108 research outputs found

    A comparison of the ichthyofaunas in two permanently open eastern Cape estuaries

    Get PDF
    The Kowie and Great Fish estuaries are situated less than 30 km apart, yet they differ considerably in terms of riverine inflow, turbidity, food resources and habitat availability. The ichthyofauna of the two estuaries were sampled using plankton, seine and gill nets. A greater ichthyofaunal richness (R) was recorded in the Kowie estuary and this is attributed to the wider range of habitats and greater degree of marine influence in this system. In contrast, all three sampling gears revealed an approximate 3:1 ratio between fish abundance in the Great Fish and Kowie estuaries. The higher abundance of fishes in the Great Fish estuary is partly attributed to the large organic and nutrient inputs into this system when compared with the Kowie system, and the influence of these inputs on estuarine primary and secondary production. Individual fish species are affected differently by turbid water conditions. Indications from this study were that piscivorous fishes (e.g. Lichia amia) which rely mainly on visual foraging methods were adversely affected by the high turbidity conditions within the Great Fish estuary, whereas piscivores (e.g. Argyrosomus hololepidotus) which rely mainly on non-visual methods were unaffected. Macrobenthic predators (e.g. Pomadasys commersonnii) and detritivo-rous fish species (e.g. Mugil cephalus) also appear to be unaffected by high suspensoid levels and were usually more abundant in the Great Fish than in the Kowie estuary. The length-frequency distributions of some of the dominanl fish species occurring in both estuaries are presented

    Multi-score Learning for Affect Recognition: the Case of Body Postures

    Get PDF
    An important challenge in building automatic affective state recognition systems is establishing the ground truth. When the groundtruth is not available, observers are often used to label training and testing sets. Unfortunately, inter-rater reliability between observers tends to vary from fair to moderate when dealing with naturalistic expressions. Nevertheless, the most common approach used is to label each expression with the most frequent label assigned by the observers to that expression. In this paper, we propose a general pattern recognition framework that takes into account the variability between observers for automatic affect recognition. This leads to what we term a multi-score learning problem in which a single expression is associated with multiple values representing the scores of each available emotion label. We also propose several performance measurements and pattern recognition methods for this framework, and report the experimental results obtained when testing and comparing these methods on two affective posture datasets

    Spin, charge and orbital ordering in ferrimagnetic insulator YBaMn2_2O5_5

    Full text link
    The oxygen-deficient (double) perovskite YBaMn2_2O5_5, containing corner-linked MnO5_5 square pyramids, is found to exhibit ferrimagnetic ordering in its ground state. In the present work we report generalized-gradient-corrected, relativistic first-principles full-potential density-functional calculations performed on YBaMn2_2O5_5 in the nonmagnetic, ferromagnetic and ferrimagnetic states. The charge, orbital and spin orderings are explained with site-, angular momentum- and orbital-projected density of states, charge-density plots, electronic structure and total energy studies. YBaMn2_2O5_5 is found to stabilize in a G-type ferrimagnetic state in accordance with experimental results. The experimentally observed insulating behavior appears only when we include ferrimagnetic ordering in our calculation. We observed significant optical anisotropy in this material originating from the combined effect of ferrimagnetic ordering and crystal field splitting. In order to gain knowledge about the presence of different valence states for Mn in YBaMn2_2O5_5 we have calculated KK-edge x-ray absorption near-edge spectra for the Mn and O atoms. The presence of the different valence states for Mn is clearly established from the x-ray absorption near-edge spectra, hyperfine field parameters and the magnetic properties study. Among the experimentally proposed structures, the recently reported description based on PP4/nmmnmm is found to represent the stable structure

    "The extreme penalty of the law": mercy and the death penalty as aspects of state power in colonial Nyasaland, c. 1903-47

    Get PDF
    Open access article.Capital punishment was the pinnacle of the colonial judicial system and its use of state violence, but has previously been neglected as a topic of historical research in Africa. This article is based on the case files and legal records of over 800 capital trials – predominantly for murder – dating between 1900 and 1947. It outlines the functioning of the legal system in Nyasaland and the tensions between “violence” and “humanitarianism” in the use and reform of the death penalty. Capital punishment was a political penalty as much as a judicial punishment, with both didactic and deterrent functions: it operated through mercy and the sparing of condemned lives as well as through executions. Mercy in Nyasaland was consistent with colonial political objectives and cultural values: it was decided not only on the facts of cases, but according to British conceptions of “justice”, “order”, “criminality”, and “African” behaviour. This article analyses the use of mercy in Nyasaland to provide a lens on the nature of colonial governance, and the tensions between African and colonial understandings of violence.Arts and Humanities Research Council (UK) and the Beit Fund, University of Oxfor

    A delicate balance between antibody evasion and ACE2 affinity for Omicron BA.2.75

    Get PDF
    Variants of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) have caused successive global waves of infection. These variants, with multiple mutations in the spike protein, are thought to facilitate escape from natural and vaccine-induced immunity and often increase in affinity for ACE2. The latest variant to cause concern is BA.2.75, identified in India where it is now the dominant strain, with evidence of wider dissemination. BA.2.75 is derived from BA.2 and contains four additional mutations in the receptor-binding domain (RBD). Here, we perform an antigenic and biophysical characterization of BA.2.75, revealing an interesting balance between humoral evasion and ACE2 receptor affinity. ACE2 affinity for BA.2.75 is increased 9-fold compared with BA.2; there is also evidence of escape of BA.2.75 from immune serum, particularly that induced by Delta infection, which may explain the rapid spread in India, where where there is a high background of Delta infection. ACE2 affinity appears to be prioritized over greater escape

