94 research outputs found

    Cu(i)/Amino Acid Catalyzed Coupling Reactions of Aryl Halides and Nucleophiles: Applications in Large-scale Production

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    Amino acids can be used as ligands to promote Ullmann-type coupling reactions. This review briefly discusses how L-proline, 4-hydroxy-L-proline and N,N-dimethylglycine can serve as the ideal ligands for copper-catalyzed coupling of aryl halides with different nucleophiles. Seven examples of applications of copper/amino acid catalyzed reactions in large-scale preparations are described

    Associations between health-related quality of life and demographics and health risks. Results from Rhode Island's 2002 behavioral risk factor survey

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    BACKGROUND: Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) has received much attention in recent years. HRQOL indicators have been used to track population trends, identify health disparities, and monitor progress in achieving national health objectives for 2010. Prior studies have examined health risks and HRQOL at the national level as well as at the state level. This paper examines multiple indicators of HRQOL by demographic characteristics and selected health behaviors for Rhode Island adults. METHODS: Data from Rhode Island's 2002 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), a random digit dialled telephone survey, were used for this study. The state wide sample contained a total of 3,843 respondents ages 18 and older. Multiple Imputation (MI) was applied to handle missing data, and data were modelled for each of 10 HRQOL indicators using multivariable logistic regression. RESULTS: By examining HRQOL through a multivariable approach we identified the strongest predictors for multiple indicators of poor HRQOL as well as predictors for specific indicators of poor HRQOL. Predictors for multiple indicators of poor HRQOL were: disability, inability to work, unemployment, lower income, lack of exercise, asthma, and smoking (specifically associated with poor mental health). CONCLUSION: Using multiple measures of HRQOL can help to assess the burden of poor health in a population, identify subgroups with unmet HRQOL needs, inform the development of targeted interventions, and monitor changes in a population's HRQOL over time. Use of these HRQOL measures in longitudinal and intervention studies is needed to increase our understanding of the causal relationships between demographics, health risk behaviors, and HRQOL

    Patterns of health-related quality of life and patterns associated with health risks among Rhode Island adults

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) has become an important consideration in assessing the impact of chronic disease on individuals as well as in populations. HRQOL is often assessed using multiple indicators. The authors sought to determine if multiple indicators of HRQOL could be used to characterize patterns of HRQOL in a population, and if so, to examine the association between such patterns and demographic, health risk and health condition covariates.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data from Rhode Island's 2004 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) were used for this analysis. The BRFSS is a population-based random-digit-dialed telephone survey of adults ages 18 and older. In 2004 RI's BRFSS interviewed 3,999 respondents. A latent class regression (LCR) model, using 9 BRFSS HRQOL indicators, was used to determine latent classes of HRQOL for RI adults and to model the relationship between latent class membership and covariates.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>RI adults were categorized into four latent classes of HRQOL. Class 1 (76%) was characterized by good physical and mental HRQOL; Class 2 (9%) was characterized as having physically related poor HRQOL; Class 3 (11%) was characterized as having mentally related poor HRQOL; and Class 4 (4%) as having both physically and mentally related poor HRQOL. Class 2 was associated with older age, being female, unable to work, disabled, or unemployed, no participation in leisure time physical activity, or with having asthma or diabetes. Class 3 was associated with being female, current smoking, or having asthma or disability. Class 4 was associated with almost all the same predictors of Classes 2 and 3, i.e. older age, being female, unable to work, disabled, or unemployed, no participation in leisure time physical activity, current smoking, with having asthma or diabetes, or with low income.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Using a LCR model, the authors found 4 distinct patterns of HRQOL among RI adults. The largest class was associated with good HRQOL; three smaller classes were associated with poor HRQOL. We identified the characteristics of subgroups at higher-risk for each of the three classes of poor HRQOL. Focusing interventions on the high-risk populations may be one approach to improving HRQOL in RI.</p

