141 research outputs found
Unsupervised Social Event Detection via Hybrid Graph Contrastive Learning and Reinforced Incremental Clustering
Detecting events from social media data streams is gradually attracting
researchers. The innate challenge for detecting events is to extract
discriminative information from social media data thereby assigning the data
into different events. Due to the excessive diversity and high updating
frequency of social data, using supervised approaches to detect events from
social messages is hardly achieved. To this end, recent works explore learning
discriminative information from social messages by leveraging graph contrastive
learning (GCL) and embedding clustering in an unsupervised manner. However, two
intrinsic issues exist in benchmark methods: conventional GCL can only roughly
explore partial attributes, thereby insufficiently learning the discriminative
information of social messages; for benchmark methods, the learned embeddings
are clustered in the latent space by taking advantage of certain specific prior
knowledge, which conflicts with the principle of unsupervised learning
paradigm. In this paper, we propose a novel unsupervised social media event
detection method via hybrid graph contrastive learning and reinforced
incremental clustering (HCRC), which uses hybrid graph contrastive learning to
comprehensively learn semantic and structural discriminative information from
social messages and reinforced incremental clustering to perform efficient
clustering in a solidly unsupervised manner. We conduct comprehensive
experiments to evaluate HCRC on the Twitter and Maven datasets. The
experimental results demonstrate that our approach yields consistent
significant performance boosts. In traditional incremental setting,
semi-supervised incremental setting and solidly unsupervised setting, the model
performance has achieved maximum improvements of 53%, 45%, and 37%,
respectively.Comment: Accepted by Knowledge-Based System
Direct imaging of a zero-field target skyrmion and its polarity switch in a chiral magnetic nanodisk
A target skyrmion is a flux-closed spin texture that has two-fold degeneracy
and is promising as a binary state in next generation universal memories.
Although its formation in nanopatterned chiral magnets has been predicted, its
observation has remained challenging. Here, we use off-axis electron holography
to record images of target skyrmions in a 160-nm-diameter nanodisk of the
chiral magnet FeGe. We compare experimental measurements with numerical
simulations, demonstrate switching between two stable degenerate target
skyrmion ground states that have opposite polarities and rotation senses and
discuss the observed switching mechanism.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Enhancement of Hydroxyapatite Dissolution through Krypton Ion Irradiation
International audienceHydroxyapatite (HA) synthesized by a wet chemical route was subjected to heavy ion irradiation, using 4 MeV Krypton ions (Kr 17+) with ion fluence ranging from 1×10 13 to 1×10 15 ions/cm 2. Glancing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) results confirmed the phase purity of irradiated HA with a moderate contraction in lattice parameters, and further indicated irradiation-induced structural disorder, evident by a broadening of diffraction peaks. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) observations indicated that the applied Kr irradiation induced significant damage in the hydroxyapatite lattice. Specifically, cavities were observed with their diameter and density varying with irradiation fluences while a radiation-induced crystalline-to-amorphous transition with increasing ion dose was identified. Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis further indicated the presence of irradiation-induced defects. Compositional analysis of pristine and irradiated materials following immersion in Tris (pH 7.4, 37℃) buffer showed that dissolution in vitro was enhanced by irradiation, reaching a peak for 0.1dpa. We examined the effects of irradiation on the early stages of the mouse osteoblast-like cells (MC3T3-E) response. A cell counting kit-8 assay (CCK-8 test) was carried out to investigate the cytotoxicity of samples, and viable cells can be observed on the irradiated materials.L'hydroxyapatite (HA) synthétisée par voie chimique a été soumise à une irradiation ionique lourde, en utilisant des ions Krypton 4 MeV (Kr 17+) avec une fluence ionique allant de 1 × 10 13 à 1 × 10 15 ions / cm 2. Incidence du regard X- Les résultats de la diffraction des rayons (GIXRD) ont confirmé la pureté de phase de l'AH irradié avec une contraction modérée des paramètres du réseau et ont en outre indiqué un trouble structurel induit par l'irradiation, évident par un élargissement des pics de diffraction. Des observations en microscopie électronique à transmission à haute résolution (HRTEM) ont indiqué que l'irradiation au Kr appliquée a induit des dommages importants dans le réseau d'hydroxyapatite. Plus précisément, des cavités ont été observées avec leur diamètre et leur densité variant avec les fluences d'irradiation tandis qu'une transition cristalline-amorphe induite par le rayonnement avec une dose ionique croissante a été identifiée. L'analyse par spectroscopie photoélectronique Raman et X (XPS) a en outre indiqué la présence de défauts induits par l'irradiation. L'analyse de la composition des matériaux vierges et irradiés après immersion dans du tampon Tris (pH 7,4, 37 ℃) a montré que la dissolution in vitro était améliorée par irradiation, atteignant un pic de 0,1 dpa. Nous avons examiné les effets de l'irradiation sur les premiers stades de la réponse des cellules de type ostéoblaste de souris (MC3T3-E). Un test de comptage de cellules kit 8 (test CCK-8) a été réalisé pour étudier la cytotoxicité des échantillons, et des cellules viables peuvent être observées sur les matériaux irradiés
