20,596 research outputs found
An interactive speech training system with virtual reality articulation for Mandarin-speaking hearing impaired children
The present project involved the development of a novel interactive speech training system based on virtual reality articulation and examination of the efficacy of the system for hearing impaired (HI) children. Twenty meaningful Mandarin words were presented to the HI children via a 3-D talking head during articulation training. Electromagnetic Articulography (EMA) and graphic transform technology were used to depict movements of various articulators. In addition, speech corpuses were organized in listening and speaking training modules of the system to help improve language skills of the HI children. Accuracy of virtual reality articulatory movement was evaluated through a series of experiments. Finally, a pilot test was performed to train two HI children using the system. Preliminary results showed improvement in speech production by the HI children, and the system was recognized as acceptable and interesting for children. It can be concluded that the training system is effective and valid in articulation training for HI children. © 2013 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
Revisiting the relativistic ejection event in XTE J1550-564 during the 1998 outburst
We revisit the discovery outburst of the X-ray transient XTE J1550−564 during which relativistic jets were observed in 1998 September, and review the radio images obtained with the Australian Long Baseline Array, and light curves obtained with the Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope and the Australia Telescope Compact Array. Based on Hi spectra, we constrain the source distance to between 3.3 and 4.9 kpc. The radio images, taken some 2 d apart, show the evolution of an ejection event. The apparent separation velocity of the two outermost ejecta is at least 1.3c and may be as large as 1.9c; when relativistic effects are taken into account, the inferred true velocity is ≥ 0.8c. The flux densities appear to peak simultaneously during the outburst, with a rather flat (although still optically thin) spectral index of −0.2
Exponential energy decay of solutions for a system of viscoelastic wave equations of Kirchhoff type with strong damping
The initial boundary value problem for a system of viscoelastic wave
equations of Kirchhoff type with strong damping is considered. We prove that,
under suitable assumptions on relaxation functions and certain initial data,
the decay rate of the solutions energy is exponential
Effects of stitching on delamination of satin weave carbon-epoxy laminates under mode I, mode II and mixed-mode I/II loadings
The objective of the present study is to characterize the effect of modified chain stitching on the delamination growth under mixed-mode I/II loading conditions. Delamination toughness under mode I is experimentally determined, for unstitched and stitched laminates, by using untabbed and tabbed double cantilever beam (TDCB) tests. The effect of the reinforcing tabs on mode I toughness is investigated. Stitching improves the energy release rate (ERR) up to 4 times in mode I. Mode II delamination toughness is evaluated in end-notched flexure (ENF) tests. Different geometries of stitched specimens are tested. Crack propagation occurs without any failure of stitching yarns. The final crack length attains the mid-span or it stops before and the specimen breaks in bending. The ERR is initially low and gradually increases with crack length to very high values. The mixedmode delamination behaviour is investigated using a mixed-mode bending (MMB) test. For unstitched specimens, a simple mixed-mode criterion is identified. For stitched specimens, stitching yarns do not break during 25% of mode I ratio tests and the ERR increase is relatively small compared to unstitched values. For 70% and 50% of mode I ratios, failures of yarns are observed during crack propagation and tests are able to capture correctly the effect of the stitching: it clearly improves the ERR for these two mixed modes, as much as threefold
Sorafenib dose escalation is not uniformly associated with blood pressure elevations in normotensive patients with advanced malignancies.
Hypertension after treatment with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor inhibitors is associated with superior treatment outcomes for advanced cancer patients. To determine whether increased sorafenib doses cause incremental increases in blood pressure (BP), we measured 12-h ambulatory BP in 41 normotensive advanced solid tumor patients in a randomized dose-escalation study. After 7 days' treatment (400 mg b.i.d.), mean diastolic BP (DBP) increased in both study groups. After dose escalation, group A (400 mg t.i.d.) had marginally significant further increase in 12-h mean DBP (P = 0.053), but group B (600 mg b.i.d.) did not achieve statistically significant increases (P = 0.25). Within groups, individuals varied in BP response to sorafenib dose escalation, but these differences did not correlate with changes in steady-state plasma sorafenib concentrations. These findings in normotensive patients suggest BP is a complex pharmacodynamic biomarker of VEGF inhibition. Patients have intrinsic differences in sensitivity to sorafenib's BP-elevating effects
Computing Topology Preservation of RBF Transformations for Landmark-Based Image Registration
In image registration, a proper transformation should be topology preserving.
