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Poster Session - Thursday, 7:00pm to 10:00pm
Poster abstracts are alphabetized by first author listed.
Hamiltonian Systems
Stephen Bond and Michael T. Turnley, Siebel Center for Computer Science, turnley2@uiuc.edu
Many systems in nature are governed by conservative processes,
including gravitational N-body dynamics, rigid-body motion and
classical molecular dynamics. The time scales of these systems range
from the order of milliseconds to millions of years. To simulate these
dynamical systems efficiently, the numerical methods used to
approximate solutions to these systems must be designed to respect the
qualitative properties (invariants) of the underlying systems. For
conservative Hamiltonian systems, geometric integrators are very
effective since they preserve many of the underlying invariants of the
motion. The research presented in this poster explores the properties
of geometric (e.g. symplectic) integrators for resolving long time
trajectories of Hamiltonian systems. This study makes direct
comparisons between known geometric integrators to understand the
relative efficiency of various methods appearing in the literature.
Visualization of Human Tissue Model for Space Radiation Dose Assessment
Kevin Calvin, Prairie View A&M, kevincalvin@hotmail.com
The science of the space radiation environment and
its transport through the human biological systems is more complex than
the most recent advancements of proton and heavy ion radiation
treatment plans. The aspect of space radiation transport not only
includes the primary high energetic particles from the free galactic
space, but also the secondary particles generated in the shielding
shell of the space vehicle. Though little, human tissue offers several
gradations of self shielding for the radiation environment as a
function of the tissue density and depth. In this paper we present the
human tissue model with more realistic representation of tissue density
variations based on the visible human body data. Our first attempt is
with the visible human body head data set. We present our
reconstruction of the 3D shield model for radiation transport and dose
calculations based on the CT, MRI and anatomical pictures of the
visible human body cross-sectional data.
This research is sponsored by the NASA grant through the NASA-Center for Applied Radiation Research at PVAMU.
Variations of Radiation Environment during the Current Solar Cycle using CRIS Data
Tausha Calvin, Prairie View A&M University, tausha_calvin@yahoo.com
The Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) of NASA,
launched in 1997, has been in orbit at the Sun-Earth libration point
(L1) ~1.5 million km sunward of Earth. Several high-resolution
spectrometers onboard the ACE measure the elemental, isotopic and ionic
charge state composition of nuclei from H to Ni (1≤Z≤28) from solar
wind energies (~1 keV/nuc) to galactic cosmic ray energies (~500
MeV/nuc). Data from the Cosmic Ray Isotope Spectrometer (CRIS)
instrument are being analyzed to understand the variations in the
particle spectrum during the current solar cycle phase. Understanding
the variation of the background galactic cosmic rays particle flux over
the time period between solar maximum and solar minimum in the near
earth orbit is an important step in assessing the space radiation risk
for deep space human exploration missions. We present the radiation
particle flux variation in the current solar cycle from the ACE/CRIS
measurements compared with model calculated predictions.
This research is supported in part by a NASA grant through the NASA-Center for Applied Radiation Research at PVAMU.
Service-Oriented Architecture for Sensor Networks
Brian Carter, University of Louisville, brian.carter@louisville.edu
Sensor networks are delivering near-real-time
information to scientists worldwide. Extracting this information to
gain knowledge and understanding is one of the greatest challenges
faced today. From national defense, medical applications, to the
environment, the data delivered from the sensor networks are
unstructured, using their own format and protocols.
Our research presents a service-oriented
architecture to comply with emerging Grid and Web service standards.
Aggregating the information from sensor networks using existing
standards will increase the quantity and quality of the data available.
This will allow for emerging devices with very different sensing and
computation capabilities to interact and exchange information in
networks that have far greater breadth of application than today’s
traditional Grids.
We will present the research being conducted showing
the integration of Web standards. The poster will reflect current
research from SensorNet, Sensor Model Language (SensorML), Federal
Enterprise Architecture (FEA), World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), and
sensor architecture research conducted at our lab facilities. Our
research will present our contribution to unifying several standard
groups for the next generation service-oriented architecture.
