3,810 research outputs found

    Responses of physiological activities and lateral root anatomical structure of Cercis glabra to waterlogging stress

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    Cercis glabra is a colour-leaf tree with excellent ornamental value, whereas its physiological and morphological responses to waterlogging stress are still unclear. A potted study was conducted to determine the effects of waterlogging stress on antioxidative enzymes (superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD), and catalase (CAT)), lipid peroxidation (in terms of malondialdehyde (MDA) content), relative electric conductivity, and osmotic substance (free proline) of leaves and aerenchyma, lignification, suberization and Casparian strip of lateral roots of C. glabra. The result showed that the SOD, POD, and CAT activity and free proline content of C. glabra were significantly increased by the different degrees of waterlogging stress compared with the non-waterlogged treatment at 8 and 12 days, and the MDA content and relative electric conductivity of C. glabra leaves were significantly increased under the different degrees of waterlogging stress compared to the non-waterlogged treatment at 16 days, and the degrees of change increased among treatments was ranked as total waterlogged > semi-waterlogged > shallow waterlogged. The lateral roots of C. glabra not only formed developed aerenchyma in the cortex but also formed suberization and Casparian strip in the endodermis under semi-waterlogged treatment at 16 days. These results implied that C. glabra had a certain tolerance to waterlogging stress, which was associated with the increasing antioxidant enzyme activity and osmotic adjustment substance content, and with the formation of aerenchyma, suberization and Casparian strip in the lateral root to adapt to the waterlogged environment

    Influence of the Feed Moisture, Rotor Speed, and Blades Gap on the Performances of a Biomass Pulverization Technology

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    Recently, a novel biomass pulverization technology was proposed by our group. In this paper, further detailed studies of this technology were carried out. The effects of feed moisture and crusher operational parameters (rotor speed and blades gap) on product particle size distribution and energy consumption were investigated. The results showed that higher rotor speed and smaller blades gap could improve the hit probability between blades and materials and enhance the impacting and grinding effects to generate finer products, however, resulting in the increase of energy consumption. Under dry conditions finer particles were much more easily achieved, and there was a tendency for the specific energy to increase with increasing feed moisture. Therefore, it is necessary for the raw biomass material to be dried before pulverization

    How do the global stock markets influence one another? Evidence from finance big data and Granger causality directed network

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    The recent financial network analysis approach reveals that the topologies of financial markets have an important influence on market dynamics. However, the majority of existing Finance Big Data networks are built as undirected networks without information on the influence directions among prices. Rather than understanding the correlations, this research applies the Granger causality test to build the Granger Causality Directed Network for 33 global major stock market indices. The paper further analyzes how the markets influence one another by investigating the directed edges in the different filtered networks. The network topology that evolves in different market periods is analyzed via a sliding window approach and Finance Big Data visualization. By quantifying the influences of market indices, 33 global major stock markets from the Granger causality network are ranked in comparison with the result based on PageRank centrality algorithm. Results reveal that the ranking lists are similar in both approaches where the U.S. indices dominate the top position followed by other American, European, and Asian indices. The lead-lag analysis reveals that there is lag effects among the global indices. The result sheds new insights on the influences among global stock markets with implications for trading strategy design, global portfolio management, risk management, and markets regulation

    Hemi(4,4′-bipyridinium) hexa­fluorido­phosphate bis­(4-amino­benzoic acid) 4,4′-bipyridine monohydrate

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    In the title compound, 0.5C10H10N2 2+·PF6 −·C10H8N2·2C7H7NO2·H2O, the cation is located on a center of symmetry. The crystal structure is determined by a complex three-dimensional network of inter­molecular O—H⋯O, O—H⋯N, N—H⋯N and N—H⋯F hydrogen bonds. π–π stacking inter­actions between neighboring pyridyl rings are also present; the centroid–centroid distance is 3.643 (5) Å. The hexa­fluoridophosphate anion is disordered over two positions with site-occupancy factors of ca 0.6 and 0.4

    Plasma level of M-CSF was independently related to 30-day survival in patients with suspected sepsis, and correlated to pathogen load: A prospective cohort study.

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    The purpose of our study was to screen the plasma cytokines to find possible indicators of disease progression and prognosis of patients with infection. With a prospective cohort study, selected patients were divided into sepsis group and non-sepsis group. Demographic and clinical information were collected. Blood samples were tested for the levels of plasma cytokines and metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS). 30-day follow-up information was recorded, and data was analyzed by SPSS22.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago, IL). A total of 95 patients were selected. After propensity score matching of age and gender, 36 patients with sepsis and 36 with non-sepsis were enrolled. 30-day follow-up data exhibited that 41 patients died and 31 survived. Patients with sepsis and 30-day death had higher plasma levels of cytokines, including macrophage-stimulating factor (M-CSF), monocyte chemoattractant protein-3 (MCP-3), etc., than patients with non-sepsis and 30-day survival, respectively. M-CSF > 8.21pg/ml was an independent risk factor for 30-day death, and the reads of pathogens in mNGS reports was positively correlated with the plasma concentrations of various cytokines, including M-CSF
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