134 research outputs found
Schema2QA: High-Quality and Low-Cost Q&A Agents for the Structured Web
Building a question-answering agent currently requires large annotated
datasets, which are prohibitively expensive. This paper proposes Schema2QA, an
open-source toolkit that can generate a Q&A system from a database schema
augmented with a few annotations for each field. The key concept is to cover
the space of possible compound queries on the database with a large number of
in-domain questions synthesized with the help of a corpus of generic query
templates. The synthesized data and a small paraphrase set are used to train a
novel neural network based on the BERT pretrained model. We use Schema2QA to
generate Q&A systems for five Schema.org domains, restaurants, people, movies,
books and music, and obtain an overall accuracy between 64% and 75% on
crowdsourced questions for these domains. Once annotations and paraphrases are
obtained for a Schema.org schema, no additional manual effort is needed to
create a Q&A agent for any website that uses the same schema. Furthermore, we
demonstrate that learning can be transferred from the restaurant to the hotel
domain, obtaining a 64% accuracy on crowdsourced questions with no manual
effort. Schema2QA achieves an accuracy of 60% on popular restaurant questions
that can be answered using Schema.org. Its performance is comparable to Google
Assistant, 7% lower than Siri, and 15% higher than Alexa. It outperforms all
these assistants by at least 18% on more complex, long-tail questions
THE USE OF COADJUTANTS IN TANK MIX WITH FUNGICIDES IN ORDER TO IMPROVE THEIR EFFECTIVENESS EVEN AT LOW DOSAGES
One of the most important items of modern agriculture is the reduction of environmental impact thanks to the integration of new cultivation and protection techniques. Therefore it is important to optimise the use of chemicals and pesticides. We found that some coadjutants applied in tank mix with fungicides on sugar beet protection improve the effectiveness of active principles in cercospora leafspot (Cercospora bieticola sacc.) control
BYOC: Personalized Few-Shot Classification with Co-Authored Class Descriptions
Text classification is a well-studied and versatile building block for many
NLP applications. Yet, existing approaches require either large annotated
corpora to train a model with or, when using large language models as a base,
require carefully crafting the prompt as well as using a long context that can
fit many examples. As a result, it is not possible for end-users to build
classifiers for themselves. To address this issue, we propose a novel approach
to few-shot text classification using an LLM. Rather than few-shot examples,
the LLM is prompted with descriptions of the salient features of each class.
These descriptions are coauthored by the user and the LLM interactively: while
the user annotates each few-shot example, the LLM asks relevant questions that
the user answers. Examples, questions, and answers are summarized to form the
classification prompt. Our experiments show that our approach yields high
accuracy classifiers, within 82% of the performance of models trained with
significantly larger datasets while using only 1% of their training sets.
Additionally, in a study with 30 participants, we show that end-users are able
to build classifiers to suit their specific needs. The personalized classifiers
show an average accuracy of 90%, which is 15% higher than the state-of-the-art
approach.Comment: Accepted at EMNLP 2023 (Findings
Characterization of upper limb use in health care workers during regular shifts: A quantitative approach based on wrist-worn accelerometers
Despite the high prevalence of upper limb (UL) work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WRMSD) among health care workers (HCWs), little is known about their relationship with exposure to biomechanical risk factors. This study aimed to assess UL activity features under actual working conditions using two wrist-worn accelerometers. Accelerometric data were processed to obtain duration, intensity, and asymmetry of UL use in 32 HCWs during the execution of commonly performed tasks (e.g., patient hygiene, transfer, and meal distribution) within a regular shift. The results show that such tasks are characterized by significantly different patterns of UL use, in particular, higher intensities and larger asymmetries were observed respectively for patient hygiene and meal distribution. The proposed approach appears, thus, suitable to discriminate tasks characterized by different UL motion patterns. Future studies could benefit from the integration of such measures with self-reported workers’ perception to elucidate the relationship between dynamic UL movements and WRMSD
The video endoscopy inguinal lymphadenectomy for vulvar cancer: A pilot study
Abstract Objective This prospective pilot study aims to validate feasibility, efficacy and safeness of the innovative technique of video endoscopy inguinal lymphadenectomy (VEIL) and compare it to open inguinal lymphadenectomy (OIL) in the staging and treatment of vulvar cancer (VC). Material and methods All patients affected by VC suitable for bilateral inguinal-femoral lymphadenectomy were prospectively enrolled and submitted to VEIL on one side and OIL contralaterally, sparing the saphenous vein. The surgical and post-surgical data were collected. Univariate analysis included chi square analysis or Fisher's exact test, when appropriate for categorical variables, and the Student t test and Mann–Whitney test when appropriate for continuous variables. Results Between October 2014 and June 2015 fifteen patients were valuable for the study. Although nodal retrieval was comparable for both procedures, operative time was higher after VEIL. No intraoperative complications were observed in both techniques. Postoperative complications were observed in 3 and 2 cases for OIL and VEIL respectively. One patient needed reoperation after OIL for wound necrosis and infection. According to Campisi's stage, lymphedema resulted significantly to be lower after VEIL (p = 0.024). Conclusions Waiting for larger series and longer follow-up data, the VEIL seems to be feasible allowing a radical removal of inguinal lymph nodes as well as OIL with lower morbidity
