process AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D review: The best processor of this generation By www.hardwarezone.com.sg Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 12:05:03 +0800 AMD continues to give and surprise. #AMD #ryzen #gaming Full Article CPU PC Components
process Monitoring and Evaluation of Production Processes An Analysis of the Automotive Industry By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process In progress : see inside a lettering artist's sketchbook and process, from pencil to vector / By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: 02/22/2017 12:00 Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - NK3631.H57 A35 2015 Full Article
process DataTables Column Filtering with Server-side Processing using PHP By www.codexworld.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Mar 2024 06:05:59 +0000 DataTables is a JavaScript library used to enhance the functionality and add advanced features to HTML tables. DataTables plugin converts a basic HTML table to an advanced feature-rich table instantly. There are various advanced features are available with DataTables, and server-side processing is one of them. DataTables server-side processing enables you to load a large number of data sets from the database. By setting the server-side option the search, pagination, and column sorting operations will be handled with the server-side script and database. Column filtering is a very useful option to help the user find specific records in a large The post DataTables Column Filtering with Server-side Processing using PHP appeared first on CodexWorld. Full Article PHP DataTables Filter MySQL Search
process Parallel Processing and Applied Mathematics 11th International Conference, PPAM 2015, Krakow, Poland, September 6-9, 2015. Revised Selected Papers, Part I By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Parallel Processing and Applied Mathematics 11th International Conference, PPAM 2015, Krakow, Poland, September 6-9, 2015. Revised Selected Papers, Part II By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Proceedings of the International Conference on Recent Cognizance in Wireless Communication & Image Processing ICRCWIP-2014 By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Mine Seismology: Data Analysis and Interpretation Palabora Mine Caving Process as Revealed by Induced Seismicity By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Process Intensification in Chemical Engineering Design Optimization and Control By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Single molecule biophysics and poisson process approach to statistical mechanics By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Signal and Image Processing in Medical Applications By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Financial signal processing and machine learning By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Materials processing : a unified approach to processing of metals, ceramics and polymers By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Engineering Library- TS183.M38 2016 Full Article
process Modeling coastal and marine processes By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Engineering Library- TC209.D95 2015 Full Article
process Resistive switching : from fundamentals of nanoionic redox processes to memristive device applications By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Engineering Library- TK7874.84.R47 2016 Full Article
process Real-time digital signal processing from MATLAB to C with the TMS320C6x DSPs By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Engineering Circulation Desk- TK5102.9.W44 2012 Full Article
process Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical-Chemical Processes in Fractured Porous Media: Modelling and Benchmarking Benchmarking Initiatives By search.lib.uiowa.edu Published On :: Location: Electronic Resource- Full Article
process Process Controls Engineer By www.avjobs.com Published On :: El Segundo, CA United States - Job Description At Boeing, we innovate and collaborate to make the world a better place. From the seabed to outer space, you can contribute to work that matters with a company where diversity, equity and inclusion are shared values. Were committed to fostering an... View Full Article
process Stuart and Nash platforms integrate to give businesses “full visibility and control over the delivery process” By postandparcel.info Published On :: Wed, 19 Jun 2024 05:18:12 +0000 Last-mile tech logistics specialist Stuart announced a new partnership with delivery orchestration platform, Nash. This collaboration will support merchants across restaurants, grocery, retail, and e-commerce to optimise local delivery operations and accelerate growth. Full Article E-Commerce Parcel Retail
process The Weeknd Remains Uninterested in Joining Grammys Despite Changes in Nomination Process By www.aceshowbiz.com Published On :: Mon, 03 May 2021 23:00:01 +0000 The 'Blinding Lights' hitmaker still refuses to be a part of the Grammys although he commends the organization for shutting down nomination review committees. Full Article music The Weeknd
process DOMS IPO fully subscribed within one hour of bidding process; retail portion booked 4X By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Dec 2023 12:00:00 +0530 At 11:06 a.m., the public issue was subscribed 1.09 times. The retail category was subscribed 4.08 times, while the NII portion garnered 1.18 times bids. There were no bids from qualified institutional buyers so far. Full Article
process Business Process Automation Specialist (Cleveland, OH or Framingham, MA) By jobs.metafilter.com Published On :: Tue, 15 Nov 2022 02:53:44 GMT Looking for someone with experience automating business processes with tools like PowerAutomate, VBA and Powershell. Detailed posting here. Full Article
process Creative Process and Career Coaching - Trey Gunn By www.musicxray.com Published On :: Thu, 13 Feb 2014 03:05:53 +0000 I have many decades of experience in developing one's original voice. Both as an artist and as a coach to musicians and artists. In addition to 11 solo recordings, I've worked with King Crimson, David Sylvian, Vernon Reid, Brian Eno, TOOL, Steven Wilson and Puscifer. I can listen to your music through, both, your ears (to hear if you are reaching your musical aims) and my ears (to hear how the piece matches up with my experience as a player/producer.) I will give advice, opinions, critiques, commentaries, articulations and 'the works' about where you are heading. When you send me a track please include some information about you and where you are heading. This is necessary for me to know how to help you and offer the right kind of critique. Additionally I run my own record label (7d Media) and am a fully independent musician (recording, performing/touring, producing, licensing, composing and more.) All of my experience and advice is available to you. for much information about my process go here: www.treygunn.com/coaching Full Article
