303 research outputs found
Nitrogen isotopic fractionation during abiotic synthesis of organic solid particles
The formation of organic compounds is generally assumed to result from
abiotic processes in the Solar System, with the exception of biogenic organics
on Earth. Nitrogen-bearing organics are of particular interest, notably for
prebiotic perspectives but also for overall comprehension of organic formation
in the young solar system and in planetary atmospheres. We have investigated
abiotic synthesis of organics upon plasma discharge, with special attention to
N isotope fractionation. Organic aerosols were synthesized from N2-CH4 and
N2-CO gaseous mixtures using low-pressure plasma discharge experiments, aimed
at simulating chemistry occurring in Titan s atmosphere and in the protosolar
nebula, respectively. Nitrogen is efficiently incorporated into the synthesized
solids, independently of the oxidation degree, of the N2 content of the
starting gas mixture, and of the nitrogen speciation in the aerosols. The
aerosols are depleted in 15N by 15-25 permil relative to the initial N2 gas,
whatever the experimental setup is. Such an isotopic fractionation is
attributed to mass-dependent kinetic effect(s). Nitrogen isotope fractionation
upon electric discharge cannot account for the large N isotope variations
observed among solar system objects and reservoirs. Extreme N isotope
signatures in the solar system are more likely the result of self-shielding
during N2 photodissociation, exotic effect during photodissociation of N2
and/or low temperature ion-molecule isotope exchange. Kinetic N isotope
fractionation may play a significant role in the Titan s atmosphere. We also
suggest that the low delta15N values of Archaean organic matter are partly the
result of abiotic synthesis of organics that occurred at that time
Deviation from the normal mode expansion in a coupled graphene-nanomechanical system
We optomechanically measure the vibrations of a nanomechanical system made of
a graphene membrane suspended on a silicon nitride nanoresonator. When probing
the thermal noise of the coupled nanomechanical device, we observe a
significant deviation from the normal mode expansion. It originates from the
heterogeneous character of mechanical dissipation over the spatial extension of
coupled eigenmodes, which violates one of the fundamental prerequisite for
employing this commonly used description of the nanoresonators' thermal noise.
We subsequently measure the local mechanical susceptibility and demonstrate
that the fluctuation-dissipation theorem still holds and permits a proper
evaluation of the thermal noise of the nanomechanical system. Since it
naturally becomes delicate to ensure a good spatial homogeneity at the
nanoscale, this approach is fundamental to correctly describe the thermal noise
of nanomechanical systems which ultimately impact their sensing capacity
Étude expérimentale et modélisation de l'écoulement de jeu d'une aube fixe isolée
International audienceThe tip-leakage flow has detrimental effects on the performance of compressors. In this paper the effects of gap height and incoming casing boundary layer thickness are analyzed. Velocity and total pressure measurements are carried out in a plane behind the trailing edge of an isolated fixed blade. The total pressure loss is decomposed in a vortex loss and a wake loss. It appears that the increase of total pressure losses with the gap height comes essentially from the vortex part. This observation motivated the development of a model based on an analogy with a jet in crossflow to estimate the tip-leakage vortex circulation. The predictions of this model are consistent with the experimental data for gaps smaller than 4 % of chord
Learning Bloch Simulations for MR Fingerprinting by Invertible Neural Networks
Magnetic resonance fingerprinting (MRF) enables fast and multiparametric MR
imaging. Despite fast acquisition, the state-of-the-art reconstruction of MRF
based on dictionary matching is slow and lacks scalability. To overcome these
limitations, neural network (NN) approaches estimating MR parameters from
fingerprints have been proposed recently. Here, we revisit NN-based MRF
reconstruction to jointly learn the forward process from MR parameters to
fingerprints and the backward process from fingerprints to MR parameters by
leveraging invertible neural networks (INNs). As a proof-of-concept, we perform
various experiments showing the benefit of learning the forward process, i.e.,
the Bloch simulations, for improved MR parameter estimation. The benefit
especially accentuates when MR parameter estimation is difficult due to MR
physical restrictions. Therefore, INNs might be a feasible alternative to the
current solely backward-based NNs for MRF reconstruction.Comment: Accepted at MICCAI MLMIR 202
Reduced subjective sleep quality in people rating themselves as electro-hypersensitive: An observational study
BACKGROUND: Disturbed sleep is among the most frequent health complaints of people exposed to radio frequency electromagnetic fields (RF-EMF) used in mobile telecommunication, particularly in individuals who consider themselves as EMF hypersensitive (EHS). We aimed at investigating whether the EHS status per se is associated with sleep complaints. Because allelic variants of the gene encoding the L-type, voltage-gated calcium channel Ca1.2 (CACNA1C) were previously associated with sleep complaints reminiscent of those reported by EHS individuals, we also explored whether self-rated EHS status and sleep quality associate with these gene variants.
METHODS: A total of 2'040 participants (1'381 females) aged 18-30 years completed online, validated questionnaires on EMF sensitivity, subjective sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, mentation during sleep, and diurnal preference. They also provided a saliva sample for genotyping three functional variants of CACNA1C (rs7304986, rs16929277 and rs2302729). Eligible participants endorsing the question "Are you electro-hypersensitive?" were considered as "EHS" (n = 105), those denying this question yet believing to develop detrimental health symptoms due to prevailing electromagnetic pollution as "attributers" (n = 254), and the remaining participants as "non-EHS" (n = 1'406). We combined the EHS and attributers into one group for binary analyses. In exploratory analyses, we then tested possible associations between EMF sensitivity, subjective sleep variables and CACNA1C variants using linear and logistic regression. We used age, sex, level of education, presence of sleep disorders and habitual mobile phone use as covariates and corrected with Benjamini-Hochberg False Discovery Rate for multiple comparisons.
