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- Title
- APPROACHES TO QUANTIFY AND COMPARE THE THERMAL STABILITY OF FOOD ALLERGENS
- Creator
- Meng Xu
- Date
- 2013-04-24, 2013-05
- Description
-
Stability to heat or other food processing conditions has been suggested as one of the characteristics of food allergens, however there is in...
Show moreStability to heat or other food processing conditions has been suggested as one of the characteristics of food allergens, however there is in general a lack of standardized approach to determine or compare the thermal stabilities of food allergens. This study evaluated the use of several analytical tools including the BCA total protein assay, Far-UV Circular Dichroism Spectroscopy, Differential Scanning Calorimetry, and inhibition ELISA assays to study the changes in the structural and immunological properties of major allergens as a result of heat treatments, and identified parameters that can be used to quantify and compare the thermal stability of food allergens. Purified allergens from milk, egg, and almond were subjected to moist-heat or dry-heat treatments and changes in protein solubility, IC50 values and thermodynamic properties of each protein were determined. It was found that high transition temperature (Tm) was closely related to a greater resistance to changes in immunological properties after heat treatments, suggesting that it can be a good parameter to quantify and compare the thermal stability of different food allergens.
M.S. in Food Safety and Technology, May 2013
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- Title
- Cessation of Screech in Underexpanded Jets
- Creator
- Raman, G.
- Date
- 1997-04-10
- Publisher
- Cambridge Univ Press
- Description
-
In significantly underexpanded jets, screech inherently ceases to exist. This paper studies screech cessation in a supersonic rectangular jet...
Show moreIn significantly underexpanded jets, screech inherently ceases to exist. This paper studies screech cessation in a supersonic rectangular jet and provides an explanation for its occurrence. Experimental data are presented for fully expanded Mach numbers, M-j, ranging from 1.1 to 1.9. Screech becomes unsteady beyond M-j = 1.65 and ceases to exist beyond M-j = 1.75. The reason for this cessation has remained a mystery, and this paper examines three suspects: (i) the theory of a frequency mismatch between screech tones and the band of the most-amplified jet instability waves, (ii) the notion that Mach disk formation disrupts the shock-cell structure and weakens the screech-producing shocks, and (iii) the idea that acoustic feedback and receptivity diminish at high levels of underexpansion. A thorough interrogation of experimental data shows that (i) is not the main cause of screech cessation here, (ii) plays an insignificant role, and (iii) appears to have been largely responsible for screech cessation. Cessation occurs because feedback to the jet lip is diminished due to excessive expansion of the jet boundary. Further, since the jet lip now reflects and scatters low intensity sound, the end result is poor receptivity at the initial shear layer. This theory is substantiated by the re-activation of screech when the nozzle lip thickness is made larger than the expanded jet boundary. Finally, increasing lip thickness is seen to produce a systematic shift (to higher M-j) of the onset of cessation. The results of this study are of direct relevance to the sonic fatigue problem in aircraft structures, because understanding screech helps prevent such damage.
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- Title
- Video Disc Transducer System and Method
- Creator
- Camras, Marvin
- Date
- 2009-05-08, 1983-02-01
- Description
-
A video disc record having a spiral video record track which can provide reproduced video signals with a desired frame rate such as thirty...
Show moreA video disc record having a spiral video record track which can provide reproduced video signals with a desired frame rate such as thirty frames per second while the disc record is rotated at a very low speed such as two revolutions per minute. A preferred transducer machine uses a pulsed light source to supply successive light images to a video camera readout. Control signals are recorded on helical control tracks so that reproduction thereof facilitates the generation of a desired standard video signal from the video camera.
Sponsorship: IIT Research Institute
United States Patent
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- Title
- INVESTIGATION OF ANION EXCHANGE MEMBRANES FOR ELECTROCHEMICAL ENERGY CONVERSION AND STORAGE SYSTEMS
- Creator
- Wang, Lihui
- Date
- 2017, 2017-05
- Description
-
The alkaline stability of poly (arylene ether) backbones in anion exchange membranes (AEMs) derivatized with quaternary benzyl N, N-...
