283 results on '"Ban X"'
Search Results
2. Comprehensive Environmental Flows Assessment for Multi‐Guilds in the Riparian Habitats of the Yangtze River
- Author
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Ban, X., primary, Qi, T., additional, Wang, H. Z., additional, Du, H., additional, Diplas, P., additional, Xiao, F., additional, Du, Y., additional, Gao, W. J., additional, Guo, W. X., additional, Shi, X., additional, and Huang, W., additional
- Published
- 2022
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3. Intelligent scheduling method for congestion prevention of urban rail vehicles in time-varying environment.
- Author
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Ban, X. Y., Li, F. S., Ai, B., and Dissanayake, S.
- Abstract
Urban rail vehicle congestion restricts the smoothness and operation capability of rail transit lines. This paper proposes an intelligent congestion prevention scheduling method for urban rail vehicles based on multi terminal and multi line transfer in a time-varying environment. Firstly, based on SARIMA model and SVM model, the target model of urban rail vehicle congestion prevention scheduling in time-varying environment is established. Secondly, with the optimal spacing of stations as the optimization object and the allocation of urban rail vehicle dispatching stations as the input bar, the global optimal objective function of rail vehicle anti congestion dispatching is obtained, and the optimization objective is determined. Then, according to the evacuation conditions of time and traffic capacity, taking the passenger flow distribution conditions of urban rail vehicle dispatching stations as the input conditions, and based on the passenger flow distribution law, the passenger flow prediction model of urban rail transit under the condition of multi station and multi line is constructed. Finally, based on the passenger flow data, the passenger flow change characteristics of future stations are predicted to achieve the anti blocking dispatching of urban rail vehicles. The simulation test results show that in a time-varying environment, this method can effectively alleviate traffic congestion, optimize the selection of rail transit routes, and improve passenger travel efficiency at different starting and ending points. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Upregulated MicroRNA-483-3p is an Early Event in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and as a Powerful Liquid Biopsy Biomarker in PDAC
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Shao H, Zhang Y, Yan J, Ban X, Fan X, Chang X, Lu Z, Wu Y, Zong L, Mo S, Yu S, and Chen J
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endocrine system diseases ,liquid biopsy ,pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma ,exosome ,biomarker ,microrna-483-3p ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,lcsh:RC254-282 - Abstract
Huilin Shao, Yue Zhang, Jie Yan, Xinchao Ban, Xiaojie Fan, Xiaoyan Chang, Zhaohui Lu, Yan Wu, Liju Zong, Shengwei Mo, Shuangni Yu, Jie Chen Department of Pathology, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Shuangni Yu; Jie Chen Tel +86 10 69159375; +86 10 69159389Email yushn@pumch.cn; chenjie@pumch.cnBackground: There is an urgent need for the development of effective noninvasive biomarkers for early pancreatic cancer diagnosis. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are promising candidates that can be identified in peripheral blood and can act as “liquid biopsy” biomarkers. miR-483-3p is overexpressed in the tumor tissue of pancreatic duct adenocarcinoma, but its potential as noninvasive biomarker remains unknown.Methods: We conducted locked nucleic acid in situ hybridization (LNA-ISH) for miR-483-3p in archival tissues of 107 patients with PDAC. We also used immunohistochemistry to evaluate SMAD4 expression, the putative miR-483-3p target gene. miR-483-3p expression level was also assessed using quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) in serum and serum exosome samples from 63 patients with PDAC and 22 healthy individuals.Results: LNA-ISH showed that miR-483-3p was overexpressed in PDAC and PanIN tissues compared to normal pancreatic duct cells. miR-483-3p expression levels correlated with increases in PanIN lesion grade. miR-483-3p expression negatively correlated with Smad4 expression (γ=− 0.770, p< 0.0001) in PDAC and PanIN tissues. Circulating miR-483-3p levels were significantly elevated in the serum and serum exosomes of PDAC patients compared to healthy controls (p< 0.0001 and p< 0.01, respectively). Specifically, serum miR-483-3p levels were able to distinguish patients with early stage (≤ 2cm) PDAC from healthy controls with an AUC of 0.83 [95% CI, 0.70– 0.96]. Higher serum exosomal miR-483-3p levels predicted worse survival in PDAC patients and serum exosomal miR-483-3p also proved to be an independent prognostic factor for PDAC (hazard ratio = 3.307; 95% CI=1.104 to 9.903; p=0.033). In vitro studies also showed that miR-483-3p promoted pancreatic cancer cell migration and invasion.Conclusion: miR-483-3p overexpression occurs early in PDAC development and is present in premalignant PanIN lesions. Serum miR-483-3p may act as an early PDAC diagnostic biomarker and serum exosomal miR-483-3p may be a PDAC prognostic biomarker.Keywords: pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, exosome, microRNA-483-3p, liquid biopsy, biomarker
- Published
- 2021
5. 799P Anlotinib plus sintilimab in patients with recurrent advanced endometrial cancer: A prospective open-label, single-arm, phase II clinical trial
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Wei, W., primary, Ban, X., additional, Yang, F., additional, Huang, Y., additional, Li, J., additional, Cheng, X., additional, and Zheng, M., additional
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- 2021
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6. Turbulent Details Simulation for SPH Fluids via Vorticity Refinement
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Liu, S., Wang, X., Ban, X., Xu, Y., Zhou, J., Kosinka, J., Telea, A., Liu, S., Wang, X., Ban, X., Xu, Y., Zhou, J., Kosinka, J., and Telea, A.
- Abstract
A major issue in smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) approaches is the numerical dissipation during the projection process, especially under coarse discretizations. High‐frequency details, such as turbulence and vortices, are smoothed out, leading to unrealistic results. To address this issue, we introduce a vorticity refinement (VR) solver for SPH fluids with negligible computational overhead. In this method, the numerical dissipation of the vorticity field is recovered by the difference between the theoretical and the actual vorticity, so as to enhance turbulence details. Instead of solving the Biot‐Savart integrals, a stream function, which is easier and more efficient to solve, is used to relate the vorticity field to the velocity field. We obtain turbulence effects of different intensity levels by changing an adjustable parameter. Since the vorticity field is enhanced according to the curl field, our method can not only amplify existing vortices, but also capture additional turbulence. Our VR solver is straightforward to implement and can be easily integrated into existing SPH methods.
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- 2021
7. Turbulent Details Simulation for SPH Fluids via Vorticity Refinement
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Visualisation and Graphics, Dep Natuurkunde, Sub Visualisation and Graphics, Liu, S., Wang, X., Ban, X., Xu, Y., Zhou, J., Kosinka, J., Telea, A., Visualisation and Graphics, Dep Natuurkunde, Sub Visualisation and Graphics, Liu, S., Wang, X., Ban, X., Xu, Y., Zhou, J., Kosinka, J., and Telea, A.