process Margo Price On The Mysterious Process Of Album-Making And Motherhood By www.gpbnews.org Published On :: Mon, 13 Jul 2020 20:40:00 +0000 The day Margo Price walked into the studio to start recording her new album, That's How Rumors Get Started , she had butterflies in her stomach, a mixture of excitement, trepidation — and morning sickness. "I definitely was not expecting to be pregnant," she says. "I had planned to go into the studio regardless of what was happening in my personal life." Her daughter Ramona was born last June — and her new album is now out in the world, too. Price says that the two processes, making an album and having a baby, were eerily similar. "I think when you're making art and you're creating something, you have this feeling of protection," she says. "You keep it to yourself at first, and it's evolving and growing and changing. And the same [can be said] when you're carrying a baby. It's such a process that it's really hard to describe either one. I think they're both kind of mysterious in their own way. It's something that's just so personal." NPR's Ailsa Chang spoke to Margo Price about staying Full Article
process Leveraging robots for smarter internal logistics ~ The role of precise, adjustable motors in optimising warehouse processes By www.logisticsit.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Nov 8400 17:31:48 +0000 “We cannot direct the wind, but we can adjust the sails,” Dolly Parton once said. In the face of uncertainty and disruption, all we can do is adapt. This rings especially true for the logistics industry, which has been subject to major disruption over the last five years. Here, Dave Walsha, sales and marketing director at drive system supplier EMS, explores how robotics could streamline internal logistics operations. Full Article
process BHB: Sterile Processing Dept To Be Upgraded By bernews.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 22:27:42 +0000 The Bermuda Hospitals Board today announced that it is “starting a major renovation project for its sterile processing department that will run from February to July 2025.” A spokesperson said, “Sterile processing is the sanitisation of equipment and items used in clinical care. The highly specialised cleaning process ensures items are completely safe for use. […] Full Article All News #BermudaHospitals #Health
process NFL’s Antonio Pierce On Hiring Process & More By bernews.com Published On :: Wed, 07 Feb 2024 11:22:49 +0000 [Written by Patrick Bean] This year’s post-season has been unlike any other for former New York Giants star middle linebacker Antonio Pierce, who has strong Bermuda connections, as he found himself a much sought after commodity among the National Football League’s [NFL] coaching ranks. Before eventually being hired on by the Las Vegas Raiders as […] Full Article All Sports #AmericanFootball #AntonioPierce #PatrickBeanReports
process The Mayan Calendar -- Process of Transition By robbby-robinson.blogspot.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Jun 2011 22:40:00 +0000 As we've seen, the Mayan Calendar is a chart of the evolution of consciousness in the universe.Each Cycle or Age has its own dominant paradigm or point of view. As you move up through the 9 Cycles, new perspectives and new ways of being arise. This new perspective starts to show up in the world, but it isn't an immediate switch from the old way of doing things to the new way. It takes time, and a process of transition, for a new understanding to gain prominence.The quantum physics revolution is a perfect example. We've known since the 1950's that matter isn't solid, and reality is nothing like we've imagined. Yet for the most part, our world continues to go along believing in the old materialistic ways... "Reality" is what can be proven with the senses. Medicine sees the body as a machine with unconnected parts. The Earth is dead, and humans are the pinnacle of evolution. And so on...Yet, as we progress, the old perspective becomes more and more marginalised. People begin to talk about things in a new way. Then people begin to act in a new way. Finally (we're not there yet), the tipping point is reached -- the old way is as disregarded as the once unshakeable "knowledge" that the Earth was flat.And that process is what the 13 days and nights of the Mayan Calendar describe.The "Days" are times when consciousness expands, new perspectives arise -- times of fresh beginnings.The "Nights" are times when the new consciousness is applied, new procedures initiated, and old ways (usually forcefully) overthrown.And each of these 13 periods is characterised by specific circumstances. Here's a breakdown of each of the 13 Days And Nights of the Mayan Calendar, and the specific transformation that occurs in each.The First Day A period of illumination -- new perspectives arise. Beginnings. Seeds are planted; energy begins to flow in a new pattern or paradigm. The First Night A period of darkness, rest. Integration. The new pattern begins to germinate within the dark subconscious of mind.The Second Day The second period of illumination. Dual paradigms, the old and the new, overlap -- both can be seen. In history, a time of turmoil, as the old ways (status quo) try to repress the new.(This is where we are as of April 20, 2011.) The Second Night The second period of darkness. Followers of the two different paradigms battle for supremacy. Historically, very violent eras.The Third Day The third period of illumination. The new paradigm begins to spread deep and wide, beginning to show up in the world as new methods of doing things, new ways of perception. The new pattern begins to overtake the old, as fables, falsehoods, and failures expose the weakness of the past system.The Third Night The third period of darkness. The fledgling perspective of the new paradigm is refined, and the earlier, simplistic aspects fall away. The old system is thrown over, usually by force.The Fourth Day The fourth period of illumination. The new pattern becomes stronger and goes deeper into consciousness. A period of expansion, as the new paradigm takes form in the world. New corollaries emerge, as the new perspective takes precedence.The Fourth Night The fourth period of darkness. Healing the pain of the transition and the death of the old ways. Rebuilding after the