158 research outputs found
Sharp bounds for variance of treatment effect estimators in the finite population in the presence of covariates
In a completely randomized experiment, the variances of treatment effect
estimators in the finite population are usually not identifiable and hence not
estimable. Although some estimable bounds of the variances have been
established in the literature, few of them are derived in the presence of
covariates.
In this paper, the difference-in-means estimator and the Wald estimator are
considered in the completely randomized experiment with perfect compliance and
noncompliance, respectively. Sharp bounds for the variances of these two
estimators are established when covariates are available.
Furthermore, consistent estimators for such bounds are obtained, which can be
used to shorten the confidence intervals and improve the power of tests.
Confidence intervals are constructed based on the consistent estimators of the
upper bounds, whose coverage rates are uniformly asymptotically guaranteed.
Simulations were conducted to evaluate the proposed methods. The proposed
methods are also illustrated with two real data analyses.Comment: Accepted by Statistica Sinic
FreePIH: Training-Free Painterly Image Harmonization with Diffusion Model
This paper provides an efficient training-free painterly image harmonization
(PIH) method, dubbed FreePIH, that leverages only a pre-trained diffusion model
to achieve state-of-the-art harmonization results. Unlike existing methods that
require either training auxiliary networks or fine-tuning a large pre-trained
backbone, or both, to harmonize a foreground object with a painterly-style
background image, our FreePIH tames the denoising process as a plug-in module
for foreground image style transfer. Specifically, we find that the very last
few steps of the denoising (i.e., generation) process strongly correspond to
the stylistic information of images, and based on this, we propose to augment
the latent features of both the foreground and background images with Gaussians
for a direct denoising-based harmonization. To guarantee the fidelity of the
harmonized image, we make use of multi-scale features to enforce the
consistency of the content and stability of the foreground objects in the
latent space, and meanwhile, aligning both fore-/back-grounds with the same
style. Moreover, to accommodate the generation with more structural and
textural details, we further integrate text prompts to attend to the latent
features, hence improving the generation quality. Quantitative and qualitative
evaluations on COCO and LAION 5B datasets demonstrate that our method can
surpass representative baselines by large margins
Circ-CCS regulates oxaliplatin resistance via targeting miR-874-3p/HK2 axis in colorectal cancer
Background. Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a malignancy that threatens the patient’s life. Previous reports showed that circular RNAs (circRNAs) can affect CRC development. Herein, we demonstrated the characters of circular RNA copper chaperone for superoxide dismutase (circ-CCS) in CRC tissues and cells. Methods. Circ-CCS, CCS mRNA, microRNA-8743p (miR-874-3p) and hexokinase 2 (HK2) were indicated by qRT-PCR and western blot in CRC. The cell roles were examined. Additionally, the interaction between miR-874-3p and circ-CCS or HK2 was forecasted by the bioinformatics method and assessed by dual-luciferase reporter assay. Finally, the mouse test was implemented to demonstrate the effect of circ-CCS in vivo. Results. Circ-CCS and HK2 were increased, whereas miR-874-3p was diminished in CRC. Circ-CCS lack subdued the IC50 value of oxaliplatin, cell proliferation, migration, invasion and glycolysis metabolism in CRC cells, while it endorsed cell apoptosis. Furthermore, miR-874-3p was validated as having a tumor repressive effect in CRC cells by restraining HK2. The results also showed that HK2 could regulate the development of CRC. In mechanism, circ-CCS targeted miR-874-3p to control HK2. In addition, circ-CCS knock-down also attenuated tumor growth in mice. Conclusion. Circ-CCS expedited CRC through miR874-3p/HK
Dissecting Arbitrary-scale Super-resolution Capability from Pre-trained Diffusion Generative Models
Diffusion-based Generative Models (DGMs) have achieved unparalleled
performance in synthesizing high-quality visual content, opening up the
opportunity to improve image super-resolution (SR) tasks. Recent solutions for
these tasks often train architecture-specific DGMs from scratch, or require
iterative fine-tuning and distillation on pre-trained DGMs, both of which take
considerable time and hardware investments. More seriously, since the DGMs are
established with a discrete pre-defined upsampling scale, they cannot well
match the emerging requirements of arbitrary-scale super-resolution (ASSR),
