18 results on '"Marc Beaudin"'
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2. Day-Ahead Power Output Forecasting for Small-Scale Solar Photovoltaic Electricity Generators.
- Author
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Yue Zhang 0026, Marc Beaudin, Raouf Taheri, Hamidreza Zareipour, and David H. Wood
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Cooling Devices in Demand Response: A Comparison of Control Methods.
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Chon Hou Wai, Marc Beaudin, Hamidreza Zareipour, Antony Schellenberg, and Ning Lu 0002
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Comparative transcriptomics reveals human-specific cortical features
- Author
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Nikolas L. Jorstad, Janet H.T. Song, David Exposito-Alonso, Hamsini Suresh, Nathan Castro, Fenna M. Krienen, Anna Marie Yanny, Jennie Close, Emily Gelfand, Kyle J. Travaglini, Soumyadeep Basu, Marc Beaudin, Darren Bertagnolli, Megan Crow, Song-Lin Ding, Jeroen Eggermont, Alexandra Glandon, Jeff Goldy, Thomas Kroes, Brian Long, Delissa McMillen, Trangthanh Pham, Christine Rimorin, Kimberly Siletti, Saroja Somasundaram, Michael Tieu, Amy Torkelson, Katelyn Ward, Guoping Feng, William D. Hopkins, Thomas Höllt, C. Dirk Keene, Sten Linnarsson, Steven A. McCarroll, Boudewijn P. Lelieveldt, Chet C. Sherwood, Kimberly Smith, Christopher A. Walsh, Alexander Dobin, Jesse Gillis, Ed S. Lein, Rebecca D. Hodge, and Trygve E. Bakken
- Abstract
Humans have unique cognitive abilities among primates, including language, but their molecular, cellular, and circuit substrates are poorly understood. We used comparative single nucleus transcriptomics in adult humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, rhesus macaques, and common marmosets from the middle temporal gyrus (MTG) to understand human-specific features of cellular and molecular organization. Human, chimpanzee, and gorilla MTG showed highly similar cell type composition and laminar organization, and a large shift in proportions of deep layer intratelencephalic-projecting neurons compared to macaque and marmoset. Species differences in gene expression generally mirrored evolutionary distance and were seen in all cell types, although chimpanzees were more similar to gorillas than humans, consistent with faster divergence along the human lineage. Microglia, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes showed accelerated gene expression changes compared to neurons or oligodendrocyte precursor cells, indicating either relaxed evolutionary constraints or positive selection in these cell types. Only a few hundred genes showed human-specific patterning in all or specific cell types, and were significantly enriched near human accelerated regions (HARs) and conserved deletions (hCONDELS) and in cell adhesion and intercellular signaling pathways. These results suggest that relatively few cellular and molecular changes uniquely define adult human cortical structure, particularly by affecting circuit connectivity and glial cell function.
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- 2022
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5. Residential Energy Management Using a Two-Horizon Algorithm.
- Author
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Marc Beaudin, Hamidreza Zareipour, Arman Kiani Bejestani, and Antony Schellenberg
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Rewiring of human neurodevelopmental gene regulatory programs by human accelerated regions
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Connor J. Kenny, Ellen M DeGennaro, Andrew B. Stergachis, Lariza M. Rento, Marc Beaudin, M. Aurel Nagy, Peter P. Wang, Kelly M. Girskis, Taehwan Shin, Michael E. Greenberg, Elizabeth A. Pollina, Peter V. Kharchenko, Ryan N. Doan, Julia L. Scotellaro, Xuyu Qian, Nenad Sestan, Jean Fan, Brian M. Debo, Janet H.T. Song, Dilenny M. Gonzalez, André M. M. Sousa, Rebecca C. Yeh, Christopher A. Walsh, Matthew B. Johnson, and Gabrielle M. Sejourne
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Epigenomics ,Cell type ,Pan troglodytes ,General Neuroscience ,Ferrets ,Brain ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Biology ,Cell cycle ,Human accelerated regions ,Biological Evolution ,Evolution, Molecular ,Mice ,HARS ,Animals ,Humans ,Macaca ,Human genome ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Epigenetics ,Enhancer ,Gene ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Summary Human accelerated regions (HARs) are the fastest-evolving regions of the human genome, and many are hypothesized to function as regulatory elements that drive human-specific gene regulatory programs. We interrogate the in vitro enhancer activity and in vivo epigenetic landscape of more than 3,100 HARs during human neurodevelopment, demonstrating that many HARs appear to act as neurodevelopmental enhancers and that sequence divergence at HARs has largely augmented their neuronal enhancer activity. Furthermore, we demonstrate PPP1R17 to be a putative HAR-regulated gene that has undergone remarkable rewiring of its cell type and developmental expression patterns between non-primates and primates and between non-human primates and humans. Finally, we show that PPP1R17 slows neural progenitor cell cycle progression, paralleling the cell cycle length increase seen predominantly in primate and especially human neurodevelopment. Our findings establish HARs as key components in rewiring human-specific neurodevelopmental gene regulatory programs and provide an integrated resource to study enhancer activity of specific HARs.
