Academic literature on the topic 'Transparent replication'

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Journal articles on the topic "Transparent replication"

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Michael Alvarez, R., Ellen M. Key, and Lucas Núñez. "Research Replication: Practical Considerations." PS: Political Science & Politics 51, no. 02 (April 2018): 422–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096517002566.

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ABSTRACTWith the discipline’s push toward data access and research transparency (DA-RT), journal replication archives are becoming increasingly common. As researchers work to ensure that replication materials are provided, they also should pay attention to the content—rather than simply the provision—of journal archives. Based on our experience in analyzing and handling journal replication materials, we present a series of recommendations that can make them easier to understand and use. The provision of clear, functional, and well-documented replication materials is key for achieving the goals of transparent and replicable research. Furthermore, good replication materials enhance the development of extensions and related research by making state-of-the-art methodologies and analyses more accessible.
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Ugliara, Fellipe A., Gustavo M. D. Vieira, and José de O. Guimarães. "Transparent replication using metaprogramming in Cyan." Science of Computer Programming 200 (December 2020): 102531. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scico.2020.102531.

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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 (February 2007): 212–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tpds.2007.29.

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Marwick, Ben, Li-Ying Wang, Ryan Robinson, and Hope Loiselle. "How to Use Replication Assignments for Teaching Integrity in Empirical Archaeology." Advances in Archaeological Practice 8, no. 1 (October 22, 2019): 78–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aap.2019.38.

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ABSTRACTThe value of new archaeological knowledge is strongly determined by how credible it is, and a key measure of scientific credibility is how replicable new results are. However, few archaeologists learn the skills necessary to conduct replication as part of their training. This means there is a gap between the ideals of archaeological science and the skills we teach future researchers. Here we argue for replications as a core type of class assignment in archaeology courses to close this gap and establish a culture of replication and reproducibility. We review replication assignments in other fields and describe how to implement a replication assignment suitable for many types of archaeology programs. We describe our experience with replication in an upper-level undergraduate class on stone artifact analysis. Replication assignments can help archaeology programs give students the skills that enable transparent and reproducible research.
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Jianliang Xu, Bo Li, and Dik Lun Lee. "Placement problems for transparent data replication proxy services." IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications 20, no. 7 (September 2002): 1383–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/jsac.2002.802068.

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Polanin, Joshua R., Emily A. Hennessy, and Sho Tsuji. "Transparency and Reproducibility of Meta-Analyses in Psychology: A Meta-Review." Perspectives on Psychological Science 15, no. 4 (June 9, 2020): 1026–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1745691620906416.

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Systematic review and meta-analysis are possible as viable research techniques only through transparent reporting of primary research; thus, one might expect meta-analysts to demonstrate best practice in their reporting of results and have a high degree of transparency leading to reproducibility of their work. This assumption has yet to be fully tested in the psychological sciences. We therefore aimed to assess the transparency and reproducibility of psychological meta-analyses. We conducted a meta-review by sampling 150 studies from Psychological Bulletin to extract information about each review’s transparent and reproducible reporting practices. The results revealed that authors reported on average 55% of criteria and that transparent reporting practices increased over the three decades studied ( b = 1.09, SE = 0.24, t = 4.519, p < .001). Review authors consistently reported eligibility criteria, effect-size information, and synthesis techniques. Review authors, however, on average, did not report specific search results, screening and extraction procedures, and most importantly, effect-size and moderator information from each individual study. Far fewer studies provided statistical code required for complete analytical replication. We argue that the field of psychology and research synthesis in general should require review authors to report these elements in a transparent and reproducible manner.
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Mader, Markus, Christof Rein, Eveline Konrat, Sophia Lena Meermeyer, Cornelia Lee-Thedieck, Frederik Kotz-Helmer, and Bastian E. Rapp. "Fused Deposition Modeling of Microfluidic Chips in Transparent Polystyrene." Micromachines 12, no. 11 (October 31, 2021): 1348. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi12111348.

