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Segmented polyurethane elastomers with liquid crystalline hard segments/
Polymer Science and EngineeringDoctor of Philosophy (PhD
Improving Complex Knowledge Base Question Answering via Question-to-Action and Question-to-Question Alignment
Complex knowledge base question answering can be achieved by converting
questions into sequences of predefined actions. However, there is a significant
semantic and structural gap between natural language and action sequences,
which makes this conversion difficult. In this paper, we introduce an
alignment-enhanced complex question answering framework, called ALCQA, which
mitigates this gap through question-to-action alignment and
question-to-question alignment. We train a question rewriting model to align
the question and each action, and utilize a pretrained language model to
implicitly align the question and KG artifacts. Moreover, considering that
similar questions correspond to similar action sequences, we retrieve top-k
similar question-answer pairs at the inference stage through
question-to-question alignment and propose a novel reward-guided action
sequence selection strategy to select from candidate action sequences. We
conduct experiments on CQA and WQSP datasets, and the results show that our
approach outperforms state-of-the-art methods and obtains a 9.88\% improvements
in the F1 metric on CQA dataset. Our source code is available at
https://github.com/TTTTTTTTy/ALCQA
: Zero-shot Style Transfer via Attention Rearrangement
Despite the remarkable progress in image style transfer, formulating style in
the context of art is inherently subjective and challenging. In contrast to
existing learning/tuning methods, this study shows that vanilla diffusion
models can directly extract style information and seamlessly integrate the
generative prior into the content image without retraining. Specifically, we
adopt dual denoising paths to represent content/style references in latent
space and then guide the content image denoising process with style latent
codes. We further reveal that the cross-attention mechanism in latent diffusion
models tends to blend the content and style images, resulting in stylized
outputs that deviate from the original content image. To overcome this
limitation, we introduce a cross-attention rearrangement strategy. Through
theoretical analysis and experiments, we demonstrate the effectiveness and
superiority of the diffusion-based ero-shot tyle
ransfer via ttention earrangement,
Z-STAR
Spectrum of malignancies among the population of adults living with HIV infection in China: A nationwide follow-up study, 2008-2011.
BackgroundAlthough increasingly studied in high-income countries, there is a paucity of data from the Chinese population on the patterns of cancer among people living with HIV (PLHIV).MethodsWe conducted a nationwide follow-up study using routinely collected data for adult PLHIV diagnosed on or before 31 December 2011 and alive and in care as of 1 January 2008. Participants were observed from 1 January 2008 (study start) to 30 June 2012 (study end). Main outcome measures were gender-stratified age-standardized incidence rates for China (ASIRC) and standardized incidence ratios (SIR) for all malignancy types/sites observed.ResultsAmong 399,451 subjects, a majority was aged 30-44 years (49.3%), male (69.8%), and Han Chinese (67.9%). A total of 3,819 reports of cancer were identified. Overall, ASIRC was 776.4 per 100,000 for males and 486.5 per 100,000 for females. Malignancy sites/types with highest ASIRC among males were lung (226.0 per 100,000), liver (145.7 per 100,000), and lymphoma (63.1 per 100,000), and among females were lung (66.8 per 100,000), lymphoma (48.0 per 100,000), stomach (47.8 per 100,000), and cervix (47.6 per 100,000). Overall SIR for males was 3.4 and for females was 2.6. Highest SIR was observed for Kaposi sarcoma (2,639.8 for males, 1,593.5 for females) and lymphoma (13.9 for males, 16.0 for females).ConclusionsThese results provide evidence of substantial AIDS-defining and non-AIDS-defining cancer burden among adult Chinese PLHIV between 2008 and 2011. Although further study is warranted, China should take action to improve cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment for this vulnerable population
Male Clients of Male Sex Workers in China: An Ignored High-Risk Population.
BackgroundThere is a high prevalence of HIV/syphilis among male sex workers, but no formal study has ever been conducted focusing on male clients of male sex workers (MCM). A detailed investigation was thus called for, to determine the burden and sociobehavioral determinants of HIV and syphilis among these MCM in China.MethodsAs part of a multicenter cross-sectional study, using respondent-driven and snowball sampling, 2958 consenting adult men who have sex with men (MSM) were recruited, interviewed, and tested for HIV and syphilis between 2008 and 2009. The distributions of sociodemographic characteristics, risk behaviors, and HIV/syphilis prevalence were determined and compared between MCM and other MSM.ResultsAmong recruited MSM, 5.0% (n = 148) were MCM. HIV prevalences for MCM and other MSM were 7.4% and 7.7%, whereas 18.9% and 14.0% were positive for syphilis, respectively. Condomless anal intercourse (CAI) was reported by 59.5% of MCM and 48.2% of MSM. Multiple logistic regression revealed that compared with other MSM, MCM were more likely to have less education [for ≤ elementary level, adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 3.13, 95% confidence interval (95% CI): 1.42 to 6.90], higher income (for >500 US Dollars per month, aOR = 2.97, 95% CI: 1.53 to 5.77), more often found partners at parks/restrooms (aOR = 4.01, 95% CI: 2.34 to 6.85), reported CAI (aOR = 1.49, 95% CI: 1.05 to 2.10), reported a larger sexual network (for ≥ 10, aOR = 2.70, 95% CI: 1.44 to 5.07), and higher odds of syphilis (aOR = 1.54, 95% CI: 1.00 to 2.38).ConclusionsThe greater frequency of risk behaviors and high prevalence of HIV and syphilis indicated that HIV/syphilis prevention programs in China need to pay special attention to MCM as a distinct subgroup, which was completely ignored until date
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