59 research outputs found
DCQA: Document-Level Chart Question Answering towards Complex Reasoning and Common-Sense Understanding
Visually-situated languages such as charts and plots are omnipresent in
real-world documents. These graphical depictions are human-readable and are
often analyzed in visually-rich documents to address a variety of questions
that necessitate complex reasoning and common-sense responses. Despite the
growing number of datasets that aim to answer questions over charts, most only
address this task in isolation, without considering the broader context of
document-level question answering. Moreover, such datasets lack adequate
common-sense reasoning information in their questions. In this work, we
introduce a novel task named document-level chart question answering (DCQA).
The goal of this task is to conduct document-level question answering,
extracting charts or plots in the document via document layout analysis (DLA)
first and subsequently performing chart question answering (CQA). The newly
developed benchmark dataset comprises 50,010 synthetic documents integrating
charts in a wide range of styles (6 styles in contrast to 3 for PlotQA and
ChartQA) and includes 699,051 questions that demand a high degree of reasoning
ability and common-sense understanding. Besides, we present the development of
a potent question-answer generation engine that employs table data, a rich
color set, and basic question templates to produce a vast array of reasoning
question-answer pairs automatically. Based on DCQA, we devise an OCR-free
transformer for document-level chart-oriented understanding, capable of DLA and
answering complex reasoning and common-sense questions over charts in an
OCR-free manner. Our DCQA dataset is expected to foster research on
understanding visualizations in documents, especially for scenarios that
require complex reasoning for charts in the visually-rich document. We
implement and evaluate a set of baselines, and our proposed method achieves
comparable results
Mechanistic study of endothelium independent vasodilation effects of wogonin
Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, locally known as HuangQin, and commonly as Baikal or Chinese skullcap, is an important herb in Chinese traditional medicine. The flavonoids from this plant are main active substances responsible for its medicinal applications. Wogonin is one such active ingredient derived from this plant. Here, we investigated the mechanism of the vasodilation effect of wogonin on isolated rat thoracic aortas. For this study, endothelium intact and endothelium removed thoracic aortic rings were prepared from rats. Using a tension transducer, the tension of the rat thoracic aortic rings was recorded. Results showed that wogonin is able to relax the endothelium-intact aortic rings, but L-NAME, indomethacin (Indo), and methylene blue (MB) could not reduce the tension in these rings. Wogonin was also able to relax endotheliumremoved rings. However, treatment with tetraethylammonium (TEA), BaCl2, glibenclamide (Gly), 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), and verapamil (Ver) had no effect on vasodilation induced by wogonin. Using wogonin to pre-treat endothelium-removed aortic rings reduced the contraction induced by K+. Pre-treatment of endothelium-removed aortic rings with wogonin markedly reduced the contraction induced by 10-6 M PE in Ca2+-free solution. It could be concluded that L-type calcium channels and intracellular Ca2+ release is inhibited by wogonin
Mechanistic study of endothelium independent vasodilation effects of wogonin
34-40Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, locally known as HuangQin, and commonly as Baikal or Chinese skullcap, is an
important herb in Chinese traditional medicine. The flavonoids from this plant are main active substances responsible for its
medicinal applications. Wogonin is one such active ingredient derived from this plant. Here, we investigated the mechanism
of the vasodilation effect of wogonin on isolated rat thoracic aortas. For this study, endothelium intact and endothelium
removed thoracic aortic rings were prepared from rats. Using a tension transducer, the tension of the rat thoracic aortic rings
was recorded. Results showed that wogonin is able to relax the endothelium-intact aortic rings, but L-NAME, indomethacin
(Indo), and methylene blue (MB) could not reduce the tension in these rings. Wogonin was also able to relax endotheliumremoved
rings. However, treatment with tetraethylammonium (TEA), BaCl2, glibenclamide (Gly), 4-aminopyridine (4-AP),
and verapamil (Ver) had no effect on vasodilation induced by wogonin. Using wogonin to pre-treat endothelium-removed
aortic rings reduced the contraction induced by K+. Pre-treatment of endothelium-removed aortic rings with wogonin
markedly reduced the contraction induced by 10-6 M PE in Ca2+-free solution. It could be concluded that L-type calcium
channels and intracellular Ca2+ release is inhibited by wogonin
A Magnetic Flux Leakage and Magnetostrictive Guided Wave Hybrid Transducer for Detecting Bridge Cables
Condition assessment of cables has gained considerable attention for the bridge safety. A magnetic flux leakage and magnetostrictive guided wave hybrid transducer is provided to inspect bridge cables. The similarities and differences between the two methods are investigated. The hybrid transducer for bridge cables consists of an aluminum framework, climbing modules, embedded magnetizers and a ribbon coil. The static axial magnetic field provided by the magnetizers meets the needs of the magnetic flux leakage testing and the magnetostrictive guided wave testing. The magnetizers also provide the attraction for the climbing modules. In the magnetic flux leakage testing for the free length of cable, the coil induces the axial leakage magnetic field. In the magnetostrictive guided wave testing for the anchorage zone, the coil provides a pulse high power variational magnetic field for generating guided waves; the coil induces the magnetic field variation for receiving guided waves. The experimental results show that the transducer with the corresponding inspection system could be applied to detect the broken wires in the free length and in the anchorage zone of bridge cables
Discovering Distinctive "Semantics" in Super-Resolution Networks
Image super-resolution (SR) is a representative low-level vision problem.
