89 research outputs found

    Nanotribology and electrical properties of carbon nanotubes hybridized with covalent organic frameworks

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    Nanomanipulation of molecular materials such as carbon nanotubes (CNTs) or new covalent organic frameworks (COFs) is key not only for the study of their fundamental physicochemical properties, but also for building and probing nanodevices. Therefore, we have investigated the tribological properties of oxidized MWCNTs (ox-MWCNTs) and their hybridization with COF building blocks (ox-MWCNTs@COF) adsorbed on a mica surface. We used the AFM tip to apply torsional forces on individual nanotubes. Depending on the manipulation parameters, the lateral displacements of the AFM tip slide and/or bend nanotubes enabling the direct quantification of the nanotube-mica adhesion. We found striking changes in the behaviour of the lateral force needed to manipulate each carbon nanotube variant which indicates an increased adhesion of ox-MWCNTs@COF with respect to ox-MWCNTs (∼10x). In addition, the use of the AFM tip as a mobile electrode enabled the measurement of electrical transport through individual nanotubes that revealed a rectifying behaviour of the ox-MWCNTs@COF with high resistivity, which was in contrast with the near ohmic performance of ox-MWCNTsP. J.d.P. acknowledges support by grants from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (FIS2017- 89549-R; “Maria de Maeztu” Program for Units of Excellence in R&D MDM2014-0377; and FIS2017-90701- REDT) and the Human Frontiers Science Program (HFSPO RGP0012/ 2018). R. M. ackowledges support by grant PID2019-110637RB-10

    Phytoplankton size-fractionated chlorophyll-a off Baja California during winter, spring, and summer 2008

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    Spatial and temporal size-fractionated phytoplankton chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) variability as pico-nanoplankton (PN, 0.4- 8.0 µm) and nano-microplankton (NM, >8.0 µm) off Baja California is shown. Chl-a samples from the upper 200 m were obtained from nearshore, offshore, and intermediate locations during winter, spring, and summer 2008. PN-Chl-a contribution to phytoplankton biomass was ~4 times higher than NM fraction. Chl-a PN/NM ratio increased toward offshore, while total Chl-a (PN + NM) decreased. Seasonally, offshore phytoplankton cells abundance had a comparable contribution for both size-fractions, without an apparent change by the integrated water-column total Chl-a (60 mg m?2). Vertical Chl-a profiles were similar for winter and summer seasons. The highest Chl-a concentration and phytoplankton-cells abundance arose in spring, predominantly for NM at nearshore locations, reaching from 2.7-fold (nearshore: middle) to 4.2-fold (middle: offshore) ratios. Phytoplankton Chl-a increased from winter to spring (5.4 times), with maximum contribution of NM (6.6 times) at nearshore zones. Water-column integrated phytoplankton abundance was 5-fold higher in spring than winter, and 2-fold over summer. Using optical microscopy, dinoflagellate cells were the most abundant and variable phytoplankton recognizable group at intermediate zone. Smaller phytoplankton cells sustained approximately continuous biomass off Baja California. The spatial and temporal phytoplankton biomass variability was mainly influenced by an increase of larger cells as result of spring coastal upwelling events

    Factors influencing the characteristics and distribution or surface organic matter in the Pacific-Atlantic connection

