246 research outputs found

    Family Background, Parental Involvement, and Environmental Influences on Taiwanese Children

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    This study examines to what extent fathers’ and mothers’ involvement in schooling is related to children’s school outcomes, taking into account differences in family social status, social structure, and children’s perceptions of their school learning environments. The findings suggested that (a) mothers were more involved in their children’s education than fathers; (b) children’s academic achievement is related to their family social status and social structure; (c) children’s self-concept is associated with their perceptions of school learning environments, parents’ aspirations, and parents’ involvement at home; and (d) the family social structure and school learning environment variables in the theoretical model mediate the relationships among family social status and children’s academic achievement and self-concept.L’objectif de cette recherche est d’étudier dans quelle mesure l’implication des parents dans l’éducation de leurs enfants est liée à la performance scolaire de ces derniers, tout en tenant compte des différences sur trois plans : le statut social de la famille, la structure sociale de la famille et la perception qu’ont les enfants de leur environnement d’apprentissage. Les résultats permettent de conclure que : (a) les mères étaient plus impliquées dans l’éducation de leurs enfants que l’étaient les pères; (b) la performance académique des enfants est liée au statut social et à la structure sociale de leur famille; (c) les concepts de soi des enfants sont liés à leurs perceptions de leurs environnements scolaires, aux aspirations de leurs parents et à l’implication des parents à la maison; et (d) la structure sociale de la famille et les variables associées à l’environnement scolaire dans le modèle théorique médient les rapports entre le statut social de la famille, la performance académique des enfants et leur concept de soi

    Templated fabrication of large area subwavelength antireflection gratings on silicon

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    We report a cheap and scalable bottom-up technique for fabricating wafer-scale, subwavelength-structured antireflection coatings on single-crystalline silicon substrates. Spin-coated monolayer colloidal crystals are utilized as shadow masks to generate metallic nanohole arrays. Inverted pyramid arrays in silicon can then be templated against nanoholes by anisotropic wet etching. The resulting subwavelength gratings greatly suppress specular reflection at normal incidence. The reflection spectra for flat silicon and the templated gratings at long wavelengths agree well with the simulated results using a rigorous coupled wave analysis model. These subwavelength gratings are of great technological importance in crystalline silicon solar cells

    The Uses of a Dual-Band Corrugated Circularly Polarized Horn Antenna for 5G Systems

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    This paper presents the development of a wide-beam width, dual-band, omnidirectional antenna for the mm-wave band used in 5G communication systems for indoor coverage. The 5G indoor environment includes features of wide space and short range. Additionally, it needs to function well under a variety of circumstances in order to carry out its diverse set of network applications. The waveguide antenna has been designed to be small enough to meet the requirements of mm-wave band and utilizes a corrugated horn to produce a wide beam width. Additionally, it is small enough to integrate with 5G communication products and is easy to manufacture. This design is simple enough to have multi-feature antenna performance and is more useful for the femtocell repeater. The corrugated circularly polarized horn antenna has been designed for two frequency bands; namely, 26.5–30 GHz for the low band and 36–40 GHz for high band. The results of this study show that return-loss is better than 18 dB for both low and high band. The peak gain is 6.1 dBi for the low band and 8.7 dBi for the high band. The beam width is 105 degrees and 77 degrees for the low band and the high band, respectively. The axial ratio is less than 5.2 dB for both low and high band. Generally, traditional circularly polarized antennas cannot meet the requirements for broadband. The designs for the antennas proposed here can meet the requirements of FR2 bandwidths. This feature limits axial ratio performance. The measurement error in the current experiment comes from the high precision control on the size of the ridge

    Bacteremic pneumonia caused by Nocardia veterana in an HIV-infected patient

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    SummaryDisseminated Nocardia veterana infection has rarely been reported. We describe the first reported case of N. veterana bacteremic pneumonia in an HIV-infected patient. The isolate was confirmed by 16S rRNA sequencing analysis. The patient initially responded well to trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole treatment (minimum inhibitory concentration 0.25μg/ml), but died of ventilator-associated pneumonia

    Location-Aware Visual Question Generation with Lightweight Models

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    This work introduces a novel task, location-aware visual question generation (LocaVQG), which aims to generate engaging questions from data relevant to a particular geographical location. Specifically, we represent such location-aware information with surrounding images and a GPS coordinate. To tackle this task, we present a dataset generation pipeline that leverages GPT-4 to produce diverse and sophisticated questions. Then, we aim to learn a lightweight model that can address the LocaVQG task and fit on an edge device, such as a mobile phone. To this end, we propose a method which can reliably generate engaging questions from location-aware information. Our proposed method outperforms baselines regarding human evaluation (e.g., engagement, grounding, coherence) and automatic evaluation metrics (e.g., BERTScore, ROUGE-2). Moreover, we conduct extensive ablation studies to justify our proposed techniques for both generating the dataset and solving the task.Comment: EMNLP 202

    Clinical meaning of age-related expression of fecal cytokeratin 19 in colorectal malignancy

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of malignant death worldwide. Because young age of onset is often considered a poor prognostic factor for CRC, it is important to identify the poor outcomes of CRC in a younger population and to consider an aggressive approach by implementing early treatment. Our aim was to specifically quantify the fecal cytokeratin 19 (CK19) transcript from CRC patients and investigate its correlation with clinical stage, tumor malignancy, and age.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The quantitation of fecal CK19 transcript was determined by a quantitative real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain in 129 CRC patients (45 younger than 60 years at diagnosis) and 85 healthy controls. The levels of CK19 protein were examined both in colonic cell lines and tissues.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The analysis of 45 younger CRC patients (age ≤ 60 years) revealed that patients at the M1 stage had significantly higher expression levels of fecal CK19 mRNA when compared with healthy controls (<it>p </it>< 0.001) and patients at the M0 stage (<it>p </it>= 0.004). Additionally, the degree of consistency between the mean level of fecal CK19 mRNA and the distant metastatic rate in each age interval was up to 89% (<it>p </it>= 0.042).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These results indicate that high levels of fecal CK19 mRNA represent a potential marker for colorectal malignancy and for aggressive treatment of younger CRC patients.</p
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