162 research outputs found

    A hierarchical semantic segmentation framework for computer vision-based bridge damage detection

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    Computer vision-based damage detection using remote cameras and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) enables efficient and low-cost bridge health monitoring that reduces labor costs and the needs for sensor installation and maintenance. By leveraging recent semantic image segmentation approaches, we are able to find regions of critical structural components and recognize damage at the pixel level using images as the only input. However, existing methods perform poorly when detecting small damages (e.g., cracks and exposed rebars) and thin objects with limited image samples, especially when the components of interest are highly imbalanced. To this end, this paper introduces a semantic segmentation framework that imposes the hierarchical semantic relationship between component category and damage types. For example, certain concrete cracks only present on bridge columns and therefore the non-column region will be masked out when detecting such damages. In this way, the damage detection model could focus on learning features from possible damaged regions only and avoid the effects of other irrelevant regions. We also utilize multi-scale augmentation that provides views with different scales that preserves contextual information of each image without losing the ability of handling small and thin objects. Furthermore, the proposed framework employs important sampling that repeatedly samples images containing rare components (e.g., railway sleeper and exposed rebars) to provide more data samples, which addresses the imbalanced data challenge

    Experimental Study of the Water Heating Performance of a Novel Tile-shaped Dual-function Solar Collector

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    AbstractSolar collectors are widely used in buildings for energy saving. However, the conventional solar collector does not match the tile roof of the building in appearance. To solve this problem, we propose a novel dual-function solar collector with tile-shaped Polymeric Methyl Methacrylate (PMMA) covers to match the roof appearance. This novel dual-function solar collector can provide hot air in winter and hot waterin other seasons, with high annual solar thermal utilization ratio. Experiments are conducted to investigate the performance of the tile-shaped collector. The efficiency of the novel tile-shaped dual-function solar collector varied from 53.2% to 69.1% in water heating mode in the test. The daily thermal efficiency of the water heating system with this tile-shaped collector system varied from 54.0% to 61.8%, while the daily thermal efficiency of the dual-function solar collector with semicircle covers varied from 44.7% to 59.2%, compared with the daily efficiency of the conventional dual-function solar collector without PMMA covers varied from 35.5% to 67.4%. It shows that the tile-shaped collector can greatly integrate the solar collector technology in to the local special feature buildings with slightly decrease of thermal efficiency

    Low Levels of p53 Protein and Chromatin Silencing of p53 Target Genes Repress Apoptosis in Drosophila Endocycling Cells

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    Apoptotic cell death is an important response to genotoxic stress that prevents oncogenesis. It is known that tissues can differ in their apoptotic response, but molecular mechanisms are little understood. Here, we show that Drosophila polyploid endocycling cells (G/S cycle) repress the apoptotic response to DNA damage through at least two mechanisms. First, the expression of all the Drosophila p53 protein isoforms is strongly repressed at a post-transcriptional step. Second, p53-regulated pro-apoptotic genes are epigenetically silenced in endocycling cells, preventing activation of a paused RNA Pol II by p53-dependent or p53-independent pathways. Over-expression of the p53A isoform did not activate this paused RNA Pol II complex in endocycling cells, but over-expression of the p53B isoform with a longer transactivation domain did, suggesting that dampened p53B protein levels are crucial for apoptotic repression. We also find that the p53A protein isoform is ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome in endocycling cells. In mitotic cycling cells, p53A was the only isoform expressed to detectable levels, and its mRNA and protein levels increased after irradiation, but there was no evidence for an increase in protein stability. However, our data suggest that p53A protein stability is regulated in unirradiated cells, which likely ensures that apoptosis does not occur in the absence of stress. Without irradiation, both p53A protein and a paused RNA pol II were pre-bound to the promoters of pro-apoptotic genes, preparing mitotic cycling cells for a rapid apoptotic response to genotoxic stress. Together, our results define molecular mechanisms by which different cells in development modulate their apoptotic response, with broader significance for the survival of normal and cancer polyploid cells in mammals

    Bioinformatics analysis of aging-related genes in thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection

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    ObjectiveThoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection (TAAD) is a cardiovascular disease with a high mortality rate. Aging is an important risk factor for TAAD. This study explored the relationship between aging and TAAD and investigated the underlying mechanisms, which may contribute to the diagnosis and treatment of TAAD.MethodsHuman aging genes were obtained from the Aging Atlas official website. Various datasets were downloaded from the GEO database:the human TAAD dataset GSE52093 were used for screening differentially expressed genes (DEGs); GSE137869, GSE102397 and GSE153434 were used as validation sets, and GSE9106 was used for diagnostic prediction of receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. Gene Ontology (GO), Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG), Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA), and protein–protein interaction (PPI) network analysis were used to screen differentially co-expressed genes from human aging genes and TAAD. Using five methods of the cytoHubba plugin in Cytoscape software (Degree, Closeness, EPC, MNC, Radiality), hub genes were identified from the differentially co-expressed genes. Single-cell RNA sequencing was used to verify the expression levels of hubgenes in different cell types of aortic tissue. ROC curves were used to further screen for diagnostic genes.ResultsA total of 70 differentially co-expressed genes were screened from human aging genes and DEGs in human TAAD dataset GSE52093. GO enrichment analysis revealed that the DEGs played a major role in regulating DNA metabolism and damaged DNA binding. KEGG enrichment analysis revealed enrichment in the longevity regulating pathway, cellular senescence, and HIF-1 signaling pathway. GSEA indicated that the DEGs were concentrated in the cell cycle and aging-related p53 signaling pathway. The five identified hubgenes were MYC, IL6, HIF1A, ESR1, and PTGS2. Single-cell sequencing of the aging rat aorta showed that hubgenes were expressed differently in different types of cells in aortic tissue. Among these five hubgenes, HIF1A and PTGS2 were validated in the aging dataset GSE102397; MYC, HIF1A and ESR1 were validated in the TAAD dataset GSE153434. The combined area under the diagnostic ROC curve (AUC) values for the five hub genes were >0.7 in the testing and training sets of the dataset GSE9106. The combined AUC values of MYC and ESR1 were equal to the combin ed AUC values of the five hub genes.ConclusionThe HIF-1 signaling pathway may play an important role in TAAD and aging. MYC and ESR1 may have diagnostic value for aging-related TAAD

