Academic literature on the topic 'Object replication'

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Journal articles on the topic "Object replication"

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SRINIVASAN, JAGANNATHAN, YIN-HE JIANG, YONGGUANG ZHANG, and BHARAT BHARGAVA. "PERFORMANCE STUDY ON SUPPORTING OBJECTS IN O-RAID DISTRIBUTED DATABASE SYSTEM." International Journal of Cooperative Information Systems 02, no. 02 (1993): 225–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218215793000113.

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O-Raid [1, 2] uses a layered approach to provide support for objects on top of a distributed relational database system called RAID [3], It reuses the replication controller of RAID to allow replication of simple objects as well as replication of composite objects. In this paper, we first describe the experiments conducted on O-Raid that measure the overheads incurred in supporting objects through a layered implementation, and the overheads involved in replicating objects. The overheads are low (e.g. 4ms for an insert query involving objects). We present experiments that evaluate three replication strategies for composite objects, namely, full replication, selective replication and no replication in a two-site and a four-site O-Raid system. For composite object experiments, the selective replication strategy demonstrated the flexibility of tuning replication of member objects based on the patterns of access. The experimentation is performed in different networking environments (LANs and WANs) to further evaluate the replication schemes. The results indicate that selective replication scheme has greater benefits in WAN than in LAN.
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Dyfuchyn, А. J., I. V. Stetsenko, and E. V. Zharikov. "The grammar of Petri-object model visual programming language." PROBLEMS IN PROGRAMMING, no. 4 (December 2021): 082–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/pp2021.04.082.

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Petri-object models solve the problem of replicating fragments of Petri nets with given parameters and constructing a model from a large number of elements. The developed visual programming language of Petri-object models gives a possibility to reduce the number of errors during a model construction by automating the coding links between elements and graphical representation of a model. In addition to replicating Petri objects, the visual language implements replication of links between Petri objects. Formalization of the visual programming language grammar is presented in the form of production rules. A conclusion about grammar properties has been drawn.
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Yao-ming, Yeh, Sun Wen-Da, and Chen Yeong-Sheng. "Object replication and CORBA fault-tolerant object service." Wuhan University Journal of Natural Sciences 6, no. 1-2 (2001): 268–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf03160254.

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Frank, Michael C., and Rebecca Saxe. "Teaching Replication." Perspectives on Psychological Science 7, no. 6 (2012): 600–604. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1745691612460686.

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Replication is held as the gold standard for ensuring the reliability of published scientific literature. But conducting direct replications is expensive, time-consuming, and unrewarded under current publication practices. So who will do them? The authors argue that students in laboratory classes should replicate recent findings as part of their training in experimental methods. In their own courses, the authors have found that replicating cutting-edge results is exciting and fun; it gives students the opportunity to make real scientific contributions (provided supervision is appropriate); and it provides object lessons about the scientific process, the importance of reporting standards, and the value of openness.
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Jeffrey, Stuart, Steve Love, and Matthieu Poyade. "The Digital Laocoön: Replication, Narrative and Authenticity." Museum and Society 19, no. 2 (2021): 166–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.29311/mas.v19i2.3583.

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This paper examines what qualities and affordances of a digital object allow it to emerge as a new cultural object in its own right. Due to the relationship between authenticity and replication, this is particularly important for digital objects derived from real world objects, such as digital ‘replicas’. Such objects are not an inauthentic or surrogate form of an ‘authentic’ object, but a new object with a complex relationship to the original and its own uses and affordances. The Digital Laocoön Immersive (VR exhibit), part of an AHRC funded project, was a response to the tragic fires at the Mackintosh Building of the Glasgow School of Art in 2014 and 2018. In this project a digital replica of a plaster cast of Laocoön, with a long history of use within the school, was chosen as the centre piece for the proposed immersive. As a consequence of both the immersive’s design methodology and the lessons learnt in its production, the Laocoön proved to be an ideal subject through which to critically assess the question of the status of the replica. This paper will explore not only how the material infrastructure, form and content of digital representations have an impact on its broader set relationships, but how the concept of an extended object, its production processes, and the way that these are explicitly acknowledged (or not), operate on its relationship to the original.
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Kang, Yan, Zhong Min Wang, Yi Fan Zhang, and Ying Lin. "An Data Replication and Deletion Algorithm for Web Objects." Advanced Materials Research 798-799 (September 2013): 794–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.798-799.794.