destruction of the old status quo systems. The new, more healthy paradigm is truly established now.The Fifth Day The fifth period of illumination, and point of greatest radiance in the Cycle. The new paradigm flourishes, sending information about wonderful new knowledge out into the world. The highest possibilities for this Cycle are attainable.The Fifth Night The fifth period of darkness, and the nadir of darkness. This is a time of major hardships, cultural collapse, horrific violence. However, it is also a little like gestation: within the dark, something new awaits. From the death, new life will arise.The Sixth Day The sixth period of illumination, a time of Enlightenment. The flowering of the paradigm into stunning new insights and newer perspectives... in fact, sowing the seeds for the new Cycle of evolution to follow.The Sixth Night The sixth period of darkness. The paradigm has reached its peak and begins to dry and wither, like wheat in autumn. Typically a time of war and violent conflict.The Seventh Day The seventh period of illumination. There is a sense of openness, of being ready for something new. The best of the paradigm has been harvested, and it's time for a new level of consciousness to arise.From the Seventh Day of the Mayan Calendar, we proceed directly to the First Day... from Light to Light. This demonstrates that whole process, even though it contains much dismantling and death, is finally and entirely a process of Creation. The Mayan Calendar is an illustration of this process. That's what makes it so fascinating... How did the Mayans ascertain such detailed information, that accurately predicts the ancient past (of which they could have known nothing) to the far future (which they are scarcely more likely to know)?We may never know the answer to this question. But at least we finally know enough to appreciate their wisdom at last. And just in time! With Bright Blessings, Full Article Calendar Mayan Process Transition WiccaSpiritualitycom
process The Healing Process of Remorse and Self-Forgiveness * Wicca-Spirituality.com By robbby-robinson.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Jun 2011 14:54:00 +0000 Although often confused with guilt and shame, remorse is actually a much higher calibrating "emotion." It's the 21st Century alternative to feeling bad about yourself, and making others around you feel bad too.It not only feels better and helps you move forward in your life, but it is healing for the Earth... and as we ride the 2012 Transition, Mother Earth needs all the help we can give her!This article explains how it works, and why you are worthy of forgiveness. Remorse is a method to heal yourself, and others, after making a mistake. After all, anything that brings a feeling of remorse is a mistake -- just a mistake. Did you know that's the origin of the word "sin"? "Sin" was an archery term; it means missing the mark. That leaves a lot more possibility for positive growth, doesn't it! So you don't need to berate yourself for eternity. There is nothing to berate yourself for if you didn't know any better, or if you did the best you could. And I believe we always do the best we can, with what we have in the moment. We're not perfect. Sometimes we do things we're not proud of. But, in the moment, that was undoubtedly the best that we could do.Maybe you gave in to your meaner impulses. If you could have held yourself to a higher ideal in that moment, you would have done so. What would you have to gain, by not?Maybe you didn't know how to do better. You can only work with what you know.God does not expect you to know what you do not yet know!For whatever reason -- fatigue, stress, anxiety, confusion, distraction, etc -- maybe you didn't do the best you hoped for. Maybe it wasn't as good as you could have done another day. But you obviously did the best you could in that moment. Why would anyone do less than that?God doesn't need you to burn in hell for it, not even the hell of your own harsh thoughts. She only wants you to learn from the process, and to use it to grow. That's what remorse is all about. There are four parts to the process of remorse. The first part is a pang in your Heart. There is an energy there, call it an emotion if you like, that signals you are not happy with your actions. From here, many people get derailed into guilt, instead of continuing the process of remorse.The second part is the most important, the core of remorse...You accept that you made a mistake. And you make an unemotional, practical assessment of your actions. When your actions and choices don't live up to your ideals or ethics... you figure out how you could do better, discover what was moving in you (probably subconsciously) that caused that action, and -- here's the critical bit -- resolve to do better next time.Remorse is calm and determined. Rather than destroying your self-respect, remorse enhances it. It provides you with the opportunity to grow, to live up to your ideals. It recognises that within you there is a perfect being, capable of the best. And that there is always another opportunity to try. Contrast that with shame, which says that you are worthless and hopeless. There's just nowhere good to go, from there!Remorse doesn't take the mistake personally. It sees an action as wrong, but not you as a person. Remorse knows that people can't accurately, honestly be judged in terms of "wrong" and "bad." The next step is always making amends. You must undo the error, to the best of your ability. And apologise, if it won't make things worse.We must be clear -- this step has nothing to do with being forgiven by another person. Whether they forgive you or not is about them and their process, and is not about you.To seek someone's forgiveness when they aren't ready to give it can be a further harm. You fix the mistake if you can. That is the only purpose of this step. Inherent in this process is self-forgiveness. You see a mistake, you acknowledge it, you figure out what went wrong, you fix it if you can, and you determine to not make that mistake again.When you've done all that, forgiveness is a lot easier.You can forgive yourself, because you know you aren't a bad person who intentionally did wrong... and because you are doing your best not to slip up that way in the future.No one is perfect. No one is expected, by the Divine, not to make mistakes. On the contrary, that's often how we learn and grow.That's all the Divine wants of you. Not perfection. But learning and growing from your slip-ups.So you can accept that you did the best you were able to, at the time. And forgive yourself, for being human and humanly fallible. If you get stuck in guilt, look for the