389 research outputs found

    Biased Average Position Estimates in Line and Bar Graphs:Underestimation, Overestimation, and Perceptual Pull

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    In visual depictions of data, position (i.e., the vertical height of a line or a bar) is believed to be the most precise way to encode information compared to other encodings (e.g., hue). Not only are other encodings less precise than position, but they can also be prone to systematic biases (e.g., color category boundaries can distort perceived differences between hues). By comparison, position's high level of precision may seem to protect it from such biases. In contrast, across three empirical studies, we show that while position may be a precise form of data encoding, it can also produce systematic biases in how values are visually encoded, at least for reports of average position across a short delay. In displays with a single line or a single set of bars, reports of average positions were significantly biased, such that line positions were underestimated and bar positions were overestimated. In displays with multiple data series (i.e., multiple lines and/or sets of bars), this systematic bias still persisted. We also observed an effect of "perceptual pull", where the average position estimate for each series was 'pulled' toward the other. These findings suggest that, although position may still be the most precise form of visual data encoding, it can also be systematically biased

    Long-Read Assembly and Annotation of the Parasitoid Wasp <i>Muscidifurax raptorellus</i>, a Biological Control Agent for Filth Flies

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    The parasitoid wasp Muscidifurax raptorellus (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) is a gregarious species that has received extensive attention for its potential in biological pest control against house fly, stable fly, and other filth flies. It has a high reproductive capacity and can be reared easily. However, genome assembly is not available for M. raptorellus or any other species in this genus. Previously, we assembled a complete circular mitochondrial genome with a length of 24,717 bp. Here, we assembled and annotated a high-quality nuclear genome of M. raptorellus, using a combination of long-read (104× genome coverage) and short-read (326× genome coverage) sequencing technologies. The assembled genome size is 314 Mbp in 226 contigs, with a 97.9% BUSCO completeness score and a contig N50 of 4.67 Mb, suggesting excellent continuity of this assembly. Our assembly builds the foundation for comparative and evolutionary genomic analysis in the genus of Muscidifurax and possible future biocontrol applications

    Recognizing basal cell carcinoma on smartphone‐captured digital histopathology images with a deep neural network

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/154530/1/bjd18026.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/154530/2/bjd18026_am.pd

    The effect of applied electric field on pulsed radio frequency and pulsed direct current plasma jet array

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    Here we compare the plasma plume propagation characteristics of a 3-channel pulsed RF plasma jet array and those of the same device operated by a pulsed dc source. For the pulsed-RF jet array, numerous long life time ions and metastables accumulated in the plasma channel make the plasma plume respond quickly to applied electric field. Its structure similar as “plasma bullet” is an anode glow indeed. For the pulsed dcplasma jet array, the strong electric field in the vicinity of the tube is the reason for the growing plasma bullet in the launching period. The repulsive forces between the growing plasma bullets result in the divergence of the pulsed dcplasma jet array. Finally, the comparison of 309 nm and 777 nm emissions between these two jet arrays suggests the high chemical activity of pulsed RF plasma jet array

    Pion-Production in Heavy-Ion Collisions at SIS energies

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    We investigate the production of pions in heavy-ion collisions in the energy range of 11 - 22 GeV/A. The dynamics of the nucleus-nucleus collisions is described by a set of coupled transport equations of the Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck type for baryons and mesons. Besides the N(938)N(938) and the Δ(1232)\Delta(1232) we also take into account nucleon resonances up to masses of 1.9GeV/c21.9 GeV/c^2 as well as π\pi-, η\eta- and ρ\rho-mesons. We study in detail the influence of the higher baryonic resonances and the 2π2\pi-production channels (NN→NNππNN\to NN \pi\pi) on the pion spectra in comparison to π−\pi^- data from Ar+KClAr + KCl collisions at 1.81.8 GeV/A and π0\pi^0-data for Au+AuAu+Au at 1.0 GeV/A. We, furthermore, present a detailed comparison of differential pion angular distributions with the BEVALAC data for Ar + KCl at 1.8 GeV/A. The general agreement obtained indicates that the overall reactions dynamics is well described by our novel transport approach.Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures (inlcuded), to appear in Z. Phys.

    Energy levels and far-infrared spectroscopy for two electrons in a semiconductor nanoring

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    The effects of electron-electron interaction of a two-electron nanoring on the energy levels and far-infrared (FIR) spectroscopy have been investigated based on a model calculation which is performed within the exactly numerical diagonalization. It is found that the interaction changes the energy spectra dramatically, and also shows significant influence on the FIR spectroscopy. The crossings between the lowest spin-singlet and triplet states induced by the coulomb interaction are clearly revealed. Our results are related to the experiment recently carried out by A. Lorke et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 2223 (2000)].Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, revised and accepted by Phys. Rev. B (Dec. 15

    The novel transcriptional regulator SczA mediates protection against Zn2+ stress by activation of the Zn2+-resistance gene czcD in Streptococcus pneumoniae

