755 research outputs found
Genetic diversity among some blackberry cultivars and their relationship with Boysenberry assessed by AFLP Markers
Blackberry cultivation has increased its popularity in Turkey due to the use of more blackberries in Turkish cuisine. To provide farmers with well adapted blackberry cultivars, some blackberry cultivars including a Boysenberry genotype from North America has been planted to various geographical regions in Turkey. In this study, genetic diversity among these blackberry cultivars and their genetic relationship with Boysenberry and raspberry were analyzed using AFLP markers. Our results indicated that Blackberry cultivars from North America had narrow genetic background which can pose a problem for future breeding programs. Blackberry genotypes selected from Bursa province of Turkey shared all AFLP markers with the cultivar Chester, which suggests that they were not unique genotypes. Although genetic similarity between Boysenberry and blackberry was low, Boysenberry wasgenetically related to common blackberry cultivars. On the other hand, AFLP analysis was unable to detect any genetic relationship between Boysenberry and common raspberry cultivars from North America in this study
Rotational Dynamics of Organic Cations in CH3NH3PbI3 Perovskite
Methylammonium lead iodide (CH3NH3PbI3) based solar cells have shown
impressive power conversion efficiencies of above 20%. However, the microscopic
mechanism of the high photovoltaic performance is yet to be fully understood.
Particularly, the dynamics of CH3NH3+ cations and their impact on relevant
processes such as charge recombination and exciton dissociation are still
poorly understood. Here, using elastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering
techniques and group theoretical analysis, we studied rotational modes of the
CH3NH3+ cation in CH3NH3PbI3. Our results show that, in the cubic (T > 327K)
and tetragonal (165K < T < 327K) phases, the CH3NH3+ ions exhibit four-fold
rotational symmetry of the C-N axis (C4) along with three-fold rotation around
the C-N axis (C3), while in orthorhombic phase (T < 165K) only C3 rotation is
present. Around room temperature, the characteristic relaxation times for the
C4 rotation is found to be ps while for the C3 rotation ps. The -dependent
rotational relaxation times were fitted with Arrhenius equations to obtain
activation energies. Our data show a close correlation between the C4
rotational mode and the temperature dependent dielectric permittivity. Our
findings on the rotational dynamics of CH3NH3+ and the associated dipole have
important implications on understanding the low exciton binding energy and slow
charge recombination rate in CH3NH3PbI3 which are directly relevant for the
high solar cell performance
Cross-orientation transfer of adaptation for facial identity is asymmetric: A study using contrast-based recognition thresholds
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from upright to inverted faces more than the reverse. We investigated whether a similar asymmetry occurred for face identity, using a recently developed adaptation method based on contrast-recognition thresholds. When adapting and test stimuli shared the same orientation, aftereffects were similar for upright and inverted faces. When orientation differed, there was significant transfer of aftereffects from upright adapting to inverted test faces, but none from inverted to upright faces. We show that asymmetric cross-orientation transfer of face aftereffects generalize across two distinct face adaptation paradigms: the previously used perceptual-bias methodology and the recently introduced contrast-threshold based adaptation paradigm. These results also represent a generalization from aftereffects for face shape and gender to aftereffects for face identity. While these results are consistent with the dual-mode hypothesis, they can also be accounted for by a single population of units of varying orientation selectivity
Relationship between 1,25âdihydroxy Vitamin D levels and homeostatic model assessment insulin resistance values in obese subjects
Aim: In this study, our aim is to evaluate the insulin resistance and quality of life in obese subjects and nonobese subjects and to find out the Vitamin D (VD) status and correlations between obesity and control groups and also according to their quality of life scores.Materials and Method: The study was carried out between May and October 2013 which is the period of VD synthesis in Turkey. The participants of this study were volunteering individuals â obese and nonobese individuals defined according to the body mass index (BMI) â that did not receive any VD support in the last 1âyear and did not have any known chronic diseases. 1,25âOH VD status and homeostatic model assessment insulin resistance (HOMAâIR) values were evaluated.Results: The study population consisted of 39 individuals with normal weight (23 women, 16 men) and 66 individuals categorized as obese (51 women, 15 men). The difference in HOMAâIR and VD values between the group of obese individuals and the group of nonobese individuals was significant (P < 0.001 vs. P <0.001). The median value of HOMAâIR was higher in the obese group than in the nonobese group (P < 0.001) while the median value of VD was higher in the nonobese group than in the obese group (P < 0.001). The results regarding the relationship of BMI with HOMAâIR and VD show that there was a positive correlation between HOMAâIR and BMI (rs = 0.507; P < 0.001) and there was a negative correlation between HOMAâIR and VD (rs = â0.316; P = 0.0001).Conclusion: Given serious diseases associated with low serum VD levels such as diabetes and cardiovascular disorders as well as low side effect incidence and low cost of VD treatment, it would be a reasonable approach to identify routine serum 25(OH) D and/or 1,25âOH VD levels of obese patients and administer a treatment to patients with low levels of VD.Key words: 1,25âOH Vitamin D, insulin resistance, obesit
