7,055 research outputs found
Perturbations in Bouncing Cosmological Models
I describe the features and general properties of bouncing models and the
evolution of cosmological perturbations on such backgrounds. I will outline
possible observational consequences of the existence of a bounce in the
primordial Universe and I will make a comparison of these models with standard
long inflationary scenarios.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
An Efficient Monte Carlo-based Probabilistic Time-Dependent Routing Calculation Targeting a Server-Side Car Navigation System
Incorporating speed probability distribution to the computation of the route
planning in car navigation systems guarantees more accurate and precise
responses. In this paper, we propose a novel approach for dynamically selecting
the number of samples used for the Monte Carlo simulation to solve the
Probabilistic Time-Dependent Routing (PTDR) problem, thus improving the
computation efficiency. The proposed method is used to determine in a proactive
manner the number of simulations to be done to extract the travel-time
estimation for each specific request while respecting an error threshold as
output quality level. The methodology requires a reduced effort on the
application development side. We adopted an aspect-oriented programming
language (LARA) together with a flexible dynamic autotuning library (mARGOt)
respectively to instrument the code and to take tuning decisions on the number
of samples improving the execution efficiency. Experimental results demonstrate
that the proposed adaptive approach saves a large fraction of simulations
(between 36% and 81%) with respect to a static approach while considering
different traffic situations, paths and error requirements. Given the
negligible runtime overhead of the proposed approach, it results in an
execution-time speedup between 1.5x and 5.1x. This speedup is reflected at
infrastructure-level in terms of a reduction of around 36% of the computing
resources needed to support the whole navigation pipeline
Identification of Novel Tumor Antigens With Patient-Derived Immune-Selected Antibodies
The identification of tumor antigens capable of eliciting an immune response in vivo may be an effective method to identify therapeutic cancer targets. We have developed a method to identify such antigens using frozen tumor-draining lymph node samples from breast cancer patients. Immune responses in tumor-draining lymph nodes were identified by immunostaining lymph node sections for B-cell markers (CD20&CD23) and Ki67 which revealed cell proliferation in germinal center zones. Antigen-dependent somatic hypermutation (SH) and clonal expansion (CE) were present in heavy chain variable (VH) domain cDNA clones obtained from these germinal centers, but not from Ki67 negative germinal centers. Recombinant VH single-domain antibodies were used to screen tumor proteins and affinity select potential tumor antigens. Neuroplastin (NPTN) was identified as a candidate breast tumor antigen using proteomic identification of affinity selected tumor proteins with a recombinant VH single chain antibody. NPTN was found to be highly expressed in approximately 20% of invasive breast carcinomas and 50% of breast carcinomas with distal metastasis using a breast cancer tissue array. Additionally, NPTN over-expression in a breast cancer cell line resulted in a significant increase in tumor growth and angiogenesis in vivo which was related to increased VEGF production in the transfected cells. These results validate NPTN as a tumor-associated antigen which could promote breast tumor growth and metastasis if aberrantly expressed. These studies also demonstrate that humoral immune responses in tumor-draining lymph nodes can provide antibody reagents useful in identifying tumor antigens with applications for biomarker screening, diagnostics and therapeutic interventions
Semantic Web Services for Multi-Agent Systems Interoperability
Agent-based technologies are often used including existing web services. The outputs of some services are also frequently used as inputs for other services, including other MAS. However, while agent-based technologies can be used to provide services, these are not described using the same semantic web technologies web services use, which makes it difficult to discover, invoke and compose them with web services seamlessly. In this paper, we analyse different agent-based technologies and how these can be described using extensions to OWL-S. Additionally, we propose an architecture that facilitates these services’ usage, where services of any kind can be registered and executed (semi-)automatically.The present work has been developed under the PIANISM Project (ANI|P2020 40125) and has received funding from FEDER Funds through NORTE2020 program and from National Funds through Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) under the project UID/EEA/00760/2019. Gabriel Santos is supported by national funds through FCT PhD studentship with reference SFRH/BD/118487/2016.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Feeding and housing boars after puberty without castration allowsfor good performance and low boar taint