- Published
- 2020
7. Day-Ahead Power Output Forecasting for Small-Scale Solar Photovoltaic Electricity Generators
- Author
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David Wood, Hamidreza Zareipour, Marc Beaudin, Yue Zhang, and Raouf Taheri
- Subjects
General Computer Science ,business.industry ,Photovoltaic system ,Weather forecasting ,computer.software_genre ,Solar power forecasting ,Automotive engineering ,Grid parity ,Stand-alone power system ,Distributed generation ,Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Environmental science ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Electricity ,business ,computer ,Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Solar power - Abstract
Because of the rapid growth of small-scale solar electricity generation over the past few years, forecasting solar power output is becoming more important. However, changes in weather conditions cause solar power generation to be highly volatile. This paper analyses the challenges of solar power forecasting and then presents a similar day-based forecasting tool to do 24-h-ahead forecasting for small-scale solar power output forecasting.
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- 2015
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8. Home energy management systems: A review of modelling and complexity
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Marc Beaudin and Hamidreza Zareipour
- Subjects
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment - Published
- 2015
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9. Cooling Devices in Demand Response: A Comparison of Control Methods
- Author
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Ning Lu, A. Schellenberg, Chon Hou Wai, Hamidreza Zareipour, and Marc Beaudin
- Subjects
Engineering ,General Computer Science ,business.industry ,Control (management) ,Control engineering ,Energy consumption ,Thermostat ,Automotive engineering ,law.invention ,Demand response ,Smart grid ,law ,Air conditioning ,business ,Gas compressor ,Control methods - Abstract
Demand response plays an important role in the development of the smart grid, which can effectively manage society's energy consumption. Cooling devices, such as refrigerators and freezers, are ideal devices for demand-response programs because their energy states can be controlled without reducing the lifestyle and comfort of the residents. Conversely, managing air conditioning and space heating would affect a resident's comfort level. Direct compressor control and thermostat control methods have been proposed in the past for controlling cooling devices but they are never studied concurrently. This paper proposes a new control mechanism and compares the effectiveness of the three control mechanisms for cooling devices in demand response. In addition, this paper illustrates the need for a damping strategy to mitigate demand oscillations that occur from synchronous fleet control.
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- 2015
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10. Residential Energy Management Using a Two-Horizon Algorithm
- Author
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A. Schellenberg, Hamidreza Zareipour, Arman Kiani Bejestani, and Marc Beaudin
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Demand response ,Engineering ,Smart grid ,General Computer Science ,Horizon (archaeology) ,business.industry ,Computation ,Management system ,Electricity ,Resolution (logic) ,business ,Algorithm ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
The increasing demand for electricity and the emergence of smart grids have presented new opportunities for residential energy management systems (REMS) in demand response market. Several techniques are available for optimizing the operation schedules and decisions of REMS. However, it can be challenging for REMS to capture sufficient resolution and horizon to make good short-term and long-term decisions, respectively, under limited computing resources. We propose a two-horizon algorithm, which can achieve high resolution schedules with reasonable value of energy services while limiting computation time. Simulation results are provided to confirm the validity of the proposed approach.
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- 2014
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11. The Landscape of Genetic Content in the Gut and Oral Human Microbiome
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Marsha C. Wibowo, Aleksandar Kostic, Marc Beaudin, Eleanor Mehlenbacher, Zhen Yang, Christina Baek, Chirag J. Patel, Jacob M. Luber, and Braden T. Tierney
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Databases, Factual ,Sequence assembly ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Article ,Genetic Heterogeneity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology ,Mouth ,0303 health sciences ,Genetic diversity ,Bacteria ,Host Microbial Interactions ,Genetic heterogeneity ,Microbiota ,Human microbiome ,Biodiversity ,DNA Fingerprinting ,Phenotype ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Evolutionary biology ,Metagenomics ,Multigene Family ,Metagenome ,Parasitology ,Oral Microbiome ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Summary Despite substantial interest in the species diversity of the human microbiome and its role in disease, the scale of its genetic diversity, which is fundamental to deciphering human-microbe interactions, has not been quantified. Here, we conducted a cross-study meta-analysis of metagenomes from two human body niches, the mouth and gut, covering 3,655 samples from 13 studies. We found staggering genetic heterogeneity in the dataset, identifying a total of 45,666,334 non-redundant genes (23,961,508 oral and 22,254,436 gut) at the 95% identity level. Fifty percent of all genes were “singletons,” or unique to a single metagenomic sample. Singletons were enriched for different functions (compared with non-singletons) and arose from sub-population-specific microbial strains. Overall, these results provide potential bases for the unexplained heterogeneity observed in microbiome-derived human phenotypes. One the basis of these data, we built a resource, which can be accessed at https://microbial-genes.bio .
