998 resultados para source parameters
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This letter presents advanced classification methods for very high resolution images. Efficient multisource information, both spectral and spatial, is exploited through the use of composite kernels in support vector machines. Weighted summations of kernels accounting for separate sources of spectral and spatial information are analyzed and compared to classical approaches such as pure spectral classification or stacked approaches using all the features in a single vector. Model selection problems are addressed, as well as the importance of the different kernels in the weighted summation.
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Résumé Des développements antérieurs, au sein de l'Institut de Géophysique de Lausanne, ont permis de développer des techniques d'acquisition sismique et de réaliser l'interprétation des données sismique 2D et 3D pour étudier la géologie de la région et notamment les différentes séquences sédimentaires du Lac Léman. Pour permettre un interprétation quantitative de la sismique en déterminant des paramètres physiques des sédiments la méthode AVO (Amplitude Versus Offset) a été appliquée. Deux campagnes sismiques lacustres, 2D et 3D, ont été acquises afin de tester la méthode AVO dans le Grand Lac sur les deltas des rivières. La géométrie d'acquisition a été repensée afin de pouvoir enregistrer les données à grands déports. Les flûtes sismiques, mises bout à bout, ont permis d'atteindre des angles d'incidence d'environ 40˚ . Des récepteurs GPS spécialement développés à cet effet, et disposés le long de la flûte, ont permis, après post-traitement des données, de déterminer la position de la flûte avec précision (± 0.5 m). L'étalonnage de nos hydrophones, réalisé dans une chambre anéchoïque, a permis de connaître leur réponse en amplitude en fonction de la fréquence. Une variation maximale de 10 dB a été mis en évidence entre les capteurs des flûtes et le signal de référence. Un traitement sismique dont l'amplitude a été conservée a été appliqué sur les données du lac. L'utilisation de l'algorithme en surface en consistante a permis de corriger les variations d'amplitude des tirs du canon à air. Les sections interceptes et gradients obtenues sur les deltas de l'Aubonne et de la Dranse ont permis de produire des cross-plots. Cette représentation permet de classer les anomalies d'amplitude en fonction du type de sédiments et de leur contenu potentiel en gaz. L'un des attributs qui peut être extrait des données 3D, est l'amplitude de la réflectivité d'une interface sismique. Ceci ajoute une composante quantitative à l'interprétation géologique d'une interface. Le fond d'eau sur le delta de l'Aubonne présente des anomalies en amplitude qui caractérisent les chenaux. L'inversion de l'équation de Zoeppritz par l'algorithme de Levenberg-Marquardt a été programmée afin d'extraire les paramètres physiques des sédiments sur ce delta. Une étude statistique des résultats de l'inversion permet de simuler la variation de l'amplitude en fonction du déport. On a obtenu un modèle dont la première couche est l'eau et dont la seconde est une couche pour laquelle V P = 1461 m∕s, ρ = 1182 kg∕m3 et V S = 383 m∕s. Abstract A system to record very high resolution (VHR) seismic data on lakes in 2D and 3D was developed at the Institute of Geophysics, University of Lausanne. Several seismic surveys carried out on Lake Geneva helped us to better understand the geology of the area and to identify sedimentary sequences. However, more sophisticated analysis of the data such as the AVO (Amplitude Versus Offset) method provides means of deciphering the detailed structure of the complex Quaternary sedimentary fill of the Lake Geneva trough. To study the physical parameters we applied the AVO method at some selected places of sediments. These areas are the Aubonne and Dranse River deltas where the configurations of the strata are relatively smooth and the discontinuities between them easy to pick. A specific layout was developed to acquire large incidence angle. 2D and 3D seismic data were acquired with streamers, deployed end to end, providing incidence angle up to 40˚ . One or more GPS antennas attached to the streamer enabled us to calculate individual hydrophone positions with an accuracy of 50 cm after post-processing of the navigation data. To ensure that our system provides correct amplitude information, our streamer sensors were calibrated in an anechoic chamber using a loudspeaker as a source. Amplitude variations between the each hydrophone were of the order of 10 dB. An amplitude correction for each hydrophone was computed and applied before processing. Amplitude preserving processing was then carried out. Intercept vs. gradient cross-plots enable us to determine that both geological discontinuities (lacustrine sediments/moraine and moraine/molasse) have well defined trends. A 3D volume collected on the Aubonne river delta was processed in order ro obtain AVO attributes. Quantitative interpretation using amplitude maps were produced and amplitude maps revealed high reflectivity in channels. Inversion of the water bottom of the Zoeppritz equation using the Levenberg-Marquadt algorithm was carried out to estimate V P , V S and ρ of sediments immediately under the lake bottom. Real-data inversion gave, under the water layer, a mud layer with V P = 1461 m∕s, ρ = 1182 kg∕m3 et V S = 383 m∕s.
