2,377 research outputs found
Habitat and community structure modulate fish interactions in a neotropical clearwater river
Species interactions can modulate the diversity and enhance the stability of biological communities in aquatic ecosystems. Despite previous efforts to describe fish interactions in tropical rivers, the role of habitat characteristics, community structure, and trophic traits over these interactions is still poorly understood. To investigate among-habitat variation in substratum feeding pressure and agonistic interactions between fishes, we used remote underwater videos in three habitats of a clearwater river in the Central Western, Brazil. We also performed visual surveys to estimate the abundance and biomass of fishes and proposed a trophic classification to understand how these variables can affect fish interactions. Community structure was the main factor affecting the variation in the interactions among the habitats. Biomass was the main variable determining which habitat a fish will feed on, while species abundance determined with how many other species it will interact in the agonistic interaction networks for each habitat. Specific habitats are not only occupied, but also used in distinct ways by the fish community. Overall, our results demonstrate the importance of the heterogeneity of habitats in tropical rivers for the interactions performed by the fishes and how the intensity of these interactions is affected by community structure
Statistical properties of Lorenz like flows, recent developments and perspectives
We comment on mathematical results about the statistical behavior of Lorenz
equations an its attractor, and more generally to the class of singular
hyperbolic systems. The mathematical theory of such kind of systems turned out
to be surprisingly difficult. It is remarkable that a rigorous proof of the
existence of the Lorenz attractor was presented only around the year 2000 with
a computer assisted proof together with an extension of the hyperbolic theory
developed to encompass attractors robustly containing equilibria. We present
some of the main results on the statisitcal behavior of such systems. We show
that for attractors of three-dimensional flows, robust chaotic behavior is
equivalent to the existence of certain hyperbolic structures, known as
singular-hyperbolicity. These structures, in turn, are associated to the
existence of physical measures: \emph{in low dimensions, robust chaotic
behavior for flows ensures the existence of a physical measure}. We then give
more details on recent results on the dynamics of singular-hyperbolic
(Lorenz-like) attractors.Comment: 40 pages; 10 figures; Keywords: sensitive dependence on initial
conditions, physical measure, singular-hyperbolicity, expansiveness, robust
attractor, robust chaotic flow, positive Lyapunov exponent, large deviations,
hitting and recurrence times. Minor typos corrected and precise
acknowledgments of financial support added. To appear in Int J of Bif and
Chaos in App Sciences and Engineerin
Influencia del tiempo de uso de las tecnologías de información y comunicación y subprogramas sobre las habilidades informacionales en estudiantes de la Universidad del Zulia
The purpose of this research was to determine the influence of the time of use of technologies of information and communication and related subprograms in the informational skills of students at the University of the Zulia. The research was developed under a descriptive, field based methodology, with a non-experimental design of the trans-sectional type. The population was made up of 95 students in the economic and social sciences program at the LUZ COL. Nucleus. The sample was obtained by means of the Shiffer formula and made up of a group of 52 students in the subprogram of accounting, 15 students of economy, and 18 students of administration. A random sampling stratified by subprograms was used. For the compilation of information 3 instruments were designed, the first one with 8 simple questions, the second one with 29 questions and a Lickert’s scale with four alternatives, and the third one was an observation sheet. The validation of the instrument was made by three experts in the area and there was no the need to realize a reliability test of the instrument provided that they were questionnaires. The analysis of the information was realized by the statistical program SPSS Version 10, in which tests were realized for the calculations of arithmetic averages and standard deviation, as well as analysis of variance, studies of homogeneity and Tukey comparison tests in order to determine the value of the variables in the study. The results obtained showed an influence of the time of use of TIC across the dimension of frequency of hours per week,and informational skills, specifically in the aspects of access and communication of information, and also they revealed that the subprograms do not influence these skills, where students in the program possess high use of these informational skills.El propósito de esta investigación fue determinar la influencia del tiempo de uso de las tecnologías de información y comunicación y subprogramas sobre las habilidades informacionales en estudiantes de la Universidad del Zulia. La investigación fue desarrollada bajo la metodología descriptiva, de campo, con un diseño no experimental del tipo transeccional descriptivo. La población estuvo conformada por 95 estudiantes del programa de ciencias económicas y sociales del núcleo COL de LUZ. La muestra se obtuvo mediante la fórmula de Shiffer constituyéndose por una muestra de 52 estudiantes del subprograma de contaduría, 15 de economía y 18 de administración. Se utilizó un muestreo aleatorio estratificado por subprogramas. Para la recolección de datos se diseñarón 