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Hong Lu

Researcher at Texas A&M University

Publications -  8
Citations -  118

Hong Lu is an academic researcher from Texas A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wireless network & Debugging. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 86 citations.

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The Design and Implementation of P2V, An Architecture for Zero-Overhead Online Verification of Software Programs

TL;DR: The PSL-to-Verilog (P2V) compiler can translate a set of assertions about a block-structured software program into a hardware design to be executed concurrently with the execution of the software program, a result that has never been previously achieved by any online model-checking system.
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Genome physical mapping from large-insert clones by fingerprint analysis with capillary electrophoresis: a robust physical map of Penicillium chrysogenum

TL;DR: This map represents the first physical map constructed using theCE technology, thus providing not only a platform for genomic studies of the penicillin-producing species, but also strategies for efficient use of the CE technology for genome physical mapping of plants, animals and microbes.
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Wheat breeding history reveals synergistic selection of pleiotropic genomic sites for plant architecture and grain yield.

TL;DR: This paper found that 6.7% of the wheat genome falls within the selective sweeps between landraces and cultivars, which harbors the genes known for yield improvement, and found that TaARF12 and TaDEP1 function in epistasis with the classical plant height Rht-1 locus, leading to a "Green Revolution"-based working model for historical wheat breeding.
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Automatic Processor Customization for Zero-Overhead Online Software Verification

TL;DR: The P2V compiler, implemented in Python, generates code for the implementation of the eMIPS processor running on the Xilinx ML401 development board, currently used to verify software properties in areas such as testing, debugging, intrusion detection, and the behavioral verification of concurrent and real-time programs.

Embedded Systems Research at DemoFest’07

TL;DR: The Embedded Systems group at Microsoft Research has been engaged in joint academic collaborations spanning both teaching and research activities, and the results of these collaborations are jointly reviewed, and highlighted to the academic community at the Faculty Summit at Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, WA, during the DemoFest event.