Task-oriented exercises improve disability of working patients with surgically-treated proximal humeral fractures. A randomized controlled trial with one-year follow-up
Background: General physiotherapy is a common means of rehabilitation after surgery for proximal humeral fracture (PHF). Better-targeted exercises seem worthy of investigation and the aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of a rehabilitation program including task-oriented exercises in improving disability, pain, and quality of life in patients after a PHF. Methods: By means of a randomized controlled trial with one-year follow-up, 70 working patients (mean age of 49 ± 11 years; 41 females), who were selected for open reduction and internal fixation with plates caused by PHF, were randomized to be included in an experimental (n = 35) or control group (n = 35). There was a permuted-block randomization plan, and a list of program codes was previously created; subsequently, an automatic assignment system was used to conceal the allocation. The first group underwent a supervised rehabilitation program of task-oriented exercises based on patients’ specific job activities, and occupational therapy. The second group underwent general physiotherapy, including supervised mobility, strengthening and stretching exercises. Both groups individually followed programs of 60-min session three times per week for 12 weeks in the outpatient setting. The Disability Arm Shoulder Hand questionnaire (DASH; scores range from 0 to 100; primary outcome), a Pain intensity Numerical Rating Scale (scores range 0 to 10; secondary outcomes), and the Short-Form Health Survey (scores range from 0 to 100; secondary outcomes) assessed the interventions. Participants were evaluated before surgery, before and after rehabilitation (primary endpoint), and at the one-year follow-up (secondary endpoint). A linear mixed model analysis for repeated measures was carried out for each outcome measure (p < 0.05). Results: Time, group and time by group showed significant effects for all outcome measures in favour of the experimental group. The DASH and the DASH work achieved clinically important between-group differences of 16.0 points (95% confidence interval [C.I.] 7.3 to 24.7) and 19.7 (95% C.I. 9.0 to 30.5) at follow-up, respectively. The NRS achieved a between-group difference of 2.9 (95% C.I. 1.0 to 3.9) at follow-up. As for SF-36, there were between-group differences ranging from 17.9 to 37.0 at follow-up. Conclusions: A rehabilitation program based on task-oriented exercises was useful in improving disability, pain, and quality of life in working patients after PHFs. Improvements lasted for at least 12 months. Trial registration: On 16/12/2019, the trial was retrospectively registered in the ISRCTN registry with the ID number 17996552
Faecalibacterium prausnitzii is not decreased in symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease of the colon
In this letter, assessment of the amount of fecal Faecalibacterium prausnitzii in symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD) is described. Among 44 consecutive patients, comprising 15 SUDD patients, 13 patients with asymptomatic diverticulosis (AD), and 16 healthy controls (HC), the fecal amount of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii was not found to be significantly different between HC, AD and SUDD subjects (p=0.871). Moreover, its count in the HC microbiota (-4.57 +/- 2.15) was lower compared with those in the AD (-4.11 +/- 1.03) and SUDD subjects (-4.03 +/- 1.299). This behavior seems to be different from that occurring in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and similar to that of other mucin-degrading species in a SUDD setting
Cross-platform Comparison of Two Pancreatic Cancer Phenotypes
Model-based approaches for combining gene expression data from multiple high throughput platforms can be sensitive to technological artifacts when the number of samples in each platform is small. This paper proposes simple tools for quantifying concordance in a small study of pancreatic cancer cells lines with an emphasis on visualizations that uncover intra- and inter-platform variation. Using this approach, we identify several transcripts from the integrative analysis whose over-or under-expression in pancreatic cancer cell lines was validated by qPCR
Synthesis, biophysical characterization and anti-HIV activity of d(TG3AG) Quadruplexes bearing hydrophobic tails at the 5'-end
Novel conjugated G-quadruplex-forming d(TG3AG) oligonucleotides, linked to hydrophobic groups
through phosphodiester bonds at 50-end, have been synthesized as potential anti-HIV aptamers, via a
fully automated, online phosphoramidite-based solid-phase strategy. Conjugated quadruplexes showed
pronounced anti-HIV activity with some preference for HIV-1, with inhibitory activity invariably in the
low micromolar range. The CD and DSC monitored thermal denaturation studies on the resulting quadruplexes,
indicated the insertion of lipophilic residue at the 50-end, conferring always improved stability
to the quadruplex complex (20 < DTm < 40 C). The data suggest no direct functional relationship
between the thermal stability and anti-HIV activity of the folded conjugated G-quartets. It would appear
that the nature of the residue at 50 end of the d(TG3AG) quadruplexes plays an important role in the thermodynamic
stabilization but a minor influence on the anti-HIV activity. Moreover, a detailed CD and DSC
analyses indicate a monophasic behaviour for sequences I and V, while for ODNs (II–IV) clearly show that
these quadruplex structures deviate from simple two-state melting, supporting the hypothesis that intermediate
states along the dissociation pathway may exis
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