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The goal of this study was to investigate the impact of computing parameters and the location of volumes of interest (VOI) on the calculation of 3D noise power spectrum (NPS) in order to determine an optimal set of computing parameters and propose a robust method for evaluating the noise properties of imaging systems. Noise stationarity in noise volumes acquired with a water phantom on a 128-MDCT and a 320-MDCT scanner were analyzed in the spatial domain in order to define locally stationary VOIs. The influence of the computing parameters in the 3D NPS measurement: the sampling distances bx,y,z and the VOI lengths Lx,y,z, the number of VOIs NVOI and the structured noise were investigated to minimize measurement errors. The effect of the VOI locations on the NPS was also investigated. Results showed that the noise (standard deviation) varies more in the r-direction (phantom radius) than z-direction plane. A 25 × 25 × 40 mm(3) VOI associated with DFOV = 200 mm (Lx,y,z = 64, bx,y = 0.391 mm with 512 × 512 matrix) and a first-order detrending method to reduce structured noise led to an accurate NPS estimation. NPS estimated from off centered small VOIs had a directional dependency contrary to NPS obtained from large VOIs located in the center of the volume or from small VOIs located on a concentric circle. This showed that the VOI size and location play a major role in the determination of NPS when images are not stationary. This study emphasizes the need for consistent measurement methods to assess and compare image quality in CT.
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The objective of this work was to estimate the genetic parameters and variability among accessions (half-sib families) of physic nut (Jatropha curcas) during the early stages of development. For this study, 110 accessions in the first year of development of the physic nut germplasm bank, maintained at Embrapa Cerrados, DF, Brazil, were evaluated in situ. The experiment was established in a randomized complete block design, with two replicates and five plants per plot arranged in rows at 4x2 m spacing. Grain yield, total number of branches per plant, plant height, stem diameter, canopy projection on the row, canopy projection between rows, canopy volume, number of days until first flowering and height of the first inflorescence were evaluated. Estimates of vegetative genetic parameters showed the existence of genetic variability in the physic nut germplasm bank. Physic nut accessions of the germplasm bank were grouped into five similarity groups based on character divergence. Although preliminary, the obtained results are promising for showing potential for Jatropha improvement with selective efficiency.
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The ability of a population to adapt to changing environments depends critically on the amount and kind of genetic variability it possesses. Mutations are an important source of new genetic variability and may lead to new adaptations, especially if the population size is large. Mutation rates are extremely variable between and within species, and males usually have higher mutation rates as a result of elevated rates of male germ cell division. This male bias affects the overall mutation rate. We examined the factors that influence male mutation bias, and focused on the effects of classical life-history parameters, such as the average age at reproduction and elevated rates of sperm production in response to sexual selection and sperm competition. We argue that human-induced changes in age at reproduction or in sexual selection will affect male mutation biases and hence overall mutation rates. Depending on the effective population size, these changes are likely to influence the long-term persistence of a population.
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The objective of this study was to estimate genetic parameters for survival and weight of Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), farmed in cages and ponds in Brazil, and to predict genetic gain under different scenarios. Survival was recorded as a binary response (dead or alive), during harvest time in the 2008 grow-out period. Genetic parameters were estimated using a Bayesian mixed linear-threshold animal model via Gibbs sampling. The breeding population consisted of 2,912 individual fish, which were analyzed together with the pedigree of 5,394 fish. The heritabilities estimates, with 95% posterior credible intervals, for tagging weight, harvest weight and survival were 0.17 (0.09-0.27), 0.21 (0.12-0.32) and 0.32 (0.22-0.44), respectively. Credible intervals show a 95% probability that the true genetic correlations were in a favourable direction. The selection for weight has a positive impact on survival. Estimated genetic gain was high when selecting for harvest weight (5.07%), and indirect gain for tagging weight (2.17%) and survival (2.03%) were also considerable.
