492 results on '"Yang, Xiaoyan"'
Search Results
2. High-Performance Planar Broadband Hot-Electron Photodetection through Platinum–Dielectric Triple Junctions.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Wang, Yongmei, Li, Yaoyao, Cui, Weihao, Hu, Junhui, Zhou, Qingjia, and Shao, Weijia
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OPTICAL polarization , *HOT carriers , *ELECTRON detection , *LIGHT absorption , *BREWSTER'S angle - Abstract
Recently, planar and broadband hot-electron photodetectors (HE PDs) were established but exhibited degraded performances due to the adoptions of the single-junction configurations and the utilizations of absorbable films with thicknesses larger than the electronic mean free path. In this work, we present a five-layer design for planar HE PDs assisted by triple junctions in which an ultrathin Pt layer dominates the broadband and displays strong optical absorption (>0.9 from 900 nm to 1700 nm). Optical studies reveal that the optical admittance matching between optical admittances of designed device and air at all interested wavelengths is responsible for broadband light-trapping that induces prominent energy depositions in Pt layers. Electrical investigations show that, benefitting from suppressed hot-electron transport losses and increased hot-electron harvesting junctions, the predicted responsivity of the designed HE PD is up to 8.51 mA/W at 900 nm. Moreover, the high average absorption (responsivity) of 0.96 (3.66 mA/W) is substantially sustained over a broad incidence angle regardless of the polarizations of incident light. The comparison studies between five-layer and three-layer devices emphasize the superiority of five-layer design in strong optical absorption in Pt layers and efficient hot-electron extraction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Remote ischemic preconditioning prevents high‐altitude cerebral edema by enhancing glucose metabolic reprogramming.
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Han, Rongrong, Yang, Xiaoyan, Ji, Xunming, and Zhou, Bing
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METABOLIC flux analysis , *CEREBRAL edema , *METABOLIC reprogramming , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *ISCHEMIC preconditioning , *REPERFUSION injury , *CELL death , *MOUNTAIN sickness - Abstract
Aims: Incidence of acute mountain sickness (AMS) ranges from 40%–90%, with high‐altitude cerebral edema (HACE) representing a life‐threatening end stage of severe AMS. However, practical and convenient preventive strategies for HACE are lacking. Remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) has demonstrated preventive effects on ischemia‐ or hypoxia‐induced cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases. This study aimed to investigate the potential molecular mechanism of HACE and the application of RIPC in preventing HACE onset. Methods: A hypobaric hypoxia chamber was used to simulate a high‐altitude environment of 7000 meters. Metabolomics and metabolic flux analysis were employed to assay metabolite levels. Transcriptomics and quantitative real‐time PCR (q‐PCR) were used to investigate gene expression levels. Immunofluorescence staining was performed on neurons to label cellular proteins. The fluorescent probes Mito‐Dendra2, iATPSnFR1.0, and CMTMRos were used to observe mitochondria, ATP, and membrane potential in cultured neurons, respectively. TUNEL staining was performed to detect and quantify apoptotic cell death. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining was utilized to analyze pathological changes, such as tissue swelling in cerebral cortex samples. The Rotarod test was performed to assess motor coordination and balance in rats. Oxygen–glucose deprivation (OGD) of cultured cells was employed as an in vitro model to simulate the hypoxia and hypoglycemia induced by RIPC in animal experiments. Results: We revealed a causative perturbation of glucose metabolism in the brain preceding cerebral edema. Ischemic preconditioning treatment significantly reprograms glucose metabolism, ameliorating cell apoptosis and hypoxia‐induced energy deprivation. Notably, ischemic preconditioning improves mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP production through enhanced glucose‐coupled mitochondrial metabolism. In vivo studies confirm that RIPC alleviates cerebral edema, reduces cell apoptosis induced by high‐altitude hypoxia, and improves motor dysfunction resulting from cerebral edema. Conclusions: Our study elucidates the metabolic basis of HACE pathogenesis. This study provides a new strategy for preventing HACE that RIPC reduces brain edema through reprogramming metabolism, highlighting the potential of targeting metabolic reprogramming for neuroprotective interventions in neurological diseases caused by ischemia or hypoxia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Application value of real-time shear wave elastography in the diagnosis and efficacy evaluation of venous thrombosis.
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Wu, Jing, Yang, Xiaoyan, Liu, Yun, Xi, Fang, and Lei, Ping
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VENOUS thrombosis , *YOUNG'S modulus , *BLOOD coagulation , *SHEAR waves , *BLOOD coagulation disorders , *BED rest , *POSTPARTUM contraception - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) of the lower limbs is a venous reflux disorder caused by abnormal coagulation of blood components, primarily characterised by swelling and pain in the lower limbs. Key risk factors include prolonged immobility due to bed rest, pregnancy, postpartum or postoperative states, traumas, malignant tumours and long-term contraceptive use. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the application of real-time shear wave elastography (SWE) in diagnosing lower-limb deep vein thrombosis (DVT). METHODS: A total of 91 patients with DVT were selected and divided into three groups: acute phase (n = 29), subacute phase (n = 30) and chronic phase (n = 32). The Young's modulus of the patients was measured using real-time SWE. The diagnostic efficacy of Young's modulus was evaluated by ROC curves. The hardness differences in Young's modulus across different parts of the same thrombus (head, body and tail) were measured using SWE. RESULTS: Before treatment, significant differences were observed in Young's modulus among patients with DVT (P < 0.001). Following anticoagulant therapy, catheter-directed thrombolysis and systemic thrombolysis, significant differences were noted in Young's modulus among patients at the same stage but receiving different treatments (acute phase: P = 0.003; subacute phase: P = 0.014; chronic phase: P = 0.004). Catheter-directed thrombolysis had greater efficacy than anticoagulant therapy. The area under the curve for SWE in staging patients was 0.917, with a sensitivity of 92.36% and specificity of 93.81%. Significant differences in Young's modulus were found between the thrombus head and thrombus body and tail but not between the thrombus body and thrombus tail. CONCLUSION: Measurement of Young's modulus using SWE can serve as an auxiliary means of evaluating staging, predicting pulmonary embolism and selecting treatment in patients with DVT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The δ15N values of foxtail millet (Setaria italica) and common millet (Panicum miliaceum) are reliable indicators of manuring practices.
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Yang, Jishuai, Yang, Xiaoyan, You, Ting, and Chen, Fahu
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BROOMCORN millet , *FOXTAIL millet , *MANURES , *AGRICULTURAL productivity ,CHINESE civilization - Abstract
Millet agriculture, which originated in northern China, alongside rice agriculture, have nurtured the Chinese civilization. Prehistoric manuring practices likely promoted and maintained sustainable millet agricultural production in the loess area of northern China. However, ongoing controversy exists regarding the indicators of prehistoric manuring intensity of foxtail millet (Setaria italica) and common millet (Panicum miliaceum). Here, we present the results of pot and field fertilization experiments on two millet types. Our findings suggest that manuring can significantly increase the δ15N values of foxtail millet, and its δ15N values increase with increasing manuring levels. The δ15N values of foxtail millet leaves are systematically greater than those of grains by approximately 1.6‰. Manuring could have a long-term residual impact on increasing the δ15N values of soil and millet crops. Combined with previous crop fertilization experiment results, we propose that the impact of manuring on the δ15N values of non-nitrogen-fixing crops is roughly consistent. The δ15N value and amount of manure are key factors determining the extent of change in plant δ15N values. The millet grain δ15N values can serve as reliable indicators of manuring practices. Finally, we provide an interpretive framework for assessing the correlation between manuring levels and the δ15N values of archaeological millet remains. The δ15N values of ancient millet grains suggest widespread and intensive manuring practices in prehistoric millet agriculture in northern China, spanning from the early Yangshao period to the Longshan period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Cosupport for Tensor Triangulated Categories.
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Chen, Tao and Yang, Xiaoyan
- Abstract
By creating a dual functor of localization, co-localization functor, in a compactly generated tensor triangulated category T , we develop a theory, cosupport, dual to that of support in T. We show that there are many properties that are similar or rather dual between cosupport and support in T. For instance, the cosupport of an object can be detected by the cosupport of its cohomology; the cosupport of a nonzero object is nonempty. Also some characterizations, properties and relations of cosupport and support are given. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Lateral kinematic properties of offshore pipe piles embedded in saturated soil considering soil plug effect.
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Li, Jiaxuan, Yang, Xiaoyan, Liu, Hao, Chen, Libo, Wu, Wenbing, Naggar, M. Hesham El, and Lu, Dagang
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DYNAMIC stiffness , *WATERLOGGING (Soils) , *MODULUS of rigidity , *FREQUENCIES of oscillating systems , *SOILS - Abstract
This study establishes a theoretical framework for analyzing the lateral oscillation of marine pipe piles. The additional mass model is introduced herein to consider the inertial fluctuation effect of the soil plug. Analytical mathematical methods are used to determine the complex impedance variation of the pile over a range of frequency effects. An investigation is performed to determine how the presence of soil plugs changes the lateral complex stiffness and natural frequency of pipe piles. Additionally, comparisons of the applicability of the plane strain model and continuous medium model have been conducted to enable the easy use of the theoretical model. The main conclusions can be drawn as (1) if the fluctuation inertia effect of the soil plug is not taken into consideration, the dynamic active length and the dynamic stiffness of the pipe pile will be underestimated; (2) for the soft soil, the plane strain model may give rise to substantial calculation errors attributed to them regardless of the vertical continuity of the soil, nevertheless, the calculation error decreases rapidly with the increase of soil shear modulus and vibration frequency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Lateral kinematic properties of offshore pipe piles embedded in saturated soil considering soil plug effect.
