794 research outputs found

    A potential explanation for the effect of carbon source on the characteristics of acetate-fed and glucose-fed aerobic granules

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    This paper proposes a new theory to account for the effect of carbon source on the characteristics of acetate-fed and glucose-fed aerobic granules. It is well known that reactor pH can vary in response to the oxidation of glucose or sodium acetate. As such, the effects associated with the carbon sources may be explained by the changed pH. The proposal was explored by experiments. Aerobic granules were cultivated in three identical sequencing batch reactors (SBRs, R1, R2 and R3), fed with sodium acetate, glucose, glucose and maintained pH at 4.5 - 5.5 (the variation of reactor pH in the oxidation of glucose), 4.5 - 5.5 and 7.5 - 8.5 (the variation of reactor pH in the oxidation of sodium acetate), respectively, and the effects of carbon source and reactor pH on the characteristics of aerobic granules were assessed. The results showed that the characteristics of aerobic granules, including microbial structure, mixed liquor suspended solids (MLSS), sludge volume index (SVI) and nitrification-denitrification, were strongly affected by reactor pH, but were independent with the carbon source supplied. These results fully supported the validity of the new theory. The theory suggests that the cultivation of aerobic granules with glucose or sodium acetate should take more attention to reactor pH rather than carbon source itself. The implications of this theory are discussed with regards to the other common carbon sources as well as better understanding of the mechanisms of aerobic granulation.Keywords: Acetate-fed granules, glucose-fed granules, reactor pH, carbon source, characteristicsAfrican Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 9(33), pp. 5357-5365, 16 August, 201

    MobiGroup: Enabling Lifecycle Support to Social Activity Organization and Suggestion with Mobile Crowd Sensing

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.This paper presents a group-aware mobile crowd sensing system called MobiGroup, which supports group activity organization in real-world settings. Acknowledging the complexity and diversity of group activities, this paper introduces a formal concept model to characterize group activities and classifies them into four organizational stages. We then present an intelligent approach to support group activity preparation, including a heuristic rule-based mechanism for advertising public activity and a context-based method for private group formation. In addition, we leverage features extracted from both online and offline communities to recommend ongoing events to attendees with different needs. Compared with the baseline method, people preferred public activities suggested by our heuristic rule-based method. Using a dataset collected from 45 participants, we found that the context-based approach for private group formation can attain a precision and recall of over 80%, and the usage of spatial-temporal contexts and group computing can have more than a 30% performance improvement over considering the interaction frequency between a user and related groups. A case study revealed that, by extracting the features such as dynamic intimacy and static intimacy, our cross-community approach for ongoing event recommendation can meet different user needs

    Planning analysis for locally advanced lung cancer: dosimetric and efficiency comparisons between intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), single-arc/partial-arc volumetric modulated arc therapy (SA/PA-VMAT)

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Purpose</p> <p>To analyze the differences between the intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), single/partial-arc volumetric modulated arc therapy (SA/PA-VMAT) techniques in treatment planning for locally advanced lung cancer.</p> <p>Materials and methods</p> <p>12 patients were retrospectively studied. In each patient's case, several parameters were analyzed based on the dose-volume histograms (DVH) of the IMRT, SA/PA-VMAT plans respectively. Also, each plan was delivered to a phantom for time comparison.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The SA-VMAT plans showed the superior target dose coverage, although the minimum/mean/maximum doses to the target were similar. For the total and contralateral lungs, the higher V<sub>5/10</sub>, lower V<sub>20/30 </sub>and mean lung dose (MLD) were observed in the SA/PA-VMAT plans (<it>p </it>< 0.05, respectively). The PA-VMAT technique improves the dose sparing (V<sub>20</sub>, V<sub>30 </sub>and MLD) of the controlateral lung more notably, comparing to those parameters of the IMRT and SA-VMAT plans respectively. The delivered monitor units (MUs) and treatment times were reduced significantly with VMAT plans, especially PA-VMAT plans (for MUs: mean 458.3 <it>vs</it>. 439.2 <it>vs</it>. 435.7 MUs, <it>p </it>< 0.05 and for treatment time: mean 13.7 <it>vs</it>. 10.6 <it>vs</it>. 6.4 minutes, <it>p </it>< 0.01).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The SA-VMAT technique achieves highly conformal dose distribution to the target. Comparing to the IMRT plans, the higher V<sub>5/10</sub>, lower V<sub>20/30 </sub>and MLD were observed in the total and contralateral lungs in the VMAT plans, especially in the PA-VMAT plans. The SA/PA-VMAT plans also reduced treatment time with more efficient dose delivering. But the clinical benefit of the VMAT technique for locally advanced lung cancer needs further investigations.</p

    Reduced neural responses to reward reflect anhedonia and inattention: an ERP study

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    An inhibited neural response to reward is typical of clinical depression and can predict an individual's overall depressive symptoms. However, the mechanism underlying this are unclear. Previous studies have found that anhedonia and inattention may mediate the relationship between reward sensitivity and depressive symptoms. Therefore, this study aimed to verify the relationship between reward sensitivity and overall depressive symptoms in a depressive tendency sample as well as to explore the mechanism underlying the ability of neural responses to reward to predict overall depressive symptoms via a mediation model. Sixty-four participants (33 with depressive tendencies and 31 without; dichotomized by BDI-II) finished simple gambling tasks while their event-related potential components (ERPs) were recorded and compared. Linear regression was conducted to verify the predictive effect of ERPs on overall depressive symptoms. A multiple mediator model was used, with anhedonia and distractibility as mediators reward sensitivity and overall depressive symptoms. The amplitude of reward positivity (ΔRewP) was greater in healthy controls compared to those with depressive tendencies (p = 0.006). Both the gain-locked ERP component (b = − 1.183, p = 0.007) and the ΔRewP (b = − 0.991, p = 0.024) could significantly negatively predict overall depressive symptoms even after controlling for all anxiety symptoms. The indirect effects of anhedonia and distractibility were significant (both confidence intervals did not contain 0) while the direct effect of reward sensitivity on depressive symptom was not significant (lower confidence interval = − 0.320, upper confidence interval = 0.065). Individuals with depressive tendencies display impaired neural responses to reward compared to healthy controls and reduced individual neural responses to reward may reflect the different biotypes of depression such as anhedonia and inattention.publishedVersio
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