Although deep SR networks have achieved extraordinary success, we are still
unaware of their working mechanisms. Specifically, whether SR networks can
learn semantic information, or just perform complex mapping function? What
hinders SR networks from generalizing to real-world data? These questions not
only raise our curiosity, but also influence SR network development. In this
paper, we make the primary attempt to answer the above fundamental questions.
After comprehensively analyzing the feature representations (via dimensionality
reduction and visualization), we successfully discover the distinctive
"semantics" in SR networks, i.e., deep degradation representations (DDR), which
relate to image degradation instead of image content. We show that a
well-trained deep SR network is naturally a good descriptor of degradation
information. Our experiments also reveal two key factors (adversarial learning
and global residual) that influence the extraction of such semantics. We
further apply DDR in several interesting applications (such as distortion
identification, blind SR and generalization evaluation) and achieve promising
results, demonstrating the correctness and effectiveness of our findings.Comment: discovering and interpreting deep degradation representations (DDR)
in super-resolution network
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Algal p-coumaric acid induces oxidative stress and siderophore biosynthesis in the bacterial symbiont Phaeobacter inhibens.
The marine alpha-proteobacterium Phaeobacter inhibens engages in intermittent symbioses with microalgae. The symbiosis is biphasic and concludes in a parasitic phase, during which the bacteria release algaecidal metabolites in response to algal p-coumaric acid (pCA). The cell-wide effects of pCA on P. inhibens remain unknown. Herein, we report a microarray-based transcriptomic study and find that genes related to the oxidative stress response and secondary metabolism are upregulated most, while those associated with energy production and motility are downregulated in the presence of pCA. Among genes upregulated is a previously unannotated biosynthetic gene cluster and, using a combination of gene deletions and metabolic profiling, we show that it gives rise to an unreported siderophore, roseobactin. The simultaneous production of algaecides and roseobactin in the parasitic phase allows the bacteria to take up any iron that is released from dying algal cells, thereby securing a limited micronutrient
Return to the essence of power - A brief analysis of the dislocation of female consciousness from the perspective of “She economy”
The world today is undergoing profound changes unseen in a century. The need to build a community with a shared future for humanity and a more open, inclusive and equal social order is all the more urgent. The women’s issue is not just the rights of individual women, but the collective development of society. The upsurge of “She economy” is steadily increasing, but behind it is the diversification trend of social and economic forms and the diversification trend of female cultural psychology. This paper studies the social psychological changes of female groups from the perspective of “she economy”, points out the misunderstanding of the single value of modern women, and constructs multiple levels of female self-consciousness awakening, which has positive significance for promoting the correction of female independence and awakening consciousness, constructing the socialist ideology of gender equality, and thus developing the socialist harmonious society
Artemisinin Alleviates Cerebral Ischemia/Reperfusion-Induced Oxidative Damage via Regulating PHB2-Mediated Autophagy in the Human Neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y Cell Line
Oxidative stress plays a key role in cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury. Artemisinin (ART) has antioxidative stress activity in addition to its powerful antimalarial effects. In this article, we investigated the effect of ART on OGD/R-induced oxidative stress injury and its underlying mechanisms. We used oxygen-glucose deprivation/reoxygenation (OGD/R) to establish an in vitro model of cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. CCK-8 and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release were used to assess cellular damage. Measurement of reactive oxygen species (ROS), malondialdehyde (MDA), superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione (GSH), and mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) estimates oxidative stress-induced damage and protection from ART effect. OGD/R treatment aggravated oxidative stress damage, whereas ART reversed the effects of OGD/R. Autophagy is closely related to oxidative stress; in order to confirm whether the antioxidative stress effect of ART is related to PHB2-mediated autophagy, we examined the protein expression of prohibitin 2 (PHB2), TOMM20, p62, and the conversion of microtubule-associated protein light chain 3I (LC3I) to LC3II and found that the protein expression of PHB2, TOMM20, p62, and LC3II/LC3I was significantly correlated with OGD/R treatment. The colocalization of PHB2 and LC3, TOMM20, and LC3 was reduced after OGD/R treatment, and ART reversed this change. After silencing PHB2, the protective effect of ART against OGD/R-induced oxidative stress injury was reduced, the protein expressions of PHB2, TOMM20 and LC3II/LC3I and the colocalization of PHB2 and LC3, TOMM20, and LC3 were decreased. We used chloroquine to block the lysosomal pathway and found that ART increased the conversion of LC3I to LC3II, silencing PHB2 which inhibited the conversion of LC3I to LC3II, and impaired mitophagy. Our findings showed that ART attenuated OGD/R-induced oxidative stress damage through PHB2-mediated mitophagy. To the current knowledge, our study is the first to demonstrate that ART attenuates OGD/R-induced oxidative stress injury through PHB2-mediated autophagy in the human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cell line, which provided new insights into the treatment of OGD/R injury
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