- Author
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Li, Jiaxuan, Yang, Xiaoyan, Liu, Hao, Chen, Libo, Wu, Wenbing, Naggar, M. Hesham El, and Lu, Dagang
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DYNAMIC stiffness , *WATERLOGGING (Soils) , *MODULUS of rigidity , *FREQUENCIES of oscillating systems , *SOILS - Abstract
This study establishes a theoretical framework for analyzing the lateral oscillation of marine pipe piles. The additional mass model is introduced herein to consider the inertial fluctuation effect of the soil plug. Analytical mathematical methods are used to determine the complex impedance variation of the pile over a range of frequency effects. An investigation is performed to determine how the presence of soil plugs changes the lateral complex stiffness and natural frequency of pipe piles. Additionally, comparisons of the applicability of the plane strain model and continuous medium model have been conducted to enable the easy use of the theoretical model. The main conclusions can be drawn as (1) if the fluctuation inertia effect of the soil plug is not taken into consideration, the dynamic active length and the dynamic stiffness of the pipe pile will be underestimated; (2) for the soft soil, the plane strain model may give rise to substantial calculation errors attributed to them regardless of the vertical continuity of the soil, nevertheless, the calculation error decreases rapidly with the increase of soil shear modulus and vibration frequency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Cofiniteness of generalized local cohomology modules.
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Shen, Jingwen and Yang, Xiaoyan
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NOETHERIAN rings , *COMMUTATIVE rings - Abstract
Let 픞 be an ideal of a commutative noetherian ring R and M,N two R-modules with M finitely generated. It is shown that if either H픞i(N) is an 픞-cofinite module of dimension ≤ 1 for all i, or 픞 is a principal ideal and ExtRi(R/픞,N) is finitely generated for all i, or ExtRi(R/픞,N) is finitely generated and dimRH픞i(M,N) ≤ 1 for all i, then the R-module H픞t(M,N) is 픞-cofinite for all t ≥ 0. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. The local-global principle for the artinianness dimensions.
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Shen, Jingwen and Yang, Xiaoyan
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ARTIN rings , *NOETHERIAN rings , *COMMUTATIVE rings , *INTEGERS - Abstract
AbstractLet
R be a commutative noetherian ring and a an ideal ofR . The goal of this paper is to establish the local-global principle for the artinianness dimension ra(M), where ra(M) is the smallest integer such that the local homology module ofM is not artinian. For an artinianR -moduleM with the set CoassRHra(M)a(M) finite, we show that ra(M)=inf{raRp(HomR(Rp,M))|p∈SpecR}. And the class of all modulesN such that CoassRN is finite is studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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11. Lysosome-Disrupting Agents in Combination with Venetoclax Increase Apoptotic Response in Primary Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) Cells Mediated by Lysosomal Cathepsin D Release and Inhibition of Autophagy.
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Manivannan, Madhumita S., Yang, Xiaoyan, Patel, Nirav, Peters, Anthea, Johnston, James B., and Gibson, Spencer B.
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CATHEPSIN D , *CHRONIC lymphocytic leukemia , *VENETOCLAX , *AUTOPHAGY , *REACTIVE oxygen species - Abstract
Venetoclax and obinutuzumab are becoming frontline therapies for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients. Unfortunately, drug resistance still occurs, and the combination could be immunosuppressive. Lysosomes have previously been identified as a target for obinutuzumab cytotoxicity in CLL cells, but the mechanism remains unclear. In addition, studies have shown that lysosomotropic agents can cause synergistic cell death in vitro when combined with the BTK inhibitor, ibrutinib, in primary CLL cells. This indicates that targeting lysosomes could be a treatment strategy for CLL. In this study, we have shown that obinutuzumab induces lysosome membrane permeabilization (LMP) and cathepsin D release in CLL cells. Inhibition of cathepsins reduced obinutuzumab-induced cell death in CLL cells. We further determined that the lysosomotropic agent siramesine in combination with venetoclax increased cell death in primary CLL cells through an increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and cathepsin release. Siramesine treatment also induced synergistic cytotoxicity when combined with venetoclax. Microenvironmental factors IL4 and CD40L or incubation with HS-5 stromal cells failed to significantly protect CLL cells from siramesine- and venetoclax-induced apoptosis. We also found that siramesine treatment inhibited autophagy through reduced autolysosomes. Finally, the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine failed to further increase siramesine-induced cell death. Taken together, lysosome-targeting drugs could be an effective strategy in combination with venetoclax to overcome drug resistance in CLL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The Effect of Ficus semicordata Fig Quality on the Sex Ratio of Its Pollinating Wasp Ceratosolen gravelyi.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Guan, Yunfang, Chen, Changqi, Zhang, Ying, Yuan, Yulin, Tang, Tiantian, Li, Zongbo, and Zhang, Yuan
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ANIMAL offspring sex ratio , *POLLINATORS , *SEX ratio , *WASPS , *FIG , *OVIPARITY , *NUTRITION - Abstract
The interaction between fig wasps and their host fig trees (Ficus spp.) is a striking example of an obligate pollination mutualism. Male and female fig wasps are confined within their natal patch instead of panmictic; under this circumstance, mating only occurs between individuals of the same patch. This is known as a local mate competition (LMC). It pays foundresses to invest mainly in daughters and to only produce enough sons to ensure that all female offspring can be fertilized, but in nature, pollinating fig wasps may face many problems with host quality, such as limitation of oviposition sites and the nutrition deficiency of the host fig. The sex ratio of wasps can determine the stability of fig–fig wasp mutualistic system and, thus, the stability of other species associated with it. In this study, we controlled the quality of host figs in three ways. The results showed that the host fig age can influence the sex ratio of pollinator offspring, while the foundress numbers and the presence of pollen have no significant effect on it. A compelling explanation for this result is that the sex-dependent mortality occurs. This is a novel finding of how host quality influences the interaction of fig and fig wasps, which can also help us understand the evolution and stability mechanism of this symbiotic system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. A latent class analysis of family resilience and its relationship with fear of recurrence in lung cancer patients: a cross-sectional study.
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Lin, Jialing, Yang, Xiaoyan, Chen, Qiuhong, Wang, Anny, Arbing, Rachel, Chen, Wei-Ti, and Huang, Feifei
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CANCER relapse , *LUNG cancer , *LATENT class analysis (Statistics) , *CANCER patients , *CITY dwellers , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Purpose: Family resilience helps cancer-affected families overcome challenges and may influence an individual's fear of cancer recurrence (FCR). Identifying distinct classes of family resilience among lung cancer patients is crucial for tailored interventions. This study aimed to identify latent classes of family resilience in lung cancer patients and explore their relationships with FCR. Methods: Three hundred ten lung cancer patients from three hospitals in Fujian were recruited from June to September 2021. Clinical data were extracted from medical records, while sociodemographic details, family resilience, and FCR were self-reported. A latent class analysis was performed to identify family resilience classes. Results: A 4-class solution showed the best fit. Compared to Class 1, the patients who had no comorbidities (ORs = 3.480–16.005) had an increased likelihood of belonging to Class 2 and 3, while those who were not family breadwinners (ORs = 0.118–0.176) had a decreased likelihood. Further, the patients who (1) did not lack interest/pleasure in doing things during the past 2-week period (OR = 7.057), (2) were never smokers (OR = 6.230), and (3) were urban residents (OR = 8.985) had an increased likelihood of belonging to Class 4, while those who were (1) male (OR = 0.167), (2) not the family breadwinner (OR = 0.152), and (3) had none or only one child (OR = 0.203) had a decreased likelihood of belonging to Class 4. The FCR level differed significantly among these four classes. Conclusion: Our study identified four distinct classes of family resilience among Chinese lung cancer patients. FCR severity decreased with increasing levels of family resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Fear of recurrence in postoperative lung cancer patients: Trajectories, influencing factors and impacts on quality of life.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Li, Yonglin, Lin, Jialing, Zheng, Jianqing, Xiao, Huimin, Chen, Weiti, and Huang, Feifei
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FEAR , *RESEARCH funding , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CANCER patients , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LUNG tumors , *QUALITY of life , *DISEASE relapse , *POSTOPERATIVE period , *DATA analysis software , *WELL-being - Abstract
Aims: To investigate the trajectory, influencing factors and dynamic relationships between fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) and quality of life (QOL) in lung cancer patients. Design: Prospective longitudinal study. Methods: Longitudinal data from 310 lung cancer patients across three hospitals in China were assessed at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months postoperatively (T1–T4). Descriptive statistics characterised patient demographics, clinical characteristics, levels of FCR and QOL. A linear mixed‐effects model was employed to analyse FCR trajectories, identify influencing factors on these trajectories, and predict the impact of FCR on QOL. Results: FCR changed significantly over time, with a slight decrease during T1–T2, an increase at T3 and gradual decline at T4. Higher fear levels were associated with female sex, suburban or rural residency, being a family breadwinner, presence of comorbidities and negative coping behaviours, and low family resilience. QOL negatively correlated with FCR, and FCR predicted lower QOL. Conclusions: At 3 and 6 months postoperatively, lung cancer patients, especially women, suburban or rural residents, family breadwinners, those with comorbidities, negative coping behaviours and low family resilience, reported high levels of FCR. Healthcare providers should pay special attention to lung cancer patients especially during the period of 3–6 months post‐surgery and offer tailored interventions to improve their QOL. Implications for the Profession and Patient Care: Understanding the FCR trajectories, its influencing factors and its negative impacts on QOL can guide the development of targeted interventions to reduce fear and enhance well‐being in patients with cancer. Impact: Identifying the trajectories and influencing factors of fear of lung cancer recurrence in patients at different time points informs future research on targeted interventions to improve QOL. Reporting Method: The study adhered to the guidelines outlined in the Statement on Reporting Observational Longitudinal Research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. COSUPPORT FOR COMPACTLY GENERATED TRIANGULATED CATEGORIES.