- Published
- 2021
8. Research of a Wheel-legged Obstacle Crossing Robot
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Wang Yueqin, Tan Xiaolan, Ban Xiang, Li Dingyu, and Yue Shidi
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Mobile robot ,Passive transformation ,Wheel-legged obstacle crossing ,Adams simulation ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 - Abstract
To meet the requirement of mobile robots to achieve high mobility and strong obstacle-crossing in complex and variable environment, a design scheme of passive transformable wheel-legged obstacle-crossing robot is proposed. The transformable wheel conversion process of the robot is obtained by external force operation, so no additional driver is required, which reduces the complexity of the mechanism. Firstly, based on the three-dimensional modeling of the whole robot, the structure, principle and force of the transformable wheel are analyzed, and then the structure optimization is carried out by taking the ratio of the triggering torque during the transformation process and radius before and after unfolding as the index. Afterwards, the force condition during the transformable stage of the robot is analyzed and the relevant parameters of the robot platform are adjusted to achieve stable obstacle crossing. Finally, kinematics simulation of transformation and obstacle-crossing process of the robot is carried out by using the Adams software, physical prototype is made and rationality of the structure design of the whole machine is verified by experiment.
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- 2024
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9. A comprehensive study on the efficacy of a wearable sleep aid device featuring closed-loop real-time acoustic stimulation
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Anh Nguyen, Galen Pogoncheff, Ban Xuan Dong, Nam Bui, Hoang Truong, Nhat Pham, Linh Nguyen, Hoang Nguyen-Huu, Khue Bui-Diem, Quan Vu-Tran-Thien, Sy Duong-Quy, Sangtae Ha, and Tam Vu
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Difficulty falling asleep is one of the typical insomnia symptoms. However, intervention therapies available nowadays, ranging from pharmaceutical to hi-tech tailored solutions, remain ineffective due to their lack of precise real-time sleep tracking, in-time feedback on the therapies, and an ability to keep people asleep during the night. This paper aims to enhance the efficacy of such an intervention by proposing a novel sleep aid system that can sense multiple physiological signals continuously and simultaneously control auditory stimulation to evoke appropriate brain responses for fast sleep promotion. The system, a lightweight, comfortable, and user-friendly headband, employs a comprehensive set of algorithms and dedicated own-designed audio stimuli. Compared to the gold-standard device in 883 sleep studies on 377 subjects, the proposed system achieves (1) a strong correlation (0.89 ± 0.03) between the physiological signals acquired by ours and those from the gold-standard PSG, (2) an 87.8% agreement on automatic sleep scoring with the consensus scored by sleep technicians, and (3) a successful non-pharmacological real-time stimulation to shorten the duration of sleep falling by 24.1 min. Conclusively, our solution exceeds existing ones in promoting fast falling asleep, tracking sleep state accurately, and achieving high social acceptance through a reliable large-scale evaluation.
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- 2023
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10. Effect of flavor characteristics and salt reduction and flavor enhancement of three edible fungi by Nano-pulverization
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BAN Xinrong, YANG Yan, LI Wen, WU Di, ZHANG Zhong, CHEN Wanchao, and LI Jingjun
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stropharia rugosoannulata ,volvariella volvacea ,nano-pulverization technology ,flavor ,flavor enhancement and salt reduction ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to optimize the processing technology of edible fungi and evaluate its application potential as flavoring agents in the food industry. Methods: The content of non-volatile flavor components of the samples was determined by ion chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography, and the umami of the samples was evaluated by equal umami concentration. The volatile aroma components in the samples were detected by GC-MS, electronic nose and electronic tongue. The microstructure before and after Nano-pulverization was observed, and the experiment of increasing freshness and reducing salt was carried out. Results: After Nano-pulverization, the contents of umami amino acids, flavor nucleotides and organic acids in Stropharia rugosoannulata and A. bisporus increased significantly, and the types and quantities of volatile compounds increased significantly, while Nano-pulverization had little effect on the flavor components of Volvariella volvacea. The results of the electronic tongue showed that the pulverized samples were significantly improved in both umami and saltiness, the addition of 0.5% Nano-pulverization A. bisporus could increase the salt concentration by 0.28%, and the umami value was increased by 145%. Conclusion: Nano-pulverization technology can improve the taste of food. Nano-pulverized edible fungus powder can be used as an effective alternative to salt and flavor enhancers in the food manufacturing industry.
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- 2024
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11. Conformation specific antagonistic high affinity antibodies to the RON receptor kinase for imaging and therapy
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Xin Yu Koh, Xiao Hui Koh, Diana Spiegelberg, Preeti Jha, Marika Nestor, Le-ann Hwang, Ban Xiong Tan, and David Philip Lane
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The RON receptor tyrosine kinase is an exceptionally interesting target in oncology and immunology. It is not only overexpressed in a wide variety of tumors but also has been shown to be expressed on myeloid cells associated with tumor infiltration, where it serves to dampen tumour immune responses and reduce the efficacy of anti-CTLA4 therapy. Potent and selective inhibitory antibodies to RON might therefore both inhibit tumor cell growth and stimulate immune rejection of tumors. We derived cloned and sequenced a new panel of exceptionally avid anti-RON antibodies with picomolar binding affinities that inhibit MSP-induced RON signaling and show remarkable potency in antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Antibody specificity was validated by cloning the antibody genes and creating recombinant antibodies and by the use of RON knock out cell lines. When radiolabeled with 89-Zirconium, the new antibodies 3F8 and 10G1 allow effective immuno-positron emission tomography (immunoPET) imaging of RON-expressing tumors and recognize universally exposed RON epitopes at the cell surface. The 10G1 was further developed into a novel bispecific T cell engager with a 15 pM EC50 in cytotoxic T cell killing assays.
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- 2022
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12. Effect of geometry error on accuracy of large-diameter pads used for CMP dressing
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Ban, X. X., primary, Zhao, H. Y., additional, Zhao, S. J., additional, Xie, R. Q., additional, Gu, Y. W., additional, Zhu, X. L., additional, Liao, D. F., additional, Li, L., additional, and Jiang, Z. D., additional
- Published
- 2018
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13. DHRS2 inhibits cell growth and motility in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
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Zhou, Y, primary, Wang, L, additional, Ban, X, additional, Zeng, T, additional, Zhu, Y, additional, Li, M, additional, Guan, X-Y, additional, and Li, Y, additional
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- 2017
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14. Structure–Transport Properties Governing the Interplay in Humidity-Dependent Mixed Ionic and Electronic Conduction of Conjugated Polyelectrolytes
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Garrett L. Grocke, Ban Xuan Dong, Aaron D. Taggart, Alex B. F. Martinson, Jens Niklas, Oleg G. Poluektov, Joseph W. Strzalka, and Shrayesh N. Patel
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Polymers and polymer manufacture ,TP1080-1185 - Published
- 2022
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15. Lymphoepithelial Carcinoma of the Salivary Gland: Morphologic Patterns and Imaging Features on CT and MRI
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Ban, X., primary, Wu, J., additional, Mo, Y., additional, Yang, Q., additional, Liu, X., additional, Xie, C., additional, and Zhang, R., additional
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- 2014
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16. DHRS2 inhibits cell growth and motility in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
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Zhou, Y, Wang, L, Ban, X, Zeng, T, Zhu, Y, Li, M, Guan, X-Y, and Li, Y
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Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is highly prevailing in Asia and it is ranked in the most aggressive squamous cell carcinomas. High-frequency loss of heterozygosity occurred in chromosome 14q11.2 in many tumors including ESCC, suggesting that one or more tumor-suppressor genes might exist within this region. In this study, we identified the tumor-suppressing role of DHRS2 (short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family, member 2) at 14q11.2 in ESCCs. Downregulation of DHRS2 occurred in 30.8% of primary ESCC tumor tissues vs paired non-tumorous tissues. DHRS2 downregulation was associated significantly with ESCC invasion, lymph nodes metastasis and clinical staging (P<0.001). Survival analysis revealed that DHRS2 downregulation was significantly associated with worse outcome of patients with ESCC. In vitro and in vivo studies indicated that both DHRS2 variants could suppress cell proliferation and cell motility. Moreover, we demonstrated that DHRS2 could reduce reactive oxygen species and decrease nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (oxidized/reduced), increase p53 stability and decrease Rb phosphorylation; it also decreased p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation and matrix metalloproteinase 2. In summary, these findings demonstrated that DHRS2 had an important part in ESCC development and progression.
