54 research outputs found

    PhenoWorld : a new paradigm to screen rodent behavior

    Get PDF
    Modeling depression in animals has inherent complexities that are augmented by intrinsic difficulties to measure the characteristic features of the disorder. Herein, we describe the PhenoWorld (PhW), a new setting in which groups of six rats lived in an ethological enriched environment, and have their feeding, locomotor activity, sleeping and social behavior automatically monitored. A battery of emotional and cognitive tests was used to characterize the behavioral phenotype of animals living in the PhW and in standard conditions (in groups of six and two rats), after exposure to an unpredictable chronic mild stress paradigm (uCMS) and antidepressants. Data reveal that animals living in the PhW displayed similar, but more striking, behavioral differences when exposed to uCMS, such as increased behavioral despair shown in the forced swimming test, resting/sleep behavior disturbances and reduced social interactions. Moreover, several PhW-cage behaviors, such as spontaneous will to go for food or exercise in running wheels, proved to be sensitive indicators of depressive-like behavior. In summary, this new ethological enriched paradigm adds significant discriminative power to screen depressive-like behavior, in particularly rodent's hedonic behavior

    LOW-Γ JETS from COMPACT STELLAR MERGERS: CANDIDATE ELECTROMAGNETIC COUNTERPARTS to GRAVITATIONAL WAVE SOURCES

    Get PDF
    The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Short gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are believed to be produced by relativistic jets from mergers of neutron stars (NSs) or NSs and black-holes (BHs). If the Lorentz-factors Γ of jets from compact stellar mergers follow a similar power-law distribution to those observed for other high-energy astrophysical phenomena (e.g., blazars, active galactic nuclei), the population of jets should be dominated by low-Γ outflows. These jets will not produce prompt gamma-rays, but jet energy will be released as X-ray/optical/radio transients when they collide with the ambient medium. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we study the properties of such transients. Approximately 78% of merger jets Mpc result in failed GRBs if the jet Γ follows a power-law distribution of index -1.75. X-ray/optical transients from failed GRBs will have broad distributions of their characteristics: light-curves peak tp ∼ 0.1-10 days after a merger; flux peaks for X-ray 10-6 mJy ≲ Fx ≲ 10-2 mJy; and optical flux peaks at 14 ≲ mg ≲ 22. X-ray transients are detectable by Swift XRT, and ∼85% of optical transients will be detectable by telescopes with limiting magnitude mg ≳ 21, for well localized sources on the sky. X-ray/optical transients are followed by radio transients with peak times narrowly clustered around tp ∼ 10 days, and peak flux of ∼10-100 mJy at 10 GHz and ∼0.1 mJy at 150 MHz. By considering the all-sky rate of short GRBs within the LIGO/Virgo range, the rate of on-axis orphan afterglows from failed GRBs should be 2.6(26) per year for NS-NS(NS-BH) mergers, respectively. Since merger jets from gravitational-wave (GW) trigger events tend to be directed to us, a significant fraction of GW events could be associated with the on-axis orphan afterglow

    Association between funding source, methodological quality and research outcomes in randomized controlled trials of synbiotics, probiotics and prebiotics added to infant formula: A Systematic Review

    Get PDF

    Interests of 5 axis toolpaths generation for Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing of aluminum alloys

    No full text
    Additive Manufacturing (AM) for metal part can be divided into two different types: The powder technology and the wire technology. Usually, powder is adapted for fine components and small parts whereas wire is used for structural components and large scale part. One of the main benefits of AM is to simplify assemblies by reducing the number of components and to provide a large freedom of design. A standard AM system consists of a combination of three blocks: a motion system, a heat source and a feedstock. For Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM), the heat source is a welding generator and the feedstock is a wire. The motion system generally used is a 6 axis robot or a CNC machine. This paper aims to propose a methodology to generate 5 axis toolpaths for WAAM and highlight the main parameters which selection is a key issue to resolve. The goal is to compare 3 axis and 5 axis toolpaths on part accuracy, depending the clearance angle of the part

    A New Strategy of Tool Path Planning Based on Hydrodynamic Data to Machine Marine Propeller

    No full text
    Marine propellers are complex surfaces that are usually machined with a perfect roughness in order not to disturb the theoretical flow. Because this requirement is penalizing from a manufacturing point of view, the global objective of the study is to propose an approach in which the machining parameters are linked to functional properties of the blade in order to remove the polishing phase. To reach this objective, hydrodynamic data are used: streak lines, that are computed during the propeller design phase, characterize the fluid behavior at the close vicinity of the blade. Those lines, which are theoretically continuous at the leading edge, turn out to be discontinuous, due to the computing method. To be consistent with the fluid behavior as much as possible, the idea presented in the paper is to compose a continuous trajectory, especially at the leading edge, to mill the surface. Thus, an algorithm is developed to plan tool paths which are smoothed at leading edge using Bezier curves. Moreover, this algorithm allows to quantify the cusp height at the leading edge to avoid a drop in performance using criteria linked to the dynamical behavior of a five axis machine tool. In this work, a strategy is developed and enables multiaxial milling of a blade surface by using geometric and hydrodynamic data and by respecting the associated constraints

    Design for manufacturing with tool paths adapted to marine propeller

    No full text
    International audienc

    SPILF update on bacterial arthritis in adults and children

    No full text
    In 2020 the French Society of Rhumatology (SFR) published an update of the 1990 recommendations for management of bacterial arthritis in adults. While we (French ID Society, SPILF) totally endorse this update, we wished to provide further information about specific antibiotic treatments. The present update focuses on antibiotics with good distribution in bone and joint. It is important to monitor their dosage, which should be maximized according to PK/PD parameters. Dosages proposed in this update are high, with the optimized mode of administration for intravenous betalactams (continuous or intermittent infusion). We give tools for the best dosage adaptation to conditions such as obesity or renal insufficiency. In case of enterobacter infection, with an antibiogram result "susceptible for high dosage", we recommend the requesting of specialized advice from an ID physician. More often than not, it is possible to prescribe antibiotics via the oral route as soon as blood cultures are sterile and clinical have symptoms shown improvement. Duration of antibiotic treatment is 6 weeks for Staphylococcus aureus, and 4 weeks for the other bacteria (except for Neisseria: 7 days).</p
    corecore