1,320 research outputs found

    EVALUATION OF IN VITRO ANTIOXIDANT POTENTIAL OF SPENT CHILLI AND SPENT CUMIN OBTAINED AFTER OLEORESIN EXTRACTION

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    Objective: Chilli spent residue (CHSR) and Cumin spent residue (CSR) obtained after oleoresin extraction is known to be rich in polyphenols, however, the very limited commercial application is known except for its use as veterinary feeds. Considering that a huge residue is left over by oleoresin spice industry, application-oriented utilization of spent residue of chilli and cumin is warranted. In these lines, we in this study evaluate the antioxidant potential of Chilli spent residue (CHSR) and Cumin spent residue (CSR) obtained after oleoresin extraction by DPPH method.Methods: In vitro radical scavenging activity of CHSR and CSR obtained after oleoresin extraction was evaluated by checking its role in scavenging DPPH.Results: The spent chilli extract exhibited higher DPPH scavenging activity when compared to the spent cumin and the IC50 values of spent chilli; spent cumin and ascorbic acid were found to be 186.23±1.05 ”g/ml, 284±1.03 ”g/ml and 33.21±1.04, respectively. As CHSR and CSR obtained after oleoresin extraction is known to be rich in polyphenols, these might be responsible for potent and significant antioxidant activity observed.Conclusion: This study shows that by-products obtained/generated in oleoresin industry can be utilized as value added product. Future work will be interesting to know the chemical composition and better understand the mechanism of action of the antioxidants present in the extract for development as a drug for therapeutic application.Â

    Attribute Equilibrium Dominance Reduction Accelerator (DCCAEDR) Based on Distributed Coevolutionary Cloud and Its Application in Medical Records

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    © 2013 IEEE. Aimed at the tremendous challenge of attribute reduction for big data mining and knowledge discovery, we propose a new attribute equilibrium dominance reduction accelerator (DCCAEDR) based on the distributed coevolutionary cloud model. First, the framework of N-populations distributed coevolutionary MapReduce model is designed to divide the entire population into N subpopulations, sharing the reward of different subpopulations' solutions under a MapReduce cloud mechanism. Because the adaptive balancing between exploration and exploitation can be achieved in a better way, the reduction performance is guaranteed to be the same as those using the whole independent data set. Second, a novel Nash equilibrium dominance strategy of elitists under the N bounded rationality regions is adopted to assist the subpopulations necessary to attain the stable status of Nash equilibrium dominance. This further enhances the accelerator's robustness against complex noise on big data. Third, the approximation parallelism mechanism based on MapReduce is constructed to implement rule reduction by accelerating the computation of attribute equivalence classes. Consequently, the entire attribute reduction set with the equilibrium dominance solution can be achieved. Extensive simulation results have been used to illustrate the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed DCCAEDR accelerator for attribute reduction on big data. Furthermore, the DCCAEDR is applied to solve attribute reduction for traditional Chinese medical records and to segment cortical surfaces of the neonatal brain 3-D-MRI records, and the DCCAEDR shows the superior competitive results, when compared with the representative algorithms

    Vortex Depinning in a Two-Dimensional Superfluid

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    \ua9 The Author(s) 2024.We employ the Gross–Pitaevskii theory to model a quantized vortex depinning from a small obstacle in a two-dimensional superfluid due to an imposed background superfluid flow. We find that, when the flow’s velocity exceeds a critical value, the vortex drifts orthogonally to the flow before subsequently moving parallel to it away from the pinning site. The motion of the vortex around the pinning site is also accompanied by an emission of a spiral-shaped sound pulse. Through simulations, we present a phase diagram of the critical flow velocity for vortex depinning together with an empirical formula that illustrates how the critical velocity increases with the height and width of the pinning site. By employing a variety of choices of initial and boundary conditions, we are able to obtain lower and upper bounds on the critical velocity and demonstrate the robustness of these results

    An application for solving truth functions

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    Nowadays, many technical devices are controlled by logic circuits. These circuits evaluate the situation based on the proposed truth functions, which they then use to perform one of the defined actions. In line with the increasing complexity of individual technical devices, the logic circuits and truth functions are also increasingly complex. For this reason, it makes sense to minimise these functions since they can thereby achieve a simpler technological process and the higher reliability of whole logic systems. This paper describes the Karnaugh Studio application, which resolves the minimisation of these truth functions - and was developed at our faculty (FAI, TBU in Zlín). The minimisation is performed using the Karnaugh Map Method - with support for up to eight variables on input. The application is based on the C++ programming language and the Dear ImGui and Magick++ libraries. Its functionality has been verified on a number of examples. This proved its applicability and ability to be used in the solution of logic circuits in industrial practice. © 2020, Springer Nature Switzerland AG