Show moreThe alkaline stability of poly (arylene ether) backbones in anion exchange membranes (AEMs) derivatized with quaternary benzyl N, N- dimethylhexylammmonium (DMH+) and trimethylammonium (TMA+) cation groups were investigated in poly (2,6- dimethyl 1,4-phenylene) oxide (PPO) and Udel® polysulfone (PSF) polymers. Previous studies have demonstrated that quaternary ammonium and phosphonium groups trigger backbone degradation in commercially available poly (arylene ether)-based AEMs, despite the base polymers’ resilience to alkaline solutions. Herein, I demonstrate that the electron withdrawing or donating character in the poly (arylene ether) backbone ultimately dictates whether the prepared AEMs will become brittle in alkaline media due to cation-triggered backbone degradation (Arges, Parrondo, Johnson, Nadhan, & Ramani, 2012a; Christopher G. Arges, Lihui Wang, Javier Parrondo, & Vijay Ramani, 2013). Mitigation of cation-triggered backbone degradation was only achieved when electron withdrawing substituents (not including the cation), such as sulfone or bromine, were eliminated from the polymer backbone (or, alternately, when electron donating groups were present). Hence, PPO AEMs prepared through chloromethylation, rather than free radical bromination, were resistant to backbone hydrolysis in alkaline media because each cation-functionalized repeat unit had two electron-donating methyl groups rather than a single methyl group. This study presents some design rules for preparing mechanically stable poly (arylene ether) AEMs from low cost, commercially available polymers for alkaline electrochemical devices.
Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering, May 2017
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- Title
- Self-Regulating Class E Resonant Power Converter Maintaining Operation in a Minimal Loss Region
- Creator
- Troyk, Philip R., Schwan, Martin A. K.
- Date
- 2009-05-11, 1993-01-12
- Description
-
A self-regulating Class E/resonant power converter includes a power switching device which is gated on at each transition between negative and...
Show moreA self-regulating Class E/resonant power converter includes a power switching device which is gated on at each transition between negative and positive half cycles of the load current by drive signals generated by a drive circuit, the rate at which the drive signals are generated being controlled by a zero crossing detector which monitors the load current and adjusts the frequency of the drive signals in correspondence with changes in the time between successive negative-to-positive zero crossings of the load current such that the power switching device continues to be switched on at substantially zero voltage, zero slope conditions to maintain the power converter operating at the optimal Class E frequency.
Sponsorship: Illinois Institute of Technology
United States Patent
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- Title
- NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF CURVATURE WEAKENING MODEL OF REACTIVE HELE-SHAW FLOW
- Creator
- Zhao, Meng
- Date
- 2013, 2013-12
- Description
-
In this paper, we study a moving interface problem in a Hele-Shaw cell, where two immiscible reactive fluids meet at the interface and...
Show moreIn this paper, we study a moving interface problem in a Hele-Shaw cell, where two immiscible reactive fluids meet at the interface and initiate chemical reactions. A new gel-like phase is produced at the interface and may modify the elastic bending property there. We model the interface as an elastic membrane with a local curva- ture dependent bending rigidity. In the first part of this paper, we review the linear stability analysis on a curvature weakening model, and derive critical flux conditions such that a Hele-Shaw bubble can develop unstable fingering pattern and self-similar morphology. In the second part of this report, we develop a boundary integral nu- merical algorithm to perform nonlinear simulations. Preliminary numerical results show that in the nonlinear regime, there also exist stable self-similar solutions.
M.S. in Applied Mathematics, December 2013
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- Title
- Emotional reactions to variations in contract language
- Creator
- Menches, Cindy L., Dorn, Lawrence
- Date
- 2012-07-20, 2012-07-25
- Description
-
This article introduces a theory of emotion-driven behavior in construction contracting and provides support for this theory by presenting the...