Dispelling Computer Science Gender Myths: Perceived Motivation,
Persistence, and Confidence Levels Among Undergraduate Men and Women
Belinda Chang, Catherine Fan and Carol Frieze, Tufts University, cfan@andrew.cmu.edu
This study assesses some of the changes in the culture of computing at
Carnegie Mellon University since 1999, specifically addressing gender
similarities and differences as they relate to perceived motivation,
persistence and confidence levels among undergraduate computer science
students. Analysis and results are based on data from three sources:
interview transcripts from the graduating class of 2004, surveys of the
current student body, and surveys of students who transferred out of
computer science. Our findings revealed some strong gender similarities
among men and women, challenging the notion of a strong gender divide
in how undergraduates relate to computer science. New understanding and
insights gained from this ongoing investigation will be used to produce
recommendations to enhance the overall success of undergraduate
students. Such recommendations will target women students in
particular, as the issue of attracting and retaining women in computer
science continues to be a national concern.
Online and Offline Power Estimation Techniques for Intel Xscale Technology Cores
Gilberto Contreras and Margaret Martonosi, Princeton University, gcontrer@princeton.edu
Recent years have seen a proliferation of embedded
devices in many aspects of life, from cell phones to automated
controllers. These devices are typically characterized by their low
power consumption, small profile and ever-increasing performance
demands. Under such constraints, understanding power consumption of
running software is of extreme importance since it can help us perform
early power and performance design optimizations. This work presents
two independent approaches for estimating power consumption of an
embedded processor. The first approach is an offline technique that
uses a functional simulator and a set of parameterized mathematical
power models to estimate power consumption of the processor. The second
approach is a runtime linear power estimation technique that uses
hardware performance counters to estimate CPU and memory power
consumption. These methods prove to be very accurate, presenting an
average error of only 4% each with respect to physical power
measurements. Overall, the tools offer significant promise in helping
hardware and software engineers to predict and optimize system power
consumption.
Lets Vote: A Multimodal Electronic Voting System
E. Vincent Cross II and Juan Gilbert, Auburn University, crossev@auburn.edu
After the debacle of the 2000 U.S. presidential
election, it became abundantly clear that America’s archaic voting
system was in need of a major overhaul. Consequently, the federal
government has allocated funds through the Help America Vote Act (HAVA)
for the purchase of modern voting equipment. Specifically, electronic
voting (E-Voting) machines are the type of modern voting equipment
which are under consideration for use in a number of states.
Incidentally, E-Voting machines are currently being used in a select
few states; however this has not been without controversy. This poster
describes an electronic voting system that has been developed to
address many of the aforementioned issues. This system is multimodal,
meaning that it accommodates speech and touch interactions. Some of the
key features are the ability to print bar codes and textual votes,
network and stand-alone functionality, increased security and support
for three distinct methods of recounts.
Laptop Robotics: Low-Cost Access to Research Robots
Zachary Dodds, Harvey Mudd College, dodds@cs.hmc.edu
Robotics has been demonstrated to draw students from
all walks of life toward computing: increasing numbers of high schools
and undergraduate CS departments have explored robotic kits to
introduce ideas fundamental to computation, programming and spatial
reasoning.
Unfortunately, the initial excitement of Lego robot
platforms fades too quickly to frustration. In about three weeks,
students realize that (1) robust mechanical design with Lego's is
difficult and is a Lego-specific skill, i.e., does not transfer outside
the endeavor of Lego robot-building and (2) the computational
capability of Lego robots limits the tasks they can handle
substantially.
We have turned to very low-cost (<$300)
laptop-driven platforms to remedy these problems. The result has been a
scalable pedagogical approach to robots: inexpensive and simple enough
for novices, but powerful enough that students will not outgrow it.
This poster will present our laptop robot and the student projects that it has enabled.
Because these robots leverage a department's or
school's existing laptop computer, they provide a substantially more
sophisticated experience than Lego-based kits. In addition, there is no
special-purpose interface to learn: students can work in Windows, MacOS
(FreeBSD), or other Linux/Unix systems using any language and
development environment.
