559 research outputs found
Geomagnetically Induced Current Calculation of High Voltage Power System with Long Transmission Lines using Kriging Method
Calculation of geomagnetically induced current (GIC) flowing through power system during the geomagnetic storm has attracted more attention recently. However, for high voltage power systems with transmission lines over hundreds or even thousands of kilometers, the earth model and geomagnetical field generally vary significantly. So, its essential to take them into consideration using limited earth survey sites and geomagnetic observatories. To address this problem, a Kriging method is introduced in this paper to make earth model and geomagnetical field interpolations. It has the characteristic of spatial autocorrelation by considering not only the distances between predicted points and training points but also the distances between training points themselves. Finally, a case study of the Central China 1000 kV ultra-high voltage (UHV) grid is carried out to illustrate the applicability and effectiveness of the proposed method
TILFA: A Unified Framework for Text, Image, and Layout Fusion in Argument Mining
A main goal of Argument Mining (AM) is to analyze an author's stance. Unlike
previous AM datasets focusing only on text, the shared task at the 10th
Workshop on Argument Mining introduces a dataset including both text and
images. Importantly, these images contain both visual elements and optical
characters. Our new framework, TILFA (A Unified Framework for Text, Image, and
Layout Fusion in Argument Mining), is designed to handle this mixed data. It
excels at not only understanding text but also detecting optical characters and
recognizing layout details in images. Our model significantly outperforms
existing baselines, earning our team, KnowComp, the 1st place in the
leaderboard of Argumentative Stance Classification subtask in this shared task.Comment: Accepted to the 10th Workshop on Argument Mining, co-located with
EMNLP 202
Phylogenetic analysis of Blaberoidea reveals nonâmonophyly of taxa and supports the creation of multiple new subfamilies
The superfamily Blaberoidea is a highly species-rich group of cockroaches. High-level blaberoidean phylogenetics are still under debate owing to variable taxon sampling and incongruence between mitochondrial and nuclear evolution, as well as different methods used in various phylogenetic studies. We here present a phylogenetic analysis of Blaberoidea based on a dataset combining the mitochondrial genome with two nuclear markers from representatives of all recognized families within the superfamily. Our results support the monophyly of Blaberiodea, which includes Ectobiidae s.s. (=Ectobiinae), Pseudophyllodromiidae, Nyctiboridae, Blattellidae s.s. (=Blattellinae) and Blaberidae. Ectobiidae s.s. was recovered as sister to the remaining Blaberoidea in all inferences. Pseudophyllodromiidae was paraphyletic with respect to Anaplectoideaâ+âMalaccina. Blattellidae s.s. excluding Anaplectoideaâ+âMalaccina formed a monophyletic group that was sister to Blaberidae. Based on our results, we propose a revised classification for Blaberoidea: Anaplectoidinae subfam.nov. and Episorineuchora gen.nov., and two new combinations at species level within Pseudophyllodromiidae; Rhabdoblattellinae subfam.nov., Calolamprodinae subfam.nov., Acutirhabdoblatta gen.nov., as well as new combinations for three species within Blaberidae. Ancestral state reconstructions based on four morphological characters allow us to infer that the common ancestor of blaberoid cockroaches is likely to be a species with characteristics similar to those found in Ectobiidae, that is, front femur Type B, arolium present, abdomen with a visible gland and male genital hook on the left side.journal articl
A Case Summary of the Application of a Drug-Eluting Stent Combined with a Drug-Coated Balloon in Left Main Coronary Artery Disease
Objective: To evaluate the clinical efficacy of a drug-eluting stent (DES) combined with a drug-coated balloon (DCB) in the treatment of left main coronary artery bifurcation lesions. Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted on the clinical data of eight patients with left main coronary artery bifurcation lesions treated with a DES combined with a DCB who were admitted to our hospital from July 2016 to July 2017. These eight patients all underwent DES treatment for their left main coronary artery and left anterior descending coronary artery lesions, and DCB treatment at the ostium of the left circumflex artery; six of the patients underwent surgical procedures under the guidance of intravascular ultrasonography. Immediate postoperative angiography was used to evaluate the patency of the diseased vessels, and the restenosis rate at the 6-month follow-up after the operation and the incidence of serious clinical events within 6 months were assessed as well. Results: The use of a DES combined with a DCB in the treatment of left main coronary artery bifurcation lesions had a low restenosis rate (left main coronary artery (8.4 ± 5.3)%, left anterior descending coronary artery (18.2 ± 5.0)%, left circumflex artery (30.5 ± 16.5)%). No serious clinical events occurred in any patients. Conclusion: A DES combined with a DCB is a safe and effective interventional treatment for left main artery coronary bifurcation lesions
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