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YANG, XIAOYAN
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TRIANGULATED categories - Abstract
The goal of the article is to better understand cosupport in triangulated categories since it is still quite mysterious. We study boundedness of local cohomology and local homology functors using Koszul objects, give some characterizations of cosupport, and get some results that, in special cases, recover and generalize the known results about the usual cosupport. Additionally, we include some computations of cosupport and provide a comparison of support and cosupport for cohomologically finite objects. Finally, we assign to any object of the category a subset of $\mathrm {Spec}R$ , called the big cosupport, and study some of its properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Assessment of lung deformation in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis with elastic registration technique on pulmonary three-dimensional ultrashort echo time MRI.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Yu, Pengxin, Sun, Haishuang, Deng, Mei, Liu, Anqi, Li, Chen, Meng, Wenyan, Xu, Wenxiu, Xie, Bingbing, Geng, Jing, Ren, Yanhong, Zhang, Rongguo, Liu, Min, and Dai, Huaping
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IDIOPATHIC pulmonary fibrosis , *LUNGS , *PULMONARY fibrosis , *PULMONARY function tests , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Objective: To assess lung deformation in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) using with elastic registration algorithm applied to three-dimensional ultrashort echo time (3D-UTE) MRI and analyze relationship of lung deformation with the severity of IPF. Methods: Seventy-six patients with IPF (mean age: 62 ± 6 years) and 62 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (mean age: 58 ± 4 years) were prospectively enrolled. End-inspiration and end-expiration images acquired with a single breath-hold 3D-UTE sequence were registered using elastic registration algorithm. Jacobian determinants were calculated from deformation fields and represented on color maps. Jac-mean (absolute value of the log means of Jacobian determinants) and the Dice similarity coefficient (Dice) were compared between different groups. Results: Compared with healthy controls, the Jac-mean of IPF patients significantly decreased (0.21 ± 0.08 vs. 0.27 ± 0. 07, p < 0.001). Furthermore, the Jac-mean and Dice correlated with the metrics of pulmonary function tests and the composite physiological index. The lung deformation in IPF patients with dyspnea Medical Research Council (MRC) ≥ 3 (Jac-mean: 0.16 ± 0.03; Dice: 0.06 ± 0.02) was significantly lower than MRC1 (Jac-mean: 0. 25 ± 0.03, p < 0.001; Dice: 0.10 ± 0.01, p < 0.001) and MRC 2 (Jac-mean: 0.22 ± 0.11, p = 0.001; Dice: 0.08 ± 0.03, p = 0.006). Meanwhile, Jac-mean and Dice correlated with health-related quality of life, 6 min-walk distance, and the extent of pulmonary fibrosis. Jac-mean correlated with pulmonary vascular-related indexes on high-resolution CT. Conclusion: The decreased lung deformation in IPF patients correlated with the clinical severity of IPF patients. Elastic registration of inspiratory-to-expiratory 3D UTE MRI may be a new morphological and functional marker for non-radiation and noninvasive evaluation of IPF. Critical relevance statement: This prospective study demonstrated that lung deformation decreased in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) patients and correlated with the severity of IPF. Elastic registration of inspiratory-to-expiratory three-dimensional ultrashort echo time (3D UTE) MRI may be a new morphological and functional marker for non-radiation and noninvasive evaluation of IPF. Key points: • Elastic registration of inspiratory-to-expiratory three-dimensional ultrashort echo time (3D UTE) MRI could evaluate lung deformation. • Lung deformation significantly decreased in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) patients, compared with the healthy controls. • Reduced lung deformation of IPF patients correlated with worsened pulmonary function and the composite physiological index (CPI). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. PHLPP1 inhibits the growth and aerobic glycolysis activity of human ovarian granular cells through inactivating AKT pathway.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, A, Min, Gegen, Tana, Daoerji, Badema, Zheng, Yue, and Wang, Aiming
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GLYCOLYSIS , *POLYCYSTIC ovary syndrome , *PHOSPHOPROTEIN phosphatases - Abstract
Background: Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a disorder characterized by hyperandrogenism, ovulatory dysfunction, and polycystic ovarian morphologic features, and PCOS is associated with infertility. PH domain Leucine-rich repeat Protein Phosphatase 1 (PHLPP1) has been shown to regulate AKT. The aim of present study is to investigate the role of PHLPP1 in PCOS. Methods: The expression levels of PHLPP1 in dihydrotestosterone (DHT)-treated human ovarian granular KGN cells were determined by qRT-PCR and Western blot. PHLPP1 was silenced or overexpressed using lentivirus. Cell proliferation was detected by CCK-8. Apoptosis and ROS generation were analyzed by flow cytometry. Glycolysis was analyzed by measuring extracellular acidification rate (ECAR). Results: DHT treatment suppressed proliferation, promoted apoptosis, enhanced ROS, and inhibited glycolysis in KGN cells. PHLPP1 silencing alleviated the DHT-induced suppression of proliferation and glycolysis, and promotion of apoptosis and ROS in KGN cells. PHLPP1 regulated cell proliferation and glycolysis in human KGN cells via the AKT signaling pathway. Conclusions: Our results showed that PHLPP1 mediates the proliferation and aerobic glycolysis activity of human ovarian granular cells through regulating AKT signaling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. Multiomics analysis provides new insights into the regulatory mechanism of carotenoid biosynthesis in yellow peach peel.
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Zheng, Jiarui, Yang, Xiaoyan, Ye, Jiabao, Su, Dongxue, Wang, Lina, Liao, Yongling, Zhang, Weiwei, Wang, Qijian, Chen, Qiangwen, and Xu, Feng
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FRUIT skins , *MULTIOMICS , *CAROTENOIDS , *BIOSYNTHESIS , *CRYPTOXANTHIN - Abstract
Carotenoids, as natural tetraterpenes, play a pivotal role in the yellow coloration of peaches and contribute to human dietary health. Despite a relatively clear understanding of the carotenoid biosynthesis pathway, the regulatory mechanism of miRNAs involved in carotenoid synthesis in yellow peaches remain poorly elucidated. This study investigated a total of 14 carotenoids and 40 xanthophyll lipids, including six differentially accumulated carotenoids: violaxanthin, neoxanthin, lutein, zeaxanthin, cryptoxanthin, and (E/Z)-phytoene. An integrated analysis of RNA-seq, miRNA-seq and degradome sequencing revealed that miRNAs could modulate structural genes such as PSY2, CRTISO, ZDS1, CHYB, VDE, ZEP, NCED1, NCED3 and the transcription factors NAC, ARF, WRKY, MYB, and bZIP, thereby participating in carotenoid biosynthesis and metabolism. The authenticity of miRNAs and target gene was corroborated through quantitative real-time PCR. Moreover, through weighted gene coexpression network analysis and a phylogenetic evolutionary study, coexpressed genes and MYB transcription factors potentially implicated in carotenoid synthesis were identified. The results of transient expression experiments indicated that mdm-miR858 inhibited the expression of PpMYB9 through targeted cleavage. Building upon these findings, a regulatory network governing miRNA-mediated carotenoid synthesis was proposed. In summary, this study comprehensively identified miRNAs engaged in carotenoid biosynthesis and their putative target genes, thus enhancing the understanding of carotenoid accumulation and regulatory mechanism in yellow peach peel and expanding the gene regulatory network of carotenoid synthesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. AdaptMVSNet: Efficient Multi-View Stereo with adaptive convolution and attention fusion.
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Jiang, Pengfei, Yang, Xiaoyan, Chen, Yuanjie, Song, Wenjie, and Li, Yang
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SOURCE code , *GEOMETRIC approach , *COMPUTER vision , *DEEP learning , *PYRAMIDS - Abstract
Multi-View Stereo (MVS) is a crucial technique for reconstructing the geometric structure of a scene, given the known camera parameters. Previous deep learning-based MVS methods have mainly focused on improving the reconstruction quality but overlooked the running efficiency during the actual algorithm deployment. For example, deformable convolutions have been introduced to improve the accuracy of the reconstruction results further, however, its inability for parallel optimization caused low inference speed. In this paper, we propose AdaptMVSNet which is device-friendly and reconstruction-efficient, while preserving the original results. To this end, adaptive convolution is introduced to significantly improve the efficiency in speed and metrics compared to current methods. In addition, an attention fusion module is proposed to blend features from adaptive convolution and the feature pyramid network. Our experiments demonstrate that our proposed approach achieves state-of-the-art performance and is almost 2 × faster than the recent fastest MVS method. We will release our source code. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Machine learning models for orthokeratology lens fitting and axial length prediction.
