14,294 research outputs found

    The nature of relaxation processes revealed by the action signals of phase modulated light fields

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    We introduce a generalized theoretical approach to study action signals induced by the absorption of two-photons from two phase modulated laser beams and subject it to experimental testing for two types of photoactive samples, solution of rhodamine 6G and GaP photodiode. In our experiment, the phases of the laser beams are modulated at the frequencies f1 and f2, respectively. The action signals, such as photoluminescence and photocurrent, which result from the absorption of two photons, are isolated at frequencies m f (f=|f1-f2|, m=0,1,2...). We demonstrate that the ratio of the amplitudes of the secondary (m=2) and the primary (m=1) signals is sensitive to the type of relaxation process taken place in the system and thus can be used for its identification. Such sensitivity originates from cumulative effects of non-equilibrated state of the system between the light pulses. When the cumulative effects are small, i.e. the relaxation time is much shorter then the laser repetition rate or the laser intensity is high enough to dominate the system behavior, the ratio achieves its reference value 1:4 (the signature of two-photon absorption). In the intermediate regimes the ratio changes rapidly with the growth of intensity from zero value in case of second order relaxation process, while it demonstrates slow monotonic decrease for linear relaxation. In the article we also determine the value of the recombination rate in a GaP photodiode by using the above approach

    A reference tissue atlas for the human kidney

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    Kidney Precision Medicine Project (KPMP) is building a spatially specified human kidney tissue atlas in health and disease with single-cell resolution. Here, we describe the construction of an integrated reference map of cells, pathways, and genes using unaffected regions of nephrectomy tissues and undiseased human biopsies from 56 adult subjects. We use single-cell/nucleus transcriptomics, subsegmental laser microdissection transcriptomics and proteomics, near-single-cell proteomics, 3D and CODEX imaging, and spatial metabolomics to hierarchically identify genes, pathways, and cells. Integrated data from these different technologies coherently identify cell types/subtypes within different nephron segments and the interstitium. These profiles describe cell-level functional organization of the kidney following its physiological functions and link cell subtypes to genes, proteins, metabolites, and pathways. They further show that messenger RNA levels along the nephron are congruent with the subsegmental physiological activity. This reference atlas provides a framework for the classification of kidney disease when multiple molecular mechanisms underlie convergent clinical phenotypes

    Energy Dependence of Breakup Cross Sections of Halo Nucleus 8B and Effective Interactions

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    We study the energy dependence of the cross sections for nucleon removal of 8B projectiles. It is shown that the Glauber model calculations with nucleon-nucleon t-matrix reproduce well the energy dependence of the breakup cross sections of 8B. A DWBA model for the breakup cross section is also proposed and results are compared with those of the Glauber model. We show that to obtain an agreement between the DWBA calculations, the Glauber formalism, and the experimental data, it is necessary to modify the energy behavior of the effective interaction. In particular, the breakup potential has a quite different energy dependence than the strong absorption potential.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure

    Cerebral oximetry monitoring in extremely preterm infants

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    BACKGROUND: The use of cerebral oximetry monitoring in the care of extremely preterm infants is increasing. However, evidence that its use improves clinical outcomes is lacking. METHODS: In this randomized, phase 3 trial conducted at 70 sites in 17 countries, we assigned extremely preterm infants (gestational age, \u3c28 weeks), within 6 hours after birth, to receive treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring for the first 72 hours after birth or to receive usual care. The primary outcome was a composite of death or severe brain injury on cerebral ultrasonography at 36 weeks\u27 postmenstrual age. Serious adverse events that were assessed were death, severe brain injury, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, retinopathy of prematurity, necrotizing enterocolitis, and late-onset sepsis. RESULTS: A total of 1601 infants underwent randomization and 1579 (98.6%) were evaluated for the primary outcome. At 36 weeks\u27 postmenstrual age, death or severe brain injury had occurred in 272 of 772 infants (35.2%) in the cerebral oximetry group, as compared with 274 of 807 infants (34.0%) in the usual-care group (relative risk with cerebral oximetry, 1.03; 95% confidence interval, 0.90 to 1.18; P = 0.64). The incidence of serious adverse events did not differ between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: In extremely preterm infants, treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring for the first 72 hours after birth was not associated with a lower incidence of death or severe brain injury at 36 weeks\u27 postmenstrual age than usual care. (Funded by the Elsass Foundation and others; SafeBoosC-III ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03770741.)