underlying shame. Shame is like Velcro to guilt. It tells you that you deserve to feel terrible guilt, that you are not worthy of forgiveness or compassion or kindness.But shame LIES.You are worthy of forgiveness, because you are not a flawed person.You are Divinity tasting life as a mortal individual -- nothing else. It doesn't matter what your family or coworkers or boss thinks of you. It doesn't matter how you've been treated by others -- that's nothing to do with YOU, that's all about the (human) blindness of others.You are infinitely worthy and loveable! And when others can't see that it's only because they haven't realised that they are infinitely worthy and loveable. When people get tied down, in their minds, into one little frail animal body and one small human life, all kinds of such misconceptions arise! But it's not the truth.The truth is that you are eternal -- learning and growing and polishing yourself on challenge after challenge, life after life. The soul that is truly you is infinitely worthy and Divine. The body and mind you think of as you are only a costume that put on for a while, and then point aside, to go home for dinner and a bath, a good rest, to get up and come play again. So how do you as a mere mortal forgive yourself? The same way you forgive anyone... With compassion for your human frailty: you really are doing our best with what you have. With perspective: understanding that this life is a playground and schoolroom, and not the life-or-death struggle it seems. With determination to not make the same mistake again.With Bright Blessings, Full Article Healing Process Remorse SelfForgiveness WiccaSpiritualitycom
process Behind-the-scenes peek into picture book writing & illustration process with Hazel Mitchell (SWEET PEA SUMMER, Candlewick) By www.inkygirl.com Published On :: Mon, 28 Jun 2021 17:22:11 +0000 Hazel Mitchell has helped create more than twenty children's books, including her award-winning picture book Toby (Candlewick Press). Her illustrations appear in books by Cynthia Lord, JaNay Brown-Wood (Imani's Moon was mentioned on the Stephen Colbert show!), Lynn Parrish Sutton, Liza Gardner Walsh and others. You can find out more about Hazel and her work at HazelMitchell.com, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Synopsis of SWEET PEA SUMMER (Candlewick): During her mother’s absence, a young girl discovers the joys of gardening—and the rewards of persistence and a sharp eye—in a sweet intergenerational story. With warm, child-friendly illustrations and a simple narration, Hazel Mitchell tells a timeless story about holding on to hope in hard times and finding the strength and determination to see it through. A brief author’s note at the end offers a bit of history and a few details about sweet peas for aspiring gardeners. Q. What inspired you to write Sweet Pea Summer? My inspiration for the book were memories I have from staying with my grandparents when I was little (4-6 years old). They lived in a row of mill cottages in a Yorkshire town called Huddersfield. The town was born out of the wool trade and had many factories and tall towers, but was surrounded by beautiful countryside. I started to sketch my memories of staying with them - the cottage, the garden, the countryside with the moors and mill chimneys, the cats that were always scampering around, the long road that stretched away up a sloping hill to the town itself. My granddad was an excellent gardener. I suspect this came from the war years in Britain when everyone grew their own food as much as possible. In my memory the garden was so, so long with a little greenhouse and was stuffed with veggies and flowers. Of course, my memory exaggerated everything. I was seeing through a small child's eyes. I even googled the road on Google Streetview and the cottage and the garden are still there, just much smaller than I recalled. I decided there was a story in these sketches and my rememberings. I find that I'm often inspired by childhood memories, places and real life things, like my own dog who is the main character in the book 'Toby', also from Candlewick Press. I've even been known to use my house in books, or feature the landscape of Maine, where I live, and sometimes I draw objects from my home. it gives authenticity I think. Q. What was the writing and illustration process like? After some note making, more doodles and musing I decided on the main character of a girl. She's not exactly me. My sister also went to stay with my grandparents when my mother was ill and that was really the nugget that set me rolling. The girl is sad and missing her mother, so Grandpa invites her to help in the garden and, in particular, to look after the sweet peas. (My own grandfather grew chrysanthemums, but I decided children would relate more to sweet peas. Plus it is easier to say!). The grandparents do not look like my grandparents and even though the child is not really me, I guess she shares some of my personality characteristics and DO I love gardening! (Although I always fail with sweet peas, which is ironic). I found I had all the inspiration I needed to get started on roughing out a story. Writing and illustrating Sweet Pea Summer was a long process, as most books tend to me. There are a lot of images in the book, which is kind of graphic novelish in a way, with multiple images on some pages that follow a grid layout. Although I did preliminary character and setting sketches, I then spent time writing scene progressions and story boarding before I was ready to do the first full dummy. I've found this saves me time in the long run, when I finally start to sketch I can be pretty certain I have the rudimentary story arc and length of book down. We had 2-3 edits and rehashes before my editors, art director and myself were all happy to go to finals. Finals are always the very long and arduous stage of the book for me. The first spark of story and hashing it out is the inspirational bit. I did all the art for Sweet Pea in pencil and watercolor (usually I colour an under painting digitally), but I felt this book needed a traditional watercolour feel. It was a longer process for sure! Along the way I did a good amount of picture research especially on the landscapes and the flowers - plus the process of growing them, which features in the story. The parallel between the illness of the m/c's mom and the flowers failing to open was important to me. didn't want it to be too obvious to the reader. My editor, Liz Bicknell at Candlewick Press, was very helpful, as always, keeping the story on track. Pam Consolazio was my art director, and her nickname was Sweet Pea as a child! it is lovely when you find unexpected connections. I scan my own artwork, which gives me the luxury of making any tweaks to the final art. I think the whole book took about 2 years, including edits etc. It's wonderful when your book finally arrives in your mailbox! (Just like any birth, the pain recedes!) It was especially concerning in this time of the pandemic, but everything went well and the books arrived in time for publication. Q. What advice do you have for young writers and illustrators? My advice to young writers and illustrators is always work on stories that you love and feel an emotional response to whether, happy, sad, funny or just that you just love and know the subject. It will always show in your work! ---- For more insights from book creators, see my Inkygirl interview archives. Full Article Inkygirl Interviews hazelmitchell illustrating picture books process writing picture books