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Polystyrene (PS) is one of the most commonly used thermoplastic materials worldwide and plays a ubiquitous role in today’s biomedical and life science industry and research. The main advantage of PS lies in its facile processability, its excellent optical and mechanical properties, as well as its biocompatibility. However, PS is only rarely used in microfluidic prototyping, since the structuring of PS is mainly performed using industrial-scale replication processes. So far, microfluidic chips in PS have not been accessible to rapid prototyping via 3D printing. In this work, we present, for the first time, 3D printing of transparent PS using fused deposition modeling (FDM). We present FDM printing of transparent PS microfluidic channels with dimensions as small as 300 µm and a high transparency in the region of interest. Furthermore, we demonstrate the fabrication of functional chips such as Tesla-mixer and mixer cascades. Cell culture experiments showed a high cell viability during seven days of culturing, as well as enabling cell adhesion and proliferation. With the aid of this new PS prototyping method, the development of future biomedical microfluidic chips will be significantly accelerated, as it enables using PS from the early academic prototyping all the way to industrial-scale mass replication.
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Wolf, Thomas. "Transparent replication for fault tolerance in distributed Ada 95." ACM SIGAda Ada Letters XIX, no. 2 (June 1999): 33–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/334725.334735.

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Spitschan, Manuel, Marlene H. Schmidt, and Christine Blume. "Principles of open, transparent and reproducible science in author guidelines of sleep research and chronobiology journals." Wellcome Open Research 5 (February 26, 2021): 172. http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.16111.2.

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Background: "Open science" is an umbrella term describing various aspects of transparent and open science practices. The adoption of practices at different levels of the scientific process (e.g., individual researchers, laboratories, institutions) has been rapidly changing the scientific research landscape in the past years, but their uptake differs from discipline to discipline. Here, we asked to what extent journals in the field of sleep research and chronobiology encourage or even require following transparent and open science principles in their author guidelines. Methods: We scored the author guidelines of a comprehensive set of 27 sleep and chronobiology journals, including the major outlets in the field, using the standardised Transparency and Openness (TOP) Factor. The TOP Factor is a quantitative summary of the extent to which journals encourage or require following various aspects of open science, including data citation, data transparency, analysis code transparency, materials transparency, design and analysis guidelines, study pre-registration, analysis plan pre-registration, replication, registered reports, and the use of open science badges. Results: Across the 27 journals, we find low values on the TOP Factor (median [25 th, 75 th percentile] 3 [1, 3], min. 0, max. 9, out of a total possible score of 29) in sleep research and chronobiology journals. Conclusions: Our findings suggest an opportunity for sleep research and chronobiology journals to further support recent developments in transparent and open science by implementing transparency and openness principles in their author guidelines.
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Spitschan, Manuel, Marlene H. Schmidt, and Christine Blume. "Transparency and open science principles in reporting guidelines in sleep research and chronobiology journals." Wellcome Open Research 5 (July 20, 2020): 172. http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.16111.1.

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Background: "Open science" is an umbrella term describing various aspects of transparent and open science practices. The adoption of practices at different levels of the scientific process (e.g., individual researchers, laboratories, institutions) has been rapidly changing the scientific research landscape in the past years, but their uptake differs from discipline to discipline. Here, we asked to what extent journals in the field of sleep research and chronobiology encourage or even require following transparent and open science principles in their author guidelines. Methods: We scored the author guidelines of a comprehensive set of 28 sleep and chronobiology journals, including the major outlets in the field, using the standardised Transparency and Openness (TOP) Factor. This instrument rates the extent to which journals encourage or require following various aspects of open science, including data citation, data transparency, analysis code transparency, materials transparency, design and analysis guidelines, study pre-registration, analysis plan pre-registration, replication, registered reports, and the use of open science badges. Results: Across the 28 journals, we find low values on the TOP Factor (median [25th, 75th percentile] 2.5 [1, 3], min. 0, max. 9, out of a total possible score of 28) in sleep research and chronobiology journals. Conclusions: Our findings suggest an opportunity for sleep research and chronobiology journals to further support the recent developments in transparent and open science by implementing transparency and openness principles in their guidelines and making adherence to them mandatory.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Transparent replication"

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Domaschka, Jörg [Verfasser]. "A Comprehensive Approach to Transparent and Flexible Replication of Java Services and Applications / Jörg Domaschka." München : Verlag Dr. Hut, 2013. http://d-nb.info/1037291611/34.

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Yu, Seong R. "A Software Replication Model for Rejuvenation Transparency to Clients in a Single Computer Environment." NSUWorks, 2006. http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/944.

