1,051 research outputs found
-like emerging -softness in Kr
Recently the interacting bosom model with higher-order interactions
was proposed by one of the authors, wherein unexpected -softness can be
emerged in this new model. This stimulates further discussion on the
connections of the new -softness and the realistic -soft
nuclei. In this paper, -like -softness arises when the
fourth-order interaction is considered. And the
corresponding transitional behaviors are similar to that from the limit
to the limit in previous IBM-1, which provides a novel perspective for
understanding the new model. Low-lying spectra, values between the
low-lying states and quadrupole moment of the first state are
investigated. Experimental data of the -like nucleus Kr are
compared with the calculated theoretical results, where the calculated
low-lying level energies and the associated values fit very well with
the experimental data
Thirty Years of Machine Learning: The Road to Pareto-Optimal Wireless Networks
Future wireless networks have a substantial potential in terms of supporting
a broad range of complex compelling applications both in military and civilian
fields, where the users are able to enjoy high-rate, low-latency, low-cost and
reliable information services. Achieving this ambitious goal requires new radio
techniques for adaptive learning and intelligent decision making because of the
complex heterogeneous nature of the network structures and wireless services.
Machine learning (ML) algorithms have great success in supporting big data
analytics, efficient parameter estimation and interactive decision making.
Hence, in this article, we review the thirty-year history of ML by elaborating
on supervised learning, unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning and deep
learning. Furthermore, we investigate their employment in the compelling
applications of wireless networks, including heterogeneous networks (HetNets),
cognitive radios (CR), Internet of things (IoT), machine to machine networks
(M2M), and so on. This article aims for assisting the readers in clarifying the
motivation and methodology of the various ML algorithms, so as to invoke them
for hitherto unexplored services as well as scenarios of future wireless
networks.Comment: 46 pages, 22 fig
New approaches to estimate microbial diversity of alcoholic fermentation
La fermentació alcohòlica la realitza una comunitat microbiana complexa, on els llevats vÃnics juguen un paper important. En els darrers anys, hi ha hagut un creixent interès per millorar complexitat del vi mitjançant fermentacions controlades quer utilitzaven no només S. cerevisiae sinó també soques seleccionades de llevats no-Saccharomyces. La investigació sobre la viabilitat dels llevats i les interaccions tenen un paper fonamental per entendre la diversitat de llevats en la fermentació mixta. En aquesta tesi, les tècniques independents de cultiu que es van aplicar per a l'anà lisi directa de mostres de vins inclouen la seqüenciació massiva, fluorescència per hibridació in situ (FISH) en combinació amb microscòpia i citometria de flux, RT-qPCR i EMA-DGGE. Aquestes tècniques independents de cultiu permeten una rà pida identificació i / o quantificació dels diferents llevats del vi. Aquestes tècniques han estat utilitzades en fermentacions espontà nies a la regió del Priorat, i H. uvarum i Starm. bacillaris van ser les dues principals espècies de llevats no-Saccharomyces aïllades. H. uvarum o Starm. bacillaris perden gradualment la seva cultivabilitat quan els mostos es van inocular amb S. cerevisiae, però es podien quantificar cèl•lules de llevats en estat viable però no cultivable. La pèrdua de cultivabilitat dels no Saccharomyces va ser induïda principalment per alguns metabòlits secretats per S. cerevisiae, però els canvis en altres metabòlits principals també van influir. Aquesta interacció de llevat no Saccharomyces amb S. cerevisiae era especÃfica d’espècie i soca.La fermentación alcohólica es llevada a cabo por una comunidad microbiana compleja, donde las levaduras del vino juegan un papel importante. En los últimos años, ha habido un creciente interés para mejorar la complejidad del vino en fermentaciones controladas utilizando no sólo S. cerevisiae sino también algunas cepas seleccionadas de levaduras no-Saccharomyces. La investigación sobre la viabilidad de las levaduras y las interacciones tienen un papel fundamental para entender la diversidad de levaduras en fermentaciones mixtas. En esta tesis, se aplicaron técnicas independientes de cultivo para el análisis de muestras de vinos directa incluyendo la secuenciación masiva, fluorescencia por hibridación in situ (FISH) en combinación con microscopÃa y citometrÃa de flujo, RT-qPCR y EMA-DGGE. Estas técnicas independientes de cultivo permiten una rápida identificación y / o cuantificación de las distintas levaduras del vino. Estas técnicas han sido utilizadas para el análisis de fermentaciones espontáneas en la región del Priorat, siendo las especies H. uvarum y Starm. bacillaris las dos principales especies de levaduras no-Saccharomyces. H. uvarum o Starm. bacillaris pierden gradualmente su cultivabilidad cuando los mostos se inocularon con S. cerevisiae, pero las levaduras se pudieron cuantificar en estado viable pero no cultivable. La pérdida de cultivabilidad de las especies no Saccharomyces fue inducida principalmente por algunos metabolitos secretados por S. cerevisiae, pero los cambios en otros metabolitos principales también influyen. Esta interacción entre levaduras no Saccharomyces con S. cerevisiae es especie y cepa dependiente.Alcoholic fermentation is driven by complex microbial community, where wine yeasts play an important role. In recent years, there has been growing interest to enhance wine complexity by