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- 2018
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17. Fish preference for hydraulic habitat in typical middle reaches of Yangtze River, China
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Ban, X., primary, Du, H., additional, and Wei, Q.W., additional
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- 2013
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18. Aircraft Observations of Dust and Pollutants over NE China: Insight into the Meteorological Mechanisms of Long-Range Transport
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Dickerson, Russell, Dickerson, Russell, Li, Can, Li, Zhanqing, Marufu, Lackson, Stehr, Jeffrey, Chen, H., Wang, P, Xia, X., Ban, X., Gong, F., Yaun, J., Yang, J., Dickerson, Russell, Dickerson, Russell, Li, Can, Li, Zhanqing, Marufu, Lackson, Stehr, Jeffrey, Chen, H., Wang, P, Xia, X., Ban, X., Gong, F., Yaun, J., and Yang, J.
- Abstract
Substantial concentrations of trace gases and aerosols are lofted and carried from Asia over the Pacific producing an inter-hemispheric impact on atmospheric chemistry and climate. The meteorological mechanism leading to this large-scale transport of dust and pollutants remains a major uncertainty in quantifying the global effects of emissions from the developing world. Models and downwind measurements have identified isentropic advection associated with wave cyclones (warm conveyor belt circulation) as an important mechanism. We present data from a case study conducted over Shenyang in NE China as part of EAST-AIRE in April 2005 in which upstream convection, rather than WCB lofting appears to dominate. Observations from instrumented aircraft flights, back trajectories, and satellite images of clouds (GOES) and aerosols (MODIS) are analyzed. In this heavily industrialized and populated region, the warm-sector PBL air ahead of a cold front was highly polluted. In the free troposphere, between ~1000 and 4000 m altitude, concentrations of trace gases and aerosols were lower, but well above background; we measured ~70 ppb O3, ~300 ppb CO, ~2 ppb SO2, and ~ 8x10-5 m-1 aerosol scattering. These observations show that dry (non-precipitating) convection can be an important mechanism for converting local air pollution problems into regional or global atmospheric chemistry problems. Climatological data indicate that spring (MAM) precipitation over NE China is low, about 90 mm compared to 290 mm over the NE US. Cloud cover, however, is similar with cumulus clouds reported about 7% of the time over NE China and about 9% of the time over the NE US suggesting that lofting in dry convective events may be common over NE Asia. Evaluation of models’ convective schemes and further observations near the source regions are called for.
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- 2006
19. Fuzzy control of non-linear systems using parameter-dependent polynomial fuzzy model
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Lam, H.K., primary, Seneviratne, L.D., additional, and Ban, X., additional
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- 2012
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20. Applying instream flow incremental method for the spawning habitat protection of Chinese sturgeon (Acipenser sinensis )
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Ban, X., primary, Du, Y., additional, Liu, H. Z., additional, and Ling, F., additional
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- 2011
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21. Effective networking when connections are invisible: comment on Reagans and Zuckerman
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van de Rijt, A., primary, Ban, X., additional, and Sarkar, R., additional
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- 2008
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22. Benchmarking travel time estimates
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Margulici, J.D., primary and Ban, X., additional
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- 2008
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23. Aircraft observations of dust and pollutants over northeast China: Insight into the meteorological mechanisms of transport
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Dickerson, R. R., primary, Li, C., additional, Li, Z., additional, Marufu, L. T., additional, Stehr, J. W., additional, McClure, B., additional, Krotkov, N., additional, Chen, H., additional, Wang, P., additional, Xia, X., additional, Ban, X., additional, Gong, F., additional, Yuan, J., additional, and Yang, J., additional
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- 2007
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24. Multiphase Viscoelastic Non‐Newtonian Fluid Simulation.
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Zhang, Y., Long, S., Xu, Y., Wang, X., Yao, C., Kosinka, J., Frey, S., Telea, A., and Ban, X.
- Subjects
- *
VISCOELASTIC materials , *NEWTONIAN fluids , *MANUFACTURING processes , *CHEMICAL bonds , *RHEOLOGY , *PSEUDOPLASTIC fluids - Abstract
We propose an SPH‐based method for simulating viscoelastic non‐Newtonian fluids within a multiphase framework. For this, we use mixture models to handle component transport and conformation tensor methods to handle the fluid's viscoelastic stresses. In addition, we consider a bonding effects network to handle the impact of microscopic chemical bonds on phase transport. Our method supports the simulation of both steady‐state viscoelastic fluids and discontinuous shear behavior. Compared to previous work on single‐phase viscous non‐Newtonian fluids, our method can capture more complex behavior, including material mixing processes that generate non‐Newtonian fluids. We adopt a uniform set of variables to describe shear thinning, shear thickening, and ordinary Newtonian fluids while automatically calculating local rheology in inhomogeneous solutions. In addition, our method can simulate large viscosity ranges under explicit integration schemes, which typically requires implicit viscosity solvers under earlier single‐phase frameworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Geographic information recommender system optimized by transportation network data
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SHAO Kuo-yi, BAN Xiao-juan, WANG Xiao-kun, and LI Bin
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geographic information systems ,recommender systems ,transportation ,network data ,collaborative filtering ,optimization ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 ,Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 - Abstract
In view of the problem that current context-aware recommender systems take users and systems as the main research direction and do not consider actual transportation network location characteristics,this article introduces a geographic information recommender system optimized by transportation network data. The system combines with transportation network data of geographic information in the context-aware recommender system to optimize the recommended results. Experimental results show that the recommended quality get improved significantly.
