92 research outputs found
Critical Factors Influencing the Bid / No-Bid Decision in the Palestinian Construction Industry
The purpose of this study is to identify and rank the factors influencing the bid/no-bid decision according to their relative importance from the perspective of the contractors in the West Bank in Palestine. To achieve the study objectives, a questionnaire survey was conducted. The survey covered a randomly selected sample of 64 contractors involved in the construction industry in the West Bank. The questionnaireâs structure is based on the related literature, the pilot study, and the feedback from local experts in the construction industry. A total of 32 factors that might influence the bid/no-bid decision were identified and considered. Then, the targeted population was asked to rank these factors according to their relative importance. The results indicate that the top five factors affecting a contractorâs decision to bid or not include the financial stability of the client, the identity and reputation of the client in the industry, the promptness of the client in the payment process, the expected profitability, and the projectâs source of funding. On the other hand, the least affecting factors are the type of the project, clientâs requirements, taxes, laws and government regulations, and weather conditions. The paper provides a comprehensive understanding of the factors affecting the bidding decision. Construction parties and researchers could benefit from the results of this study
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Sorption of cesium and strontium on Savannah River soils impregnated with colloidal silica
Colloidal silica (CS) is being considered as an injectable low viscosity fluid for creation of impermeable barrier containment of low level radioactive waste at the Savannah River Site (SRS), South Carolina. The sorption behavior of cesium and strontium on Savannah River Site Soils impregnated with Colloidal Silica was studied using a batch experimental method. The samples were prepared by addition of CS and an aqueous solution of CaCl{sub 2} to the soil materials. Sorption studies were conducted after the gelation of the CS samples had occurred. The variation of the sorption ratio, R, as a function of cesium or strontium concentration was examined. The Freundlich isotherm was used to fit the data and very good results were obtained
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Automated Segmentation of HeLa Nuclear Envelope from Electron Microscopy Images
This paper describes an image-processing pipeline for the automatic segmentation of the nuclear envelope of HeLcells observed through Electron Microscopy. The pipeline was applied to a 3D stack of 300 images. The intermediate results of neighbouring slices are further combined to improve the final results. Comparison with a handsegmented ground truth reported Jaccard similarity values between 94-98% on the central slices with a decrease towards the edges of the cell where the structure was considerably more complex. The processing is unsupervised and each 2D slice is processed in about 5-10 seconds running on a MacBook Pro. No systematic attempt to make the code faster was made. These encouraging results could be further used to provide data for more complex segmentation techniques like Deep Learning, which require a considerable amount of data to train architectures like Convolutional Neural Networks. The code is freely available from https://github.com/reyesaldasoro/HeLa-Cell-Segmentatio
Safety perspectives on presently considered drugs for the treatment of COVIDâ19
Intense efforts are underway to evaluate potential therapeutic agents for the treatment of COVIDâ19. In order to respond quickly to the crisis, the repurposing of existing drugs is the primary pharmacological strategy. Despite the urgent clinical need for these therapies, it is imperative to consider potential safety issues. This is important due to the harmâbenefit ratios that may be encountered when treating COVIDâ19, which can depend on the stage of the disease, when therapy is administered and underlying clinical factors in individual patients. Treatments are currently being trialled for a range of scenarios from prophylaxis (where benefit must greatly exceed risk) to severe lifeâthreatening disease (where a degree of potential risk may be tolerated if it is exceeded by the potential benefit). In this perspective, we have reviewed some of the most widely researched repurposed agents in order to identify potential safety considerations using existing information in the context of COVIDâ19
Confinement increases the lifetimes of hydroxyapatite precursors
The mineral component of bone is a carbonated, nonstoichiometric hydroxyapatite (calcium phosphate) that forms in nanometer confinement within collagen fibrils, the principal organic constituent of bone. We here employ a model system to study the effects of confinement on hydroxyapatite precipitation from solution under physiological conditions. In common with earlier studies of calcium carbonate and calcium sulfate precipitation, we find that confinement significantly prolongs the lifetime of metastable phases, here amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) and octacalcium phosphate (OCP). The effect occurs at surprisingly large separations of up to 1 ÎŒm, and at 0.2 ÎŒm the lifetime of ACP is extended by at least an order of magnitude. The soluble additive poly(aspartic acid), which in bulk stabilizes ACP, appears to act synergistically with confinement to give a greatly enhanced stability of ACP. The reason for the extended lifetime appears to be different from that found with CaCO3 and CaSO4, and underscores both the variety of mechanisms whereby confinement affects the growth and transformation of solid phases, and the necessity to study a wide range of crystalline systems to build a full understanding of confinement effects. We suggest that in the case of ACP and OCP the extended lifetime of these metastable phases is chiefly due to a slower transport of ions between a dissolving metastable phase, and the more stable, growing phase. These results highlight the potential importance of confinement on biomineralization processes
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