2,921 research outputs found

    Increased Frequency of Down Syndrome in Young Mothers of Rural Population

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    Studies were conducted in 222 children clinically diagnosed with Down syndrome (properly diagnosed on the basis of symptoms by Dr. Chandraleka, Pediatrician) to understand the frequency and type distribution of such cases; and to determine the origin of extrachromosome in the 21st pair. Clinical diagnosis was confirmed with karyotyping. Results have shown that nondisjunction or pure trisomy 21 appears to be the main cytogenetic cause; with a percentage frequency of 96.4%; comprising of 114 boys (53.3%) and 108 girls (46.7%). Also the cytological and molecular analysis result revealed that Down syndrome was increased in the young Indian mothers especially in the rural areas.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1Department of Advanced Zoology & Biotechnology, Auxillium College, Vellore2School of Bio Sciences & Technology, VIT University, Vellore – 632014*Corresponding author, Email: [email protected] Please Cite This Article As:  R. Regina Mary, K.M. Gothandam, T. Lazar Mathew. 2010. Increased Frequency of Down Syndrome in Young Mothers of Rural Population. Journal of Ecobiotechnology 2/3: 40-44

    Critical temperature of superconductor/ferromagnet bilayers

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    Superconductor/ferromagnet bilayers are known to exhibit nontrivial dependence of the critical temperature T_c on the thickness d_f of the ferromagnetic layer. We develop a general method for investigation of T_c as a function of the bilayer's parameters. It is shown that interference of quasiparticles makes T_c(d_f) a nonmonotonic function. The results are in good agreement with experiment. Our method also applies to multilayered structures.Comment: 4 pages, 2 EPS figures; the style file jetpl.cls is included. Version 2: typos correcte

    HATS-17b: A Transiting Compact Warm Jupiter in a 16.3 Days Circular Orbit

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    We report the discovery of HATS-17b, the first transiting warm Jupiter of the HATSouth network. HATS-17b transits its bright (V=12.4) G-type (M_{\star}=1.131 ±\pm 0.030 M_{\odot}, R_{\star}=1.0910.046+0.070^{+0.070}_{-0.046} R_{\star}) metal-rich ([Fe/H]=+0.3 dex) host star in a circular orbit with a period of P=16.2546 days. HATS-17b has a very compact radius of 0.777 ±\pm 0.056 RJ_J given its Jupiter-like mass of 1.338 ±\pm 0.065 MJ_J. Up to 50% of the mass of HATS-17b may be composed of heavy elements in order to explain its high density with current models of planetary structure. HATS-17b is the longest period transiting planet discovered to date by a ground-based photometric survey, and is one of the brightest transiting warm Jupiter systems known. The brightness of HATS-17b will allow detailed follow-up observations to characterize the orbital geometry of the system and the atmosphere of the planet.Comment: 12 page, 8 figures, submitted to A

    Local density of states in superconductor-strong ferromagnet structures

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    We study the dependence of the local density of states (LDOS) on coordinates for a superconductor-ferromagnet (S/F) bilayer and a S/F/S structure assuming that the exchange energy h in the ferromagnet is sufficiently large: >>1,% h\tau >>1, where τ\tau is the elastic relaxation time. This limit cannot be described by the Usadel equation and we solve the more general Eilenberger equation. We demonstrate that, in the main approximation in the parameter (hτ)1% (h\tau)^{-1}, the proximity effect does not lead to a modification of the LDOS in the S/F system and a non-trivial dependence on coordinates shows up in next orders in (hτ)1.(h\tau) ^{-1}. In the S/F/S sandwich the correction to the LDOS is nonzero in the main approximation and depends on the phase difference between the superconductors. We also calculate the superconducting critical temperature TcT_{c} for the bilayered system and show that it does not depend on the exchange energy of the ferromagnet in the limit of large h and a thick F layer.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure

    USE ORGANIC FERTILIZERS IN THE MODERN AGRICULTURE

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    The paper presents a synthesis of soil fertilization technologies, practices, methods, and measures that can be applied by each farmer within his farm, depending on the local specificity, respecting the environmental protection. Intensive farming with high yields requires large amounts of nutrients that the Romanian soil, even the most fertile, cannot fully provide, being absolutely necessary to supplement it with fertilizers.A part of the applied fertilizers are not consumed by crops and can be lost through surface leakage or infiltration water, which can result in aquatic system pollution. Intensification of agriculture by using both organic and mineral nitrogen-based fertilizers has caused surface waters eutrophication and the accumulation of nitrates in drinking water sources, which can generate serious effects on human and animal health.Adopting the environment-friendly agricultural technologies means both increasing the farmers' interest in the use of organic fertilizers and, implicitly, increasing the requested quantities.The manure used for centuries in agriculture obviously cannot ensure this necessity, which has led to intense research to find new compostable raw materials for the production of new fertilizers to provide nutrient needs for crops, safe and environmentally friendly.According to the Rural Development Regulation no. 1305/2013, at least 30% of the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development is dedicated to measures that contribute to the achievement of environmental and climate objectives, biodiversity conservation, natural resources protection (especially soil and water), greenhouse gas emission reduction, traditional landscape conservation and agri-environment policies will be implemented through National Rural Development Program 2014-2020