Efficient Finite Field Arithmetic for Field Programmable Gate Arrays
Edgar Ferrer, Dorothy Bollman and Oscar Moreno, University of Puerto Rico, eferrer@cs.uprm.edu
Finite field arithmetic has a wide range of
applications in various fields, including cryptography and
error-correcting codes. This project is motivated by a novel method
modeling genetic networks by means of finite fields. In order to deal
with very large genetic networks, it is essential to develop capacity
for performing very fast and efficient arithmetic over finite fields.
For this purpose we are developing efficient algorithms that will be
hardwired into FPGAs. One very efficient method for arithmetic on
GF(2m) involves the use of Zech logarithm tables. This method is very
efficient for small m. For large composite m, say m = rs , GF(2m) is an
extension of GF(2r) and we can make use of the fact that GF(2m) is
isomorphic to GF(2r)s.. In this project we make use of the Zech log
table method for arithmetic over the ground field GF GF(2r) and FPGAs
for arithmetic over the extension field.
Efficient Distance Field Computations using Cluster Trees Sarah
Frisken and Elena Jakubiak, Tufts University and Ron Perry, Mitsubishi
Electric Research Laboratories, jakubiak@cs.tufts.edu
Rendering fonts on small display devices such as
cell phones poses new challenges. To fit sufficient information on tiny
display devices, small font sizes must be used and fonts must be
rendered with high clarity so that text is easily readable. Adaptively
Sampled Distance Fields (ADFs) provide a new way to render such fonts.
Initially, this method was slower than desired. To render a glyph (a
letter, number or symbol) using an ADF requires repeated costly
distance computations. Many of the distance computations, however, are
ultimately unnecessary. Cluster Trees use hierarchical clustering to
gain an idea of the layout of a glyph and use this to prune unnecessary
distance computations. The use of Cluster Trees for ADF font-rendering
resulted in a 10x speed-up. This new font rendering technology will be
included in the next release of Macromedia Flash Player.
Text Entry for Automobiles
Iván E. González, Jake Wobbrock and Brad A. Myers, Carnegie Mellon University, ieg@andrew.cmu.edu
The need for text entry in an automobile setting has
become a new challenge as more devices that require user input are
integrated with the driving experience. Some of the solutions that have
been used in the past include on-screen keyboards and gestural methods,
both of which require the user’s visual attention. The proposed
solution is EdgeWrite, a unistroke text entry method that has been
previously implemented for a stylus on a touchscreen, a finger on a
touch pad, a joystick on a game controller or wheelchair, a mouse,
trackball or TrackPoint connected to a regular computer. Gesture
recognition in EdgeWrite is accomplished through the sequence of
corners that are hit in a square region. The need of only four binary
sensors allow high tactility and can alleviate the need for visual
attention making it an efficient solution for text entry in
automobiles. Two prototype steering wheels were developed that
integrate EdgeWrite, one with a small touch pad, and another one with
four buttons. Steering EdgeWrite will be compared using a driving
simulator to previous studies that measured effects of talking on a
cell phone while driving.
A Molecular Dynamics Study of the Role that Surface-Active
Phospholipids play in the Lubrication of Synovial Joints: Implications
for the Treatment and Prevention of Osteoarthritis
Stacie LeSure Gregory, North Carolina State University, slesure@hotmail.com
The superb lubrication and low friction associated with synovial joints
are partly due to the presence of synovial fluid. The physiological
function of the joints is severely comprised if this fluid is
deteriorated, possibly leading to osteoarthritis. Surface active
phospholipids (SAPLs) are the primary components lending synovial fluid
its lubricating properties. This research effort is using molecular
dynamics simulation to understand the actual role that SAPLs play in
joint lubrication. There are two major issues being investigated. The
first study will determine how these double chain fatty acid molecules
behave when two opposing surfaces containing SAPLs are brought into
close proximity. Secondly, single chain and triple chain molecules will
be modeled in an effort to understand why nature chose the double chain
fatty acid molecules to act as boundary lubricants. Single or triple
chain molecules may prove to have beneficial pharmaceutical
applications.