    THE ANTIOXIDANT AND ANTIMICROBIAL ACTIVITY OF THE LEAVES EXTRACT OF CLERODENDRUM COLEBROOKIANUM WALP, (FAM: VERBENACEAE)

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    Objective: To investigate the in-vitro antioxidant and antimicrobial potential of Clerodendrum colebrookianum leaves extract.Methods: The leaves of C. colebrookianum were collected from various parts of Aizawl, Mizoram, India. Subsequently, the leaves were extracted with solvents (chloroform, acetone, ethanol and methanol) in a Soxhlet extraction apparatus for 24hr. Further, the extracts were extensively examined for its in-vitro antioxidant (DPPH) and antimicrobial activities. The preliminary phytochemical screening was carried out using standard protocols.Results: The existence of alkaloids, flavonoids, diterpenes, saponins, glycosides, steroids and terpeinoids were revealed in the phytochemical screening. The aqueous and acetone extract had the highest total phenolic content (2.348 mg/ml), when compared to methanol, ethanol and chloroform extracts, which was 0.549 mg/ml, 0.408 mg/ml and 0.407 mg/ml, respectively. The antioxidant activity was more significant for aqueous extract, when compared to other extracts. The antimicrobial activity was more significant for acetone extract showed significant zone of inhibition of 14±0.3, 13±0.3 and 15±0.2 for E. coli, S. marcescens and S. aureus, respectively.Conclusion: The high level of antioxidant and antimicrobial potential of C. colebrookianum leaf extracts encourage its potential use for biomedical applications

    Supersymmetry Breaking on Gauged Non-Abelian Vortices

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    There are a large number of systems characterized by a completely broken gauge symmetry, but with an unbroken global color-flavor diagonal symmetry, i.e., systems in the so-called color-flavor locked phase. If the gauge symmetry breaking supports vortices, the latter develop non-Abelian orientational zero-modes and become non-Abelian vortices, a subject of intense study in the last several years. In this paper we consider the effects of weakly gauging the full exact global flavor symmetry in such systems, deriving an effective description of the light excitations in the presence of a vortex. Surprising consequences are shown to follow. The fluctuations of the vortex orientational modes get diffused to bulk modes through tunneling processes. When our model is embedded in a supersymmetric theory, the vortex is still 1/2 BPS saturated, but the vortex effective action breaks supersymmetry spontaneously.Comment: Latex, 24 pages, 1 figur

    Clinical characteristics and role of early cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in patients with suspected ST-elevation myocardial infarction and normal coronary arteries

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    A variety of conditions other than acute myocardial infarction may cause ST-elevation. Our objective was to evaluate the impact of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) on differential diagnosis from a prospective series of patients with suspected ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and completely normal coronary arteries. Among 1,145 patients with suspected STEMI, 49 patients had completely normal coronary arteries and entered a prospective registry. CMR was done within 24 h, if possible, and included function analyses, T2-weighted imaging (T2 ratio), T1-weighted imaging before and after gadolineum administration (global relative enhancement; gRE), and late gadolineum enhancement (LGE). All patients were asked for a follow-up CMR after approximately 3 months. The incidence of patients with suspected STEMI and normal coronary arteries was 4.3% and mean age was 45 ± 14 years (STEMI group 64 ± 13 years; P < 0.001). 55% had a recent history of infection. Cardiac biomarkers showed a moderate elevation on admission. There was a significant change from baseline to follow-up for LV end-diastolic volumes (EDV) (P < 0.001), LV mass (P < 0.05), mean T2 ratio (P < 0.05), and LGE volume (P < 0.05). Major diagnostic groups were myocarditis (29%), pericarditis (27%), and takotsubo cardiomyopathy (10%). 18% were regarded as non-diagnostic. The study showed an incidence of 4.3% of patients with suspected STEMI and completely normal coronary arteries. Early CMR was valuable in the evaluation of the differential diagnoses and to exclude myocardial abnormalities in patients with uncertain aetiology. Further studies are needed for the assessment of long-term outcome
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