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Xu, Shuai, Yang, Xiaoyan, Zhang, Shuxian, Zheng, Xuan, Zheng, Fang, Liu, Yin, Zhang, Hanyu, Ye, Qing, and Li, Lihua
- Abstract
Purpose: In order to improve the efficiency of orthokeratology (OK) lens fitting and predict the axial length after 1 year of OK lens wear, machine learning models were proposed. Methods: Clinical data from 1302 myopic subjects were collected retrospectively, and two machine learning models were implemented. Demographic and corneal topographic data were collected as input variables. The output variables were the parameters of the OK lens and the axial length after 1 year. Eighty percent of input variables was used as the training set and the remaining 20% was used as the validation set. The first alignment curve (AC1) of the OK lenses, deduced using machine learning models and formula calculation, were compared. Multiple regression models (support vector machine, Gaussian process, decision tree and random forest) were used to predict the axial length after 1 year. In addition, we classified data based on lens brand, and carried out more detailed parameter fitting and analysis for spherical and toric OK lenses. Results: The OK lens fitting model showed higher (R2 = 0.93) and lower errors (mean absolute error [MAE] = 0.19, mean square error [MSE] = 0.09) when predicting AC1, compared with the formula calculation (R2 = 0.66, MAE = 0.44, MSE = 0.25). The machine learning model still had high R2 values ranging from 0.91 to 0.96 when considering the brand and design of the OK lenses. Further, the R2 value for the axial length prediction model was 0.94, which indicated that the machine learning model had high accuracy and good robustness. Conclusion: The OK lens fitting model and the axial length prediction model played an important role in guiding OK lens fitting, with high accuracy and robustness in prediction performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Photo‐Responsive Azobenzene‐Containing Inverse Opal Films for Information Security.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Haibao, Tao, Xinfeng, Yao, Yuan, Xie, Yufeng, and Lin, Shaoliang
- Subjects
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INFORMATION technology security , *STRUCTURAL colors , *OPALS , *COLLOIDAL crystals , *VISIBLE spectra , *SILICA - Abstract
Stimuli‐responsive photonic crystals (PCs) have attracted increasing attentions owing to the unique optical feature in regulating the propagation of light and tunable structural colors in response to external stimuli, emerging application potential on diverse fields. However, the development of stimuli‐responsive PCs with wide visible light range, broad shift of bandgaps, and adjustable responsive rates for counterfeiting remains challenging. Herein, a simple strategy for the preparation of photo‐responsive azobenzene‐containing inverse opal (AzoIO) films is reported. First, azobenzene‐containing composites are generated by filling functional monomers into voids of silica colloids crystals. Followed by the thermal polymerization and subsequent etching, a series of AzoIO films are successfully fabricated with adjustable structural colors in wide visible wavelength. Upon irradiation with linearly polarized visible light (LPVL), a slowly broad blueshift of bandgaps (≈138 nm, 3200 s) is observed due to the anisotropic shrinkage of the periodic PC structures. However, UV light irradiation contributed to a fast broad blueshift of bandgaps (≈131 nm, 10 s), owing to the photoisomerization merit of azobenzene moiety. The proof‐of‐concept study on the applications in light‐modulated multicolored writable paper, encryption films, and fast writing/erasing demonstrated the potential for information security. This work paves an avenue for developing promising optical anti‐counterfeiting materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Recapitulating the Drifting and Fusion of Two-Generation Spheroids on Concave Agarose Microwells.
- Author
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Pan, Rong, Yang, Xiaoyan, Ning, Ke, Xie, Yuanyuan, Chen, Feng, and Yu, Ling
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AGAROSE , *CELL motility , *CELL size , *UMBILICAL veins , *SATELLITE cells - Abstract
Cells with various structures and proteins naturally come together to cooperate in vivo. This study used cell spheroids cultured in agarose micro-wells as a 3D model to study the movement of cells or spheroids toward other spheroids. The formation dynamics of tumor spheroids and the interactions of two batches of cells in the agarose micro-wells were studied. The results showed that a concave bottom micro-well (diameter: 2 mm, depth: 2 mm) prepared from 3% agarose could be used to study the interaction of two batches of cells. The initial tumor cell numbers from 5 × 103 cells/well to 6 × 104 cells/well all could form 3D spheroids after 3 days of incubation. Adding the second batch of DU 145 cells to the existing DU 145 spheroid resulted in the formation of satellite cell spheroids around the existing parental tumor spheroid. Complete fusion of two generation cell spheroids was observed when the parental spheroids were formed from 1 × 104 and 2 × 104 cells, and the second batch of cells was 5 × 103 per well. A higher amount of the second batch of cells (1 × 104 cell/well) led to the formation of independent satellite spheroids after 48 h of co-culture, suggesting the behavior of the second batch of cells towards existing parental spheroids depended on various factors, such as the volume of the parental spheroids and the number of the second batch cells. The interactions between the tumor spheroids and Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECs) were modeled on concave agarose micro-wells. The HUVECs (3 × 103 cell/well) were observed to gather around the parental tumor spheroids formed from 1 × 104, 2 × 104, and 3 × 104 cells per well rather than aggregate on their own to form HUVEC spheroids. This study highlights the importance of analyzing the biological properties of cells before designing experimental procedures for the sequential fusion of cell spheroids. The study further emphasizes the significant roles that cell density and the volume of the spheroids play in determining the location and movement of cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Impact of thyroid autoimmunity on pregnancy outcomes in euthyroid women following fresh/frozen‐thawed embryo transfer.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Qiu, Shumin, Jiang, Wenwen, Huang, Zhiqing, Shi, Hang, Du, Shengrong, Sun, Yan, and Zheng, Beihong
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EMBRYO transfer , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *THYROID gland , *MISCARRIAGE , *OVARIAN reserve - Abstract
Objective: To investigate whether thyroid autoimmunity (TAI) is associated with assisted reproductive technology (ART) outcomes in euthyroid women undergoing fresh embryo transfer (ET) and frozen‐thawed embryo transfer (FET). Design: A retrospective cohort study. Pregnancy and neonatal outcome after fresh ET or FET were compared between the positive and negative thyroid autoimmune antibody groups. Patients: A total of 5439 euthyroid women who started their ART cycle at our centre between 2015 and 2019 were included. Results: The thyroid antibody positive group had a greater mean age than the thyroid antibody negative group (32(29,35) vs. 31(28,34), p <.001). Women with positive thyroid antibody presented with a higher prevalence of diminished ovarian reserve (DOR) (9.1% vs. 7.1%, p =.026) and lower number of oocyte retrieved (9(5,15) vs. 10(6,15), p =.020), but difference was not significant after adjusting for age. The pregnancy rate, live birth rate, pregnancy loss rate, preterm delivery rate and low birthweight rate between the thyroid antibody positive and thyroid antibody negative groups were comparable both in fresh ET cycles and FET cycles. Subanalysis of the treatment outcomes when using a stricter threshold of TSH of 2.5 mIU/L showed no difference to that achieved when using an upper limit of 4.78 mIU/L. Conclusions: The present study reveals that patients with anti‐thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAbs) and/or antithyroglobulin antibodies (TgAbs) showed no significant differences in pregnancy outcomes following fresh ET and FET when compared with patients with negative thyroid antibodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Combination of mTOR inhibitor PP242 and AMPK activator metformin exerts enhanced inhibitory effects on colorectal carcinoma cells in vitro by blocking multiple kinase pathways.
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Sun, Cuicui, Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Zhi, and Gao, Zuhua
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- 2023
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25. Lung shrinking assessment on HRCT with elastic registration technique for monitoring idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
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Sun, Haishuang, Yang, Xiaoyan, Sun, Xuebiao, Meng, Xiapei, Kang, Han, Zhang, Rongguo, Zhang, Haoyue, Liu, Min, Dai, Huaping, and Wang, Chen
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IDIOPATHIC pulmonary fibrosis , *COMPUTED tomography , *PULMONARY function tests , *LUNG physiology , *JACOBIAN determinants - Abstract
Objectives: Evaluation and follow-up of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) mainly rely on high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) and pulmonary function tests (PFTs). The elastic registration technique can quantitatively assess lung shrinkage. We aimed to investigate the correlation between lung shrinkage and morphological and functional deterioration in IPF. Methods: Patients with IPF who underwent at least two HRCT scans and PFTs were retrospectively included. Elastic registration was performed on the baseline and follow-up HRCTs to obtain deformation maps of the whole lung. Jacobian determinants were calculated from the deformation fields and after logarithm transformation, log_jac values were represented on color maps to describe morphological deterioration, and to assess the correlation between log_jac values and PFTs. Results: A total of 69 patients with IPF (male 66) were included. Jacobian maps demonstrated constriction of the lung parenchyma marked at the lung base in patients who were deteriorated on visual and PFT assessment. The log_jac values were significantly reduced in the deteriorated patients compared to the stable patients. Mean log_jac values showed positive correlation with baseline percentage of predicted vital capacity (VC%) (r = 0.394, p < 0.05) and percentage of predicted forced vital capacity (FVC%) (r = 0.395, p < 0.05). Additionally, the mean log_jac values were positively correlated with pulmonary vascular volume (r = 0.438, p < 0.01) and the number of pulmonary vascular branches (r = 0.326, p < 0.01). Conclusions: Elastic registration between baseline and follow-up HRCT was helpful to quantitatively assess the morphological deterioration of lung shrinkage in IPF, and the quantitative indicator log_jac values were significantly correlated with PFTs. Key Points: • The elastic registration on HRCT was helpful to quantitatively assess the deterioration of IPF. • Jacobian logarithm was significantly reduced in deteriorated patients and mean log_jac values were correlated with PFTs. • The mean log_jac values were related to the changes of pulmonary vascular volume and the number of vascular branches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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26. The a-filter Grade of an Ideal b and (a,b)-f-modules.