Learning Site-specific Styles for Multi-institutional Unsupervised Cross-modality Domain Adaptation
Unsupervised cross-modality domain adaptation is a challenging task in
medical image analysis, and it becomes more challenging when source and target
domain data are collected from multiple institutions. In this paper, we present
our solution to tackle the multi-institutional unsupervised domain adaptation
for the crossMoDA 2023 challenge. First, we perform unpaired image translation
to translate the source domain images to the target domain, where we design a
dynamic network to generate synthetic target domain images with controllable,
site-specific styles. Afterwards, we train a segmentation model using the
synthetic images and further reduce the domain gap by self-training. Our
solution achieved the 1st place during both the validation and testing phases
of the challenge. The code repository is publicly available at
https://github.com/MedICL-VU/crossmoda2023.Comment: crossMoDA 2023 challenge 1st place solutio
Determination by Landsat Satellite Imagery to Local Scales in Land and Pollution Monitoring: A Case of Buyuk Melen Watershed (Turkey)
Buyuk Melen Watershed provides drinking water from the Western Black Sea region to Istanbul province, which Buyuk and Kucuk Melen rivers, Asar, Ugur and Aksu rivers. Many settlement areas, fertilized agricultural lands, industrial plants and solid/liquid waste dumping areas have present in Melen watershed, causing substantial pollution problems. Melen watershed has been at a serious risk of pollution that a lot of settlement areas, agricultural lands, industrial facilities, and solid and liquid waste. In this study, LANDSAT satellite data was used to monitor the status of this area on the potential of the region studied. In the watershed change of 1987, 2001, 2006 and 2010 and also supported by satellite data. However, contaminants in the watershed discharges to the inner parts as shown from the satellite data have also been observed that the increase in pollution
QCD Baryogenesis
We explore a simple model which naturally explains the observed baryon
asymmetry of the Universe. In this model the strong coupling is promoted to a
dynamical quantity, which evolves through the vacuum expectation value of a
singlet scalar field that mixes with the Higgs field. In the resulting cosmic
history, QCD confinement and electroweak symmetry breaking initially occur
simultaneously close to the weak scale. The early confinement triggers the
axion to roll toward its minimum, which creates a chemical potential between
baryons and antibaryons through the interactions of the meson,
resulting in spontaneous baryogenesis. The electroweak sphalerons are sharply
switched off after confinement and the baryon asymmetry is frozen in.
Subsequently, evolution of the Higgs vacuum expectation value (which is
modified in the confined phase) triggers a relaxation to a Standard Model-like
vacuum. We identify viable regions of parameter space, and describe various
experimental probes, including current and future collider constraints, and
gravitational wave phenomenology.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures. Published versio
Single coronary artery incidence in 215,140 patients undergoing coronary angiography
Background: The aim of our study is to determine the incidence of single coronary artery (SCA). SCA is a rarely seen coronary anomaly in which the right coronary artery and the left main coronary artery arise from single aortic sinus. Although SCA has a benign course in most cases and its clinical significance is unknown, in some autopsy studies it was shown to be related to sudden cardiac death. Materials and methods: SCA patients detected among 215,140 coronary angiographies (CAG) performed between 1998 and 2013 in SANKO Hospital were included in our study. The classification of CAG was made according to the two different classifications defined by Smith and Lipton and colleagues. Results: A total number of 215,140 patients who underwent routine CAG were included in the study, and SCA was detected in 67 (0.031%) patients. There were 6 (9%) type R-I, 23 (34%) type R-II, 10 (15%) type R-III, 16 (24%) type L-I and 12 (18%) type L-II patients according to the angiographic classification. Conclusions: SCA is rarely seen during routine cardiac catheterisation and its incidence is 0.014â0.066% in angiographic series. In our study, the incidence was shown to be similar to the previous studies.
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