process Why we might never know the truth about ultra-processed foods By www.bbc.com Published On :: Sat, 27 Jul 2024 23:33:23 GMT Experts can’t agree how exactly they affect us and it’s not clear that science will give us an answer. Full Article
process Differential compartmental processing and phosphorylation of pathogenic human tau and native mouse tau in the line 66 model of frontotemporal dementia [Molecular Bases of Disease] By www.jbc.org Published On :: 2020-12-25T00:06:31-08:00 Synapse loss is associated with motor and cognitive decline in multiple neurodegenerative disorders, and the cellular redistribution of tau is related to synaptic impairment in tauopathies, such as Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia. Here, we examined the cellular distribution of tau protein species in human tau overexpressing line 66 mice, a transgenic mouse model akin to genetic variants of frontotemporal dementia. Line 66 mice express intracellular tau aggregates in multiple brain regions and exhibit sensorimotor and motor learning deficiencies. Using a series of anti-tau antibodies, we observed, histologically, that nonphosphorylated transgenic human tau is enriched in synapses, whereas phosphorylated tau accumulates predominantly in cell bodies and axons. Subcellular fractionation confirmed that human tau is highly enriched in insoluble cytosolic and synaptosomal fractions, whereas endogenous mouse tau is virtually absent from synapses. Cytosolic tau was resistant to solubilization with urea and Triton X-100, indicating the formation of larger tau aggregates. By contrast, synaptic tau was partially soluble after Triton X-100 treatment and most likely represents aggregates of smaller size. MS corroborated that synaptosomal tau is nonphosphorylated. Tau enriched in the synapse of line 66 mice, therefore, appears to be in an oligomeric and nonphosphorylated state, and one that could have a direct impact on cognitive function. Full Article
process The Western Balkans Before the Berlin Process Summit By f1.media.brightcove.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Jun 2018 00:00:00 +0100 Full Article
process Cyber Security Series: Securing Elections and Reclaiming Democratic Processes By f1.media.brightcove.com Published On :: Mon, 03 Sep 2018 00:00:00 +0100 Full Article
process Strong laws of large numbers for weighted sums of ????-dimensional arrays of random variables and applications to marked point processes By www.ams.org Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 14:10 EST Ta Cong Son, Tran Manh Cuong, Le Quang Dung and Le Van Dung Theor. Probability and Math. Statist. 111 (), 153-165. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
process Large deviations for perturbed Gaussian processes and logarithmic asymptotic estimates for some exit probabilities By www.ams.org Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 14:10 EST Claudio Macci and Barbara Pacchiarotti Theor. Probability and Math. Statist. 111 (), 21-43. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
process A kinetic dissection of the fast and superprocessive kinesin-3 KIF1A reveals a predominant one-head-bound state during its chemomechanical cycle [Molecular Biophysics] By www.jbc.org Published On :: 2020-12-25T00:06:30-08:00 The kinesin-3 family contains the fastest and most processive motors of the three neuronal transport kinesin families, yet the sequence of states and rates of kinetic transitions that comprise the chemomechanical cycle and give rise to their unique properties are poorly understood. We used stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy and single-molecule motility assays to delineate the chemomechanical cycle of the kinesin-3, KIF1A. Our bacterially expressed KIF1A construct, dimerized via a kinesin-1 coiled-coil, exhibits fast velocity and superprocessivity behavior similar to WT KIF1A. We established that the KIF1A forward step is triggered by hydrolysis of ATP and not by ATP binding, meaning that KIF1A follows the same chemomechanical cycle as established for kinesin-1 and -2. The ATP-triggered half-site release rate of KIF1A was similar to the stepping rate, indicating that during stepping, rear-head detachment is an order of magnitude faster than in kinesin-1 and kinesin-2. Thus, KIF1A spends the majority of its hydrolysis cycle in a one-head-bound state. Both the ADP off-rate and the ATP on-rate at physiological ATP concentration were fast, eliminating these steps as possible rate-limiting transitions. Based on the measured run length and the relatively slow off-rate in ADP, we conclude that attachment of the tethered head is the rate-limiting transition in the KIF1A stepping cycle. Thus, KIF1A's activity can be explained by a fast rear-head detachment rate, a rate-limiting step of tethered-head attachment that follows ATP hydrolysis, and a relatively strong electrostatic interaction with the microtubule in the weakly bound post-hydrolysis state. Full Article
process Problem Notes for SAS®9 - 58465: SAS Life Science Analytics Framework 4.6 - Group membership removal fails with an exception for Process Flows that exist in the Recycle Bin By Published On :: Wed, 26 Aug 2020 16:27:10 EST In SAS Life Science Analytics Framework 4.6, group membership removal fails with an exception if a user is set as assignee, a candidate, or a notification recipient in a user task for a Process Flow . The Process Full Article LSAFOFR+SAS+Life+Science+Analytics+Frame