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Abstract
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This project was undertaken to study the relationships between the performance of locally available asphalts and their physicochemical properties under Iowa conditions with the ultimate objective of development of a locally and performance-based asphalt specification for durable pavements. Physical and physicochemical tests were performed on three sets of asphalt samples including: (a) twelve samples from local asphalt suppliers and their TFOT residues, (b) six core samples of known service records, and (c) a total of 79 asphalts from 10 pavement projects including original, lab aged and recovered asphalts from field mixes, as well as from lab aged mixes. Tests included standard rheological tests, HP-GPC and TMA. Some specific viscoelastic tests (at 5 deg C) were run on b samples and on some a samples. DSC and X-ray diffraction studies were performed on a and b samples. Furthermore, NMR techniques were applied to some a, b and c samples. Efforts were made to identify physicochemical properties which are correlated to physical properties known to affect field performance. The significant physicochemical parameters were used as a basis for an improved performance-based trial specification for Iowa to ensure more durable pavements.
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Les catastrophes sont souvent perçues comme des événements rapides et aléatoires. Si les déclencheurs peuvent être soudains, les catastrophes, elles, sont le résultat d'une accumulation des conséquences d'actions et de décisions inappropriées ainsi que du changement global. Pour modifier cette perception du risque, des outils de sensibilisation sont nécessaires. Des méthodes quantitatives ont été développées et ont permis d'identifier la distribution et les facteurs sous- jacents du risque.¦Le risque de catastrophes résulte de l'intersection entre aléas, exposition et vulnérabilité. La fréquence et l'intensité des aléas peuvent être influencées par le changement climatique ou le déclin des écosystèmes, la croissance démographique augmente l'exposition, alors que l'évolution du niveau de développement affecte la vulnérabilité. Chacune de ses composantes pouvant changer, le risque est dynamique et doit être réévalué périodiquement par les gouvernements, les assurances ou les agences de développement. Au niveau global, ces analyses sont souvent effectuées à l'aide de base de données sur les pertes enregistrées. Nos résultats montrent que celles-ci sont susceptibles d'être biaisées notamment par l'amélioration de l'accès à l'information. Elles ne sont pas exhaustives et ne donnent pas d'information sur l'exposition, l'intensité ou la vulnérabilité. Une nouvelle approche, indépendante des pertes reportées, est donc nécessaire.¦Les recherches présentées ici ont été mandatées par les Nations Unies et par des agences oeuvrant dans le développement et l'environnement (PNUD, l'UNISDR, la GTZ, le PNUE ou l'UICN). Ces organismes avaient besoin d'une évaluation quantitative sur les facteurs sous-jacents du risque, afin de sensibiliser les décideurs et pour la priorisation des projets de réduction des risques de désastres.¦La méthode est basée sur les systèmes d'information géographique, la télédétection, les bases de données et l'analyse statistique. Une importante quantité de données (1,7 Tb) et plusieurs milliers d'heures de calculs ont été nécessaires. Un modèle de risque global a été élaboré pour révéler la distribution des aléas, de l'exposition et des risques, ainsi que pour l'identification des facteurs de risque sous- jacent de plusieurs aléas (inondations, cyclones tropicaux, séismes et glissements de terrain). Deux indexes de risque multiples ont été générés pour comparer les pays. Les résultats incluent une évaluation du rôle de l'intensité de l'aléa, de l'exposition, de la pauvreté, de la gouvernance dans la configuration et les tendances du risque. Il apparaît que les facteurs de vulnérabilité changent en fonction du type d'aléa, et contrairement à l'exposition, leur poids décroît quand l'intensité augmente.¦Au niveau local, la méthode a été testée pour mettre en évidence l'influence du changement climatique et du déclin des écosystèmes sur l'aléa. Dans le nord du Pakistan, la déforestation induit une augmentation de la susceptibilité des glissements de terrain. Les recherches menées au Pérou (à base d'imagerie satellitaire et de collecte de données au sol) révèlent un retrait glaciaire rapide et donnent une évaluation du volume de glace restante ainsi que des scénarios sur l'évolution possible.