5,381 research outputs found
Towards Multi-class Object Detection in Unconstrained Remote Sensing Imagery
Automatic multi-class object detection in remote sensing images in
unconstrained scenarios is of high interest for several applications including
traffic monitoring and disaster management. The huge variation in object scale,
orientation, category, and complex backgrounds, as well as the different camera
sensors pose great challenges for current algorithms. In this work, we propose
a new method consisting of a novel joint image cascade and feature pyramid
network with multi-size convolution kernels to extract multi-scale strong and
weak semantic features. These features are fed into rotation-based region
proposal and region of interest networks to produce object detections. Finally,
rotational non-maximum suppression is applied to remove redundant detections.
During training, we minimize joint horizontal and oriented bounding box loss
functions, as well as a novel loss that enforces oriented boxes to be
rectangular. Our method achieves 68.16% mAP on horizontal and 72.45% mAP on
oriented bounding box detection tasks on the challenging DOTA dataset,
outperforming all published methods by a large margin (+6% and +12% absolute
improvement, respectively). Furthermore, it generalizes to two other datasets,
NWPU VHR-10 and UCAS-AOD, and achieves competitive results with the baselines
even when trained on DOTA. Our method can be deployed in multi-class object
detection applications, regardless of the image and object scales and
orientations, making it a great choice for unconstrained aerial and satellite
imagery.Comment: ACCV 201
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Airborne measurement of inorganic ionic components of fine aerosol particles using the particle-into-liquid sampler coupled to ion chromatography technique during ACE-Asia and TRACE-P
Adeno-associated virus-mediated heme oxygenase-1 gene transfer suppresses the progression of micronodular cirrhosis in rats
Aim: To test the hypothesis that enhancement of the activity of heme oxygenase can interfere with processes of fibrogenesis associated with recurrent liver injury, we investigated the therapeutic potential of over-expression of heme oxygense-1 in a CCI 4-induced micronodular cirrhosis model. Methods: Recombinant adeno-associated viruses carrying rat HO-1 or GFP gene were generated. 1×10 12 vg of adeno-associated viruses were administered through portal injection at the time of the induction of liver fibrosis. Results: Conditioning the rat liver with over-expression of HO-1 by rAAV/HO-1 significantly increased the HO enzymatic activities in a stable manner. The development of micronodular cirrhosis was significantly inhibited in rAAV/HO-1-transduced animals as compared to controls. Portal hypertension was markedly diminished in rAAV/ HO-1-transduced animals as compared to controls, whereas there are no significant changes in systolic blood pressure. This finding was accompanied with improved liver biochemistry, less infiltrating macrophages and less activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) in rAAV/ HO-1-transduced livers. Conclusions: Enhancement of HO activity in the livers suppresses the development of cirrhosis. © 2006 The WJG Press. All rights reserved.published_or_final_versio
Convergence of subjective outcome and objective outcome evaluation findings: Insights based on the Project P.A.T.H.S.
Copyright © 2007 with author.(s). A total of 546 students participated in the Tier 1 Program of the P.A.T.H.S. Project responded to the Chinese Positive Youth Development Scale (CPYDS) at pretest and posttest and the Subjective Outcome Scale (SOS) at posttest. Result showed that the SOS was internally consistent. The SOS total scores were significantly related to measures of global satisfaction and the participants' degree of sharing with others, thus giving support to its construct validity. Factor analysis revealed that there were three dimensions of the scale and the related subscales were significantly correlated among themselves. Based on the significant relationships between the SOS measures of perceived program effectiveness and posttest CPYDS scores as well as changes in CPYDS scores, the present study revealed the convergence of subjective outcome evaluation findings and objective outcome evaluation findings in the P.A.T.H.S. Project. ©2007 with author. Published by TheScientificWorld.Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust
Graphitic Carbon Nitride Nanosheet-Carbon Nanotube Three-Dimensional Porous Composites as High-Performance Oxygen Evolution Electrocatalysts
Australian Research Council (ARC). Grant Numbers: DP140104062, DP13010445
Implementing guidelines for the prescribing of vancomycin and teicoplanin
published_or_final_versio
Mitochondrial alterations in children with chronic liver disease
