180 research outputs found
GPU Accelerated Prognostics
Prognostic methods enable operators and maintainers to predict the future performance for critical systems. However, these methods can be computationally expensive and may need to be performed each time new information about the system becomes available. In light of these computational requirements, we have investigated the application of graphics processing units (GPUs) as a computational platform for real-time prognostics. Recent advances in GPU technology have reduced cost and increased the computational capability of these highly parallel processing units, making them more attractive for the deployment of prognostic software. We present a survey of model-based prognostic algorithms with considerations for leveraging the parallel architecture of the GPU and a case study of GPU-accelerated battery prognostics with computational performance results
The Brazilian Tunable Filter Imager for the SOAR telescope
This paper presents a new Tunable Filter Instrument for the SOAR telescope.
The Brazilian Tunable Filter Imager (BTFI) is a versatile, new technology,
tunable optical imager to be used in seeing-limited mode and at higher spatial
fidelity using the SAM Ground-Layer Adaptive Optics facility at the SOAR
telescope. The instrument opens important new science capabilities for the SOAR
community, from studies of the centers of nearby galaxies and the insterstellar
medium to statistical cosmological investigations. The BTFI takes advantage of
three new technologies. The imaging Bragg Tunable Filter concept utilizes
Volume Phase Holographic Gratings in a double-pass configuration, as a tunable
filter, while a new Fabry-Perot (FP) concept involves technologies which allow
a single FP etalon to act over a large range of interference orders and
spectral resolutions. Both technologies will be in the same instrument.
Spectral resolutions spanning the range between 25 and 30,000 can be achieved
through the use of iBTF at low resolution and scanning FPs beyond R ~2,000. The
third new technologies in BTFI is the use of EMCCDs for rapid and cyclically
wavelength scanning thus mitigating the damaging effect of atmospheric
variability through data acquisition. An additional important feature of the
instrument is that it has two optical channels which allow for the simultaneous
recording of the narrow-band, filtered image with the remaining (complementary)
broad-band light. This avoids the uncertainties inherent in tunable filter
imaging using a single detector. The system was designed to supply tunable
filter imaging with a field-of-view of 3 arcmin on a side, sampled at 0.12" for
direct Nasmyth seeing-limited area spectroscopy and for SAM's visitor
instrument port for GLAO-fed area spectroscopy. The instrument has seen first
light, as a SOAR visitor instrument. It is now in comissioning phase.Comment: accepted in PAS
Biasogram: visualization of confounding technical bias in gene expression data.
Gene expression profiles of clinical cohorts can be used to identify genes that are correlated with a clinical variable of interest such as patient outcome or response to a particular drug. However, expression measurements are susceptible to technical bias caused by variation in extraneous factors such as RNA quality and array hybridization conditions. If such technical bias is correlated with the clinical variable of interest, the likelihood of identifying false positive genes is increased. Here we describe a method to visualize an expression matrix as a projection of all genes onto a plane defined by a clinical variable and a technical nuisance variable. The resulting plot indicates the extent to which each gene is correlated with the clinical variable or the technical variable. We demonstrate this method by applying it to three clinical trial microarray data sets, one of which identified genes that may have been driven by a confounding technical variable. This approach can be used as a quality control step to identify data sets that are likely to yield false positive results
Serogroups and virulence genotypes of Escherichia coli isolated from patients with sepsis