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Software aging related failures in the operational phase can be prevented by applying proactive software rejuvenation. Proactive rejuvenation is a process of gracefully terminating an application and immediately restarting it at a clean internal state. This process incurs periods of application unavailability during rejuvenation. Two policies were established to abate the effects of the application unavailability. First was to perform the periodic rejuvenations during scheduled rejuvenation windows. Second was to schedule the rejuvenation windows during the low system usage periods to reduce the per-unit cost of the downtime. This practice restricted the use of software rejuvenation during the peak workload periods when the software aging effect may be at its greatest. This research, therefore, addressed the unavailability associated with software rejuvenation in the single computer environment. A new software rejuvenation model was formulated in this research that achieved rejuvenation transparency to the clients in a single-computer environment. This goal was accomplished by formulating the new hot-standby rejuvenation model. The new hotstandby rejuvenation model was synthesized by augmenting the software rejuvenation method with the entity redundancy in the form of hot-passive software replication. This research was based on prior works that applied software rejuvenation in the redundant hardware environments. SRN modeling formalism was used as the modeling technique. Two sets of experiments were conducted to validate the new hot-standby rejuvenation models formulated in this research. First set investigated the effect of the new rejuvenation models on the unavailability characteristics of the single component application architecture. Second set performed the same investigation using the loosely coupled multiple component application architecture. Experiment results in this research showed that the new hot-standby rejuvenation models can achieve rejuvenation transparency to the clients. The new models achieved the effects of rejuvenation by switching the aged active replica with the standby replica in the robust state. Furthermore, the results of the two experiments demonstrated that the new hot stand by rejuvenation method can provide significant improvement to the software unavailability. A major implication of this research is the expanded use of software rejuvenation in the single computer environment. When using the new rejuvenation method, the proactive rejuvenation can be performed anytime as needed without restraint in a single computer environment. Applications that cannot tolerate service interruptions can use the new proactive rejuvenation model in a single computer environment. Another implication is the significant unavailability improvement produced by the new rejuvenation model in application systems where the current rejuvenation method provided small improvement. A future research recommendation is to characterize the overhead of the new rejuvenation models. Another is to investigate a method of routinely capturing application failure rate, repair rate, and rejuvenation completion rate, and store these rates as part of the application history. These rates can then be used to calculate the optimum rejuvenation interval and the unavailability improvement ratio.
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Wennergren, Oscar, Mattias Vidhall, and Jimmy Sörensen. "Transparency analysis of Distributed file systems : With a focus on InterPlanetary File System." Thesis, Högskolan i Skövde, Institutionen för informationsteknologi, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:his:diva-15727.

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IPFS claims to be the replacement of HTTP and aims to be used globally. However, our study shows that in terms of scalability, performance and security, IPFS is inadequate. This is a result from our experimental and qualitative study of transparency of IPFS version 0.4.13. Moreover, since IPFS is a distributed file system, it should fulfill all aspects of transparency, but according to our study, this is not the case. From our small-scale analysis, we speculate that nested files appear to be the main cause of the performance issues and replication amplifies these problems even further.
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Nayate, Amol Pramod. "Transparent replication." Thesis, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3461.

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Singhal, Rekha. "Transparent replication for efficient distributed transactions." Thesis, 1998. http://localhost:8080/iit/handle/2074/2255.

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Pinho, Luís Miguel Rosário da Silva. "A framework for the transparent replication of real-time applications." Doctoral thesis, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10216/11033.

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Pinho, Luís Miguel Rosário da Silva. "A framework for the transparent replication of real-time applications." Tese, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10216/11033.

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Books on the topic "Transparent replication"

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India) CUTS Centre for Consumer Action Research & Training (Jaipur. Model framework for replication: Usages of RTI in rural Rajasthan, India, enchancing transparency and reforming the processes. Jaipur: CUTS Centre for Consumer Action Research & Training, 2010.

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Miller, David, Claire Harkins, Matthias Schlögl, and Brendan Montague. Impact of Market Forces on Addictive Substances and Behaviours. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198753261.001.0001.

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This book examines the ‘web of influence’ formed by industries which manufacture and sell ‘addictive’ products in the EU. The differences between alcohol, food, gambling, and tobacco as consumer products are obvious. However, we explore whether food, alcohol, and gambling industries are merely replicating tobacco tactics or innovating in corporate strategy. Using a new data set on corporate networks formed by the tobacco, alcohol, food, and gambling industries at the EU level, the book shows the interlocking connections between corporations, trade associations, and policy intermediaries, including lobbyists and think tanks. Quantitative data guide qualitative studies on the content of corporate strategy and the attempts of corporations to ‘capture’ policy and three crucial ancillary domains—science, civil society, and the news and promotional media. The effects of these three arenas on policy networks and outcomes are examined with a focus on new forms of policy partnership such as corporate social responsibility and partnership governance. Drawing on our structural data, we show the comprehensive engagement of industry with science-policy issues in the EU, the ways that corporations can dominate agendas and decision making, as well as the potential for popular pressures and public health agendas to be effective. The book concludes by asking what solutions might be possible to the evident public health challenges posed by the addictions web of influence. It proposes key evidence-based transparency and public health reforms that have the best chance of minimizing the burden of disease from addictions in the medium to long term.
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Book chapters on the topic "Transparent replication"

