176 research outputs found
Atypical moral judgment following traumatic brain injury
Previous research has shown an association between emotions, particularly social emotions, and moral judgments. Some studies suggested an association between blunted emotion and the utilitarian moral judgments observed in patients with prefrontal lesions. In order to investigate how prefrontal brain damage affects moral judgment, we asked a sample of 29 TBI patients (12 females and 17 males) and 41 healthy participants (16 females and 25 males) to judge 22 hypothetical dilemmas split into three different categories (non-moral, impersonal and personal moral). The TBI group presented a higher proportion of affirmative (utilitarian) responses for personal moral dilemmas when compared to controls, suggesting an atypical pattern of utilitarian judgements. We also found a negative association between the performance on recognition of social emotions and the proportion of affirmative responses on personal moral dilemmas. These results suggested that the preference for utilitarian responses in this type of dilemmas is accompanied by difficulties in social emotion recognition. Overall, our findings suggest that deontological moral judgments are associated with normal social emotion processing and that frontal lobe plays an important role in both emotion and moral judgment
Comparative study on pilling resistence standard methods
Textile fabrics are prone to develop balls of fibre on the surface, which are known as pills. The pills are formed during wear and washing, when fibres on the fabric surface “tease out” and become entangled. Under the influence of the rubbing action these loose fibres develop into small spherical bundles anchored to the fabric by a few unbroken fibres. Such a surface deterioration is generally undesirable, but the degree of consumer tolerance for a given level of pilling will depend on the garment type and fabric end use
Stacked Denoising Autoencoders and Transfer Learning for Immunogold Particles Detection and Recognition
In this paper we present a system for the detection of immunogold particles
and a Transfer Learning (TL) framework for the recognition of these immunogold
particles. Immunogold particles are part of a high-magnification method for the
selective localization of biological molecules at the subcellular level only
visible through Electron Microscopy. The number of immunogold particles in the
cell walls allows the assessment of the differences in their compositions
providing a tool to analise the quality of different plants. For its
quantization one requires a laborious manual labeling (or annotation) of images
containing hundreds of particles. The system that is proposed in this paper can
leverage significantly the burden of this manual task.
For particle detection we use a LoG filter coupled with a SDA. In order to
improve the recognition, we also study the applicability of TL settings for
immunogold recognition. TL reuses the learning model of a source problem on
other datasets (target problems) containing particles of different sizes. The
proposed system was developed to solve a particular problem on maize cells,
namely to determine the composition of cell wall ingrowths in endosperm
transfer cells. This novel dataset as well as the code for reproducing our
experiments is made publicly available.
We determined that the LoG detector alone attained more than 84\% of accuracy
with the F-measure. Developing immunogold recognition with TL also provided
superior performance when compared with the baseline models augmenting the
accuracy rates by 10\%
Traumatic brain injury patients: does frontal brain lesion influence basic emotion recognition?
Adequate emotion recognition is relevant to individuals’ interpersonal communication. Patients with frontal traumatic brain
injury (TBI) exhibit a lower response to facial emotional stimuli, influencing social interactions. In this sense, the main goal of
the current study was to assess the ability of TBI patients in recognizing basic emotions. Photographs of facial expressions of
five basic emotions (happiness, sadness, fear, anger, and surprise) were presented to 32 TBI patients and 41 healthy controls.
Emotion recognition was measured by accuracy and reaction time. Overall performance of the TBI group was poorer than
control group for emotion recognition, both in terms of accuracy and reaction time. It is suggested that TBI patients show
impairment on emotion recognition, and this relation seems to be moderated by the lesion localization.
Keywords:
emotion
recognition, basic emotions, TBI patients
Novel benzopsoralen analogues : synthesis, biological activity and molecular docking studies
New benzopsoralen analogues were synthesized and their inhibitory effect on the growth of tumourtumour cell lines (MDA MB231 and TCC-SUP) was evaluated. The in vitro antitumour activity of the new benzopsoralen analogues was discussed in terms of structure–activity relationship. Molecular docking studies with human-CYP2A6 enzymes were also carried out with the synthesized compounds to evaluate the potential of these molecules to interact with the haem group of the enzymes. The results demonstrated that the compounds that are able to interact with the iron ion of the haem cofactor and at the same time with active site Asn297 are those that have better anti-proliferative activity.To the Foundation for the Science and Technology (FCT, Portugal) for financial support to the NMR Portuguese network (PTNMR, Bruker Avance III 400-Univ. Minho). FCT and FEDER (European Fund for Regional Development)-COMPETE-QREN-EU for financial support to the Chemistry Research Centre, CQ/UM [PEst-C/QUI/UI0686/2011 (FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-022716)], to REQUIMTE (PEst-C/EQB/LA0006/2011), to the Centre of Biological Engineering (PEst-OE/EQB/LA0023/2013) and the PhD grant to C.S.F. (SFRH/BD/48636/2008). The authors also acknowledge the Institute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto (IPATIMUP, Porto, Portugal) for kindly providing the breast cancer cell lines used in this work
Synthesis of novel psoralen analogues and their in vitro antitumor activity
New tetracyclic benzofurocoumarin (benzopsoralen) analogues were synthesized and their inhibitory effect on the growth of tumor cell lines was evaluated. The human tumor cell lines used were MDA MB231 (breast adenocarcinoma), HeLa (cervix adenocarcinoma) and TCC-SUP (bladder transitional cell carcinoma). The in vitro antitumor activity of the new benzopsoralens was discussed in terms of structure–activity relationship. Molecular docking studies with human-CYP2A6 enzymes were also carried out with the synthesized compounds in order to evaluate the potential of these compounds to interact with the heme group of the enzymes. The results have demonstrated that the linear compounds have the most pronounced activity against tumor cell lines and this might be related to the better accessibility that these compounds have to the active site in relation to the angular ones that have shown in the majority of the cases multiple binding poses in the active site of CYP2A6.To the Foundation for the Science and Technology (FCT, Portugal) for financial support to the NMR portuguese network (PTNMR, Bruker Avance III 400-Univ. Minho). FCT and FEDER (European Fund for Regional Development)-COMPETE-QREN-EU for financial support to the Research Centre, CQ/UM [PEst-C/QUI/UI0686/2011 (FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-022716)], (Pest-C/EQB/LA0006/2011) and the PhD grant to C.S.F. (SFRH/BD/48636/2008). The authors also acknowledge the Institute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto (IPATIMUP, Porto, Portugal) for kindly providing the breast cancer cell line used in this work
Synthesis of novel psoralen analogues derived from 7-hydroxy-4-methylcoumarin
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) FEDER (European Fund for Regional Development)-COMPETE-QREN-EU FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-022716FEDER (European Fund for Regional Development)-COMPETE-QREN-EU FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-02271
- …