2,094 research outputs found
A New Species of the Genus Caminus (Astroporida: Geodiidae) from Korea
Caminus jejuensis n. sp was collected from depth of 20 m at Geomeunyeo, Seogwipo, Jejudo Island by a SCUBA diving from April 2004 to December 2008. This new species is similar to C. chinensis from China in the composition of spicules except for the spherasters and they differ in spicule size and growth form. This species has longer orthotriaenes and spherules, smaller sterrasters and oxyasters than those of C. chinensis. This species also has many spherasters in choanosome, but C. chinensis lacks. Morever, the new species is a massive shape with wrinkles, whereas C. chinensis is a club shape with smooth surface. Description and figures of the new species are provided
Innovation and Internationalization of Korean SMEs in the Textile and Footwear Industries
Innovation has been recognized as one of the factors that enhances firm internationalization, a vital route for the growth and survival of small and medium enterprises. Thus, it is important to identify antecedents of firm innovation and their impacts on SME internationalization for their long-term success. Accordingly, the present study examined a model of SME internationalization in which the causal relationships among entrepreneurial orientation, absorptive capacity, innovation (product, process, and marketing innovation), and internationalization were proposed. Analyses of 156 survey data collected from Korean SMEs exporting textiles, apparel, and footwear revealed that entrepreneurial orientation and absorptive capacity appeared to function as significant antecedents of product and process innovation. Among three dimensions of innovation, only process and marketing innovation positively affected internationalization. The study provides practical implications by asserting the importance of process and marketing innovation to increase firm internationalization
Speech Intelligibility Assessment of Dysarthric Speech by using Goodness of Pronunciation with Uncertainty Quantification
This paper proposes an improved Goodness of Pronunciation (GoP) that utilizes
Uncertainty Quantification (UQ) for automatic speech intelligibility assessment
for dysarthric speech. Current GoP methods rely heavily on neural
network-driven overconfident predictions, which is unsuitable for assessing
dysarthric speech due to its significant acoustic differences from healthy
speech. To alleviate the problem, UQ techniques were used on GoP by 1)
normalizing the phoneme prediction (entropy, margin, maxlogit, logit-margin)
and 2) modifying the scoring function (scaling, prior normalization). As a
result, prior-normalized maxlogit GoP achieves the best performance, with a
relative increase of 5.66%, 3.91%, and 23.65% compared to the baseline GoP for
English, Korean, and Tamil, respectively. Furthermore, phoneme analysis is
conducted to identify which phoneme scores significantly correlate with
intelligibility scores in each language.Comment: Accepted to Interspeech 202
Automatic Severity Assessment of Dysarthric speech by using Self-supervised Model with Multi-task Learning
Automatic assessment of dysarthric speech is essential for sustained
treatments and rehabilitation. However, obtaining atypical speech is
challenging, often leading to data scarcity issues. To tackle the problem, we
propose a novel automatic severity assessment method for dysarthric speech,
using the self-supervised model in conjunction with multi-task learning.
Wav2vec 2.0 XLS-R is jointly trained for two different tasks: severity level
classification and an auxilary automatic speech recognition (ASR). For the
baseline experiments, we employ hand-crafted features such as eGeMaps and
linguistic features, and SVM, MLP, and XGBoost classifiers. Explored on the
Korean dysarthric speech QoLT database, our model outperforms the traditional
baseline methods, with a relative percentage increase of 4.79% for
classification accuracy. In addition, the proposed model surpasses the model
trained without ASR head, achieving 10.09% relative percentage improvements.
Furthermore, we present how multi-task learning affects the severity
classification performance by analyzing the latent representations and
regularization effect
Clinical characteristics and treatment modalities of vulvovaginal atrophy in genitourinary syndrome of menopause
Background: Genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) causes symptoms such as vaginal dryness, dysuria, repetitive urinary tract infection and urinary urgency may affect daily activities, sexual relationships, and overall quality of life. The aim of the study was to provide the clinical characteristics of VVA patients in South Korea and the effectiveness as well as complications of the currently used low dose estrogen vaginal suppository.Methods: 52 women who has visited the outpatient gynecology clinic of the National Health Insurance Service Ilsan Hospital from January 2018 to December 2019 were recruited as study subjects. For the analysis of the clinical characteristics, subjective symptoms described by the patient’s own words such as vaginal dryness, pain, dysuria, dyspareunia, or no symptoms at all were included. Objective signs such as thinning of vaginal rugae, mucosal dryness, and mucosal fragility and the presence of petechiae were recorded.Results: Vaginal dryness was the most common complaint (92.3%). Thinning of the vaginal rugae was the most commonly noted objective sign (73.1%). Of the 52 subjects, 31 (59.6%) refrained from using the low dose estrogen vaginal suppository. The most common reason for not being able to use the suppository was the inability to insert the suppository (32.3%).Conclusions: Although patient-reported symptoms and clinical objectivity through physical examination are two components in diagnosing VVA, further study is warranted for a more objective and discriminatory diagnosis criteria for VVA. As the only available treatment modality was low dose vaginal estrogen suppository, comparison with other treatment modalities were not available
Nitric oxide directly activates calcium-activated potassium channels from rat brain reconstituted into planar lipid bilayer
AbstractUsing the planar lipid bilayer technique, we tested whether NO directly activates calcium-activated potassium (Maxi-K) channels isolated from rat brain. We used streptozotocin (STZ) as NO donor, and the NO release was controlled with light. In the presence of 100–800 μM STZ, the Maxi-K channel activity increased up to 3-fold within several tens of seconds after the light was on, and reversed to the control level several minutes after shutting off the light. Similar activation was observed with other NO donors such as S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine and sodium nitroprusside. The degree of activity increase was dependent upon the initial open probability (Pinit). When the Pinit was lower, the activity increase was greater. These results demonstrate that NO can directly affect the Maxi-K channel activity, and suggest that the Maxi-K channel might be one of the physiological targets of NO in brain
12CO(J = 1 \to 0) On-the-fly Mapping Survey of the Virgo Cluster Spirals. II. Molecular Gas Properties in Different Density Environments
This study investigated the properties of the molecular gas content and star formation activity of 17 Virgo spirals, 21 Ursa Major (UMa) spirals, 13 Pisces spiral galaxies, and a comparison sample of 11 field spiral galaxies with a spatially resolved gas and stellar distribution. The H I-deficient galaxies with a defH I > 0.4 have a similar range of CO luminosity normalized by the K-band luminosity (L CO/L K) like the field spirals, although their CO content can be smaller by up to a factor of 2. The CO, H I, and stellar disk diameters are closely related to each other for both cluster and field galaxies, and the relative diameters of the CO and H I disks grow monotonically and smoothly as the H I-to-stellar disk diameter ratio decreases. Cluster galaxies have a molecular gas consumption time up to 10 times shorter than that of the field comparison sample, suggesting a significant change in the molecular gas content and star formation activity among all the cluster galaxies, even when they do not show any sign of H I stripping. The strongly H I-stripped Virgo cluster galaxies show only a modestly reduced total gas consumption time, indicating that the star formation activity and gas consumption are a highly local (rather than global) phenomenon. Our finding is that the depletion of cold gas by ram-pressure stripping and/or starvation caused by preprocessing in each cluster environment makes galaxies evolve passively
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