Speech Usability Metric: Evaluating Spoken Language Systems
Priyanka Gupta, Auburn University, guptapr@auburn.edu
This poster presents a speech usability metric to
evaluate spoken language systems. This evaluating method tests spoken
language systems on three levels, namely user satisfaction, accuracy
and task completion time. It allows the designer to place emphasis on
the specific metrics that according to him/her are most important for
designing a highly usable system. Currently, PARADISE (PARAdigm for
Dialogue System Evaluation) is the most-cited method for evaluating
spoken dialogue systems. It is based entirely on maximizing user
satisfaction. However, there are some instances where user satisfaction
is not paramount. In these cases and those where user satisfaction is
paramount, the speech usability metric can be used. An example of such
a system could be a spoken language system where accuracy or task
completion time is paramount, e.g. military applications. The speech
usability metric addresses all the same issues as the PARADISE
Framework, but it is less complex and does not require a large set of
users to test the system. The primary focus of this research was to
validate this usability metric as an alternative tool for evaluating
spoken language systems. The results of our usability study will be
reported.
How Do We Get the Clinical Side of Healthcare On Par with the
Administrative Side of Healthcare with Respect To Information
Technology Alignment?
Karen Hare, Brian Whitworth and Albert Jekelis, New Jersey Institute Of Technology, kxh1868@njit.edu
Healthcare information systems have historically been administrative
systems, with responsibility for financial viability of the healthcare
organization. Currently there exists a distinction in the level of
automation that has taken place on the administrative verses the
clinical side of healthcare. Information technology systems that are
utilized for clinical healthcare have unique requirements as well as
legislative mandates for patient privacy, confidentiality and security.
Coupled with these are the complex nature of the data and the way that
they need to be communicated.
A preliminary study has been conducted that suggests
that there are non-monetary factors that contribute to the gaps in
adoption of information technology on the clinical side of healthcare.
Inhibitors were identified that precluded clinicians from embracing the
technology that could help them implement the technology solutions.
These findings suggest that functionality, user-friendliness and system
integration, as well as faster system response time, are major concerns
retarding implementation of clinical information technology solutions.
This continuing research will seek to identify information technology
solutions for clinical healthcare practitioners that address agility
and flexibility, while adhering to the constructs that are necessary
for secure and confidential data.
Influences of Basket and Stellate Cells on Cerebellar Purkinje Cells
William Holtkamp and William Stegall, University of Houston Downtown, zaecron@gmail.com
The cerebellum is vital to motor actions in everyday
activities. In the cerebellum, the Purkinje cells are the only output
(consisting of voltage spikes which are also called action potentials)
which responds to the rest of the brain. There are two types of cells,
basket and stellate, which inhibit the Purkinje cell. Not many studies
have focused on these cells, and their functions remain unknown. What
do these cells do? Why are they in the body? This study tries to
explain these questions, utilizing biophysically detailed computational
models developed using NEURON 1. New models were created of basket and
stellate cells, using known physiological parameters, and these were
incorporated with preexisting models of Purkinje cells. The simulations
reveal that basket and stellate cells seem to act as a fuse in order to
not allow the Purkinje cells to receive mass amounts of excitation. Our
tests prove this theory to be true and in fact prove the interneuron
cells (basket and stellate) to have great effects on Purkinje cells to
firing rates and excitability.
1 NEURON is a tested program. Information can be found at
http://neuron.duke.edu/ and also at http://www.neuron.yale.edu/neuron/.