    HATS-13b and HATS-14b: two transiting hot Jupiters from the HATSouth survey

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    We report the discovery of HATS-13b and HATS-14b, two hot-Jupiter transiting planets discovered by the HATSouth survey. The host stars are quite similar to each other (HATS-13: V = 13.9 mag, M* = 0.96 Msun, R* = 0.89 Rsun, Teff = 5500 K, [Fe/H] = 0.05; HATS-14: V = 13.8 mag, M* = 0.97 Msun, R* = 0.93 Rsun, Teff = 5350 K, [Fe/H] = 0.33) and both the planets orbit around them with a period of roughly 3 days and a separation of roughly 0.04 au. However, even though they are irradiated in a similar way, the physical characteristics of the two planets are very different. HATS-13b, with a mass of Mp = 0.543 MJ and a radius of Rp = 1.212 RJ, appears as an inflated planet, while HATS-14b, having a mass of Mp = 1.071 MJ and a radius of Rp = 1.039 RJ, is only slightly larger in radius than Jupiter.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1503.0006

    Do (and say) as I say: Linguistic adaptation in human-computer dialogs

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    © Theodora Koulouri, Stanislao Lauria, and Robert D. Macredie. This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.There is strong research evidence showing that people naturally align to each other’s vocabulary, sentence structure, and acoustic features in dialog, yet little is known about how the alignment mechanism operates in the interaction between users and computer systems let alone how it may be exploited to improve the efficiency of the interaction. This article provides an account of lexical alignment in human–computer dialogs, based on empirical data collected in a simulated human–computer interaction scenario. The results indicate that alignment is present, resulting in the gradual reduction and stabilization of the vocabulary-in-use, and that it is also reciprocal. Further, the results suggest that when system and user errors occur, the development of alignment is temporarily disrupted and users tend to introduce novel words to the dialog. The results also indicate that alignment in human–computer interaction may have a strong strategic component and is used as a resource to compensate for less optimal (visually impoverished) interaction conditions. Moreover, lower alignment is associated with less successful interaction, as measured by user perceptions. The article distills the results of the study into design recommendations for human–computer dialog systems and uses them to outline a model of dialog management that supports and exploits alignment through mechanisms for in-use adaptation of the system’s grammar and lexicon

    The ethics of uncertainty for data subjects

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    Modern health data practices come with many practical uncertainties. In this paper, I argue that data subjects’ trust in the institutions and organizations that control their data, and their ability to know their own moral obligations in relation to their data, are undermined by significant uncertainties regarding the what, how, and who of mass data collection and analysis. I conclude by considering how proposals for managing situations of high uncertainty might be applied to this problem. These emphasize increasing organizational flexibility, knowledge, and capacity, and reducing hazard

    Tensor Regression with Applications in Neuroimaging Data Analysis

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    Classical regression methods treat covariates as a vector and estimate a corresponding vector of regression coefficients. Modern applications in medical imaging generate covariates of more complex form such as multidimensional arrays (tensors). Traditional statistical and computational methods are proving insufficient for analysis of these high-throughput data due to their ultrahigh dimensionality as well as complex structure. In this article, we propose a new family of tensor regression models that efficiently exploit the special structure of tensor covariates. Under this framework, ultrahigh dimensionality is reduced to a manageable level, resulting in efficient estimation and prediction. A fast and highly scalable estimation algorithm is proposed for maximum likelihood estimation and its associated asymptotic properties are studied. Effectiveness of the new methods is demonstrated on both synthetic and real MRI imaging data.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figure

    Role of thyroid hormones in early postnatal development of skeletal muscle and its implications for undernutrition

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    Published online by Cambridge University Press 09 Mar 2007Energy intake profoundly influences many endocrine axes which in turn play a central role in development. The specific influence of a short period of mild hypothyroidism, similar to that induced by undernutrition, in regulating muscle development has been assessed in a large mammal during early postnatal life. Hypothyroidism was induced by providing methimazole and iopanoic acid in the feed of piglets between 4 and 14 d of age, and controls were pair-fed to the energy intake of their hypothyroid littermates. Thyroid status was evaluated, and myofibre differentiation and cation pump concentrations were then assessed in the following functionally distinct muscles: longissimus dorsi (l. dorsi), soleus and rhomboideus. Reductions in plasma concentrations of thyroxine (T4; 32%, P < O·Ol), triiodothyronine (T3;48%, P < 0·001), free T3, (58%, P < 0·001)and hepatic 5'-monodeiodinase (EC 1.11.1.8) activity (74%, P < 0·001) occurred with treatment. Small, although significant, increases in the proportion of type I slow-twitch oxidative fibres occurred with mild hypothyroidism, in l. dorsi (2%, P < 0·01) and soleus(7%, P < 0·01). Nuclear T3-receptor concentration in l. dorsi of hypothyroid animals compared with controls increased by 46% (P < 0·001), a response that may represent a homeostatic mechanism making muscle more sensitive to low levels of circulating thyroid hormones. Nevertheless, Na+, K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.37) concentration was reduced by 15–16% in all muscles (l.dorsi P< 0·05,soleus P < 0·001, rhomboideus P < 0·05), and Ca2+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.38) concentration was significantly reduced in the two slow-twitch muscles: by 22% in rhomboideus (P < 0·001) and 23% in soleus (P < 0·05). It is concluded that during early postnatal development of large mammals a period of mild hypothyroidism, comparable with that found during undernutrition, induces changes in myofibre differentiation and a down-regulation of cation pumps in skeletal muscle. Such changes would result in slowness of movement and muscle weakness, and also reduce ATP hydrolysis with a concomitant improvement in energetic efficiency.A. P. Harrison, D. R. Tivey, T. Clausen, C. Duchamp and M. J. Daunce
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