process The Neuroproteomic Basis of Enhanced Perception and Processing of Brood Signals That Trigger Increased Reproductive Investment in Honeybee (Apis mellifera) Workers [Research] By www.mcponline.org Published On :: 2020-10-01T00:05:25-07:00 The neuronal basis of complex social behavior is still poorly understood. In honeybees, reproductive investment decisions are made at the colony-level. Queens develop from female-destined larvae that receive alloparental care from nurse bees in the form of ad-libitum royal jelly (RJ) secretions. Typically, the number of raised new queens is limited but genetic breeding of "royal jelly bees" (RJBs) for enhanced RJ production over decades has led to a dramatic increase of reproductive investment in queens. Here, we compare RJBs to unselected Italian bees (ITBs) to investigate how their cognitive processing of larval signals in the mushroom bodies (MBs) and antennal lobes (ALs) may contribute to their behavioral differences. A cross-fostering experiment confirms that the RJB syndrome is mainly due to a shift in nurse bee alloparental care behavior. Using olfactory conditioning of the proboscis extension reflex, we show that the RJB nurses spontaneously respond more often to larval odors compared with ITB nurses but their subsequent learning occurs at similar rates. These phenotypic findings are corroborated by our demonstration that the proteome of the brain, particularly of the ALs differs between RJBs and ITBs. Notably, in the ALs of RJB newly emerged bees and nurses compared with ITBs, processes of energy and nutrient metabolism, signal transduction are up-regulated, priming the ALs for receiving and processing the brood signals from the antennae. Moreover, highly abundant major royal jelly proteins and hexamerins in RJBs compared with ITBs during early life when the nervous system still develops suggest crucial new neurobiological roles for these well-characterized proteins. Altogether, our findings reveal that RJBs have evolved a strong olfactory response to larvae, enabled by numerous neurophysiological adaptations that increase the nurse bees' alloparental care behavior. Full Article
process The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Civil Society By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 09:59:58 +0000 The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Civil Society Research paper sysadmin 27 November 2018 Given today’s challenging geopolitical conditions and the evolving nature of the international climate regime since Paris, civil society must now once again recalibrate its strategies to ensure continued and increasing relevance. — Photo by The Climate Reality Project, ‘People’s Climate March Protest’, via Unsplash, 2017. This is one of four background papers feeding into a synthesis paper entitled The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes. Summary Following the failure of the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP 15) in Copenhagen in 2009, there was a step change in the sophistication and unity of civil society engagement on climate policy. This ensured that, subsequently, civil society was more effective in exercising multiple channels of influence around the negotiations for the Paris Agreement in 2015. Civil society proved to be particularly effective at harnessing the twin narratives of climate science and economics, and at leveraging an emerging multi-level governance architecture, to create political space for climate leadership. Given today’s challenging geopolitical conditions and the evolving nature of the international climate regime since Paris, civil society must now once again recalibrate its strategies to ensure continued and increasing relevance. In particular, the shift to a more ‘nationally grounded’ implementation regime focusing on individual states’ climate commitments will require civil society to become more effective at influencing domestic politics. At the same time, civil society will need to continue to seek strategic synergies at the international level. Civil society has a central role to play in ensuring that the first key test of the Paris ‘ratchet’ mechanism – revising countries’ pledged climate actions, or Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), by 2020 – is robust, science-informed and strongly rooted in domestic politics. 2018-11-28-non-state-actors-climate-civil-society-guy (PDF) Full Article
process The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Corporate Sector By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 10:09:06 +0000 The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Corporate Sector Research paper sysadmin 27 November 2018 Given the challenging political contexts since 2015, the corporate sector will have a key role to play in persuading national governments how technologies and expertise have moved on since the pledges were made. — Photo by Priscilla Du Preez, ‘Climate Reality’ via Unsplash, 2017. This is one of four background papers feeding into a synthesis paper entitled The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes. Summary The corporate sector has traditionally engaged governments at national rather than international level in lobbying for action related to climate change. Where it has engaged at an international level, this has often been to restrain regulation and ambition, such as in air transport. Over time, many businesses have increasingly understood that there is more commercial opportunity in a strong, consistent approach to tackling climate mitigation and adaptation, and an increasing number are willing to speak up on the issue. The Paris Climate Conference in 2015 demonstrated this positive engagement. Businesses are more powerful when engaging directly with national governments on detailed policies – by demonstrating what is possible and indirectly influencing national governments’ international pledges. Traditional trade/industry sector associations and groups have tended to suffer from the ‘lowest common denominator’ effect of their least progressive members. Progressive business groups coalescing around climate ambition can help to counter this. Unlike at the Copenhagen climate talks in 2009, the business community provided a positive, supportive backdrop to the 2015 Paris talks, mindful of the public relations opportunities in taking a progressive stance and of the benefits of targets that reflected the science. The carbon market was a particular focus for corporates, which succeeded in getting emissions trading options and market mechanisms included in Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. Given the challenging political contexts since 2015, the corporate sector will have a key role to play in persuading national governments how technologies and expertise have moved on since the pledges were made. With increasing awareness of resource scarcity, businesses are pursuing ever more creative solutions. Wide recognition that the avoidance of future emissions is increasingly dependent on developing and emerging economies means that business voices from these countries will potentially be more influential in the next few years. 2018-11-28-non-state-actors-climate-corporate-duggan (PDF) Full Article
