1,381 research outputs found
Surface Waves and Roughness in Self-Aerated Supercritical Flow
In high-velocity open channel flows, free-surface aeration is commonly observed. The effects of surface waves on the air-water flow properties are tested herein. The study simulates the air-water flow past a fixed-location phase-detection probe by introducing random fluctuations of the flow depth. The present model yields results that are close to experimental observations in terms of void fraction, bubble count rate and bubble/droplet chord size distributions. The results show that the surface waves have relatively little impact on the void fraction profiles, but that the bubble count rate profiles and the distributions of bubble and chord sizes are affected by the presence of surface waves
Quantum phases of a qutrit
We consider various approaches to treat the phases of a qutrit. Although it
is possible to represent qutrits in a convenient geometrical manner by
resorting to a generalization of the Poincare sphere, we argue that the
appropriate way of dealing with this problem is through phase operators
associated with the algebra su(3). The rather unusual properties of these
phases are caused by the small dimension of the system and are explored in
detail. We also examine the positive operator-valued measures that can describe
the qutrit phase properties.Comment: 6 page
An efficient density-based clustering algorithm using reverse nearest neighbour
Density-based clustering is the task of discovering high-density regions of
entities (clusters) that are separated from each other by contiguous regions of
low-density. DBSCAN is, arguably, the most popular density-based clustering
algorithm. However, its cluster recovery capabilities depend on the combination
of the two parameters. In this paper we present a new density-based clustering
algorithm which uses reverse nearest neighbour (RNN) and has a single
parameter. We also show that it is possible to estimate a good value for this
parameter using a clustering validity index. The RNN queries enable our
algorithm to estimate densities taking more than a single entity into account,
and to recover clusters that are not well-separated or have different
densities. Our experiments on synthetic and real-world data sets show our
proposed algorithm outperforms DBSCAN and its recent variant ISDBSCAN.Comment: Accepted in: Computing Conference 2019 in London, UK.
http://saiconference.com/Computin
Chronic sleep disruption alters gut microbiota, induces systemic and adipose tissue inflammation and insulin resistance in mice.
Chronic sleep fragmentation (SF) commonly occurs in human populations, and although it does not involve circadian shifts or sleep deprivation, it markedly alters feeding behaviors ultimately promoting obesity and insulin resistance. These symptoms are known to be related to the host gut microbiota. Mice were exposed to SF for 4 weeks and then allowed to recover for 2 weeks. Taxonomic profiles of fecal microbiota were obtained prospectively, and conventionalization experiments were performed in germ-free mice. Adipose tissue insulin sensitivity and inflammation, as well as circulating measures of inflammation, were assayed. Effect of fecal water on colonic epithelial permeability was also examined. Chronic SF-induced increased food intake and reversible gut microbiota changes characterized by the preferential growth of highly fermentative members of Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae and a decrease of Lactobacillaceae families. These lead to systemic and visceral white adipose tissue inflammation in addition to altered insulin sensitivity in mice, most likely via enhanced colonic epithelium barrier disruption. Conventionalization of germ-free mice with SF-derived microbiota confirmed these findings. Thus, SF-induced metabolic alterations may be mediated, in part, by concurrent changes in gut microbiota, thereby opening the way for gut microbiome-targeted therapeutics aimed at reducing the major end-organ morbidities of chronic SF
Importance of Lid Hygiene Before Ocular Surgery: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of Eyelid and Conjunctiva Microbiota
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of a cleansing eyelid wipe in reducing the microbiota present on the ocular surface before cataract surgery.
Methods: A single-center, prospective, single-blind phase IV study was conducted at the University Complutense of Madrid. Forty-five adult patients who were scheduled for ocular surgery after treatment with commercially available eyelid wipes were consecutively enrolled. The study lasted 5 days and the patients were examined at day 0 (D0), day 3 (D3), and day 5 (D5). They received instructions to apply the eyelid wipe only to the eye subject to surgery, using the other eye as a control with no treatment. Lid and conjunctival swabs were taken on each day and microbes identified. Ocular surface microbiota was estimated by measuring the area of the agar plate occupied by the grown colonies with respect to the total available area.
Results: Measurements at D3 and D5 showed a percent reduction of 58% and 63%, respectively, in the microbial load on the eyelid in the treated eyes (P=0.0011). There was also a reduction, although nonsignificant, in the microbiota of the conjunctiva of 72% and 69% on D3 and D5, respectively.