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The phenomenal growth of the object has brought huge increase in the traffic on World Wide Web. Long read latency of service experienced by the end-users, especially during the peak hours, continues to be the common problem to the popular web servers while retrieving popular objects. A replication and deletion algorithm is presented to solve object replication problem, which is a NP-hard problem and can be formulated as a 0-1 constraint optimization problem. The algorithm defines an appropriate replica distribution with the objective to decrease the number of object access operations over excessive distances, balance the load of popular web servers, and then minimize the network traffic of the object. Object deletion in a distributed web-server environment is one of the possible solutions to extend available memory and reduce the load of the server. During the adaptive time period due to different object update frequency, objects are dynamically duplicated and deleted in a distributed web server system with limited storage capacity. Simulation results demonstrate the performance of the proposed algorithm.
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Li, Keqiu, Hong Shen, Francis Chin, and Weishi Zhang. "Multimedia Object Placement for Transparent Data Replication." IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems 18, no. 2 (2007): 212–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tpds.2007.29.

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Kangasharju, Jussi, James Roberts, and Keith W. Ross. "Object replication strategies in content distribution networks." Computer Communications 25, no. 4 (2002): 376–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-3664(01)00409-1.

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Moser, L. E., P. M. Melliar-Smith, and P. Narasimhan. "Consistent object replication in the Eternal system." Theory and Practice of Object Systems 4, no. 2 (1998): 81–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1096-9942(1998)4:2<81::aid-tapo3>3.0.co;2-a.

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BANDITWATTANAWONG, T., S. HIDAKA, H. WASHIZAKI, and K. MARUYAMA. "Cluster Replication for Distributed-Java-Object Caching." IEICE Transactions on Information and Systems E89-D, no. 11 (2006): 2712–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ietisy/e89-d.11.2712.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Object replication"

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Little, Mark Cameron. "Object replication in a distributed system." Thesis, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/10443/188.

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A number of techniques have been proposed for the construction of fault—tolerant applications. One of these techniques is to replicate vital system resources so that if one copy fails sufficient copies may still remain operational to allow the application to continue to function. Interactions with replicated resources are inherently more complex than non—replicated interactions, and hence some form of replication transparency is necessary. This may be achieved by employing replica consistency protocols to mask replica failures and maintain consistency of state between functioning replicas. To achieve consistency between replicas it is necessary to ensure that all replicas receive the same set of messages in the same order, despite failures at the senders and receivers. This can be accomplished by making use of order preserving reliable communication protocols. However, we shall show how it can be more efficient to use unordered reliable communication and to impose ordering at the application level, by making use of syntactic knowledge of the application. This thesis develops techniques for replicating objects: in general this is harder than replicating data, as objects (which can contain data) can contain calls on other objects. Handling replicated objects is essentially the same as handling replicated computations, and presents more problems than simply replicating data. We shall use the concept of the object to provide transparent replication to users: a user will interact with only a single object interface which hides the fact that the object is actually replicated. The main aspects of the replication scheme presented in this thesis have been fully implemented and tested. This includes the design and implementation of a replicated object invocation protocol and the algorithms which ensure that (replicated) atomic actions can manipulate replicated objects.
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Reiser, Hans P. "Flexible and reconfigurable support for fault-tolerant object replication." [S.l. : s.n.], 2007. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:289-vts-58013.

