1,686 research outputs found
Novel hemotropic mycoplasmas are widespread and genetically diverse in vampire bats
Bats (Order: Chiroptera) have been widely studied as reservoir hosts for viruses of concern for
human and animal health. However, whether bats are equally competent hosts of non-viral
pathogens such as bacteria remains an important open question. Here, we surveyed blood and
saliva samples of vampire bats from Peru and Belize for hemotropic Mycoplasma spp.
(hemoplasmas), bacteria that can cause inapparent infection or anemia in hosts. 16S rRNA gene
amplification of blood showed 67% (150/223) of common vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) were
infected by hemoplasmas. Sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene amplicons revealed three novel
genotypes that were phylogenetically related but not identical to hemoplasmas described from
other (non-vampire) bat species, rodents, humans, and non-human primates. Hemoplasma
prevalence in vampire bats was highest in non-reproductive and young individuals, did not differ
by country, and was relatively stable over time (i.e., endemic). Metagenomics from pooled
D. rotundus saliva from Peru detected non-hemotropic Mycoplasma species and hemoplasma
genotypes phylogenetically similar to those identified in blood, providing indirect evidence for
potential direct transmission of hemoplasmas through biting or social contacts. This study
demonstrates vampire bats host several novel hemoplasmas and sheds light on risk factors for
infection and basic transmission routes. Given the high frequency of direct contacts that arise
when vampire bats feed on humans, domestic animals, and wildlife, the potential of these
bacteria to be transmitted between species should be investigated in future work
Worldwide occurrence of haemoplasmas in wildlife: Insights into the patterns of infection, transmission, pathology and zoonotic potential
Haemotropic mycoplasmas (haemoplasmas) have increasingly attracted the attention of wildlife disease researchers due to a combination of wide host range, high prevalence and genetic diversity. A systematic review identified 75 articles that investigated haemoplasma infection in wildlife by molecular methods (chiefly targeting partial 16S rRNA gene sequences), which included 131 host genera across six orders. Studies were less common in the Eastern Hemisphere (especially Africa and Asia) and more frequent in the Artiodactyla and Carnivora. Meta-analysis showed that infection prevalence did not vary by geographic region nor host order, but wild hosts showed significantly higher prevalence than captive hosts. Using a taxonomically flexible machine learning algorithm, we also found vampire bats and cervids to have greater prevalence, whereas mink, a subclade of vesper bats, and true foxes all had lower prevalence compared to the remaining sampled mammal phylogeny. Haemoplasma genotype and nucleotide diversity varied little among wild mammals but were marginally lower in primates and bats. Coinfection with more than one haemoplasma species or genotype was always confirmed when assessed. Risk factors of infection identified were sociality, age, males and high trophic levels, and both prevalence and diversity were often higher in undisturbed environments. Haemoplasmas likely use different and concurrent transmission routes and typically display enzootic dynamics when wild populations are studied longitudinally. Haemoplasma pathology is poorly known in wildlife but appears subclinical. Candidatus Mycoplasma haematohominis, which causes disease in humans, probably has it natural host in bats. Haemoplasmas can serve as a model system in ecological and evolutionary studies, and future research on these pathogens in wildlife must focus on increasing the geographic range and taxa of studies and elucidating pathology, transmission and zoonotic potential. To facilitate such work, we recommend using universal PCR primers or NGS protocols to detect novel haemoplasmas and other genetic markers to differentiate among species and infer cross-species transmission
Using LDGM Codes and Sparse Syndromes to Achieve Digital Signatures
In this paper, we address the problem of achieving efficient code-based
digital signatures with small public keys. The solution we propose exploits
sparse syndromes and randomly designed low-density generator matrix codes.
Based on our evaluations, the proposed scheme is able to outperform existing
solutions, permitting to achieve considerable security levels with very small
public keys.Comment: 16 pages. The final publication is available at springerlink.co
Bistable Gradient Networks II: Storage Capacity and Behaviour Near Saturation
We examine numerically the storage capacity and the behaviour near saturation
of an attractor neural network consisting of bistable elements with an
adjustable coupling strength, the Bistable Gradient Network (BGN). For strong
coupling, we find evidence of a first-order "memory blackout" phase transition
as in the Hopfield network. For weak coupling, on the other hand, there is no
evidence of such a transition and memorized patterns can be stable even at high
levels of loading. The enhanced storage capacity comes, however, at the cost of
imperfect retrieval of the patterns from corrupted versions.Comment: 15 pages, 12 eps figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. E. Sequel to
cond-mat/020356
Using additive manufacturing with blow moulding to facilitate accurate consumer testing
A South African entrepreneur needed a fast and accurate route to consumer testing for a
design of phlegm collection bottle for long-distance runners. Vaal University of Technology
was presented with an initial product concept which had to be developed into a fully
functional prototype required for field trials. The idea was converted into a practical product
proposal and modelled using a 3D computer aided design (CAD) system. The CAD data
were used for laser sintering of polyamide to produce an initial prototype for appearance and
ergonomic evaluation. For product testing in the field, a short run of fully functional
prototypes in thin-walled low density poly-ethylene (LDPE) was required. This required a
further design iteration and the production of tooling for the blow moulding process. A novel
hybrid modular approach to tool manufacture was followed, where the outer frame of the
tools were machined in aluminium and the tool inserts were laser sintered in AlumideTM.