    Research on Large-scale Energy Storage of Chinese Power System Based on Demand Analysis

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    With the construction and development of a low carbon and environmental protection society, China is promoting the construction of a clean, low carbon, safe and efficient energy supply system, the most critical of which is to promote the rapid construction of new energy installed capacity. However, with the continuous expansion of the new energy installed capacity, the random volatility of the power supply has become an important factor that puzzles the power balance of the current power system, not only formed a larger peak pressure, but also became one of the important factors restricting the development of new energy. At the same time, the new energy power electronic equipment has weak supporting characteristics, which also makes the proportion of new energy power system continues to increase, and has a high impact on security. In this context, this paper carries out a demand analysis, firstly discussing the demand for large-scale energy storage in the development of new energy for power system, and secondly analyzing the demand for large-scale energy storage in the safe operation of large power grid, so as to promote the construction of GW-level electrochemical energy storage power station and effectively deal with the power imbalance and safety problems

    BP-NUCA: Cache Pressure-Aware Migration for High-Performance Caching in CMPs

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    As the momentum behind Chip Multi-Processors (CMPs) continues to grow, Last Level Cache (LLC) management becomes a crucial issue to CMPs because off-chip accesses often involve a big latency. Private cache design is distinguished by smaller local access latency, good performance isolation and easy scalability, thus is becoming an attractive design alternative for LLC of CMPs. This paper proposes Balanced Private Non-Uniform Cache Architecture (BP-NUCA), a new LLC architecture that starts from private cache design for smaller local access latency and good performance isolation, then introduces a low cost mechanism to dynamically migrate private blocks among peer private caches of LLC to improve the overall space utilization. BP-NUCA achieves this by measuring the cache access pressure level that each cache set experiences at runtime and then using the information to guide block migration among different private caches of LLC. A heavily accessed set, namely a set with high access pressure level, is allowed to migrate its evicted blocks to peer private caches, replacing blocks of sets which are with the same index and have low access pressure level. By migrating blocks from heavily accessed cache sets to less accessed cache sets, BP-NUCA effectively balances space utilization of LLC among different cores. Experimental results using a full system CMP simulator show that BP-NUCA improves the overall throughput by as much as 20.3 %, 12.4 %, 14.5 % and 18.0 % (on average 7.7 %, 4.4 %, 4.0 % and 6.1 %) over private cache, shared cache, shared cache management scheme UCP and private cache organization CC respectively on a 4-core CMP for SPEC CPU2006 benchmarks

    CIRBP is a novel oncogene in human bladder cancer inducing expression of HIF-1 alpha

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    Cold-inducible RNA binding protein (CIRBP) has been reported to be associated with distinct tumorigenesis. In this study, we investigated the role of CIRBP in human bladder cancer (BCa), indicating that CIRBP is overexpressed in BCa tissues and cell lines to promote proliferation and migration. Moreover, CIRBP could induce expression of HIF-1 alpha via binding to the 3'-UTR of its mRNA to increase the mRNA stability in BCa cells. Furthermore, we demonstrated that PTGIS is a HIF-1 alpha targeted gene, a major regulator in hypoxic cancer progression by activating transcription of various oncogenes. Our results also suggested that overexpression of HIF-1 alpha may suppress the expression of PTGIS in BCa cells, by binding to HRE sequence at the promoter region of PTGIS. In addition, we found a strongly downregulation of PTGIS in BCa tissue and transcriptionally inhibited by HIF-1 alpha in BCa cells, which could be triggered by its DNA methylation. Further result suggested that knockdown of CIRBP could promote the expression of PTGIS, meanwhile knockdown of PTGIS could partially rescue CIRBP-deficiency induced inhibition of migration and proliferation in BCa cells. Taken together, our study indicated that CIRBP could be a novel oncogene in human bladder cancer inducing transcription of HIF-1 alpha, which could inhibit expression of methylated PTGIS
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