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- 2015
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26. Fast neighbor search on GPU for Ghost SPH simulation
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LIU Xu, BAN Xiao-juan, CHEN Tan-hao, and ZHANG Ya-lan
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search algorithm ,neighbor ,smooth particle hydrodynamics ,graphic processing unit ,parallel computing ,fluid simulation ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 ,Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 - Abstract
This paper presents a novel fast neighbor searching method. By using this method,fluid simulation based on smooth particle hydrodynamics(SPH) can be parallelized easily and run on graphic processing unit(GPU) with high efficiency. The neighbor searching method can search two or more kinds of particles,while saving their information in the same background grid. Ghost boundary particles are introduced to improve the accuracy of boundaries,which can enhance the fidelity of the fluid simulation. Experiments show that the proposed method is more efficient than the traditional SPH method based on GPU.
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- 2015
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27. A framework for analyzing the sensitivity of traffic data quality to sensor location and spacing
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Margulici, J. D., Ban, X. J., Bayen, A., Chu, L., Danczyk, A., Juan Herrera, Herring, R., Liu, H. X., Tossavainen, O. -P, and Work, D.
28. An implicitly stable mixture model for dynamic multi-fluid simulations
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Xu, Y., Wang, X., Wang, J., Song, C., Wang, T., Zhang, Y., Chang, Jian, Zhang, Jian Jun, Kosinka, J., Telea, A., Ban, X., Xu, Y., Wang, X., Wang, J., Song, C., Wang, T., Zhang, Y., Chang, Jian, Zhang, Jian Jun, Kosinka, J., Telea, A., and Ban, X.
- Abstract
Particle-based simulations have become increasingly popular in real-time applications due to their efficiency and adaptability, especially for generating highly dynamic fluid effects. However, the swift and stable simulation of interactions among distinct fluids continues to pose challenges for current mixture model techniques. When using a single-mixture flow field to represent all fluid phases, numerical discontinuities in phase fields can result in significant losses of dynamic effects and unstable conservation of mass and momentum. To tackle these issues, we present an advanced implicit mixture model for smoothed particle hydrodynamics. Instead of relying on an explicit mixture field for all dynamic computations and phase transfers between particles, our approach calculates phase momentum sources from the mixture model to derive explicit and continuous velocity phase fields. We then implicitly obtain the mixture field using a phase-mixture momentum-mapping mechanism that ensures conservation of incompressibility, mass, and momentum. In addition, we propose a mixture viscosity model and establish viscous effects between the mixture and individual fluid phases to avoid instability under extreme inertia conditions. Through a series of experiments, we show that, compared to existing mixture models, our method effectively improves dynamic effects while reducing critical instability factors. This makes our approach especially well-suited for long-duration, efficiency-oriented virtual reality scenarios.
29. Implicit smoothed particle hydrodynamics model for simulating incompressible fluid-elastic coupling
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Wang, Xiaokun, Wang, T., Wang, J., Xu, Y., Ban, X., Huang, H., Zhu, Z., Chang, J., Zhang, Jian J., Wang, Xiaokun, Wang, T., Wang, J., Xu, Y., Ban, X., Huang, H., Zhu, Z., Chang, J., and Zhang, Jian J.
- Abstract
Fluid simulation has been one of the most critical topics in computer graphics for its capacity to produce visually realistic effects. The intricacy of fluid simulation manifests most with interacting dynamic elements. The coupling for such scenarios has always been challenging to manage due to the numerical instability arising from the coupling boundary between different elements. Therefore, we propose an implicit smoothed particle hydrodynamics fluid-elastic coupling approach to reduce the instability issue for fluid-fluid, fluid-elastic, and elastic-elastic coupling circumstances. By deriving the relationship between the universal pressure field with the incompressible attribute of the fluid, we apply the number density scheme to solve the pressure Poisson equation for both fluid and elastic material to avoid the density error for multi-material coupling and conserve the non-penetration condition for elastic objects interacting with fluid particles. Experiments show that our method can effectively handle the multiphase fluids simulation with elastic objects under various physical properties.
30. Anisotropic screen space rendering for particle-based fluid simulation
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Xu, Y., Xiong, Y., Yin, D., Ban, X., Wang, X., Chang, Jian, Zhang, Jian J., Xu, Y., Xiong, Y., Yin, D., Ban, X., Wang, X., Chang, Jian, and Zhang, Jian J.
- Abstract
This paper proposes a real-time fluid rendering method based on the screen space rendering scheme for particle-based fluid simulation. Our method applies anisotropic transformations to the point sprites to stretch the point sprites along appropriate axes, obtaining smooth fluid surfaces based on the weighted principal components analysis of the particle distribution. Then we combine the processed anisotropic point sprite information with popular screen space filters like curvature flow and narrow-range filters to process the depth information. Experiments show that the proposed method can efficiently resolve the issues of jagged edges and unevenness on the surface that existed in previous methods while preserving sharp high-frequency details.
31. Spatial adaptivity with boundary refinement for smoothed particle hydrodynamics fluid simulation
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Xu, Y., Song, C., Wang, Xiaokun, Ban, X., Wang, J., Zhang, Y., Chang, Jian, Xu, Y., Song, C., Wang, Xiaokun, Ban, X., Wang, J., Zhang, Y., and Chang, Jian
- Abstract
Fluid simulation is well-known for being visually stunning while computationally expensive. Spatial adaptivity can effectively ease the computational cost by discretizing the simulation space with varying resolutions. Adaptive methods nowadays mainly focus on the mechanism of refining the fluid surfaces to obtain more vivid splashes and wave effects. But such techniques hinder further performance gain under the condition where most of the vast fluid surface is tranquil. Moreover, energetic flow beneath the surface cannot be adequately captured with the interior of the fluid still being simulated under coarse discretization. This article proposes a novel boundary-distance based adaptive method for smoothed particle hydrodynamics fluid simulation. The signed-distance field constructed with respect to the coupling boundary is introduced to determine particle resolution in different spatial positions. The resolution is maximal within a specific distance to the boundary and decreases smoothly as the distance increases until a threshold is reached. The sizes of the particles are then adjusted towards the resolution via splitting and merging. Additionally, a wake flow preservation mechanism is introduced to keep the particle resolution at a high level for a period of time after a particle flows through the boundary object to prevent the loss of flow details. Experiments show that our method can refine fluid–solid coupling details more efficiently and effectively capture dynamic effects beneath the surface.
32. Physics-based fluid simulation in computer graphics: Survey, research trends, and challenges
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Wang, Xiaokun, Xu, Y., Liu, S., Ren, B., Kosinka, J., Telea, A. C., Wang, J., Song, C., Chang, Jian, Li, C., Zhang, Jian Jun, Ban, X., Wang, Xiaokun, Xu, Y., Liu, S., Ren, B., Kosinka, J., Telea, A. C., Wang, J., Song, C., Chang, Jian, Li, C., Zhang, Jian Jun, and Ban, X.
- Abstract
Physics-based fluid simulation has played an increasingly important role in the computer graphics community. Recent methods in this area have greatly improved the generation of complex visual effects and its computational efficiency. Novel techniques have emerged to deal with complex boundaries, multiphase fluids, gas–liquid interfaces, and fine details. The parallel use of machine learning, image processing, and fluid control technologies has brought many interesting and novel research perspectives. In this survey, we provide an introduction to theoretical concepts underpinning physics-based fluid simulation and their practical implementation, with the aim for it to serve as a guide for both newcomers and seasoned researchers to explore the field of physics-based fluid simulation, with a focus on developments in the last decade. Driven by the distribution of recent publications in the field, we structure our survey to cover physical background; discretization approaches; computational methods that address scalability; fluid interactions with other materials and interfaces; and methods for expressive aspects of surface detail and control. From a practical perspective, we give an overview of existing implementations available for the above methods. (Figure presented.)
