2,301 research outputs found
An Optical and Infrared Photometric Study of the Young Open Cluster IC 1805 in the Giant H II Region W4
We present deep wide-field optical CCD photometry and mid-infrared
Spitzer/IRAC and MIPS 24micron data for about 100,000 stars in the young open
cluster IC 1805. The members of IC 1805 were selected from their location in
the various color-color and color-magnitude diagrams, and the presence of
Halpha emission, mid-infrared excess emission, and X-ray emission. The
reddening law toward IC 1805 is nearly normal (R_V = 3.05+/-0.06). However, the
distance modulus of the cluster is estimated to be 11.9+/-0.2 mag (d =
2.4+/-0.2 kpc) from the reddening-free color-magnitude diagrams, which is
larger than the distance to the nearby massive star-forming region W3(OH)
measured from the radio VLBA astrometry. We also determined the age of IC 1805
(tau_MSTO = 3.5 Myr). In addition, we critically compared the age and mass
scale from two pre-main-sequence evolution models. The initial mass function
with a Salpeter-type slope of Gamma = -1.3+/-0.2 was obtained and the total
mass of IC 1805 was estimated to be about 2700+/-200 M_sun. Finally, we found
our distance determination to be statistically consistent with the Tycho-Gaia
Astrometric Solution Data Release 1, within the errors. The proper motion of
the B-type stars shows an elongated distribution along the Galactic plane,
which could be explained by some of the B-type stars being formed in small
clouds dispersed by previous episodes of star formation or supernova
explosions.Comment: 45 pages, 32 figures, 9 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
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A Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Stroke Recurrence Rate in Ischemic Stroke Patients With and Without Acupuncture Treatment.
Little was known about the effects of acupuncture on stroke recurrence. The aim of this study is to investigate whether ischemic stroke patients receiving acupuncture treatment have a decreased risk of stroke recurrence. A retrospective cohort study of 30,058 newly diagnosed cases of ischemic stroke in 2000 to 2004 was conducted based on the claims of Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database. The use of acupuncture treatment and stroke recurrence were identified during the follow-up period from 2000 to 2009. This study compared the risk of stroke recurrence between ischemic stroke cohorts with and without acupuncture treatment by calculating adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of acupuncture associated with stroke recurrence in the Cox proportional hazard model. The stroke recurrence rate per 1000 person-years decreased from 71.4 without to 69.9 with acupuncture treatment (P < 0.001). Acupuncture treatment was associated with reduced risk of stroke recurrence (HR 0.88; 95% CI 0.84-0.91). The acupuncture effect was noted in patients with or without medical treatment for stroke prevention but its impact decreased with aging of stroke patients. Compared with stroke patients without acupuncture treatment and medication therapy, the hazard ratios of stroke recurrence for those had medication therapy only, acupuncture only, and both were 0.42 (95% CI 0.38-0.46), 0.50 (95% CI 0.43-0.57), and 0.39 (95% CI 0.35-0.43), respectively. This study raises the possibility that acupuncture might be effective in lowering stroke recurrence rate even in those on medications for stroke prevention. Results suggest the need of prospective sham-controlled and randomized trials to establish the efficacy of acupuncture in preventing stroke
Cadmium burden and the risk and phenotype of prostate cancer
© 2009 Chen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens
On-device Real-time Custom Hand Gesture Recognition
Most existing hand gesture recognition (HGR) systems are limited to a
predefined set of gestures. However, users and developers often want to
recognize new, unseen gestures. This is challenging due to the vast diversity
of all plausible hand shapes, e.g. it is impossible for developers to include
all hand gestures in a predefined list. In this paper, we present a
user-friendly framework that lets users easily customize and deploy their own
gesture recognition pipeline. Our framework provides a pre-trained single-hand
embedding model that can be fine-tuned for custom gesture recognition. Users
can perform gestures in front of a webcam to collect a small amount of images
per gesture. We also offer a low-code solution to train and deploy the custom
gesture recognition model. This makes it easy for users with limited ML
expertise to use our framework. We further provide a no-code web front-end for
users without any ML expertise. This makes it even easier to build and test the
end-to-end pipeline. The resulting custom HGR is then ready to be run on-device
for real-time scenarios. This can be done by calling a simple function in our
open-sourced model inference API, MediaPipe Tasks. This entire process only
takes a few minutes.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures; Accepted to ICCV Workshop on Computer Vision for
Metaverse, Paris, France, 202
Nonlinear and conventional biosignal analyses applied to tilt table test for evaluating autonomic nervous system and autoregulation
Copyright © Tseng et al.; Licensee Bentham Open.