Finishing entire male pigs after puberty is not common in Europe due to aggression and boar taint. Alternatives to surgical castration or immunocastration should be explored as the production of entire males can also increase the productivity and sustainability of swine production. This study evaluated
the performance, welfare, health, and meat quality of heavier pigs (from 95 to 135 kg) raised without castration. A factorial experiment consisting of 2 housing conditions (H1 control, H2 improved) × 3 diets (D1 – control diet, D2 – 10% beet pulp, D3 – 5% beet pulp + 4% Fibrofos) with 60 entire males
randomly allocated to 6 pens, 23 to 30 weeks of age, was conducted using a Pietrain Ă— (Large White Ă— Landrace) cross. Treatment effects were evaluated with respect to growth, carcass yield, skin lesions, cortisol, hemogram, skatole, androstenone and meat physicochemical characteristics. Improved housing
with more headspace, larger feeders, extra drinkers, environmental enrichment (organic toys), and group stability until slaughter led to a significant decrease in androstenone levels and benefited animal health and welfare without compromising performance. In addition, diets with inulin from Fibrofos or sugar beet pulp allowed to significantly reduce skatole content. Due to the price, beet pulp is more
sustainable and its 10% inclusion did not negatively affect either intake or performance. Raising entire male pigs for carcasses with low boar taint is be possible if adequate space, environmental enrichment, and specific feeds are provided.9814-6B05-9C03 | Ricardo Miguel Pereira PintoN/
Modeling Star counts in the Monoceros stream and the Galactic anti-centre
There is a continued debate as to the form of the outer disc of the Milky Way
galaxy, which has important implications for its formation. Stars are known to
exist at a galacto-centric distance of at least 20 kpc. However, there is much
debate as to whether these stars can be explained as being part of the disc or
whether another extra galactic structure, the so called Monoceros ring/stream,
is required. To examine the outer disc of the Galaxy toward the anti-centre to
determine whether the star counts can be explained by the thin and thick discs
alone. Using Sloan star counts and extracting the late F and early G dwarfs it
is possible to directly determine the density of stars out to a galacto-centric
distance of about 25 kpc. These are then compared with a simple flared disc
model. A flared disc model is shown to reproduce the counts along the line of
sights examined, if the thick disc does not have a sharp cut off. The flare
starts at a Galacto-centric radius of 16 kpc and has a scale length of
4.5+/-1.5 kpc. Whilst the interpretation of the counts in terms of a
ring/stream cannot be definitely discounted, it does not appear to be
necessary, at least along the lines of sight examined towards the anti centre.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted to be published in A&
Ultraviolet, Optical, and X-Ray Observations of the Type Ia Supernova 2005am with Swift
We present ultraviolet and optical light curves in six broadband filters and
grism spectra obtained by Swift's Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope for the Type Ia
supernova SN2005am. The data were collected beginning about four days before
the B-band maximum, with excellent coverage of the rapid decline phase and
later observations extending out to 69 days after the peak. The optical and
near UV light curve match well those of SN1992A. The other UV observations
constitute the first set of light curves shorter than 2500 Angstroms and allow
us to compare the light curve evolution in three UV bands. The UV behavior of
this and other low redshift supernovae can be used to constrain theories of
progenitor evolution or to interpret optical light curves of high redshift
supernovae. Using Swift's X-Ray Telescope, we also report the upper limit to
SN2005am's X-ray luminosity to be 1.77 x 10^40 erg s^-1 in the 0.3--10 keV
range from 58,117 s of exposure time.Comment: 15 pages, including 3 figures and 2 tables, submitted to
Astrophysical Journa
Probing the Canis Major stellar over-density as due to the Galactic warp
Proper-motion, star counts and photometric catalog simulations are used to
explain the detected stellar over-density in the region of Canis Major (CMa),
claimed to be the core of a disrupted dwarf galaxy (Martin et al. 2004,
