2,411 research outputs found
Spatially distributed water-balance and meteorological data from the Wolverton catchment, Sequoia National Park, California
Accurate water-balance measurements in the seasonal, snow-dominated Sierra Nevada are important for forest and downstream water management. However, few sites in the southern Sierra offer detailed records of the spatial and temporal patterns of snowpack and soil-water storage and the fluxes affecting them, i.e., precipitation as rain and snow, snowmelt, evapotranspiration, and runoff. To explore these stores and fluxes we instrumented the Wolverton basin (2180-2750 m) in Sequoia National Park with distributed, continuous sensors. This 2006-2016 record of snow depth, soil moisture and soil temperature, and meteorological data quantifies the hydrologic inputs and storage in a mostly undeveloped catchment. Clustered sensors record lateral differences with regards to aspect and canopy cover at approximately 2250 and 2625 m in elevation, where two meteorological stations are installed. Meteorological stations record air temperature, relative humidity, radiation, precipitation, wind speed and direction, and snow depth. Data are available at hourly intervals by water year (1 October-30 September) in non-proprietary formats from online data repositories (https://doi.org/10.6071/M3S94T)
Recent advances in malaria genomics and epigenomics
Malaria continues to impose a significant disease burden on low- and middle-income countries in the tropics. However, revolutionary progress over the last 3 years in nucleic acid sequencing, reverse genetics, and post-genome analyses has generated step changes in our understanding of malaria parasite (Plasmodium spp.) biology and its interactions with its host and vector. Driven by the availability of vast amounts of genome sequence data from Plasmodium species strains, relevant human populations of different ethnicities, and mosquito vectors, researchers can consider any biological component of the malarial process in isolation or in the interactive setting that is infection. In particular, considerable progress has been made in the area of population genomics, with Plasmodium falciparum serving as a highly relevant model. Such studies have demonstrated that genome evolution under strong selective pressure can be detected. These data, combined with reverse genetics, have enabled the identification of the region of the P. falciparum genome that is under selective pressure and the confirmation of the functionality of the mutations in the kelch13 gene that accompany resistance to the major frontline antimalarial, artemisinin. Furthermore, the central role of epigenetic regulation of gene expression and antigenic variation and developmental fate in P. falciparum is becoming ever clearer. This review summarizes recent exciting discoveries that genome technologies have enabled in malaria research and highlights some of their applications to healthcare. The knowledge gained will help to develop surveillance approaches for the emergence or spread of drug resistance and to identify new targets for the development of antimalarial drugs and perhaps vaccines
Hepatic progenitor cells from adult human livers for cell transplantation.
Objective: Liver regeneration is mainly based on cellular
self-renewal including progenitor cells. Efforts have been
made to harness this potential for cell transplantation, but
shortage of hepatocytes and premature differentiated
progenitor cells from extra-hepatic organs are limiting
factors. Histological studies implied that resident cells in
adult liver can proliferate, have bipotential character and
may be a suitable source for cell transplantation.
Methods: Particular cell populations were isolated after
adequate tissue dissociation. Single cell suspensions were
purified by Thy-1 positivity selection, characterised in vitro
and transplanted in immunodeficient Pfp/Rag2 mice.
Results: Thy-1+ cells that are mainly found in the portal
tract and the surrounding parenchyma, were isolated from
surgical liver tissue with high yields from specimens with
histological signs of regeneration. Thy-1+ cell populations
were positive for progenitor (CD34, c-kit, CK14, M2PK,
OV6), biliary (CK19) and hepatic (HepPar1) markers
revealing their progenitor as well as hepatic and biliary
nature. The potential of Thy-1+ cells for differentiation in
vitro was demonstrated by increased mRNA and protein
expression for hepatic (CK18, HepPar1) and biliary (CK7)
markers during culture while progenitor markers CK14,
chromogranin A and nestin were reduced. After
transplantation of Thy-1+ cells into livers of immunodeficient
mice, engraftment was predominantly seen in the
periportal portion of the liver lobule. Analysis of in situ
material revealed that transplanted cells express human
hepatic markers HepPar1 and albumin, indicating functional
engraftment.
