441 research outputs found
Characterization of mechanical properties by inverse technique for composite reinforced by knitted fabric. Part 1. Material modeling and direct experimental evaluation of mechanical properties
Polymer composites reinforced with knitted fabrics are materials with high potential in aerospace and machine building industries [1-6]. Such materials are mechanically non-linear with a high dynamic energy absorption capacity. Accurate prediction of mechanical properties is of great importance for these materials when considering their applications in novel structures. Three different approaches were implemented to this aim in the reported research work and the results are presented in: Part 1- numerical structural modeling (FEM using Solid Works) based on application of experimentally measured mechanical and geometrical properties of reinforcement and matrix, accompanied by direct measurements of mechanical properties; Part 2 - application of inverse method for characterization of mechanical properties by means of vibration modal analysis. The goal was to obtain and predict mechanical behavior of a weft knitted fabric reinforced multilayered composite plate. Results of all three approaches were compared and discussed
Genetic and epigenetic regulation in Lingo-1 : Effects on cognitive function and white matter microstructure in a case-control study for schizophrenia
Leucine-rich repeat and immunoglobulin domain-containing protein (Lingo-1) plays a vital role in a large number of neuronal processes underlying learning and memory, which are known to be disrupted in schizophrenia. However, Lingo-1 has never been examined in the context of schizophrenia. The genetic association of a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP, rs3144) and methylation (CpG sites) in the Lingo-1 3âČ-UTR region was examined, with the testing of cognitive dysfunction and white matter (WM) integrity in a schizophrenia case-control cohort (n = 268/group). A large subset of subjects (97 control and 161 schizophrenia subjects) underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans to assess WM integrity. Frequency of the rs3144 minor allele was overrepresented in the schizophrenia population (p = 0.03), with an odds ratio of 1.39 (95% CI 1.016â1.901). CpG sites surrounding rs3144 were hypermethylated in the control population (p = 0.032) compared to the schizophrenia group. rs3144 genotype was predictive of membership to a subclass of schizophrenia subjects with generalized cognitive deficits (p < 0.05), in addition to having associations with WM integrity (p = 0.018). This is the first study reporting a potential implication of genetic and epigenetic risk factors in Lingo-1 in schizophrenia. Both of these genetic and epigenetic alterations may also have associations with cognitive dysfunction and WM integrity in the context of the schizophrenia pathophysiology
South Dakota Retained Ownership Demonstration
Three hundred seventy-four calves representing 44 cow-calf producers were consigned to a custom feedlot. Steer calves (254 head) consigned in October weighed 522 Ib initially, gained 2.91 1b per head daily, and averaged 1,100 Ib at slaughter after an average of 200 days on feed. Average cost of gain and profitability were 12.03 per head, respectively. Steers consigned in January weighed 71 1 Ib initially, gained 3.07 Ib per head daily, and averaged 1,135 1b at slaughter after 141 days on feed. Average cost of gain and profitability were 64.22 per head, respectively. Losses observed for 1994-95 were due to low carcass beef prices relative to the price of feeder cattle in fall of 1994 and January of 1995. As in previous years, average daily gain, days on feed, and quality grade appear related to differences in profit between cattle
South Dakota Retained Ownership Demonstration
Seven hundred six calves representing 81 cow-calf producers were consigned to a custom feedlot. Steer calves (421 head) consigned in October weighed 562 Ib initially, gained 2.75 Ib per head daily, and averaged 1153 1b at slaughter after an average of 207 days on feed. Average cost of gain and profitability were 86.61 per head, respectively. Steers consigned in January weighed 738 Ib initially, gained 3.36 Ib per head daily, and averaged 1,196 Ib at slaughter after 137 days on feed. Average cost of gain and profitability were 58.39 per cwt and -$95.63 per head, respectively. Severe losses observed for 1993-94 were due to a crash in the carcass beef market in late May through July as compared to the previous 3years of the Retained Ownership Demonstration. As in previous years, average daily gain, days on feed and percentage of choice appear to be related to differences in profit between cattle
Effects of 17ÎČ-Estradiol on Distribution of Pituitary Isoforms of Luteinizing Hormone and Follicle-Stimulating Hormone during the Follicular Phase of the Bovine Estrous Cycle