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Borges, Felipe, Luis Pacheco, Eduardo Alchieri, Marcos F. Caetano, and Priscila Solis. "Transparent State Machine Replication for Kubernetes." In Advanced Information Networking and Applications, 859–71. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15032-7_72.

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Wolf, Thomas, and Alfred Strohmeier. "Fault Tolerance by Transparent Replication for Distributed Ada 95." In Reliable Software Technologies — Ada-Europe’ 99, 412–24. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-48753-0_35.

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Schmidt, Stefan. "Replication." In Toward a more perfect psychology: Improving trust, accuracy, and transparency in research., 233–53. Washington: American Psychological Association, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0000033-015.

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Grahe, Jon. "A Replication Crisis." In A Journey into Open Science and Research Transparency in Psychology, 1–13. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003033851-1.

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García Portilla, Jason. "b) Uruguay: Extreme Positive Case Study (Latin America)." In “Ye Shall Know Them by Their Fruits”, 299–307. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78498-0_19.

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AbstractSecularisation and religiosity in Uruguay are closer to Western European levels than to Latin American averages. The idea of medieval “Christendom” inherited from Hispanic times became obsolete and residual in Uruguay already during the nineteenth century (which is early compared to the rest of Latin America).Uruguay closely followed the laïcité model of the French Revolution without ever completely replicating it. This process resulted in the widespread secularisation of institutional fields, displaced religion to the domestic sphere, and guaranteed the freedom of consciousness and religion.In Uruguay, as well as in Switzerland, Protestantism has played a crucial role along with liberalism in introducing anti-clericalism (and religious freedom) in its constitution and therefore also in its institutions. Protestantism, then, has played a decisive role in shaping the trajectory of democracy, human capital, ethics, transparency, secularisation, and social progress.
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"Replication." In Transparent and Reproducible Social Science Research, 158–72. University of California Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvpb3xkg.14.

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"NINE. Replication." In Transparent and Reproducible Social Science Research, 158–72. University of California Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520969230-012.

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Kecskemeti, Gabor, Attila Kertesz, Attila Marosi, and Peter Kacsuk. "Interoperable Resource Management for Establishing Federated Clouds." In Achieving Federated and Self-Manageable Cloud Infrastructures, 18–35. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-1631-8.ch002.

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Cloud Computing builds on the latest achievements of diverse research areas, such as Grid Computing, Service-oriented computing, business process modeling and virtualization. As this new computing paradigm was mostly lead by companies, several proprietary systems arose. Recently, alongside these commercial systems, several smaller-scale privately owned systems are maintained and developed. This chapter focuses on issues faced by users with interests in Multi-Cloud use and by Cloud providers with highly dynamic workloads. The authors propose a Federated Cloud Management architecture that provides unified access to a federated Cloud that aggregates multiple heterogeneous IaaS Cloud providers in a transparent manner. The architecture incorporates the concepts of meta-brokering, Cloud brokering, and on-demand service deployment. The meta-brokering component provides transparent service execution for the users by allowing the interconnection of various Cloud brokering solutions. Cloud-Brokers manage the number and the location of the Virtual Machines performing the user requests. In order to decrease Virtual Machine instantiation time and increase dynamism in the system, the service deployment component optimizes service delivery by encapsulating services as virtual appliances allowing their decomposition and replication among IaaS Cloud infrastructures. The architecture achieves service provider level transparency through automatic virtual appliance replication and Virtual Machine management of Cloud-Brokers.
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McAuliff, Bradley D., Melanie B. Fessinger, Anthony D. Perillo, and Jennifer T. Perillo. "Psychology and Law, Meet Open Science." In The Oxford Handbook of Psychology and Law, 71—C5P156. Oxford University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197649138.013.5.