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Soria-Rodriguez, Pedro. "Multicast-Based Interactive-Group Object-Replication For Fault Tolerance." Digital WPI, 1999. https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-theses/1069.

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"Distributed systems are clusters of computers working together on one task. The sharing of information across different architectures, and the timely and efficient use of the network resources for communication among computers are some of the problems involved in the implementation of a distributed system. In the case of a low latency system, the network utilization and the responsiveness of the communication mechanism are even more critical. This thesis introduces a new approach for the distribution of messages to computers in the system, in which, the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) is used in conjunction with IP multicast to implement a fault-tolerant, low latency distributed system. Fault tolerance is achieved by replication of the current state of the system across several hosts. An update of the current state is initiated by a client application that contacts one of the state object replicas. The new information needs to be distributed to all the members of the distributed system (the object replicas). This state update is accomplished by using a two-phase commit protocol, which is implemented using a binary tree structure along with IP multicast to reduce the amount of network utilization, distribute the computation load associated with state propagation, and to achieve faster communication among the members of the distributed system. The use of IP multicast enhances the speed of message distribution, while the two-phase commit protocol encapsulates IP multicast to produce a reliable multicast service that is suitable for fault tolerant, distributed low latency applications. The binary tree structure, finally, is essential for the load sharing of the state commit response collection processing. "
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Chen, Chih-yung. "A framework for supporting fault-tolerant objects in distributed systems." Thesis, University of Essex, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.364551.

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Fan, Rui 1977. "Efficient replication of large data objects." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/29581.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2003.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 77-78).<br>Replication is an important technique for improving the reliability and scalability of data services. The primary problem encountered in replication is the trade-off between amount of replication, performance, and consistency. A rule of thumb states that any replication algorithm must sacrifice at least one of these criteria. In this thesis, we investigate replicating large data objects, such as files, whose size is large compared to metadata used by the replication algorithm. With this assumption, we present a distributed replication algorithm which simultaneously achieves a high replication factor, nearly optimal performance, and strong data consistency. Furthermore, our algorithm makes only basic assumptions about its environment. Our algorithm works in any asynchronous, reliable message-passing network, without relying on higher level functions such as distributed locking or group communication. Our algorithm is suitable for implementation in both LAN and WAN settings. This thesis is divided into two parts. In the first part, we formally state the assumptions and guarantees of our replication algorithm in terms of its trace properties. We then formally implement our algorithm in the IOA modeling language. We also give rigorous proofs of the algorithm's correctness and its performance analysis. The main idea of our algorithm is to separately maintain copies of the data, and information about the locations of the up-to-date copies. Our algorithm then mostly performs cheap operations on the location information, and avoids expensive operations on the actual data. The second part of this thesis presents two lower bounds on the costs of data replication. The first lower bound gives the minimum number of writes that must occur during a read operation. The second lower bound states that for a certain class of efficient replication algorithms, the replicas must use storage proportional to the maximum number of concurrent writers. The motivation for these lower bounds was certain algorithmic techniques we used in our replication algorithm. The lower bounds suggest that these techniques are necessary. The lower bounds are also of independent interest.<br>by Rui Fan.<br>S.M.
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Баглай, Іванна Юріївна. "Онлайн-гра клієнт-серверної архітектури". Bachelor's thesis, КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського, 2020. https://ela.kpi.ua/handle/123456789/34948.

