1,356 research outputs found
Optimal Pebbling in Products of Graphs
We prove a generalization of Graham's Conjecture for optimal pebbling with
arbitrary sets of target distributions. We provide bounds on optimal pebbling
numbers of products of complete graphs and explicitly find optimal -pebbling
numbers for specific such products. We obtain bounds on optimal pebbling
numbers of powers of the cycle . Finally, we present explicit
distributions which provide asymptotic bounds on optimal pebbling numbers of
hypercubes.Comment: 28 pages, 1 figur
Кераміка для техніки
The benthic invertebrates fauna of most of the saline lakes of the Sud Lipez region (Bolivia, Altiplano) has been until now quite unstudied. Samples collected during an extensive survey of 12 lakes and two small inflow rivers allow a first list of the main macroinvertebrates living in the biotopes. The heterogeneous nature of these saline lakes with their freshwater springs and phreatic inflows offers a variety of habitats to macroinvertebrates. The benthic fauna in lakes with salinity > 10 g l-1 is not so low in density but includes few species and is dominated by Orthocladinae and Podonominae larvae. In contrast, the freshwater springs and inflows are colonized by a diverse fauna with a mixture of both freshwater and saline taxa, but dominated by Elmidae and Amphipoda. The lakes are quite isolated and, apart from some cosmopolitan organisms, their fauna can be quite distinctive. (Résumé d'auteur
Heterospecific interactions and the proliferation of sexually dimorphic traits
Sexual selection is expected to promote speciation by fostering the evolution of sexual traits that minimize reproductive interactions among existing or incipient species. In species that compete for access to, or attention of, females, sexual selection fosters more elaborate traits in males compared to females. If these traits also minimize reproductive interactions with heterospecifics, then species with enhanced risk of interactions between species might display greater numbers of these sexual dimorphic characters. We tested this prediction in eight families of North American birds. In particular, we evaluated whether the number of sexually dimorphic traits was positively associated with species richness at a given site or with degree of sympatry with congeners. We found no strong evidence of enhanced sexual dimorphism with increasing confamilial species richness at a given site. We also found no overall relationship between the number of sexually dimorphic traits and overlap with congeners across these eight families. However, we found patterns consistent with our prediction within Anatidae (ducks, geese and swans) and, to a lesser degree, Parulidae (New World warblers). Our results suggest that sexually selected plumage traits in these groups potentially play a role in reproductive isolation
Methylprednisolone for acute spinal cord injury: An inappropriate standard of care
N 1987, high forceps were used to deliver a newborn girl in a hospital in Southern California. Acute SCI remains a devastating condition, and little progress has been made toward improving or curing neurological outcome. However, since the results of NASCIS II were published in 1990, the use of MP in the treatment of this disorder has become an accepted standard. 3,7 The 1-year follow-up results from NASCIS II have been reported 4 but were less publicized. Since early and 1-year results from NASCIS III have become available, acute care medical institutions are presently faced with the decision of whether to incorporate the recommended 48-hour protocol proposed in this latest study into their existing 24-hour protocols. Methods. Published results from NASCIS II and III were reviewed in the context of the original study design, including primary outcomes compared with post-hoc comparisons. Data were retroconverted from tabular form back to raw form to allow direct inspection of changes in treatment groups. These findings were further analyzed with respect to justification of practice standards. Although well-designed and well-executed, both NASCIS II and III failed to demonstrate improvement in primary outcome measures as a result of the administration of methylprednisolone. Post-hoc comparisons, although interesting, did not provide compelling data to establish a new standard of care in the treatment of patients with acute SCI. Conclusions. The use of methylprednisolone administration in the treatment of acute SCI is not proven as a standard of care, nor can it be considered a recommended treatment. Evidence of the drug's efficacy and impact is weak and may only represent random events. In the strictest sense, 24-hour administration of methylprednisolone must still be considered experimental for use in clinical SCI. Forty-eight-hour therapy is not recommended. These conclusions are important to consider in the design of future trials and in the medicolegal arena. KEY WORD
Microbiome profiling by Illumina sequencing of combinatorial sequence-tagged PCR products