33. HandDGCL: Two-hand 3D reconstruction based disturbing graph contrastive learning
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Han, B., Yao, C., Wang, X., Chang, Jian, Ban, X., Han, B., Yao, C., Wang, X., Chang, Jian, and Ban, X.
- Abstract
Virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) applications are becoming increasingly prevalent. However, constructing realistic 3D hands, especially when two hands are interacting, from a single RGB image remains a major challenge due to severe mutual occlusion and the enormous diversity of hand poses. In this article, we propose a disturbing graph contrastive learning strategy for two-hand 3D reconstruction. This involves a graph disturbance network designed to generate graph feature pairs to enhance the consistency of the two-hand pose features. A contrastive learning module leverages high-quality generative features for a strong feature expression. We further propose a similarity distinguish method to divide positive and negative features for accelerating the model convergence. Additionally, a multi-term loss is designed to balance the relation among the hand pose, the visual scale and the viewpoint position. Our model has achieved state-of-the-art results in the InterHand2.6M benchmark. Ablation studies show the model's great ability to correct unreasonable hand movements. In subjective assessments, our graph disturbance learning method significantly improves the construction of realistic 3D hands, especially when two hands are interacting.
34. Effect of statin therapy on the progression of coronary atherosclerosis
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Tian Jinwei, Gu Xia, Sun Yanli, Ban Xiang, Xiao Yun, Hu Sining, and Yu Bo
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Atherosclerosis ,Statin ,Meta-analysis ,Intravascular ultrasound ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background An increasing number of authors employing intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and virtual histology (VH-IVUS) have investigated the effect of statin use on plaque volume (PV) and plaque composition. However, inconsistent results have been reported. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis to determine the appropriate regimen of statins to effectively stabilize vulnerable coronary plaques. Methods Online electronic databases were carefully searched for all relevant studies. We compared mean values of PV and plaque composition between baseline and follow-up in patients receiving statin therapy. We pooled treatment effects and calculated mean differences (MD) with the 95% confidence interval (CI) using a random-effects model. By stratified analyses, we explored the influence of clinical presentation, dose and duration of statin treatment, and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) levels on the effects of statins. Results Seventeen studies involving 2,171 patients were analyzed. Statin therapy significantly decreased PV (−5.3 mm3; 95% CI: –3.3 mm3 to −7.2 mm3; P < 0.001), without heterogeneity. When considering the dose and duration of statins used, only subgroups employing a high dose and long duration demonstrated a significant reduction in PV (p < 0.001). A significant decrease in PV was noted if achieved LDL-C levels were p < 0.001). Statin treatment could induce a twofold decrease in PV in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) compared with that observed in patients with stable angina pectoris (SAP). A regressive trend was seen for necrotic core volume (MD: –2.1 mm3; 95% CI: –4.7 mm3 to 0.5 mm3, P = 0.11). However, statin use did not induce a significant change for fibrotic, fibro-fatty, or dense calcium compositions. Conclusions Our meta-analysis demonstrated that statin therapy (especially that involving a high dose and long duration and achieving
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- 2012
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35. Daming capsule restores endothelial dysfunction induced by high-fat diet
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Zhang Rong, Niu Huifang, Wang Ning, Sun Lihua, Xu Yi, Zhao Ruibo, Ban Xiang, Yu Yao, Yang Baofeng, and Ai Jing
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Other systems of medicine ,RZ201-999 - Abstract
Abstract Background Daming capsule (DMC), a traditional Chinese formula, has a lipid-modulating action with reduced adverse side effects as compared with other lipid lowering compounds. Since endothelial dysfunction often accompanies the hyperlipidemic state, we hypothesize that DMC might restore endothelial dysfunction produced by a high-fat (HF) diet. Importantly, we also investigate possible mechanisms involved in mediating the effects of DMC on vascular reactivity. Methods Rats were divided into four groups: control, HF diet, HF mixed DMC diet, HF mixed atorvastatin (ATV) diet. After 30 days, the thoracic cavity was exposed to remove the thoracic aorta for (i) histological examination; (ii) measurement of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) by western blot; and (iii) tension study of thoracic aortic ring. Results HF diet induced significant attenuation in the contraction and relaxation of rat aortic rings. Treatment with DMC significantly improved the relaxation of the aortic rings as compared with those from HF rats (P < 0.05), which was abolished by a nonspecific NOS inhibitor L-NAME. Moreover DMC significantly restored the decrease in eNOS expression induced by HF diet. Similar results were found in histopathologic changes. DMC failed to restore the loss of vasocontraction of aorta explained by an impairment of ATP-sensitive K+ channels (KATP) on the structure and/or function. DMC exerted the same protective effect as ATV, a positive control drug, on vascular injury produced by HF diet. Conclusion DMC partially protects the aorta from HF-induced endothelial dysfunction via upregulation of the expression of eNOS.
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- 2012
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36. A novel function for vimentin: the potential biomarker for predicting melanoma hematogenous metastasis
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Li Man, Zhang Baogang, Sun Baocun, Wang Xuan, Ban Xinchao, Sun Tao, Liu Zhiyong, and Zhao Xiulan
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The incidence of malignant melanoma (MM) was occurring at a faster rate than for most neoplasm worldwide, and melanoma metastasis is still the most formidable problem. So it is necessarily to find some biomarkers associated with melanoma metastasis. Methods In our study, 8 spontaneous lung metastatic mice models were created by B16F10 subcutaneously transplantation. The differential protein profiles of two kinds of subcutaneous transplanted tumor tissues, which was parental B16F10 (B16 group) and corresponding lung metastases (B16M group) were detected by two-dimensional differential in-gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) combined with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF/MS). Western blotting was used to validate the results, and the clinical significance of individual protein was detected furtherly in a set of human samples. Result In this study, thirty proteins were found to be differentially expressed (ratio > 2 or < -2, P < 0.01) and thirteen of them were identified by MS. Highly expressed proteins in B16M group included cytoskeleton/structure proteins (vimentin, gamma-actin, β-actin, laminin binding protein), the chaperone family of proteins (heavy-chain binding protein, Bip), immunoproteasome assembly (proteasome activator REG alpha) and others involved in glycolysis activity (PGK1, enolase, TPI, human skeletal muscle GAPDH) and protein transport (myoglobin). Vimentin was significantly up-regulated in B16M group compared with B16 group which was validated by western blotting. Immunohistochemistry was performed in a set of clinical samples, the results showed that over-expression of vimentin was frequently observed in primary melanoma patients with hematogenous metastasis (P < 0.05), not associated with lymph node metastasis (P > 0.05). The presence of TNM stage was a independent indicator of poor prognosis for melanoma patients (P = 0.004). Conclusion The aberrant immunohistochemical expression of vimentin in primary melanoma tissues may help to call attention for patients with high risk of hematogenous metastasis. That might be as a novel metastatic indicator for melanoma. In a word, vimentin is not only the dignostic marker but also the hematogenous metastasis predictor for melanomas clinically.
