How Can the Open Network Organization Be Constructed by M&A?

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curtis Tade ◽  
Venkat Dasari ◽  
Vinod K. Mishra

Author(s):  
Bin Hu ◽  
Yuemin Wu ◽  
Min Sun ◽  
Zheng Bang Liu ◽  
Lin Zhang ◽  
...  

Backgrounds: In order to guarantee safe and efficient operation interaction in open network environment, a new dynamic trust monitoring and updating model based on behavior context is proposed in this paper. Methods: Setting four behavior attributes such as security, availability, reliability and performance. Then utilizing the fuzzy clustering and information entropy mathematical methods to carry out the effective synthesis on such attributes. Conclusion: The effectiveness and efficiency of the schema are verified by simulation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
Farzad V. Farahani ◽  
Magdalena Fafrowicz ◽  
Waldemar Karwowski ◽  
Bartosz Bohaterewicz ◽  
Anna Maria Sobczak ◽  
...  

Significant differences exist in human brain functions affected by time of day and by people’s diurnal preferences (chronotypes) that are rarely considered in brain studies. In the current study, using network neuroscience and resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) data, we examined the effect of both time of day and the individual’s chronotype on whole-brain network organization. In this regard, 62 participants (39 women; mean age: 23.97 ± 3.26 years; half morning- versus half evening-type) were scanned about 1 and 10 h after wake-up time for morning and evening sessions, respectively. We found evidence for a time-of-day effect on connectivity profiles but not for the effect of chronotype. Compared with the morning session, we found relatively higher small-worldness (an index that represents more efficient network organization) in the evening session, which suggests the dominance of sleep inertia over the circadian and homeostatic processes in the first hours after waking. Furthermore, local graph measures were changed, predominantly across the left hemisphere, in areas such as the precentral gyrus, putamen, inferior frontal gyrus (orbital part), inferior temporal gyrus, as well as the bilateral cerebellum. These findings show the variability of the functional neural network architecture during the day and improve our understanding of the role of time of day in resting-state functional networks.


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