    Wet-Chemical Synthesis of Surface-Passivated Halide Perovskite Microwires for Improved Optoelectronic Performance and Stability

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    One-dimensional (1D) halide perovskite materials with intrinsic high carrier mobility and long diffusion length hold great promises for high-performance optoelectronic devices, in which the passivation of the surface defects is of significance for further boosting its optoelectronic performance as well as its moisture stability. Herein, we demonstrate a simple room-temperature wet-chemical synthetic protocol for perovskite microwires with controlled morphologies and passivated surface states. This strategy allows for facile assembly of hydrophobic 1<i>H</i>,1<i>H</i>-perfluorooctylamine (PFA) molecules on the surface of the perovskite microwires owing to the coordination binding between the amino groups of PFA and Pb<sup>2+</sup>. Both steady and time-resolved photoluminescence measurements revealed that the passivation of PFA greatly benefit for the inhibition of the photogenerated carriers recombination. The constructed perovskite microwire-based photodetectors have shown increased detectivity of 4.99 × 10<sup>11</sup> jones and responsivity of 1.27 A/W (light power density of 1 mW/cm<sup>2</sup>). Moreover, the hydrophobic fluorocarbon alkyl chains endow the perovskite microwires with higher resistance toward moisture. Such coating of a water-resisting layer resulted in greatly enhanced stability of perovskite microwires under the humidity of 55 ± 5% over 30 days. We thus believe that our work is of importance for the development of 1D halide perovskite photodetectors with highly improved performance and stability

    Soluble CD83 Alleviates Experimental Autoimmune Uveitis by Inhibiting Filamentous Actin-Dependent Calcium Release in Dendritic Cells

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    Soluble CD83 (sCD83) is the extracellular domain of the membrane-bound CD83 molecule, and known for its immunoregulatory functions. Whether and how sCD83 participates in the pathogenesis of uveitis, a serious inflammatory disease of the eye that can cause visual disability and blindness, is unknown. By flow cytometry and imaging studies, we show that sCD83 alleviates experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU) through a novel mechanism. During onset and recovery of EAU, the level of sCD83 rises in the serum and aqueous humor, and CD83+ leukocytes infiltrate the inflamed eye. Systemic or topical application of sCD83 exerts a protective effect by decreasing inflammatory cytokine expression, reducing ocular and splenic leukocyte including CD4+ T cells and dendritic cells (DCs). Mechanistically, sCD83 induces tolerogenic DCs by decreasing the synaptic expression of co-stimulatory molecules and hampering the calcium response in DCs. These changes are caused by a disruption of the cytoskeletal rearrangements at the DC–T cell contact zone, leading to altered localization of calcium microdomains and suppressed T-cell activation. Thus, the ability of sCD83 to modulate DC-mediated inflammation in the eye could be harnessed to develop new immunosuppressive therapeutics for autoimmune uveitis

    The Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer perspective on regulation of interleukin-6 signaling in COVID-19-related systemic inflammatory response

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    The pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has placed an unprecedented burden on healthcare systems around the world. In patients who experience severe disease, acute respiratory distress is often accompanied by a pathological immune reaction, sometimes referred to as ‘cytokine storm’. One hallmark feature of the profound inflammatory state seen in patients with COVID-19 who succumb to pneumonia and hypoxia is marked elevation of serum cytokines, especially interferon gamma, tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 17 (IL-17), interleukin 8 (IL-8) and interleukin 6 (IL-6). Initial experience from the outbreaks in Italy, China and the USA has anecdotally demonstrated improved outcomes for critically ill patients with COVID-19 with the administration of cytokine-modulatory therapies, especially anti-IL-6 agents. Although ongoing trials are investigating anti-IL-6 therapies, access to these therapies is a concern, especially as the numbers of cases worldwide continue to climb. An immunology-informed approach may help identify alternative agents to modulate the pathological inflammation seen in patients with COVID-19. Drawing on extensive experience administering these and other immune-modulating therapies, the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer offers this perspective on potential alternatives to anti-IL-6 that may also warrant consideration for management of the systemic inflammatory response and pulmonary compromise that can be seen in patients with severe COVID-19
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