5,407 research outputs found
Data Science as an Emerging Discipline: The Roles of iSchools in the Era of Big Data
Workshop 4b: Information Science to Data Science: New Directions for iSchools Part 2 of 2 - Session 2A: Collaborative and Interdisciplinary Nature of IS2DSHosts: Wuhan University School of Information Management and the Sungkyunkwan University Library & Information Science and Data Science DepartmentData science has been a hype in both academia and industry. It is a high time for iSchools to reflect the roles they are playing and how they can contribute in the data science space, specifically in the areas of education and research. This position paper reviews data science related teaching and research activities in tier 1 iSchools and discusses the potentials of iSchools in shaping up the future of Data science.published_or_final_versio
Methods of tropical optimization in rating alternatives based on pairwise comparisons
We apply methods of tropical optimization to handle problems of rating
alternatives on the basis of the log-Chebyshev approximation of pairwise
comparison matrices. We derive a direct solution in a closed form, and
investigate the obtained solution when it is not unique. Provided the
approximation problem yields a set of score vectors, rather than a unique (up
to a constant factor) one, we find those vectors in the set, which least and
most differentiate between the alternatives with the highest and lowest scores,
and thus can be representative of the entire solution.Comment: 9 pages, presented at the Annual Intern. Conf. of the German
Operations Research Society (GOR), Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg,
Germany, August 30 - September 2, 201
Lipoteichoic acid from an Enterococcus faecalis clinical strain promotes TNF-α expression through the NF-κB and p38 MAPK signaling pathways in differentiated THP-1 macrophages
published_or_final_versio
Flux Discharge Cascades in Various Dimensions
We study the dynamics of electric flux discharge by charged particle pair or
spherical string or membrane production in various dimensions. When electric
flux wraps at least one compact cycle, we find that a single "pair" production
event can initiate a cascading decay in real time that "shorts out" the flux
and discharges many units of it. This process arises from local dynamics in the
compact space, and so is invisible in the dimensionally-reduced truncation. It
occurs in theories as simple as the Schwinger model on a circle, and has
implications for any theory with compact dimensions and electric flux,
including string theories and the string landscape.Comment: 19+8 pages, 3 figures, 3 appendice
Nonequilibrium Dynamics in Noncommutative Spacetime
We study the effects of spacetime noncommutativity on the nonequilibrium
dynamics of particles in a thermal bath. We show that the noncommutative
thermal bath does not suffer from any further IR/UV mixing problem in the sense
that all the finite-temperature non-planar quantities are free from infrared
singularities. We also point out that the combined effect of finite temperature
and noncommutative geometry has a distinct effect on the nonequilibrium
dynamics of particles propagating in a thermal bath: depending on the momentum
of the mode of concern, noncommutative geometry may switch on or switch off
their decay and thermalization. This momentum dependent alternation of the
decay and thermalization rates could have significant impacts on the
nonequilibrium phenomena in the early universe at which spacetime
noncommutativity may be present. Our results suggest a re-examination of some
of the important processes in the early universe such as reheating after
inflation, baryogenesis and the freeze-out of superheavy dark matter
candidates.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figure
An adaptive prefix-assignment technique for symmetry reduction
This paper presents a technique for symmetry reduction that adaptively
assigns a prefix of variables in a system of constraints so that the generated
prefix-assignments are pairwise nonisomorphic under the action of the symmetry
group of the system. The technique is based on McKay's canonical extension
framework [J.~Algorithms 26 (1998), no.~2, 306--324]. Among key features of the
technique are (i) adaptability---the prefix sequence can be user-prescribed and
truncated for compatibility with the group of symmetries; (ii)
parallelizability---prefix-assignments can be processed in parallel
independently of each other; (iii) versatility---the method is applicable
whenever the group of symmetries can be concisely represented as the
automorphism group of a vertex-colored graph; and (iv) implementability---the
method can be implemented relying on a canonical labeling map for
vertex-colored graphs as the only nontrivial subroutine. To demonstrate the
practical applicability of our technique, we have prepared an experimental
open-source implementation of the technique and carry out a set of experiments
that demonstrate ability to reduce symmetry on hard instances. Furthermore, we
demonstrate that the implementation effectively parallelizes to compute
clusters with multiple nodes via a message-passing interface.Comment: Updated manuscript submitted for revie
Cryotomography of budding influenza a virus reveals filaments with diverse morphologies that mostly do not bear a genome at their distal end
