682 research outputs found
Hierarchical Masked 3D Diffusion Model for Video Outpainting
Video outpainting aims to adequately complete missing areas at the edges of
video frames. Compared to image outpainting, it presents an additional
challenge as the model should maintain the temporal consistency of the filled
area. In this paper, we introduce a masked 3D diffusion model for video
outpainting. We use the technique of mask modeling to train the 3D diffusion
model. This allows us to use multiple guide frames to connect the results of
multiple video clip inferences, thus ensuring temporal consistency and reducing
jitter between adjacent frames. Meanwhile, we extract the global frames of the
video as prompts and guide the model to obtain information other than the
current video clip using cross-attention. We also introduce a hybrid
coarse-to-fine inference pipeline to alleviate the artifact accumulation
problem. The existing coarse-to-fine pipeline only uses the infilling strategy,
which brings degradation because the time interval of the sparse frames is too
large. Our pipeline benefits from bidirectional learning of the mask modeling
and thus can employ a hybrid strategy of infilling and interpolation when
generating sparse frames. Experiments show that our method achieves
state-of-the-art results in video outpainting tasks. More results are provided
at our https://fanfanda.github.io/M3DDM/.Comment: ACM MM 2023 accepte
Homozygous mutation in DNALI1 leads to asthenoteratozoospermia by affecting the inner dynein arms
Asthenozoospermia is the most common cause of male infertility. Dynein protein arms play a crucial role in the motility of sperm flagella and defects in these proteins generally impair the axoneme structure and affect sperm flagella function. In this study, we performed whole exome sequencing for a cohort of 126 infertile patients with asthenozoospermia and identified homozygous DNALI1 mutation in one patient from a consanguineous family. This identified homozygous mutation was verified by Sanger sequencing. In silico analysis showed that this homozygous mutation is very rare, highly pathogenic, and very conserved. Sperm routine analysis confirmed that the motility of the spermatozoa from the patient significantly decreased. Further sperm morphology analysis showed that the spermatozoa from the patient exhibited multiple flagella morphological defects and a specific loss in the inner dynein arms. Fortunately, the patient was able to have his child via intracytoplasmic sperm injection treatment. Our study is the first to demonstrate that homozygous DNALI1 mutation may impair the integration of axoneme structure, affect sperm motility and cause asthenoteratozoospermia in human beings
Low temperature and temperature decline increase acute aortic dissection risk and burden: A nationwide case crossover analysis at hourly level among 40,270 patients.
Background: Acute aortic dissection (AAD) is a life-threatening cardiovascular emergency with high mortality, so identifying modifiable risk factors of AAD is of great public health significance. The associations of non-optimal temperature and temperature variability with AAD onset and the disease burden have not been fully understood. Methods: We conducted a time-stratified case-crossover study using a nationwide registry dataset from 1,868 hospitals in 313 Chinese cities. Conditional logistic regression and distributed lag models were used to investigate associations of temperature and temperature changes between neighboring days (TCN) with the hourly AAD onset and calculate the attributable fractions. We also evaluated the heterogeneity of the associations. Findings: A total of 40,270 eligible AAD cases were included. The exposure-response curves for temperature and TCN with AAD onset risk were both inverse and approximately linear. The risks were present on the concurrent hour (for temperature) or day (for TCN) and lasted for almost 1 day. The cumulative relative risks of AAD were 1.027 and 1.026 per 1°C lower temperature and temperature decline between neighboring days, respectively. The associations were significant during the non-heating period, but were not present during the heating period in cities with central heating. 23.13% of AAD cases nationwide were attributable to low temperature and 1.58% were attributable to temperature decline from the previous day. Interpretation: This is the largest nationwide study demonstrating robust associations of low temperature and temperature decline with AAD onset. We, for the first time, calculated the corresponding disease burden and further showed that central heating may be a modifier for temperature-related AAD risk and burden. Funding: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (92043301 and 92143301), Shanghai International Science and Technology Partnership Project (No. 21230780200), the Medical Research Council-UK (MR/R013349/1), and the Natural Environment Research Council UK (NE/R009384/1)
Measurement of differential cross sections for top quark pair production using the lepton plus jets final state in proton-proton collisions at 13 TeV
National Science Foundation (U.S.
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