scholarly journals Channel Sensing in Molecular Communications With Single Type of Ligand Receptors

2019 ◽  
Vol 67 (10) ◽  
pp. 6868-6884
Author(s):  
Murat Kuscu ◽  
Ozgur B. Akan
2019 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davood G. Gozli ◽  
Ci Jun Gao

AbstractThe concepts want, hope, and exploration cannot be organized in relation to a single type of motive (e.g., motive for food). They require, in addition, the motive for acquiring and maintaining a stable scheme that enables reward-directed activity. Facing unpredictability, the animal has to seek not only reward, but also a new equilibrated state within which reward seeking is possible.


2003 ◽  
Vol 770 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Przybylinska ◽  
N. Q. Vinh ◽  
B.A. Andreev ◽  
Z. F. Krasil'nik ◽  
T. Gregorkiewicz

AbstractA successful observation and analysis of the Zeeman effect on the near 1.54 μm photoluminescence spectrum in Er-doped crystalline MBE-grown silicon are reported. A clearly resolved splitting of 5 major spectral components was observed in magnetic fields up to 5.5 T. Based on the analysis of the data the symmetry of the dominant optically active center was conclusively established as orthorhombic I (C2v), with g‼≈18.4 and g⊥≈0 in the ground state. The fact that g⊥≈0 explains why EPR detection of Er-related optically active centers in silicon may be difficult. Preferential generation of a single type of an optically active Er-related center in MBE growth confirmed in this study is essential for photonic applications of Si:Er.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Liu ◽  
Lu Zhang ◽  
Xinyi Qin ◽  
Tao Huang ◽  
Ziwei Xu ◽  
...  

Background: Nitration is one of the important Post-Translational Modification (PTM) occurring on the tyrosine residues of proteins. The occurrence of protein tyrosine nitration under disease conditions is inevitable and represents a shift from the signal transducing physiological actions of -NO to oxidative and potentially pathogenic pathways. Abnormal protein nitration modification can lead to serious human diseases, including neurodegenerative diseases, acute respiratory distress, organ transplant rejection and lung cancer. Objective: It is necessary and important to identify the nitration sites in protein sequences. Predicting that which tyrosine residues in the protein sequence are nitrated and which are not is of great significance for the study of nitration mechanism and related diseases. Methods: In this study, a prediction model of nitration sites based on the over-under sampling strategy and the FCBF method was proposed by stacking ensemble learning and fusing multiple features. Firstly, the protein sequence sample was encoded by 2701-dimensional fusion features (PseAAC, PSSM, AAIndex, CKSAAP, Disorder). Secondly, the ranked feature set was generated by the FCBF method according to the symmetric uncertainty metric. Thirdly, in the process of model training, use the over- and under- sampling technique was used to tackle the imbalanced dataset. Finally, the Incremental Feature Selection (IFS) method was adopted to extract an optimal classifier based on 10-fold cross-validation. Results and Conclusion: Results show that the model has significant performance advantages in indicators such as MCC, Recall and F1-score, no matter in what way the comparison was conducted with other classifiers on the independent test set, or made by cross-validation with single-type feature or with fusion-features on the training set. By integrating the FCBF feature ranking methods, over- and under- sampling technique and a stacking model composed of multiple base classifiers, an effective prediction model for nitration PTM sites was build, which can achieve a better recall rate when the ratio of positive and negative samples is highly imbalanced.


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