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Trees for a Beautiful Golf Course by Philip Scott (page 1) The Golf Course\u27s Worst Enemy by Charles Amorim and Hal Haskell (2) Message from the President by James f. Gilligan (2) Turf Management Club News (3) Quotes from 1962 Freshman (4) When I consider How my Night is Spent Leonard Mailloux(5) Protection of a Golf Course by Pay Lucas Jr. (6) Safety - The Superintendents\u27 Responsibility by Gerald Peters (7) Picture - Senior Stockbridge Turf Majors (8) Picture - Freshmen Stockbridge Turf Majors (9) Kansas - In the Transition Zone by Carl Beer (10 Seeds by Don Daigle (11) Picture - Dean F. P. Jeffrey, Dr. W.G. Colby and Director J. R. Beattie (12) Picture - Graduates of Winter School for Turf Managers - 1963 (13) The Effect of Last Year\u27s Weather Upon This Year\u27s Incidence of Turf Insects by John C. Schread (A-1) Labor-Management Relations by Mortimer H. Gavin S.J. (A-4) Massachusetts Labor Laws by Andrew C. SInclair (A-7) Golf Course Budget by John Espey (A-10) Golf Course Budgets by Robert St. Thomas (A-12) Purpose & Method of Budgeting by Leon St. Pierre (A-13) The Committee Chairman, His Duties by Charles Connelly (A-16) Long-range vs. Short-range Planning by George Farber (A-18) The Golf Course Superintendent, His Duties by Sherwood Moore (A-20) The Budget by Leo Kowalski (A-25) Public Relations by Leon St. Pierre (A-26) A Study of WIlt by Harry Meusal (A-28) Specifications for a Method of Putting Green Construction by Alexander Radko (A-33) Management of Kentucky Bluegrass & Grass Mixtures for Turf by F.V. Juska (A-38) What\u27s New in Fertilizers by Geoffrey S. Cornish (A-40) Methylene Ureas by Harvey Stangel (A-42) Plastic Coated Fertilizers by Louis I. Hansen (A-44) The Role of Sewage Sludge by James Latham Jr. (A-49) The Role of Ureaforms in the Turf Fertilizer Industry by Robert T. Miller (A-51) Why Low Phosphorus & Higher Potassium by L. J. Sullivan (A-55) Uptake of Potassium by Evangel Bredakis (A-59) Responsibility of Industry & Community in Land Usage & Plantings by Joseph L. Beasley (A-61) Turf & Other Planting Problems by H. Thurston Handley Jr. (A-65) Weeds & Diseases by Dominic Marini (A-67) General Maintenacne & Equipment by Lewis Hodgkinson (A-68) Fertilizer Problems by William J. Bennett (A-70) Lawn Construction & Insect Problems by herbert C. Fordham (A-71
Huntingtin mediates dendritic transport of β-actin mRNA in rat neurons
Transport of mRNAs to diverse neuronal locations via RNA granules serves an important function in regulating protein synthesis within restricted sub-cellular domains. We recently detected the Huntington's disease protein huntingtin (Htt) in dendritic RNA granules; however, the functional significance of this localization is not known. Here we report that Htt and the huntingtin-associated protein 1 (HAP1) are co-localized with the microtubule motor proteins, the KIF5A kinesin and dynein, during dendritic transport of β-actin mRNA. Live cell imaging demonstrated that β-actin mRNA is associated with Htt, HAP1, and dynein intermediate chain in cultured neurons. Reduction in the levels of Htt, HAP1, KIF5A, and dynein heavy chain by lentiviral-based shRNAs resulted in a reduction in the transport of β-actin mRNA. These findings support a role for Htt in participating in the mRNA transport machinery that also contains HAP1, KIF5A, and dynein
Vegetarian diets are associated with healthy mood states: a cross-sectional study in Seventh Day Adventist adults
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The physical health status of vegetarians has been extensively reported, but there is limited research regarding the mental health status of vegetarians, particularly with regard to mood. Vegetarian diets exclude fish, the major dietary source of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), critical regulators of brain cell structure and function. Omnivorous diets low in EPA and DHA are linked to impaired mood states in observational and experimental studies.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We examined associations between mood state and polyunsaturated fatty acid intake as a result of adherence to a vegetarian or omnivorous diet in a cross-sectional study of 138 healthy Seventh Day Adventist men and women residing in the Southwest. Participants completed a quantitative food frequency questionnaire, Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS), and Profile of Mood States (POMS) questionnaires.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Vegetarians (VEG:n = 60) reported significantly less negative emotion than omnivores (OMN:n = 78) as measured by both mean total DASS and POMS scores (8.32 ± 0.88 vs 17.51 ± 1.88, <it>p </it>= .000 and 0.10 ± 1.99 vs 15.33 ± 3.10, <it>p </it>= .007, respectively). VEG reported significantly lower mean intakes of EPA (<it>p </it>< .001), DHA (<it>p </it>< .001), as well as the omega-6 fatty acid, arachidonic acid (AA; <it>p </it>< .001), and reported higher mean intakes of shorter-chain α-linolenic acid (<it>p </it>< .001) and linoleic acid (<it>p </it>< .001) than OMN. Mean total DASS and POMS scores were positively related to mean intakes of EPA (<it>p </it>< 0.05), DHA (<it>p </it>< 0.05), and AA (<it>p </it>< 0.05), and inversely related to intakes of ALA (<it>p </it>< 0.05), and LA (<it>p </it>< 0.05), indicating that participants with low intakes of EPA, DHA, and AA and high intakes of ALA and LA had better mood.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The vegetarian diet profile does not appear to adversely affect mood despite low intake of long-chain omega-3 fatty acids.</p
