1,140 research outputs found
Enhanced surface transfer doping of diamond by V2O5 with improved thermal stability
Surface transfer doping of hydrogen-terminated diamond has been achieved utilising V2O5 as a surface electron accepting material. Contact between the oxide and diamondsurface promotes the transfer of electrons from the diamond into the V2O5 as revealed by the synchrotron-based high resolution photoemission spectroscopy. Electrical characterization by Hall measurement performed before and after V2O5 deposition shows an increase in hole carrier concentration in the diamond from 3.0âĂâ1012 to 1.8âĂâ1013âcmâ2 at room temperature. High temperature Hall measurements performed up to 300â°C in atmosphere reveal greatly enhanced thermal stability of the hole channel produced using V2O5 in comparison with an air-induced surface conduction channel. Transfer doping of hydrogen-terminated diamond using high electron affinity oxides such as V2O5 is a promising approach for achieving thermally stable, high performance diamond based devices in comparison with air-induced surface transfer dopin
A comparative evaluation of interactive segmentation algorithms
In this paper we present a comparative evaluation of four popular interactive segmentation algorithms. The evaluation was carried out as a series of user-experiments, in which participants were tasked with extracting 100 objects from a common dataset: 25 with each algorithm, constrained within a time limit of 2 min for each object. To facilitate the experiments, a âscribble-drivenâ segmentation tool was developed to enable interactive image segmentation by simply marking areas of foreground and background with the mouse. As the participants refined and improved their respective segmentations, the corresponding updated segmentation mask was stored along with the elapsed time. We then collected and evaluated each recorded mask against a manually segmented ground truth, thus allowing us to gauge segmentation accuracy over time. Two benchmarks were used for the evaluation: the well-known Jaccard index for measuring object accuracy, and a new fuzzy metric, proposed in this paper, designed for measuring boundary accuracy. Analysis of the experimental results demonstrates the effectiveness of the suggested measures and provides valuable insights into the performance and characteristics of the evaluated algorithms
A Review of Target Mass Corrections
With recent advances in the precision of inclusive lepton--nuclear scattering
experiments, it has become apparent that comparable improvements are needed in
the accuracy of the theoretical analysis tools. In particular, when extracting
parton distribution functions in the large-x region, it is crucial to correct
the data for effects associated with the nonzero mass of the target. We present
here a comprehensive review of these target mass corrections (TMC) to structure
functions data, summarizing the relevant formulas for TMCs in electromagnetic
and weak processes. We include a full analysis of both hadronic and partonic
masses, and trace how these effects appear in the operator product expansion
and the factorized parton model formalism, as well as their limitations when
applied to data in the x->1 limit. We evaluate the numerical effects of TMCs on
various structure functions, and compare fits to data with and without these
corrections.Comment: 41 pages, 13 figures; minor updates to match published versio
Fast-decaying plant litter enhances soil carbon in temperate forests but not through microbial physiological traits
Conceptual and empirical advances in soil biogeochemistry have challenged long-held assumptions about the role of soil micro-organisms in soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics; yet, rigorous tests of emerging concepts remain sparse. Recent hypotheses suggest that microbial necromass production links plant inputs to SOC accumulation, with high-quality (i.e., rapidly decomposing) plant litter promoting microbial carbon use efficiency, growth, and turnover leading to more mineral stabilization of necromass. We test this hypothesis experimentally and with observations across six eastern US forests, using stable isotopes to measure microbial traits and SOC dynamics. Here we show, in both studies, that microbial growth, efficiency, and turnover are negatively (not positively) related to mineral-associated SOC. In the experiment, stimulation of microbial growth by high-quality litter enhances SOC decomposition, offsetting the positive effect of litter quality on SOC stabilization. We suggest that microbial necromass production is not the primary driver of SOC persistence in temperate forests. Factors such as microbial necromass origin, alternative SOC formation pathways, priming effects, and soil abiotic properties can strongly decouple microbial growth, efficiency, and turnover from mineral-associated SOC
Multimode photon blockade
Interactions are essential for the creation of correlated quantum many-body
states. While two-body interactions underlie most natural phenomena, three- and
four-body interactions are important for the physics of nuclei [1], exotic
few-body states in ultracold quantum gases [2], the fractional quantum Hall
effect [3], quantum error correction [4], and holography [5, 6]. Recently, a