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Abstract As the field of psychology and law begins to embrace more transparent and accessible science, many questions arise about what open science actually is and how to do it. In this chapter, we contextualize this reform by examining fundamental concerns about psychological research—irreproducibility and replication failures, false-positive errors, and questionable research practices—that threaten its validity and credibility. Next, we turn to psychology’s response by reviewing the concept of open science and explaining how to implement specific practices—preregistration, registered reports, open materials/data/code, and open access publishing—designed to make research more transparent and accessible. We conclude by weighing the implications of open science for the field of psychology and law, specifically with respect to how we conduct and evaluate research, as well as how we train the next generation of psychological scientists and share scientific findings in applied settings.
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Tschichold, Cornelia. "CALL replication studies: getting to grips with complexity." In CALL and complexity – short papers from EUROCALL 2019, 362–66. Research-publishing.net, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.14705/rpnet.2019.38.1037.

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Calls for replication studies are becoming more frequent, and Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL) has now reached sufficient maturity to offer numerous studies that lend themselves to replication. Realistic and successful replications rely on transparency in terms of data, results, and methodology. Two published studies in the area of vocabulary CALL will be discussed from the perspective of their suitability for replication: Franciosi, Yagi, Tomoshige, and Ye (2016) and Kim and Kim (2012). Alzahrani (2017) is a replication of Franciosi et al. (2016), confirming the findings with a markedly different learner group. The replication used the same methodology, a slightly modified list of target words, and Saudi participants. Kim and Kim (2012) compared vocabulary learning across three different screen sizes. The flashcard software is not specified any further, nor are the target words. While such an underspecified methodology is less likely to lead to a successful replication that can strengthen the validity and reliability of research results in our field, it can still provide a good training opportunity for students to learn about methodology in CALL.
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Conference papers on the topic "Transparent replication"

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Vingralek, R., Y. Breitbart, M. Sayal, and P. Scheuermann. "A transparent replication of HTTP service." In Proceedings 15th International Conference on Data Engineering (Cat. No.99CB36337). IEEE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icde.1999.754905.

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Ugliara, Fellipe Augusto, Gustavo Maciel Dias Vieira, and José de Oliveira Guimarães. "Transparent Replication Using Metaprogramming in Cyan." In SBLP 2017: 21st Brazilian Symposium on Programming Languages. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3125374.3125375.

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Pereira, Paola Martins, Fernando Luís Dotti, Cristina Meinhardt, and Odorico Machado Mendizabal. "A library for services transparent replication." In SAC '19: The 34th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3297280.3297308.

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Vardhan, Manu, D. K. Yadav, and Dharmender Singh Kushwaha. "A Transparent Service Replication Mechanism for Clouds." In 2012 Sixth International Conference on Complex, Intelligent, and Software Intensive Systems (CISIS). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cisis.2012.199.

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Leontiadis, Iraklis, and Reza Curtmola. "Secure Storage with Replication and Transparent Deduplication." In CODASPY '18: Eighth ACM Conference on Data and Application Security and Privacy. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3176258.3176315.

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Keqiu Li, Hong Shen, F. Y. L. Chin, and Liusheng Huang. "Multimedia object placement for hybrid transparent data replication." In GLOBECOM '05. IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference, 2005. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/glocom.2005.1577718.

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Kotz, Frederik, Andreas Striegel, Norbert Schneider, Matthias Worgull, and Bastian E. Rapp. "High-throughput thermal replication of transparent fused silica glass." In Microfluidics, BioMEMS, and Medical Microsystems XVII, edited by Bonnie L. Gray and Holger Becker. SPIE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2506155.

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Wolf, Thomas. "Transparent replication for fault tolerance in distributed Ada 95." In the ninth international workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/329607.334735.

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Colesa, A., I. Stan, and I. Ignat. "Transparent Fault-Tolerance Based on Asynchronous Virtual Machine Replication." In 12th International Symposium on Symbolic and Numeric Algorithms for Scientific Computing (SYNASC 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/synasc.2010.58.

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Yingwei Jin, Wenyu Qu, and Keqiu Li. "A Survey of Cache/Proxy for Transparent Data Replication." In Second International Conference on Semantics, Knowledge, and Grid (SKG 2006). IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/skg.2006.15.

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Reports on the topic "Transparent replication"

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Hao, W., Y. Li, M. Durrani, S. Gupta, and A. Qu. Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links (TRILL): Centralized Replication for Active-Active Broadcast, Unknown Unicast, and Multicast (BUM) Traffic. RFC Editor, April 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc8361.

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