A qualitative synthesis of the positive and negative impacts related to delivery of peer-based health interventions in prison settings
Background Peer interventions involving prisoners in delivering peer education and peer support in a prison setting can address health need and add capacity for health services operating in this setting. This paper reports on a qualitative synthesis conducted as part of a systematic review of prison-based peer interventions. One of the review questions aimed to investigate the positive and negative impacts of delivering peer interventions within prison settings. This covered organisational and process issues relating to peer interventions, including prisoner and staff views. Methods A qualitative synthesis of qualitative and mixed method studies was undertaken. The overall study design comprised a systematic review involving searching, study selection, data extraction and validity assessment. Studies reporting interventions with prisoners or ex-prisoners delivering education or support to prisoners resident in any type of prison or young offender institution, all ages, male and female, were included. A thematic synthesis was undertaken with a subset of studies reporting qualitative data (n=33). This involved free coding of text reporting qualitative findings to develop a set of codes, which were then grouped into thematic categories and mapped back to the review question. Results Themes on process issues and wider impacts were grouped into four thematic categories: peer recruitment training and support; organisational support; prisoner relationships; prison life. There was consistent qualitative evidence on the need for organisational support within the prison to ensure smooth implementation and on managing security risks when prisoners were involved in service delivery. A suite of factors affecting the delivery of peer interventions and the wider organisation of prison life were identified. Alongside reported benefits of peer delivery, some reasons for non-utilisation of services by other prisoners were found. There was weak qualitative evidence on wider impacts on the prison system, including better communication between staff and prisoners. Gaps in evidence were identified. Conclusions The quality of included studies limited the strength of the conclusions. The main conclusion is that peer interventions cannot be seen as independent of prison life and health services need to work in partnership with prison services to deliver peer interventions. More research is needed on long-term impacts
Enantiopure distorted ribbon-shaped nanographene combining two-photon absorptionbased upconversion and circularly polarized luminescence
Herein we describe a distorted ribbon-shaped nanographene exhibiting unprecedented combination of
optical properties in graphene-related materials, namely upconversion based on two-photon absorption
(TPA-UC) together with circularly polarized luminescence (CPL). The compound is a graphene molecule
of ca. 2 nm length and 1 nm width with edge defects that promote the distortion of the otherwise planar
lattice. The edge defects are an aromatic saddle-shaped ketone unit and a [5]carbohelicene moiety. This
system is shown to combine two-photon absorption and circularly polarized luminescence and
a remarkably long emission lifetime of 21.5 ns. The [5]helicene is responsible for the chiroptical activity
while the push–pull geometry and the extended network of sp2 carbons are factors favoring the
nonlinear absorption. Electronic structure theoretical calculations support the interpretation of the results.This project has received funding from the European Research
Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020
research and innovation program (ERC-2015-STG-677023). We
also thank the Ministerio de EconomĂa y Competitividad
(MINECO, Spain) (CTQ2015-70283-P, CTQ2014-53598-R,
MAT2014-54231-C4-1P, FIS2016-77578-R) and the “Unidad de
Excelencia QuĂmica Aplicada a Biomedicina y Medioambiente
(UGR)”. A. G. C., C. S. S. and C. M. C. acknowledge funding from
MINECO (Spain) for RyC-2013-12943, IJCI-2014-19291 and
BES-2016-076371 contracts, respectively. I. R. M. thanks UGR
(Spain) for a postdoctoral scholarship. I. M. and E. M. thank the
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia for financial support
(IF/00759/2013 and post-doc grant SFRH/BPD/75782/2011). We
thank the CSIRC-Alhambra for supercomputing facilities
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