process The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 10:18:41 +0000 The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes Research paper sysadmin 27 November 2018 In the current international political environment of rising populism, the role of sub- and non-state actors may become more important than ever. — Photo by UNclimatechange, ‘Bonn Climate Change Conference - October 2014’ via Flickr, 2014. Summary Climate action from sub-state and non-state actors such as subnational governments, cities, corporations and NGOs has very significant potential to enhance national efforts to curb CO2 emissions, close the so-called ‘emissions gap’ – between current commitments and the action necessary to meet climate targets – and help move the world on to a ‘1.5°C pathway’ that would limit global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels by 2100. In addition to their own climate action, sub-state/non-state actors can contribute to climate governance by developing new policies and business models to support emissions cuts and build resilience. Knowledge exchange and capacity-building have a role to play in helping these innovations to spread internationally. Politically, measures implemented by sub-state/non-state actors can help national governments to implement existing targets faster and more effectively, while helping to build political support for more ambitious climate action. The post-Paris climate regime of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) reflects the growing importance of sub- and non-state actors, and has featured the creation of institutional structures to engage and coordinate them. In the current international political environment of rising populism, the role of sub- and non-state actors may become more important than ever. However, more questions about the robustness of sub- and non-state action are also likely to be raised. With the 2020 deadline approaching for countries to submit details of enhanced Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), long-term climate strategies and other means of raising policy ambition, the next two years are set to provide significant opportunity for sub- and non-state action. Many governments are already developing ways to engage with sub- and non-state actors to identify opportunities to strengthen action by 2020. Key questions in this respect include (a) whether sub- and non-state actors can mobilize across sectors; and (b) whether action can be extended beyond the ‘usual suspects’ to include contributions from less familiar sources, such as business sectors with limited opportunities for climate action or corporations in the Global South. 2018-11-28-non-state-sctors-climate-synthesis-hale-final (PDF) Full Article
process The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Financial Institutions By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 20 Dec 2018 10:15:53 +0000 The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Financial Institutions Research paper sysadmin 20 December 2018 The trillions of dollars needed to secure the sustainable, climate-compatible pathway outlined in the 2015 Paris Agreement have focused attention on private finance and investment. — Photo by João Barbosa, ‘The need to keep growing’, 2018. This is one of four background papers feeding into a synthesis paper entitled The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes. Summary The trillions of dollars needed to secure the sustainable, climate-compatible pathway outlined in the 2015 Paris Agreement have focused attention on private finance and investment, and on the role of the financial sector as a potentially powerful non-state actor in the international climate debate. Leading individual financial institutions reacted to the Paris Agreement by framing it in terms of what it would mean for markets – i.e. risks and opportunities – and by underlining the importance of national implementation of climate change commitments. Key recent developments signal that the financial sector actively supports Paris-compatible government action on climate change, as well as company-level action to understand the physical and ‘transition’ risks and opportunities associated with climate change and policy responses. Financial sector engagement is taking place through well-organized and well-supported international initiatives and platforms. A critical part of this process entails robust activity by financial institutions to embed climate change and broader sustainability factors into strategies and operations. At country level, attention to implementation of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and associated sector-level policy development has been largely separate from the broader ‘sustainable finance’ dynamic. National-level action has not benefited from the same level of organized financial sector involvement evident in international action. One of the reasons for this is that, with some notable exceptions, international financial initiatives lack the capacity and resources to participate in the granular detail of national policy processes. Policymakers in turn often lack the internal capacity to consult or engage with the financial sector domestically. This paper includes some thoughts on further international and national climate actions. Ensuring that messages from successful international financial sector initiatives are heard in regional and non-climate forums offers one avenue for building a stronger foundation for greater climate ambition. Building the resource base for stronger national climate policy engagement, as a counter-voice to incumbent interests and to ensure that the quality of policy is ‘investment grade’, is another. This will be critical to the delivery of policy outcomes. Other key elements include the need to pool knowledge across relevant parts of the finance sector, build alliances, and shift action towards joint problem-solving with policymakers. A ‘Talanoa 2.020’-type initiative offers one potentially promising approach to advancing dialogue in this respect. 2018-12-21-non-state-actors-climate-financial-institutions-hamilton (PDF) Full Article