Show moreThis article introduces a theory of emotion-driven behavior in construction contracting and provides support for this theory by presenting the quantitative results of a study on the emotional reaction of individuals to the language in contract clauses. Four different versions of the standard Delay Clause found in most construction contracts were extracted from four different contracts and were presented to a group of 27 individuals. Participants rank ordered the clause versions from 1 (most negative) to 4 (most positive). Overall, Clause Version 2 was ranked as having the most negative contract language, with nearly 75% of the participants ranking it as most negative. In contrast, Clause Version 4 was ranked as having the most positive contract language, with over 50% of the participants ranking it as most positive. Participants likewise selected negative emotion words to describe their reaction to Clause Version 2 and positive emotion words to describe their reaction to Clause Version 4. The findings suggest that contract clauses that contain negative language do tend to generate negative emotional reactions while positive contract language do tend to generate positive emotional reactions.
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- Title
- Study of pp interactions at high multiplicity at U-70, Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
- Creator
- Aleev, A., Avdeichikov, V., Balandin, V., Borzunov, Yu., Chencov, Yu., Dunin, V., Furmanec, N., Kekelidze, G., Kireev, V., Kokoulina, E., Ladygin, V., Myalkovsky, V., Nikitin, V., Peshehonov, V., Petukhov, Yu., Rufanov, I., Yukaev, A., Zhidkov, N., Basiladze, S., Bogdanova, G., Erofeeva, I., Grishin, N., Grishkevich, Ya., Karmanov, D., Kramarenko, V., Leflat, A., Merkin, M., Popov, V., Tihonova, L., Vishnevskaya, A., Volkov, V., Voronin, A., Zverev, E., Ardashev, E., Afonin, A., Golovkin, V., Golovnya, S., Gorokhov, S., Kholodenko, A., Kiryakov, A., Kurchaniniv, L., Lobanov, I., Lobanova, E., Mitrofanov, G., Petrov, V., Pleskach, A., Polkovnikov, M., Ronzhin, V., Ryadovikov, V., Senko, V., Soldatov, M., Shalanda, N., Tsyupa, Yu., Vorobiev, A., Yakimchuk, V., Zapolsky, V., Kutov, A.
- Date
- 2013-09-15, 2013-09-15
- Publisher
- IIT Press
- Description
-
The E190 Experiment is aimed at the search for collective phenomena in a quark-gluon system and a hadron system. It is carried out at U-70 in...
Show moreThe E190 Experiment is aimed at the search for collective phenomena in a quark-gluon system and a hadron system. It is carried out at U-70 in IHEP, Protvino. The evidence of Bose-Einstein condensation of pions has been confirmed with a twofold increasing of sampling at a level of 7 standard deviations. We study soft photon (smaller than 60 MeV) yield by using of an electromagnetic calorimeter with low energy threshold. In the gluon dominance model we explain multiparticle production by the active gluons. In this model the estimation of the contribution of charge exchange has been obtained.
Sponsorship: IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory
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- Title
- HACCP with multivariate process monitoring and fault diagnosis techniques: application to a food pasteurization process
- Creator
- Tokatli, F., Cinar, A., Schlesser, J. E.
- Date
- 2005-06
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCI LTD
- Description
-
Multivariate statistical process monitoring (SPM), and fault detection and diagnosis (FDD) methods are developed to monitor the critical...
Show moreMultivariate statistical process monitoring (SPM), and fault detection and diagnosis (FDD) methods are developed to monitor the critical control points (CCPs) in a continuous food pasteurization process. Multivariate SPM techniques effectively use information from all process variables to detect abnormal process behavior. Fault diagnosis techniques isolate the source cause of the deviation in process variable(s). The methods developed are illustrated by implementing them to monitor the critical control points and diagnose causes of abnormal operation of a high temperature short time (HTST) pasteurization pilot plant. The detection power of multivariate SPM and FDD techniques over univariate SPM techniques is shown and their integrated use to ensure the product safety and quality in food processes is demonstrated.
