1,542 research outputs found
Integrated pest management of sugarcane moth borers: An Indonesian experience : S1012TU05 Integrated Pest Management
An Integrated Pest Management program is developed to combat moth borer infestation in Java, Indonesia. An extensive survey over a period of two years (2010 ? 2011) revealed the existence of five moth borer species causing damage to sugarcane crops in Java, and these were Chilo auricilius, C. sacchariphagus, Scirpophaga excerptalis, Sesamia inferens and Tetramoera schistaceana, with the three former species being the most abundant. Infestation by C. sacchariphagus and C. auricilius caused dead heart and leaf damage in young cane and bored internodes in older cane, while S. excerptalis was responsible for the majority of dead heart symptoms at all stages of plant development. Infestation by the main three borers commenced in February and escalated to a peak in about June ? July. Our results revealed very low levels of parasitism by key natural enemies, and this was attributed to inconsistent parasitoid release, lack of prior assessment of infestation levels, release of low parasitoid densities and random use of insecticides. Certain varieties demonstrated a degree of tolerance to borer infestation, however, different susceptibility levels to different borer species was evident, hence, breeding for combined resistance to all borer species is difficult. A plan is developed based on borer abundance in the field, whereby accurate densities of natural enemies are released as borer infestation commences and well before it reaches a peak. The principal components of a detailed Integrated Management Program to combat moth borer infestations in Indonesia are discussed. (Résumé d'auteur
Building a Career in Estate Management: The Perspective of Covenant University Students
The practice of estate management is influenced by processes developed over many years and worked out by a profession
that has been established since 1975 by Decree No. 24 in Nigeria with all the strength and weaknesses inherent. The study
examined the perception of estate management student about a career in the profession of Estate Surveying and Valuation.
Estate management students of Covenant University students from 100 to 500 levels were adopted as population sample for
the study. Structured questionnaires were analyzed and the simple descriptive statistics and mean item score were used for
analysis. The outcome of the study shows that some of the students are not fully aware of the course- Estate Management but
were compelled to study it. Some others willingly choose to study the course having heard about the prospect and some
others just dabbled into it in a bid to avoid time wasting. One of the recommendations is that more orientation should be
given to students about the different profession and its prospect so as to enhance their knowledge before venturing into them.
It also recommended that there should be more interaction between the university system and the professional practice to
enable students have better exposure of the real practice after graduation
Age grading \u3cem\u3eAn. gambiae\u3c/em\u3e and \u3cem\u3eAn. arabiensis\u3c/em\u3e using near infrared spectra and artificial neural networks
Background
Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is currently complementing techniques to age-grade mosquitoes. NIRS classifies lab-reared and semi-field raised mosquitoes into \u3c or ≥ 7 days old with an average accuracy of 80%, achieved by training a regression model using partial least squares (PLS) and interpreted as a binary classifier. Methods and findings
We explore whether using an artificial neural network (ANN) analysis instead of PLS regression improves the current accuracy of NIRS models for age-grading malaria transmitting mosquitoes. We also explore if directly training a binary classifier instead of training a regression model and interpreting it as a binary classifier improves the accuracy. A total of 786 and 870 NIR spectra collected from laboratory reared An. gambiae and An. arabiensis, respectively, were used and pre-processed according to previously published protocols. The ANN regression model scored root mean squared error (RMSE) of 1.6 ± 0.2 for An. gambiae and 2.8 ± 0.2 for An. arabiensis; whereas the PLS regression model scored RMSE of 3.7 ± 0.2 for An. gambiae, and 4.5 ± 0.1 for An. arabiensis. When we interpreted regression models as binary classifiers, the accuracy of the ANN regression model was 93.7 ± 1.0% for An. gambiae, and 90.2 ± 1.7% for An. arabiensis; while PLS regression model scored the accuracy of 83.9 ± 2.3% for An. gambiae, and 80.3 ± 2.1% for An. arabiensis. We also find that a directly trained binary classifier yields higher age estimation accuracy than a regression model interpreted as a binary classifier. A directly trained ANN binary classifier scored an accuracy of 99.4 ± 1.0 for An. gambiae and 99.0 ± 0.6% for An. arabiensis; while a directly trained PLS binary classifier scored 93.6 ± 1.2% for An. gambiae and 88.7 ± 1.1% for An. arabiensis. We further tested the reproducibility of these results on different independent mosquito datasets. ANNs scored higher estimation accuracies than when the same age models are trained using PLS. Regardless of the model architecture, directly trained binary classifiers scored higher accuracies on classifying age of mosquitoes than regression models translated as binary classifiers. Conclusion
We recommend training models to estimate age of An. arabiensis and An. gambiae using ANN model architectures (especially for datasets with at least 70 mosquitoes per age group) and direct training of binary classifier instead of training a regression model and interpreting it as a binary classifier
THE PERCEPTION OF ESTATE MANAGEMENT STUDENTS OF COVENANT UNIVERSITY TO THE COURSE VALUATION: COMPREHENSIBLE OR NOT?
Valuation is very important to the real estate profession. It is a veritable tool for decision making in property
transaction and require that opinion of values given for an interest in landed property by practitioners are reliable
and consistent. However, the study of valuation by university students appears to have generated bias over the years.