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Shen, Jingwen and Yang, Xiaoyan
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COHEN-Macaulay modules , *MODULES (Algebra) , *NOETHERIAN rings , *COMMUTATIVE rings , *IDEALS (Algebra) - Abstract
Let a , b be two ideals of a commutative noetherian ring R and M a finitely generated R-module. We continue to study f-gradR(a , b ,M) which was introduced in [Bull. Malays. Math. Sci. Soc., 2015, 38(2): 467–482]. Some computations and bounds of f-gradR(a , b ,M) are provided. We also give the structure of (a , b )-f-modules. Some properties which are analogous to those of Cohen-Macaulay modules are discovered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. Crystal structure, electric and microwave dielectric properties of La2Mg(Mg1/3Sb2/3)O6 novel double-perovskite with non-stoichiometric 1:1 cationic ordering.
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Yang, Li, Yang, Xiaoyan, Fang, Weishuang, Deng, Sihao, He, Lunhua, Liu, Laijun, Fernández-Carrión, Alberto J., and Kuang, Xiaojun
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CERAMICS , *DIELECTRIC properties , *CRYSTAL structure , *X-ray powder diffraction , *PERMITTIVITY , *MICROWAVES - Abstract
In this contribution, the novel double-perovskite La 2 Mg(Mg 1/3 Sb 2/3)O 6 has been successfully prepared by solid-state reaction method, and its structure has been determined for the first time by a combination of X-ray and neutron powder diffraction data analysis. The novel material exhibits a thermal expansion of ∼9.1 ppm/°C and a large optical band gap (4.23 eV). The complex impedance data analysis indicates that La 2 Mg(Mg 1/3 Sb 2/3)O 6 features a Debye-like behaviour, with a bulk conductivity, σ b , varying between 10-7-10-4 S ‧cm-1 within 500–900 °C temperature range, and activation energy (E a) of ∼ 1.36 eV. In addition, the microwave dielectric properties of La 2 Mg(Mg 1/3 Sb 2/3)O 6 sintered at 1625 °C display optimized quality factor (Q× f) of ∼ 28,700 GHz (f = 9.65 GHz), a dielectric constant (ε r) of ∼ 20.2 and temperature coefficient of the resonant frequency (τ f) of ∼ − 89 ppm/°C. This work widen the reduced number of A 3 + B 2 / 3 2 + B 1 / 3 5 + O 3 compounds explored so far. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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28. Local Cohen–Macaulay DG-Modules.
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Yang, Xiaoyan and Li, Yanjie
- Abstract
Let A be a commutative noetherian local DG-ring with bounded cohomology. For local Cohen–Macaulay DG-modules with constant amplitude, we obtain an explicit formula for the sequential depth, show that Cohen–Macaulayness is stable under localization and give several equivalent definitions of maximal local Cohen–Macaulay DG-modules over local Cohen–Macaulay DG-rings. We also provide some characterizations of Gorenstein DG-rings by projective and injective dimensions of DG-modules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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29. Characteristics of Diaphragmatic and Chest Wall Motion in People with Normal Pulmonary Function: A Study with Free-Breathing Dynamic MRI.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Sun, Haishuang, Deng, Mei, Chen, Yicong, Li, Chen, Yu, Pengxin, Zhang, Rongguo, Liu, Min, Dai, Huaping, and Wang, Chen
- Subjects
- *
RESPIRATORY muscles , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DIAPHRAGM walls , *BODY mass index , *AGE groups - Abstract
Objective: We aimed to quantitatively study the characteristic of diaphragm and chest wall motion using free-breathing dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (D-MRI) in Chinese people with normal lung function. Methods: 74 male subjects (mean age, 37 ± 11 years old) were prospectively enrolled, and they underwent high-resolution CT(HRCT), pulmonary functional tests (PFTs), and D-MRI in the same day. D-MRI was acquired with a gradient-echo sequence during the quiet and deep breathing. The motion of the diaphragm and chest wall were respectively assessed by measuring thoracic anteroposterior diameter (AP), left–right diameter (LR), cranial–caudal diameter (CC), and thoracic area ratios between end-inspiration and end-expiration. The effect of age, body mass index (BMI), and smoking on respiratory muscle function was also analyzed. Results: The mean ratio of right and left AP was greater than that of LR on three transversal planes during both quiet and deep breathing. The mean ratio at the anterior diaphragm (AND, Quiet: 1.04 ± 0.03; Deep: 1.15 ± 0.09) was weaker than that of the apex (vs. APD, Quiet: 1.08 ± 0.05, p < 0.001; Deep: 1.29 ± 0.12, p < 0.001) and posterior diaphragm (vs. POD, Quiet: 1.09 ± 0.04, p < 0.001; Deep: 1.30 ± 0.12, p < 0.001) both in quiet and deep breathing. Compared with non-smokers, the left AP and thoracic area ratios in smokers were significantly decreased (p < 0.05). However, the ratios of AP, LR, CC, and thoracic area on each plane were similar among groups in different age and BMI. Conclusions: During both quiet and deep breathing, the chest wall motion is prominent in the anteroposterior direction. The motions of diaphragm apex and posterior diaphragm were more prominent than that of the anterior diaphragm. Smoking may affect the respiratory muscle mobility. Dynamic MRI can quantitatively evaluate the motion of respiratory muscles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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30. Isolation and Identification of Secondary Metabolites Produced by Phytopathogenic Fungus Corynespora cassiicola from Hevea brasiliensis.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Guo, Zhikai, Yang, Yang, Abulaizi, Ailiman, Xiong, Zijun, Zhang, Shiqing, Li, Boxun, and Huang, Guixiu
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ULTRAVIOLET spectrometry , *HEVEA , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC fungi , *NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy , *METABOLITES , *CORYNESPORA , *HIGH performance liquid chromatography - Abstract
The secondary metabolites of the phytopathogenic fungus Corynespora cassiicola CC01 from Hevea brasiliensis were investigated. As a result, two new compounds, 5-acetyl-7-hydroxy-6- methoxybenzofuran-2(3H)-one (1) and (S)-2-(2,3-dihydrofuro [3,2-c]pyridin-2-yl)propan-2-ol (2), together with seven known compounds, 4,6,8-trihydroxy-3,4-dihydronaphthalen-1(2H)-one (3), 3,6,8-trihydroxy-3,4-dihydronaphthalen-1(2H)-one (4), curvulin acid (5), 2-methyl-5-carboxymethyl- 7-hydroxychromone (6), tyrosol (7), p-hydroxybenzoic acid (8) and cerevisterol (9), were isolated from the fermentation extract by comprehensive silica gel, reverse phase silica gel, Sephadex-LH20 column chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The structures of these compounds were identified by using high-resolution electrospray mass spectrometry (HRESIMS), nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR), optical rotation, ultraviolet and infrared spectroscopy techniques and a comparison of NMR data with those reported in the literature. Compounds 1 and 2 were new compounds, and compounds 3–9 were discovered from this phytopathogenic fungus for the first time. Compounds 1–9 were tested for phytotoxicity against the fresh tender leaf of Hevea brasiliensis, and the results show that none of them were phytotoxic. Additionally, these compounds were subjected to an antimicrobial assay against three bacteria (E. coli, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Micrococcus luteus), but they showed no activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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31. Carbon-modified NiCo2O4 as an electrode material for supercapacitors.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Xiaojuan, Feng, Huimin, Tian, Lecheng, Liu, Lei, Ding, Juan, Qamar, Nouman, and Xing, Zhicai
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ENERGY density , *TRANSITION metal oxides , *ELECTRIC conductivity , *POWER density , *LED lamps , *AMORPHOUS carbon - Abstract
Transition metal oxides are a promising class of electrode materials for pseudocapacitors due to their high electrochemical activity and eco-friendly nature. However, they possess poor intrinsic conductivity which results in the low energy density of the assembled supercapacitors. In this study, electrodes composed of amorphous C-modified NiCo 2 O 4 (C/NiCo 2 O 4 /NF) on nickel foam substrate were prepared by electrochemical deposition and thermostatic heating method. The incorporation of amorphous C compensates for the low electrical conductivity of NiCo 2 O 4 materials, thereby significantly enhancing the electrochemical performance. The galvanostatic charge-discharge (GCD) test results reveal an impressive specific capacitance of 379.4 mF/cm2 at a current density of 1.5 mA/cm2, and with a capacitance retention rate of 87.1 %. In addition, the symmetric supercapacitor assembled using C/NiCo 2 O 4 electrode materials exhibits exceptional energy density and power density, reaching maximum values of 522.3 μWh/cm2 and 900 μW/cm2 respectively. The device is capable of illuminating LED for up to 8 min, further demonstrating its practical applicability. These results underscore the feasibility and promise of C/NiCo 2 O 4 as an electrode material for the advancement of high-performance supercapacitors. C/NiCo 2 O 4 -50/NF nanomaterials were prepared on nickel foam by electrochemical deposition and constant temperature heating treatment. The symmetric water system and solid-state supercapacitors were assembled with them, and the devices can light up LED lamps. [Display omitted] • Amorphous C was compounded on the surface of NiCo 2 O 4 using thermostatic heating treatment. • Amorphous C composite improves electrode material properties. • Symmetric supercapacitors assembled with C/NiCo 2 O 4 -50/NF have good performance and can light LEDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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32. A Solid Electrolyte Based on Electrochemical Active Li4Ti5O12 with PVDF for Solid State Lithium Metal Battery.