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Кваліфікаційна робота включає пояснювальну записку (58 с., 21 рис., 3 табл., список використаної літератури з 18 найменувань, 3 додатки). Метою бакалаврського дипломного проєкту є дослідження та структуризація теоретичних відомостей, необхідних для розробки та реалізації онлайн-гри, і на основі отриманих даних розробити власну онлайн-гру клієнт-серверної архітектури. Для досягнення поставленої мети проведено аналіз існуючих топологій з’єднання вузлів у мережі, шаблони проектів, призначених для синхронізації процесів, алгоритмів оптимізації кількості синхронізуючої інформації. В результаті роботи було програмно реалізовано онлайн-гру, в якій було використано оптимальні та спеціалізовані під певну задачу алгоритми. Перевагою даного проєкту є абстрактність розробленої архітектури, що реалізує синхронізацію. Результати дипломної роботи можуть бути використанні для вивчення основних концепцій онлайн-гри. А розроблена архітектура синхронізації може бути використана для розробки мережевих ігор. При розробці онлайн-гри було використано ресурси: мова програмування С++, програма імітації умов мережі clumsy, програма візуалізації роботи потоків в реальному часі Tracy Profiler.<br>Qualification work includes an explanatory note (56 pages, 21 figures, 3 tables, list of references from 18 items, 3 appendices). The purpose of the bachelor's thesis project is to study and structure the theoretical information needed to develop and implement an online game, and on the basis of the data to develop their own online game client-server architecture. To achieve this goal, the analysis of existing topologies of connection of nodes in the network, project templates designed to synchronize processes, algorithms for optimizing the amount of synchronizing information. As a result of the work, an online game was implemented in software, in which optimal and specialized algorithms for a certain task were used. The advantage of this project is the abstractness of the developed architecture that implements synchronization. The results of the thesis can be used to study the basic concepts of online gaming. And the developed synchronization architecture can be used for development of network games. Resources were used in the development of the online game: C ++ programming language, a program for simulating the conditions of the clumsy network, a program for visualizing the work of streams in real time Tracy Profiler.
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Jalan, Manisha. "Investigating the recombinational response to replication fork barriers in fission yeast." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2016. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:aed1673a-f967-41a5-9643-2e432052e174.

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Timely completion of DNA replication in each cell cycle is crucial for maintaining genomic integrity. This is often challenged by the presence of various replication fork barriers (RFBs). On collision with a RFB, the fate of the replication fork remains uncertain. In some cases, the integrity of the fork is maintained until the barrier is removed or the fork is rescued by merging with the incoming fork. However, fork stalling can cause dissociation of all of the associated replication proteins (fork collapse). If this occurs, the cell's recombination machinery can intervene to help restart replication in a process called recombination-dependent replication (RDR). Programmed protein-DNA barriers like the Replication Terminator Sequence-1 (RTS1) have been used to demonstrate that replication fork blockage can induce recombination. However, it remains unclear how efficiently this recombination gives rise to replication restart and whether the restarted replication fork exhibits the same fidelity as an origin-derived fork. It is also unknown whether accidental replication barriers induce recombination in the same manner as programmed barriers. In this study, I introduce recombination reporters at various sites downstream of RTS1 to obtain information on both the fidelity and efficiency of replication restart. I find that unlike break induced replication (BIR), the restarted fork gives rise to hyper-recombination at least 75 kb downstream of the barrier. Surprisingly, fork convergence, rather than inducing recombination, acts to prevent or curtail genetic instability associated with RDR. I also investigate a number of genetic factors that have a role in either preventing or promoting genome instability associated with the progression of the restarted fork. To compare RTS1 with an accidental protein-DNA barrier, a novel site-specific barrier system (called MarBl) was established based on the human mariner transposase, Hsmar1, binding to its transposon end. Replication fork blockage at MarBl strongly induces recombination, more so than at RTS1. This appears to be a general feature of accidental barriers as introduction of the E. coli TusB-TerB site-specific barrier in S. pombe gives rise to a similar effect. Here, I compare and contrast accidental barriers with programmed barriers. I observe that there is very little replication restart, if any, at MarBl measured by direct repeat recombination downstream. This points to the fact that accidental barriers do not trigger fork collapse in the same way as programmed RFBs and that the increased recombination that they cause may be a consequence of the inability of replication forks to terminate correctly, owing to the bi-directional nature of the barrier. Several genetic factors are assessed for their impact on MarBl-induced recombination, which further highlights both similarities and differences with RTS1-induced recombination.
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Nguyen, Michael Ong. "Investigating the molecular mechanism of replication restart in fission yeast." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:b90fff59-d5b7-43b2-b648-61c0bc977ee9.