process The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Subnational Governments By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 23 Jan 2019 09:34:56 +0000 The Role of Sub-state and Non-state Actors in International Climate Processes: Subnational Governments Research paper sysadmin 23 January 2019 This paper looks at the role of subnational governments in influencing global climate ambition, and makes recommendations for how these actors can increase their influence in the future. — Photo by Annie Spratt, ‘High in the SuperTrees’ via Unsplash, 2017 Summary ‘Subnational governments’ – including municipal, regional and provincial authorities – lack the formal status of negotiating parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). But they have a vital role to play in informing and helping to shape international climate action, as they are often the key delivery partners for on-the-ground policies. Subnational governments are often closer to climate problems than the UNFCCC parties themselves, and have experience, expertise and peer influence that can support the development of progressive policies and increased ambition. Many subnational governments have joined or formed various groupings to share information and experience, and to increase their collective profile and voice. Notable initiatives and collaborations include the Under2 Coalition, ICLEI, C40 and the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy. Subnational governments are highly diverse. In some cases, politically high-profile administrations – the US state of California being a notable example – have exploited their visibility and policy successes to engage in wider climate debates. Equally, however, subnational agendas can encounter resistance from national governments anxious to ensure the primacy of their negotiating positions in the UNFCCC system. One of the advantages that subnational governments enjoy, subject to resources, is their ability to join with peer groups to take a fresh approach to mitigation or adaptation policies. Groups of cities or subnational regions can, through collaborative organizations, explore new approaches that might be less attractive within a national context. To maintain and build on their current achievements and influence, subnational governments need, among other things, to: improve the credibility of their experience through evaluation of the success of their climate policies; use membership of appropriate international groups to share experience and boost their leverage; continue to create collaborative relationships with progressive businesses to increase influence at a national level; build on cross-regional relationships in climate adaptation and resilience; and work with other subnational actors to build momentum ahead of the first post-Paris revision of climate commitments in 2020. 2019-01-23-Duggan (PDF) Full Article
process Microchip Expands 64-Bit Portfolio with High-Performance PIC64HX Microprocessors for Edge Computing By www.hpcwire.com Published On :: Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:07:23 +0000 CHANDLER, Ariz., Oct. 23, 2024 — The global edge computing market is expected to grow by more than 30 percent in the next five years, serving mission-critical applications in the […] The post Microchip Expands 64-Bit Portfolio with High-Performance PIC64HX Microprocessors for Edge Computing appeared first on HPCwire. Full Article
process Advance Science, Technology and Sophistication with SX-Aurora TSUBASA or Vector Processor or Vector Engine (VE) By www.hpcwire.com Published On :: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 19:01:32 +0000 Noritaka Hoshi, Senior Manager, AI Platform Division, talks about the impetus for and challenges within the development of SX-Aurora TSUBASA or a massive SIMD, created to handle enormous computing and […] The post Advance Science, Technology and Sophistication with SX-Aurora TSUBASA or Vector Processor or Vector Engine (VE) appeared first on HPCwire. Full Article
process AMAX Expands Server Portfolio with New AMD EPYC 9005 Series Processors for AI and HPC Workloads By www.hpcwire.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 15:12:47 +0000 FREMONT, Calif., Nov. 6, 2024 — AMAX, an AMD Elite Partner and a global leader in end-to-end GPU cluster solutions and advanced cooling technologies, announced its latest lineup of servers powered […] The post AMAX Expands Server Portfolio with New AMD EPYC 9005 Series Processors for AI and HPC Workloads appeared first on HPCwire. Full Article
process Multiscale Computer Model of the Spinal Dorsal Horn Reveals Changes in Network Processing Associated with Chronic Pain By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2022-04-13 Laura MedlockApr 13, 2022; 42:3133-3149Systems/Circuits Full Article
process Aperiodic EEG Predicts Variability of Visual Temporal Processing By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2024-10-02 Michele DeodatoOct 2, 2024; 44:e2308232024-e2308232024BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
process Spatiotemporal Neural Network for Sublexical Information Processing: An Intracranial SEEG Study By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2024-11-06T09:30:07-08:00 Words offer a unique opportunity to separate the processing mechanisms of object subcomponents from those of the whole object, because the phonological or semantic information provided by the word subcomponents (i.e., sublexical information) can conflict with that provided by the whole word (i.e., lexical information). Previous studies have revealed some of the specific brain regions and temporal information involved in sublexical information processing. However, a comprehensive spatiotemporal neural network for sublexical processing remains to be fully elucidated due to the low temporal or spatial resolutions of previous neuroimaging studies. In this study, we recorded stereoelectroencephalography signals with high spatial and temporal resolutions from a large sample of 39 epilepsy patients (both sexes) during a Chinese character oral reading task. We explored the activated brain regions and their connectivity related to three sublexical effects: phonological regularity (whether the whole character's pronunciation aligns with its phonetic radical), phonological consistency (whether characters with the same phonetic radical share the same pronunciation), and semantic transparency (whether the whole character's meaning aligns with its semantic radical). The results revealed that sublexical effects existed in the inferior frontal gyrus, precentral and postcentral gyri, temporal lobe, and middle occipital gyrus. Additionally, connectivity from the middle occipital gyrus to the postcentral gyrus and from postcentral gyrus to the fusiform gyrus was associated with the sublexical effects. These findings provide valuable insights into the spatiotemporal dynamics of sublexical processing and object recognition in the brain. Full Article