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Zhou, Qi, Yang, Xiaoyan, Xiong, Xiaosong, Zhang, Qianyu, Peng, Bohao, Chen, Yuhui, Wang, Zhaogen, Fu, Lijun, and Wu, Yuping
- Subjects
- *
SOLID electrolytes , *SUPERIONIC conductors , *SOLID state batteries , *POLYELECTROLYTES , *LITHIUM cells , *IONIC conductivity , *DIFLUOROETHYLENE , *LITHIUM - Abstract
In parallel with researches unveiling the nature and mechanism in solid state battery, numbers of investigations have been pursuing methods to stabilize their performance as well as to reduce the cost. Simple preparation and earth‐abundant ingredients are preconditions for a solid state electrolyte to be suitable for scalable production. In this work, a commercial anode active material, spinel Li4Ti5O12, is introduced for the first time, which has high ionic conductivity to sustain high rate charge/discharge with considerable high performance/cost ratio, into poly(vinylidene fluoride) to achieve a composite solid electrolyte. The membrane solid electrolyte containing 80 wt% of the Li4Ti5O12 (LTO‐8) shows outstanding ionic conductivity of 2.87 × 10−4 S cm−1 at 35 °C and inhibits electronic conductive network. The self‐sacrificed interface contributes to the stabilized performance of the composite. Li||LiFePO4 cells with LTO‐8 present a discharge specific capacity of 150 mAh g−1 at 0.5C and a considerable average specific capacity of 119 mAh g−1 under 5C in 400 cycles, demonstrating its excellent working performance. This investigation provides promising application of Li4Ti5O12 for solid state electrolytes, which is superior to the reported solid state electrolytes in comprehensive performance, and surely paves another commercial way to solid state batteries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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33. Construction of 3D Ordered Honeycomb Films with Controllable Pores as Efficient Catalytic Supports.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Haibao, Yao, Yuan, and Lin, Shaoliang
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HONEYCOMB structures , *OPTICAL polarization , *LINEAR polarization , *3-D films , *METAL nanoparticles , *COMPOSITE membranes (Chemistry) - Abstract
The facile construction of 3D porous film using the breath figure technique is critically important in diverse practical applications. However, the discovery of easy synthetic methods and preparation of stimuli‐responsive 3D ordered nano‐/micro‐architectures remain challenging. Herein, the promotive breath figure technique is presented to construct 3D honeycomb porous films on curved substrates using an azobenzene‐containing copolymer. The nanopore size of honeycomb structure decreases gradually with the increase of surface curvature, due to the different solvent drying speeds. Upon irradiation with directional linear polarization light, the round‐shaped nanopores are converted into rectangular‐ and rhombic‐shaped nanopores under different polarization directions. Moreover, these porous films are employed as substrates to load various metal nanoparticles, successfully preparing the nanocomposites. The catalytic capacity of both control and these nanocomposites are evaluated using the NaBH4‐mediated reduction reaction from 4‐nitrophenol to 4‐aminophenol. Compared to the control and nonporous films, the porous films with smaller nanopores exhibit larger catalytic activity. Additionally, UV irradiation upon the nanocomposites promotes the catalytic action, due to the change in surface hydrophilicity caused by the photoisomerization of azobenzene. Recyclable use of nanocomposites demonstrates the high stability. This research provides an innovative strategy to prepare 3D curved porous films for potential on catalysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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34. Research progress of PD‐L1 non‐glycosylation in cancer immunotherapy.
- Author
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Cao, Pu, Yang, Xiaoyan, Liu, Daquan, Ye, Simin, Yang, Wei, Xie, Zhizhong, and Lei, Xiaoyong
- Subjects
- *
PROGRAMMED death-ligand 1 , *PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors , *SMALL molecules , *GOLGI apparatus , *SYNTHETIC enzymes , *MOVEMENT disorders , *GLYCANS - Abstract
Cancer is the second leading cause of death among human diseases. Immunotherapy has opened a new chapter in cancer treatment. However, the emergence of immune escape mechanisms severely limited its application. The high expression of PD‐L1 on tumour cells is an important means for cancer cells to achieve immune escape via binding to PD‐1 on immune cells. Recent studies have shown that PD‐L1 expression in most cancer cells is over‐glycosylated. Glycosylation is a fundamental and extensive post‐translational modification of eukaryotic membrane‐binding proteins, which affects a variety of biological activities, including protein folding, solubility, stability and ligand‐receptor interactions. PD‐L1 glycosylation initiates in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and completes in the Golgi apparatus, which has a complex relationship with cancer development. Importantly, non‐glycosylated PD‐L1 attenuates protein stability and PD‐1 interactions. These processes are essential regulatory mechanisms that modulate immunosuppression and immune surveillance in cancer patients. Therefore, non‐glycosylated PD‐L1 may be a potentially promising strategy to improve the efficacy of checkpoint blockade therapy for cancer. In this review, we have described the PD‐L1 glycosylation processes and provided evidence for the role of non‐glycosylated PD‐L1 in anti‐tumour‐related signalling pathways. Furthermore, strategies for non‐glycosylation of PD‐L1 using small molecule inhibitors, gene therapy and various enzymes in the synthetic glycosylation pathway are discussed. Finally, the detection of PD‐L1 expression is enhanced by its deglycosylation, and we have summarized the development, application and clinical application potential of antibody therapies targeting PD‐1/PD‐L1 glycosylation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. CBX3 regulated by miR-139 promotes the development of HCC by regulating cell cycle progression.
- Author
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Zhang, Pan, Yang, Xiaoyan, Zha, Zhongming, Zhu, Yumeng, Zhang, Guoqiang, and Li, Guotao
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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36. On the steady-state exactly resonant, nearly resonant, and non-resonant waves and their relationships.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Yang, Jie, and Liu, Zeng
- Subjects
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P-waves (Seismology) , *WATER waves , *LINEAR operators , *WAVE energy , *RESONANCE , *WATER depth - Abstract
The steady-state exactly resonant, nearly resonant, and non-resonant waves in infinite water depth are investigated, and their relationships are revealed. In the framework of homotopy analysis method (HAM), the two primary wave components' amplitudes in the initial guess of the velocity potential are fixed and the actual frequencies of the primary waves are unknown. For different wavenumber ratio ( k 2 / k 1 ) values, three groups of steady-state wave systems are obtained with the proper auxiliary linear operator and the initial guess. It is found that when the third-order resonance occurs accurately, the energy of each wave group is mainly concentrated in the primary and third-order resonant wave components. When the value of the wavenumber ratio ( k 2 / k 1 ) moves away from the exact resonance, the energy of the whole wave system is either gradually transferred to the two primary or one resonant wave components that finally evolves into the trivial non-resonant wave system, or the energy is more evenly distributed among more wave components that evolves into multiple nearly resonant wave systems. In addition, the results obtained based on HAM are verified and confirmed by means of the Zakharov equation. This work illustrate that the steady-state wave systems are continuous in wavevector space, the normal non-resonant solution on either side of the resonance point comes from the different third-order resonant solutions, and the occurrence of multiple near resonances can significantly increase the nonlinearity of the wave system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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37. Advances in the Utilization of Tea Polysaccharides: Preparation, Physicochemical Properties, and Health Benefits.