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Successful replication of the genome during each cell cycle requires that every replication fork merge with its opposing fork. However, lesions in the template DNA or protein-DNA barriers often impede replication forks and threaten the timely completion of genome duplication. If a fork encounters a replication fork barrier (RFB), it can be subject to a variety of fates. In some cases the replisome is maintained in a manner such that it can resume DNA synthesis when the barrier is removed. Alternatively the stalled fork is simply held in a competent state to merge with the opposing fork when it arrives. However, fork stalling can also precipitate dissociation of the replisome (fork collapse) or even fork breakage. If this happens the recombination machinery can intervene to restore DNA integrity and restart replication, albeit with a risk of causing deleterious genetic change if ectopic homologous sequences are recombined. I have exploited a site-specific RFB in fission yeast termed RTS1 to investigate the consequences of perturbing a single replication fork. RTS1 is a polar RFB (i.e. it blocks fork progression in a unidirectional fashion), enabling replication to be completed by the opposing fork. Despite this, fork blockage at RTS1 triggers a strong recombinational response that is able to restart DNA synthesis, which at least initially is highly error prone. Here, I present my work in establishing a live cell imaging approach to visualizing the recombinational response at the RTS1 RFB, demonstrating that the majority of cells initiate recombination-dependent replication (RDR). RDR begins within a few minutes of fork blockage and is only curtailed by the arrival of the opposing fork. It depends on the Rad52 protein, which remains associated with the restarted fork and whose presence correlates with its infidelity. I also illustrate the significance of various genetic factors, including Rad51, the Rad51 mediators, Fml1 helicase, Rad54 translocase, Pfh1 sweepase, and Cds1 checkpoint kinase, in modulating Rad52 localization and block-induced recombination at the RTS1 RFB.
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Nilsson, Benjamin Erik. "Viral and host factors regulating influenza virus replication." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2017. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:b8953952-e6d5-4f6d-a7ba-cd55277611d1.

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Avian influenza A viruses typically do not replicate very efficiently when exposed to a mammalian host species. One of the reasons for this is the low activity of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of avian influenza viruses in mammalian cells. This host restrictive effect can be overcome by adaptive mutations in the avian polymerase, many of which are found in the 627-domain of the PB2 polymerase subunit. Deletion of the 627-domain revealed that this domain is not required for enzymatic functions of the polymerase in vitro, but that it essential for viral replication in a cellular environment in a nucleoprotein-independent manner. While the 627-domain is not necessary for viral RNA synthesis, it was demonstrated that it is involved in mediating encapsidation of nascent replication products. Recently the host factor ANP32A was shown to be the main determinant of host range restriction of the viral polymerase. It was demonstrated that during viral infections ANP32A interacts with KPNA2, a host factor strongly linked to host range restriction of the viral polymerase. It was also revealed that avian polymerases specifically are restricted in vRNA synthesis, a defect that was reversed in the presence of avian ANP32A. ANP32A was shown to be an enhancer of vRNA synthesis in vitro. Viral polymerase-polymerase interactions have been reported previously and presumably fulfil several essential functions during viral replication. Here the potential interaction interfaces of two different polymerase dimers were investigated and a role of polymerase dimers in replication and in trans-activation of cRNA-bound polymerases was found. RNA-binding proteins are essential for RNA metabolism and therefore cell physiology. It has been reported that the RNA-binding proteome responds to biological stimuli. Here the response of the RNA-binding proteome to influenza virus infection was investigated using an in vivo UV crosslinking interactome capture technique. It was demonstrated that the RNA-binding proteome is significantly altered and that this effect is independent of protein abundance. Several host RNA-binding proteins were identified that change their RNA-binding behaviour and that could have pro- or antiviral functions during influenza virus infection.
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Foskolou, Iosifina Petrina. "The role of hypoxia-induced RRM2B in DNA replication." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2016. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e552002e-9303-4968-babe-6092331c2540.