RESULTS: The EHS/attributers consistently reported prolonged sleep latency, reduced sleep quality, higher sleepiness and more nocturnal mentation when compared to non-EHS. Habitual mobile phone use was not associated with self-rated sleep latency and sleep quality scores. While the T-allele of variant rs2302729 of CACNA1C was associated with both, self-reported EMF sensitivity and reduced subjective sleep quality, we found no evidence for the hypothesis that EHS mediates impaired sleep quality via this allelic variant.
CONCLUSIONS: Irrespective of reported RF-EMF exposure, self-rated EHS/attributers rated subjective sleep quality worse than non-EHS individuals.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Swiss National Clinical Trials Portal (SNCTP000002285) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03074617)
Endoscopic Evaluation and Management of Gastrointestinal Bleeding in Patients with Ventricular Assist Devices
The optimal diagnostic approach and yield for gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB) in patients with ventricular assist devices (VAD) are unknown. We explored the etiology of bleeding and yield of upper and lower endoscopy, balloon-assisted enteroscopy, and video capsule endoscopy in the evaluation of GIB in patients with VADs. Methods. All VAD patients with overt gastrointestinal bleeding and drop in hematocrit from April 1, 2000 to July 31, 2008 were retrospectively reviewed. The endoscopic evaluation of each episode was recorded. Overall yield of EGD, colonoscopy, balloon-assisted, and video capsule endoscopy were evaluated. Results. Thirty-six bleeding episodes occurred involving 20 patients. The site of GIB was identified in 32/36 episodes (88.9%), and the etiology of bleeding was determined in 30/36 cases (83.3%). Five VAD patients underwent VCE. The VCE exams demonstrated a high yield with 80% of exams identifying the etiology of GIB. Endoscopic intervention was successful in 8/9 attempts. No adverse events were recorded. Two patients required surgical intervention for GIB. Conclusion. Upper, lower, video capsule, and balloon-assisted enteroscopies are safe and demonstrate a high yield in the investigation of gastrointestinal bleeding in VAD patients. Medical centers caring for VAD patients should employ a standardized protocol to optimize endoscopic evaluation and intervention
A key role for stimulus-specific updating of the sensory cortices in the learning of stimulus-reward associations
Successful adaptive behavior requires the learning of associations between stimulus-specific choices and rewarding outcomes. Most research on the mechanisms underlying such processes has focused on subcortical reward-processing regions, in conjunction with frontal circuits. Given the extensive stimulus-specific coding in the sensory cortices, we hypothesized they would play a key role in the learning of stimulus-specific reward associations. We recorded electrical brain activity (EEG) during a learning-based, decision-making, gambling task where, on each trial, participants chose between a face and a house and then received feedback (gain or loss). Within each 20-trial set, either faces or houses were more likely to predict a gain. Results showed that early feedback processing (~200-1200ms) was independent of the choice made. In contrast, later feedback processing (~1400-1800ms) was stimulus-specific, reflected by decreased alpha power (reflecting increased cortical activity) over face-selective regions. For winning-versus-losing after a face choice, but not after a house choice. Finally, as the reward association was learned in a set, there was increasingly stronger attentional bias towards the more likely winning stimulus, reflected by increasing attentional-orienting-related brain activity and increasing likelihood of choosing that stimulus. These results delineate the processes underlying the updating of stimulus-reward associations during feedback-guided learning, which then guides future attentional allocation and decision making
Methodologies and MR Parameters in Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Neurography: A Scoping Review Protocol.
Magnetic resonance neurography (MRN), the MR imaging of peripheral nerves, is clinically used for assessing and monitoring peripheral neuropathies based on qualitative, weighted MR imaging. Recently, quantitative MRN has been increasingly reported with various MR parameters as potential biomarkers. An evidence synthesis mapping the available methodologies and normative values of quantitative MRN of human peripheral nerves, independent of the anatomical location and type of neuropathy, is currently unavailable and would likely benefit this young field of research. Therefore, the proposed scoping review will include peer-reviewed literature describing methodologies and normative values of quantitative MRN of human peripheral nerves. The literature search will include the databases MEDLINE (PubMed), EMBASE (Ovid), Web of Science, and Scopus. At least two independent reviewers will screen the titles and abstracts against the inclusion criteria. Potential studies will then be screened in full against the inclusion criteria by two or more independent reviewers. From all eligible studies, data will be extracted by two or more independent reviewers and presented in a diagrammatic or tabular form, separated by MR parameter and accompanied by a narrative summary. The reporting will follow the guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR). Upon completion, the scoping review will provide a map of the available literature, identify possible gaps, and inform on possible future research. SCOPING REVIEW REGISTRATION: Open Science Framework 9P3ZM
Asthma Knowledge, Adherence, and Administration Techniques in Hispanic Caregivers of Pediatrics
7.5% of Hispanics in the United States suffer from asthma-related diseases, and Latino children are not as likely to use preventative asthma medications as compared with Caucasians. Educational interventions may reduce the number of visits to emergency-care. The reasons for non-adherence are currently unknown, and discovering these reasons will help to address the problem
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