485 research outputs found
Contribution of active hair-bundle motility to nonlinear amplification in the mammalian cochlea
The cochlea’s high sensitivity stems from the active process of outer hair cells, which possess two force-generating mechanisms: active hair-bundle motility elicited by Ca(2+) influx and somatic motility mediated by the voltage-sensitive protein prestin. Although interference with prestin has demonstrated a role for somatic motility in the active process, it remains unclear whether hair-bundle motility contributes in vivo. We selectively perturbed the two mechanisms by infusing substances into the endolymph or perilymph of the chinchilla’s cochlea and then used scanning laser interferometry to measure vibrations of the basilar membrane. Blocking somatic motility, damaging the tip links of hair bundles, or depolarizing hair cells eliminated amplification. While reducing amplification to a lesser degree, pharmacological perturbation of active hair-bundle motility diminished or eliminated the nonlinear compression underlying the broad dynamic range associated with normal hearing. The results suggest that active hair-bundle motility plays a significant role in the amplification and compressive nonlinearity of the cochlea
Exploring high repetitivity remote sensing time series for mapping and monitoring natural habitats ; A new approach combining OBIA and k-partite graphs
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Diet of larval albacore Thunnus alalunga (Bonnaterre, 1788) off Mallorca Island (NW Mediterranean)
These are the first data on the feeding of larval albacore (Thunnus alalunga Bonnaterre, 1788) in the Mediterranean. Specimens were gathered from day-time bongo-hauls conducted over the SW Mallorcan (Balearic Islands) shelf-slope. Ninety eight percent of 101 individuals ranging from 2.65 to 9.4 mm standard length (SL) contained 1 to 15 prey items per gut. Mean number of prey/gut was 3.55 ± 2.19 (SD). A positive correlation was found between larval SL and the number of prey/gut. The analysis of frequency of occurrence (F), numerical frequency (N), weight frequency (W) and the Index of Relative Importance (IRI) showed a dominance of copepodites and nauplii in the smallest size-class. As larvae grew, cladocerans and Calanoida copepodites dominated the diet, and cladocerans and copepodites were important in F, N and W. Piscivory was observed after notochord flexion and was important in terms of W. A positive correlation between mean prey size and both SL and lower jaw length (LJL) was observed. The niche breadth (S) did not vary with LJL, but the raw prey size range did. Larger copepodites, the absence of nauplii and the incorporation of fish larvae and a larger number of cladocerans in the diet accounted for the increase in mean prey size through increased larval size.DIETA DE LAS LARVAS DE ALBACORA THUNNUS ALALUNGA (BONNATERRE, 1788) EN AGUAS DE MALLORCA
(MEDITERRÁNEO NW). – Se ofrecen los primeros datos sobre la dieta de las larvas de albacora (Thunnus alalunga Bonaterre, 1788) en el Mediterráneo. Los especímenes se obtuvieron de pescas diurnas con bongo sobre la plataforma-talud al SW de Mallorca (Islas Baleares). El 98% de 101 individuos de entre 2.65 y 9.4 mm de longitud estándar (LE) contuvieron entre 1 y 15 presas por digestivo. La media de presas por larva fue de 3.55 ± 2.19 (DE), existiendo una correlación positiva entre el número de presas en el tubo digestivo y la LS. Los índices de frecuencia de ocurrencia (F), frecuencia numérica (N), frecuencia en peso (W) y el Índice de Importancia Relativa (IRI) mostraron un predominio de copepoditos y nauplius en larvas
pequeñas, disminuyendo en importancia a lo largo del crecimiento en detrimento de cladóceros y copepoditos de Calanoida, que fueron importantes en F, N y W. Se observó piscivoría, importante en W, a partir de la flexión de la notocorda. Se detectó una correlación positiva entre el tamaño medio de las presas y tanto la LS como la longitud de la maxila (LJL) de las larvas. La amplitud del nicho alimentario (S) no varió con la LJL, aunque el rango total del tamaño de las presas sí lo hizo. El aumento de talla de los copepoditos, la desaparición progresiva de mauplius y la incorporación de larvas de peces y más cladóceros explica el aumento de la talla media de las presas a lo largo del crecimiento larvario.Versión del editor1,006
Anti-oxidative, metal chelating and radical scavenging effects of protein hydrolysates from blue-spotted stingray
Purpose: To evaluate protein hydrolysates and membrane ultrafiltration fractions of blue-spotted stingray for metal chelating and radical scavenging activities, as well as protection against oxidative protein damage.Methods: Stingray protein isolates were hydrolysed with alcalase, papain and trypsin for 3 h. Alcalase hydrolysate was fractionated by membrane ultrafiltration to yield < 3, 3 - 10 and > 10 kDa fractions. Peptide contents, iron and copper chelating activity, 2, 2'-azino-bis(3- ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid) (ABTS) and hydroxyl radical scavenging activities, and protection against oxidative protein damage were evaluated.Results: Three-hour alcalase hydrolysate (3AH) had the highest peptide content and the lowest half maximal effective concentration (EC50) for ABTS radical scavenging (793.9 μg/mL), hydroxyl radical scavenging (6.93 mg/mL), iron chelating (116.4 μg/mL) and copper chelating activity (2136.9 μg/mL) among the hydrolysates. Among the fractions of 3AH, < 3 kDa fraction had the best iron chelating activity, 3 - 10 kDa fraction exhibited the highest ABTS radical scavenging activity, while > 10 kDa fraction showed the best copper chelating activity. The < 3 kDa and 3 - 10 kDa fractions had similar levels of hydroxyl radical scavenging activity to reduced glutathione. The protective effects of 3AH and < 3 kDa fraction against oxidative protein damage were comparable to that of reduced glutathione.Conclusion: Alcalase is the best protease for producing hydrolysates with metal chelating and antioxidant activities from stingray proteins. Alcalase hydrolysate, specifically its < 3 kDa fraction, has potential for future applications in antioxidant therapy and health food formulation
OCT Volumetric Data Restoration with Latent Distribution of Refractive Index