The objective of this study was to examine the influence of 17ÎČ-estradiol (E2) on distribution of LH and FSH isoforms during the follicular phase of the bovine estrous cycle prior to the preovulatory surges of LH and FSH. On Day 16 of the estrous cycle (Day 0 = estrus), intact controls (CONT; n = 4) were treated with prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α) to induce luteal regression and initiation of the follicular phase. Other cows were also treated with PGF2α and either ovariectomized (OVX; n = 5) or ovariectomized and given E2 implants (OVXE; n = 6) to mimic the pattern of increasing E2 concentrations during the follicular phase of the estrous cycle. Pituitaries were collected 40 h after treatment with PGF2α, or ovariectomy (0 h). Aliquots of pituitary extracts were chromatofocused on pH 10.5-4.0 gradients. The LH resolved into thirteen isoforms (designated A-L and S, beginning with the most basic form) while FSH resolved into nine isoforms (designated I-IX, beginning with the most basic form). The percentage of LH as isoform F (elution pH = 9.32 + 0.01) was greater (p \u3c 0.05) in the OVX group (48.5%) than in the OVXE group (45.0% ). LH isoforms I (elution pH = 6.98 ± 0.01) and J (elution pH = 6.48 ± 0.01) were more abundant (p \u3c 0.05) in cows from the OVXE (2.3 and 5.8%, respectively) than the OVX group (1.4 and 3.7%, respectively). Distribution of LH isoforms in cows from the three groups did not differ (p \u3e 0.10). Distribution of FSH isoforms were similar (p \u3e 0.05) among all groups. In summary, removal of the ovary (OVX) resulted in a slight increase in percentage of the basic LH isoform F, while removal of the ovary and administration of E2 (OVXE) in a pattern that mimicked increasing concentrations of E2 during the follicular phase of the estrous cycle resulted in a slight increase in the percentage of acidic LH isoforms (I and J). There was no influence of ovariectomy or treatment with E2 on distribution of FSH isoforms in the pituitary. Thus, gonadotropin heterogeneity does not appear to change significantly during the follicular phase of the bovine estrous cycle
Two-Loop Renormalization Group Analysis of the Burgers-Kardar-Parisi-Zhang Equation
A systematic analysis of the Burgers--Kardar--Parisi--Zhang equation in
dimensions by dynamic renormalization group theory is described. The fixed
points and exponents are calculated to two--loop order. We use the dimensional
regularization scheme, carefully keeping the full dependence originating
from the angular parts of the loop integrals. For dimensions less than
we find a strong--coupling fixed point, which diverges at , indicating
that there is non--perturbative strong--coupling behavior for all .
At our method yields the identical fixed point as in the one--loop
approximation, and the two--loop contributions to the scaling functions are
non--singular. For dimensions, there is no finite strong--coupling fixed
point. In the framework of a expansion, we find the dynamic
exponent corresponding to the unstable fixed point, which describes the
non--equilibrium roughening transition, to be ,
in agreement with a recent scaling argument by Doty and Kosterlitz. Similarly,
our result for the correlation length exponent at the transition is . For the smooth phase, some aspects of the
crossover from Gaussian to critical behavior are discussed.Comment: 24 pages, written in LaTeX, 8 figures appended as postscript,
EF/UCT--94/3, to be published in Phys. Rev. E
Personalized brain stimulation of memory networks
Available online 13 September 2022Background: The finding that transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) can enhance memory performance via stimulation of parietal sites within the Cortical-Hippocampal Network counts as one of the most exciting findings in this field in the past decade. However, the first independent effort aiming to fully replicate this finding found no discernible influence of TMS on memory performance. Objective: We examined whether this might relate to interindividual spatial variation in brain connectivity architecture, and the capacity of personalisation methodologies to overcome the noise inherent across independent scanners and cohorts. Methods: We implemented recently detailed personalisation methodology to retrospectively compute individual-specific parietal targets and then examined relation to TMS outcomes. Results: Closer proximity between actual and novel fMRI-personalized targets associated with greater improvement in memory performance. Conclusion: These findings demonstrate the potential importance of aligning brain stimulation targets according to individual-specific differences in brain connectivity, and extend upon recent findings in prefrontal cortex.Robin F.H. Cash, Joshua Hendrikse, Kavisha B Fernando, Sarah Thompson, Chao Suo, Alex Fornito, Murat YĂŒcel, Nigel C. Rogasch, Andrew Zalesky, James P. Coxo
PET imaging of putative microglial activation in individuals at ultra-high risk for psychosis, recently diagnosed and chronically ill with schizophrenia