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    The present work reports the first data set on particulate organic carbon (POC) and nitrogen (PON), and the high-resolution modelling of their stable isotope variability in the Patagonian Cold Estuarine System (PCES), with focus on particulate organic matter (POM) origin and distribution in dependence on physical, chemical and biological parameters. POC, PON, stable carbon (δ¹³C) and nitrogen isotopes (δ¹⁵N), dissolved organic nitrogen, phaeopigments, diatom, dinoflagellate and heterotrophic bacteria (HB) abundance are reported for 17 stations in different waters masses in the southern end of the Argentine shelf in late summer 2012. Most parameters denote clear differences between Beagle - Magellan Water (BMW), Subantarctic Shelf Water (SSW) and Subantarctic Water (SAW). POC and PON decreased from maxima in BMW to intermediate values in SSW and minima in SAW. There was a highly significant correlation among POC, PON and fluorescence indicators of diagenetic maturity of dissolved humic matter. This, together with the inverse correlations of salinity with POC and PON, and the wide range of C:N ratios indicate that POM in the study area is partly derived from terrestrial runoff, superimposed by autochthonous components from plankton of different life stages. HB abundance was significantly correlated with POC and dissolved organic matter (DOM), likely reflecting a resource control of HB and a significant contribution of bacterial biomass to POM in the nanoparticle fraction. The direct relationship between HB and dissolved humics suggests bacterial uptake of DOM fractions otherwise considered refractory. POM complexity was reflected in a wide variation of δ¹³C, despite the narrow temperature range of this region. The variability of stable isotopes of POC could be accounted for by a model with a degree of detail hitherto not reported in the literature. A multiple regression including C:N ratio, ammonium and the quotient between log abundance of diatoms, dinoflagellates and HB explained 92% of δ¹³C variance, mostly produced by ammonium. Despite the strong effect of ammonium on δ¹³C, δ¹⁵N variability was largely explained by a strong inverse relationship with the fraction of unutilized nitrate, suggesting dominance of nitrate uptake. However, the proportion of presumably isotopically heavier ammonium derived from continental runoff in the marine δ¹⁵N-POM pool is unknown and requires investigation of the isotopic composition of dissolved inorganic nitrogen in the PCES. The presented new information and its comparison with data from other sectors of the Argentine shelf constitute a contribution to an approach for the understanding of the organic matter dynamics that can be potentially expanded to the entire Southwest Atlantic.Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Muse

    Chatbots in social networks for the timely support of university students with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms

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    Se estima que la prevalencia del trastorno por déficit de atención con hiperactividad (TDAH) en estudiantes universitarios es del 2 al 4.5% pero varía de una universidad a otra. Sin embargo, muchos estudiantes evitan acudir a tratamiento por ansiedad, temor al estigma, porque sienten que los problemas de los otros son mayores que los propios o bien desconocen la sintomatología del TDAH. En esta contribución se presenta el diseño e implementación de un chatbot para la aplicación del cuestionario Adult Self Report Scale-Versión 1.1 (EATDAH-A) así como los resultados de la aplicación del mismo y la opinión de los usuarios en cuanto a su utilidad y experiencia como usuario.It is estimated that the prevalence of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in university students is from 2 to 4.53% but varies from one university to another. However, many students avoid therapies due to grief, nervousness, fear, or because they feel that the problems of others are greater than their own or they are unaware of the symptoms of ADHD. This contribution presents the design and implementation of a chatbot for the application of the Adult Self Report Scale-Version 1.1 (ASRS v1.1) questionnaire as well as the results of its application and the opinion of users regarding its usefulness and user experience.Facultad de Informátic

    Chatbots in social networks for the timely support of university students with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms

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    Se estima que la prevalencia del trastorno por déficit de atención con hiperactividad (TDAH) en estudiantes universitarios es del 2 al 4.5% pero varía de una universidad a otra. Sin embargo, muchos estudiantes evitan acudir a tratamiento por ansiedad, temor al estigma, porque sienten que los problemas de los otros son mayores que los propios o bien desconocen la sintomatología del TDAH. En esta contribución se presenta el diseño e implementación de un chatbot para la aplicación del cuestionario Adult Self Report Scale-Versión 1.1 (EATDAH-A) así como los resultados de la aplicación del mismo y la opinión de los usuarios en cuanto a su utilidad y experiencia como usuario.It is estimated that the prevalence of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in university students is from 2 to 4.53% but varies from one university to another. However, many students avoid therapies due to grief, nervousness, fear, or because they feel that the problems of others are greater than their own or they are unaware of the symptoms of ADHD. This contribution presents the design and implementation of a chatbot for the application of the Adult Self Report Scale-Version 1.1 (ASRS v1.1) questionnaire as well as the results of its application and the opinion of users regarding its usefulness and user experience.Facultad de Informátic

    Chatbots in social networks for the timely support of university students with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms

