoma SCNA datasets showed less than 10% overlap at the individual gene level, but network-guided analysis revealed 66% shared pathways, including all but three of the pathways identified in our data. Frequently altered pathways included WNT, cadherin signalling, angiogenesis and melanogenesis. Additionally, our results emphasize the potential of the EPHA3 and FRS2 gene products, involved in angiogenesis and migration, as possible therapeutic targets in melanoma. Our study demonstrates the utility of network-guided approaches, for both large and small datasets, to identify pathways recurrently perturbed in cancer.
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This paper initially identifies the main transformations of the television system that are caused by digitalization. Its development in several broadcasting platforms is analyzed as well as the particular obstacles and requirements that are detected for each of them. Due to its technical characteristics and its historical link to the public services, the terrestrial network requires migration strategies different from those strictly commercial, and public intervention might be needed. The paper focuses on such migration strategies towards DTT and identifies the main issues for public intervention in the areas of the digital scenario: technology, business and market transformation and the reception field. Moreover, it describes and classifies the challenges that public broadcasters should confront due to digitalization. This paper finally concludes that the leadership of the public broadcasters during the migration towards DTT is an interesting tool for public policy. The need for foster the digitalization of the terrestrial platform and to achieve certain social and public goal besides the market interest brings an opportunity for public institutions and public broadcasters to work together. That leading role could also be positive for the public service to face its necessary redefinition and reallocation within the digital context.
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This is the Annual Report for Fiscal Year 2004 (July 1, 2003-June 30, 2004) for the Iowa Communications Network.
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For self-pollinating plants to reproduce, male and female organ development must be coordinated as flowers mature. The Arabidopsis transcription factors AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 6 (ARF6) and ARF8 regulate this complex process by promoting petal expansion, stamen filament elongation, anther dehiscence, and gynoecium maturation, thereby ensuring that pollen released from the anthers is deposited on the stigma of a receptive gynoecium. ARF6 and ARF8 induce jasmonate production, which in turn triggers expression of MYB21 and MYB24, encoding R2R3 MYB transcription factors that promote petal and stamen growth. To understand the dynamics of this flower maturation regulatory network, we have characterized morphological, chemical, and global gene expression phenotypes of arf, myb, and jasmonate pathway mutant flowers. We found that MYB21 and MYB24 promoted not only petal and stamen development but also gynoecium growth. As well as regulating reproductive competence, both the ARF and MYB factors promoted nectary development or function and volatile sesquiterpene production, which may attract insect pollinators and/or repel pathogens. Mutants lacking jasmonate synthesis or response had decreased MYB21 expression and stamen and petal growth at the stage when flowers normally open, but had increased MYB21 expression in petals of older flowers, resulting in renewed and persistent petal expansion at later stages. Both auxin response and jasmonate synthesis promoted positive feedbacks that may ensure rapid petal and stamen growth as flowers open. MYB21 also fed back negatively on expression of jasmonate biosynthesis pathway genes to decrease flower jasmonate level, which correlated with termination of growth after flowers have opened. These dynamic feedbacks may promote timely, coordinated, and transient growth of flower organs.
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State Agency Audit Report
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It is well known that multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) techniques can bring numerous benefits, such as higher spectral efficiency, to point-to-point wireless links. More recently, there has been interest in extending MIMO concepts tomultiuser wireless systems. Our focus in this paper is on network MIMO, a family of techniques whereby each end user in a wireless access network is served through several access points within its range of influence. By tightly coordinating the transmission and reception of signals at multiple access points, network MIMO can transcend the limits on spectral efficiency imposed by cochannel interference. Taking prior information-theoretic analyses of networkMIMO to the next level, we quantify the spectral efficiency gains obtainable under realistic propagation and operational conditions in a typical indoor deployment. Our study relies on detailed simulations and, for specificity, is conducted largely within the physical-layer framework of the IEEE 802.16e Mobile WiMAX system. Furthermore,to facilitate the coordination between access points, we assume that a high-capacity local area network, such as Gigabit Ethernet,connects all the access points. Our results confirm that network MIMO stands to provide a multiple-fold increase in spectralefficiency under these conditions.
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This paper describes a Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) case study in engineering education carried out within the context of a network management course. The case study shows that the use of two computing tools developed by the authors and based on Free- and Open-Source Software (FOSS) provide significant educational benefits over traditional engineering pedagogical approaches in terms of both concepts and engineering competencies acquisition. First, the Collage authoring tool guides and supports the course teacher in the process of authoring computer-interpretable representations (using the IMS Learning Design standard notation) of effective collaborative pedagogical designs. Besides, the Gridcole system supports the enactment of that design by guiding the students throughout the prescribed sequence of learning activities. The paper introduces the goals and context of the case study, elaborates onhow Collage and Gridcole were employed, describes the applied evaluation methodology, anddiscusses the most significant findings derived from the case study.
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ADSL is becoming the standard form of residential and small-business broadband Internet access due to, primarily, its low deployment cost. These ADSL residential lines are often deployed with 802.11 Access Points (AP) that providewireless connectivity. Given the density of ADSL deployment, it is often possible for a residential wireless client to be in range of several other APs, belonging to neighbors, with ADSL connectivity. While the ADSL technology has showed evident limits in terms of capacity (with speeds ranging 1-10 Mbps), the short-range wireless communication can guarantee a muchhigher capacity (up to 20 Mbps). Furthermore, the ADSL links in the neighborhood are generally under-utilized, since ADSL subscribers do not connect 100% of the time. Therefore, it is possible for a wireless client to simultaneously connect to several APs in range and effectively aggregate their available ADSL bandwidth.In this paper, we introduce ClubADSL, a wireless client that can simultaneously connect to several APs in range on different frequencies and aggregate both their downlink and uplink capacity. ClubADSL is a software that runs locally on the client-side, and it requires neither modification to the existing Internet infrastructure, nor any hardware/protocol upgradesto the 802.11 local area network. We show the feasibility of ClubADSL in seamlessly transmitting TCP traffic, and validate its implementation both in controlled scenarios and with current applications over real ADSL lines. In particular we show that a ClubADSL client can greatly benefit from the aggregated download bandwidth in the case of server-client applications such as video streaming, but can also take advantage of the increased upload bandwidth greatly reducing download times with incentive-based P2P applications such as BitTorrent.
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State University Audit Report
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2000 Summary Iowa Beef Cow Business Record