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Regions of low oxygen (hypoxia) occur in most solid tumours and correlate with poor patient prognosis due to their resistance to chemo- and radiotherapy and to their increased metastatic potential. Severe levels of hypoxia induce DNA replication stress characterised by an increased number of stalled replication forks and significantly reduced replication rates, which occurs in the absence of DNA damage. Ribonucleotide Reductase (RNR) is the only enzyme capable of de novo synthesis of dNTPs - the building blocks of DNA synthesis and repair. However, oxygen is essential for mammalian RNRs (RRM1/RRM2 and RRM1/RRM2B), leading us to question the source of dNTPs in hypoxia. Here we show that the RRM2B subunit of RNR is significantly induced in response to hypoxia in a universal manner. Interestingly, the hypoxic induction of RRM2B occurs both at transcriptional and translational levels and likely through two distinct mechanisms, one of which is p53-dependent. Most importantly, we demonstrate that RRM1/RRM2B enzyme is capable of retaining activity in hypoxia and therefore is favoured over RRM1/RRM2 in order to preserve on-going replication. We found two distinct mechanisms by which RRM2B maintains hypoxic activity and we identified specific RRM2B-residues (Y164 and K37/K151) responsible for this function. The importance of RRM2B in the response to tumour hypoxia is further illustrated by increased expression in the hypoxic regions of glioblastoma biopsies, roles in tumour growth and radioresistance, as well as prevention of DNA damage and apoptosis. In this study we present multi-disciplinary evidence, demonstrating the molecular rationale for the ability of RRM1/RRM2B to function in hypoxia. We propose that RRM2B has been evolutionary conserved so as to act as the hypoxic specific RNR subunit in order to be able to react promptly when this physiologically relevant stress occurs. Our data provide new insight into RNR biology, highlighting RRM2B as an important, hypoxic-specific, anti-cancer therapeutic target.
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Books on the topic "Object replication"

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Gourhant, Y. An object-oriented approach for replication managment. Trinity College Dublin, 1992.

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R, Mathieu James, and Society for American Archaeology. Meeting, eds. Experimental archaeology: Replicating past objects, behaviors, and processes. Archaeopress, 2002.

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Mathieu, James R. Experimental Archaeology: Replicating Past Objects, Behaviors, and Processes (British Archaeological Reports, International Series). Archaeopress, 2002.

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Elsner, Jaś, ed. Figurines. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198861096.001.0001.

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This book concerns figurines from cultures that have no direct links with each other. It explores the category of the figurine as a key material concept in the art history of antiquity through comparative juxtaposition of papers drawn from Chinese, pre-Columbian, and Greco-Roman culture. It extends the study of figurines beyond prehistory into ancient art-historical contexts. At stake are issues of figuration and anthropomorphism, miniaturization and portability, one-off production and replication, substitution and scale. Crucially, figurines are objects of handling by their users as well as their makers—so that, as touchable objects, they engage the viewer in different ways from flat art. Unlike the voyeuristic relationship of viewing a neatly framed pictorial narrative, as if from the outside, the viewer as handler is always potentially and without protection within the narrative of figurines. This is why they have had potential for a potent, even animated, agency in relation to those who use them.
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Book chapters on the topic "Object replication"

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Pedone, Fernando, and André Schiper. "From Object Replication to Database Replication." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-11294-2_11.

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Fabry, Johan. "Replication as an Aspect." In Object-Oriented Technology: ECOOP’98 Workshop Reader. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-49255-0_190.

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Alonso, Luis. "Reflection Based Mobile Replication." In Object-Oriented Technology: ECOOP’98 Workshop Reader. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-49255-0_92.

