59 research outputs found

    Referring to Screen Texts with Voice Assistants

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    Voice assistants help users make phone calls, send messages, create events, navigate, and do a lot more. However, assistants have limited capacity to understand their users' context. In this work, we aim to take a step in this direction. Our work dives into a new experience for users to refer to phone numbers, addresses, email addresses, URLs, and dates on their phone screens. Our focus lies in reference understanding, which becomes particularly interesting when multiple similar texts are present on screen, similar to visual grounding. We collect a dataset and propose a lightweight general-purpose model for this novel experience. Due to the high cost of consuming pixels directly, our system is designed to rely on the extracted text from the UI. Our model is modular, thus offering flexibility, improved interpretability, and efficient runtime memory utilization.Comment: 7 pages, Accepted to ACL Industry Track 202

    Dichloroacetate alleviates development of collagen II-induced arthritis in female DBA/1 mice

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    Introduction Dichloroacetate (DCA) has been in clinical use for the treatment of lactacidosis and inherited mitochondrial disorders. It has potent anti-tumor effects both in vivo and in vitro, facilitating apoptosis and inhibiting proliferation. The proapoptotic and anti-proliferative properties of DCA prompted us to investigate the effects of this compound in arthritis. Methods In the present study, we used DCA to treat murine collagen type II (CII)-induced arthritis (CIA), an experimental model of rheumatoid arthritis. DBA/1 mice were treated with DCA given in drinking water. Results Mice treated with DCA displayed much slower onset of CIA and significantly lower severity (P less than 0.0001) and much lower frequency (36% in DCA group vs. 86% in control group) of arthritis. Also, cartilage and joint destruction was significantly decreased following DCA treatment (P = 0.005). Moreover, DCA prevented arthritis-induced cortical bone mineral loss. This clinical picture was also reflected by lower levels of anti-CII antibodies in DCA-treated versus control mice, indicating that DCA affected the humoral response. In contrast, DCA had no effect on T cell-or granulocyte-mediated responses. The beneficial effect of DCA was present in female DBA/1 mice only. This was due in part to the effect of estrogen, since ovariectomized mice did not benefit from DCA treatment to the same extent as sham-operated controls (day 30, 38.7% of ovarectomized mice had arthritis vs. only 3.4% in sham-operated group). Conclusion Our results indicate that DCA delays the onset and alleviates the progression of CIA in an estrogen-dependent manner

    The Staphylococcus aureus Response to Unsaturated Long Chain Free Fatty Acids: Survival Mechanisms and Virulence Implications

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    Staphylococcus aureus is an important human commensal and opportunistic pathogen responsible for a wide range of infections. Long chain unsaturated free fatty acids represent a barrier to colonisation and infection by S. aureus and act as an antimicrobial component of the innate immune system where they are found on epithelial surfaces and in abscesses. Despite many contradictory reports, the precise anti-staphylococcal mode of action of free fatty acids remains undetermined. In this study, transcriptional (microarrays and qRT-PCR) and translational (proteomics) analyses were applied to ascertain the response of S. aureus to a range of free fatty acids. An increase in expression of the σB and CtsR stress response regulons was observed. This included increased expression of genes associated with staphyloxanthin synthesis, which has been linked to membrane stabilisation. Similarly, up-regulation of genes involved in capsule formation was recorded as were significant changes in the expression of genes associated with peptidoglycan synthesis and regulation. Overall, alterations were recorded predominantly in pathways involved in cellular energetics. In addition, sensitivity to linoleic acid of a range of defined (sigB, arcA, sasF, sarA, agr, crtM) and transposon-derived mutants (vraE, SAR2632) was determined. Taken together, these data indicate a common mode of action for long chain unsaturated fatty acids that involves disruption of the cell membrane, leading to interference with energy production within the bacterial cell. Contrary to data reported for other strains, the clinically important EMRSA-16 strain MRSA252 used in this study showed an increase in expression of the important virulence regulator RNAIII following all of the treatment conditions tested. An adaptive response by S. aureus of reducing cell surface hydrophobicity was also observed. Two fatty acid sensitive mutants created during this study were also shown to diplay altered pathogenesis as assessed by a murine arthritis model. Differences in the prevalence and clinical importance of S. aureus strains might partly be explained by their responses to antimicrobial fatty acids

    Systems: Impact on Attitude and Driving Behaviour

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    studies are carried out within broad problem areas. Research is organized in interdisciplinary research environments and doctoral studies mainly in graduate schools. Jointly, they publish the series Linköping Studies in Arts and Science. Thi

    Sociala och Emotionella Egenskaper hos Talbaserade Informationssystem för Bilar : Effekter pÄ Bilförares Attityder och Körbeteenden