Influenza viruses exhibit striking variations in particle morphology between strains. Clinical isolates of influenza A virus have been shown to produce long filamentous particles while laboratory-adapted strains are predominantly spherical. However, the role of the filamentous phenotype in the influenza virus infectious cycle remains undetermined. We used cryo-electron tomography to conduct the first three-dimensional study of filamentous virus ultrastructure in particles budding from infected cells. Filaments were often longer than 10 microns and sometimes had bulbous heads at their leading ends, some of which contained tubules we attribute to M1 while none had recognisable ribonucleoprotein (RNP) and hence genome segments. Long filaments that did not have bulbs were infrequently seen to bear an ordered complement of RNPs at their distal ends. Imaging of purified virus also revealed diverse filament morphologies; short rods (bacilliform virions) and longer filaments. Bacilliform virions contained an ordered complement of RNPs while longer filamentous particles were narrower and mostly appeared to lack this feature, but often contained fibrillar material along their entire length. The important ultrastructural differences between these diverse classes of particles raise the possibility of distinct morphogenetic pathways and functions during the infectious process
A single residue substitution in the receptor-binding domain of H5N1 hemagglutinin is critical for packaging into pseudotyped lentiviral particles
© 2012 Tang et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Background: Serological studies for influenza infection and vaccine response often involve microneutralization and hemagglutination inhibition assays to evaluate neutralizing antibodies against human and avian influenza viruses, including H5N1. We have previously characterized lentiviral particles pseudotyped with H5-HA (H5pp) and validated an H5pp-based assay as a safe alternative for high-throughput serological studies in BSL-2 facilities. Here we show that H5-HAs from different clades do not always give rise to efficient production of H5pp and the underlying mechanisms are addressed.
Methodology/Findings: We have carried out mutational analysis to delineate the molecular determinants responsible for efficient packaging of HA from A/Cambodia/40808/2005 (H5Cam) and A/Anhui/1/2005 (H5Anh) into H5pp. Our results demonstrate that a single A134V mutation in the 130-loop of the receptor binding domain is sufficient to render H5Anh the ability to generate H5Anh-pp efficiently, whereas the reverse V134A mutation greatly hampers production of H5Cam-pp. Although protein expression in total cell lysates is similar for H5Anh and H5Cam, cell surface expression of H5Cam is detected at a significantly higher level than that of H5Anh. We further demonstrate by several independent lines of evidence that the behaviour of H5Anh can be explained by a stronger binding to sialic acid receptors implicating residue 134.
Conclusions: We have identified a single A134V mutation as the molecular determinant in H5-HA for efficient incorporation into H5pp envelope and delineated the underlying mechanism. The reduced binding to sialic acid receptors as a result of the A134V mutation not only exerts a critical influence in pseudotyping efficiency of H5-HA, but has also an impact at the whole virus level. Because A134V substitution has been reported as a naturally occurring mutation in human host, our results may have implications for the understanding of human host adaptation of avian influenza H5N1 virusesThis work was supported by grants from the Research Fund for the Control of Infectious Diseases of Hong Kong (RFCID#08070972), the Area of
Excellence Scheme of the University Grants Committee (grant AoE/M-12/-06 of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China), the French Ministry of Health, and the RESPARI project of the Institut Pasteur International Network
A Self-Reference False Memory Effect in the DRM Paradigm: Evidence from Eastern and Western Samples
It is well established that processing information in relation to oneself (i.e., selfreferencing) leads to better memory for that information than processing that same information in relation to others (i.e., other-referencing). However, it is unknown whether self-referencing also leads to more false memories than other-referencing. In the current two experiments with European and East Asian samples, we presented participants the Deese-Roediger/McDermott (DRM) lists together with their own name or other people’s name (i.e., “Trump” in Experiment 1 and “Li Ming” in Experiment 2). We found consistent results across the two experiments; that is, in the self-reference condition, participants had higher true and false memory rates compared to those in the other-reference condition. Moreover, we found that selfreferencing did not exhibit superior mnemonic advantage in terms of net accuracy compared to other-referencing and neutral conditions. These findings are discussed in terms of theoretical frameworks such as spreading activation theories and the fuzzytrace theory. We propose that our results reflect the adaptive nature of memory in the sense that cognitive processes that increase mnemonic efficiency may also increase susceptibility to associative false memories
Functional role of ICAM-3 polymorphism in genetic susceptibility to SARS infection.
Key Messages 1. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) patients who are homozygous for intercellular adhesion molecule-3 (ICAM-3) Gly143 showed significant association with higher lactate dehydrogenase levels and lower total white blood cell counts on admission. 2. In vitro functional studies demonstrated low level binding of ICAM-3 to DC-SIGN and a wide variation in T-cell response of the wild-type ICAM-3 genotype.published_or_final_versio
- …