Blow moulding trials were undertaken in LDPE which revealed a number of positive and
negative issues. The rough surface of the tool inserts produced a desirable textured surface
in the resultant blow-moulded bottles but also prevented a clean “shut-off” between the two
halves of the tool. This allowed air to escape from the cavity along the split plane, creating
unwanted holes in the bottles. In addition, the low thermal conductivity of AlumideTM resulted
in an unwanted overheating of the tools. Strategies were identified to overcome these issues
and these are explained in the paper
Subsurface microstructural changes in a cast heat resisting alloy caused by high temperature corrosion
A cast HP ModNb alloy (Fe–25Cr–35Ni–1Nb, wt.%) was oxidised and carburised in CO–CO2 corresponding to aC = 0.1 and pO2 = 3 1016 atm at 1080 C. Formation of an external, chromium-rich oxide scale led to depletion of this metal in a deep alloy subsurface zone. Within that zone, secondary chromium-rich carbides dissolved, primary carbides oxidised, solute silicon and aluminium internally oxidised, and extensive porosity developed. Pore volumes correspond to the difference between metal loss by scaling and metal displacement by internal oxidation, assuming the scale–metal interface to be fixed. The pores are concluded to be Kirkendall void
The Atomic Physics Underlying the Spectroscopic Analysis of Massive Stars and Supernovae
We have developed a radiative transfer code, CMFGEN, which allows us to model
the spectra of massive stars and supernovae. Using CMFGEN we can derive
fundamental parameters such as effective temperatures and surface gravities,
derive abundances, and place constraints on stellar wind properties. The last
of these is important since all massive stars are losing mass via a stellar
wind that is driven from the star by radiation pressure, and this mass loss can
substantially influence the spectral appearance and evolution of the star.
Recently we have extended CMFGEN to allow us to undertake time-dependent
radiative transfer calculations of supernovae. Such calculations will be used
to place constraints on the supernova progenitor, to place constraints on the
supernova explosion and nucleosynthesis, and to derive distances using a
physical approach called the "Expanding Photosphere Method". We describe the
assumptions underlying the code and the atomic processes involved. A crucial
ingredient in the code is the atomic data. For the modeling we require accurate
transition wavelengths, oscillator strengths, photoionization cross-sections,
collision strengths, autoionization rates, and charge exchange rates for
virtually all species up to, and including, cobalt. Presently, the available
atomic data varies substantially in both quantity and quality.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space
Scienc
Compactifications of Heterotic Theory on Non-Kahler Complex Manifolds: I
We study new compactifications of the SO(32) heterotic string theory on
compact complex non-Kahler manifolds. These manifolds have many interesting
features like fewer moduli, torsional constraints, vanishing Euler character
and vanishing first Chern class, which make the four-dimensional theory
phenomenologically attractive. We take a particular compact example studied
earlier and determine various geometrical properties of it. In particular we
calculate the warp factor and study the sigma model description of strings
propagating on these backgrounds. The anomaly cancellation condition and
enhanced gauge symmetry are shown to arise naturally in this framework, if one
considers the effect of singularities carefully.
We then give a detailed mathematical analysis of these manifolds and
construct a large class of them. The existence of a holomorphic (3,0) form is
important for the construction. We clarify some of the topological properties
of these manifolds and evaluate the Betti numbers. We also determine the
superpotential and argue that the radial modulus of these manifolds can
actually be stabilized.Comment: 75 pages, Harvmac, no figures; v2: Some new results added, typos
corrected and references updated. Final version to appear in JHE
Determining the global minimum of Higgs potentials via Groebner bases - applied to the NMSSM
Determining the global minimum of Higgs potentials with several Higgs fields
like the next-to-minimal supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model (NMSSM)
is a non-trivial task already at the tree level. The global minimum of a Higgs
potential can be found from the set of all its stationary points defined by a
multivariate polynomial system of equations. We introduce here the algebraic
Groebner basis approach to solve this system of equations. We apply the method
to the NMSSM with CP conserving as well as CP violating parameters. The results
reveal an interesting stationary-point structure of the potential. Requiring
the global minimum to give the electroweak symmetry breaking observed in Nature
excludes large parts of the parameter space.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Good methods for coping with missing data in decision trees
We propose a simple and effective method for dealing with missing data in decision trees used for classification. We call this approach 'missingness incorporated in attributes' (MIA). It is very closely related to the technique of treating 'missing' as a category in its own right, generalizing it for use with continuous as well as categorical variables. We show through a substantial data-based study of classification accuracy that MIA exhibits consistently good performance across a broad range of data types and of sources and amounts of missingness. It is competitive with the best of the rest (particularly, a multiple imputation EM algorithm method; EMMI) while being conceptually and computationally simpler. A simple combination of MIA and EMMI is slower but even more accurate
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