We examined putative microglial activation as a function of illness course in schizophrenia. Microglial activity was quantified using [11C](R)-(1-[2-chrorophynyl]-N-methyl-N-[1-methylpropyl]-3 isoquinoline carboxamide (11C-(R)-PK11195) positron emission tomography (PET) in: (i) 10 individuals at ultra-high risk (UHR) of psychosis; (ii) 18 patients recently diagnosed with schizophrenia; (iii) 15 patients chronically ill with schizophrenia; and, (iv) 27 age-matched healthy controls. Regional-binding potential (BPND) was calculated using the simplified reference-tissue model with four alternative reference inputs. The UHR, recent-onset and chronic patient groups were compared to age-matched healthy control groups to examine between-group BPND differences in 6 regions: dorsal frontal, orbital frontal, anterior cingulate, medial temporal, thalamus and insula. Correlation analysis tested for BPND associations with gray matter volume, peripheral cytokines and clinical variables. The null hypothesis of equality in BPND between patients (UHR, recent-onset and chronic) and respective healthy control groups (younger and older) was not rejected for any group comparison or region. Across all subjects, BPND was positively correlated to age in the thalamus (r=0.43, P=0.008, false discovery rate). No correlations with regional gray matter, peripheral cytokine levels or clinical symptoms were detected. We therefore found no evidence of microglial activation in groups of individuals at high risk, recently diagnosed or chronically ill with schizophrenia. While the possibility of 11C-(R)-PK11195-binding differences in certain patient subgroups remains, the patient cohorts in our study, who also displayed normal peripheral cytokine profiles, do not substantiate the assumption of microglial activation in schizophrenia as a regular and defining feature, as measured by 11C-(R)-PK11195 BPND.M A Di Biase, A Zalesky, G O'keefe, L Laskaris, B T Baune, C S Weickert, J Olver, P D McGorry, G P Amminger, B Nelson, A M Scott, I Hickie, R Banati, F Turkheimer, M Yaqub, I P Everall, C Pantelis and V Crople
Soliton approach to the noisy Burgers equation: Steepest descent method
The noisy Burgers equation in one spatial dimension is analyzed by means of
the Martin-Siggia-Rose technique in functional form. In a canonical formulation
the morphology and scaling behavior are accessed by mean of a principle of
least action in the asymptotic non-perturbative weak noise limit. The ensuing
coupled saddle point field equations for the local slope and noise fields,
replacing the noisy Burgers equation, are solved yielding nonlinear localized
soliton solutions and extended linear diffusive mode solutions, describing the
morphology of a growing interface. The canonical formalism and the principle of
least action also associate momentum, energy, and action with a
soliton-diffusive mode configuration and thus provides a selection criterion
for the noise-induced fluctuations. In a ``quantum mechanical'' representation
of the path integral the noise fluctuations, corresponding to different paths
in the path integral, are interpreted as ``quantum fluctuations'' and the
growth morphology represented by a Landau-type quasi-particle gas of ``quantum
solitons'' with gapless dispersion and ``quantum diffusive modes'' with a gap
in the spectrum. Finally, the scaling properties are dicussed from a heuristic
point of view in terms of a``quantum spectral representation'' for the slope
correlations. The dynamic eponent z=3/2 is given by the gapless soliton
dispersion law, whereas the roughness exponent zeta =1/2 follows from a
regularity property of the form factor in the spectral representation. A
heuristic expression for the scaling function is given by spectral
representation and has a form similar to the probability distribution for Levy
flights with index .Comment: 30 pages, Revtex file, 14 figures, to be submitted to Phys. Rev.
The bounds of education in the human brain connectome
Inter-individual heterogeneity is evident in aging; education level is known to contribute for this heterogeneity. Using a cross-sectional study design and network inference applied to resting-state fMRI data, we show that aging was associated with decreased functional connectivity in a large cortical network. On the other hand, education level, as measured by years of formal education, produced an opposite effect on the long-term. These results demonstrate the increased brain efficiency in individuals with higher education level that may mitigate the impact of age on brain functional connectivity.This work was funded by the European Commission (FP7): âSwitchBoxâ (Contract HEALTH-F2-2010-259772) and co-financed by the Portuguese North Regional Operational Program (ON.2 â O Novo Norte) under the National Strategic Reference Framework (QREN), through the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER). JosĂ© M. Soares, Paulo Marques, and Nadine C. Santos are supported by fellowships of the project âSwitchBoxâ; Ricardo MagalhĂŁes is supported by a fellowship from the project FCT ANR/NEU-OSD/0258/2012 funded by FCT/MEC (www.fct.pt) and by ON.2 â ONOVONORTE â North Portugal Regional Operational Programme 2007/2013, of the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF) 2007/2013, through FEDER
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