Displaying 20 results from an estimated 390 matches for "pathological".
2012 Mar 13
1
how to write crossed and nested random effects in a model
Dear R Users,
I have a question based on my research. I am analyzing reader-based
diagnostic data set. My study involves diabetic patients who were evaluated
for treatable diabetic retinopathy based on the presence or absence of two
pathologies in their eyes. Pathologies were identified using the clinical
examination (Gold standard method). In addition it can be identified by
taking digital
2007 Aug 29
3
OT: distribution of a pathological random variate
Folks,
I wonder if anything could be said about the distribution of a random variate x, where
x = N(0,1)/N(0,1)
Obviously x is pathological because it could be 0/0. If we exclude this point, so the set is {x/(0/0)}, does x have a well defined distribution? or does it exist a distribution that approximates x.
(The case could be generalized of course to N(mu1, sigma1)/N(mu2, sigma2) and one still couldn't get away from the singular...
2008 Oct 06
1
[Game] Pathologic: help me create a useful bug report
Appdb entry (http://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&iId=8352)
I'm trying to get all my games to run under linux, but of cause a few are giving me problems, and Pathologic is one of the few that really bothers me.
As far as I can tell, the game uses DirectX9, Windows Media format (cinematics), and OpenAL. Of the three, the WMF dependency is the most annoying, as it
2007 Sep 11
4
ext3 on zvols journal performance pathologies?
I''ve been seeing read and write performance pathologies with Linux
ext3 over iSCSI to zvols, especially with small writes. Does running
a journalled filesystem to a zvol turn the block storage into swiss
cheese? I am considering serving ext3 journals (and possibly swap
too) off a raw, hardware-mirrored device. Before I do (and I''ll
write up any results) I''d like to know
2006 Oct 31
0
6413731 pathologically slower fsync on 32 bit systems
Author: perrin
Repository: /hg/zfs-crypto/gate
Revision: a593e64c4739242e2eb3a43ea296996000af0c2d
Log message:
6413731 pathologically slower fsync on 32 bit systems
Files:
update: usr/src/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/zil.h
update: usr/src/uts/common/fs/zfs/zil.c
2010 Aug 14
0
server goes pathological
Ubuntu-10.04, x86, stock.
I''m running into a situation where a server goes pathological.
Basically, it becomes excruciatingly slow. I can get things through the
file system, but a simple file touch can take 6 - 12 hours.
Top shows various btrfs processes hard at work - typically 100% of a
cpu, (four cpu server), and the machine shows a load of just over 4.
Some flush-btrfs, so...
2010 Jun 13
1
ERROR need finite 'ylim' values
Hello:
I use R with MAC
I have a simple data table, numeric and text columns, named dt. The table is
imported through read.csv from a csv file. Row numbers are automatically
assigned, header is set to TRUE. there are 599 rows and several columns.
I am trying to plot using the stripchart command: one numeric variable (say
dt$fnatg) vs a text column (say dt$pat). dt$pat contains one of 3 values:
2007 Aug 16
4
residual plots for lmer in lme4 package
Hi,
I was wondering if I might be able to ask some advice about doing residual
plots for the lmer function in the lme4 package.
Our group's aim is to find if the expression staining of a particular gene
in a sample (or "core") is related to the pathology of the core.
To do this, we used the lmer function to perform a logistic mixed model
below. I apologise in advance
2009 Nov 01
0
Internal error in 'ls' for pathological environments (PR#14036)
On Sun, Nov 1, 2009 at 6:02 AM, Peter Dalgaard <p.dalgaard at biostat.ku.dk> w=
rote:
> macrakis at alum.mit.edu wrote:
>>
>> nchar(with(list(2),ls())) gives an internal error. This is of course
>> a peculiar call (no names in the list), but the error is not caught
>> cleanly.
>>
>> It is not clear from the documentation whether with(list(2)...) is
2017 Apr 24
3
Disable optimization on basic block level
How do you disable optimization for a function?
I ask because my application often compiles machine-generated code that
results in pathological structures that take a long time to optimize, for
little benefit. As an example, if a basic block has over a million
instructions in it, then DSE can take a while, as it is O(n^2) in the
number of instructions in the block. In my application (at least), this
block is typically executed only once at...
2004 Oct 28
1
plot.baysian error = only 0's may mix with negative subscripts
Dear R users and developers
After upgrading to Windows XP and R 1.9.1 and 2.0, I retried to execute
plot.baysian() to a data set that I had used previously to plot with no
problem in win2000 R1.8. The error I get is:
Error in points(Mbar[-index], lods[-index], pch = ".") :
only 0's may mix with negative subscripts
Thanx in advance
Dino
P.S. I allready sent this message
2013 Jul 29
2
Improve --inplace updates on pathological inputs
Hi,
I recently came across a situation where "rsync --inplace" performs very poorly. If both the source and destination files contain long sequences of identical blocks, but not necessarily in the same location, the sender can spend an inordinate amount of CPU time finding matching blocks.