    Rapid escape of new SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variants from BA.2-directed antibody responses

    Get PDF
    In November 2021, Omicron BA.1, containing a raft of new spike mutations, emerged and quickly spread globally. Intense selection pressure to escape the antibody response produced by vaccines or severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection then led to a rapid succession of Omicron sub-lineages with waves of BA.2 and then BA.4/5 infection. Recently, many variants have emerged such as BQ.1 and XBB, which carry up to 8 additional receptor-binding domain (RBD) amino acid substitutions compared with BA.2. We describe a panel of 25 potent monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) generated from vaccinees suffering BA.2 breakthrough infections. Epitope mapping shows potent mAb binding shifting to 3 clusters, 2 corresponding to early-pandemic binding hotspots. The RBD mutations in recent variants map close to these binding sites and knock out or severely knock down neutralization activity of all but 1 potent mAb. This recent mAb escape corresponds with large falls in neutralization titer of vaccine or BA.1, BA.2, or BA.4/5 immune serum

    Genetic insights into resting heart rate and its role in cardiovascular disease.

    Get PDF
    Resting heart rate is associated with cardiovascular diseases and mortality in observational and Mendelian randomization studies. The aims of this study are to extend the number of resting heart rate associated genetic variants and to obtain further insights in resting heart rate biology and its clinical consequences. A genome-wide meta-analysis of 100 studies in up to 835,465 individuals reveals 493 independent genetic variants in 352 loci, including 68 genetic variants outside previously identified resting heart rate associated loci. We prioritize 670 genes and in silico annotations point to their enrichment in cardiomyocytes and provide insights in their ECG signature. Two-sample Mendelian randomization analyses indicate that higher genetically predicted resting heart rate increases risk of dilated cardiomyopathy, but decreases risk of developing atrial fibrillation, ischemic stroke, and cardio-embolic stroke. We do not find evidence for a linear or non-linear genetic association between resting heart rate and all-cause mortality in contrast to our previous Mendelian randomization study. Systematic alteration of key differences between the current and previous Mendelian randomization study indicates that the most likely cause of the discrepancy between these studies arises from false positive findings in previous one-sample MR analyses caused by weak-instrument bias at lower P-value thresholds. The results extend our understanding of resting heart rate biology and give additional insights in its role in cardiovascular disease development

    Faulting in austenite

    No full text

    Perceiving affect from arm movement

    No full text
    We examined the visual perception of affect from point-light displays of arm movements. Two actors were instructed to perform drinking and knocking movements with ten different affects while the three-dimensional positions of their arms were recorded. Point-light animations of these natural movements and phase-scrambled, upside-down versions of the same knocking movements were shown to participants who were asked to categorize the affect of the display. In both cases the resulting confusion matrices were analyzed using multidimensional scaling. For the natural movements the resulting two-dimensional psychological space was similar to a circumplex with the first dimension appearing as activation and the second dimension as pleasantness. For the scrambled displays the first dimension was similar in structure to that obtained for the natural movements but the second dimension was not. With both natural and scrambled movements Dimension 1 of the psychological space was highly correlated to the kinematics of the movement. These results suggest that the corresponding activation of perceived affect is a formless cue that relates directly to the movement kinematics while the pleasantness of the movement appears to be carried in the phase relations between the different limb segments

    Color Doppler sonography of small bowel wall changes in 21 consecutive cases of acute mesenteric ischemia.

    No full text
    AIM OF THE STUDY: To describe the small bowel wall changes observed with color Doppler sonography in acute mesenteric ischemia with comparison with its outcome. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We reviewed the sonographic findings of 21 patients with a final diagnosis of acute mesenteric ischemia (12 acute arterial forms and 9 acute venous forms). These examinations included identification of non peristaltic thin-walled fluid-filled intestinal loops (with or without pneumatosis), thickened intestinal wall (> 3 mm) (noted as stratified or not), and preserved or absent mural flow assessed with color Doppler. Sonographic findings were compared with the surgical data (n = 16) or with the clinical outcome (n = 5). RESULTS: In acute arterial ischemia, non-peristaltic thin-walled intestinal loops were detected with sonography in five cases, with visualization of pneumatosis in one. Bowel infarction was diagnosed in four of these five patients including one patient with pneumatosis. Thickened bowel loops were sonographically detected in four cases, of which 3 required resection. Conservative therapy was performed in the remaining case having preserved wall stratification and mural flow with color Doppler. In acute venous ischemia, thickened bowel loops were detected with sonography in six cases. Conservative therapy was performed in three cases for whom preserved mural flow was noted. Stratification was present in two of these three cases. CONCLUSION: In acute arterial ischemia, intestinal resection is frequently required when non-peristaltic, thin-walled, fluid-filled loops are detected with sonography. In arterial and venous ischemia, absence of wall stratification and mural flow are frequently associated with ischemia requiring surgery
    • …
    corecore