247 research outputs found

    Clinical evaluation of stretchable and wearable inkjet-printed strain gauge sensor for respiratory rate monitoring at different body postures

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    Respiratory rate (RR) is a vital sign with continuous, convenient, and accurate measurement which is difficult and still under investigation. The present study investigates and evaluates a stretchable and wearable inkjet-printed strain gauge sensor (IJP) to estimate the RR continuously by detecting the respiratory volume change in the chest area. As the volume change could cause different strain changes at different body postures, this study aims to investigate the accuracy of the IJP RR sensor at selected postures. The evaluation was performed twice on 15 healthy male subjects (mean ± SD of age: 24 ± 1.22 years). The RR was simultaneously measured in breaths per minute (BPM) by the IJP RR sensor and a reference RR sensor (e-Health nasal thermal sensor) at each of the five body postures namely standing, sitting at 90°, Flower’s position at 45°, supine, and right lateral recumbent. There was no significant difference in measured RR between IJP and reference sensors, between two trials, or between different body postures (all p \u3e 0.05). Body posture did not have any significant effect on the difference of RR measurements between IJP and the reference sensors (difference \u3c 0.01 BPM for each measurement in both trials). The IJP sensor could accurately measure the RR at different body postures, which makes it a promising, simple, and user-friendly option for clinical and daily uses

    Improvement of visual acuity based on optical coherence tomography patterns following intravitreal bevacizumab treatment in patients with diabetic macular edema

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    <b>AIM:</b>To report the visual outcome based on various patterns of optical coherence tomography (OCT) morphology in diabetic macular edema (DME), following treatment with anti-VEGF intravitreal bevacizumab (IVB) injection.<b>METHODS:</b>Sixty-seven consecutive subjects with centre involving DME underwent intravitreal injection of Bevacizumab (1.25 mg/0.05 mL) in this retrospective, comparative, non randomized study. The DME was classified into one of four categories:focal, diffuse, focal cystoid and neurosensory detachment based on OCT. Best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), macular appearance, and OCT findings were used to decide whether the subject should have a repeat injection of intravitreal bevacizumab. Outcome measures were a change in mean BCVA (Snellen converted to logMAR) and central macular thickness (CMT) in each group during the six month follow-up period.<b>RESULTS:</b>The mean BCVA improved to logMAR 0.23 at final follow-up from a baseline of 0.32 logMAR (<i>P=</i>0.040) in the focal group, logMAR 0.80 at final follow-up from a baseline of 0.82 logMAR (<i>P=</i>0.838) in the diffuse group, worsened to logMAR 0.53 at final follow-up from a baseline of 0.43 logMAR (<i>P=</i>0.276) in the focal cystoid group, and improved to logMAR 0.79 at final follow-up from a baseline of 0.93 logMAR (<i>P=</i>0.490) in the neurosensory detachment group. The mean CMT before treatment were 298.8±25.03 Όm in the focal group, 310.8±40.6 Όm in the diffuse group, 397.15±31.05 Όm in the focal cystoid group and 401.03±75.1 Όm in the neurosensory detachment group. A mean of 2.05 (range:1-5) injections in the focal group, 1.32 (range:1-2) in the diffuse group, 2.6 (range:1-6) in the focal cystoid group and 2.6 (range:1-6) in the neurosensory detachment group were performed during the six month follow-up period. Following intravitreal bevacizumab treatment, vision improved, remained unchanged or worsened in 11, 7 and 2 subjects in focal group; 11, 9 and 8 in diffuse group; 0, 2 and 4 in focal cystoid group and 5, 5 and 3 subjects respectively in neurosensory detachment group.<b>CONCLUSION:</b>OCT morpholgy patterns in DME may predict the effects of intravitreal bevacizumab treatment, and patients with focal DME are most likely to benefit from the improvent of visual acuity from this treatment

    Exploiting Arabic Diacritization for High Quality Automatic Annotation

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    International audienceWe present a novel technique for Arabic morphological annotation. The technique utilizes diacritization to produce morphological annotations of quality comparable to human annotators. Although Arabic text is generally written without diacritics, diacritization is already available for large corpora of Arabic text in several genres. Furthermore, diacritization can be generated at a low cost for new text as it does not require specialized training beyond what educated Arabic typists know. The basic approach is to enrich the input to a state-of-the-art Arabic morphological analyzer with word diacritics (full or partial) to enhance its performance. When applied to fully diacritized text, our approach produces annotations with an accuracy of over 97% on lemma, part-of-speech, and tokenization combined

    Mathematical model for the irradiance probability density function of a laser beam propagating through turbulent media

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    We develop a model for the probability density function (pdf) of the irradiance fluctuations of an optical wave propagating through a turbulent medium. The model is a two-parameter distribution that is based on a doubly stochastic theory of scintillation that assumes that small-scale irradiance fluctuations are modulated by large-scale irradiance fluctuations of the propagating wave, both governed by independent gamma distributions. The resulting irradiance pdf takes the form of a generalized K distribution that we term the gamma-gamma distribution. The two parameters of the gamma-gamma pdf are determined using a recently published theory of scintillation, using only values of the refractive-index structure parameter C-n(2) (or Rytov variance) and inner scale l(0) provided with the simulation data. This enables us to directly calculate various log-irradiance moments that are necessary in the scaled plots. We make a number of comparisons with published plane wave and spherical wave simulation data over a wide range of turbulence conditions (weak to strong) that includes inner scale effects. The gamma-gamma pdf is found to generally provide a good fit to the simulation data in nearly all cases tested

    Strategic management application for secondary school principals in Taif city from the agents and teachers point of view