Especially for landmark-based image registration, if the displacement of one
landmark is larger enough than those of neighbourhood landmarks, topology
violation will be occurred. This paper aim to analyse the topology preservation
of some Radial Basis Functions (RBFs) which are used to model deformations in
image registration. Mat\'{e}rn functions are quite common in the statistic
literature (see, e.g. \cite{Matern86,Stein99}). In this paper, we use them to
solve the landmark-based image registration problem. We present the topology
preservation properties of RBFs in one landmark and four landmarks model
respectively. Numerical results of three kinds of Mat\'{e}rn transformations
are compared with results of Gaussian, Wendland's, and Wu's functions
The absolute position of a resonance peak
It is common practice in scattering theory to correlate between the position
of a resonance peak in the cross section and the real part of a complex energy
of a pole of the scattering amplitude. In this work we show that the resonance
peak position appears at the absolute value of the pole's complex energy rather
than its real part. We further demonstrate that a local theory of resonances
can still be used even in cases previously thought impossible
Involvement of autophagy in the effect of exercise on left ventricular hypertrophy induced by high fat diet in rats
Chaired Posters PresentationObjectives: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) associated with obesity
increases the morbidity and mortality of cardiovascular disease, which could
be attenuated by exercise in overweight and hypertensive patients. The
lysosomal degradation pathway − autophagy is reportedly mediated the
beneficial effect of exercise on glucose and lipid homeostasis. The present
study aimed to investigate the involvement of autophagy in the effect of
exercise on LVH induced by high fat diet in rats.
Methods: Female adult SD rats were divided into 4 groups namely: (i) high
fat diet (HFD), (ii) HFD+exercise, (iii) exercise, (iv) control. Rats in the
HFD groups were orally fed with high-fat chow (30% fat) daily for 12 weeks,
and rats in the exercise groups had exercise with a motorized wheel in the
last 4 weeks. Noninvasive measures of systolic pressure and fat composition
were assessed, respectively by tail cuff and MRI. The expression of markers
for cardiac hypertrophy and the protein expression in autophagic pathway
were determined by quantitative real time-PCR and western blot, respectively.
Statistical significance was at p<0.05 with ANOVA analysis followed by
post-hoc tests.
Results: Rats fed with HFD had LVH (increased heart weight and LV/
RV+septum ratio) with higher levels of body weight, arterial pressures and
fat composition than that of the control rat. In addition, the QTc interval and
the diameter and disarray of ventricular myocytes were significantly
increased in the HFD group, supported by elevated levels of the expression
of hypertrophic markers (ANP, BNP, β-MHC). These parameters were
attenuated by exercise in the HFD-fed rats. Moreover, we found elevated
levels of LC3II in the HFD heart, which were also attenuated by exercise,
suggesting an involvement of autophagy in the beneficial effect of exercise.
Furthermore, the expression level of AMPKα was also increased in the
exercise groups.
Conclusion: We demonstrated that exercise lowers the body weight and
attenuates the HFD-induced LVH in rats, which probably involves autophagy.
Future studies will focus on the role of autophagy in the pathogenesis.published_or_final_versio
Leaf-applied sodium chloride promotes cadmium accumulation in durum wheat grain
Cadmium (Cd) accumulation in durum wheat grain is a growing concern. Among the factors affecting Cd accumulation in plants, soil chloride (Cl) concentration plays a critical role. The effect of leaf NaCl application on grain Cd was studied in greenhouse-grown durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. durum, cv. Balcali-2000) by immersing (10 s) intact flag leaves into Cd and/or NaCl-containing solutions for 14 times during heading and dough stages. Immersing flag leaves in solutions containing increasing amount of Cd resulted in substantial increases in grain Cd concentration. Adding NaCl alone or in combination with the Cd-containing immersion solution promoted accumulation of Cd in the grains, by up to 41%. In contrast, Zn concentrations of grains were not affected or even decreased by the NaCl treatments. This is likely due to the effect of Cl complexing Cd and reducing positive charge on the metal ion, an effect that is much smaller for Zn. Charge reduction or removal (CdCl2 0 species) would increase the diffusivity/lipophilicity of Cd and enhance its capability to penetrate the leaf epidermis and across membranes. Of even more significance to human health was the ability of Cl alone to penetrate leaf tissue and mobilize and enhance shoot Cd transfer to grains, yet reducing or not affecting Zn transfer
Induction of hepatocyte stimulating activity by T<inf>3</inf> and appearance of the activity despite inhibition of DNA synthesis by adriamycin
A hepatocyte stimulating activity (HSA) has been extracted from rats that had received an injection of a pharmacological dose of T3 20 hours earlier. The injection of HSA from T3-treated rats into different recipient rats that had previously had 40% of their liver removed resulted in a significant increase in hepatic DNA synthesis. The injection of saline or HSA from normal rat liver had little or no effect on hepatic DNA synthesis in recipient rats. HSA from the T3-treated rats also stimulated DNA synthesis in Novikoff hepatoma cells and primary hepatocytes in culture, and in isolated normal rat liver nuclei in a nuclear incorporating system. In further experiments in which the increased DNA synthesis that follows partial hepatectomy was blocked by adriamycin, HSA appeared in these non-regenerating livers. This latter observation had indicated that the development of HSA is not merely an accompaniment of DNA synthesis
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