The failure rate in valuation compared to other courses seems to be higher. The aim of this paper is to examine the
Perception of Estate Management students to the study of valuation. Estate management students of covenant
university students from 200 to 500 levels (being the levels offering valuation as a subject) were adopted as
population sample for the study. Structured questionnaires were analyzed and the simple descriptive statistics were
used for the study. The outcome of the study shows that some of the students are not fully aware of the course-
Estate Management but were compelled to study it and as such are not enjoying some of the subjects particularly
valuation while some are aware but find valuation particularly difficult and the others are of the opinion that
valuation is very interesting. It recommends that more orientation should be given to students about the different
discipline and the courses / subjects that make up the study before embarking on such a study at the universit
The Category of Node-and-Choice Forms, with Subcategories for Choice-Sequence Forms and Choice-Set Forms
The literature specifies extensive-form games in many styles, and eventually
I hope to formally translate games across those styles. Toward that end, this
paper defines , the category of node-and-choice forms. The
category's objects are extensive forms in essentially any style, and the
category's isomorphisms are made to accord with the literature's small handful
of ad hoc style equivalences.
Further, this paper develops two full subcategories: for
forms whose nodes are choice-sequences, and for forms whose
nodes are choice-sets. I show that is "isomorphically enclosed"
in in the sense that each form is isomorphic to
a form. Similarly, I show that is
isomorphically enclosed in in the sense that each
form with no-absentmindedness is isomorphic to a
form. The converses are found to be almost immediate, and the
resulting equivalences unify and simplify two ad hoc style equivalences in
Kline and Luckraz 2016 and Streufert 2019.
Aside from the larger agenda, this paper already makes three practical
contributions. Style equivalences are made easier to derive by [1] a natural
concept of isomorphic invariance and [2] the composability of isomorphic
enclosures. In addition, [3] some new consequences of equivalence are
systematically deduced.Comment: 43 pages, 9 figure
RIPK1 protects from TNF-α-mediated liver damage during hepatitis
Cell death of hepatocytes is a prominent characteristic in the pathogenesis of liver disease, while hepatolysis is a starting point of inflammation in hepatitis and loss of hepatic function. However, the precise molecular mechanisms of hepatocyte cell death, the role of the cytokines of hepatic microenvironment and the involvement of intracellular kinases, remain unclear. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is a key cytokine involved in cell death or survival pathways and the role of RIPK1 has been associated to the TNF-alpha-dependent signaling pathway. We took advantage of two different deficient mouse lines, the RIPK1 kinase dead knock-in mice (Ripk1K45A) and the conditional knockout mice lacking RIPK1 only in liver parenchymal cells (Ripk1LPC-KO), to characterize the role of RIPK1 and TNF-alpha in hepatitis induced by concanavalin A (ConA). Our results show that RIPK1 is dispensable for liver homeostasis under steady-state conditions but in contrast, RIPK1 kinase activity contributes to caspase-independent cell death induction following ConA injection and RIPK1 also serves as a scaffold, protecting hepatocytes from massive apoptotic cell death in this model. In the Ripk1LPC-KO mice challenged with ConA, TNF-alpha triggers apoptosis, responsible for the observed severe hepatitis. Mechanism potentially involves both TNF-independent canonical NF-kappa B activation, as well as TNF-dependent, but canonical NF-kappa B-independent mechanisms. In conclusion, our results suggest that RIPK1 kinase activity is a pertinent therapeutic target to protect liver against excessive cell death in liver diseases
Microfluidic genome-wide profiling of intrinsic electrical properties in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Methods to analyze the intrinsic physical properties of cells – for example, size, density, rigidity, or electrical properties – are an active area of interest in the microfluidics community. Although the physical properties of cells are determined at a fundamental level by gene expression, the relationship between the two remains exceptionally complex and poorly characterized, limiting the adoption of intrinsic separation technologies. To improve our current understanding of how a cell's genotype maps to a measurable physical characteristic and quantitatively investigate the potential of using these characteristics as biomarkers, we have developed a novel screen that combines microfluidic cell sorting with high-throughput sequencing and the haploid yeast deletion library to identify genes whose functions modulate one such characteristic – intrinsic electrical properties. Using this screen, we are able to establish a high-content electrical profile of the haploid yeast gene deletion strains. We find that individual genetic deletions can appreciably alter the electrical properties of cells, affecting [approximately] 10% of the 4432 gene deletion strains screened. Additionally, we find that gene deletions affecting electrical properties in specific ways (i.e. increasing or decreasing effective conductivity at higher or lower electric field frequencies) are strongly associated with an enriched subset of fundamental biological processes that can be traced to specific pathways and complexes. The screening approach demonstrated here and the attendant results are immediately applicable to the intrinsic separations community.Singapore-MIT AllianceNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (NSF IDBR grant DBI-0852654)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH grant EB005753
A non-interleaving process calculus for multi-party synchronisation
We introduce the wire calculus. Its dynamic features are inspired by Milner's
CCS: a unary prefix operation, binary choice and a standard recursion
construct. Instead of an interleaving parallel composition operator there are
operators for synchronisation along a common boundary and non-communicating
parallel composition. The (operational) semantics is a labelled transition
system obtained with SOS rules. Bisimilarity is a congruence with respect to
the operators of the language. Quotienting terms by bisimilarity results in a
compact closed category
Interacting Frobenius Algebras are Hopf
Theories featuring the interaction between a Frobenius algebra and a Hopf
algebra have recently appeared in several areas in computer science: concurrent
programming, control theory, and quantum computing, among others. Bonchi,
Sobocinski, and Zanasi (2014) have shown that, given a suitable distributive
law, a pair of Hopf algebras forms two Frobenius algebras. Here we take the
opposite approach, and show that interacting Frobenius algebras form Hopf
algebras. We generalise (BSZ 2014) by including non-trivial dynamics of the
underlying object---the so-called phase group---and investigate the effects of
finite dimensionality of the underlying model. We recover the system of Bonchi
et al as a subtheory in the prime power dimensional case, but the more general
theory does not arise from a distributive law.Comment: 32 pages; submitte
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