We developed a low-cost, high-throughput microbiome profiling method that
uses combinatorial sequence tags attached to PCR primers that amplify the rRNA
V6 region. Amplified PCR products are sequenced using an Illumina paired-end
protocol to generate millions of overlapping reads. Combinatorial sequence
tagging can be used to examine hundreds of samples with far fewer primers than
is required when sequence tags are incorporated at only a single end. The
number of reads generated permitted saturating or near-saturating analysis of
samples of the vaginal microbiome. The large number of reads al- lowed an
in-depth analysis of errors, and we found that PCR-induced errors composed the
vast majority of non-organism derived species variants, an ob- servation that
has significant implications for sequence clustering of similar high-throughput
data. We show that the short reads are sufficient to assign organisms to the
genus or species level in most cases. We suggest that this method will be
useful for the deep sequencing of any short nucleotide region that is
taxonomically informative; these include the V3, V5 regions of the bac- terial
16S rRNA genes and the eukaryotic V9 region that is gaining popularity for
sampling protist diversity.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figure
Assessing the Health of Richibucto Estuary with the Latent Health Factor Index
The ability to quantitatively assess the health of an ecosystem is often of
great interest to those tasked with monitoring and conserving ecosystems. For
decades, research in this area has relied upon multimetric indices of various
forms. Although indices may be numbers, many are constructed based on
procedures that are highly qualitative in nature, thus limiting the
quantitative rigour of the practical interpretations made from these indices.
The statistical modelling approach to construct the latent health factor index
(LHFI) was recently developed to express ecological data, collected to
construct conventional multimetric health indices, in a rigorous quantitative
model that integrates qualitative features of ecosystem health and preconceived
ecological relationships among such features. This hierarchical modelling
approach allows (a) statistical inference of health for observed sites and (b)
prediction of health for unobserved sites, all accompanied by formal
uncertainty statements. Thus far, the LHFI approach has been demonstrated and
validated on freshwater ecosystems. The goal of this paper is to adapt this
approach to modelling estuarine ecosystem health, particularly that of the
previously unassessed system in Richibucto in New Brunswick, Canada. Field data
correspond to biotic health metrics that constitute the AZTI marine biotic
index (AMBI) and abiotic predictors preconceived to influence biota. We also
briefly discuss related LHFI research involving additional metrics that form
the infaunal trophic index (ITI). Our paper is the first to construct a
scientifically sensible model to rigorously identify the collective explanatory
capacity of salinity, distance downstream, channel depth, and silt-clay content
--- all regarded a priori as qualitatively important abiotic drivers ---
towards site health in the Richibucto ecosystem.Comment: On 2013-05-01, a revised version of this article was accepted for
publication in PLoS One. See Journal reference and DOI belo
A mesocosm experiment investigating the effects of substratum quality and wave exposure on the survival of fish eggs
In a mesocosm experiment, the attachment of bream (Abramis brama) eggs to spawning substrata with and without periphytic biofilm coverage and their subsequent survival with and without low-intensity wave exposure were investigated. Egg attachment was reduced by 73% on spawning substrata with a natural periphytic biofilm, compared to clean substrata. Overall, this initial difference in egg numbers persisted until hatching. The difference in egg numbers was even increased in the wave treatment, while it was reduced in the no-wave control treatment. Exposure to a low-intensity wave regime affected egg development between the two biofilm treatments differently. Waves enhanced egg survival on substrata without a biofilm but reduced the survival of eggs on substrata with biofilm coverage. In the treatment combining biofilm-covered substrata and waves, no attached eggs survived until hatching. In all treatments, more than 75% of the eggs became detached from the spawning substrata during the egg incubation period, an
The MHC and body odors: arbitrary effects caused by shifts of mean pleasantness
The main conclusions of the study by Jacob et al.1 published in February's issue of Nature Genetics differ from those of most previous studies of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and mate or odor preference in any animal2. It is therefore important to understand what may have caused these differences
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