controlled fermentations using not only S. cerevisiae but also together with some selected non-Saccharomyces yeast strains. Research on yeast viability and interaction has a fundamental role to understand the diversity of yeast in mixed fermentations. In this thesis, culture-independent techniques were developed and applied for direct wine sample analysis including massive sequencing, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) combined with microscopy and flow cytometry, RT-qPCR and EMA-DGGE. These culture-independent techniques enable fast identification and/or quantification of different wine yeasts. These techniques have been used during spontaneous fermentation in Priorat region, and H. uvarum and Starm. bacillaris where the two main non-Saccharomyces yeast species detected. H. uvarum or Starm. bacillaris gradually lost their culturability when musts were inoculated with S. cerevisiae, but quantifiable yeast cells existed in viable but non-culturable state. The culturability loss of non-Saccharomyces was mainly induced by some metabolites secreted from S. cerevisiae, but changes in other main metabolites also had some effect. This interaction of non-Saccharomyces yeast with S. cerevisiae showed the specificity of species and strains
Effects of food concentration and photoperiod on egg production, female life expectancy and population dynamics of the paracalanid copepod, Bestiolina amoyensis
The paracalanid copepod, Bestiolina amoyensis, is a widely distributed species occurring in subtropical inshore waters across the Pacific Ocean. Its small size, herbivorous feeding habit, and high adaptability make the species one of the most promising candidates as potential live feed for hatchery larval rearing. This study investigated effects of different feeding density of microalgae Isochrysis spp. (1 × 105, 2 × 105, 3 × 105, 4 × 105, and 5 × 105 cells ml–1) and photoperiod (8L:16D, 12L:12D, and 16L:8D) on productivity-related parameters, including egg production, female life expectancy and population dynamics of B. amoyensis. Results showed that total egg output over female lifespan, final population size and intrinsic rate of population of 12L:12D photoperiod treatments were always the highest among three photoperiod conditions, especially at the food concentration of 4 × 105 cells ml–1, indicating B. amoyensis had high reproductive performance and the population was in a more stable status. The number of nauplii from 4 × 105 cells ml–1 algal concentration treatment accounted for 75% of the population, and the ratio of females to males approaching 1:1 when photoperiod was 12L:12D; female life expectancy was 10.5 ± 0.6 days. In conclusion, our results showed that Isochrysis spp. is a suitable feed for B. amoyensis with an optimal concentration at 4 × 105 cells mL–1; the optimal photoperiod for B. amoyensis rearing is 12L:12D. The relatively long reproductive lifespan and high intrinsic population increase rate make B. amoyensis a good candidate to develop culture techniques for hatchery larval rearing
Suppression of Gluconeogenic Gene Expression by LSD1-Mediated Histone Demethylation
Aberrant gluconeogenic gene expression is associated with diabetes, glycogen storage disease, and liver cancer. However, little is known how these genes are regulated at the chromatin level. In this study, we investigated in HepG2 cells whether histone demethylation is a potential mechanism. We found that knockdown or pharmacological inhibition of histone demethylase LSD1 causes remarkable transcription activation of two gluconeogenic genes, FBP1 and G6Pase, and consequently leads to increased de novo glucose synthesis and decreased intracellular glycogen content. Mechanistically, LSD1 occupies the promoters of FBP1 and G6Pase, and modulates their H3K4 dimethylation levels. Thus, our work identifies an epigenetic pathway directly governing gluconeogenic gene expression, which might have important implications in metabolic physiology and diseases
Automated Prompting for Non-overlapping Cross-domain Sequential Recommendation
Cross-domain Recommendation (CR) has been extensively studied in recent years
to alleviate the data sparsity issue in recommender systems by utilizing
different domain information. In this work, we focus on the more general
Non-overlapping Cross-domain Sequential Recommendation (NCSR) scenario. NCSR is
challenging because there are no overlapped entities (e.g., users and items)
between domains, and there is only users' implicit feedback and no content
information. Previous CR methods cannot solve NCSR well, since (1) they either
need extra content to align domains or need explicit domain alignment
constraints to reduce the domain discrepancy from domain-invariant features,
(2) they pay more attention to users' explicit feedback (i.e., users' rating
data) and cannot well capture their sequential interaction patterns, (3) they
usually do a single-target cross-domain recommendation task and seldom
investigate the dual-target ones. Considering the above challenges, we propose
Prompt Learning-based Cross-domain Recommender (PLCR), an automated
prompting-based recommendation framework for the NCSR task. Specifically, to
address the challenge (1), PLCR resorts to learning domain-invariant and
domain-specific representations via its prompt learning component, where the
domain alignment constraint is discarded. For challenges (2) and (3), PLCR
introduces a pre-trained sequence encoder to learn users' sequential
interaction patterns, and conducts a dual-learning target with a separation
constraint to enhance recommendations in both domains. Our empirical study on
two sub-collections of Amazon demonstrates the advance of PLCR compared with
some related SOTA methods
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