where a unified model adapts to arbitrary upsampling scales, instead of
preparing a series of distinct models for each case. These limitations beg an
intriguing question: can we identify the ASSR capability of existing
pre-trained DGMs without the need for distillation or fine-tuning? In this
paper, we take a step towards resolving this matter by proposing Diff-SR, a
first ASSR attempt based solely on pre-trained DGMs, without additional
training efforts. It is motivated by an exciting finding that a simple
methodology, which first injects a specific amount of noise into the
low-resolution images before invoking a DGM's backward diffusion process,
outperforms current leading solutions. The key insight is determining a
suitable amount of noise to inject, i.e., small amounts lead to poor low-level
fidelity, while over-large amounts degrade the high-level signature. Through a
finely-grained theoretical analysis, we propose the Perceptual Recoverable
Field (PRF), a metric that achieves the optimal trade-off between these two
factors. Extensive experiments verify the effectiveness, flexibility, and
adaptability of Diff-SR, demonstrating superior performance to state-of-the-art
solutions under diverse ASSR environments
Attribute-Aware Representation Rectification for Generalized Zero-Shot Learning
Generalized Zero-shot Learning (GZSL) has yielded remarkable performance by
designing a series of unbiased visual-semantics mappings, wherein, the
precision relies heavily on the completeness of extracted visual features from
both seen and unseen classes. However, as a common practice in GZSL, the
pre-trained feature extractor may easily exhibit difficulty in capturing
domain-specific traits of the downstream tasks/datasets to provide fine-grained
discriminative features, i.e., domain bias, which hinders the overall
recognition performance, especially for unseen classes. Recent studies
partially address this issue by fine-tuning feature extractors, while may
inevitably incur catastrophic forgetting and overfitting issues. In this paper,
we propose a simple yet effective Attribute-Aware Representation Rectification
framework for GZSL, dubbed , to adaptively rectify the
feature extractor to learn novel features while keeping original valuable
features. Specifically, our method consists of two key components, i.e.,
Unseen-Aware Distillation (UAD) and Attribute-Guided Learning (AGL). During
training, UAD exploits the prior knowledge of attribute texts that are shared
by both seen/unseen classes with attention mechanisms to detect and maintain
unseen class-sensitive visual features in a targeted manner, and meanwhile, AGL
aims to steer the model to focus on valuable features and suppress them to fit
noisy elements in the seen classes by attribute-guided representation learning.
Extensive experiments on various benchmark datasets demonstrate the
effectiveness of our method.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
High-Mobility and Bias-Stable Field-Effect Transistors Based on Lead-Free Formamidinium Tin Iodide Perovskites
Electronic devices based on tin halide perovskites often exhibit a poor operational stability. Here, we report an additive engineering strategy to realize high-performance and stable field-effect transistors (FETs) based on 3D formamidinium tin iodide (FASnI3) films. By comparatively studying the modification effects of two additives, i.e., phenethylammonium iodide and 4-fluorophenylethylammonium iodide via combined experimental and theoretical investigations, we unambiguously point out the general effects of phenethylammonium (PEA) and its fluorinated derivative (FPEA) in enhancing crystallization of FASnI3 films and the unique role of fluorination in reducing structural defects, suppressing oxidation of Sn2+ and blocking oxygen and water involved defect reactions. The optimized FPEA-modified FASnI3 FETs reach a record high field-effect mobility of 15.1 cm2/(V·s) while showing negligible hysteresis. The devices exhibit less than 10% and 3% current variation during over 2 h continuous bias stressing and 4200-cycle switching test, respectively, representing the best stability achieved so far for all Sn-based FETs.</p
High-Mobility and Bias-Stable Field-Effect Transistors Based on Lead-Free Formamidinium Tin Iodide Perovskites