Conclusion: Bipotential progenitor cells from human
adult livers can be isolated using Thy-1 and might be a
potential candidate for cell treatment in liver diseases
The Sensitivity of Auditory-Motor Representations to Subtle Changes in Auditory Feedback While Singing
Singing requires accurate control of the fundamental frequency (F0) of the voice. This study examined trained singers’ and untrained singers’ (nonsingers’) sensitivity to subtle manipulations in auditory feedback and the subsequent effect on the mapping between F0 feedback and vocal control. Participants produced the consonant-vowel /ta/ while receiving auditory feedback that was shifted up and down in frequency. Results showed that singers and nonsingers compensated to a similar degree when presented with frequency-altered feedback (FAF); however, singers’ F0 values were consistently closer to the intended pitch target. Moreover, singers initiated their compensatory responses when auditory feedback was shifted up or down 6 cents or more, compared to nonsingers who began compensating when feedback was shifted up 26 cents and down 22 cents. Additionally, examination of the first 50 ms of vocalization indicated that participants commenced subsequent vocal utterances, during FAF, near the F0 value on previous shift trials. Interestingly, nonsingers commenced F0 productions below the pitch target and increased their F0 until they matched the note. Thus, singers and nonsingers rely on an internal model to regulate voice F0, but singers’ models appear to be more sensitive in response to subtle discrepancies in auditory feedback
Lazy AC-Pattern Matching for Rewriting
We define a lazy pattern-matching mechanism modulo associativity and
commutativity. The solutions of a pattern-matching problem are stored in a lazy
list composed of a first substitution at the head and a non-evaluated object
that encodes the remaining computations. We integrate the lazy AC-matching in a
strategy language: rewriting rule and strategy application produce a lazy list
of terms.Comment: In Proceedings WRS 2011, arXiv:1204.531
Subthreshold K+ production in deuteron and alpha induced nuclear reactions
Double differential cross sections have been measured for pi+ and K+ emitted
around midraidity in d+A and He+A collisions at a beam kinetic energy of 1.15
GeV/nucleon. The total pi+ yield increases by a factor of about 2 when using an
alpha projectile instead of a deuteron whereas the K+ yield increases by a
factor of about 4. According to transport calculations, the K+ enhancement
depends both on the number of hadron-hadron collisions and on the energy
available in those collisions: their center-of-mass energy increases with
increasing number of projectile nucleons
Supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on the lattice
Recent development in numerical simulations of supersymmetric Yang-Mills
(SYM) theories on the lattice is reviewed.Comment: 37 pages, 10 figure
Topographic and vegetation effects on snow accumulation in the southern Sierra Nevada: a statistical summary from lidar data
Airborne light detection and ranging (lidar) measurements carried out in the
southern Sierra Nevada in 2010 in the snow-free and peak-snow-accumulation
periods were analyzed for topographic and vegetation effects on snow
accumulation. Point-cloud data were processed from four primarily
mixed-conifer forest sites covering the main snow-accumulation zone, with a
total surveyed area of over 106 km2. The percentage of pixels with at
least one snow-depth measurement was observed to increase from 65–90 to
99 % as the sampling resolution of the lidar point cloud was increased
from 1 to 5 m. However, a coarser resolution risks undersampling the
under-canopy snow relative to snow in open areas and was estimated to
result in at least a 10 cm overestimate of snow depth over the main
snow-accumulation region between 2000 and 3000 m, where 28 % of the area had
no measurements. Analysis of the 1 m gridded data showed consistent patterns
across the four sites, dominated by orographic effects on precipitation.
Elevation explained 43 % of snow-depth variability, with slope, aspect and
canopy penetration fraction explaining another 14 % over the elevation
range of 1500–3300 m. The relative importance of the four variables varied
with elevation and canopy cover, but all were statistically significant over
the area studied. The difference between mean snow depth in open versus
under-canopy areas increased with elevation in the rain–snow transition zone
(1500–1800 m) and was about 35 ± 10 cm above 1800 m. Lidar has the
potential to transform estimation of snow depth across mountain basins, and
including local canopy effects is both feasible and important for accurate assessments
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