225 research outputs found
Extending crispness : a systematic approach to controlling water migration in bread
Crispness is one of the most important sensory characteristics of crispy bread, because consumers associate crispness with freshness, wholesomeness, and quality. This sensory sensation, however, is lost within a few hours after baking, because of a fast water uptake of the crust. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to systematically determine the mechanisms that lead to the fast loss of crispness and to reveal the parameters that are key for crispness retention. We showed that the crust acts as a barrier for water migration, causing water accumulation in the crust. Reducing this barrier property by increasing the water vapor permeability of the crust to an optimal value of 8 Ă 10â9 g/(m s Pa) resulted in breads with crispness retention that was more than eight times longer. These breads had either channels or cracks in their crust. Despite the changes of the crust properties, these breads had similar crumb softness retention compared to standard breads. The properties of the crumb also affected the water uptake of the crust, but less so than the properties of the crust. Bread containing a crumb with a lower water vapor permeability had a significantly longer crispness retention. Based on these findings, we propose a model that provides a comprehensive view of crispness loss and concluded that the increase in crust permeability is the best way to create breads with a noticeably longer crispness retention. </p
A phase II multicentre, open-label, proof-of-concept study of tasquinimod in hepatocellular, ovarian, renal cell, and gastric cancers
Background:
Tasquinimod is a small molecule with immunomodulatory, anti-angiogenic, and anti-metastatic properties that targets the tumor microenvironment. This study aimed to obtain a clinical proof of concept that tasquinimod was active and tolerable in patients with advanced solid tumors.
Patients and Methods:
This early stopping design, open-label, proof-of-concept clinical trial evaluated the clinical activity of tasquinimod in four independent cohorts of patients with advanced hepatocellular (n = 53), ovarian (n = 55), renal cell (n = 38), and gastric (n = 21) cancers. Tasquinimod was given orally every day (0.5 mg/day for at least 2 weeks, with dose increase to 1 mg/day) until radiological progression according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumor (RECIST) 1.1 criteria, intolerable toxicity, or patient withdrawal. The primary efficacy endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS) rate according to RECIST 1.1 by central assessment.
Results:
Interim futility analyses at 8Â weeks (6Â weeks for the gastric cancer cohort) found adequate clinical activity of tasquinimod only in the hepatocellular cohort and recruitment to the other three cohorts was stopped. PFS rates were 26.9% at 16Â weeks, 7.3% at 24Â weeks, 13.2% at 16Â weeks, and 9.5% at 12Â weeks, respectively, in hepatocellular, ovarian, renal cell, and gastric cancer cohorts. The pre-defined PFS threshold was not reached in the hepatocellular cancer cohort at the second stage of the trial. The most common treatment-related adverse events were fatigue (48.5%), nausea (34.1%), decreased appetite (31.7%), and vomiting (24.6%).
Conclusions:
This study failed to demonstrate clinical activity of tasquinimod in heavily pre-treated patients with advanced hepatocellular, ovarian, renal cell, and gastric cancer.
Trial registration:
NCT01743469
Astrometric Control of the Inertiality of the Hipparcos Catalog
Based on the most complete list of the results of an individual comparison of
the proper motions for stars of various programs common to the Hipparcos
catalog, each of which is an independent realization of the inertial reference
frame with regard to stellar proper motions, we redetermined the vector
of residual rotation of the ICRS system relative to the extragalactic
reference frame. The equatorial components of this vector were found to be the
following: mas yr,
mas yr, and mas yr.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Synergism between production and soil health through crop diversification, organic amendments and crop protection in wheatâbased systems
One of the critical challenges in agriculture is enhancing yield without compromising its foundation, a healthy environment and, particularly, soils. Hence, there is an urgent need to identify management practices that simultaneously support soil health and production and help achieve environmentally sound production systems.
To investigate how management influences production and soil health under realistic agronomic conditions, we conducted an onâfarm study involving 60 wheat fields managed conventionally, under noâtill or organically. We assessed 68 variables defining management, production and soil health properties. We examined how management systems and individual practices describing crop diversification, fertiliser inputs, agrochemical use and soil disturbance influenced productionâquantity and qualityâand soil health focusing on aspects ranging from soil organic matter over soil structure to microbial abundance and diversity.