This is an open access article licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/
by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the work is properly cited.Tilt table test (TTT) is a standard examination for patients with suspected autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction or uncertain causes of syncope. Currently, the analytical method based on blood pressure (BP) or heart rate (HR) changes during the TTT is linear but normal physiological modulations of BP and HR are thought to be predominately nonlinear. Therefore, this study consists of two parts: the first part is analyzing the HR during TTT which is compared to three methods to distinguish normal controls and subjects with ANS dysfunction. The first method is power spectrum density (PSD), while the second method is detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA), and the third method is multiscale entropy (MSE) to calculate the complexity of system. The second part of the study is to analyze BP and cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) changes during TTT. Two measures were used to compare the results, namely correlation coefficient analysis (nMxa) and MSE. The first part of this study has concluded that the ratio of the low frequency power to total power of PSD, and MSE methods are better than DFA to distinguish the difference between normal controls and patients groups. While in the second part, the nMxa of the three stages moving average window is better than the nMxa with all three stages together. Furthermore the analysis of BP data using MSE is better than CBFV data.The Stroke Center and Department of Neurology, National Taiwan University, National Science Council in Taiwan, and the Center for Dynamical Biomarkers
and Translational Medicine, National Central University, which is sponsored by National Science Council and Min-Sheng General Hospital Taoyuan
Urinary Extracellular Vesicles for Renal Tubular Transporters Expression in Patients With Gitelman Syndrome
Background: The utility of urinary extracellular vesicles (uEVs) to faithfully represent the changes of renal tubular protein expression remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate renal tubular sodium (Na+) or potassium (K+) associated transporters expression from uEVs and kidney tissues in patients with Gitelman syndrome (GS) caused by inactivating mutations in SLC12A3.Methods: uEVs were isolated by ultracentrifugation from 10 genetically-confirmed GS patients. Membrane transporters including Na+-hydrogen exchanger 3 (NHE3), Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter (NKCC2), NaCl cotransporter (NCC), phosphorylated NCC (p-NCC), epithelial Na+ channel β (ENaCβ), pendrin, renal outer medullary K1 channel (ROMK), and large-conductance, voltage-activated and Ca2+-sensitive K+ channel (Maxi-K) were examined by immunoblotting of uEVs and immunofluorescence of biopsied kidney tissues. Healthy and disease (bulimic patients) controls were also enrolled.Results: Characterization of uEVs was confirmed by nanoparticle tracking analysis, transmission electron microscopy, and immunoblotting. Compared with healthy controls, uEVs from GS patients showed NCC and p-NCC abundance were markedly attenuated but NHE3, ENaCβ, and pendrin abundance significantly increased. ROMK and Maxi-K abundance were also significantly accentuated. Immunofluorescence of the representative kidney tissues from GS patients also demonstrated the similar findings to uEVs. uEVs from bulimic patients showed an increased abundance of NCC and p-NCC as well as NHE3, NKCC2, ENaCβ, pendrin, ROMK and Maxi-K, akin to that in immunofluorescence of their kidney tissues.Conclusion: uEVs could be a non-invasive tool to diagnose and evaluate renal tubular transporter adaptation in patients with GS and may be applied to other renal tubular diseases
The Genome Sequence of 'Mycobacterium massiliense' Strain CIP 108297 Suggests the Independent Taxonomic Status of the Mycobacterium abscessus Complex at the Subspecies Level
Members of the Mycabacterium abscessus complex are rapidly growing mycobacteria that are emerging as human pathogens. The M. abscassus complex was previously composed of three species, namely M. abscessus sensu strict, 'M. massiliense', and M. bolletii', In 2011, 'M. massiliense' and 'M. bolletre' were united and reclassified as a single subspecies within M. abscessus: M. abscessus subsp. bolletii. However, the placement of 'M. massiliense' Within the boundary of M. abscessus subsp. balletii remains highly controversial with regard to clinical aspects. In this study, we revisited the taxonomic status of members of the M. abscessus complex based on comparative analysis of he whole-genome sequences of 53 strains, The genome sequence of the previous type strain of 'Mycobacterium massiliense' (CIP 108297) was determined using next-generation sequencing. The genome tree based on average nucleotide identity (AN I) values supported the differentiation of M. bolletii' and M. massiliense' at the subspecies level. The genome tree also clearly illustrated that 'M. bolletil' and 'M. massiliense' form a distinct phylogenetic clade within the radiation of the M. abscessus complex. The genomic distances observed in this study suggest that the current M. abscessus subsp. bolletii taxon should be divided into two subspecies, M. abscessus subsp. massiliense subsp. nov. and M. abscessus subsp. bolletii, to correspondingly accommodate the previously known 'M. assiliense' and 'M. bolletii' strains.
Absence of the Septum Pellucidum Associated with a Midline Fornical Nodule and Ventriculomegaly: A Report of Two Cases
We report two autopsy cases that revealed the partial absence of the septum pellucidum with ventriculomegaly. In each case, the brain showed mild dilatation of both frontal horns of the lateral ventricles, normal third and fourth ventricles and no aqueductal stenosis. The posterior portion of the septum pellucidum was absent and the fornices were fused in a single midline nodule, abnormally displaced to a caudal position and lodged in the foramina of Monro. The brain base showed no apparent abnormalities; the optic nerves were well developed. We conclude that the caudally displaced fornix in the absence of the septum pellucidum may have intermittently obstructed the foramina of Monro and induced mild ventriculomegaly
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