Poly[(5,5′-dimethyl-2,2′-bipyridine-κ2 N,N′)(μ3-5-hydroxyisophthalato-κ4 O 1:O 3,O 3′:O 3′)cadmium]
In the title compound, [Cd(C8H4O5)(C12H12N2)], the CdII cation is coordinated by three 5-hydroxyisophthalate anions and one 5,5′-bimethyl-2,2′-bipyridine ligand in a distorted CdO4N2 octahedral geometry. The 5-hydroxyisophthalate anions bridge the Cd cations, forming a two-dimensional polymeric complex parallel to (100). In the complex, the hydroxy group is linked to the uncoordinated carboxy-O atom via an O—H⋯O hydrogen bond. Weak C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds are also present in the crystal structure. One of the methyl groups is disordered over two positions in a 0.536 (11):0.464 (11) ratio
FGBERT: Function-Driven Pre-trained Gene Language Model for Metagenomics
Metagenomic data, comprising mixed multi-species genomes, are prevalent in
diverse environments like oceans and soils, significantly impacting human
health and ecological functions. However, current research relies on K-mer
representations, limiting the capture of structurally relevant gene contexts.
To address these limitations and further our understanding of complex
relationships between metagenomic sequences and their functions, we introduce a
protein-based gene representation as a context-aware and structure-relevant
tokenizer. Our approach includes Masked Gene Modeling (MGM) for gene
group-level pre-training, providing insights into inter-gene contextual
information, and Triple Enhanced Metagenomic Contrastive Learning (TEM-CL) for
gene-level pre-training to model gene sequence-function relationships. MGM and
TEM-CL constitute our novel metagenomic language model {\NAME}, pre-trained on
100 million metagenomic sequences. We demonstrate the superiority of our
proposed {\NAME} on eight datasets
The synthesis of a core-shell MnO2/3D-ordered hollow carbon sphere composite and its superior electrochemical capability for lithium ion batteries
NSFC [U1305246, 21321062]; Xiamen city [3502Z20121002
The G1613A Mutation in the HBV Genome Affects HBeAg Expression and Viral Replication through Altered Core Promoter Activity
Infection of hepatitis B virus (HBV) causes acute and chronic hepatitis and is closely associated with the development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Previously, we demonstrated that the G1613A mutation in the HBV negative regulatory element (NRE) is a hotspot mutation in HCC patients. In this study, we further investigated the functional consequences of this mutation in the context of the full length HBV genome and its replication. We showed that the G1613A mutation significantly suppresses the secretion of e antigen (HBeAg) and enhances the synthesis of viral DNA, which is in consistence to our clinical result that the G1613A mutation associates with high viral load in chronic HBV carriers. To further investigate the molecular mechanism of the mutation, we performed the electrophoretic mobility shift assay with the recombinant RFX1 protein, a trans-activator that was shown to interact with the NRE of HBV. Intriguingly, RFX1 binds to the G1613A mutant with higher affinity than the wild-type sequence, indicating that the mutation possesses the trans-activating effect to the core promoter via NRE. The trans-activating effect was further validated by the enhancement of the core promoter activity after overexpression of RFX1 in liver cell line. In summary, our results suggest the functional consequences of the hotspot G1613A mutation found in HBV. We also provide a possible molecular mechanism of this hotspot mutation to the increased viral load of HBV carriers, which increases the risk to HCC
Aggregation-Induced Emission (AIE), Life and Health
Light has profoundly impacted modern medicine and healthcare, with numerous luminescent agents and imaging techniques currently being used to assess health and treat diseases. As an emerging concept in luminescence, aggregation-induced emission (AIE) has shown great potential in biological applications due to its advantages in terms of brightness, biocompatibility, photostability, and positive correlation with concentration. This review provides a comprehensive summary of AIE luminogens applied in imaging of biological structure and dynamic physiological processes, disease diagnosis and treatment, and detection and monitoring of specific analytes, followed by representative works. Discussions on critical issues and perspectives on future directions are also included. This review aims to stimulate the interest of researchers from different fields, including chemistry, biology, materials science, medicine, etc., thus promoting the development of AIE in the fields of life and health
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