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- 2019
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12. Home Energy Management Systems: A Review of Modelling and Complexity
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Marc Beaudin and Hamidreza Zareipour
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,business.industry ,Energy management ,Heuristic (computer science) ,Computer science ,020209 energy ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,Energy consumption ,Demand response ,Smart grid ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Home automation ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Production (economics) ,Operations management ,business - Abstract
Innovations in the residential sector are required to reduce environmental impacts, as the sector is a contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. The increasing demand for electricity and the emergence of smart grids have presented new opportunities for home energy management systems (HEMS) in demand response markets. HEMS are demand response tools that shift and curtail demand to improve the energy consumption and production profile of a dwelling on behalf of a consumer. HEMS usually create optimal consumption and productions schedules by considering multiple objectives such as energy costs, environmental concerns, load profiles and consumer comfort. The existing literature has presented several methods, such as mathematical optimization, model predictive control and heuristic control, for creating efficient operation schedules and for making good consumption and production decisions. However, the effectiveness of the methods in the existing literature can be difficult to compare due to diversity in modelling parameters, such as appliance models, timing parameters and objectives. The present chapter provides a comparative analysis of the literature on HEMS, with a focus on modelling approaches and their impact on HEMS operations and outcomes. In particular, we discuss a set of HEMS challenges such as forecast uncertainty, modelling device heterogeneity, multi-objective scheduling, computational limitations, timing considerations and modelling consumer well-being. The presented work is organized to allow a reader to understand and compare the important considerations, approaches, nomenclature and results in prominent and new literary works without delving deeply into each one.
- Published
- 2016
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13. Energy storage for mitigating the variability of renewable electricity sources: An updated review
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Hamidreza Zareipour, Anthony Schellenberglabe, Marc Beaudin, and William Rosehart
- Subjects
Engineering ,Wind power ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Scale (chemistry) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Environmental engineering ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental economics ,Energy storage ,Renewable energy ,Electric power system ,Stand-alone power system ,Electricity ,business ,Solar power - Abstract
Wind and solar power generation is growing quickly around the world, mainly to mitigate some of the negative environmental impacts of the electricity sector. However, the variability of these renewable sources of electricity poses technical and economical challenges when integrated on a large scale. Energy storage is being widely regarded as one of the potential solutions to deal with the variations of variable renewable electricity sources (VRES). This paper presents an up-to-date review of the state of technology, installations and some challenges of electrical energy storage (EES) systems. It particularly focuses on the applicability, advantages and disadvantages of various EES technologies for large-scale VRES integration. This survey paper indicates that each challenge imposed by VRES requires a different set of EES characteristics to address the issue, and that there is no single EES technology that consistently outperforms the others in various applications. This paper also discusses external factors, such as mineral availability and geographic limitations, that may affect the success of the widespread implementation of EES technologies.
- Published
- 2010
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14. Engineers Without Borders In-Canada Engineering Educational Programming – Case Study of Two Projects
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Patrick Miller, Marc Beaudin, Dena Ghoneim, and Anita Lazurko
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Engineering ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,21st century skills ,business.industry ,Engineering profession ,Best practice ,General Medicine ,Certificate ,Engineering management ,Globalization ,Sustainability ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Systems thinking ,Engineering ethics ,business - Abstract
The 21st century brings a number of opportunities and challenges that require the innovative capacity of the engineering profession. Many of these challenges and opportunities are shaped by globalization, which has impacts on how the engineering profession is educated and ultimately practices. Engineers Without Borders Canada (EWB) has recently completed the development of two projects that enable engineering students to develop skills for engineering practice in a globalized world These projects are based on ‘complementary learning outcomes’-areas that complement CEAB outcomes while providing a 21st century perspective.The first project is a final year technical elective focused on enabling electrical engineering students to combine the skills they have learned in other courses with complementary 21st included the application of systems thinking to engineering problems, sustainability and its relation to electrical engineering, and globalization and its impacts on engineering practice. The outcome of this course is to expand their ability to practice in a globalized world. EWB’s second program is a certificate that is aimed at recognizing students who develop 21st century skills throughout their education through curricular and co-curricular engagement. For curricular measurement, the certificate offers a framework to determine which courses enable the development of 21st century skills. The co-curricular component applies best practices for leadership evaluation from a number of institutions worldwide to effectively measure a student’s leadership experiences. The certificate both serves to encourage students to explore unique educational and leadership opportunities while also to recognize students who have invested their time in developing 21st century skills.