Endnote format citation for DOI:10.1016/j.foodcont.2004.04.008
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- Title
- Ozone Delivery System Binder
- Creator
- Cooper, Kerri, Lee, Alvin, Slade, Peter
- Date
- 2010-09-10T18:51:34Z
- Description
-
Development and validation of the Ozone Delivery System
- Title
- Electromagnetic Transducer Head
- Creator
- Camras, Marvin
- Date
- 1951-02-06
- Description
-
Sponsorship: Armour Research Foundation of Illinois Institute of Technology
United States Patent
- Title
- TRANSFER RATE OF NOROVIRUS DURING CHOPPING ROMAINE LETTUCE
- Creator
- Li, Mingming
- Date
- 2012-11-24, 2012-12
- Description
-
Human noroviruses (HuNoV) are the leading cause of outbreaks of nonbacterial gastroenteritis in the U.S., and are often implicated in...
Show moreHuman noroviruses (HuNoV) are the leading cause of outbreaks of nonbacterial gastroenteritis in the U.S., and are often implicated in outbreaks associated with ready-to-eat foods, such as salads. Such foods may be extensively handled, and norovirus may be transferred readily between infected food handlers and food surfaces. The aim of this study was to investigate norovirus transfer between surfaces and romaine lettuce which were commonly used in the preparation of fresh food. Fresh Romaine lettuce was cut into 25cm2 pieces and inoculated with 25 μl (approx. 7-log PFU) murine norovirus (MNV-1) per leaf. After 10 min air-drying, 5 g piles of inoculated leaves were cut with a sterile stainless steel knife on a sterile cutting board. Sampling sponges soaked in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Media (DMEM) were used to swab blade and board surfaces for MNV-1 transferred from lettuce. In some cases, fresh, uninoculated Romaine lettuce was chopped using the contaminated knife and board. MNV-1 transferred to the chopped lettuce was recovered by stomaching in DMEM and enumerated by plaque assay. MNV-1 transfer was lower from contaminated lettuce to cutting board (p<0.05) than that from a contaminated cutting board to lettuce. This same trend was observed between a stainless steel knife and lettuce. The MNV-1 transfer coefficient was lower when contaminated lettuce was chopped on a wood board (p<0.05) compared to a polyvinyl cutting board. Norovirus transfers readily between surfaces common in the preparation of fresh produce preparation, but the transfer coefficient appears to be dependent on the surface type. This research provides the scientific basis for the development of a risk assessment model for norovirus transfer during the fresh food preparation.
M.S. in Food Safety and Technology, December 2012
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- Title
- Method for Treating Materials
- Creator
- Schey, John A.
- Date
- 2009-04-30, 1973-07-17
- Description
-
Sponsorship: IIT Research Institute
United States Patent
- Title
- MODELING OF A DCFC ANODE IN CONNECTION WITH THE EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH ON THE WETTING BEHAVIOR OF A GRAPHIC ROD IN MOLTEN CARBONATE
- Creator
- Li, Yue
- Date
- 2013, 2013-12
- Description
-
Not available
M.S. in Civil Engineering, July 2013
- Title
- THE EFFECT OF FLOW ON MICROPARTICLE TRANSPORT AND THE ROLE OF MICROPARTICLES IN THROMBOSIS
- Creator
- Lee, Ying-hui
- Date
- 2012-11-27, 2012-12
- Description
-
Elevated monocyte/macrophage-derived microparticles (MPs) have been found to correlate with thrombotic complications. These MPs carry tissue...