Towards Coral Bleaching Early Detection using Data Mining
Jerrold Illis, University of the Virgin Islands, ill8225@uvi.edu
In recent years, coral bleaching has become an
epidemic claiming the lives of many of our coral reefs around the
world. There are various environmental and atmospheric factors that can
cause this phenomenon. The most prevailing theory is that mass coral
bleaching has occurred in association with episodes of elevated sea
temperatures over the past 20 years. When the thermal tolerance of
corals is exceeded this leads to the loss of the essential
zooxanthellae that reside within the corals. These organisms have a
symbiotic relationship with corals and perish without the zooxanthellae
and the nutrients they provide. This research considers using K-means
clustering algorithms on coral reef data for effective coral bleaching
data analysis. Data will be partitioned into groups and clustered based
on the selected atmospheric categories (e.g. Air Temp, Sea Temperature,
Salinity, Wind Speed, Fluorometry, etc.). The results suggest that
clustering algorithms can partition coral reef data into groups based
on the similarity between their expression profiles. In this way,
trends and relationships can be observed aiding in predicting future
coral bleaching events. Observations on sea temperature playing a major
role in coral bleaching will be assessed along with the role of
accompanying factors.
Improving Object Inlining for High-Performance Java Scientific Applications
Mackale Joyner, Rice University, mjoyner@rice.edu
Java is a popular programming language that enables
many developers to achieve high productivity. Previous work in Java
improved runtime performance by using object inlining. This research
extends prior object inlining work by both analyzing the code and
performing optimizations to further improve application runtime
performance. Two impediments to object inlining and to increased
runtime performance are object and array aliasing and binary method
invocations. This research implements object and array alias strategies
to address the aliasing problem while utilizing an idea from
Telescoping Languages to address the binary method invocation problem.
Application runtime gains of up to 20% result from employing these
techniques. The improvements made to the compile-time object inlining
optimization should increase the scientific community's acceptance of
the Java programming language in the development of high-performance
scientific applications by decreasing the performance gap between Java
and accepted languages such as C and Fortran.
Understanding Interaction Equals Better Performance
Charles Lively, Xingfu Wu and Valerie E. Taylor, Texas A&M University, clively@cs.tamu.edu
The GYRO plasma-physics application has been
introduced as a key tool to quickly analyze and solve various physics
scenarios. However, previous work has shown that in order to improve
the performance of this application, a better understanding of the
collision step, including kernel interactions, must be studied. This
work analyzes the performance of the GYRO plasma-physics application
across various platforms in terms of kernel coupling. Performance data
was obtained using a variety of platforms, including the Cray X1, IBM
p690 cluster, IBM SP3, and SGI Altix. The Prophesy performance analysis
infrastructure was used to facilitate the creation of performance
models to better understand the application. In addition, the
performance data of additional applications was incorporated. Overall,
an exploration of trends in the kernel coupling values across different
applications and different system platforms were explored and are
presented.
Using Genetic Algorithms for Adaptative Generation of Allocation Policies in Heterogeneous Distributed Systems Wilson
E. Lozano, Amado E. Pereira, John A. Sanabria and Wilson
Rivera-Gallego, University of Puerto Rico - Mayaguez Campus,
wilson.rivera@ece.uprm.edu
The problem of managing computational resources in
heterogeneous distributed systems such as Grid-based systems is an NP
Hard problem. As a result, a number of heuristic techniques have been
developed to deal with the complexity of the problem.
A Grid-based testbed has been deployed at the
University of Puerto Rico. This test-bed was used to obtain a benchmark
of some known heuristic techniques for allocation of resources. A set
of resource management techniques based on genetic algorithms have been
explored and tested on this system and a systematic study of
performance has been carried out. This analysis has provided new ideas
to incorporate adaptive generation of allocation policies in
heterogeneous distributed systems.
Technology and Access: Minority Serving Institutions Bridging the Divide
Debbie McMahon, Our Lady of the Lake University, ubergd@lake.ollusa.edu
This study examines how two Hispanic Serving
Institutions in San Antonio, Texas, are using, conceptualizing and
implementing technology, who is utilizing these technologies, and how
computer policy is impacting the educational mission of the
universities. Addressing “the perceived gap between those who have
access to the latest technologies and those who do not” (NPEC), the
U.S. Department of Education recognized and acted on the need to
provide equity in higher education for people of color, with federal
grants designed to reduce or eliminate the technology gap by providing
funds to universities who qualify as Hispanic Serving Institutions.