number of artificial quantum systems have emerged as simulators for many-body
physics, featuring the ability to engineer strong interactions. However, the
interactions in these systems have largely been limited to the two-body
paradigm, and require building up multi-body interactions by combining two-body
forces. Here, we demonstrate a pure N-body interaction between microwave
photons stored in an arbitrary number of electromagnetic modes of a multimode
cavity. The system is dressed such that there is collectively no interaction
until a target total photon number is reached across multiple distinct modes,
at which point they interact strongly. The microwave cavity features 9 modes
with photon lifetimes of ms coupled to a superconducting transmon
circuit, forming a multimode circuit QED system with single photon
cooperativities of . We generate multimode interactions by using
cavity photon number resolved drives on the transmon circuit to blockade any
multiphoton state with a chosen total photon number distributed across the
target modes. We harness the interaction for state preparation, preparing Fock
states of increasing photon number via quantum optimal control pulses acting
only on the cavity modes. We demonstrate multimode interactions by generating
entanglement purely with uniform cavity drives and multimode photon blockade,
and characterize the resulting two- and three-mode W states using a new
protocol for multimode Wigner tomography.Comment: 5 pages of main text with 5 figures. 11 pages of supplementary
information with 10 figure
Identifying barriers to the care of the rheumatoid hand in China: comparing attitudes of rheumatologists and hand surgeons
AimIn China, hand surgeons treat fewer rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients compared to other countries. We investigated whether physician and surgeon knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding RA hand deformities reflect current evidence and may contribute to the low utilization of surgery.MethodWe surveyed hand surgeons and rheumatologists at three tertiary hospitals in Beijing, China. Questionnaires were developed from literature and expert review to assess their knowledge, attitudes and practice patterns related to rheumatoid hand surgery.ResultsThirtyĂą five hand surgeons and 59 rheumatologists completed the survey. Roughly oneĂą third felt that the rheumatologists and hand surgeons agree on how to manage RA hand deformities. OneĂą fifth of rheumatologists and 29% of hand surgeons believed that drug therapy can correct hand deformities, which contradicts current evidence. Likewise, 30% and 14%, respectively, recommended surgery for earlyĂą stage hand sequelae that do not meet current indications for surgery. Over 80% of surgeons and rheumatologists had no exposure to the other specialty during training and felt their training on the treatment of rheumatoid hand deformities was inadequate.ConclusionAlthough we found similar interspeciality disagreement in China as is seen in the United States, there appears to be less interaction through training and consultations. Our results also indicate potential deficits in training and unawareness of evidence and indications for rheumatoid hand surgery. These findings help to explain why surgery for rheumatoid hand deformities is rare in China; doctors have fewer opportunities to collaborate across specialties and may not be able to select appropriate candidates for surgery.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147075/1/apl12971.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147075/2/apl12971_am.pd
Cholesterol Sulfonation Enzyme, SULT2B1b, Modulates AR and Cell Growth Properties in Prostate Cancer
Cholesterol accumulates in prostate lesions and has been linked to prostate cancer (PCa) incidence and progression. However, how accumulated cholesterol contributes to PCa development and progression is not completely understood. Cholesterol sulfate (CS), the primary sulfonation product of cholesterol sulfotransferase (SULT2B1b), accumulates in human prostate adenocarcinoma and precancerous prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) lesions compared to normal regions of the same tissue sample. Given the enhanced accumulation of CS in these lesions, it was hypothesized that SULT2B1b-mediated production of CS provides a growth advantage to these cells. To address this, PCa cells with RNAi-mediated knockdown (KD) of SULT2B1b were used to assess the impact on cell growth and survival. SULT2B1b is expressed and functional in a variety of prostate cells and the data demonstrate that SULT2B1b KD, in LNCaP and other androgen-responsive (VCaP and C4-2) cells, results in decreased cell growth/viability and induces cell death. SULT2B1b KD also decreases androgen receptor (AR) activity and expression at mRNA and protein levels. While AR overexpression has no impact on SULT2B1b KD-mediated cell death, addition of exogenous androgen is able to partially rescue the growth inhibition induced by SULT2B1b KD in LNCaP cells. These results suggest that SULT2B1b positively regulates the AR either through alterations in ligand availability or by interaction with critical co-regulators that influence AR activity
The Mitochondrial Epigenome:An Unexplored Avenue to Explain Unexplained Myopathies?