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- 2015
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15. Contributors
- Author
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Hossein Akhavan-Hejazi, Mads R. Almassalkhi, Jordan Bakke, Marc Beaudin, Yonghong Chen, Pengwei Du, Joe Gardner, Yang Gu, Ian A. Hiskens, Marc Keyser, Stephan Koch, Ryan Leonard, Francesco Marra, James McCalley, Hamed Mohsenian-Rad, K. Nandha Kumar, J.S. Ren, William Rosehart, Anthony Schellenberg, B. Sivaneasan, P.L. So, Matthew H. Tackett, K.T. Tan, Saurabh Tewari, Yixing Xu, Guangya Yang, and Hamidreza Zareipour
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Energy Storage for Mitigating the Variability of Renewable Electricity Sources
- Author
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Hamidreza Zareipour, William Rosehart, Anthony Schellenberg, and Marc Beaudin
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Electric power system ,Variable (computer science) ,Engineering ,Wind power ,business.industry ,Scale (chemistry) ,Electrical engineering ,Electricity ,Environmental economics ,business ,Solar power ,Energy storage ,Renewable energy - Abstract
Wind and solar power generation is growing quickly around the world, mainly to mitigate some of the negative environmental impacts of the electricity sector. However, the variability of these renewable sources of electricity poses technical and economical challenges when integrated on a large scale. Energy storage is being widely regarded as one of the potential solutions to deal with the variations of variable renewable electricity sources (VRES). This chapter presents an review of the state of technology, installations and some challenges of electrical energy storage (EES) systems. It particularly focuses on the applicability, advantages and disadvantages of various EES technologies for large-scale VRES integration. This chapter indicates that each challenge imposed by VRES requires a dierent set of EES characteristics to address the issue, and that there is no single EES technology that consistently outperforms the others in various applications. This chapter also discusses external factors, such as mineral availability and geographic limitations, that may aect the success of the widespread implementation of EES technologies.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Forecasting Solar Photovoltaic power production at the aggregated system level
- Author
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Hamidreza Zareipour, Yue Zhang, David Wood, and Marc Beaudin
- Subjects
Engineering ,Autoregressive model ,business.industry ,Moving average ,Least squares support vector machine ,Photovoltaic system ,Production (economics) ,Autoregressive integrated moving average ,business ,Automotive engineering ,Solar power ,Simulation ,Power (physics) - Abstract
Solar Photovoltaic power production has grown significantly over the past few years. California ISO is the first system operator in North America to make the data for aggre- gated system-level solar power production across its territory available on a regular basis. In this paper, we demonstrate the application of three well-established forecasting models to 24- hour-ahead prediction of solar power at the system level. The models investigated in this paper include Auto Regressive Inte- grated Moving Average (ARIMA), Radial Basis Function Neural Network (RBFNN), and Least Squares Support Vector Machine (LS-SVM). Numerical results and discussions are provided based on California ISO solar power data.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
18. Residential energy management using a moving window algorithm
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Hamidreza Zareipour, A. Schellenberg, and Marc Beaudin
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Mathematical optimization ,Engineering ,Linear programming ,business.industry ,Real-time computing ,Scheduling (production processes) ,Window (computing) ,Energy consumption ,Fair-share scheduling ,Smart grid ,Error detection and correction ,business ,Algorithm ,Integer programming - Abstract
Residential energy management is an important research topic due to the opportunities offered by the coming of Smart Grid, and increasing concern of greenhouse gas emissions. This works demonstrates the formulation and use of optimization to improve energy consumption and production schedules for a single dwelling, and how to integrate it using a moving window error correcting algorithm. The presented numerical results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm outperforms a baseline model without the mowing window algorithm, and is more robust against forecast errors and fluctuations beyond the scope of the scheduling period.
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- 2012
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