2,769 research outputs found
Searches for Gauge Mediated SUSY Breaking at LEP
Searches for neutralinos and sleptons with arbitrary lifetimes, as predicted
in the framework of the Gauge Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking (GMSB) model,
have been performed by the four LEP collaborations. No evidence for these
particles has been found in the data recorded at center-of-mass energies up to
sqrt(s)=209GeV. Therefore constraints on the production cross-sections and
particle masses as well as interpretations in the framework of the GMSB model
are presented.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, To appear in the proceedings of the 37th
Rencontres de Moriond, Electroweak Interactions and Unified Theories, Les
Arcs, France, 9-16 March 200
The CMS Silicon Strip Tracker: System Tests and Test Beam Results
With a total area of 210 squaremeters and about 15000 single silicon modules
the silicon strip tracker of the CMS experiment at the LHC will be the largest
silicon strip detector ever built. While the performance of the individual
mechanical and electronic components has already been tested extensively, their
interplay in larger integrated substructures also has to be studied before mass
production can be launched, in order to ensure the envisaged performance of the
overall system. This is the main purpose of the system tests, during which
hardware components as final as possible are being integrated into
substructures of the tracker subsystems. System tests are currently being
carried out for all subsystems of the tracker. In addition, silicon modules and
electronic components have been operated and studied in a particle beam
environment. In this report results from the CMS silicon tracker system tests
and a test beam experiment at CERN are presented.Comment: 5 pages; presented at the 8th ICATPP Conference, Como, Italy, October
6-10, 2003; to be published by World Scientifi
Is It Human? The Role of Anthropomorphism as a Driver for the Successful Acceptance of Digital Voice Assistants
The market of digital voice has grown significantly over the recent years. Big players like Amazon, Google, Apple, Microsoft and Samsung are focusing on the development and expansion of their assistants. Especially smart speakers are on the rise but also in smartphone integrated voice applications are getting more popular. The main characteristics of this new technology are both elements of human-computer-interaction and especially the attribution of human characteristics. Although there is an increase of the number of current users as well as of consumers intending to use digital voice assistants in the future, drivers and barriers of digital voice assistants have not yet been sufficiently empirically investigated, especially concerning the phenomenon of anthropomorphism. This study points to additional key factors that are important to foster broader acceptance. Our empirical study is based on the UTAUT2 and highlights the importance of anthropomorphism in relation to other determinants known from the literature
WILL RENTING SUBSTITUTE BUYING? DRIVERS OF USER INTENTION TO PARTICIPATE IN RENTAL-COMMERCE
In recent years, consumer consumption has undergone massive change. Different consumption forms, such as collaborative consumption or access-based consumption, are on the rise in the environment of the sharing economy. A relatively new field is rental-commerce, in which users rent everyday products via an online website for a fixed period of time and a fixed (e.g. daily or monthly) price. To investigate this new phenomenon, we examined what drives inexperienced users to take part in rental-commerce. Our results showed that sustainability, economic benefits, trust, safety, complexity, and knowledge of rental-commerce serve as predictors of the intention to rent products via a rental-commerce website. Surprisingly, knowledge of terms of use has no significant influence on this behavioral intention. As such, rental-commerce retailers should pay special attention to these results and highlight the advantages to determine usersâ willingness to take part in this business model
Ethics and Morality in AI - A Systematic Literature Review and Future Research
Artificial intelligence (AI) has become an integral part of our daily lives in recent years. At the same time, the topic of ethics and morality in the context of AI has been discussed in both practical and scientific discourse. Either it deals with ethical concerns, concrete application areas, the programming of AI or its moral status. However, no article can be found that provides an overview of the combination of ethics, morality and AI and systematizes them. Thus, this paper provides a systematic literature review on ethics and morality in the context of AI examining the scientific literature between the years 2017 and 2021. The search resulted in 1,641 articles across five databases of which 224 articles were included in the evaluation. Literature was systematized into seven topics presented in this paper. Implications of this review can be valuable not only for academia, but also for practitioners
Deep gene sequence cluster analyses of multi-virus infected mucosal tissue reveal enhanced transmission of acute HIV-1
Exposure of the genital mucosa to a genetically diverse viral swarm from the donor HIV-1 can result in breakthrough and systemic infection by a single transmitted/founder (TF) virus in the recipient. The highly diverse HIV-1 envelope (Env) in this inoculating viral swarm may have critical role in transmission and subsequent immune response. Thus, chronic (Envchronic) and acute (Envacute) Env chimeric HIV-1 were tested using multi-virus competition assays in human mucosal penile and cervical tissues. Viral competition analysis revealed that Envchronic viruses resided and replicated mainly in the tissue while Envacute viruses penetrated the human tissue and established infection of CD4(+) T cells more efficiently. Analysis of the replication fitness, as tested in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), showed similar replication fitness of Envacute and Envchronic viruses, which did not correlate with transmission fitness in penile tissue. Further, we observed that chimeric env viruses with higher replication in genital mucosal tissue (chronic Env viruses) had higher binding affinity to C-type lectins. Data presented herein suggests that the inoculating HIV-1 may be sequestered in the genital mucosal tissue (represented by chronic Env HIV-1) but that a single HIV-1 clone (e.g. acute Env HIV-1) can escape this trapped replication for systemic infection.
