352 research outputs found

    New views on old hands: the context of stencils in El Castillo and La Garma Caves (Cantabria, Spain)

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    Hand stencils are an intriguing feature of prehistoric imagery in caves and rockshelters in several parts of the world, and the recent demonstration that the oldest of those in Western Europe date back to 37 000 years or earlier further enhances their significance. Their positioning within the painted caves of France and Spain is far from random, but responds to the shapes and fissures in the cave walls. Made under conditions of low and flickering light, the authors suggest that touch—‘palpation’—as much as vision, would have driven and directed the locations chosen for these stencils. Detailed study of the images in two Cantabrian caves also allows different individuals to be distinguished, most of whom appear to have been female. Finally, the project reveals deliberate associations between the stencils and features on the cave walls

    Vicia faba Crop Residues for Sustainable Electricity Generation Using a Sludge-based Microbial Fuel Cell

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    Microbial fuel cells (MFC) simultaneously degrade organic substrates and generate electricity in a sustainable and eco-friendly way. Here, we built a 4-unit MFC and studied the efficiency of MFC at different conditions, including pH, substrate concentration of Vicia faba agricultural wastes with exoelectrogenic bacteria P. aeruginosa. The exoelectrogenic bacteria were obtained from industrial effluents and used to inoculate the MFCs. The optimized conditions in terms of yielding maximum potential of 802 mV, yielding maximum power density of 283 mW m–2 were reported at a substrate concentration of 6 g L–1 of V. faba waste and pH of 5.5, corresponding to a current density 1255.93 mA m–2. Using exoelectrogenic bacteria from industrial effluents and agricultural wastes resulted in efficient MFC. Thus, the developed MFCs using V. faba agricultural wastes can be used in rural areas that have limited access to electricity, by reusing agricultural wastes and concomitant electricity generation. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

    Tuning and hybrid parallelization of a genetic-based multi-point statistics simulation code

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    One of the main difficulties using multi-point statistical (MPS) simulation based on annealing techniques or genetic algorithms concerns the excessive amount of time and memory that must be spent in order to achieve convergence. In this work we propose code optimizations and parallelization schemes over a genetic-based MPS code with the aim of speeding up the execution time. The code optimizations involve the reduction of cache misses in the array accesses, avoid branching instructions and increase the locality of the accessed data. The hybrid parallelization scheme involves a fine-grain parallelization of loops using a shared-memory programming model (OpenMP) and a coarse-grain distribution of load among several computational nodes using a distributed-memory programming model (MPI). Convergence, execution time and speed-up results are presented using 2D training images of sizes 100 × 100 × 1 and 1000 × 1000 × 1 on a distributed-shared memory supercomputing facility.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Planeación estratégica en el simulador de negocios para la industria de sensores

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    En el presente documento se ha incorporado el análisis y la toma de decisiones llevadas a cabo en el simulador de negocio Capstone. El simulador recrea un ambiente de negocios enfocado al mercado de sensores, en donde se toma el mando de una empresa llamada Erie, en la que a lo largo de ocho años se debe implementar una estrategia que tendrá que adaptarse a factores externos y que, por medio de diversas tácticas, buscará ser líder con respecto a la competencia.ITESO, A.C

    Estudio exploratorio de la variabilidad radial y apical del tamaño y frecuencia de los canales resiníferos en Pino radiata