Background: Over recent years it has become apparent that the hepatocyte mitochondrion functions both as a cause and as a target of liver injury. Resultant dysfunction of mitochondria yields deficient oxidative phosphorylation, increased generation of reactive oxygen species, impairment of other metabolic pathways and activation of both necrotic and apoptotic pathways of cellular death.Methods: This study was conducted on 26 children and adolescents with chronic liver disease who presented to or were following up in the Pediatric Hepatology Clinic, Children’s Hospital, Ain-Shams University. They were divided into three groups according to the aetiology of liver disease (GI=patients with Wilson’s disease (WD), GII=patients with chronic hepatitis C, GIII=patients with chronic liver disease other thanWilson’s and chronic hepatitis C).Ultrasound-guided gun liver biopsies were performed, under local anaesthesia for all the 26 patients, using a modified 18-gauge truecut needle. Two liver biopsy cores were taken from each patient. One for light and electron microscopic examinations and the other was immediately immersed in liquid nitrogen to be frozen and used forstudying mitochondrial DNA deletions by PCR.Results: Liver steatosis was higher in the group of patients with Wilson’s disease and other liver disease. Electron microscopic examination of the mitochondria revealed significant mitochondrial pleomorphism in patients with Wilson’s disease and patients with chronic hepatitis C infection. Enlarged mitochondria were found to bemore prevalent among patients with chronic hepatitis infection.Three of our patients (11.53%) had mitochondrial DNA deletions. We developed scoring system for mitochondrial affection in our patients, 7 patients (32%) were considered to have mild mitochondrial affection,9 patients (41%) had moderate mitochondrial affection, while 6 patients (27%) had severe mitochondrial affection. Four of the studied patients had no mitochondrial affection.Conclusion: Mitochondria affection is common in chronic liver disease. This mitochondrial affection might be responsible for some of the chronic liver disease manifestation such as easy fatiguability and steatosis
Small poly-L-lysines improve cationic lipid-mediated gene transfer in vascular cells in vitro and in vivo
The potential of two small poly-L-lysines ( sPLLs), low molecular weight sPLL ( LMW-L) containing 7 - 30 lysine residues and L18 with 18 lysine repeats, to enhance the efficiency of liposome-mediated gene transfer ( GT) with cationic lipid DOCSPER {[}1,3- dioleoyloxy- 2-( N-5-carbamoyl-spermine)-propane] in vascular smooth muscle cells ( SMCs) was investigated. Dynamic light scattering was used for determination of particle size. Confocal microscopy was applied for colocalization studies of sPLLs and plasmid DNA inside cells. GT was performed in proliferating and quiescent primary porcine SMCs in vitro and in vivo in porcine femoral arteries. At low ionic strength, sPLLs formed small complexes with DNA ( 50 100 nm). At high ionic strength, large complexes ( 11 mu m) were observed without any significant differences in particle size between lipoplexes ( DOCSPER/ DNA) and lipopolyplexes ( DOCSPER/ sPLL/ DNA). Both sPLLs were colocalized with DNA inside cells 24 h after transfection, protecting DNA against degradation. DOCSPER/ sPLL/ DNA formulations enhanced GT in vitro up to 5- fold, in a porcine model using local periadventitial application up to 1.5- fold. Both sPLLs significantly increased liposome- mediated GT. Poly-L-lysine L18 was superior to LMW-L since it enabled maximal GT at a 10-fold lower concentration. Thus, sPLLs may serve as enhancers for GT applications in SMCs in vitro and in vivo using local delivery. Copyright (c) 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Binary pattern tile set synthesis is NP-hard
In the field of algorithmic self-assembly, a long-standing unproven
conjecture has been that of the NP-hardness of binary pattern tile set
synthesis (2-PATS). The -PATS problem is that of designing a tile assembly
system with the smallest number of tile types which will self-assemble an input
pattern of colors. Of both theoretical and practical significance, -PATS
has been studied in a series of papers which have shown -PATS to be NP-hard
for , , and then . In this paper, we close the
fundamental conjecture that 2-PATS is NP-hard, concluding this line of study.
While most of our proof relies on standard mathematical proof techniques, one
crucial lemma makes use of a computer-assisted proof, which is a relatively
novel but increasingly utilized paradigm for deriving proofs for complex
mathematical problems. This tool is especially powerful for attacking
combinatorial problems, as exemplified by the proof of the four color theorem
by Appel and Haken (simplified later by Robertson, Sanders, Seymour, and
Thomas) or the recent important advance on the Erd\H{o}s discrepancy problem by
Konev and Lisitsa using computer programs. We utilize a massively parallel
algorithm and thus turn an otherwise intractable portion of our proof into a
program which requires approximately a year of computation time, bringing the
use of computer-assisted proofs to a new scale. We fully detail the algorithm
employed by our code, and make the code freely available online
Robot-assisted ureteral reimplantation in children with vesico-ureteral reflux
香港泌尿外科學會Moderated Poster (Free Paper) Session II - Upper Tract and Robotic Surgery: MP.2-4OBJECTIVE: We report our initial experience on robot-assisted ureteral reimplanation in children with vesico-ureteral reflux (VUR) …published_or_final_versionThe 17th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Hong Kong Urological Association, Hong Kong, 6 November 2011. In Program Book, 2011, p. 6
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