- Author
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Wang, Qian, Yang, Xiaoyan, Zhu, Changwei, Liu, Guodong, Sun, Yujun, and Qian, Lisheng
- Subjects
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POLYSACCHARIDES , *TEA , *CHEMICAL structure , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Tea polysaccharide (TPS) is the second most abundant ingredient in tea following tea polyphenols. As a complex polysaccharide, TPS has a complex chemical structure and a variety of bioactivities, such as anti-oxidation, hypoglycemia, hypolipidemic, immune regulation, and anti-tumor. Additionally, it shows excellent development and application prospects in food, cosmetics, and medical and health care products. However, numerous studies have shown that the bioactivity of TPS is closely related to its sources, processing methods, and extraction methods. Therefore, the authors of this paper reviewed the relevant recent research and conducted a comprehensive and systematic review of the extraction methods, physicochemical properties, and bioactivities of TPS to strengthen the understanding and exploration of the bioactivities of TPS. This review provides a reference for preparing and developing functional TPS products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Horizontal Vibration Characteristics of a Tapered Pile in Arbitrarily Layered Soil.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Jiang, Guosheng, Liu, Hao, Wu, Wenbing, Mei, Guoxiong, and Yang, Zijian
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CONDOMINIUMS , *SOILS , *BENDING moment , *SHEARING force , *ANALYTICAL solutions , *BEARING capacity of soils - Abstract
A tapered pile (TP) is a new type of pile with a good bearing capacity, and scholars have conducted in-depth research on its static bearing characteristics. However, there is relatively little research on its dynamic bearing characteristics. In this paper, the horizontal vibration behavior of a tapered pile in arbitrarily layered soil is studied. Utilizing the Winkler foundation model and Timoshenko beam model to simulate pile-surrounding soil (PSS) and a tapered pile, respectively, the horizontal vibration model of a tapered pile embedded in layered soil was built. The analytical solutions for the horizontal displacement (HD), bending moment (BM), and shear force (SF) of a tapered pile were derived, and then the solutions for the horizontal dynamic impedance (HDI), rocking dynamic impedance (RDI), and horizontal-rocking coupling dynamic impedance (HRDI) of pile head were obtained. Using the present solutions, the effects of soil and pile properties on the horizontal vibration characteristics of a tapered pile were systemically studied. The ability of a tapered pile–soil system to resist horizontal vibration can be improved by strengthening the upper soil, but this ability cannot be further improved by increasing the thickness of the strengthened upper soil if its thickness is greater than the critical influence thickness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Using contrast-enhanced CT and non-contrast-enhanced CT to predict EGFR mutation status in NSCLC patients—a radiomics nomogram analysis.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Liu, Min, Ren, Yanhong, Chen, Huang, Yu, Pengxin, Wang, Siyi, Zhang, Rongguo, Dai, Huaping, and Wang, Chen
- Abstract
Objectives: To develop and validate a general radiomics nomogram capable of identifying EGFR mutation status in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, regardless of patient with either contrast-enhanced CT (CE-CT) or non-contrast-enhanced CT (NE-CT). Methods: A total of 412 NSCLC patients were retrospectively enrolled in this study. Patients' radiomics features not significantly different between NE-CT and CE-CT were defined as general features, and were further used to construct the general radiomics signature. Fivefold cross-validation was used to select the best machine learning algorithm. Finally, a general radiomics nomogram was developed using general radiomics signature, and clinical and radiological characteristics. Two groups of data collected at different time periods were used as two test sets to access the discrimination and clinical usefulness. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC-AUC) was applied to performance evaluation. Result: The general radiomics signature yielded the highest AUC of 0.756 and 0.739 in the two test sets, respectively. When applying to same type of CT, the performance of general radiomics signature was always similar to or higher than that of models built using only NE-CT or CE-CT features. The general radiomics nomogram combining general radiomics signature, smoking history, emphysema, and ILD achieved higher performance whether applying to NE-CT or CE-CT (test set 1, AUC = 0.833 and 0.842; test set 2, AUC = 0.839 and 0.850). Conclusions: Our work demonstrated that using general features to construct radiomics signature and nomogram could help identify EGFR mutation status of NSCLC patients and expand its scope of clinical application. Key Points: • General features were proposed to construct general radiomics signature using different types of CT of different patients at the same time to identify EGFR mutation status of NSCLC patients. • The general radiomics nomogram based on general radiomics signature, and clinical and radiological characteristics could identify EGFR mutation status of patients with NSCLC and outperformed the general radiomics signature. • The general radiomics nomogram had a wider scope of clinical application; no matter which of NE-CT and CE-CT the patient has, its EGFR mutation status could be predicted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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40. Vertical Dynamic Impedance of a Viscoelastic Pile in Arbitrarily Layered Soil Based on the Fictitious Soil Pile Model.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Wang, Lixing, Wu, Wenbing, Liu, Hao, Jiang, Guosheng, Wang, Kuihua, and Mei, Guoxiong
- Subjects
- *
STRESS waves , *SOILS , *TRANSFER functions , *SOIL dynamics , *ANALYTICAL solutions - Abstract
The vertical vibration of a viscoelastic pile immersed in arbitrarily layered soil is investigated by taking the interaction among pile, pile surrounding soil (PSS) and pile end soil (PES) into account. Firstly, considering both the stratification and stress wave effect of soil, a mathematical model of the pile–soil system is established based on the fictitious soil pile (FSP) model. Then, utilizing the impedance function transfer method and Laplace transform technique, the analytical solutions of the vertical dynamic impedance of pile are derived in the frequency domain. The analytical solutions are validated by comparing them with other existing solutions. Finally, a parametric study is put forward to investigate the properties of PES on the vertical dynamic impedance of pile. The results reveal that the properties of PES have a significant effect on the vertical dynamic impedance of pile, but there is a critical influence thickness for this effect. For the cases of the PES thickness exceeding the critical influence thickness, further increase of PES thickness will not affect the dynamic behavior of the pile–soil system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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41. Combined effects of starch fine molecular structures and storage temperatures on long-term rice amylopectin retrogradation property.
- Author
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Li, Enpeng, Yang, Xiaoyan, and Li, Cheng
- Subjects
- *
AMYLOSE , *AMYLOPECTIN , *FINE structure (Physics) , *STARCH , *RICE starch , *DIFFERENTIAL scanning calorimetry , *RICE industry - Abstract
Though the retrogradation property as affected by starch fine molecular structures has been widely investigated, it remains largely unexplored how concurrent starch structures and storage conditions e.g. temperature tailor the starch retrogradation property. The amylopectin long-term retrogradation for 8 different rice starches with a broad range of amylose content was thus investigated under different storage temperatures. Results showed that gelatinized starch stored at −20 °C generally had a narrower melting temperature range from differential scanning calorimetry, while larger cells and thicker cell walls in the gel matrix than that stored at 4 °C. Different linear correlations were found between starch fine molecular structures and amylopectin retrogradation parameters when starch was stored under different temperatures. For example, the melting enthalpy of retrograded starch double helices was negatively correlated with the amount of amylose intermediate chains at 4 °C, while positively correlated with the relative length of amylopectin short chains at −20 °C. Under both temperatures, rice starch R250 had the highest retrogradation enthalpy. These results could help the rice industry improve both the nutritional and textural attributes of cooked rice by selecting starch with desirable molecular structures and optimizing the storage conditions for rice after cooking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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42. On bi-chromatic steady-state gravity waves with an arbitrary included angle.
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Yang, Xiaoyan and Li, Ye
- Subjects
- *
GRAVITY waves , *P-waves (Seismology) , *WAVENUMBER , *LINEAR operators , *BOUNDARY value problems - Abstract
Being encouraged by the recent study by Yang et al. ["On collinear steady-state gravity waves with an infinite number of exact resonances," Phys. Fluids 31, 122109 (2019)] on two primary waves traveling in the same/opposite direction, we investigate two primary waves traveling with an arbitrary included angle by solving the water-wave equations as a nonlinear boundary-value problem. When the included angle is small, there exists an infinite number of nearly resonant wave components corresponding to an infinite number of small denominators in the framework of the classical analytic approximation methods, like perturbation methods. At a certain included angle, it will cause the classical third-order resonance, corresponding to a singularity. Fortunately, based on the homotopy analysis method (HAM), this type of problem can be solved uniformly by choosing a proper auxiliary linear operator with which the small denominators and singularity can be avoided once and for all. Approximate homotopy-series solutions can be obtained for the two primary waves traveling with an arbitrary included angle. The solutions bifurcate at the angle of classical third-order resonance. Regardless of the resonance at the third-order, it is found that when the acute angle between the two primary wave components becomes smaller, the wave energy slowly shifts from the primary wave components to the high-order wave components, and the increase in wave amplitude strengthens this energy transfer. Moreover, when the included angle is close to or smaller than the third-order resonant angle, the third-order quasi-resonant interaction has a greater influence on the energy distribution, especially if the overall amplitude is relatively large. All of this illustrates the validity and potential of the HAM to be applied to rather complicated nonlinear problems that may have an infinite number of singularities or small denominators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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43. A Test Generation Method of R-2R Digital-to-Analog Converters Based on Genetic Algorithm.