In my case, I came across this problem while backing up multi-hundred-gigabyte MySQL database
2018 May 29
4
My own codegen is 2.5x slower than llc?
My back-end code generator uses LLVM 5.0.1 to optimize and generate code
for x86_64.
If I run it on a given sample of IR, it takes almost 5 minutes to generate
object code. 95%+ of this time is spent in MergeConsecutiveStores(). (One
function has a basic block with 14000 instructions, which is a pathological
case for MergeConsecutiveStores.)
If, instead, I dump out the LLVM IR, and manually run both opt and llc on
it with -O2, the whole affair takes only 2 minutes.
I am using a dynamically linked LLVM library. I have verified using GDB
that both my code generator and llc are invoking the shared libr...
2009 Nov 01
2
Internal error in 'ls' for pathological environments (PR#14035)
nchar(with(list(2),ls())) gives an internal error. This is of course
a peculiar call (no names in the list), but the error is not caught
cleanly.
It is not clear from the documentation whether with(list(2)...) is
allowable; if it is not, it should presumably give an error. If it is, then
ls
shouldn't have problems with the resulting environment.
> qq <- with(list(2),ls())
2019 Sep 24
2
Repacking database from v1 to v2 format: how long does it take?
On 23/09/2019 20:41, Andrew Bartlett wrote:
> On Mon, 2019-09-23 at 11:25 +0200, Francesco Malvezzi via samba wrote:
>> hi all,
>>
>> I updated a small domain with 8k object to samba-4.11.0 and the
>> database
>> conversion from v1 to v2 didn't take a noticeable time.
>>
>> On the other hand, in a larger domain with 67k object, where the
>>
2002 Feb 20
2
Code for bivariate Poisson regression?
Dear RHelpers,
Does anyone know of any R code to perform bivariate Poisson regression
(including random effects)?
Best wishes
Simon
Simon D.W. Frost, M.A., D.Phil.
Department of Pathology
University of California, San Diego
Antiviral Research Center
(Formerly: UCSD Treatment Center)
150 W. Washington St., Suite 100
San Diego, CA 92103
USA
Tel: +1 619 543 8080 x275
Fax: +1 619 298 0177
Email:
2020 Nov 13
6
RFC: [SmallVector] Adding SVec<T> and Vec<T> convenience wrappers.
...lVector is on
the heap.
A lot of this is boiled out from the discussion in
https://groups.google.com/g/llvm-dev/c/q1OyHZy8KVc/m/1l_AasOLBAAJ?pli=1
The goals here are twofold:
1. convenience: not having to read/write "N", or do an extra edit/recompile
cycle if you forgot it
2. avoiding pathological cases: The choice of N is usually semi-arbitrary
in our experience, and if one isn't careful, can result in
sizeof(SmallVector) becoming huge, especially in the case of nested
SmallVectors. This patch avoids pathological cases in two ways:
A. SVec<T>'s heuristic keeps sizeof(SVec<...
2011 Feb 16
1
read.table - reading text variables as text
Hi
I'm reading a CSV file using read.table, and it keeps importing a text
variable as a factor. To overcome this, I've used the as.is command
referring to the variable in question (called "stim")
data<-read.table(file.choose(), header=T, sep=",", as.is = "stim")
However, "stim" is still imported as a factor. I notice there are other
read.table
2019 Sep 23
2
Repacking database from v1 to v2 format: how long does it take?
hi all,
I updated a small domain with 8k object to samba-4.11.0 and the database
conversion from v1 to v2 didn't take a noticeable time.
On the other hand, in a larger domain with 67k object, where the
sudo ./bin/samba-tool dbcheck --cross-ncs --fix
takes ~40 minutes, 2 hours and half were not enough to complete the
conversion.
Is it a couple of hours something expected if dbcheck takes so
2018 May 03
0
Alignment Member Functions should be Virtual
...en in C.
This hardware situation was reasonably common in the past, but code
still accessed objects not aligned to 32-bits. The compiler just had
to use multiple aligned loads to access data crossing a word boundary
and combine the data.
You'll probably find that path simpler than inventing a pathological C
dialect. As Eli said, changing getCharAlign is likely to have huge
knock-on consequences that the rest of Clang just isn't ready for.
Cheers.
Tim.