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    En este trabajo se cuantifica la variabilidad radial y apical de los canales resiníferos de pino radiata (Pinus radiata) de 14 años.Se determinó la frecuencia y el tamaño de los canales resiníferos en muestras microtomadas usando un software comercial. Las muestras fueron extraídas de árboles en pie presentando tres niveles diferentes de resinación externa, es decir, moderada/leve, e intensa. Se evaluó la variabilidad de los canales resiníferos según la posición radial a tres diferentes alturas: base, DAP, y al comienzo de la copa del árbol.Los resultados muestran que la variación radial y apical del tamaño y la frecuencia de canales resiníferos aparece débilmente correlacionada con el nivel de intensidad de resinación observada en árboles en pie de pino radiata. AbstractRadial and apical variation in resin canals of radiata pine were studied. The frequency and size of resin canals were examined, using microscopic techniques from a commercial software. Wood samples from standing trees were taken, showing three different levels of external resin-bleeding intensity: moderate, light and intense. The variability of the resin canals were examined according to the radial position at three different heights ; bottom, breast height diameter and at the beginning of the tree top. The results show that the apical and radial variation of the size and frequency of resin canals appeared weakly correlated with the intensity level of the tree resin-bleeding of the standing radiata pine trees

    Cyclin A triggers Mitosis either via the Greatwall kinase pathway or Cyclin B

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    Two mitotic cyclin types, cyclin A and B, exist in higher eukaryotes, but their specialised functions in mitosis are incompletely understood. Using degron tags for rapid inducible protein removal, we analyse how acute depletion of these proteins affects mitosis. Loss of cyclin A in G2-phase prevents mitotic entry. Cells lacking cyclin B can enter mitosis and phosphorylate most mitotic proteins, because of parallel PP2A:B55 phosphatase inactivation by Greatwall kinase. The final barrier to mitotic establishment corresponds to nuclear envelope breakdown, which requires a decisive shift in the balance of cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk1 and PP2A:B55 activity. Beyond this point, cyclin B/Cdk1 is essential for phosphorylation of a distinct subset of mitotic Cdk1 substrates that are essential to complete cell division. Our results identify how cyclin A, cyclin B and Greatwall kinase coordinate mitotic progression by increasing levels of Cdk1-dependent substrate phosphorylation

    How and When Socially Entrepreneurial Nonprofit Organizations Benefit From Adopting Social Alliance Management Routines to Manage Social Alliances?

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    Social alliance is defined as the collaboration between for-profit and nonprofit organizations. Building on the insights derived from the resource-based theory, we develop a conceptual framework to explain how socially entrepreneurial nonprofit organizations (SENPOs) can improve their social alliance performance by adopting strategic alliance management routines. We test our framework using the data collected from 203 UK-based SENPOs in the context of cause-related marketing campaign-derived social alliances. Our results confirm a positive relationship between social alliance management routines and social alliance performance. We also find that relational mechanisms, such as mutual trust, relational embeddedness, and relational commitment, mediate the relationship between social alliance management routines and social alliance performance. Moreover, our findings suggest that different types of social alliance motivation can influence the impact of social alliance management routines on different types of the relational mechanisms. In general, we demonstrate that SENPOs can benefit from adopting social alliance management routines and, in addition, highlight how and when the social alliance management routines–social alliance performance relationship might be shaped. Our study offers important academic and managerial implications, and points out future research directions

    Core components for effective infection prevention and control programmes: new WHO evidence-based recommendations

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    Abstract Health care-associated infections (HAI) are a major public health problem with a significant impact on morbidity, mortality and quality of life. They represent also an important economic burden to health systems worldwide. However, a large proportion of HAI are preventable through effective infection prevention and control (IPC) measures. Improvements in IPC at the national and facility level are critical for the successful containment of antimicrobial resistance and the prevention of HAI, including outbreaks of highly transmissible diseases through high quality care within the context of universal health coverage. Given the limited availability of IPC evidence-based guidance and standards, the World Health Organization (WHO) decided to prioritize the development of global recommendations on the core components of effective IPC programmes both at the national and acute health care facility level, based on systematic literature reviews and expert consensus. The aim of the guideline development process was to identify the evidence and evaluate its quality, consider patient values and preferences, resource implications, and the feasibility and acceptability of the recommendations. As a result, 11 recommendations and three good practice statements are presented here, including a summary of the supporting evidence, and form the substance of a new WHO IPC guideline
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