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Emdadul Haque

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  6
Citations -  499

Emdadul Haque is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Shigella & Shigellosis. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 370 citations.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Architectural Implications of Autonomous Driving: Constraints and Acceleration

TL;DR: With accelerator-based designs, this work is able to build an end-to-end autonomous driving system that meets all the design constraints, and explore the trade-offs among performance, power and the higher accuracy enabled by higher resolution cameras.
Journal Article

Community-based evaluation of the effect of breast-feeding on the risk of microbiologically confirmed or clinically presumptive shigellosis in Bangladeshi children.

TL;DR: It is suggested that breast-feeding confers a high level of protection against shigellosis throughout the first 3 years of life, especially among nutritionally compromised children, and thereby underscore the importance of promotion of breast- feeding as a central component of Shigella control programs in less developed settings.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Concise loads and stores: the case for an asymmetric compute-memory architecture for approximation

TL;DR: This paper introduces a novel approximate computing technique that decouples the format of data in the memory hierarchy from the format in the compute subsystem to significantly reduce the cost of storing and moving bits throughout theMemory hierarchy and improve application performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of shigellosis among children exposed to cases of Shigella dysentery: a multivariate assessment.

TL;DR: The findings show that the high risk of shigellosis in residentially exposed Bangladeshi children results from multiple Shigella strains circulating concurrently within the same neighborhood; demonstrate that the risk is notably modified by host age, nutritional status, and dietary patterns; and illustrate that the classic picture of dysentery is relatively infrequent and is correlated with the infecting species and with host nutritional status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of postshigellosis persistent diarrhea in young children.

TL;DR: The data demonstrate the importance of Shigella as a cause of persistent diarrhea and indicate that strategies to prevent postshigellosis persistent diarrhea must be broad-based, with a focus on older children as well as infants.