466 research outputs found
A Comparative Study on multichannel Speaker-attributed automatic speech recognition in Multi-party Meetings
Speaker-attributed automatic speech recognition (SA-ASR) in multiparty
meeting scenarios is one of the most valuable and challenging ASR task. It was
shown that single-channel frame-level diarization with serialized output
training (SC-FD-SOT), single-channel word-level diarization with SOT
(SC-WD-SOT) and joint training of single-channel target-speaker separation and
ASR (SC-TS-ASR) can be exploited to partially solve this problem. SC-FD-SOT
obtains the speaker-attributed transcriptions by aligning the speaker
diarization results with the ASR hypotheses, SC-WD-SOT uses word-level
diarization to get rid of the alignment dependence on timestamps, and SC-TS-ASR
jointly trains target-speaker separation and ASR modules, which achieves the
best performance. In this paper, we propose three corresponding multichannel
(MC) SA-ASR approaches, namely MC-FD-SOT, MC-WD-SOT and MC-TS-ASR. For
different tasks/models, different multichannel data fusion strategies are
considered, including channel-level cross-channel attention for MC-FD-SOT,
frame-level cross-channel attention for MC-WD-SOT and neural beamforming for
MC-TS-ASR. Experimental results on the AliMeeting corpus reveal that our
proposed multichannel SA-ASR models can consistently outperform the
corresponding single-channel counterparts in terms of the speaker-dependent
character error rate (SD-CER)
Modulations of resting-static functional connectivity on insular by electroacupuncture in subjective tinnitus
ObjectiveTo explore the modulations of electroacupuncture in subjective tinnitus (ST) by comparing the difference of functional connectivity (FC) in ST patients and healthy volunteers between the insular (INS) and the whole brain region.MethodsA total of 34 ST patients were selected into electroacupuncture group (EG) and 34 age- and sex-matched normal subjects were recruited into control group (CG). The EG received acupuncture at SI19 (Tinggong), GB11 (Touqiaoyin), TE17 (Yifeng), GV20 (Baihui), GV15 (Yamen), GV14 (Dazhui), SJ13 (Zhongzhu), among which the points of SI19 and GB11 were connected to the electroacupuncture instrument with the density wave of 2/50 Hz, and 3 treatments per week for 10 sessions in total. The severity of tinnitus was evaluated by Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), the hearing status was recorded using pure tone audiometry, and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) was performed on the brain before and after treatment, the CG received no intervention yet only rs-fMRI data were collected.ResultsWith the electroacupuncture treatment, the total THI score, average air conduction threshold of patients of EG were significantly lower than before (p < 0.01), and the total effective rate was 88.24%. Compared with CG, FC of ST patients between INS and left superior temporal gyrus and right hippocampal significantly decreased before treatment, while FC of ST patients between INS and right superior frontal gyrus, left middle frontal gyrus and right anterior cuneus significantly decreased after treatment (voxel p < 0.001, cluster p < 0.05, corrected with GRF). FC of ST patients between the INS and right middle frontal gyrus, left superior frontal gyrus and right paracentral lobule showed a significant decrease after treatment (voxel p < 0.001, cluster p < 0.05, corrected with GRF). In addition, THI score in EG was negatively correlated with the reduction of FC value in INS-left superior frontal gyrus before treatment (r = −0.41, p = 0.017). Therefore, this study suggests that abnormal FC of INS may be one of the significant central mechanisms of ST patients and can be modulated by electroacupuncture.DiscussionElectroacupuncture treatment can effectively reduce or eliminate tinnitus symptoms in ST patients and improve the hearing by decreasing FC between the INS and the frontal and temporal brain regions
Aloperine Suppresses Cancer Progression by Interacting with VPS4A to Inhibit Autophagosome-lysosome Fusion in NSCLC.
Aloperine (ALO), a quinolizidine-type alkaloid isolated from a natural Chinese herb, has shown promising antitumor effects. Nevertheless, its common mechanism of action and specific target remain elusive. Here, it is demonstrated that ALO inhibits the proliferation and migration of non-small cell lung cancer cell lines in vitro and the tumor development in several mouse tumor models in vivo. Mechanistically, ALO inhibits the fusion of autophagosomes with lysosomes and the autophagic flux, leading to the accumulation of sequestosome-1 (SQSTM1) and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), thereby inducing tumor cell apoptosis and preventing tumor growth. Knockdown of SQSTM1 in cells inhibits ROS production and reverses ALO-induced cell apoptosis. Furthermore, VPS4A is identified as a direct target of ALO, and the amino acids F153 and D263 of VPS4A are confirmed as the binding sites for ALO. Knockout of VPS4A in H1299 cells demonstrates a similar biological effect as ALO treatment. Additionally, ALO enhances the efficacy of the anti-PD-L1/TGF-β bispecific antibody in inhibiting LLC-derived subcutaneous tumor models. Thus, ALO is first identified as a novel late-stage autophagy inhibitor that triggers tumor cell death by targeting VPS4A
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