    Get PDF
    Se estima que la prevalencia del trastorno por déficit de atención con hiperactividad (TDAH) en estudiantes universitarios es del 2 al 4.5% pero varía de una universidad a otra. Sin embargo, muchos estudiantes evitan acudir a tratamiento por ansiedad, temor al estigma, porque sienten que los problemas de los otros son mayores que los propios o bien desconocen la sintomatología del TDAH. En esta contribución se presenta el diseño e implementación de un chatbot para la aplicación del cuestionario Adult Self Report Scale-Versión 1.1 (EATDAH-A) así como los resultados de la aplicación del mismo y la opinión de los usuarios en cuanto a su utilidad y experiencia como usuario.It is estimated that the prevalence of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in university students is from 2 to 4.53% but varies from one university to another. However, many students avoid therapies due to grief, nervousness, fear, or because they feel that the problems of others are greater than their own or they are unaware of the symptoms of ADHD. This contribution presents the design and implementation of a chatbot for the application of the Adult Self Report Scale-Version 1.1 (ASRS v1.1) questionnaire as well as the results of its application and the opinion of users regarding its usefulness and user experience.Facultad de Informátic

    Changes in Coastal Benthic Algae Succession Trajectories and Assemblages Under Contrasting Nutrient and Grazer Loads

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    Eutrophication plays a crucial role in coastal systems, driving changes in the composition and abundance of flora and fauna with consequent effects for the entire ecosystem. Sensitive to nutrient levels, micro- and macroalgal blooms serve as valuable indicators of eutrophication. The San Antonio Bay (Northern Argentinean Patagonia, 40° 43′ S, 64° 56′ W) provides an appropriate system to study in situ eutrophication processes on coastal communities. In a multi-scale approach, using two different kind of settlement substrates (micro: polyethylene terephthalate, and macro: ceramic), the present study followed benthic algal dynamics over one year, distinguishing changes in natural succession and seasonality. Strong differences were found in the biofilm assemblages after three days, marked by tube dwelling diatoms and Cocconeis spp. under high nutrient-grazer conditions and needle like diatoms (e.g. Nitzschia spp., Tabularia spp.) under lower nutrient-grazer loads. The succession continued by the colonization of macroalgae, with a higher recruitment rate in the nutrient and grazer rich environment with a concomitant higher diversity. Our results show that under higher nutrient-grazer conditions natural benthic succession not only differs in trajectory but in its final taxa composition promoting higher biodiversity and biomass accumulation. In addition, taxa specific substrate preferences interfere with the observed eutrophication pattern, suggesting substrate dependant interrelations between the bloom forming taxa. These findings provide evidence that nutrient enrichment can not only affect an established assemblage but also affect the early succession stages, changing the succession trajectory and thus the final assemblage.Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Muse

    The CALIFA survey across the Hubble sequence: Spatially resolved stellar population properties in galaxies

