2,831 research outputs found
The interface between silicon and a high-k oxide
The ability to follow Moore's Law has been the basis of the tremendous
success of the semiconductor industry in the past decades. To date, the
greatest challenge for device scaling is the required replacement of silicon
dioxide-based gate oxides by high-k oxides in transistors. Around 2010 high-k
oxides are required to have an atomically defined interface with silicon
without any interfacial SiO2 layer. The first clean interface between silicon
and a high-K oxide has been demonstrated by McKee et al. Nevertheless, the
interfacial structure is still under debate. Here we report on first-principles
calculations of the formation of the interface between silicon and SrTiO3 and
its atomic structure. Based on insights into how the chemical environment
affects the interface, a way to engineer seemingly intangible electrical
properties to meet technological requirements is outlined. The interface
structure and its chemistry provide guidance for the selection process of other
high-k gate oxides and for controlling their growth. Our study also shows that
atomic control of the interfacial structure can dramatically improve the
electronic properties of the interface. The interface presented here serves as
a model for a variety of other interfaces between high-k oxides and silicon.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures (one color
State based model of long-term potentiation and synaptic tagging and capture
Recent data indicate that plasticity protocols have not only synapse-specific but also more widespread effects. In particular, in synaptic tagging and capture (STC), tagged synapses can capture plasticity-related proteins, synthesized in response to strong stimulation of other synapses. This leads to long-lasting modification of only weakly stimulated synapses. Here we present a biophysical model of synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus that incorporates several key results from experiments on STC. The model specifies a set of physical states in which a synapse can exist, together with transition rates that are affected by high- and low-frequency stimulation protocols. In contrast to most standard plasticity models, the model exhibits both early- and late-phase LTP/D, de-potentiation, and STC. As such, it provides a useful starting point for further theoretical work on the role of STC in learning and memory
MSSM Baryogenesis and Electric Dipole Moments: An Update on the Phenomenology
We explore the implications of electroweak baryogenesis for future searches
for permanent electric dipole moments in the context of the minimal
supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model (MSSM). From a cosmological
standpoint, we point out that regions of parameter space that over-produce
relic lightest supersymmetric particles can be salvaged only by assuming a
dilution of the particle relic density that makes it compatible with the dark
matter density: this dilution must occur after dark matter freeze-out, which
ordinarily takes place after electroweak baryogenesis, implying the same degree
of dilution for the generated baryon number density as well. We expand on
previous studies on the viable MSSM regions for baryogenesis, exploring for the
first time an orthogonal slice of the relevant parameter space, namely the
(tan\beta, m_A) plane, and the case of non-universal relative gaugino-higgsino
CP violating phases. The main result of our study is that in all cases lower
limits on the size of the electric dipole moments exist, and are typically on
the same order, or above, the expected sensitivity of the next generation of
experimental searches, implying that MSSM electroweak baryogenesis will be soon
conclusively tested.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, matches version published in JHE
Punica granatum (Pomegranate) juice provides an HIV-1 entry inhibitor and candidate topical microbicide
BACKGROUND: For ≈ 24 years the AIDS pandemic has claimed ≈ 30 million lives, causing ≈ 14,000 new HIV-1 infections daily worldwide in 2003. About 80% of infections occur by heterosexual transmission. In the absence of vaccines, topical microbicides, expected to block virus transmission, offer hope for controlling the pandemic. Antiretroviral chemotherapeutics have decreased AIDS mortality in industrialized countries, but only minimally in developing countries. To prevent an analogous dichotomy, microbicides should be: acceptable; accessible; affordable; and accelerative in transition from development to marketing. Already marketed pharmaceutical excipients or foods, with established safety records and adequate anti-HIV-1 activity, may provide this option. METHODS: Fruit juices were screened for inhibitory activity against HIV-1 IIIB using CD4 and CXCR4 as cell receptors. The best juice was tested for inhibition of: (1) infection by HIV-1 BaL, utilizing CCR5 as the cellular coreceptor; and (2) binding of gp120 IIIB and gp120 BaL, respectively, to CXCR4 and CCR5. To remove most colored juice components, the adsorption of the effective ingredient(s) to dispersible excipients and other foods was investigated. A selected complex was assayed for inhibition of infection by primary HIV-1 isolates. RESULTS: HIV-1 entry inhibitors from pomegranate juice adsorb onto corn starch. The resulting complex blocks virus binding to CD4 and CXCR4/CCR5 and inhibits infection by primary virus clades A to G and group O. CONCLUSION: These results suggest the possibility of producing an anti-HIV-1 microbicide from inexpensive, widely available sources, whose safety has been established throughout centuries, provided that its quality is adequately standardized and monitored
ACO-RR: Ant Colony Optimization Ridge Regression in Reuse of Smart City System
© 2019, Springer Nature Switzerland AG. With the rapid development of artificial intelligence, governments of different countries have been focusing on building smart cities. To build a smart city is a system construction process which not only requires a lot of human and material resources, but also takes a long period of time. Due to the lack of enough human and material resources, it is a key challenge for lots of small and medium-sized cities to develop the intelligent construction, compared with the large cities with abundant resources. Reusing the existing smart city system to assist the intelligent construction of the small and medium-sizes cities is a reasonable way to solve this challenge. Following this idea, we propose a model of Ant Colony Optimization Ridge Regression (ACO-RR), which is a smart city evaluation method based on the ridge regression. The model helps small and medium-sized cities to select and reuse the existing smart city systems according to their personalized characteristics from different successful stories. Furthermore, the proposed model tackles the limitation of ridge parameters’ selection affecting the stability and generalization ability, because the parameters of the traditional ridge regression is manually random selected. To evaluate our model performance, we conduct experiments on real-world smart city data set. The experimental results demonstrate that our model outperforms the baseline methods, such as support vector machine and neural network
Phylogeny of the Infraorder Pentatomomorpha Based on Fossil and Extant Morphology, with Description of a New Fossil Family from China
<div><h3>Background</h3><p>An extinct new family of Pentatomomorpha, Venicoridae Yao, Ren & Cai <b>fam. nov.</b>, with 2 new genera and 2 new species (<em>Venicoris solaris</em> Yao, Ren & Rider <b>gen. & sp. nov.</b> and <em>Clavaticoris zhengi</em> Yao, Ren & Cai <b>gen. & sp. nov.</b>) are described from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation in Northeast China.</p> <h3>Methodology/Principal Findings</h3><p>A cladistic analysis based on a combination of fossil and extant morphological characters clarified the phylogenetic status of the new family and has allowed the reconstruction of intersuperfamily and interfamily relationships within the Infraorder Pentatomomorpha. The fossil record and diversity of Pentatomomorpha during the Mesozoic is discussed.</p> <h3>Conclusions/Significance</h3><p>Pentatomomorpha is a monophyletic group; Aradoidea and the Trichophora are sister groups; these fossils belong to new family, treated as the sister group of remainder of Trichophora; Pentatomoidea is a monophyletic group; Piesmatidae should be separated as a superfamily, Piesmatoidea. Origin time of Pentatomomorpha should be tracked back to the Middle or Early Triassic.</p> </div
MicroRNA-Related Cofilin Abnormality in Alzheimer's Disease
Rod-like structures composed of actin and the actin-binding protein cofilin are found in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. However, the mechanisms underlying formation of these structures and their pathological consequences are still largely unknown. We found that microRNAs 103 and 107 repress translation of cofilin, and that reduced levels of miR-103 or miR-107 are associated with elevated cofilin protein levels and formation of rod-like structures in a transgenic mouse model of AD. These results suggest that microRNAs may play an important role in cytoskeletal pathology in AD
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