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- 2010
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37. Synthesis of Carbazolones via PIFA-Mediated Annulation of 2-Aryl Enaminones.
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BAN, X., PAN, Y., LIN, Y., WANG, S., DU, Y., and ZHAO, K.
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- 2013
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38. Mitigating the Effects of Starch Derivatives on Cold Denaturation of Gluten Protein: Insights from Hydration Capacity and Conformation Behavior.
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Li Y, Kong H, Li C, Ban X, Gu Z, Lu Y, and Li Z
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Mitigating the cold denaturation of gluten protein during frozen storage is crucial for the quality improvement of frozen cereal products. Our previous study observed that starch derivatives, especially short-clustered maltodextrin (SCMD), could significantly improve frozen dough quality, alleviating the deterioration of gluten-network structure. To further reveal the cryoprotection mechanism of SCMD on gluten protein during frozen storage, the modulatory roles of SCMD in the hydration capacity and conformation behavior of gluten protein were explored, in comparison with DE2 maltodextrin (MD) and pregelatinized starch (PGS). Results demonstrated that SCMD significantly facilitated the reservation of bound water and decreased the surface hydrophobicity of gluten protein after 8 weeks of frozen storage. Remarkable effects of SCMD on stabilizing the secondary structure and microenvironment of aromatic amino acids of gluten protein were observed. Further mechanistic investigation showed that when the temperature dropped from 300 to 250 K, the short-clustered structure could stabilize the α-helixes more evidently than linear structures through hydrogen bonds with water and steric hindrance effect, rather than directly with protein. Our findings will provide novel insights into the cold denaturation of gluten protein and useful guidance in selecting the optimum structure to suppress this denaturation, improving the quality of frozen cereal products.
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- 2024
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39. Automated segmentation of brain metastases with deep learning: A multi-center, randomized crossover, multi-reader evaluation study.
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Luo X, Yang Y, Yin S, Li H, Shao Y, Zheng D, Li X, Li J, Fan W, Li J, Ban X, Lian S, Zhang Y, Yang Q, Zhang W, Zhang C, Ma L, Luo Y, Zhou F, Wang S, Lin C, Li J, Luo M, He J, Xu G, Gao Y, Shen D, Sun Y, Mou Y, Zhang R, and Xie C
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Prospective Studies, Adult, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Deep Learning, Cross-Over Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Background: Artificial intelligence has been proposed for brain metastasis (BM) segmentation but it has not been fully clinically validated. The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate a system for BM segmentation., Methods: A deep-learning-based BM segmentation system (BMSS) was developed using contrast-enhanced MR images from 488 patients with 10338 brain metastases. A randomized crossover, multi-reader study was then conducted to evaluate the performance of the BMSS for BM segmentation using data prospectively collected from 50 patients with 203 metastases at 5 centers. Five radiology residents and 5 attending radiologists were randomly assigned to contour the same prospective set in assisted and unassisted modes. Aided and unaided Dice similarity coefficients (DSCs) and contouring times per lesion were compared., Results: The BMSS alone yielded a median DSC of 0.91 (95% confidence interval, 0.90-0.92) in the multi-center set and showed comparable performance between the internal and external sets (P = .67). With BMSS assistance, the readers increased the median DSC from 0.87 (0.87-0.88) to 0.92 (0.92-0.92) (P < .001) with a median time saving of 42% (40-45%) per lesion. Resident readers showed a greater improvement than attending readers in contouring accuracy (improved median DSC, 0.05 [0.05-0.05] vs 0.03 [0.03-0.03]; P < .001), but a similar time reduction (reduced median time, 44% [40-47%] vs 40% [37-44%]; P = .92) with BMSS assistance., Conclusions: The BMSS can be optimally applied to improve the efficiency of brain metastasis delineation in clinical practice., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology.)
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- 2024
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40. Regulatory mechanisms of strigolactone perception in rice.
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Hu Q, Liu H, He Y, Hao Y, Yan J, Liu S, Huang X, Yan Z, Zhang D, Ban X, Zhang H, Li Q, Zhang J, Xin P, Jing Y, Kou L, Sang D, Wang Y, Wang Y, Meng X, Fu X, Chu J, Wang B, and Li J
- Abstract
Strigolactones (SLs) are hormones essential for plant development and environmental responses. SL perception requires the formation of the complex composed of an SL receptor DWARF14 (D14), F-box protein D3, and transcriptional repressor D53, triggering ubiquitination and degradation of D53 to activate signal transduction. However, mechanisms of SL perception and their influence on plant architecture and environmental responses remain elusive and controversial. Here, we report that key residues at interfaces of the AtD14-D3-ASK1 complex are essential for the activation of SL perception, discover that overexpression of the D3-CTH motif negatively regulates SL perception to enhance tillering, and reveal the importance of phosphorylation and N-terminal disordered (NTD) domain in mediating ubiquitination and degradation of D14. Importantly, low nitrogen promotes phosphorylation and stabilization of D14 to repress rice tillering. These findings reveal a panorama of the activation, termination, and regulation of SL perception, which determines the plasticity of plant architecture in complex environments., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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41. Advances in microbial exopolysaccharides as α-amylase inhibitors: Effects, structure-activity relationships, and anti-diabetic effects in vivo.
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Zhang L, Li Z, Kong H, Ban X, Gu Z, Hong Y, Cheng L, and Li C
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- Animals, Structure-Activity Relationship, Humans, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Gastrointestinal Microbiome drug effects, Blood Glucose metabolism, Blood Glucose drug effects, alpha-Amylases antagonists & inhibitors, alpha-Amylases metabolism, Hypoglycemic Agents pharmacology, Hypoglycemic Agents chemistry, Polysaccharides, Bacterial chemistry, Polysaccharides, Bacterial pharmacology
- Abstract
The rapid digestion of starch, as the main source of energy in the human diet, causes an acute increase in blood sugar levels that will affect blood glucose homeostasis. The inhibition of α-amylase activity is an effective way of reducing starch digestibility, thereby controlling postprandial glycemia. As a class of carbohydrate polymers, microbial exopolysaccharides (EPSs) have garnered widespread attention for their inhibitory effects on α-amylase, but there is a lack of comprehensive review in this area. This paper aimed to review the inhibitory activity of microbial EPSs on α-amylase and their interaction mechanisms, and the effect of microbial EPSs on lowering blood glucose levels and regulating glycolipid metabolism in vivo were also discussed. Numerous studies have reported that EPSs with α-amylase inhibition activity are primarily produced by lactic acid bacteria. Microbial EPSs with an appropriate range of molecular weight, high proportion of glucose or mannose or arabinose residues, and high uronic acid content might be acceptable to inhibit α-amylase activity. Additionally, microbial EPSs exhibited potential anti-diabetic effects in mice, reducing blood glucose levels, and regulating glycolipid metabolism and gut microbiota. The information covered in this review may enhance the development and application of EPSs in functional food and pharmaceutical research., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Caiming Li reports financial support was provided by the National Key Research and Development Program of China, the Science and Technology Support Program (Modern Agriculture) of Jiangsu Province. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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42. Enhanced antimicrobial activity against oral bacteria Actinomyces viscous by cinnamaldehyde emulsion microencapsulated with cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase-catalyzed products.
