164 research outputs found
An Exploratory Case-Control Study on the Associations of Bacterially-Derived Vitamin K Forms with the Intestinal Microbiome and Obesity-Related Osteoarthritis
Background: Evidence suggests that natural metabolites produced by intestinal microorganisms may have beneficial or harmful effects on osteoarthritis (OA). This could include menaquinones, which are bacterially-synthesized, biologically-active vitamin K forms abundant in the intestinal microbiome. Objectives: The overall goal of this study was to evaluate the association of intestinally-derived menaquinones with obesity-related OA. Methods: This case-control study used data and biospecimens derived from a subgroup of Johnston County Osteoarthritis Study participants. Fecal menaquinone concentrations and microbial composition were determined in 52 obese participants with hand and knee OA and 42 age- and sex-matched obese participants without OA. The inter-relationships among fecal menaquinones were evaluated using principal component analysis. The differences in alpha and beta diversities and microbial composition across menaquinone clusters were evaluated using ANOVA. Results: The samples were clustered into the following 3 groups: cluster 1 characterized by higher fecal menaquinone-9 and -10 concentrations, cluster 2 characterized by lower overall menaquinone concentrations, and cluster 3 characterized by higher menaquinone-12 and -13 concentrations. Overall, fecal menaquinone clusters did not differ between participants with or without OA (P = 0.707). Microbial diversity did not differ across the fecal menaquinone clusters (all F-test P > 0.12). However, the relative abundance of bacterial taxa differed among clusters, with higher abundance of Coprococcus, Prevotella, and Eggerthella in cluster 2 than in cluster 1; higher abundance of Oscillospira, Dorea, Eubacterium, and Bacteroides in cluster 3 than in cluster 1; and higher abundance of Prevotella, Sutterella, and Dorea in cluster 3 than in cluster 2 (all P < 0.001). Conclusion: Menaquinones were variable and abundant in the human gut, but the fecal menaquinone clusters did not differ with OA status. Although the relative abundance of specific bacterial taxa differed among fecal menaquinone clusters, the relevance of these differences with respect to vitamin K status and human health is uncertain
Learning perceptually grounded word meanings from unaligned parallel data
In order for robots to effectively understand natural language commands, they must be able to acquire meaning representations that can be mapped to perceptual features in the external world. Previous approaches to learning these grounded meaning representations require detailed annotations at training time. In this paper, we present an approach to grounded language acquisition which is capable of jointly learning a policy for following natural language commands such as “Pick up the tire pallet,” as well as a mapping between specific phrases in the language and aspects of the external world; for example the mapping between the words “the tire pallet” and a specific object in the environment. Our approach assumes a parametric form for the policy that the robot uses to choose actions in response to a natural language command that factors based on the structure of the language. We use a gradient method to optimize model parameters. Our evaluation demonstrates the effectiveness of the model on a corpus of commands given to a robotic forklift by untrained users.U.S. Army Research Laboratory (Collaborative Technology Alliance Program, Cooperative Agreement W911NF-10-2-0016)United States. Office of Naval Research (MURIs N00014-07-1-0749)United States. Army Research Office (MURI N00014-11-1-0688)United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA BOLT program under contract HR0011-11-2-0008
Microstructured reactor as a pre-turbo catalytic converter
The idea of a structured catalytic converter
placed immediately after engine exhaust valves, thus
operating on high gas temperature and velocity, is
explored. The assumption is that major part of the reactor
operates in the entry region where Nusselt and Sherwood
numbers are highly enhanced. In this work, flow resistances
as well as heat and mass transfer coefficients were studied
for gas velocities exceeding 50 m/s. Consequently, the
transition range (between laminar and turbulent flows) was
reached. The comparison with classic monolith has shown
significant improvement in heat or mass transfer paid by
slight increase in flow resistance
BWIBots: A platform for bridging the gap between AI and human–robot interaction research
Recent progress in both AI and robotics have enabled the development of general purpose robot platforms that are capable of executing a wide variety of complex, temporally extended service tasks in open environments. This article introduces a novel, custom-designed multi-robot platform for research on AI, robotics, and especially human–robot interaction for service robots. Called BWIBots, the robots were designed as a part of the Building-Wide Intelligence (BWI) project at the University of Texas at Austin. The article begins with a description of, and justification for, the hardware and software design decisions underlying the BWIBots, with the aim of informing the design of such platforms in the future. It then proceeds to present an overview of various research contributions that have enabled the BWIBots to better (a) execute action sequences to complete user requests, (b) efficiently ask questions to resolve user requests, (c) understand human commands given in natural language, and (d) understand human intention from afar. The article concludes with a look forward towards future research opportunities and applications enabled by the BWIBot platform
Towards computerizing intensive care sedation guidelines: design of a rule-based architecture for automated execution of clinical guidelines
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Computerized ICUs rely on software services to convey the medical condition of their patients as well as assisting the staff in taking treatment decisions. Such services are useful for following clinical guidelines quickly and accurately. However, the development of services is often time-consuming and error-prone. Consequently, many care-related activities are still conducted based on manually constructed guidelines. These are often ambiguous, which leads to unnecessary variations in treatments and costs.</p> <p>The goal of this paper is to present a semi-automatic verification and translation framework capable of turning manually constructed diagrams into ready-to-use programs. This framework combines the strengths of the manual and service-oriented approaches while decreasing their disadvantages. The aim is to close the gap in communication between the IT and the medical domain. This leads to a less time-consuming and error-prone development phase and a shorter clinical evaluation phase.