145 research outputs found

    Eye structure of externally eyeless Grylloblattids (Insecta,Notoptera)

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    Eye structure of externally eyeless Galloisiana nipponensis is investigated using light and scanning electron microscopic techniques, The cornea and retinula cells in an ommatidium are formed but only eye pigment was lacking. Key words : Notoptera, Galloisiana, compound eye, eyeless

    Layout Optimization of the Beam Spot Locations Scanned by Electromagnets in Particle Beam Therapy

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    This paper presents a layout optimization method of the spot locations of pencil beam scanning for particle beam cancer therapy. With the pencil beam scanning technique, the particle beam is scanned from spot to spot in the tumor by using scanning magnets. To provide clinically ideal dose distributions and less-invasive treatment to the patients, both the spot locations and the number of particles given to each spot should be optimized. However, the spot layout is fixed with a lattice pattern in many prior studies. We propose the optimization method to derive the non-lattice spot layout to realize an acceptable dose distribution with a reduced number of spots. With the proposed method, a large enough number of spots were located densely at the initial state, and then the spots with the smallest contribution were removed one by one through iterations. The number of particles given to each spot was determined by solving a quadratic problem. Furthermore, we also propose the idea to accelerate the optimization process by simultaneously removing multiple spots. The algorithm was confirmed by numerical examples of both two-dimensional and three-dimensional cases. The dose quality with the optimized spot layout was better than that with the conventional lattice spot patterns, with all tested cases. In the optimized spot layout, the spots were located on the closed lines which were concentric to the target contour. We also confirmed the proposed method of multiple-remotion can accelerate the optimization process without violating the dose quality

    Fractional Vortices and Lumps

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    We study what might be called fractional vortices, vortex configurations with the minimum winding from the viewpoint of their topological stability, but which are characterized by various notable substructures in the transverse energy distribution. The fractional vortices occur in diverse Abelian or non-Abelian generalizations of the Higgs model. The global and local features characterizing these are studied, and we identify the two crucial ingredients for their occurrence - the vacuum degeneracy leading to non-trivial vacuum moduli M, and the BPS nature of the vortices. Fractional vortices are further classified into two kinds. The first type of such vortices appear when M has orbifold Z_n singularities; the second type occurs in systems in which the vacuum moduli space M possesses either a deformed geometry or some singularity. These general features are illustrated with several concrete models.Comment: LaTeX, 46 pages, 12 figures. V2: minor changes, footnote adde

    DialMAT: Dialogue-Enabled Transformer with Moment-Based Adversarial Training

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    This paper focuses on the DialFRED task, which is the task of embodied instruction following in a setting where an agent can actively ask questions about the task. To address this task, we propose DialMAT. DialMAT introduces Moment-based Adversarial Training, which incorporates adversarial perturbations into the latent space of language, image, and action. Additionally, it introduces a crossmodal parallel feature extraction mechanism that applies foundation models to both language and image. We evaluated our model using a dataset constructed from the DialFRED dataset and demonstrated superior performance compared to the baseline method in terms of success rate and path weighted success rate. The model secured the top position in the DialFRED Challenge, which took place at the CVPR 2023 Embodied AI workshop.Comment: Accepted for presentation at Fourth Annual Embodied AI Workshop at CVP

    Light- and Electron- microscopic and Immunohistochemical Studies of Human Rhabdomyosarcomas. Comparisons Among Primary Tumors, Heterotransplants in Nude Mice, and Cultured Cells from 13 Patients

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    Eighteen human rhabdomyosarcomas (RMS) were transplanted into the sub-cutaneous space on the back of nude mice. Thirteen of the tumors gave rise to transplantable tumors that were further examined morphologically and immuno-histochemically. The morphology of the transplanted tumors was similar to that of the primary tumors. Immunohistochemically, five primary tumors and six transplanted tumors were reacted with both desmin and myoglobin. However, in eleven cases cultured cells derived from the transplanted tumors, which showed elongated to strap-spindle-shaped cytoplasm resembling myotubules, reacted more intensely with both myoglobin and desmin. On ultrastructural examination, six primary tumors and seven transplanted tumors were found to have myofilaments or Z-bands. However, cultured cells showed myofilaments or Z-bands in their cytoplasm in all cases examined. We concluded that, on xeno-grafting, the histologic characteristics of the primary tumor are essentially con-served, and that tumor cells under culture conditions undergo an increased differentiation of skeletal muscle. These human RMS strains in nude mice and in cell lines will provide an excellent model system for investigating the biology of RMS and for further study of the molecular events underlying the genesis of this tumor

    Multiple Layer Structure of Non-Abelian Vortex

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    Bogomol'nyi-Prasad-Sommerfield (BPS) vortices in U(N) gauge theories have two layers corresponding to non-Abelian and Abelian fluxes, whose widths depend nontrivially on the ratio of U(1) and SU(N) gauge couplings. We find numerically and analytically that the widths differ significantly from the Compton lengths of lightest massive particles with the appropriate quantum number.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure

    Dynamics of Strings between Walls

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    Configurations of vortex-strings stretched between or ending on domain walls were previously found to be 1/4 Bogomol'nyi-Prasad-Sommerfield(BPS) states in N=2 supersymmetric gauge theories in 3+1 dimensions. Among zero modes of string positions, the center of mass of strings in each region between two adjacent domain walls is shown to be non-normalizable whereas the rests are normalizable. We study dynamics of vortex-strings stretched between separated domain walls by using two methods, the moduli space (geodesic) approximation of full 1/4 BPS states and the charged particle approximation for string endpoints in the wall effective action. In the first method we explicitly obtain the effective Lagrangian, in terms of hypergeometric functions, and find the 90 degree scattering for head-on collision. In the second method the domain wall effective action is assumed to be U(1)^N gauge theory, and we find a good agreement between two methods for well separated strings.Comment: 48 pages, 9 figure

    Double chambered right ventricle with severe calcification of the tricuspid valve in an elderly woman: a case report

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Double chambered right ventricle is a rare congenital cardiac anomaly in which the right ventricle is divided into two chambers by an anomalous muscle bundle. The diagnosis of this disorder is difficult in adults. Calcification of the tricuspid valve is extremely rare, and very few cases have been reported. Most cases of tricuspid valve calcification had a congenital disorder with high pressure in the right ventricle.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We report a rare case of a 71-year-old Japanese woman who presented with chest discomfort, and was found to have a double chambered right ventricle with severe calcification of the tricuspid valve. This abnormality was found by echocardiography, and the diagnosis was confirmed by multislice cardiac computerized tomography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, and cardiac catheterization. Our patient rejected surgical repair, and medical therapy with carvedilol was effective to reduce her symptoms.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Calcification of the tricuspid valve is extremely rare, and considered to be due to high pressure in the right ventricle. To the best of our knowledge, there are no other reported cases of this combination of double chambered right ventricle and calcification of the tricuspid valve.</p
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