Show moreElevated monocyte/macrophage-derived microparticles (MPs) have been found to correlate with thrombotic complications. These MPs carry tissue factor (TF), the principal coagulation pathway initiator, as their parental cells and expose anionic phospholipid phosphatidylserine (PS), which can promote thrombin generation and fibrin formation. During thrombus development, MPs may be delivered to the injured/dysfunctional vascular endothelium or biomaterial surfaces and influence the process of thrombosis. MPs are submicron membrane vesicles that may have increased transport and/or binding capabilities compared to platelets or other cell types due to their decreased size and their higher Brownian diffusion. MPs and their surface molecules can be delivered to surfaces, either biological or prosthetic, and alter the local environment. Little is known of the mechanisms by which MPs are transported to and impart their biological activity on surfaces, especially in blood. Such a transfer of activity will depend on the ability of MPs to be transported to the surface, the strength of adhesion of the MPs on the surface and the nature of the activity/host interaction. In the present study, physical and biological properties of MPs generated from macrophage-like cell lines by endotoxin stimulation were characterized, the transport of MPs to surface by flow was investigated, and the import biological activity on surfaces was elucidated. We observed that the deposition of MPs suspended in buffer on glass surfaces was strongly shear-dependent using a well-defined parallel plate flow chamber. The diffusivity coefficients of MPs at shear rate ranges ranging from 100 to 3200 s-1 were determined from the classical mass transport equation proposed by Leveque and the values were found to be of the same order of magnitude as predicted by Brownian xi diffusion. MPs non-specific attachment to glass was dominated by electrostatic interactions; this was verified by changing the surrounding ionic strength of the suspending solution. In addition to shear rate, red blood cells (RBCs) also influenced MP adhesion due to the complex movement of RBCs. Such movement has been shown to enhance the adhesion of platelets (1-2 micron size cells) to surfaces in flowing blood. MP lateral transport was enhanced at low concentrations of RBCs and reduced at higher concentration of RBCs. The reduction of MP deposition was due to the competition for surface binding sites between the two populations of MPs. The two types of MPs studied here, those produced by macrophages after endotoxin stimulation and those produced by RBCs during experimental preparation (repeated centrifugal washing) have the capability of nonspecific binding to artificial surfaces in a competitive manner. Finally, we demonstrated that the amount of adherent MPs on surfaces influenced fibrin formation via both a TF-dependent and a negatively charged phospholipid pathway. These findings suggest that procoagulant MPs may modulate thrombotic events under certain conditions, especially in MP-associated diseases. The knowledge of the effects of flow on MP transport and the influence of increased MPs on thrombosis may provide novel insights for the transfer of biological activity to relatively passive surfaces.
PH.D in in Biomedical Engineering, December 2012
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- Title
- NSF Annual Report 2012 on Flexible Decision-making in Response to Disruptive Events on Construction Sites
- Creator
- Menches, Cindy L., Chen, Juan
- Date
- 2012-06-29, 2012-06-29
- Description
-
This 2012 annual research report submitted to the National Science Foundation describes: (1) involved people, (2) research activities, (3)...
Show moreThis 2012 annual research report submitted to the National Science Foundation describes: (1) involved people, (2) research activities, (3) research findings, (4) training and development, (5) outreach activities, (6) publications, and (7) contributions for rant number CMMI-1100514, Flexible Decision-making in Response to Disruptive Events on Construction Sites.
Sponsorship: National Science Foundation Award Number: CMMI-1100514
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- Title
- Flux Gate Transducer
- Creator
- Wiegand, David E.
- Date
- 1961-09-05
- Description
-
Sponsorship: Armour Research Foundation of Illinois Institute of Technology
United States Patent
- Title
- ULTRASONIC RANGING AND INFRARED DEPTH PROFILING FOR 3D IMAGE RECOl'STRUCTION AND SCENE ANALYSIS
- Creator
- Jia, Weldi
- Date
- 2013, 2013-07
- Description
-
This doctoral work cannot be done without the help, support and dedication of numerous people. First of all, I will give my great thanks to my...
Show moreThis doctoral work cannot be done without the help, support and dedication of numerous people. First of all, I will give my great thanks to my advisor Dr. Jafar Saniie, who is patient, fundamental and knowledgeable in providing advices, suggestions and guidance to all my six years' study. I would like to express my sincere thanks for his encouragement and nancial support during my study. I will never forget the days and nights he spent with me doing research work in the ECASP research lab. His spirit of carefully searching, friendly talking and knowledgeably thinking stays in my mind forever. My gratitude extends to my committee members, Dr. Anjali, Dr. Moderes and Dr. Oruklu. Also, I would like to give my thanks to my colleagues and friends, especially the people in ECASP research lab, Won-Jae, Sufeng, Thomas, Spenser and Pramod. Their kindness and powerful knowledge in di erent elds help me enhance my work so much. I will never forget the days debugging programs with them and the days we cheered for our success. I would like to dedicate this thesis to my family, especially to my grandfather who just passed away but gave me nancial support and advices from childhood till now, my father who is not able to speak after an accident during my study, my mother who is taking care of my father herself during the past six years, and my wife Wenhui Liu, who encouraged and helped me living in the United States. I promise that I will use what I learned from here to change the world and their constant support of my academic ventures from the beginning to the present would be valuable. Thank you Grandpa, rest in peace in heaven.
