1,079 research outputs found
As-built design specification for historical daily data bases for testing advanced models
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
A Study of Aerodynamics in Agriculture
Rosana G. Moreira, Editor-in-Chief; Texas A&M UniversityThis is an Invited Paper from International Commission of Agricultural Engineering (CIGR, Commission Internationale du Genie Rural) E-Journal Volume 5 (2003): I. Lee, C. Kang, J. Yun, J. Jeun, and G. Kim. A Study of Aerodynamics in Agriculture. Vol. V. December 2003
Синтез природных арилгликозидов, производных ванилинового и 3,4-дигидроксибензилового спиртов
Reusing three-phase power-flow object components for unbalanced harmonic analysis
In this paper, the harmonic penetration method is developed as a component-based application. The direct nodal voltage harmonic solution is developed as an independent software component and then integrated with existing three-phase power-flow software components. The harmonic solution reuses many facilities available in the fundamental frequency power-flow object components. The nonlinear devices such as six pulse converters are modeled as entity objects and inherited from the basic object-oriented power-system device model at fundamental frequency. Also, the linear solver also is reused form the power-flow component library. The application of object components shows that the development of complicated algorithms becomes easy due to the high code reusability
Identification of human intestinal parasites affecting an asymptomatic peri-urban Argentinian population using multi-parallel quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction
Background: In resource-limited countries, stool microscopy is the diagnostic test of choice for intestinal parasites (soil-transmitted helminths and/or intestinal protozoa). However, sensitivity and specificity is low. Improved diagnosis of intestinal parasites is especially important for accurate measurements of prevalence and intensity of infections in endemic areas. Methods: The study was carried out in Orán, Argentina. A total of 99 stool samples from a local surveillance campaign were analyzed by concentration microscopy and McMaster egg counting technique compared to the analysis by multi-parallel quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). This study compared the performance of qPCR assay and stool microscopy for 8 common intestinal parasites that infect humans including the helminths Ascaris lumbricoides, Ancylostoma duodenale, Necator americanus, Strongyloides stercoralis, Trichuris trichiura, and the protozoa Giardia lamblia, Cryptosporidium parvum/hominis, and Entamoeba histolytica, and investigated the prevalence of polyparasitism in an endemic area. Results: qPCR showed higher detection rates for all parasites as compared to stool microscopy except T. trichiura. Species-specific primers and probes were able to distinguish between A. duodenale (19.1 %) and N. americanus (36.4 %) infections. There were 48.6 % of subjects co-infected with both hookworms, and a significant increase in hookworm DNA for A. duodenale versus N. americanus (119.6 fg/μL: 0.63 fg/μL, P∈<∈0.001) respectively. qPCR outperformed microscopy by the largest margin in G. lamblia infections (63.6 % versus 8.1 %, P∈<∈0.05). Polyparasitism was detected more often by qPCR compared to microscopy (64.7 % versus 24.2 %, P∈<∈0.05). Conclusions: Multi-parallel qPCR is a quantitative molecular diagnostic method for common intestinal parasites in an endemic area that has improved diagnostic accuracy compared to stool microscopy. This first time use of multi-parallel qPCR in Argentina has demonstrated the high prevalence of intestinal parasites in a peri-urban area. These results will contribute to more accurate epidemiological survey, refined treatment strategies on a public scale, and better health outcomes in endemic settings.Fil: Cimino, Rubén Oscar. Universidad Nacional de Salta; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Jeun, Rebecca. Baylor College Of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Juarez, Marisa. Universidad Nacional de Salta; ArgentinaFil: Cajal, Pamela S.. Universidad Nacional de Salta; ArgentinaFil: Vargas Flores, Paola Andrea. Universidad Nacional de Salta; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Echazú, Adriana. Universidad Nacional de Salta; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Bryan, Patricia E.. Baylor College Of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Nasser, Julio Rubén. Universidad Nacional de Salta; ArgentinaFil: Krolewiecki, Alejandro Javier. Universidad Nacional de Salta; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Mejia, Rojelio. Baylor College Of Medicine; Estados Unidos. Universidad Nacional de Salta; Argentin