¦Ces résultats ont été présentés à des publics différents, notamment en face de 160 gouvernements. Les résultats et les données générées sont accessibles en ligne (http://preview.grid.unep.ch). La méthode est flexible et facilement transposable à des échelles et problématiques différentes, offrant de bonnes perspectives pour l'adaptation à d'autres domaines de recherche.¦La caractérisation du risque au niveau global et l'identification du rôle des écosystèmes dans le risque de catastrophe est en plein développement. Ces recherches ont révélés de nombreux défis, certains ont été résolus, d'autres sont restés des limitations. Cependant, il apparaît clairement que le niveau de développement configure line grande partie des risques de catastrophes. La dynamique du risque est gouvernée principalement par le changement global.¦Disasters are often perceived as fast and random events. If the triggers may be sudden, disasters are the result of an accumulation of actions, consequences from inappropriate decisions and from global change. To modify this perception of risk, advocacy tools are needed. Quantitative methods have been developed to identify the distribution and the underlying factors of risk.¦Disaster risk is resulting from the intersection of hazards, exposure and vulnerability. The frequency and intensity of hazards can be influenced by climate change or by the decline of ecosystems. Population growth increases the exposure, while changes in the level of development affect the vulnerability. Given that each of its components may change, the risk is dynamic and should be reviewed periodically by governments, insurance companies or development agencies. At the global level, these analyses are often performed using databases on reported losses. Our results show that these are likely to be biased in particular by improvements in access to information. International losses databases are not exhaustive and do not give information on exposure, the intensity or vulnerability. A new approach, independent of reported losses, is necessary.¦The researches presented here have been mandated by the United Nations and agencies working in the development and the environment (UNDP, UNISDR, GTZ, UNEP and IUCN). These organizations needed a quantitative assessment of the underlying factors of risk, to raise awareness amongst policymakers and to prioritize disaster risk reduction projects.¦The method is based on geographic information systems, remote sensing, databases and statistical analysis. It required a large amount of data (1.7 Tb of data on both the physical environment and socio-economic parameters) and several thousand hours of processing were necessary. A comprehensive risk model was developed to reveal the distribution of hazards, exposure and risk, and to identify underlying risk factors. These were performed for several hazards (e.g. floods, tropical cyclones, earthquakes and landslides). Two different multiple risk indexes were generated to compare countries. The results include an evaluation of the role of the intensity of the hazard, exposure, poverty, governance in the pattern and trends of risk. It appears that the vulnerability factors change depending on the type of hazard, and contrary to the exposure, their weight decreases as the intensity increases.¦Locally, the method was tested to highlight the influence of climate change and the ecosystems decline on the hazard. In northern Pakistan, deforestation exacerbates the susceptibility of landslides. Researches in Peru (based on satellite imagery and ground data collection) revealed a rapid glacier retreat and give an assessment of the remaining ice volume as well as scenarios of possible evolution.¦These results were presented to different audiences, including in front of 160 governments. The results and data generated are made available online through an open source SDI (http://preview.grid.unep.ch). The method is flexible and easily transferable to different scales and issues, with good prospects for adaptation to other research areas. The risk characterization at a global level and identifying the role of ecosystems in disaster risk is booming. These researches have revealed many challenges, some were resolved, while others remained limitations. However, it is clear that the level of development, and more over, unsustainable development, configures a large part of disaster risk and that the dynamics of risk is primarily governed by global change.