3 instrumentos, dos cuestionarios y una hoja de observación con su respectiva validación a cargo de tres expertos. El análisis de los datos se realizó a través del programa estadístico SPSS Versión 10, en el cual se realizaron pruebas para los cálculos de media aritmética y desviación estándar, además del análisis de la varianza, estudios de Homogeneidad y pruebas de comparación de Tukey y robustas, con el fin de determinar el valor de las variables en el estudio. Los resultados obtenidos mostraron una influencia del tiempo en el uso de las TIC a través de su dimensión frecuencia de horas a la semana sobre las habilidades informacionales, específicamente en los aspectos de acceso y comunicación de la información, también revelaron que los subprogramas no influyen sobre estas destrezas, donde los estudiantes del programa poseen un uso Alto de las habilidades Informacionale
Biomechanical Response of Lung Epithelial Cells to Iron Oxide and Titanium Dioxide Nanoparticles
Increasing evidence shows that lungs can be damaged by inhalation of nanoparticles (NPs) at environmental and occupational settings. Recent findings have associated the exposure to iron oxide (Fe2O3) and titanium dioxide (TiO2) - NPs widely used in biomedical and clinical research - with pulmonary oxidative stress and inflammation. Although changes on cellular mechanics could contribute to pulmonary inflammation, there is no information regarding the effects of Fe2O3 and TiO2 on alveolar epithelial cell biomechanics. The aim was to investigate the NPs-induced biomechanical effects in terms of cell stiffness and traction forces exerted by human alveolar epithelial cells. Cell Young's modulus (E) measured by atomic force microscopy in alveolar epithelial cells significantly decreased after exposure to Fe2O3 and TiO2 (∼28 and ∼25%, respectively) compared to control conditions. Moreover, both NPs induced a similar reduction in the traction forces exerted by the alveolar epithelial cells in comparison to the control conditions. Accordingly, immunofluorescence images revealed a reduction of actomyosin stress fibers in response to the exposure to NPs. However, no inflammatory response was detected. In conclusion, an acute exposure of epithelial pulmonary cells to Fe2O3 and TiO2 NPs, which was mild since it was non-cytotoxic and did not induce inflammation, modified cell biomechanical properties which could be translated into damage of the epithelial barrier integrity, suggesting that mild environmental inhalation of Fe2O3 and TiO2 NPs could not be innocuous
The importance of the ligation of the inferior thyroid artery in parathyroid function after subtotal thyroidectomy
We prospectively studied the effects of the ligation of the inferior thyroid artery (ITA) on postoperative hypoparathyroidism in 48 patients who underwent functional subtotal thyroidectomy. Patients were randomized into two groups: A, with bilateral ligation of the ITA and B, without ligation of the ITA. Parathyroid function was checked preoperatively and after surgery by clinical examination and measurement of total calcium, intact PTH, urinary calcium, and AMPc. RESULTS: A significant incidence of postoperative hypocalcemia occurred: 17% in group A and 13% in B on the 4th postoperative day. Six months later, the incidence was 5% in Group A and 0% in Group B. These differences were not statistically significant between the two groups, and neither were any of the other clinical and laboratory observations. CONCLUSION: The ligation of the ITA was not an important causal factor for the occurrence of postoperative hypocalcemia after subtotal thyroidectomy.Com o objetivo de observar os efeitos da ligadura da artéria tireoidiana inferior (ITA) no hipoparatireoidismo, 48 pacientes submetidos à tireoidectomia subtotal funcional foram estudados de forma prospectiva. Dois grupos foram randomizados, A: com a ligadura troncular bilateral da ITA e B: sem a ligadura troncular da ITA. A função paratireoidiana foi verificada no período pré-operatório e após a cirurgia através de exame clínico e dosagens de cálcio total, PTH, cálcio urinário e cAMP. Os resultados demostraram incidência importante e significativa de hipocalcemia pós-operatória, de 17% no grupo A e 13% no grupo B no 4º PO. Seis meses após, a incidência foi de 5% no grupo A e 0% no grupo B. Estas diferenças não foram estatisticamente significativas entre os dois grupos, nem nenhum dos outros dados clínicos ou laboratoriais estudados. Concluímos que a ligadura da ITA não é um fator causal importante de hipocalcemia pós-operatória após tireoidectomia subtotal
Endonuclease IV Is the Main Base Excision Repair Enzyme Involved in DNA Damage Induced by UVA Radiation and Stannous Chloride
Stannous chloride (SnCl2) and UVA induce DNA lesions through ROS. The aim of this work was to study the toxicity induced by UVA preillumination, followed by SnCl2 treatment. E. coli BER mutants were used to identify genes which could play a role in DNA lesion repair generated by these agents. The survival assays showed (i) The nfo mutant was the most sensitive to SnCl2; (ii) lethal synergistic effect was observed after UVA pre-illumination, plus SnCl2 incubation, the nfo mutant being the most sensitive; (iii) wild type and nfo mutants, transformed with pBW21 plasmid (nfo+) had their survival increased following treatments. The alkaline agarose gel electrophoresis assays pointed that (i) UVA induced DNA breaks and fpg mutant was the most sensitive; (ii) SnCl2-induced DNA strand breaks were higher than those from UVA and nfo mutant had the slowest repair kinetics; (iii) UVA + SnCl2 promoted an increase in DNA breaks than SnCl2 and, again, nfo mutant displayed the slowest repair kinetics. In summary, Nfo protects E. coli cells against damage induced by SnCl2 and UVA + SnCl2