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Chen S, Li J, Li Z, Gu Z, Ban X, Hong Y, Cheng L, and Li C
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- Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Drug Compounding, Actinomyces drug effects, Mouth microbiology, Humans, Catalysis, Glucosyltransferases antagonists & inhibitors, Glucosyltransferases metabolism, Emulsions, Acrolein analogs & derivatives, Acrolein chemistry, Acrolein pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry
- Abstract
Actinomyces viscous (A. viscous) is well documented as a major cariogenic bacterium in the oral cavity and needs to be inhibited and removed timely. Essential oils (EOs) are recognized as secure antibacterial agents for treating oral diseases, but their volatility and insolubility limit their application. In this study, cinnamaldehyde was screened as the optimum EO for inhibiting the A. viscous growth by a micro-agar dilution method and microencapsulated by cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase)-catalyzed products. The antibacterial effects against A. viscous were investigated and compared with the free cinnamaldehyde. Antibacterial diameter, antibacterial efficiency and stability, and time-kill curve results revealed that the cinnamaldehyde emulsion had better antibacterial properties. 1 MIC of the cinnamaldehyde emulsion had an inhibitory zone of 9.92 nm, a 100 % inhibition rate when acting for 2 min or 5 min, and still maintained the same inhibitory effect for 2 years. The extracellular environment showed more pH decrease, conductivity increase, and protein leakage, suggesting damage to the cell membrane. Microstructure and flow cytometric analysis further revealed that the CGTase-catalyzed products induced more changes in the A. viscous membrane integrity. Based on the results, CGTase-catalyzed products can be used as a potential substance for encapsulating EOs for treating oral bacteria., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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43. Increased serum β-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio and aggravated histological liver inflammation in females with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease and polycystic ovary syndrome.
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Zhu X, Aikebaier G, Ban X, Huang Q, Yan H, Chang X, Yang X, Sun X, Tang H, Bian H, Gao X, and Xia M
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- 2024
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44. Cooperative action of non-digestible oligosaccharides improves lipid metabolism of high-fat diet-induced mice.
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Li Y, Kong H, Li C, Gu Z, Ban X, and Li Z
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- Animals, Mice, Male, Insulin Resistance, Weight Gain drug effects, Oligosaccharides pharmacology, Oligosaccharides metabolism, Diet, High-Fat, Lipid Metabolism drug effects, Gastrointestinal Microbiome drug effects, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Obesity metabolism, Obesity diet therapy
- Abstract
Non-digestible oligosaccharides are known to exert health-promoting effects. However, the specific mechanisms by which they regulate host physiology remain unclear. Understanding these mechanisms will facilitate the development of non-digestible oligosaccharide compositions that can achieve synergistic effects. This study selected three representative non-digestible oligosaccharides, namely xylo-oligosaccharides (XOS), galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS), and isomalto-oligosaccharides (IMO), to investigate their effects as dietary interventions on mice fed a high-fat diet. The results demonstrated that XOS and IMO synergistically mitigated weight gain and ectopic lipid deposition. Further analysis revealed that XOS significantly altered the composition of the gut microbiota, while IMO significantly enhanced insulin sensitivity via the PI3K/Akt pathway. Moreover, the combination of XOS and IMO synergistically promoted the oxidation and breakdown of fatty acids and increased the abundance of acetate and propionate-producing bacteria, such as Lactobacillus . These findings suggest a novel strategy for obesity management based on dietary intervention with XOS and IMO.
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- 2024
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45. Effect of different initiators on the properties of diacetone acrylamide grafted starch-based adhesive.
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Wu D, Cheng L, Ma P, Hong Y, Li Z, Li C, Ban X, and Gu Z
- Abstract
Environmentally friendly and non-toxic bio-based adhesives are emerging as the most promising substitutes for petroleum-based adhesives, attracting increasing attention. This work involved the synthesis of a starch-based adhesive for particleboards by grafting diacetone acrylamide (DAAM) onto starch. The graft polymerization was initiated using three different initiators: ammonium persulfate (APS), hydrogen peroxide (H
2 O2 )/ammonium ferrous sulfate system, and ceric ammonium nitrate (CAN). A comparative study was conducted to assess the varying effects of these initiators. The results showed that in the graft copolymerization of starch with DAAM, different initiators produced different types of free radicals, and CAN initiation produced alkyl radicals and long-chain alkyl radicals with a peak total spin value of 3.96 × 1015 , and thus had the highest grafting efficiency and grafting rate of 72.59 % and 16.75 %, respectively. From the comparison of the total number of spins, it can be seen that CAN is more targeted for starch initiation. In addition, characterization results from Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and confocal Raman spectroscopy showed that DAAM underwent a graft copolymerization reaction with starch. Notably, the adhesive initiated by CAN demonstrated the highest water resistance and mechanical strength, with an absorption thickness expansion and static bending strength of 8.52 % and 10.56 MPa, respectively., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no commercial or associative interests that have appeared to inappropriately influence this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2024
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46. Encapsulated TADF macrocycles for high-efficiency solution-processed and flexible organic light-emitting diodes.
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Ban X, Cao Q, Zhang W, Bian W, Yang C, Wang J, Qian Y, Xu H, Tao C, and Jiang W
- Abstract
Macrocyclic thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) emitters have been demonstrated to realize high efficiency OLEDs, but the design concept was still confined to rigid π-conjugated structures. In this work, two macrocyclic TADF emitters, Cy-BNFu and CyEn-BNFu, with a flexible alkyl chain as a linker and bulky aromatic hydrocarbon wrapping units were designed and synthesized. The detailed photophysical analysis demonstrates that the flexible linker significantly enhances the solution-processibility and flexibility of the parent TADF core without sacrificing the radiative transition and high PLQY. Moreover, benefiting from sufficient encapsulation of both horizontal and vertical space, the macrocyclic CyEn-BNFu further isolated the TADF core and inhibited the aggregation caused quenching, which benefits the utilization of triplet excitons. As a result, the non-doped solution-processed OLEDs based on CyEn-BNFu exhibit high maximum external quantum efficiencies (EQE) up to 32.3%, which were 3 times higher than those of the devices based on the parent molecule. In particular, these macrocyclic TADF emitters ensure the fabrication of flexible OLEDs with higher brightness, color purity and bending resistance. This work opens a way to construct macrocyclic TADF emitters with a flexible alkyl chain linker and highlights the benefits of such encapsulated macrocycles for optimizing the performance of flexible solution-processed devices., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
- Published
- 2024
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47. Proportion, Correlates and the Associations of Meeting 24-h Movement Guidelines With Mental Well-Being and Psychological Distress: A Cross-Sectional Study of 10 589 Chinese Students.