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    This study aimed to know the degree of application of the strategic management at the secondary school at the city Taif, obstacles, and to know obstacles facing the application of the strategic management , and suggestion of improvement, and to know the different views of participants according to variables(job title, classrooms, scientific, years of experience, and the number of training sessions).. it has been used descriptive method , the study sample consisted of (363) agents and teachers , were chosen randomly from the (1235), it has been used a questionnaire, The first is the reality of the application of strategic management divided into five areas: analysis of the internal environment, analysis of the external environment, formulation of strategy, implementation of strategy, evaluation and strategic control; the second is the obstacles to the application of strategic management; the third is the proposals that contribute to the application Strategic management. It was sure to validity and reliability. The results of the study responses on the degree of application for the strategic management among the principals of general education schools in Taif were average, and their response to the obstacles of application was medium. Their response was also to the proposed solutions with an agree level. There were no statistically significant differences at (α 0.05) ≀between the responses of the study on the degree of application of strategic management, according to the variables of the study

    A Short Review: Chemistry of Curcumin and Its Metal Complex Derivatives

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    This review covers recent progress in the synthesis of curcumin and the bioactivity of semisynthetic and synthetic analogs of curcumin. The review also shows how curcumin is a useful intermediate for the synthesis of more complex organic molecules; historical perspective; the process of preparing the metal complexes and characterization the produced complexes using various spectral and other techniques; shows the importance of curcumin and its derivatives for their potential applications in medical devices and broad-spectrum of medical application such as antibiotic ointment, alternative therapeutics, antifungal, and antibacterial activities

    Bioaccumulation and Ecological Risk Assessment of Heavy Metals in the Soil and Wild Rats in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

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    The present study aimed to analyze the impact of environmental contamination on metal accumulation and oxidative stress in wild rats, Rattus rattus, collected from metal-polluted areas in the vicinity of Riyadh Region, Saudi Arabia.Soil samples and wild rats were collected from four locations (Dhurma, Kharj Road, Al Muzahmiyah and Laban Valley ) that differ in their extent of pollution load. However, Laban Valley was taken as a reference site in this study . High concentrations of heavy metals (cadmium, lead and zinc) were recorded in soil and tissues ( liver, kidney and hair) of animals collected from Dhurma , the site with high anthropogenic pressure. Moreover, a significant increase in the level of liver malondialdeyhde (MDA) coupled with an inhibition of the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), Glutathione Peroxidase(GPx), Glutathione Reductase (GR) and Glutathione-S-Transferase (GST) were recorded in Dhurma followed by Kharj Road and Al Muzahmiyah compared to the reference site.From these results , it could be concluded that that the selected biomarkers are useful for the assessment of pollution impacts in natural environments and the small wild animal R. rattus can be used as a bioindicator model for metal toxicity in an arid environment

    A standard tag set expounding traditional morphological features for Arabic language part-of-speech tagging

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    The SALMA Morphological Features Tag Set (SALMA, Sawalha Atwell Leeds Morphological Analysis tag set for Arabic) captures long-established traditional morphological features of grammar and Arabic, in a compact yet transparent notation. First, we introduce Part-of-Speech tagging and tag set standards for English and other European languages, and then survey Arabic Part-of-Speech taggers and corpora, and long-established Arabic traditions in analysis of morphology. A range of existing Arabic Part-of-Speech tag sets are illustrated and compared; and we review generic design criteria for corpus tag sets. For a morphologically-rich language like Arabic, the Part-of-Speech tag set should be defined in terms of morphological features characterizing word structure. We describe the SALMA Tag Set in detail, explaining and illustrating each feature and possible values. In our analysis, a tag consists of 22 characters; each position represents a feature and the letter at that location represents a value or attribute of the morphological feature; the dash ‘-’ represents a feature not relevant to a given word. The first character shows the main Parts of Speech, from: noun, verb, particle, punctuation, and Other (residual); these last two are an extension to the traditional three classes to handle modern texts. ‘Noun’ in Arabic subsumes what are traditionally referred to in English as ‘noun’ and ‘adjective’. The characters 2, 3, and 4 are used to represent subcategories; traditional Arabic grammar recognizes 34 subclasses of noun (letter 2), 3 subclasses of verb (letter 3), 21 subclasses of particle (letter 4). Others (residuals) and punctuation marks are represented in letters 5 and 6 respectively. The next letters represent traditional morphological features: gender (7), number (8), person (9), inflectional morphology (10) case or mood (11), case and mood marks (12), definiteness (13), voice (14), emphasized and non-emphasized (15), transitivity (16), rational (17), declension and conjugation (18). Finally there are four characters representing morphological information which is useful in Arabic text analysis, although not all linguists would count these as traditional features: unaugmented and augmented (19), number of root letters (20), verb root (21), types of nouns according to their final letters (22). The SALMA Tag Set is not tied to a specific tagging algorithm or theory, and other tag sets could be mapped onto this standard, to simplify and promote comparisons between and reuse of Arabic taggers and tagged corpora

    Splitting Arabic Texts into Elementary Discourse Units

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    International audienceIn this article, we propose the first work that investigates the feasibility of Arabic discourse segmentation into elementary discourse units within the segmented discourse representation theory framework. We first describe our annotation scheme that defines a set of principles to guide the segmentation process. Two corpora have been annotated according to this scheme: elementary school textbooks and newspaper documents extracted from the syntactically annotated Arabic Treebank. Then, we propose a multiclass supervised learning approach that predicts nested units. Our approach uses a combination of punctuation, morphological, lexical, and shallow syntactic features. We investigate how each feature contributes to the learning process. We show that an extensive morphological analysis is crucial to achieve good results in both corpora. In addition, we show that adding chunks does not boost the performance of our system
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