Mutations in either mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) or nuclear genes that encode mitochondrial proteins may lead to dysfunctional mitochondria, giving rise to mitochondrial diseases. Some mitochondrial myopathies, however, present without a known underlying cause. Interestingly, methylation of mtDNA has been associated with various clinical pathologies. The present study set out to assess whether mtDNA methylation could explain impaired mitochondrial function in patients diagnosed with myopathy without known underlying genetic mutations. Enhanced mtDNA methylation was indicated by pyrosequencing for muscle biopsies of 14 myopathy patients compared to four healthy controls, at selected cytosines in the Cytochrome B (CYTB) gene, but not within the displacement loop (D-loop) region. The mtDNA methylation patterns of the four healthy muscle biopsies were highly consistent and showed intriguing tissue-specific differences at particular cytosines with control skin fibroblasts cultured in vitro. Within individual myopathy patients, the overall mtDNA methylation pattern correlated well between muscle and skin fibroblasts. Despite this correlation, a pilot analysis of four myopathy and five healthy fibroblast samples did not reveal a disease-associated difference in mtDNA methylation. We did, however, detect increased expression of solute carrier family 25A26 (SLC25A26), encoding the importer of S-adenosylmethionine, together with enhanced mtDNA copy numbers in myopathy fibroblasts compared to healthy controls. To confirm that pyrosequencing indeed reflected DNA methylation and not bisulfite accessibility, mass spectrometry was employed. Although no myopathy-related differences in total amount of methylated cytosines were detected at this stage, a significant contribution of contaminating nuclear DNA (nDNA) was revealed, and steps to improve enrichment for mtDNA are reported. In conclusion, in this explorative study we show that analyzing the mitochondrial genome beyond its sequence opens novel avenues to identify potential molecular biomarkers assisting in the diagnosis of unexplained myopathies
On the Societal Impact of Open Foundation Models
Foundation models are powerful technologies: how they are released publicly
directly shapes their societal impact. In this position paper, we focus on open
foundation models, defined here as those with broadly available model weights
(e.g. Llama 2, Stable Diffusion XL). We identify five distinctive properties
(e.g. greater customizability, poor monitoring) of open foundation models that
lead to both their benefits and risks. Open foundation models present
significant benefits, with some caveats, that span innovation, competition, the
distribution of decision-making power, and transparency. To understand their
risks of misuse, we design a risk assessment framework for analyzing their
marginal risk. Across several misuse vectors (e.g. cyberattacks, bioweapons),
we find that current research is insufficient to effectively characterize the
marginal risk of open foundation models relative to pre-existing technologies.
The framework helps explain why the marginal risk is low in some cases,
clarifies disagreements about misuse risks by revealing that past work has
focused on different subsets of the framework with different assumptions, and
articulates a way forward for more constructive debate. Overall, our work helps
support a more grounded assessment of the societal impact of open foundation
models by outlining what research is needed to empirically validate their
theoretical benefits and risks
Changes in global terrestrial live biomass over the 21st century
Live woody vegetation is the largest reservoir of biomass carbon, with its restoration considered one of the most
effective natural climate solutions. However, terrestrial carbon fluxes remain the largest uncertainty in the global
carbon cycle. Here, we develop spatially explicit estimates of carbon stock changes of live woody biomass from
2000 to 2019 using measurements from ground, air, and space. We show that live biomass has removed 4.9 to
5.5 PgC year
â1
from the atmosphere, offsetting 4.6 ± 0.1 PgC year
â1
of gross emissions from disturbances and
adding substantially (0.23 to 0.88 PgC year
â1
) to the global carbon stocks. Gross emissions and removals in the
tropics were four times larger than temperate and boreal ecosystems combined. Although live biomass is responsible
for more than 80% of gross terrestrial fluxes, soil, dead organic matter, and lateral transport may play important
roles in terrestrial carbon sinkThis study was funded by NASA Interdisciplinary Science Program (NNH16ZDA001N-IDS). M.L. and Y. Yang have been supported by the NASA Postdoctoral Program, administered by Universities Space Research Association under contract with NASA.G.-J.N. was supported by the European Union H2020-VERIFY project (776810)
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