This study details changes that have taken place as a result of this
funding, and what the momentum is to sustain the improvements made in
education at these institutions with regard to technology. Interviews
with faculty and key personnel indicate how program efforts to provide
access and integration meet the needs of students and educational
objectives of the institutions with regard to technological advancement
and proficiency. This qualitative study explores the questions "What
drives the technology initiatives to succeed and what does that success
mean?"
Activities of Parallel Fibers on Cerebellar Purkinje Cells
Aaron Murray, University of Houston Downtown, murraya@gmail.com
In the cerebellum, Purkinje cells are very large,
flask-shaped cells with huge dendrites extending upward to the
molecular layer of the cerebellar cortex. Research on Purkinje cell
models by Erik De Schutter and James M. Bower, in their paper,
“Simulated responses of cerebellar Purkinje cells”, implied that
Purkinje cell responses are independent of the dendritic location of
the granule cell synaptic inputs. We systematically tested the validity
of this theory with biophysically detailed models built using the
Neuron modeling software package developed by Michael Hines and John W.
Moore at the Department of Neurobiology, Duke University. An important
addition was that of inhibitory collaterals between groups of Purkinje
cells, a fact ignored in the original De Schutter and Bower study. The
result of these studies indicated that collaterals should enhance small
differences in excitation between Purkinje cells. These small
differences could represent those in granule cell excitation, or even
their location of excitation on the dendrites.
A Generic Interface for Communication between Story Understanding Systems and Knowledge Bases
Heather D. Pfeiffer, Nemecio R. Chavez, Jr. and Roger T. Hartley, New Mexico State University, hdp@cs.nmsu.edu
Presented is a story-understanding approach that
uses world knowledge independent of the story at hand and independent
of the structure or organization of the knowledge representation (KR).
The world knowledge is stored and processed via a knowledge base (KB).
This approach has been developed and tested, with "The Crow and The
Pitcher" text story, using a prototype story-understanding system and
two different KBs. Each knowledge base has different KR data structures
and processing operations. We show that the generic interface between
the story understanding system and each KB works equally well, and
provides a platform where the relative efficiencies can be compared for
the storage and retrieval operations. This poster discusses the outcome
of comparing the two knowledge bases using this generic interface for
story understanding on the given text passage, and suggests possible
larger story problems for testing.
Simulations of Hand Motor Trajectories, Neuronal Electrical
Activity, and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (Fmri) Signal
During Grasping Movements in Stroke
Antonio Ulloa and Marc Maier, ISERM, antonio.ulloa@alum.bu.edu
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies in stroke patients
have associated brain activity to the motor impairments resulting from
stroke. However, the neural mechanisms responsible for impairments in
grasping movements after stroke have not been systematically
investigated. In the present work, we investigated the mechanisms
responsible for motor impairment after stroke. We implemented a neural
network model of the motor areas of the human brain and their
interactions. The model simulates motor trajectories, neuronal
electrical activity, and, after a transformation of the electrical
activity, the fMRI signal that would correspond to that activity. The
simulations show the effects of stroke as impairments of the grasping
movement and as changes in neuronal electrical activity and fMRI
signal. Our simulations agree with one experimental study on grasping
and provide predictions of neuronal electrical activity and fMRI
signal. Our model provides a mechanistic explanation of why stroke
causes the observed motor impairments.
3D Finger Biometrics
Damon L. Woodard and Patrick J. Flynn, University of Notre Dame, dwoodard@nd.edu
As society becomes more electronically connected,
the need for accurate automatic personal identification will increase.
Biometrics addresses this need. Biometrics refers to the use of
physiological and/or behavioral traits to automatically establish an
individual’s identity. Examples of biometric identifiers currently in
use include fingerprint, iris, and face. Our research investigates the
use of the back surface of the hand, specifically the fingers, as a
biometric identifier. We use 3D data from captured range images of the
hand to compute a surface curvature based representation of the
fingers’ surface. The normalized correlation coefficient is used to
determine similarity during comparisons. Our experiments involve the
use of a large database of images collected over time to assist in
evaluating the stability of thometric identifier. We present our
research results which indicate good performance for a
first-of-its-kind technique and support our assertion that additional
research in this area is warranted.
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