http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
AUTOMATION AND OPTIMIZATION OF TEST APPLICATION FOR JTAG-BASED DESIGNS
Castrodale, Grant L.,Ghazale, Silvio E. Bou,Kanopoulos, Nick 대한전자공학회 1989 ICVC : International Conference on VLSI and CAD Vol.1 No.1
The Joint Test Action Group JTAG has proposed a standard test interface based on boundary scan which gives serial access to the components on a board. Due to the serial nature of boundary scan, the time it takes to apply test vectors increases tremendously over the traditional in-circuit testing. We propose techniques for applying the vectors to reduce the test application time. Analytical expressions for the application time of each of the techniques are derived based on the connectivity of the chips, the length of the test vectors of each chip, and the I/O pin count and location within the boundary scan path. These formulas are used to determine which technique to use for the automatic translation of chip-level sets to a board-level test set. Since the boundary scan interface is being standardized, it becomes possible to provide automatic vector translation and optimization of test application for any board designed according to the standard.
Castrodale, Louisa J.,Raczniak, Gregory A.,Rudolph, Karen M.,Chikoyak, Lori,Cox, Russell S.,Franklin, Tricia L.,Traxler, Rita M.,Guerra, Marta Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute 2015 Safety and health at work Vol.6 No.4
Background: In 2012, the Alaska Section of Epidemiology investigated personnel potentially exposed to a Brucella suis isolate as it transited through three laboratories. Methods: We summarize the first implementation of the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2013 revised recommendations for monitoring such exposures: (1) risk classification; (2) antimicrobial postexposure prophylaxis; (3) serologic monitoring; and (4) symptom surveillance. Results: Over 30 people were assessed for exposure and subsequently monitored for development of illness. No cases of laboratory-associated brucellosis occurred. Changes were made to gaps in laboratory biosafety practices that had been identified in the investigation. Conclusion: Achieving full compliance for the precise schedule of serologic monitoring was challenging and resource intensive for the laboratory performing testing. More refined exposure assessments could inform decision making for follow-up to maximize likelihood of detecting persons at risk while not overtaxing resources.
Louisa J. Castrodale,Gregory A. Raczniak,Karen M. Rudolph,Lori Chikoyak,Russell S. Cox,Tricia L. Franklin,Rita M. Traxler,Marta Guerra 한국산업안전보건공단 산업안전보건연구원 2015 Safety and health at work Vol.6 No.4
Background: In 2012, the Alaska Section of Epidemiology investigated personnel potentially exposed to a Brucella suis isolate as it transited through three laboratories. Methods: We summarize the first implementation of the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2013 revised recommendations for monitoring such exposures: (1) risk classification; (2) antimicrobial postexposure prophylaxis; (3) serologic monitoring; and (4) symptom surveillance. Results: Over 30 people were assessed for exposure and subsequently monitored for development of illness. No cases of laboratory-associated brucellosis occurred. Changes were made to gaps in laboratory biosafety practices that had been identified in the investigation. Conclusion: Achieving full compliance for the precise schedule of serologic monitoring was challenging and resource intensive for the laboratory performing testing. More refined exposure assessments could inform decision making for follow-up to maximize likelihood of detecting persons at risk while not overtaxing resources.