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As modern molecular biology moves towards the analysis of biological systems as opposed to their individual components, the need for appropriate mathematical and computational techniques for understanding the dynamics and structure of such systems is becoming more pressing. For example, the modeling of biochemical systems using ordinary differential equations (ODEs) based on high-throughput, time-dense profiles is becoming more common-place, which is necessitating the development of improved techniques to estimate model parameters from such data. Due to the high dimensionality of this estimation problem, straight-forward optimization strategies rarely produce correct parameter values, and hence current methods tend to utilize genetic/evolutionary algorithms to perform non-linear parameter fitting. Here, we describe a completely deterministic approach, which is based on interval analysis. This allows us to examine entire sets of parameters, and thus to exhaust the global search within a finite number of steps. In particular, we show how our method may be applied to a generic class of ODEs used for modeling biochemical systems called Generalized Mass Action Models (GMAs). In addition, we show that for GMAs our method is amenable to the technique in interval arithmetic called constraint propagation, which allows great improvement of its efficiency. To illustrate the applicability of our method we apply it to some networks of biochemical reactions appearing in the literature, showing in particular that, in addition to estimating system parameters in the absence of noise, our method may also be used to recover the topology of these networks.
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Hsp70-Hsp40-NEF and possibly Hsp100 are the only known molecular chaperones that can use the energy of ATP to convert stably pre-aggregated polypeptides into natively refolded proteins. However, the kinetic parameters and ATP costs have remained elusive because refolding reactions have only been successful with a molar excess of chaperones over their polypeptide substrates. Here we describe a stable, misfolded luciferase species that can be efficiently renatured by substoichiometric amounts of bacterial Hsp70-Hsp40-NEF. The reactivation rates increased with substrate concentration and followed saturation kinetics, thus allowing the determination of apparent V(max)' and K(m)' values for a chaperone-mediated renaturation reaction for the first time. Under the in vitro conditions used, one Hsp70 molecule consumed five ATPs to effectively unfold a single misfolded protein into an intermediate that, upon chaperone dissociation, spontaneously refolded to the native state, a process with an ATP cost a thousand times lower than expected for protein degradation and resynthesis.
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Understanding the emplacement and growth of intrusive bodies in terms of mechanism, duration, ther¬mal evolution and rates are fundamental aspects of crustal evolution. Recent studies show that many plutons grow in several Ma by in situ accretion of discrete magma pulses, which constitute small-scale magmatic reservoirs. The residence time of magmas, and hence their capacities to interact and differentiate, are con¬trolled by the local thermal environment. The latter is highly dependant on 1) the emplacement depth, 2) the magmas and country rock composition, 3) the country rock thermal conductivity, 4) the rate of magma injection and 5) the geometry of the intrusion. In shallow level plutons, where magmas solidify quickly, evi¬dence for magma mixing and/or differentiation processes is considered by many authors to be inherited from deeper levels. This work shows however that in-situ differentiation and magma interactions occurred within basaltic and felsic sills at shallow depth (0.3 GPa) in the St-Jean-du-Doigt (SJDD) bimodal intrusion, France. This intrusion emplaced ca. 347 Ma ago (IDTIMS U/Pb on zircon) in the Precambrian crust of the Armori- can massif and preserves remarkable sill-like emplacement processes of bimodal mafic-felsic magmas. Field evidence coupled to high precision zircon U-Pb dating document progressive thermal maturation within the incrementally built ioppolith. Early m-thick mafic sills (eastern part) form the roof of the intrusion and are homogeneous and fine-grained with planar contacts with neighboring felsic sills; within a minimal 0.8 Ma time span, the system gets warmer (western part). Sills are emplaced by under-accretion under the old east¬ern part, interact and mingle. A striking feature of this younger, warmer part is in-situ differentiation of the mafic sills in the top 40 cm of the layer, which suggests liquids survival in the shallow crust. Rheological and thermal models were performed in order to determine the parameters required to allow this observed in- situ differentiation-accumulation processes. Strong constraints such as total emplacement durations (ca. 0.8 Ma, TIMS date) and pluton thickness (1.5 Km, gravity model) allow a quantitative estimation of the various parameters required (injection rates, incubation time,...). The results show that in-situ differentiation may be achieved in less