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Yang, Chenglin, and Wang, Houjun
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- *
DIGITAL-to-analog converters , *FAULT diagnosis , *TEST methods - Abstract
A novel multidimensional fitness function genetic algorithm is proposed to optimize test vectors of R-2R Digital-to-Analog Converters (DAC). The proposed method employs distribution of characteristic vectors and the number of test vectors to formulate a multidimensional fitness function to search a non-dominate (ND) solution set. The searching process is directed by a ND sort method. Each individual in the ND set does not contain redundant test vectors. The test vectors are taken as the input excitation of the circuit under test (CUT) and the fault diagnosis is performed. As the number of test vectors increases, the accuracy of fault diagnosis also increases. The validity of the proposed method is verified by fault diagnosis. The average fault diagnosis rate is more than 85% for the R-2R network under the influence of tolerance. In addition, the parametric faults of ± 50 % deviation from the nominal value in each resistor of the R-2R network can be detected in the proposed method. Finally, the comparative experiments and results are briefly described in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Effect of pre-pregnancy body mass index on neonatal outcomes in women undergoing autologous frozen-thawed embryo transfer.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Zheng, Beihong, and Wang, Yun
- Subjects
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FETAL macrosomia , *BODY mass index , *FERTILIZATION in vitro , *EMBRYO transfer , *LOW birth weight , *PREMATURE labor , *HUMAN abnormalities , *INFERTILITY treatment , *DATABASES , *RESEARCH , *BIRTH rate , *TIME , *RESEARCH methodology , *GESTATIONAL age , *FETAL development , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *RISK assessment , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *INFERTILITY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PREGNANCY complications , *FERTILITY , *CRYOPRESERVATION of organs, tissues, etc. , *SMALL for gestational age - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the associations between pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and neonatal outcomes in women undergoing autologous frozen-thawed embryo transfer (FET).Design: Retrospective cohort study.Setting(s): University-affiliated reproductive medical center.Patient(s): A total of 16,240 women with singleton deliveries achieved by autologous FET.Intervention(s): None.Main Outcome Measure(s): Neonatal outcomes included preterm birth (PTB), low birth weight (LBW), small-for-gestational age (SGA), large-for-gestational age (LGA), fetal macrosomia, and birth defects.Result(s): After adjusting for confounding factors, our study showed that in autologous FET cycles, the overweight women (23 kg/m2≤ BMI <27.5 kg/m2) were associated with increased rates of PTB (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.226; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.060-1.418), macrosomia (aOR, 1.692; 95% CI, 1.491-1.921), and LGA (aOR, 1.980; 95% CI, 1.715-2.286); and the obese women (BMI ≥27.5 kg/m2) were significantly associated with increased PTB (aOR, 1.503; 95% CI, 1.167-1.936), early PTB (aOR, 2.829; 95% CI, 1.679-4.765), very LBW (aOR, 3.087; 95% CI, 1.720-5.542), macrosomia (aOR, 2.325; 95% CI, 1.862-2.904), and LGA (aOR, 3.235; 95% CI, 2.561-4.085). The rate of SGA infants was higher in the underweight women (BMI <18.5 kg/m2) (aOR, 1.687; 95% CI, 1.375-2.071) than that in the normal-weight women (18.5 kg/m2≤ BMI ≤23 kg/m2). No significant difference was observed in the risk of birth defects between normal-weight cases and other BMI categories.Conclusion(s): Among women undergoing FET, pre-pregnancy BMI affected neonatal outcomes of singletons. BMI in Asian categories for overweight and obese showed significant increases in PTB, macrosomia, and LGA; early PTB and very LBW only increased in obese cases. In addition, underweight status was associated with increased risk of SGA. In contrast, there was no association between pre-pregnancy BMI and birth defects in FET cycles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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45. Dimension and level of triangulated categories.
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Yang, Xiaoyan and Shen, Jingwen
- Subjects
- *
TRIANGULATED categories - Abstract
For the bounded derived category of an abelian category, bounds of the dimension with respect to a complete hereditary cotorsion pair are given. We also characterize levels of DG-modules and study how levels involved in a recollement of derived categories over DG-rings are related. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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46. The Auslander–Reiten Formula on Finitely Presented Functor Categories.
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Guo, Shoutao and Yang, Xiaoyan
- Subjects
- *
ARTIN algebras - Abstract
Let R be an artin algebra. The Auslander–Reiten formula for the category (mod-R)-mod of finitely presented functors is presented, which is extended from the Auslander–Reiten formula for the category mod-R of finitely presented modules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Distance Estimation in Virtual Reality Is Affected by Both the Virtual and the Real-World Environments.
- Author
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Zhang, Junjun, Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Zhenlan, and Li, Ling
- Subjects
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VIRTUAL reality , *DEPTH perception , *DISTANCES - Abstract
The experience in virtual reality (VR) is unique, in that observers are in a real-world location while browsing through a virtual scene. Previous studies have investigated the effect of the virtual environment on distance estimation. However, it is unclear how the real-world environment influences distance estimation in VR. Here, we measured the distance estimation using a bisection (Experiment 1) and a blind-walking (Experiments 2 and 3) method. Participants performed distance judgments in VR, which rendered either virtual indoor or outdoor scenes. Experiments were also carried out in either real-world indoor or outdoor locations. In the bisection experiment, judged distance in virtual outdoor was greater than that in virtual indoor. However, the real-world environment had no impact on distance judgment estimated by bisection. In the blind-walking experiment, judged distance in real-world outdoor was greater than that in real-world indoor. On the other hand, the virtual environment had no impact on distance judgment estimated by blind-walking. Generally, our results suggest that both the virtual and real-world environments have an impact on distance judgment in VR. Especially, the real-world environment where a person is physically located during a VR experience influences the person's distance estimation in VR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Distance Estimation in Virtual Reality Is Affected by Both the Virtual and the Real-World Environments.
- Author
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Zhang, Junjun, Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Zhenlan, and Li, Ling
- Subjects
- *
VIRTUAL reality , *DEPTH perception , *DISTANCES - Abstract
The experience in virtual reality (VR) is unique, in that observers are in a real-world location while browsing through a virtual scene. Previous studies have investigated the effect of the virtual environment on distance estimation. However, it is unclear how the real-world environment influences distance estimation in VR. Here, we measured the distance estimation using a bisection (Experiment 1) and a blind-walking (Experiments 2 and 3) method. Participants performed distance judgments in VR, which rendered either virtual indoor or outdoor scenes. Experiments were also carried out in either real-world indoor or outdoor locations. In the bisection experiment, judged distance in virtual outdoor was greater than that in virtual indoor. However, the real-world environment had no impact on distance judgment estimated by bisection. In the blind-walking experiment, judged distance in real-world outdoor was greater than that in real-world indoor. On the other hand, the virtual environment had no impact on distance judgment estimated by blind-walking. Generally, our results suggest that both the virtual and real-world environments have an impact on distance judgment in VR. Especially, the real-world environment where a person is physically located during a VR experience influences the person's distance estimation in VR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Effect of Relative Corneal Refractive Power Shift Distribution on Axial Length Growth in Myopic Children Undergoing Orthokeratology Treatment.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Bi, Hua, Li, Lihua, Li, Shumao, Chen, Song, Zhang, Bin, and Wang, Yan
- Subjects
- *
GROWTH of children , *PHOTOREFRACTIVE keratectomy , *ORTHOKERATOLOGY , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *CORNEAL topography , *MYOPIA - Abstract
To quantify the spatial distribution of relative corneal refractive power shift (RCRPS) to investigate its association with axial length growth. Eighty myopic children were randomly assigned for fitting with type A or B lenses. Axial lengths and corneal topographies were measured at baseline and the 1-, 6-, and 12-months follow-up visits. Treatment-zone decentrations and sizes were derived from tangential maps. RCRPSs were computed by taking the difference between after-treatment and baseline axial maps and then subtracting the apex value. Values at the same radius were averaged to obtain an RCRPS profile, from which four distributional parameters were extracted: the peak value (Rmax), the location where the profile first reached its half peak (X50), and the powers summed within 4- and 8-mm diameter areas (Sum4 and Sum8, respectively). Linear mixed models were used to analyse the correlation between the AL growth and the distributional parameters. At baseline, no significant differences were observed between the two groups. After treatment, Axial length growth was significantly smaller in subjects fitted with type-B lenses (0.15 ± 0.16 vs 0.25 ± 0.22 mm, P =.028). Smaller treatment-zones (1.56 ± 0.14 vs 1.75 ± 0.13 mm, P <.01), smaller X50 values (1.56 ± 0.39 vs 1.98 ± 0.28 mm, P <.01), and greater Sum4 values (11.83 ± 6.47 vs 8.14 ± 5.06 D, P =.01) were also observed in subjects wearing type-B lenses. Among the distributional parameters, only X50 was significantly associated with AL growth in the multiple regression analysis (P =.005). The spatial distribution of RCRPS is critical in retarding AL growth, and the ones reaching peak within a shorter distance from the apex may provide better myopia control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. One‐dimensional consolidation of layered soils under ramp load based on continuous drainage boundary.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoyan, Zong, Mengfan, Tian, Yi, Jiang, Guosheng, El Naggar, M. Hesham, Wu, Wenbing, and Xu, Meijuan
- Subjects
- *
PORE water pressure , *SOIL consolidation , *DRAINAGE , *TRANSFER matrix - Abstract
The traditional drainage boundary regards the drainage boundary as completely permeable or completely impervious. However, the drainage boundary is an impeded drainage boundary between completely permeable and impervious in engineering practice. In view of this, a new drainage boundary, namely the continuous drainage boundary, is introduced in this paper to study the consolidation problem of layered soils. First, the governing equations for the one‐dimensional consolidation problem of layered soils subjected to a ramp load are established. Then, the analytical solution of excess pore water pressure and average consolidation degree is derived by means of Laplace transform and matrix transfer method. The present solution is verified by degenerating it and comparing with existing solutions. Based on the present solution, the consolidation behavior of the layered soils is investigated by conducting a detailed parametric study. The results show that, both the interface parameters of boundaries and the stratification of the layered soils can heavily affect the distribution of the excess pore water pressure along the depth, thereby influence the plane of the maximum excess pore water pressure. Therefore, the interface parameters of boundaries and the soil stratification should be comprehensively considered in the optimization for the horizontal drains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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