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Dobrovnik, Michael, and Johann Eder. "Partial replication of object-oriented databases." In Advances in Databases and Information Systems. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bfb0057738.

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Marangozova, Vania, and Daniel Hagimont. "Non-functional Replication Management in the Corba Component Model." In Object-Oriented Information Systems. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-46102-7_48.

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Andersen, Birger, Carlos Baquero, and Niels C. Juul. "3rd Workshop on Mobility and Replication." In Object-Oriented Technology: ECOOP’98 Workshop Reader. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-49255-0_84.

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Zhipeng, Tan, and Feng Dan. "Dynamic Replication Strategies for Object Storage Systems." In Emerging Directions in Embedded and Ubiquitous Computing. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11807964_6.

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Kapitza, Rüdiger, Thomas Zeman, Franz J. Hauck, and Hans P. Reiser. "Parallel State Transfer in Object Replication Systems." In Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-72883-2_13.

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Fabry, Johan. "Replication as an Aspect -The Naming Problem." In Object-Oriented Technology: ECOOP’98 Workshop Reader. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-49255-0_127.

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Kuenning, Geoffrey H., Rajive Bagrodia, Richard G. Guy, Gerald J. Popek, Peter Reiher, and An-I. Wang. "Measuring the Quality of Service of Optimistic Replication." In Object-Oriented Technology: ECOOP’98 Workshop Reader. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-49255-0_90.

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Conference papers on the topic "Object replication"

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Pedone, Fernando, and Rui Oliveira. "From Object Replication to Database Replication." In 2009 Fourth Latin-American Symposium on Dependable Computing (LADC). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ladc.2009.28.

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Osrael, Johannes, Lorenz Froihofer, and Karl M. Goeschka. "What service replication middleware can learn from object replication middleware." In the 1st workshop. ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1169091.1169094.

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Sabbouh, M., K. Prasad, and W. Thompson. "Replication in an object-oriented system." In Proceedings 23rd Annual Conference on Local Computer Networks. LCN'98. IEEE, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/lcn.1998.727665.

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Eychenne, Yves, Michel Simatic, Christophe Baradel, and Bruno Kohen. "Exploiting late binding in object messaging for implementing object replication." In the 5th workshop. ACM Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/506378.506383.

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Ugawa, Tomoharu, Masahiro Yasugi, and Taiichi Yuasa. "Replication-Based Incremental Compaction." In 11th IEEE International Symposium on Object/Component/Service-Oriented Real-Time Distributed Computing (ISORC '08). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isorc.2008.61.

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Guo, Minzhe, and Prabir Bhattacharya. "Mechanism Design Based Secure Data Object Replication." In 2012 IEEE 11th International Conference on Trust, Security and Privacy in Computing and Communications (TrustCom). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/trustcom.2012.202.

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Aung, Sint Sint, ThinThin Naing, Khaing Moe San, Thinn Thu Naing, and Ni Lar Thein. "Consistency Control Systems for Remote Object Replication." In 6th Asia-Pacific Symposium on Information and Telecommunication Technologies. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/apsitt.2005.203680.

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Zhong, Ming, Kai Shen, and Joel Seiferas. "Object replication degree customization for high availability." In the twenty-sixth annual ACM symposium. ACM Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1281100.1281164.

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Wei, Qingsong, Bharadwaj Veeravalli, and Zhixiang Li. "Dynamic Replication Management for Object-Based Storage System." In 2010 IEEE International Conference on Networking, Architecture, and Storage (NAS). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/nas.2010.24.

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Zhou, W., and L. Wang. "Distributed object replication in a cluster of workstations." In Proceedings Fourth International Conference/Exhibition on High Performance Computing in the Asia-Pacific Region. IEEE, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hpc.2000.843567.

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Reports on the topic "Object replication"

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Peddi, Praveen, and Lisa C. DiPippo. A Replication Strategy for Distributed Real-Time Object-Oriented Databases. Defense Technical Information Center, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada477629.

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