than 10 years at such shallow depth, provided that: (1) The differentiating sills are injected beneath consolidated, yet still warm basalt sills, which act as low conductive insulating screens (eastern part formation in the SJDD intrusion). The latter are emplaced in a very short time (800 years) at high injection rate (0.5 m/y) in order to create a "hot zone" in the shallow crust (incubation time). This implies that nearly 1/3 of the pluton (400m) is emplaced by a subsequent and sustained magmatic activity occurring on a short time scale at the very beginning of the system. (2) Once incubation time is achieved, the calculations show that a small hot zone is created at the base of the sill pile, where new injections stay above their solidus T°C and may interact and differentiate. Extraction of differentiated residual liquids might eventually take place and mix with newly injected magma as documented in active syn-emplacement shear-zones within the "warm" part of the pluton. (3) Finally, the model show that in order to maintain a permanent hot zone at shallow level, injection rate must be of 0.03 m/y with injection of 5m thick basaltic sills eveiy 130yr, imply¬ing formation of a 15 km thick pluton. As this thickness is in contradiction with the one calculated for SJDD (1.5 Km) and exceed much the average thickness observed for many shallow level plutons, I infer that there is no permanent hot zone (or magma chambers) at such shallow level. I rather propose formation of small, ephemeral (10-15yr) reservoirs, which represent only small portions of the final size of the pluton. Thermal calculations show that, in the case of SJDD, 5m thick basaltic sills emplaced every 1500 y, allow formation of such ephemeral reservoirs. The latter are formed by several sills, which are in a mushy state and may interact and differentiate during a short time.The mineralogical, chemical and isotopic data presented in this study suggest a signature intermediate be¬tween E-MORB- and arc-like for the SJDD mafic sills and feeder dykes. The mantle source involved produced hydrated magmas and may be astenosphere modified by "arc-type" components, probably related to a sub¬ducting slab. Combined fluid mobile/immobile trace elements and Sr-Nd isotopes suggest that such subduc¬tion components are mainly fluids derived from altered oceanic crust with minor effect from the subducted sediments. Close match between the SJDD compositions and BABB may point to a continental back-arc setting with little crustal contamination. If so, the SjDD intrusion is a major witness of an extensional tectonic regime during the Early-Carboniferous, linked to the subduction of the Rheno-Hercynian Ocean beneath the Variscan terranes. Also of interest is the unusual association of cogenetic (same isotopic compositions) K-feldspar A- type granite and albite-granite. A-type granites may form by magma mixing between the mafic magma and crustal melts. Alternatively, they might derive from the melting of a biotite-bearing quartz-feldspathic crustal protolith triggered by early mafic injections at low crustal levels. Albite-granite may form by plagioclase cu¬mulate remelting issued from A-type magma differentiation.
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Bone marrow-derived endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) infiltrate into sites of neovascularization in adult tissues and mature into functional blood endothelial cells (BECs) during a process called vasculogenesis. Human marrow-derived EPCs have recently been reported to display a mixed myeloid and lymphatic endothelial cell (LEC) phenotype during inflammation-induced angiogenesis; however, their role in cancer remains poorly understood. We report the in vitro differentiation of human cord blood CD133(+)CD34(+) progenitors into podoplanin(+) cells expressing both myeloid markers (CD11b, CD14) and the canonical LEC markers vascular endothelium growth factor receptor 3 (VEGFR-3), lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (LYVE-1), and prospero homeobox 1 (PROX-1). These podoplanin(+) cells displayed sprouting behavior comparable to that of LECs in vitro and a dual hemangiogenic and lymphangiogenic activity in vivo in an endothelial cell sprouting assay and corneal vascularization assay, respectively. Furthermore, these cells expressed vascular endothelium growth factor (VEGF) family members A, -C, and -D. Thus, bone-marrow derived EPCs stimulate hemangiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis through their ability to differentiate into LECs and to produce angiogenic factors. Importantly, plasma from patients with breast cancer induced differentiation of CD34(+) cord blood progenitors into hemangiogenic and lymphangiogenic CD11b(+) myeloid cells, whereas plasma from healthy women did not have this effect. Consistent with these findings, circulating CD11b(+) cells from breast cancer patients, but not from healthy women, displayed a similar dual angiogenic activity. Taken together, our results show that marrow-derived EPCs become hemangiogenic and lymphangiogenic upon exposure to cancer plasma. These newly identified functions of bone-marrow derived EPCs are expected to influence the diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer.
