Design Of Ble 2-Step Separate Channel Fingerprinting

Author(s):  
Takahiro Yamamoto ◽  
Shigemi Ishida ◽  
Ryota Kimoto ◽  
Shigeaki Tagashira ◽  
Akira Fukuda
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi Yamasaki ◽  
S. N. Balakrishnan ◽  
Hiroyuki Takano

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Jiang ◽  
Jun Ye ◽  
Peng Hu ◽  
Shengli Zhu ◽  
Yanqin Liang ◽  
...  

Co-crystallization is an efficient way of molecular crystal engineering to tune the electronic properties of organic semiconductors. In this work, we synthesized anthracene-4,8-bis(dicyanomethylene)4,8-dihydrobenzo[1,2-b:4,5-b’]-dithiophene (DTTCNQ) single crystals as a template to...


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 768-777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine L. Perkins

It has been proposed that the depolarizing phase of the biphasic synaptic GABA response could be mediated by HCO3 − passing through GABAA channels after dissipation of the transmembrane Cl− gradient due to intracellular Cl− accumulation. To test this hypothesis, giant GABA-mediated postsynaptic currents (GPSCs) were recorded from pyramidal cells in slices of adult guinea pig hippocampus in the presence of 4-aminopyridine. GPSCs consisted of an early outward current (GABAA component) followed by a late inward current (GABAD component). Spontaneous outward inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) occurred during the GABADcomponent of the GPSC. GPSCs that were evoked 1–12 s after the preceding GPSC (short interval, siGPSCs) showed no GABADcomponent even though in many cells the amplitude of the siGPSC was greater than the amplitude of the GABAA component of the preceding spontaneous GPSC. In addition, the siGPSC evoked during the GABAD component of a spontaneous GPSC was an outward current. To test whether the siGPSC lacked a GABADcomponent because it was generated predominantly at the soma, where less of an increase in [Cl−]i would occur, picrotoxin was applied to the soma of the pyramidal cell. To the contrary, this focal application of picrotoxin caused less of a reduction in the amplitude of the siGPSC than in the amplitude of the GABAA component of the GPSC. Furthermore when a GPSC and siGPSC were evoked 10 s apart using identical stimuli, the area under the outward current curve was sometimes greater for the siGPSC than for the GPSC, and yet the siGPSC had no inward component. This result indicates that even when the location of Cl− entry was the same, more Cl− could enter the cell during the siGPSC than during the outward component of the GPSC and yet not lead to an inward current. In addition, when the second of two identical stimuli was applied during the inward GABAD component of the first evoked GPSC, the GABAA response it generated was always outward, demonstrating that the equilibrium potential for GABAA responses did not become more positive than the holding potential during a GPSC. Finally, evoking GPSCs at a hyperpolarized potential revealed that the siGPSC actually lacked a GABAD conductance. These results disprove the Cl− accumulation hypothesis of the synaptic depolarizing GABA response and suggest the possibility that a separate channel type may mediate the GABAD component of the GPSC.


2018 ◽  
Vol 149 ◽  
pp. 62-70
Author(s):  
Bruna Cardoso Paz ◽  
Mikaël Cassé ◽  
Sylvain Barraud ◽  
Gilles Reimbold ◽  
Maud Vinet ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 621 ◽  
pp. 181-186
Author(s):  
Wei Ying ◽  
Yu Liang Li ◽  
Guang Zhang ◽  
Ting Fang ◽  
Liang Zhao

DF10 filter rod forming machine produced by Italy GD Automatic Machinery Ltd is the world's fastest filter rod maker adopting the design of dual-channel. To achieve automatic sampling detection on line, a PLC-based automatic separate channel filter rod sampling detection system has been designed. Mainly composed of a sampling and launching device, matching tube, receiving device, a test instruments, PLC control unit and data terminal, the system first samples the filter rods from the two channels, then launches them into the test instrument to measure their physical parameters, and after wards send the real-time feedback of testing data to the data terminal. The application results show that the system has the advantages of convenient operation, high stability, safety and reliability. With an effective batch’s completion rate above 98%, it greatly reduces the labor intensity of operators and QC personnel, and significantly improves the quality control capacity of filter rod production.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lavanya Moparthi ◽  
Viktor Sinica ◽  
Milos Filipovic ◽  
Viktorie Vlachova ◽  
Peter Michael Zygmunt

The human TRPA1 (hTRPA1) is an intrinsic thermosensitive ion channel responding to both cold and heat, depending on the redox environment. Here, we have studied purified hTRPA1 truncated proteins to gain further insight into the temperature gating of hTRPA1. We found in patch-clamp bilayer recordings that Δ1-688 hTRPA1, without the N-terminal ankyrin repeat domain (N-ARD), was more sensitive to cold and heat, whereas Δ1-854 hTRPA1 that is also lacking the S1-S4 voltage sensing-like domain (VSLD) gained sensitivity to cold but lost its heat sensitivity. The thiol reducing agent TCEP abolished the temperature sensitivity of both Δ1-688 hTRPA1 and Δ1-854 hTRPA1. Cold and heat activity of Δ1-688 hTRPA1 and Δ1-854 hTRPA1 were associated with different structural conformational changes as revealed by intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence measurements. Heat evoked major structural rearrangement of the VSLD as well as the C-terminus domain distal to the transmembrane pore domain S5-S6 (CTD), whereas cold only caused minor conformational changes. As shown for Δ1-854 hTRPA1, a sudden drop in tryptophan fluorescence occurred within 25-20°C indicating a transition between heat and cold conformations of the CTD, and thus it is proposed that the CTD contains a bidirectional temperature switch priming hTRPA1 for either cold or heat. In whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology experiments, replacement of the cysteines 865, 1021 and 1025 with alanine modulated the cold sensitivity of hTRPA1 when heterologously expressed in HEK293T cells. It is proposed that the hTRPA1 CTD harbors cold and heat sensitive domains allosterically coupled to the S5-S6 pore region and the VSLD, respectively.


Algorithms ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Mondelli ◽  
S. Hamed Hassani ◽  
Rüdiger Urbanke

We consider the primitive relay channel, where the source sends a message to the relay and to the destination, and the relay helps the communication by transmitting an additional message to the destination via a separate channel. Two well-known coding techniques have been introduced for this setting: decode-and-forward and compress-and-forward. In decode-and-forward, the relay completely decodes the message and sends some information to the destination; in compress-and-forward, the relay does not decode, and it sends a compressed version of the received signal to the destination using Wyner–Ziv coding. In this paper, we present a novel coding paradigm that provides an improved achievable rate for the primitive relay channel. The idea is to combine compress-and-forward and decode-and-forward via a chaining construction. We transmit over pairs of blocks: in the first block, we use compress-and-forward; and, in the second block, we use decode-and-forward. More specifically, in the first block, the relay does not decode, it compresses the received signal via Wyner–Ziv, and it sends only part of the compression to the destination. In the second block, the relay completely decodes the message, it sends some information to the destination, and it also sends the remaining part of the compression coming from the first block. By doing so, we are able to strictly outperform both compress-and-forward and decode-and-forward. Note that the proposed coding scheme can be implemented with polar codes. As such, it has the typical attractive properties of polar coding schemes, namely, quasi-linear encoding and decoding complexity, and error probability that decays at super-polynomial speed. As a running example, we take into account the special case of the erasure relay channel, and we provide a comparison between the rates achievable by our proposed scheme and the existing upper and lower bounds.


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