Small intestinal eosinophils regulate Th17 cells by producing IL-1 receptor antagonist
Eosinophils play proinflammatory roles in helminth infections and allergic diseases. Under steady-state conditions, eosinophils are abundantly found in the small intestinal lamina propria, but their physiological function is largely unexplored. In this study, we found that small intestinal eosinophils down-regulate Th17 cells. Th17 cells in the small intestine were markedly increased in the Delta dblGATA-1 mice lacking eosinophils, and an inverse correlation was observed between the number of eosinophils and that of Th17 cells in the small intestine of wild-type mice. In addition, small intestinal eosinophils suppressed the in vitro differentiation of Th17 cells, as well as IL-17 production by small intestinal CD4(+) T cells. Unlike other small intestinal immune cells or circulating eosinophils, we found that small intestinal eosinophils have a unique ability to constitutively secrete high levels of IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra), a natural inhibitor of IL-1 beta. Moreover, small intestinal eosinophils isolated from IL-1Ra-deficient mice failed to suppress Th17 cells. Collectively, our results demonstrate that small intestinal eosinophils play a pivotal role in the maintenance of intestinal homeostasis by regulating Th17 cells via production of IL-1Ra.open111815sciescopu
Best Practices for Critical Information Infrastructure Protection (CIIP): Experiences from Latin America and the Caribbean and Selected Countries
Over the past few decades, Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has witnessed numerous changes in its development, with most being beneficial. Positive changes relate to sizable growth and expansion of the region’s network infrastructure sectors, such as transport, energy, and information and communications technologies (ICT), among others. In many cases, ICT interconnects these critical infrastructures, creating substructures referred to as critical information infrastructures (CIIs). This publication is written to provide insights to the strategic thinking behind the creation of the national critical information infrastructure protection (CIIP) frameworks. It also builds its recommendations on in-depth analysis of the best CIIP practices around the world, with consideration of the region-specific landscape to originate a base line from which further development can be delineated
As-built design specification for the digital derivation of daily and monthly data bases from synoptic observations of temperature and precipitation for the People's Republic of China
A data base of synoptic meteorological information was compiled for the People's Republic of China, as an integral part of the Large Area Crop Inventory Experiment. A system description is provided, including hardware and software specifications, computation algorithms and an evaluation of output validity. Operations are also outlined, with emphasis placed on least squares interpolation
A closure mechanism for screech coupling in rectangular twin jets
Twin-jet configuration allows two different scenarios to close the screech
feedback. For each jet, there is one loop involving disturbances which
originate in that jet and arrive at its own receptivity point in-phase
(self-excitation). The other loop is associated with free-stream acoustic waves
that radiate from the other jet, reinforcing the self-excited screech
(cross-excitation). In this work, the role of the free-stream acoustic mode and
the guided jet mode as a closure mechanism for twin rectangular jet screech is
explored by identifying eligible points of return for each path, where upstream
waves propagating from such a point arrive at the receptivity location with an
appropriate phase relation. Screech tones generated by these jets are found to
be intermittent with an out-of-phase coupling as a dominant coupling mode.
Instantaneous phase difference between the twin jets computed by the Hilbert
transform suggests that a competition between out-of-phase and in-phase
coupling is responsible for the intermittency. To model wave components of the
screech feedback while ensuring perfect phase-locking, an ensemble average of
leading spectral proper orthogonal decomposition modes is obtained from several
segments of large-eddy simulations data that correspond to periods of invariant
phase difference between the two jets. Each mode is then extracted by retaining
relevant wavenumber components produced via a streamwise Fourier transform.
Spatial cross-correlation analysis of the resulting modes shows that most of
the identified points of return for the cross-excitation are synchronised with
the guided jet mode self-excitation, supporting that it is preferred in closing
rectangular twin-jet screech coupling
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