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The world-class Idrija mercury deposit (western Slovenia) is hosted by highly deformed Permocarboniferous to Middle Triassic sedimentary rocks within a complex tectonic structure at the transition between the External Dinarides and the Southern Alps. Concordant and discordant mineralization formed concomitant with Middle Triassic bimodal volcanism in an aborted rift. A multiple isotopic (C, O, S) investigation of host rocks and ore minerals was performed to put constraints on the source and composition of the fluid, and the hydrothermal alteration. The distributions of the delta(13)C and delta(18)O values of host and gangue carbonates are indicative of a fracture-controlled hydrothermal system, with locally high fluid-rock ratios. Quantitative modeling of the delta(13)C and delta(18)O covariation for host carbonates during temperature dependent fluid-rock interaction, and concomitant precipitation of void-filling dolomites points to a slightly acidic hydrothermal fluid (delta(13)Capproximate to-4parts per thousand and delta(18)Oapproximate to+10parts per thousand), which most likely evolved during isotopic exchange with carbonates under low fluid/rock ratios. The delta(34)S values of hydrothermal and sedimentary sulfur minerals were used to re-evaluate the previously proposed magmatic and evaporitic sulfur sources for the mineralization, and to assess the importance of other possible sulfur sources such as the contemporaneous seawater sulfate, sedimentary pyrite, and organic sulfur compounds. The delta(34)S values of the sulfides show a large variation at deposit down to hand-specimen scale. They range for cinnabar and pyrite from -19.1 to +22.8parts per thousand, and from -22.4 to +59.6parts per thousand, respectively, suggesting mixing of sulfur from different sources. The peak of delta(34)S values of cinnabar and pyrite close to 0parts per thousand is compatible with ore sulfur derived dominantly from a magmatic fluid and/or from hydrothermal leaching of basement rocks. The similar stratigraphic trends of the delta(34)S values of both cinnabar and pyrite suggest a minor contribution of sedimentary sulfur (pyrite and organic sulfur) to the ore formation. Some of the positive delta(34)S values are probably derived from thermochemical reduction of evaporitic and contemporaneous seawater sulfates.
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ABSTRACT (English)An accurate processing of the order between sensory events at the millisecond time scale is crucial for both sensori-motor and cognitive functions. Temporal order judgment (TOJ) tasks, is the ability of discriminating the order of presentation of several stimuli presented in a rapid succession. The aim of the present thesis is to further investigate the spatio-temporal brain mechanisms supporting TOJ. In three studies we focus on the dependency of TOJ accuracy on the brain states preceding the presentation of TOJ stimuli, the neural correlates of accurate vs. inaccurate TOJ and whether and how TOJ performance can be improved with training.In "Pre-stimulus beta oscillations within left posterior sylvian regions impact auditory temporal order judgment accuracy" (Bernasconi et al., 2011), we investigated if the brain activity immediately preceding the presentation of the stimuli modulates TOJ performance. By contrasting the electrophysiological activity before the stimulus presentation as a function of TOJ accuracy we observed a stronger pre-stimulus beta (20Hz) oscillatory activity within the left posterior sylvian region (PSR) before accurate than inaccurate TOJ trials.In "Interhemispheric coupling between the posterior sylvian regions impacts successful auditory temporal order judgment" (Bernasconi et al., 2010a), and "Plastic brain mechanisms for attaining auditory temporal order judgment proficiency" (Bernasconi et al., 2010b), we investigated the spatio-temporal brain dynamics underlying auditory TOJ. In both studies we observed a topographic modulation as a function of TOJ performance at ~40ms after the onset of the first sound, indicating the engagement of distinct configurations of intracranial generators. Source estimations in the first study revealed a bilateral PSR activity for both accurate and inaccurate TOJ trials. Moreover, activity within left, but not right, PSR correlated with TOJ performance. Source estimations in the second study revealed a training-induced left lateralization of the initial bilateral (i.e. PSR) brain