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    Modern vehicles use advanced information systems in vehicles to provide and control a wide variety of functions and features. Even modest vehicles today are equipped with systems that control diverse functions from air-conditioning to high quality audio/video systems. Since driving requires the use of eyes and hands, voice interaction has become more widely used by in-vehicle systems. Due to the technical complexity involved in voice recognition, focus has been on issues of speech ecognition. Speech generation is comparatively simple, but what effect does the choice of voice have on the driver? We know from human-human interaction that social cues of the voice itself influence attitude and interpretation of information. Introducing speech based communication with the car changes the relationship between driver and vehicle. So, for in-vehicle information systems, does the spoken voice matter? The work presented in this thesis studies the effects of the voice used by invehicle systems. A series of studies were used to answer the following questions: Do the characteristics of voices used by an in-vehicle system affect driver’s attitude? Do the characteristics of voice used by an in-vehicle system affect driver’s performance? Are social reactions to voice communication the same in the car environment as in the office environment? Results show that voices do matter! Voices trigger social and emotional effects that impact both attitude and driving performance. Moreover, there is not one effective voice that works for all drivers. Therefore an in-vehicle system that knows its driver and possibly adapts to its driver can be the most effective. Finally, an interesting observation from these studies is that social reactions to voice communication in the car are different than in the office, Similarity attraction, an otherwise solid finding in social science, did not hold all studies. It is hypothesized that this difference can be related to the different kinds of task demands when driving a car or working in an office environment.Dagens fordon Ă€r oftast utrustade med avancerade informationssystem för att tillhandahĂ„lla och styra ett brett utbud av funktioner och tjĂ€nster frĂ„n klimatsystem till audio- och videosystem. Eftersom bilkörning krĂ€ver förarens ögon pĂ„ vĂ€gen och hĂ€nder pĂ„ ratten sĂ„ blir talstyrda system allt vanligare. Utveckling av talbaserade bilsystem Ă€r oftast fokuserad pĂ„ taligenkĂ€nningen, eftersom generering av förstĂ„eligt tal Ă€r jĂ€mförelsevis enkelt. Men vilken inverkan fĂ„r den valda rösten? Vi vet att röster pĂ„verkar sĂ„vĂ€l attityd som tolkning av information i kommunikation mellan mĂ€nniskor. Införandet av talbaserade bilsystem kommer dĂ€rför att förĂ€ndra relationen mellan förare och fordon. FrĂ„gan Ă€r dock hur röstens egenskaper pĂ„verkar föraren? Det arbete som presenteras hĂ€r studerar effekterna av de röster som anvĂ€nds av talsystem i bilar, dĂ€r en rad studier utförts för att besvara följande frĂ„gor: PĂ„verkar egenskaperna hos en röst i ett bilinformationsystem förarens attityd? PĂ„verkar egenskaperna hos en röst i ett bilinformationsystem förarens körförmĂ„ga? Är reaktioner pĂ„ talbaserade system i bilar desamma som för talbaserade system i hem- eller kontorsmiljö? Resultaten visar att röster pĂ„verkar förare! Röster utlöser sociala och emotionella reaktioner som pĂ„verkar bĂ„de attityd och körbeteende. En röst passar dessutom inte alla! Ett bilsystem som kĂ€nner och anpassar sig till sin förares sinnesstĂ€mning Ă€r mest effektivt. Dessutom visar resultaten att det förefaller som om reaktioner pĂ„ röster och talbaserade system inte Ă€r densamma i bilar som i hem eller kontor. SĂ„ kallad similarity-attraction – att man attraheras av personer eller egenskaper om liknar en sjĂ€lv, en faktor som vanligtivs visats spela stor roll – observerades inte i alla studier. En hypotes Ă€r att skillnad i reaktion kan vara relaterad till arten av uppgift – att köra bil stĂ€ller andra krav Ă€n arbete i hem- eller kontorsmiljö

    Anti-staphylococcal activities of lysostaphin and LytM catalytic domain

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    BACKGROUND: Lysostaphin and the catalytic domain of LytM cleave pentaglycine crossbridges of Staphylococcus aureus peptidoglycan. The bacteriocin lysostaphin is secreted by Staphylococcus simulans biovar staphylolyticus and directed against the cell walls of competing S. aureus. LytM is produced by S. aureus as a latent autolysin and can be activated in vitro by the removal of an N-terminal domain and occluding region. RESULTS: We compared the efficacies of the lysostaphin and LytM catalytic domains using a newly developed model of chronic S. aureus infected eczema. Lysostaphin was effective, like in other models. In contrast, LytM was not significantly better than control. The different treatment outcomes could be correlated with in vitro properties of the proteins, including proteolytic stability, affinity to cell wall components other than peptidoglycan, and sensitivity to the ionic milieu. CONCLUSIONS: Although lysostaphin and LytM cleave the same peptide bond in the peptidoglycan, the two enzymes have very different environmental requirements what is reflected in their contrasting performance in mouse eczema model
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