323 research outputs found
Monovalent copper complexes of N-aryl-pyridine-2-aldimine. Synthesis, characterization and structure
A direct synthetic route, based on silver(I) assisted metal exchange reaction, to cationic bis-ligand complexes of copper(I) involving N-aryl-pyridine-2-aldimines (L, 1) has been studied. These complexes are obtained as their perchlorates, [Cu(L)2]ClO4 (2). They have been characterized with the help of spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography. The X-ray structure of [Cu(L2)2]ClO4, where L2 is N-p-tolyl-pyridine-2-aldimine is reported. There are two crystallographically independent molecules in the asymmetric unit. The ligand L2 coordinates in a bidentate manner providing a highly distorted tetrahedral geometry about copper. The complexes show highly resolved symmetrical 1H NMR spectra. Intense MLCT absorptions are observed in the visible range. In methanol the CuL22+/CuL2+ couple has E½ ca, 0.35 V vs SCE at 298 K. The moderately high positive potential is brought about by the distortion in the geometry of CuL22+
Complicated septic shock caused by Achromobacter xylosoxidans bacteremia in a patient with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
Infections caused by Achromobacter xylosoxidans cause significant morbidity and mortality in debilitated individuals. Eradication of these infections requires prolonged therapy with antimicrobial agents and removal of any infected central venous catheter. The outcome is usually poor in patients with high risk malignancy, septic complications, and/or multi-organ dysfunction
Fermion confinement induced by geometry
We consider a five-dimensional model in which fermions are confined in a
hypersurface due to an interaction with a purely geometric field. Inspired by
the Rubakov-Shaposhnikov field-theoretical model, in which massless fermions
can be localized in a domain wall through the interaction of a scalar field, we
show that particle confinement may also take place if we endow the
five-dimensional bulk with a Weyl integrable geometric structure, or if we
assume the existence of a torsion field acting in the bulk. In this picture,
the kind of interaction considered in the Rubakov-Shaposhnikov model is
replaced by the interaction of fermions with a geometric field, namely a Weyl
scalar field or a torsion field. We show that in both cases the confinement is
independent of the energy and the mass of the fermionic particle. We generalize
these results to the case in which the bulk is an arbitrary n-dimensional
curved space.Comment: 8 page
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Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
Open-source science builds on open and free resources that include data, metadata, software, and workflows. Informed decisions on whether and how to (re)use digital datasets are dependent on an understanding about the quality of the underpinning data and relevant information. However, quality information, being difficult to curate and often context specific, is currently not readily available for sharing within and across disciplines. To help address this challenge and promote the creation and (re)use of freely and openly shared information about the quality of individual datasets, members of several groups around the world have undertaken an effort to develop international community guidelines with practical recommendations for the Earth science community, collaborating with international domain experts. The guidelines were inspired by the guiding principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR). Use of the FAIR dataset quality information guidelines is intended to help stakeholders, such as scientific data centers, digital data repositories, and producers, publishers, stewards and managers of data, to: i) capture, describe, and represent quality information of their datasets in a manner that is consistent with the FAIR Guiding Principles; ii) allow for the maximum discovery, trust, sharing, and reuse of their datasets; and iii) enable international access to and integration of dataset quality information. This article describes the processes that developed the guidelines that are aligned with the FAIR principles, presents a generic quality assessment workflow, describes the guidelines for preparing and disseminating dataset quality information, and outlines a path forward to improve their disciplinary diversity
Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
Open-source science builds on open and free resources that include data, metadata, software, and workflows. Informed decisions on whether and how to (re)use digital datasets are dependent on an understanding about the quality of the underpinning data and relevant information. However, quality information, being difficult to curate and often context specific, is currently not readily available for sharing within and across disciplines. To help address this challenge and promote the creation and (re) use of freely and openly shared information about the quality of individual datasets, members of several groups around the world have undertaken an effort to develop international community guidelines with practical recommendations for the Earth science community, collaborating with international domain experts. The guidelines were inspired by the guiding principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR). Use of the FAIR dataset quality information guidelines is intended to help stakeholders, such as scientific data centers, digital data repositories, and producers, publishers, stewards and managers of data, to: i) capture, describe, and represent quality information of their datasets in a manner that is consistent with the FAIR Guiding Principles; ii) allow for the maximum discovery, trust, sharing, and reuse of their datasets; and iii) enable international access to and integration of dataset quality information. This article describes the processes that developed the guidelines that are aligned with the FAIR principles, presents a generic quality assessment workflow, describes the guidelines for preparing and disseminating dataset quality information, and outlines a path forward to improve their disciplinary diversity
Dynamics of electrons in the quantum Hall bubble phases
In Landau levels N > 1, the ground state of the two-dimensional electron gas
(2DEG) in a perpendicular magnetic field evolves from a Wigner crystal for
small filling of the partially filled Landau level, into a succession of bubble