Electronic devices based on tin halide perovskites often exhibit a poor operational stability. Here, we report an additive engineering strategy to realize high-performance and stable field-effect transistors (FETs) based on 3D formamidinium tin iodide (FASnI3) films. By comparatively studying the modification effects of two additives, i.e., phenethylammonium iodide and 4-fluorophenylethylammonium iodide via combined experimental and theoretical investigations, we unambiguously point out the general effects of phenethylammonium (PEA) and its fluorinated derivative (FPEA) in enhancing crystallization of FASnI3 films and the unique role of fluorination in reducing structural defects, suppressing oxidation of Sn2+ and blocking oxygen and water involved defect reactions. The optimized FPEA-modified FASnI3 FETs reach a record high field-effect mobility of 15.1 cm2/(V·s) while showing negligible hysteresis. The devices exhibit less than 10% and 3% current variation during over 2 h continuous bias stressing and 4200-cycle switching test, respectively, representing the best stability achieved so far for all Sn-based FETs.</p
Surface Plasmon Resonance Enhanced Spontaneous Upconversion and Stimulated Emissions in Glass Ceramics Containing Ba 2
Glass ceramics containing Yb3+, Er3+ codoped Ba2LaF7 nanocrystals were fabricated via melt quenching method and the subsequent heating treatment. The formation of Ba2LaF7 nanocrystals in the glass ceramics was confirmed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and transmission electron microscope (TEM). The spontaneous upconversion (UC) emission and the stimulated counterpart as a random lasing action of Er3+, which were related to the characteristic transitions of Er3+ ions, were achieved in the Yb3+, Er3+-doped Ba2LaF7 nanocrystals embedded glass ceramic hybrid. Furthermore, the absorption spectra verified the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) band of Ag, which precipitated from the matrix glasses as Ag nanoparticles (NPs). By incorporating Ag NPs in the glass ceramic hybrid, spontaneous UC emission intensity of Er3+ in visible region was significantly enhanced, while the threshold of the random lasing was decreased from 480 to 350 nJ/cm2
StMAPKK5 responds to heat stress by regulating potato growth, photosynthesis, and antioxidant defenses
BackgroundsAs a conserved signaling pathway, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade regulates cellular signaling in response to abiotic stress. High temperature may contribute to a significant decrease in economic yield. However, research into the expression patterns of StMAPKK family genes under high temperature is limited and lacks experimental validation regarding their role in supporting potato plant growth.MethodsTo trigger heat stress responses, potato plants were grown at 35°C. qRT-PCR was conducted to analyze the expression pattern of StMAPKK family genes in potato plants. Plant with StMAPKK5 loss-of-function and gain-of-function were developed. Potato growth and morphological features were assessed through measures of plant height, dry weight, and fresh weight. The antioxidant ability of StMAPKK5 was indicated by antioxidant enzyme activity and H2O2 content. Cell membrane integrity and permeability were suggested by relative electrical conductivity (REC), and contents of MDA and proline. Photosynthetic capacity was next determined. Further, mRNA expression of heat stress-responsive genes and antioxidant enzyme genes was examined.ResultsIn reaction to heat stress, the expression profiles of StMAPKK family genes were changed. The StMAPKK5 protein is located to the nucleus, cytoplasm and cytomembrane, playing a role in controlling the height and weight of potato plants under heat stress conditions. StMAPKK5 over-expression promoted photosynthesis and maintained cell membrane integrity, while inhibited transpiration and stomatal conductance under heat stress. Overexpression of StMAPKK5 triggered biochemical defenses in potato plant against heat stress, modulating the levels of H2O2, MDA and proline, as well as the antioxidant activities of CAT, SOD and POD. Overexpression of StMAPKK5 elicited genetic responses in potato plants to heat stress, affecting heat stress-responsive genes and genes encoding antioxidant enzymes.ConclusionStMAPKK5 can improve the resilience of potato plants to heat stress-induced damage, offering a promising approach for engineering potatoes with enhanced adaptability to challenging heat stress conditions
A multi-wavelength mid-IR laser based on BaGa4Se7 optical parametric oscillators
A multi-wavelength mid-IR laser consisting of 3.05 μm, 4.25 μm, and 5.47 μm BaGa4Se7(BGSe)optical parametric oscillators (OPOs) switched by DKDP electro-optic switches with one 10 Hz/7.6 ns pumping wave is demonstrated. Maximum energies at 3.05 μm, 4.25 μm, and 5.47 μm are 1.35 mJ, 1.03 mJ, and 0.56 mJ, respectively, corresponding to optical-to-optical conversion efficiencies of 9.4%, 7.6%, and 4.2%. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first of generation of three mid-IR wavelength lasers using electro-optic switches. Furthermore, this study provides a viable solution for a high-energy or high-power, compact, or even portable multi-wavelength mid-IR laser device that employs a single pumping wave
- …