    TINJAUAN DAN REKOMENDASI STANDAR KOMPETENSI KERJA NASIONAL INDONESIA QUANTITY SURVEYOR (SKKNI QS)

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    Seiring dengan perkembangan industri konstruksi di Indonesia, peran profesi quantity surveyor (QS) juga mengalami perkembangan yang signifikan. Dalam rangka memastikan kompetensi QS, diperlukan peraturan yang mengatur standar kompetensi sebagai acuan dalam menentukan keterampilan yang diperlukan oleh QS. Di Indonesia, kompetensi QS diatur dalam standar kompetensi kerja nasional Indonesia (SKKNI) berdasarkan keputusan menteri ketenagakerjaan Nomor KEP.06/MEN/I/2011. SKKNI QS ini diperlukan sebagai dasar pemetaan kompetensi yang harus dimiliki dan sekaligus dasar penyusunan program pelatihan bagi QS di Indonesia. Namun sejak diterbitkan pertama kali pada 2011, SKKNI QS belum mengalami pembaruan guna menjaga kualitas dan relevansi tenaga kerja QS dalam menghadapi persaingan global. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengkaji dan memberikan rekomendasi terhadap SKKNI QS melalui pendekatan desktop study dan meta-analysis. Dengan demikian, penelitian ini berusaha mengidentifikasi pembaruan unit kompetensi apa yang perlu dilakukan pada SKKNI QS agar profesi QS Indonesia terus berkembang dan mampu bersaing secara global. Hasil analisis merekomendasikan tiga belas unit kompetensi tambahan yang perlu dimasukkan ke dalam SKKNI QS baru. Dengan demikian, penelitian ini berkontribusi dalam pengembangan profesi QS di Indonesia melalui pembaruan SKKNI sebagai instrumen krusial dalam menjaga kualifikasi dan kompetensi QS di Indonesia

    Dietary non-esterified oleic Acid decreases the jejunal levels of anorectic N-acylethanolamines

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    BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Oleoylethanolamide and several other N-acylethanolamines (NAEs), e.g. linoleoylethanolamide and palmitoylethanolamide, have anorectic properties in rats, and prolonged intake of a high-fat diet decreases the levels of the anorectic NAEs in jejunum. Jejunal anorectic NAEs are thought to add to the control of food intake via activation of PPARalpha and the vagus nerve. The fat-induced decrease may explain part of the hyperphagic effect of high-fat diets. In the present study, we investigated 1) whether the reduced levels of anorectic NAEs were reversible in rats, 2) whether mice respond to dietary fat (olive oil) by reducing levels of anorectic NAEs, and 3) whether dietary non-esterified oleic acid also can decrease levels of anorectic NAEs in mice. We are searching for the fat sensor in the intestine, which mediates the decreased levels of anorectic NAEs. METHODS: Male rats and mice were fed diets high (45 energy% fat) in either triacylglycerol or free fatty acids for 7-14 days, and jejunal NAE and N-acylphosphatidylethanolamine (NAPE) levels were determined by liquid-chromatography mass spectrometry. RESULTS: In rats, reduced levels of anorectic NAEs could be reversed after 3 days from changing the diet from high-fat to chow. Corresponding NAPE levels tended to show the same changes. In mice, jejunal levels of anorectic NAEs were also reduced when fed a high-fat diet. In addition, we found that non-esterified oleic acid were also able to reduce levels of anorectic NAEs in mice. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that the down-regulation of the jejunal level of anorectic NAEs by dietary fat is not restricted to rats, and that the fatty acid component oleic acid, in dietary olive oil may be sufficient to mediate this regulation. Thus, a fatty acid sensor may mediate this effect of dietary fat

    Boundary element formulations for the numerical solution of two-dimensional diffusion problems with variable coefficients

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    This is the post-print version of the final paper published in Computers & Mathematics with Applications. The published article is available from the link below. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. Copyright @ 2012 Elsevier B.V.This paper presents new formulations of the radial integration boundary integral equation (RIBIE) and the radial integration boundary integro-differential equation (RIBIDE) methods for the numerical solution of two-dimensional diffusion problems with variable coefficients. The methods use either a specially constructed parametrix (Levi function) or the standard fundamental solution for the Laplace equation to reduce the boundary-value problem (BVP) to a boundary–domain integral equation (BDIE) or boundary–domain integro-differential equation (BDIDE). The radial integration method (RIM) is then employed to convert the domain integrals arising in both BDIE and BDIDE methods into equivalent boundary integrals. The resulting formulations lead to pure boundary integral and integro-differential equations with no domain integrals. Furthermore, a subdomain decomposition technique (SDBDIE) is proposed, which leads to a sparse system of linear equations, thus avoiding the need to calculate a large number of domain integrals. Numerical examples are presented for several simple problems, for which exact solutions are available, to demonstrate the efficiency of the proposed approaches
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