Conclusions: The degree of microbiota reduction was comparable with that obtained after topical application of antibiotics in other studies. The results suggest the use of these eyelid wipes as a complementary prophylactic method before any ocular surgery
The effect of annealing on the elastoplastic and viscoelastic responses of isotactic polypropylene
Observations are reported on isotactic polypropylene (i) in a series of
tensile tests with a constant strain rate on specimens annealed for 24 h at
various temperatures in the range from 110 to 150 C and (ii) in two series of
creep tests in the sub-yield region of deformation on samples not subjected to
thermal treatment and on specimens annealed at 140 C. A model is developed for
the elastoplastic and nonlinear viscoelastic responses of semicrystalline
polymers. A polymer is treated an equivalent transient network of
macromolecules bridged by junctions (physical cross-links, entanglements and
lamellar blocks). The network is assumed to be highly heterogeneous, and it is
thought of as an ensemble of meso-regions with different activation energies
for separation of strands from temporary nodes. The elastoplastic behavior is
modelled as sliding of meso-domains with respect to each other driven by
mechanical factors. The viscoelastic response is attributed to detachment of
active strands from temporary junctions and attachment of dangling chains to
the network. Constitutive equations for isothermal uniaxial deformation are
derived by using the laws of thermodynamics. Adjustable parameters in the
stress-strain relations are found by fitting the experimental data.Comment: 29 pages, 14 figure
Information ontrol and the exercise of power in the obstetrical encounter
Interactions between doctor and patient involve participants with unequal power and possibly different interests. While a number of studies have focused upon the doctor/patient relationship, few have examined the utility of the concept of power and its capacity to help us understand the outcome of these interactions. The information sought by pregnant women from their obstetricians is used to provide a case study of one conceptualization and test of the utility of the concept of power. Pregnant women and their obstetricians are found to have different perceptions of the information that should be exchanged during their interactions. Women generally fail to obtain the information they want. Lower social class patients desire more and obtain less information than their higher status counterparts
Comparison of brush and biopsy sampling methods of the ileal pouch for assessment of mucosa-associated microbiota of human subjects
BACKGROUND: Mucosal biopsy is the most common sampling technique used to assess microbial communities associated with the intestinal mucosa. Biopsies disrupt the epithelium and can be associated with complications such as bleeding. Biopsies sample a limited area of the mucosa, which can lead to potential sampling bias. In contrast to the mucosal biopsy, the mucosal brush technique is less invasive and provides greater mucosal coverage, and if it can provide equivalent microbial community data, it would be preferable to mucosal biopsies. RESULTS: We compared microbial samples collected from the intestinal mucosa using either a cytology brush or mucosal biopsy forceps. We collected paired samples from patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) who had previously undergone colectomy and ileal pouch anal anastomosis (IPAA), and profiled the microbial communities of the samples by sequencing V4-V6 or V4-V5 16S rRNA-encoding gene amplicons. Comparisons of 177 taxa in 16 brush-biopsy sample pairs had a mean R(2) of 0.94. We found no taxa that varied significantly between the brush and biopsy samples after adjusting for multiple comparisons (false discovery rate ≤0.05). We also tested the reproducibility of DNA amplification and sequencing in 25 replicate pairs and found negligible variation (mean R(2) = 0.99). A qPCR analysis of the two methods showed that the relative yields of bacterial DNA to human DNA were several-fold higher in the brush samples than in the biopsies. CONCLUSIONS: Mucosal brushing is preferred to mucosal biopsy for sampling the epithelial-associated microbiota. Although both techniques provide similar assessments of the microbial community composition, the brush sampling method has relatively more bacterial to host DNA, covers a larger surface area, and is less traumatic to the epithelium than the mucosal biopsy
3D Reconstruction of Sculptures from Single Images via Unsupervised Domain Adaptation on Implicit Models
Acquiring the virtual equivalent of exhibits, such as sculptures, in virtual
reality (VR) museums, can be labour-intensive and sometimes infeasible. Deep
learning based 3D reconstruction approaches allow us to recover 3D shapes from
2D observations, among which single-view-based approaches can reduce the need
for human intervention and specialised equipment in acquiring 3D sculptures for
VR museums. However, there exist two challenges when attempting to use the
well-researched human reconstruction methods: limited data availability and
domain shift. Considering sculptures are usually related to humans, we propose
our unsupervised 3D domain adaptation method for adapting a single-view 3D
implicit reconstruction model from the source (real-world humans) to the target
(sculptures) domain. We have compared the generated shapes with other methods
and conducted ablation studies as well as a user study to demonstrate the
effectiveness of our adaptation method. We also deploy our results in a VR
application
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