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Zhang H, Sheng J, Yue X, Lou H, Ban X, Wu W, Li R, Gao G, Wang C, Lou X, and Wang X
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, China, Adolescent, Psychological Distress, Sleep, Surveys and Questionnaires, Child, Sex Factors, Stress, Psychological, Guidelines as Topic, East Asian People, Mental Health, Students psychology, Screen Time, Exercise psychology
- Abstract
Background: The increased trends in psychological distress and mental illness have been of great significance in public health concerns. The study aimed to investigate the proportion and correlates of meeting 24-h movement guidelines (including moderate to vigorous physical activity, screen time and sleep duration) and the associations between 24-h movement guidelines met and mental well-being and psychological distress in a large sample of Chinese students., Methods: All participants received a physical examination and filled out questionnaires in this study. Chi-square tests were used to analyse the proportion of reaching 24-h guidelines by gender and logistic regression was used to analyse correlates of meeting 24-h guidelines. Two binary logistic regression models were used to analyse the association between meeting 24-h guidelines and mental well-being and psychological distress. The back-propagation artificial neural network was used to describe the importance of the independent variables., Results: The findings revealed a generally low rate of meeting the 24-h movement guidelines, particularly concerning moderate to vigorous physical activity (16.5%). Meeting all three guidelines was related to better mental health in both boys and girls. Particularly, meeting screen time guideline and meeting sleep duration guideline appeared to be more important on mental outcomes, compared to meeting moderate to vigorous physical activity guideline. Compared with boys, girls were more susceptible to the influences of 24-h movement guidelines on mental health., Conclusions: Meeting all three components of the 24-h movement guidelines was associated with the most favourable mental health outcomes for both boys and girls. Thus, maintaining a daily balance of sufficient physical activity, limited screen time, and adequate sleep is crucial for enhancing the mental health status of students., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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48. Tetraphenylborate enhanced enzymatic production of γ-cyclodextrin: System construction and its mechanism.
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Jiang Z, Xiao Y, Xu Z, Gu Z, Li Z, Ban X, Hong Y, Cheng L, and Li C
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- Starch chemistry, Starch metabolism, Manihot chemistry, gamma-Cyclodextrins chemistry, gamma-Cyclodextrins metabolism, Molecular Docking Simulation, Bacillus enzymology, Borates chemistry, Glucosyltransferases metabolism, Glucosyltransferases chemistry
- Abstract
γ-Cyclodextrin (γ-CD) is an attractive material among the natural cyclodextrins owing to its excellent properties. γ-CD is primarily produced from starch by γ-cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (γ-CGTase) in a controlled system. However, difficulty in separation and low conversion rate leads to high production costs for γ-CD. In this study, γ-CGTase from Bacillus sp. G-825-6 STB17 was used in γ-CD production from cassava starch. With the introduction of sodium tetraphenylborate (NaBPh
4 ), the total conversion rate was promoted from an initial 18.07 % to 50.49 % and the γ-CD ratio reached 78.81 % with a yield of 39.79 g/L. Furthermore, the mechanism was conducted via the determination of binding constant, which indicated that γ-CD exhibited much stronger binding strength with NaBPh4 than β-CD. The reformation of water molecules and the chaotropic effect might be the main driving forces for the interaction. Additionally, the conformations of CD complexes were depicted by NMR and molecular docking. The results further verified different binding patterns between CDs and tetraphenylborate ions, which might be the primary reason for the specific binding. This system not only guides γ-CD production with an efficient and easy-to-remove production aid but also offers a new perspective on the selection of complexing agents in CD production., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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49. Enantioselective [2 + 2] Photocycloreversion Enables De Novo Deracemization Synthesis of Cyclobutanes.
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Wang J, Fu Q, Cao S, Lv X, Yin Y, Ban X, Zhao X, and Jiang Z
- Abstract
While photochemical deracemization significantly enhances atom economy by eliminating the necessity for additional oxidants or reductants, the laborious presynthesis of substrates from feedstock chemicals is often required, thereby compromising the practicality of this method. In this study, we propose a novel approach known as de novo deracemization synthesis, which involves direct utilization of simple substrates undergoing both photochemical transformation and reversible photochemical transformation. The efficient enantiocontrol of chiral catalysts in the latter process establishes an effective platform for deracemization. This alternative and practical approach to address the challenges of asymmetric photocatalysis has been successfully demonstrated in the photosensitized de novo deracemization synthesis of azaarene-functionalized cyclobutanes featuring three stereocenters, including an all-carbon quaternary center. By exclusively employing a suitable chiral catalyst to enable kinetically controlled [2 + 2] photocycloreversion, we pave a creative path toward achieving more cost-effective photochemical deracemization.
- Published
- 2024
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50. CT and MRI features of sarcomatoid urothelial carcinoma of the bladder and its differential diagnosis with conventional urothelial carcinoma.
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Zhuo J, Han J, Yang L, Wang Y, Shi G, Yan Z, Yang L, Han R, Huang F, Ban X, and Duan X
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- Humans, Diagnosis, Differential, Male, Female, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Adult, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Carcinoma, Transitional Cell diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Transitional Cell pathology
- Abstract
Background: Sarcomatoid urothelial carcinoma (SUC) is a rare and highly malignant form of bladder cancer with a poor prognosis. Currently, there is limited information on the imaging features of bladder SUC and reliable indicators for distinguishing it from conventional urothelial carcinoma (CUC). The objective of our study was to identify the unique imaging characteristics of bladder SUC and determine factors that aid in its differential diagnosis., Materials and Methods: This retrospective study enrolled 22 participants with bladder SUC and 61 participants with CUC. The clinical, pathologic, and CT/MRI data from both groups were recorded, and a comparison was conducted using univariate analysis and multinomial logistic regression for distinguishing SUC from CUC., Results: The majority of SUCs were located in the trigone of the bladder and exhibited large tumor size, irregular shape, low ADC values, Vesical Imaging-Reporting and Data System (VI-RADS) score ≥ 4, the presence of necrosis, and an invasive nature. Univariate analysis revealed significant differences in terms of tumor location, shape, the maximum long-axis diameter (LAD), the short-axis diameter (SAD), ADC-value, VI-RADS scores, necrosis, extravesical extension (EVE), pelvic peritoneal spread (PPS), and hydronephrosis/ureteral effusion (p < .001 ~ p = .037) between SUCs and CUCs. Multinomial logistic regression found that only SAD (p = .014) and necrosis (p = .003) emerged as independent predictors for differentiating between SUC and CUC. The model based on these two factors achieved an area under curve (AUC) of 0.849 in ROC curve analysis., Conclusion: Bladder SUC demonstrates several distinct imaging features, including a high incidence of trigone involvement, large tumor size, and obvious invasiveness accompanied by necrosis. A bladder tumor with a large SAD and evidence of necrosis is more likely to be SUC rather than CUC., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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