PH.D in Electrical Engineering, July 2013
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- Title
- THE EVALUATION OF THERMAL INACTIVATION OF COXIELLA BURNETII NINE MILE PHASE II IN BOVINE AND NON-BOVINE MILKS BY MOST PROBABLE NUMBER-POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION (MPN-PCR) ASSAY
- Creator
- Zhang, Cheng
- Date
- 2016, 2016-05
- Description
-
As non-bovine milks become popular for human consumption, ensuring that standard bovine milk pasteurization conditions provide enough...
Show moreAs non-bovine milks become popular for human consumption, ensuring that standard bovine milk pasteurization conditions provide enough treatment for non-bovine milks is significant for food safety. Coxiella burnetii, an obligate intracellular bacterium, has been used as the reference microorganism for defining milk pasteurization conditions. To evaluate C. burnetii thermal inactivation in bovine and non-bovine milks at commercial pasteurization temperature, an MPN-PCR assay was developed to quantitate viable C. burnetii in milk. Using this assay, the thermal inactivation of C. burnetii and a potential nonpathogenic surrogate, Micrococcus luteus, was tested in bovine, buffalo, camel and goat milks. Milk in sealed glass vials was pre-heated in a water bath at 72°C and inoculated via a syringe with C. burnetii and M. luteus at a final concentration of ~6.5 log10 ge/mL (CFU/mL) each. The inoculated milk was heat-treated at 72°C for up to 16 sec, cooled in a crushed ice bath and serially diluted. Viable M. luteus was quantitated by plating on BHIA plates. For C. burnetii detection, 1 mL of each dilution was inoculated into 9 mL Acidified Citrate Cysteine Medium-2 (ACCM-2) in triplicate T-25 flasks to produce a 3- flask Most Probable Number (MPN) assay. Viability of C. burnetii was considered positive if an increase of ≥0.5 log10 ge/mL was detected by qPCR after 14 d growth in ACCM-2 media. The numbers of positive flasks at each dilution were used to calculate the remaining viable C. burnetii by MPN method. The average D-values for 72°C inactivation were 1.99 ± 0.21 sec, 0.79 ± 0.28 sec, 1.43 ± 0.30 sec, and 2.06 ± 0.71 sec for C. burnetii, and 5.47 ± 0.94 sec, 3.65 ± 0.45 sec, 3.48 ± 0.83 sec and 5.34 ± 1.54 sec for M. luteus in bovine, buffalo, camel and goat milks, respectively. For C. burnetii, D-values in camel and goat milks were not significantly different (p>0.05) from bovine milk, but the D-value in buffalo milk was significantly lower (p<0.05). These results indicate that non-bovine milks may not be a safety concern under standard milk pasteurization conditions, and M. luteus could be a good surrogate for C. burnetii thermal inactivation in milk.
M.S. in Food Safety and Technology, May 2016
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- Title
- Method for Improving Local Descriptors in Peer-to-Peer File Sharing
- Creator
- Frieder, Ophir, Yee, Gen
- Date
- 2013-10-09, 2013-09-24
- Description
-
A method for improving searches in a peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing system that includes a plurality of server computers. A content file,...
Show moreA method for improving searches in a peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing system that includes a plurality of server computers. A content file, identified by a descriptor including at least one metadata term and a mathematical identifier that uniquely identifies the content file in one of the server computers, is selected for searching. Other server computers are searched to find one or more matching content files; one that has a descriptor with a mathematical identifier matching the mathematical identifier of the first content file. The descriptors of the matching content files are returned to the searching server computer and used to expand the local descriptor.
Sponsorship: Illinois Institute of Technology
United States Patent
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