Importance: During heterosexual HIV-1 transmission, a genetic bottleneck occurs in the newly infected individual as the virus passes from the mucosa and leading to systemic infection of a single transmitted HIV-1 clone in the recipient. This bottleneck in the recipient has just been described and the mechanisms involved in this selection process have not been elucidated. However, understanding mucosal restriction is of the utmost importance to understanding dynamics of infections and to now design focused vaccines. Using our human penile and cervical mucosal tissue models for mixed HIV infections, we provide evidence that HIV-1 from acute/early as compared to chronic infection can more efficiently traverse the mucosal epithelium and transmitted to T cells, suggesting higher transmission fitness. These studies focused on the role of the HIV-1 envelope in transmission and provides strong evidence that HIV transmission may involve breaking the mucosal lectin trap
âHelp! I Have a Problemâ â Differences between a Humanlike and Robot-like Chatbot Avatar in Complaint Management
To distinguish from other competitors, companies have to establish good quality and price but also an excellent service policy. Especially the after-sales service should guarantee that customers having problems are supported and satisfied. Following, good complaint management is important. With the increase of economically profitable chatbots, there is a possibility to provide a 24/7 online service to the customers. To investigate what kind of chatbot avatar, which compensation, and what kind of reaction lead to a higher behavioral intention, a 2x2x2 between-subject design was conducted (N=389). The results show that the choice of the avatar, the reaction, as well as the compensation, play a decisive role in influencing user behavior and, thus, increase the probability that the customer, despite a complaint, returns and buys again from the retailer. Further, the behavioral intention can be explained by the mediating influences of anthropomorphism and the evaluation of redress
Differences and Similarities in Motivation for Offline and Online eSports Event Consumption
ESports is a rising phenomenon that attracts followers worldwide. Recently, big eSports events are hosted regularly as a counterpart to the âtraditionalâ online streams. However, the differences between offline and online consumption have not been scientifically addressed. Based on the Motivation Scale for Sports Consumption (MSSC), on-site visitors and stream followers (N = 637) of a big eSports event were surveyed. By analyzing the motives for eSports consumption of these two groups, insights about users following one specific broadcast form were derived and success factors (e.g. intention to visit) were assessed. While on-site attendees are motivated by social aspects, online participants seek knowledge gain and are interested in details of the gameplay. Escape and drama motivation are equally important for both groups. The findings give new insights in the field of eSports and help practitioners develop live experiences of eSports online as well as offline
Does colonization with MRSA, ESBL â producing Enterobacteriaceae, and/or Acinetobacter baumannii â increase the risk for postoperative surgical site infection?
Objective
Evaluation of the role of indicator pathogens in equine surgical site infection (SSI) and other infectionâpromoting factors.
Study design
Crossâsectional study.
Animals
Horses presenting with an open injury or surgical colic during 1.5 years.
Methods
A nasal swab and a faecal sample were collected from every patient upon admission. Furthermore, a wound swab was collected from wounds of injured horses. Details on the wounds and procedures were documented. Laparotomy incisions and injuries were monitored for signs suggesting infection.
Results
In total, 156 horses presented because of a surgical colic (n = 48) or open injuries (n = 108). Thirteen surgical colic patients and three injured horses did not survive beyond 24 h, and four injured horses were discharged from the clinic at the day of admission. SSIs occurred in 31 (30.7%) injured horses and 11 (31.4%) horses after laparotomy. Regarding injuries, general anaesthesia increased the risk of developing a WI compared to sedation. Indicator pathogens were cultured from 29/42 SSI. In total, 10/11 infected laparotomy incisions and 19/31 injuries with SSI tested positive for multidrugâresistant pathogens (MDRPs) . Indicator pathogens were not detected at admission in any of the horses that developed incisional SSIs after laparotomy but were detected in two of the injured horses that developed SSIs.
Conclusion
MDRPs were identified in almost 70% of the SSI. Less than 5% of the affected animals were colonized with the same pathogen before admission, indicating that colonization with MDR pathogens is only one of the crucial factors for the development of SSI.
Clinical significance
Colonization with MDRP seems not to predispose horses to MDR SSIs
PINK1-Interacting Proteins: Proteomic Analysis of Overexpressed PINK1
Recent publications suggest that the Parkinson's disease- (PD-) related PINK1/Parkin pathway promotes elimination of dysfunctional mitochondria by autophagy. We used tandem affinity purification (TAP), SDS-PAGE, and mass spectrometry as a first step towards identification of possible substrates for PINK1. The cellular abundance of selected identified interactors was investigated by Western blotting. Furthermore, one candidate gene was sequenced in 46 patients with atypical PD. In addition to two known binding partners (HSP90, CDC37), 12 proteins were identified using the TAP assay; four of which are mitochondrially localized (GRP75, HSP60, LRPPRC, and TUFM). Western blot analysis showed no differences in cellular abundance of these proteins comparing PINK1 mutant and control fibroblasts. When sequencing LRPPRC, four exonic synonymous changes and 20 polymorphisms in noncoding regions were detected. Our study provides a list of putative PINK1 binding partners, confirming previously described interactions, but also introducing novel mitochondrial proteins as potential components of the PINK1/Parkin mitophagy pathway
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