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A framework is proposed that semi-automatically translates a clinical guideline, expressed as an XML-based flow chart, into a Drools Rule Flow by employing semantic technologies such as ontologies and SWRL. An overview of the architecture is given and all the technology choices are thoroughly motivated. Finally, it is shown how this framework can be integrated into a service-oriented architecture (SOA).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The applicability of the Drools Rule language to express clinical guidelines is evaluated by translating an example guideline, namely the sedation protocol used for the anaesthetization of patients, to a Drools Rule Flow and executing and deploying this Rule-based application as a part of a SOA. The results show that the performance of Drools is comparable to other technologies such as Web Services and increases with the number of decision nodes present in the Rule Flow. Most delays are introduced by loading the Rule Flows.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The framework is an effective solution for computerizing clinical guidelines as it allows for quick development, evaluation and human-readable visualization of the Rules and has a good performance. By monitoring the parameters of the patient to automatically detect exceptional situations and problems and by notifying the medical staff of tasks that need to be performed, the computerized sedation guideline improves the execution of the guideline.</p
Autism genetic database (AGD): a comprehensive database including autism susceptibility gene-CNVs integrated with known noncoding RNAs and fragile sites
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Autism is a highly heritable complex neurodevelopmental disorder, therefore identifying its genetic basis has been challenging. To date, numerous susceptibility genes and chromosomal abnormalities have been reported in association with autism, but most discoveries either fail to be replicated or account for a small effect. Thus, in most cases the underlying causative genetic mechanisms are not fully understood. In the present work, the Autism Genetic Database (AGD) was developed as a literature-driven, web-based, and easy to access database designed with the aim of creating a comprehensive repository for all the currently reported genes and genomic copy number variations (CNVs) associated with autism in order to further facilitate the assessment of these autism susceptibility genetic factors.</p> <p>Description</p> <p>AGD is a relational database that organizes data resulting from exhaustive literature searches for reported susceptibility genes and CNVs associated with autism. Furthermore, genomic information about human fragile sites and noncoding RNAs was also downloaded and parsed from miRBase, snoRNA-LBME-db, piRNABank, and the MIT/ICBP siRNA database. A web client genome browser enables viewing of the features while a web client query tool provides access to more specific information for the features. When applicable, links to external databases including GenBank, PubMed, miRBase, snoRNA-LBME-db, piRNABank, and the MIT siRNA database are provided.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>AGD comprises a comprehensive list of susceptibility genes and copy number variations reported to-date in association with autism, as well as all known human noncoding RNA genes and fragile sites. Such a unique and inclusive autism genetic database will facilitate the evaluation of autism susceptibility factors in relation to known human noncoding RNAs and fragile sites, impacting on human diseases. As a result, this new autism database offers a valuable tool for the research community to evaluate genetic findings for this complex multifactorial disorder in an integrated format. AGD provides a genome browser and a web based query client for conveniently selecting features of interest. Access to AGD is freely available at <url>http://wren.bcf.ku.edu/</url>.</p
Spoken language interaction with robots: Recommendations for future research
With robotics rapidly advancing, more effective human–robot interaction is increasingly needed to realize the full potential of robots for society. While spoken language must be part of the solution, our ability to provide spoken language interaction capabilities is still very limited. In this article, based on the report of an interdisciplinary workshop convened by the National Science Foundation, we identify key scientific and engineering advances needed to enable effective spoken language interaction with robotics. We make 25 recommendations, involving eight general themes: putting human needs first, better modeling the social and interactive aspects of language, improving robustness, creating new methods for rapid adaptation, better integrating speech and language with other communication modalities, giving speech and language components access to rich representations of the robot’s current knowledge and state, making all components operate in real time, and improving research infrastructure and resources. Research and development that prioritizes these topics will, we believe, provide a solid foundation for the creation of speech-capable robots that are easy and effective for humans to work with
Cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, their ratio and hypertension: evidence of associations in male veterans from the Vietnam Experience Study.
Although clinical observations implicate cortisol in hypertension, the epidemiological evidence is less compelling. Little is known about the relationship between dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHEAS) and hypertension, and nothing about the association with the cortisol: DHEAS ratio. The present analyses of data obtained from Vietnamera US veterans examined the associations between cortisol, DHEAS, their ratio and hypertension. Participants were 4180 male veterans. From military files, telephone interviews and a medical examination, sociodemographic and health data were collected. At medical examination, a fasted morning blood sample was collected to assay serum cortisol and DHEAS, blood pressure measured and body mass index (BMI) determined. Hypertension was defined by having one of the following: a reported physician diagnosis, taking antihypertensive medication, an average systolic blood pressure >= 140 mm Hg and an average diastolic blood pressure >= 90 mm Hg. Cortisol and the cortisol: DHEAS ratio were positively associated with hypertension (P < 0.001), whereas DHEAS was negatively associated; the latter relationship was attenuated to non-significance (P = 0.06) in models that adjusted for age, sociodemographics, place of service, health behaviours and BMI. The present analyses provide confirmation of a positive association between cortisol and the cortisol: DHEAS ratio and population hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension (2011) 25, 418-424; doi:10.1038/jhh.2011.6; published online 10 February 201
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