Bellazzini et al. 2003), as due to the Galactic warp and flare in the external
disk. We compare the kinematics of CMa M-giant selected sample with surrounding
Galactic disk stars in the UCAC2 catalog and find no peculiar proper motion
signature: CMa stars mimic thick disk kinematics. Moreover, when taking into
account the Galactic warp and flare of the disk, 2MASS star count profiles
reproduce the CMa stellar over-density. This star count analysis is confirmed
by direct comparison with synthetic color-magnitude diagrams simulated with the
Besancon models (Robin et al. 2003) that include the warp and flare of the
disk. The presented evidence casts doubt on the identification of the CMa
over-density as the core of a disrupted Milky Way satellite. This however does
not make clear the origin of over-densities responsible for the ring structure
in the anticenter direction of the Galactic halo (Newberg et al. 2002; Yanny et
al. 2003; Zaggia et al. 2004, in preparation).Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters, 4 page
Electrical properties of AlNxOy thin films prepared by reactive magnetron sputtering
Direct current magnetron sputtering was used to produce AlNxOy thin films, using an aluminum target, argon and a mixture of N2+O2 (17:3) as reactive gases. The partial pressure of the reactive gas mixture was increased, maintaining the discharge current constant. Within the two identified regimes of the target (metallic and compound), four different tendencies for the deposition rate were found and a morphological evolution from columnar towards cauliflower-type, ending up as dense and featureless-type films. The structure was found to be
Al-type (face centered cubic) and the structural characterization carried out by X-ray 2 diffraction and transmission electron microscopy suggested the formation of an aluminumbased polycrystalline phase dispersed in an amorphous aluminum oxide/nitride (or oxynitride)
matrix. This type of structure, composition, morphology and grain size, were found to be strongly correlated with the electrical response of the films, which showed a gradual transition between metallic-like responses towards semiconducting and even insulating-type behaviors.
A group of films with high aluminum content revealed a sharp decrease of the temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR) as the concentration ratio of non-metallic/aluminum atomic ratio increased. Another group of samples, where the non-metallic content became more important, revealed a smooth transition between positive and negative values of TCR. In order to test whether the oxynitride films have a unique behavior or simply a transition between the typical responses of aluminum and of those of the correspondent nitride and oxide, the electrical properties of the ternary oxynitride system were compared with AlNx and AlOy
systems, prepared in similar conditions.This research is sponsored by FEDER funds through the program COMPETE-Programa Operacional Factores de Competitividade, by the national funds through FCT-Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, under the project PTDC/CTM-NAN/112574/2009 and Programa
Pessoa 2010/2011 Cooperação Portugal/França, Proc.º 441.00, Project“COLOURCLUSTER”. J. Borges also acknowledges FCT financial support under PhD
grant no. SFRH/BD/47118/2008
Defective DNA base excision repair in brain from individuals with Alzheimer's disease and amnestic mild cognitive impairment
Oxidative stress is thought to play a role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and increased oxidative DNA damage has been observed in brain tissue from AD patients. Base excision repair (BER) is the primary DNA repair pathway for small base modifications such as alkylation, deamination and oxidation. In this study, we have investigated alterations in the BER capacity in brains of AD patients. We employed a set of functional assays to measure BER activities in brain tissue from short post-mortem interval autopsies of 10 sporadic AD patients and 10 age-matched controls. BER activities were also measured in brain samples from 9 amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) subjects. We found significant BER deficiencies in brains of AD patients due to limited DNA base damage processing by DNA glycosylases and reduced DNA synthesis capacity by DNA polymerase β. The BER impairment was not restricted to damaged brain regions and was also detected in the brains of amnestic MCI patients, where it correlated with the abundance of neurofibrillary tangles. These findings suggest that BER dysfunction is a general feature of AD brains which could occur at the earliest stages of the disease. The results support the hypothesis that defective BER may play an important role in the progression of AD
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