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    © ESO, 2015. Various different physical processes contribute to the star formation and stellar mass assembly histories of galaxies. One important approach to understanding the significance of these different processes on galaxy evolution is the study of the stellar population content of today's galaxies in a spatially resolved manner. The aim of this paper is to characterize in detail the radial structure of stellar population properties of galaxies in the nearby universe, based on a uniquely large galaxy sample, considering the quality and coverage of the data. The sample under study was drawn from the CALIFA survey and contains 300 galaxies observed with integral field spectroscopy. These cover a wide range of Hubble types, from spheroids to spiral galaxies, while stellar masses range from MBlack star ∼ 109 to 7 × 1011 M⊙. We apply the fossil record method based on spectral synthesis techniques to recover the following physical properties for each spatial resolution element in our target galaxies: the stellar mass surface density (μBlack star), stellar extinction (AV), light-weighted and mass-weighted ages ('log age'L, 'log age'M), and mass-weighted metallicity ('log ZBlack star'M). To study mean trends with overall galaxy properties, the individual radial profiles are stacked in seven bins of galaxy morphology (E, S0, Sa, Sb, Sbc, Sc, and Sd). We confirm that more massive galaxies are more compact, older, more metal rich, and less reddened by dust. Additionally, we find that these trends are preserved spatially with the radial distance to the nucleus. Deviations from these relations appear correlated with Hubble type: earlier types are more compact, older, and more metal rich for a given MBlack star, which is evidence that quenching is related to morphology, but not driven by mass. Negative gradients of 'log age'L are consistent with an inside-out growth of galaxies, with the largest 'log age'L gradients in Sb-Sbc galaxies. Further, the mean stellar ages of disks and bulges are correlated and with disks covering a wider range of ages, and late-type spirals hosting younger disks. However, age gradients are only mildly negative or flat beyond R ∼ 2 HLR (half light radius), indicating that star formation is more uniformly distributed or that stellar migration is important at these distances. The gradients in stellar mass surface density depend mostly on stellar mass, in the sense that more massive galaxies are more centrally concentrated. Whatever sets the concentration indices of galaxies obviously depends less on quenching/morphology than on the depth of the potential well. There is a secondary correlation in the sense that at the same MBlack star early-type galaxies have steeper gradients. The μBlack star gradients outside 1 HLR show no dependence on Hubble type. We find mildly negative 'log ZBlack star'M gradients, which are shallower than predicted from models of galaxy evolution in isolation. In general, metallicity gradients depend on stellar mass, and less on morphology, hinting that metallicity is affected by both - the depth of the potential well and morphology/quenching.Support from the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, through projects AYA2010-15081 (PI R.G.D.), and Junta de Andalucia FQ1580 (PI R.G.D.), AYA2010-22111-C03-03, and AYA2010-10904E (S.F.S.). We also thank the Viabilidad, Diseno, Acceso y Mejora funding program, ICTS-2009-10, for funding the data acquisition of this project. R.C.F. thanks the hospitality of the IAA and the support of CAPES and CNPq. R.G.D. acknowledges the support of CNPq (Brazil) through Programa Ciencia sem Fronteiras (401452/2012-3). A.G. acknowledges support from EU FP7/2007-2013 under grant agreement n.267251 (AstroFIt) and from the EU Marie Curie Integration Grant >SteMaGE> Nr. PCIG12-GA-2012-326466. C.J.W. acknowledges support through the Marie Curie Career Integration Grant 303912. E.P. acknowledges support from the Guillermo Haro program at INAOE. Support for L.G. is provided by the Ministry of Economy, Development, and Tourism's Millennium Science Initiative through grant IC120009, awarded to The Millennium Institute of Astrophysics, MAS. L.G. acknowledges support by CONICYT through FONDECYT grant 3140566. J.I.P. acknowledges financial support from the Spanish MINECO under grant AYA2010-21887-C04-01 and from Junta de Andalucia Excellence Project PEX2011-FQM7058. I.M., J.M. and A.d.O. acknowledge support from the project AYA2013-42227-P. RAM is funded by the Spanish program of International Campus of Excellence Moncloa (CEI). J.M. A. acknowledges support from the European Research Council Starting Grant (SEDmorph; P.I. V. Wild).Peer Reviewe

    Disrupted mitochondrial and metabolic plasticity underlie comorbidity between age-Related and degenerative disorders as parkinson disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus.

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    Idiopathic Parkinson's disease (iPD) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) are chronic, multisystemic, and degenerative diseases associated with aging, with eventual epidemiological co-morbidity and overlap in molecular basis. This study aims to explore if metabolic and mitochondrial alterations underlie the previously reported epidemiologic and clinical co-morbidity from a molecular level. To evaluate the adaptation of iPD to a simulated pre-diabetogenic state, we exposed primary cultured fibroblasts from iPD patients and controls to standard (5 mM) and high (25 mM) glucose concentrations to further characterize metabolic and mitochondrial resilience. iPD fibroblasts showed increased organic and amino acid levels related to mitochondrial metabolism with respect to controls, and these differences were enhanced in high glucose conditions (citric, suberic, and sebacic acids levels increased, as well as alanine, glutamate, aspartate, arginine, and ornithine amino acids; p-values between 0.001 and 0.05). The accumulation of metabolites in iPD fibroblasts was associated with (and probably due to) the concomitant mitochondrial dysfunction observed at enzymatic, oxidative, respiratory, and morphologic level. Metabolic and mitochondrial plasticity of controls was not observed in iPD fibroblasts, which were unable to adapt to different glucose conditions. Impaired metabolism and mitochondrial activity in iPD may limit energy supply for cell survival. Moreover, reduced capacity to adapt to disrupted glucose balance characteristic of T2DM may underlay the co-morbidity between both diseases. Conclusions: Fibroblasts from iPD patients showed mitochondrial impairment, resulting in the accumulation of organic and amino acids related to mitochondrial metabolism, especially when exposed to high glucose. Mitochondrial and metabolic defects down warding cell plasticity to adapt to changing glucose bioavailability may explain the comorbidity between iPD and T2DM
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