45 research outputs found
Ajuste de modelos nĂŁo-lineares aos dados de crescimento de bĂșfalas da raça Murrah criadas em terras baixas no estado do Rio Grande do Sul.
ZOOTEC 2009
AnĂĄlises de componentes principais e correlação de Spearman para a determinação de caracterĂsticas a serem utilizadas em programas de melhoramento de poedeiras.
Herdabilidade para caracterĂsticas produtivas, reprodutivas e de qualidade do ovo em trĂȘs linhagens poedeiras.
Run Control and Monitor System for the CMS Experiment
The Run Control and Monitor System (RCMS) of the CMS experiment is the set of
hardware and software components responsible for controlling and monitoring the
experiment during data-taking. It provides users with a "virtual counting
room", enabling them to operate the experiment and to monitor detector status
and data quality from any point in the world. This paper describes the
architecture of the RCMS with particular emphasis on its scalability through a
distributed collection of nodes arranged in a tree-based hierarchy. The current
implementation of the architecture in a prototype RCMS used in test beam
setups, detector validations and DAQ demonstrators is documented. A discussion
of the key technologies used, including Web Services, and the results of tests
performed with a 128-node system are presented.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 8 pages, PSN THGT00
CD14 Deficiency Impacts Glucose Homeostasis in Mice through Altered Adrenal Tone
The toll-like receptors comprise one of the most conserved components of the innate immune system, signaling the presence of molecules of microbial origin. It has been proposed that signaling through TLR4, which requires CD14 to recognize bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), may generate low-grade inflammation and thereby affect insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism. To examine the long-term influence of partial innate immune signaling disruption on glucose homeostasis, we analyzed knockout mice deficient in CD14 backcrossed into the diabetes-prone C57BL6 background at 6 or 12 months of age. CD14-ko mice, fed either normal or high-fat diets, displayed significant glucose intolerance compared to wild type controls. They also displayed elevated norepinephrine urinary excretion and increased adrenal medullary volume, as well as an enhanced norepinephrine secretory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. These results point out a previously unappreciated crosstalk between innate immune- and sympathoadrenal- systems, which exerts a major long-term effect on glucose homeostasis
Variance Caused by Cytoplasmic Line and Sire by Herd Interaction Effects for Milk Yield Considering Estimation Bias
A total of 138,869 lactation milk yields (305 d, milked twice daily, mature equivalent) from the first three parities of 68,063 New York Holstein cows were used to estimate variance components that were due to additive direct genetic effects, cow permanent environmental effects (cow within sire for sire model), sire by herd interaction effects, and cytoplasmic line effects. The original data were assigned to 10 random samples, which were each analyzed using an animal model and a sire model. From each sample of original data, 20 other samples were analyzed with levels assigned randomly to cytoplasmic and interaction effects (data with randomly simulated levels). Ten of those samples were analyzed with an animal model and 10 with a sire model. The models also included fixed effects of herd-year-seasons. For the animal model and sire model, average fractions of phenotypic variance and average standard errors were, respectively, for additive direct genetic effects 0.300 (0.029) and 0.228 (0.040) for original data and 0.325 (0.025) and 0.262 (0.039) for data with randomly simulated levels. For cow permanent environmental effects the respective averages were 0.242 (0.024) and 0.444 (0.014) for original data and 0.235 (0.025) and 0.492 (0.016) for data with randomly simulated levels. The averages for sire by herd interaction effects were 0.015 (0.008) and 0.018 (0.007) for original data and 0.003 (0.007) and 0.004 (0.009) for data with randomly simulated levels. For cytoplasmic line effects, the respective averages were 0.011 (0.007) and 0.043 (0.008) for original data and 0.003 (0.006) and 0.003 (0.007) for data with randomly simulated levels. The differences between estimates of variance components for original data and data with randomly simulated levels suggest that estimates of fractions of total variance caused by sire by herd interaction and cytoplasmic effects estimated with REML may be biased upward by 0.003 to 0.004