response. Moreover, the activity within the left PSR region correlated with TOJ performance.Based on these results, we suggest that a "temporal stamp" is established within left PSR on the first sound within the pair at early stages (i.e. ~40ms) of cortical processes, but is critically modulated by inputs from right PSR (Bernasconi et al., 2010a; b). The "temporal stamp" on the first sound may be established via a sensory gating or prior entry mechanism.Behavioral and brain responses to identical stimuli can vary due to attention modulation, vary with experimental and task parameters or "internal noise". In a fourth experiment (Bernasconi et al., 2011b) we investigated where and when "neural noise" manifest during the stimulus processing. Contrasting the AEPs of identical sound perceived as High vs. Low pitch, a topographic modulation occurred at ca. 100ms after the onset of the sound. Source estimation revealed activity within regions compatible with pitch discrimination. Thus, we provided neurophysiological evidence for the variation in perception induced by "neural noise".ABSTRACT (French)Un traitement précis de l'ordre des événements sensoriels sur une échelle de temps de milliseconde est crucial pour les fonctions sensori-motrices et cognitives. Les tâches de jugement d'ordre temporel (JOT), consistant à présenter plusieurs stimuli en succession rapide, sont traditionnellement employées pour étudier les mécanismes neuronaux soutenant le traitement d'informations sensorielles qui varient rapidement. Le but de cette thèse est d'étudier le mécanisme cérébral soutenant JOT. Dans les trois études présentées nous nous sommes concentrés sur les états du cerveau précédant la présentation des stimuli de JOT, les bases neurales pour un JOT correct vs. incorrect et sur la possibilité et les moyens d'améliorer l'exécution du JOT grâce à un entraînement.Dans "Pre-stimulus beta oscillations within left posterior sylvian regions impact auditory temporal order judgment accuracy" (Bernasconi et al., 2011),, nous nous sommes intéressé à savoir si l'activité oscillatoire du cerveau au pré-stimulus modulait la performance du JOT. Nous avons contrasté l'activité électrophysiologique en fonction de la performance TOJ, mesurant une activité oscillatoire beta au pré-stimulus plus fort dans la région sylvian postérieure gauche (PSR) liée à un JOT correct.Dans "Interhemispheric coupling between the posterior sylvian regions impacts successful auditory temporal order judgment" (Bernasconi et al., 2010a), et "Plastic brain mechanisms for attaining auditory temporal order judgment proficiency" (Bernasconi et al., 2010b), nous avons étudié la dynamique spatio-temporelle dans le cerveau impliqué dans le traitement du JOT auditif. Dans ses deux études, nous avons observé une modulation topographique à ~40ms après le début du premier son, en fonction de la performance JOT, indiquant l'engagement des configurations de générateurs intra- crâniens distincts. La localisation de source dans la première étude indique une activité bilatérale de PSR pour des JOT corrects vs. incorrects. Par ailleurs, l'activité dans PSR gauche, mais pas dans le droit, est corrélée avec la performance du JOT. La localisation de source dans la deuxième étude indiquait une latéralisation gauche induite par l'entraînement d'une réponse initialement bilatérale du cerveau. D'ailleurs, l'activité dans la région PSR gauche corrèlait avec la performance de TOJ.Basé sur ces résultats, nous proposons qu'un « timbre-temporel » soit établi très tôt (c.-à-d. à ~40ms) sur le premier son par le PSR gauche, mais module par l'activité du PSR droite (Bernasconi et al., 2010a ; b). « Le timbre- temporel » sur le premier son peut être établi par le mécanisme neuronal de type « sensory gating » ou « prior entry ».Les réponses comportementales et du cerveau aux stimuli identiques peut varier du à des modulations d'attention ou à des variations dans les paramètres des tâches ou au bruit interne du cerveau. Dans une quatrième expérience (Bernasconi et al. 2011B), nous avons étudié où et quand le »bruit neuronal« se manifeste pendant le traitement des stimuli. En contrastant les AEPs de sons identiques perçus comme aigus vs. grave, nous avons mesuré une modulation topographique à env. 100ms après l'apparition du son. L'estimation de source a révélé une activité dans les régions compatibles avec la discrimination de fréquences. Ainsi, nous avons fourni des preuves neurophysiologiques de la variation de la perception induite par le «bruit neuronal».