SDSS-V Algorithms: Fast, Collision-Free Trajectory Planning for Heavily Overlapping Robotic Fiber Positioners
Robotic fiber positioner (RFP) arrays are becoming heavily adopted in wide
field massively multiplexed spectroscopic survey instruments. RFP arrays
decrease nightly operational overheads through rapid reconfiguration between
fields and exposures. In comparison to similar instruments, SDSS-V has selected
a very dense RFP packing scheme where any point in a field is typically
accessible to three or more robots. This design provides flexibility in target
assignment. However, the task of collision-less trajectory planning is
especially challenging. We present two multi-agent distributed control
strategies that are highly efficient and computationally inexpensive for
determining collision-free paths for RFPs in heavily overlapping workspaces. We
demonstrate that a reconfiguration path between two arbitrary robot
configurations can be efficiently found if "folded" state, in which all robot
arms are retracted and aligned in a lattice-like orientation, is inserted
between the initial and final states. Although developed for SDSS-V, the
approach we describe is generic and so applicable to a wide range of RFP
designs and layouts. Robotic fiber positioner technology continues to advance
rapidly, and in the near future ultra-densely packed RFP designs may be
feasible. Our algorithms are especially capable in routing paths in very
crowded environments, where we see efficient results even in regimes
significantly more crowded than the SDSS-V RFP design.Comment: To be published in the Astronomical Journa
DNA-based population density estimation of black bear at northern Mexico: A preliminary study
The analysis of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) microsatellites from hair samples obtained by the non-invasive method of traps was used to estimate the population density of black bears (Ursus americanus eremicus) in a mountain located at the county of Lampazos, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. The genotyping of bears was performed by multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using an average of two hairs for each animal. Samples were obtained with barbed wire placed at the traps, which contained food as bait. Multiplex PCR was performed with the GenomiPhiTM, G.E. kit and genotyping with an automated DNA sequencing machine (ABI 310 System). Allelic frequency, heterozygosis and exclusion probability of seven DNA microsatellites were calculated and analyzed with computer programs to determine the population density. Three of the microsatellites had a heterozygosis higher than 0.7 and the population density was calculated in at least 1 bear/km2.Keywords: Black bear, Ursus americanus, population size, DNA microsatellite, MexicoAfrican Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 12(2), pp. 103-10
Centralised and Distributed Optimization for Aggregated Flexibility Services Provision
The recent deployment of distributed battery units in prosumer premises offer
new opportunities for providing aggregated flexibility services to both
distribution system operators and balance responsible parties. The optimization
problem presented in this paper is formulated with an objective of cost
minimization which includes energy and battery degradation cost to provide
flexibility services. A decomposed solution approach with the alternating
direction method of multipliers (ADMM) is used instead of commonly adopted
centralised optimization to reduce the computational burden and time, and then
reduce scalability limitations. In this work we apply a modified version of
ADMM that includes two new features with respect to the original algorithm:
first, the primal variables are updated concurrently, which reduces
significantly the computational cost when we have a large number of involved
prosumers; second, it includes a regularization term named Proximal Jacobian
(PJ) that ensures the stability of the solution. A case study is presented for
optimal battery operation of 100 prosumer sites with real-life data. The
proposed method finds a solution which is equivalent to the centralised
optimization problem and is computed between 5 and 12 times faster. Thus,
aggregators or large-scale energy communities can use this scalable algorithm
to provide flexibility services.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Low triglyceride levels are associated with a better metabolic control in patients with type 1 diabetes
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although it is well known in the literature that high triglyceride serum (TG) levels can jeopardize the metabolic control, little is known about the influence of low TG on type 1 diabetes patients (T1D). The aim of this study is to investigate the distribution of TG serum levels in individuals with T1D and its relationship with metabolic control.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>We reviewed the medical charts of 180 patients with T1D, who were classified in groups according to TG levels: 1) low (below 50 mg/dL); 2) normal (50-150 mg/dL); 3) high (above 150 mg/dL). TG were low in 21.1% (n = 38; group 1), normal in 68.6% (n = 123; group 2) and high in 10.6% (n = 19; group 3). High TG was associated with a poor metabolic control (p < 0.001). Patients with TG lower than 50 mg/dL had a lower HbA1c than those with TG between 50 and 150 mg/dL (7.41+/-1.50% vs 8.56%+/-1.94%; p = 0.002).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>TG lower than 50 mg/dL was common and might be associated with a better metabolic control in patients with T1D, although it is not clear whether the former is the cause or consequence for the latter.</p
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