Our onâfarm comparison showed marked differences between soil health and production in the current system: organic management resulted in the best overall soil health (+47%) but the most significant yield gap (â34%) compared to conventional management. Noâtill systems were generally intermediate, exhibiting a smaller yield gap (â17%) and only a marginally improved level of soil health (+5%) compared to conventional management. Yet, the overlap between management systems in production and soil health properties was considerably large.
Our results further highlight the importance of soil health for productivity by revealing positive associations between crop yield and soil health properties, particularly under conventional management, whereas factors such as weed pressure were more dominant in organic systems.
None of the three systems showed advantages in supporting productionâsoil healthâbased multifunctionality. In contrast, a crossâsystem analysis suggests that multifunctional agroecosystems could be achieved through a combination of crop diversification and organic amendments with effective crop protection.
Synthesis and applications: Our onâfarm study implies that current tradeâoffs in managing production and soil health could be overcome through more balanced systems incorporating conventional and alternative approaches. Such multifunctionality supporting systems could unlock synergies between vital ecosystem services and help achieve productive yet environmentally sound agriculture supported by healthy soils
Synergism between production and soil health through crop diversification, organic amendments and crop protection in wheat-based systems
One of the critical challenges in agriculture is enhancing yield without compromising its foundation, a healthy environment and, particularly, soils. Hence, there is an urgent need to identify management practices that simultaneously support soil health and production and help achieve environmentally sound production systems.To investigate how management influences production and soil health under realistic agronomic conditions, we conducted an on-farm study involving 60 wheat fields managed conventionally, under no-till or organically. We assessed 68 variables defining management, production and soil health properties. We examined how management systems and individual practices describing crop diversification, fertiliser inputs, agrochemical use and soil disturbance influenced production-quantity and quality-and soil health focusing on aspects ranging from soil organic matter over soil structure to microbial abundance and diversity.Our on-farm comparison showed marked differences between soil health and production in the current system: organic management resulted in the best overall soil health (+47%) but the most significant yield gap (-34%) compared to conventional management. No-till systems were generally intermediate, exhibiting a smaller yield gap (-17%) and only a marginally improved level of soil health (+5%) compared to conventional management. Yet, the overlap between management systems in production and soil health properties was considerably large.Our results further highlight the importance of soil health for productivity by revealing positive associations between crop yield and soil health properties, particularly under conventional management, whereas factors such as weed pressure were more dominant in organic systems.None of the three systems showed advantages in supporting production-soil health-based multifunctionality. In contrast, a cross-system analysis suggests that multifunctional agroecosystems could be achieved through a combination of crop diversification and organic amendments with effective crop protection.Synthesis and applications: Our on-farm study implies that current trade-offs in managing production and soil health could be overcome through more balanced systems incorporating conventional and alternative approaches. Such multifunctionality supporting systems could unlock synergies between vital ecosystem services and help achieve productive yet environmentally sound agriculture supported by healthy soils
Weight Gain in Early Life Predicts Risk of Islet Autoimmunity in Children With a First-Degree Relative With Type 1 Diabetes
OBJECTIVEâIn a prospective birth cohort study, we followed infants who had a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes to investigate the relationship between early growth and infant feeding and the risk of islet autoimmunity
Multi-objective calibration of RothC using measured carbon stocks and auxiliary data of a long-term experiment in Switzerland
Interactions between model parameters and low spatiotemporal resolution of available data mean that conventional soil organic carbon (SOC) models are often affected by equifinality, with consequent uncertainty in SOC forecasts. Estimation of belowground C inputs is another major source of uncertainty in SOC modelling. Models are usually calibrated on SOC stocks and fluxes from longâterm experiments (LTEs), whereas other point data are not used for constraining the model parameters. We used data from an agricultural longâterm (> 65 years) fertilization experiment to test a multiâobjective parameter estimation approach on the RothC model, combining SOC data from different fertilization treatments with microbial biomass, basal respiration and Zimmermannâs fractions data. We also compared two methods to estimate the belowground C inputs: a conventional scaling of belowground biomass from crop harvest yield and an alternative approach based on constant belowground C for cereals measured experimentally in the field. The resulting posterior parameter distributions still suffered from some equifinality; the most stable C pool kinetic constants and composition of exogenous organic matter were the most sensitive parameters. The use of fixed belowground C inputs for cereals improved the model performance, reducing the importance of treatmentâspecific parameters and processes. The introduction of microbial biomass and basal respiration data was effective for increasing determination of the calibration, but also suggested a change in the model structure: the microbial biomass pool, which is proportional to the C inputs in the traditional models, could be represented by different microbial physiology functions
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