states with increasing number of guiding centers per bubble as the filling
increases, to a modulated stripe state near half filling. In this work, we show
that these first-order phase transitions between the bubble states lead to
measurable discontinuities in several physical quantities such as the density
of states and the magnetization of the 2DEG. We discuss in detail the behavior
of the collective excitations of the bubble states and show that their spectra
have higher-energy modes besides the pinned phonon mode. The frequencies of
these modes, at small wavevector k, have a discontinuous evolution as a
function of filling factor that should be measurable in, for example, microwave
absorption experiments.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Corrected typos in eqs. (38),(39),(40
Convective Systems over the South China Sea: Cloud-Resolving Model Simulations
The two-dimensional version of the Goddard Cumulus Ensemble (GCE) model is used to simulate two South China Sea Monsoon Experiment (SCSMEX) convective periods [18–26 May (prior to and during the monsoon onset) and 2–11 June (after the onset of the monsoon) 1998]. Observed large-scale advective tendencies for potential temperature, water vapor mixing ratio, and horizontal momentum are used as the main forcing in governing the GCE model in a semiprognostic manner. The June SCSMEX case has stronger forcing in both temperature and water vapor, stronger low-level vertical shear of the horizontal wind, and larger convective available potential energy (CAPE). The temporal variation of the model-simulated rainfall, time- and domain-averaged heating, and moisture budgets compares well to those diagnostically determined from soundings. However, the model results have a higher temporal variability. The model underestimates the rainfall by 17 % to 20 % compared to that based on soundings. The GCE model-simulated rainfall for June is in very good agreement with the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), precipitation radar (PR), and the Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP). Overall, the model agrees better with observations for the June case rather than the May case. The model-simulated energy budgets indicate that the two largest terms for both cases are net condensatio
Robustness and Generalization
We derive generalization bounds for learning algorithms based on their
robustness: the property that if a testing sample is "similar" to a training
sample, then the testing error is close to the training error. This provides a
novel approach, different from the complexity or stability arguments, to study
generalization of learning algorithms. We further show that a weak notion of
robustness is both sufficient and necessary for generalizability, which implies
that robustness is a fundamental property for learning algorithms to work
Characterization of the LM5 pectic galactan epitope with synthetic analogues of β-1,4-d-galactotetraose
Plant cell wall glycans are important polymers that are crucial to plant development and serve as an important source of sustainable biomass. The study of polysaccharides in the plant cell wall relies heavily on monoclonal antibodies for localization and visualization of glycans, using e.g. Immunofluorescent microscopy. Here, we describe the detailed epitope mapping of the mab LM5 that is shown to bind to a minimum of three sugar residues at the non-reducing end of linear beta-1,4-linked galactan. The study uses de novo synthetic analogs of galactans combined with carbohydrate microarray and competitive inhibition ELISA for analysis of antibody-carbohydrate interactions
Comparative antimicrobial susceptibility of aerobic and facultative bacteria from community-acquired bacteremia to ertapenem in Taiwan
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Ertapenem is a once-a-day carbapenem and has excellent activity against many gram-positive and gram-negative aerobic, facultative, and anaerobic bacteria. The susceptibility of isolates of community-acquired bacteremia to ertapenem has not been reported yet. The present study assesses the in vitro activity of ertapenem against aerobic and facultative bacterial pathogens isolated from patients with community-acquired bacteremia by determining and comparing the MICs of cefepime, cefoxitin, ceftazidime, ceftriaxone, ertapenem, piperacillin, piperacillin-tazobactam, ciprofloxacin, amikacin and gentamicin. The prevalence of extended broad spectrum β-lactamases (ESBL) producing strains of community-acquired bacteremia and their susceptibility to these antibiotics are investigated.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Aerobic and facultative bacteria isolated from blood obtained from hospitalized patients with community-acquired bacteremia within 48 hours of admission between August 1, 2004 and September 30, 2004 in Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Keelung, Taiwan, were identified using standard procedures. Antimicrobial susceptibility was evaluated by Etest according to the standard guidelines provided by the manufacturer and document M100-S16 Performance Standards of the Clinical Laboratory of Standard Institute. Antimicrobial agents including cefepime, cefoxitin, ceftazidime, ceftriaxone, ertapenem, piperacillin, piperacillin-tazobactam, ciprofloxacin, amikacin and gentamicin were used against the bacterial isolates to test their MICs as determined by Etest. For <it>Staphylococcus aureus </it>isolates, MICs of oxacillin were also tested by Etest to differentiate oxacillin-sensitive and oxacillin-resistant <it>S. aureus</it>.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Ertapenem was highly active in vitro against many aerobic and facultative bacterial pathogens commonly recovered from patients with community-acquired bacteremia (128/159, 80.5 %). Ertapenem had more potent activity than ceftriaxone, piperacillin-tazobactam, or ciprofloxacin against oxacillin-susceptible <it>S</it>. <it>aureus </it>(17/17, 100%)and was more active than any of these agents against <it>enterobacteriaceae </it>(82/82, 100%).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Based on the microbiology pattern of community-acquired bacteremia, initial empiric treatment that requires coverage of a broad spectrum of both gram-negative and gram-positive aerobic bacteria, such as ertapenem, may be justified in moderately severe cases of community-acquired bacteremia in non-immunocompromised hosts.</p
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