24 research outputs found
A Consumer-tier based Visual-Brain Machine Interface for Augmented Reality Glasses Interactions
Objective.Visual-Brain Machine Interface(V-BMI) has provide a novel
interaction technique for Augmented Reality (AR) industries. Several
state-of-arts work has demonstates its high accuracy and real-time interaction
capbilities. However, most of the studies employ EEGs devices that are rigid
and difficult to apply in real-life AR glasseses application sceniraros. Here
we develop a consumer-tier Visual-Brain Machine Inteface(V-BMI) system
specialized for Augmented Reality(AR) glasses interactions. Approach. The
developed system consists of a wearable hardware which takes advantages of fast
set-up, reliable recording and comfortable wearable experience that
specificized for AR glasses applications. Complementing this hardware, we have
devised a software framework that facilitates real-time interactions within the
system while accommodating a modular configuration to enhance scalability. Main
results. The developed hardware is only 110g and 120x85x23 mm, which with 1
Tohm and peak to peak voltage is less than 1.5 uV, and a V-BMI based angry bird
game and an Internet of Thing (IoT) AR applications are deisgned, we
demonstrated such technology merits of intuitive experience and efficiency
interaction. The real-time interaction accuracy is between 85 and 96
percentages in a commercial AR glasses (DTI is 2.24s and ITR 65 bits-min ).
Significance. Our study indicates the developed system can provide an essential
hardware-software framework for consumer based V-BMI AR glasses. Also, we
derive several pivotal design factors for a consumer-grade V-BMI-based AR
system: 1) Dynamic adaptation of stimulation patterns-classification methods
via computer vision algorithms is necessary for AR glasses applications; and 2)
Algorithmic localization to foster system stability and latency reduction.Comment: 15 pages,10 figure
Progress on improving Agricultural Nitrogen use efficiency: UK-China viortual joint centers on Nitrogen Agronomy
Two virtual joint centers for nitrogen agronomy were established between the UK and China to facilitate collaborative research aimed at improving nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) in agricultural production systems and reducing losses of reactive N to the environment. Major focus areas were improving fertilizer NUE, use of livestock manures, soil health, and policy development and knowledge exchange. Improvements to fertilizer NUE included attention to application rate in the context of yield potential and economic considerations and the potential of improved practices including enhanced efficiency fertilizers, plastic film mulching and cropping design. Improved utilization of livestock manures requires knowledge of the available nutrient content, appropriate manure processing technologies and integrated nutrient management practices. Soil carbon, acidification and biodiversity were considered as important aspects of soil health. Both centers identified a range of potential actions that could be taken to improve N management, and the research conducted has highlighted the importance of developing a systemslevel approach to assessing improvement in the overall efficiency of N management and avoiding unintended secondary effects from individual interventions. Within this context, the management of fertilizer emissions and
livestock manure at the farm and regional scales appear to be particularly important targets for mitigation
Effect of Ketogenic Diets on Body Composition and Metabolic Parameters of Cancer Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
A ketogenic diet characterized by high fat and low carbohydrate can drive the body to produce a large number of ketone bodies, altering human metabolism. Unlike normal cells, tumor cells have difficulty in consuming ketone bodies. Therefore, the application of ketogenic diets in cancer therapy is gaining attention. However, the effect of ketogenic diets on body parameters of cancer patients is not well established. This meta-analysis aimed to summarize the effects of ketogenic diets on cancer patients in earlier controlled trials. PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library were searched for clinical trials that enrolled cancer patients who received ketogenic diets intervention. Ten controlled trials were included in this meta-analysis. Data were extracted and checked by three authors independently. Pooled effect sizes revealed a significant effect of ketogenic diets on body weight (SMD −1.83, 95% CI −2.30 to −1.35; p p < 0.00001). No significant effect on blood glucose, insulin, or lipid profile except triglycerides was found in the analysis. It had no effect on liver and kidney function except that GGT were decreased a little. There were no significant changes in IGF-1 and TNF-α related to tumor growth. Mental health improvement of cancer patients was supported by several trials. Taken together, findings in this study confirmed that the ketogenic diet was a safe approach for cancer patients reducing body weight and fat mass. In addition, cancer treatment-related indicators changed insignificantly. Ketogenic diets may be beneficial to the quality of life of cancer patients. However, intervention duration in most studies is shorter than 6 months, and the effect of a long-term ketogenic diet is still required further validation. More trials with a larger sample size are necessary to give a more conclusive result; PROSPERO registration number: CRD42021277559
Destruction of spin cycloid in (111)c-oriented BiFeO3 thin films by epitaxial constraint : enhanced polarization and release of latent magnetization
In BiFeO3 films, it has been found that epitaxial constraint results in the destruction of a space
modulated spin structure. For (111)c films, relative to corresponding bulk crystals, it is shown (i)
that the induced magnetization is enhanced at low applied fields; (ii) that the polarization is
dramatically enhanced; whereas, (iii) the lattice structure for s111dc films and crystals is nearly
identical. Our results evidence that eptiaxial constraint induces a transition between cycloidal and
homogeneous antiferromagnetic spin states, releasing a latent antiferromagnetic component locked
within the cycloid.Published versio
Anomalous polarization enhancement in a van der Waals ferroelectric material under pressure
Abstract CuInP2S6 with robust room-temperature ferroelectricity has recently attracted much attention due to the spatial instability of its Cu cations and the van der Waals (vdW) layered structure. Herein, we report a significant enhancement of its remanent polarization by more than 50% from 4.06 to 6.36 µC cm−2 under a small pressure between 0.26 to 1.40 GPa. Comprehensive analysis suggests that even though the hydrostatic pressure suppresses the crystal distortion, it initially forces Cu cations to largely occupy the interlayer sites, causing the spontaneous polarization to increase. Under intermediate pressure, the condensation of Cu cations to the ground state and the polarization increase due cell volume reduction compensate each other, resulting in a constant polarization. Under high pressure, the migration of Cu cations to the center of the S octahedron dominates the polarization decrease. These findings improve our understanding of this fascinating vdW ferroelectric material, and suggest new ways to improve its properties