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    Maintenance of the intracellular homeostasis of metal ions is important for the virulence of many bacterial pathogens. Here, we demonstrate that the czcD gene of the human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae is involved in resistance against Zn2+, and that its transcription is induced by the transition-metal ions Zn2+, Co2+ and Ni2+. Upstream of czcD a gene was identified, encoding a novel TetR family regulator, SczA, that is responsible for the metal ion-dependent activation of czcD expression. Transcriptome analyses revealed that in a sczA mutant expression of czcD, a gene encoding a MerR-family transcriptional regulator and a gene encoding a zinc-containing alcohol dehydrogenase (adhB) were downregulated. Activation of the czcD promoter by SczA is shown to proceed by Zn2+-dependent binding of SczA to a conserved DNA motif. In the absence of Zn2+, SczA binds to a second site in the czcD promoter, thereby fully blocking czcD expression. This is the first example of a metalloregulatory protein belonging to the TetR family that has been described. The presence in S. pneumoniae of the Zn2+-resistance system characterized in this study might reflect the need for adjustment to a fluctuating Zn2+ pool encountered by this pathogen during infection of the human body

    J/ψ+c+cˉJ/\psi + c + \bar{c} Photoproduction in e+e−e^+ e^- Scattering

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    We investigate the J/ψJ/\psi + c + cˉ\bar{c} photoproduction in e+e−e^+ e^- collision at the LEP II energy. The physical motivations for this study are: 1) such next-to-leading order(NLO) process was not considered in previous investigations of J/ψJ/\psi photoproduction in e+e−e^+ e^- interaction, and it is worthwhile to do so in order to make sound predictions for experimental comparison; 2) from recent Belle experiment results, the process with same final states at the BB factory has a theoretically yet unexplainable large fraction; hence it is interesting to see what may happen at other colliders; 3) the existing LEP data are marginal in observing such process, and at the planed Linear Colliders(LCs) this process can be measured with high accuracy; 4) it is necessary to take this process into consideration in the aim of elucidating the quarkonium production mechanism, especially in testing the universality of NRQCD nonperturbative matrix elements via J/ψJ/\psi photoproduction in electron-position collisions.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure

    Hole-doping dependence of percolative phase separation in Pr_(0.5-delta)Ca_(0.2+delta)Sr_(0.3)MnO_(3) around half doping

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    We address the problem of the percolative phase separation in polycrystalline samples of Pr0.5−ή_{0.5-\delta}Ca0.2+ÎŽ_{0.2+\delta}Sr0.3_{0.3}MnO3_3 for −0.04≀Ύ≀0.04-0.04\leq \delta \leq 0.04 (hole doping nn between 0.46 and 0.54). We perform measurements of X-ray diffraction, dc magnetization, ESR, and electrical resistivity. These samples show at TCT_C a paramagnetic (PM) to ferromagnetic (FM) transition, however, we found that for n>0.50n>0.50 there is a coexistence of both of these phases below TCT_C. On lowering TT below the charge-ordering (CO) temperature TCOT_{CO} all the samples exhibit a coexistence between the FM metallic and CO (antiferromagnetic) phases. In the whole TT range the FM phase fraction (XX) decreases with increasing nn. Furthermore, we show that only for n≀0.50n\leq 0.50 the metallic fraction is above the critical percolation threshold XC≃15.5X_C\simeq 15.5%. As a consequence, these samples show very different magnetoresistance properties. In addition, for n≀0.50n\leq 0.50 we observe a percolative metal-insulator transition at TMIT_{MI}, and for TMI<T<TCOT_{MI}<T<T_{CO} the insulating-like behavior generated by the enlargement of XX with increasing TT is well described by the percolation law ρ−1=σ∌(X−XC)t\rho ^{-1}=\sigma \sim (X-X_C)^t, where tt is a critical exponent. On the basis of the values obtained for this exponent we discuss different possible percolation mechanisms, and suggest that a more deep understanding of geometric and dimensionality effects is needed in phase separated manganites. We present a complete TT vs nn phase diagram showing the magnetic and electric properties of the studied compound around half doping.Comment: 9 text pages + 12 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Immunological Synapse Predicts Effectiveness of Chimeric Antigen Receptor Cells

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    Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-modified T cell therapy has the potential to improve the overall survival of patients with malignancies by enhancing the effectiveness of CAR T cells. Precisely predicting the effectiveness of various CAR T cells represents one of today's key unsolved problems in immunotherapy. Here, we predict the effectiveness of CAR-modified cells by evaluating the quality of the CAR-mediated immunological synapse (IS) by quantitation of F-actin, clustering of tumor antigen, polarization of lytic granules (LGs), and distribution of key signaling molecules within the IS. Long-term killing capability, but not secretion of conventional cytokines or standard 4-hr cytotoxicity, correlates positively with the quality of the IS in two different CAR T cells that share identical antigen specificity. Xenograft model data confirm that the quality of the IS in vitro correlates positively with performance of CAR-modified immune cells in vivo. Therefore, we propose that the quality of the IS predicts the effectiveness of CAR-modified immune cells, which provides a novel strategy to guide CAR therapy. Xiong et al. developed a novel approach to predict the effectiveness of CAR-modified cells by quantifying the quality of CAR-mediated immunological synapse, which may introduce a new parameter to the field of immunotherapy
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