Fujii G., Yoshida Y., Muramatsu S., et al. OCT Volumetric Data Restoration with Latent Distribution of Refractive Index. Proceedings - International Conference on Image Processing, ICIP 2019-September, 764 (2019); https://doi.org/10.1109/ICIP.2019.8803737.This work proposes a novel restoration model for optical coherence tomography (OCT) data. The authors have been developing a multi-frequency swept (MS) en-face OCT device that can help understand the mechanism of the sensory epithelium in the cochlear. Although the device has merit in acquiring moving tissues, the broadened light gives a weak response; thus, some signal restorations are demanded. This work proposes the introduction of a formulation for OCT data restoration as a convex optimization problem by assuming a latent refractive index distribution. An algorithm to solve the problem with the primal-dual splitting (PDS) framework is then derived. The PDS has an advantage of requiring no inverse matrix operation and being able to handle high-dimensional data. The significance of the proposed model is verified by simulations on artificial data, followed by an experiment with the actual observation of 256 256 2000 voxels
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Effect of inorganic-to-organic mass ratio on the heterogeneous OH reaction rates of erythritol: Implications for atmospheric chemical stability of 2-methyltetrols
The 2-methyltetrols have been widely chosen as chemical tracers for isoprene-derived secondary organic aerosols. While they are often assumed to be relatively unreactive, a laboratory study reported that pure erythritol particles (an analog of 2-methyltetrols) can be heterogeneously oxidized by gas-phase OH radicals at a significant rate. This might question the efficacy of these compounds as tracers in aerosol source-apportionment studies. Additional uncertainty could arise as organic compounds and inorganic salts often coexist in atmospheric particles. To gain more insights into the chemical stability of 2-methyltetrols in atmospheric particles, this study investigates the heterogeneous OH oxidation of pure erythritol particles and particles containing erythritol and ammonium sulfate (AS) at different dry inorganic-to-organic mass ratios (IOR) in an aerosol flow tube reactor at a high relative humidity of 85 %. The same reaction products are formed upon heterogenous OH oxidation of erythritol and erythritol-AS particles, suggesting that the reaction pathways are not strongly affected by the presence and amount of AS. On the other hand, the effective OH uptake coefficient, eff, is found to decrease by about a factor of 20 from 0:450:025 to 0:020:001 when the relative abundance of AS increases and the IOR increases from 0.0 to 5.0. One likely explanation is the presence of dissolved ions slows down the reaction rates by decreasing the surface concentration of erythritol and reducing the frequency of collision between erythritol and gas-phase OH radicals at the particle surface. Hence, the heterogeneous OH reactivity of erythritol and likely 2-methyltetrols in atmospheric particles would be slower than previously thought when the salts are present. Given 2-methyltetrols often coexist with a significant amount of AS in many environments, where ambient IOR can vary from 1:89 to 250, our kinetic data would suggest that 2-methyltetrols in atmospheric particles are likely chemically stable against heterogeneous OH oxidation under humid conditions
Für ein Ende des NATO-Krieges und eine politisch-diplomatische Regelung in Afghanistan
Four visual censuses targeting Octopus vulgaris living in dens on sandy bottoms were carried out from June to October 2013 in the National Park of the Atlantic Galician Islands (NW Spain). Censuses were undertaken by scuba diving between 5 and 21 m depth in daytime. The total area swept was 13.75 ha. There were no significant differences between octopus presence in dens during open and closed fishing seasons. Depth had a significant negative relationship with occupancy. The average number of dens per 1000 m2 was 3.84±0.84 in June and 3.89 in October. The area per den was 260 m2. Den number estimations varied between 1586 and 2057. The largest number of dens (76.5%) was found between 5 and 10 m depth. Den distribution was clumped. No significant differences were found between octopus size classes (small, medium and large) and den diameter. Associate dens were observed. There were no significant differences in den diameter and shell types found around the middens. Many dens could be “permanent”. Drilling bivalve shell behaviour is discussed. The surveyed area had around 1100 individuals, mainly small specimens. No significant differences were found between octopus size and depth. Substrate, den type and food abundance and availability (especially razors Ensis arcuatus) seem to be the main factors influencing dens and octopus density and distribution. Den availability does not appear to be a limiting factor in this case. Temperature, den availability, predators and fishing pressure influencing density and distribution are discussed. Rodas inlet may be a preferential habitat for O. vulgaris individuals ranging from 200 to 2000 g, but especially small specimens ( ≤ 1000 g)
Effect of Coulomb interactions on the physical observables of graphene
We give an update of the situation concerning the effect of electron-electron
interactions on the physics of a neutral graphene system at low energies. We
revise old renormalization group results and the use of 1/N expansion to
address questions of the possible opening of a low-energy gap, and the
magnitude of the graphene fine structure constant. We emphasize the role of
Fermi velocity as the only free parameter determining the transport and
electronic properties of the graphene system and revise its renormalization by
Coulomb interactions in the light of recent experimental evidence.Comment: Proceedings of the Nobel Symposium on graphene 2010, to appear as a
special issue in Physica Script
Cohomology of bundles on homological Hopf manifold
We discuss the properties of complex manifolds having rational homology of
including those constructed by Hopf, Kodaira and
Brieskorn-van de Ven. We extend certain previously known vanishing properties
of cohomology of bundles on such manifolds.As an application we consider
degeneration of Hodge-deRham spectral sequence in this non Kahler setting.Comment: To appear in Proceedings of 2007 conference on Several complex
variables and Complex Geometry. Xiamen. Chin
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