Person-in-Context Synthesis with Compositional Structural Space

Author(s):  
Weidong Yin ◽  
Ziwei Liu ◽  
Leonid Sigal
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
George C. Ruben ◽  
Merrill W. Shafer

Traditionally ceramics have been shaped from powders and densified at temperatures close to their liquid point. New processing methods using various types of sols, gels, and organometallic precursors at low temperature which enable densificatlon at elevated temperatures well below their liquidus, hold the promise of producing ceramics and glasses of controlled and reproducible properties that are highly reliable for electronic, structural, space or medical applications. Ultrastructure processing of silicon alkoxides in acid medium and mixtures of Ludox HS-40 (120Å spheres from DuPont) and Kasil (38% K2O &62% SiO2) in basic medium have been aimed at producing materials with a range of well defined pore sizes (∼20-400Å) to study physical phenomena and materials behavior in well characterized confined geometries. We have studied Pt/C surface replicas of some of these porous sol-gels prepared at temperatures below their glass transition point.


2015 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-25
Author(s):  
Jan M. Matuszkiewicz

The author presents his own concept of potential landscape phytocomplexes as the structural space units on the level of plant organization higher than an ecosystem (i.e. above biogeocenosis). He also defines the concept of vegetation landscape in a typological sense. Basing on the example of Sudety Mountains and Foreland regions, the author demonstrates a method of distinguishing landscape phytocomplexes and their utilization for regional description of vegetation and geobotanical regionalization.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junwen Luo ◽  
Yi Cai ◽  
Jialin Wu ◽  
Hongmin Cai ◽  
Xiaofeng Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractIn recent years, deep learning has been increasingly used to decipher the relationships among protein sequence, structure, and function. Thus far deep learning of proteins has mostly utilized protein primary sequence information, while the vast amount of protein tertiary structural information remains unused. In this study, we devised a self-supervised representation learning framework to extract the fundamental features of unlabeled protein tertiary structures (PtsRep), and the embedded representations were transferred to two commonly recognized protein engineering tasks, protein stability and GFP fluorescence prediction. On both tasks, PtsRep significantly outperformed the two benchmark methods (UniRep and TAPE-BERT), which are based on protein primary sequences. Protein clustering analyses demonstrated that PtsRep can capture the structural signals in proteins. PtsRep reveals an avenue for general protein structural representation learning, and for exploring protein structural space for protein engineering and drug design.


Killing Times ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 150-184
Author(s):  
David Wills

A different appropriation of the instant takes place in the case of extrajudicial killing by drones. That practice by the U.S., begun in 2002, has remained shrouded in secrecy. However one counts the victims, drone executions outnumber by a huge margin American judicial executions, and the drone penalty thus represents a particular paradigm of the American death penalty: for the most part out of sight and out of mind. It raises in turn questions about American democracy and the deadly criminal conduct of its foreign policy, but also produces a perspective that brings into focus the long series of historical relations between slavery and the death penalty, as well as lynching and the persistence of racism in the application of capital punishment. Furthermore, the sovereign secrecy of drone attacks produces a structural space shared by the U.S. president and the terrorist s/he attacks.


Solar Energy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 194 ◽  
pp. 156-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianlong Meng ◽  
Cunliang Liu ◽  
Xiaohui Bai ◽  
Kun Du ◽  
Carlos Felipe Aristizábal López ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (35) ◽  
pp. 9302-9305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhitong Zheng ◽  
Mollie Touve ◽  
Josue Barnes ◽  
Norbert Reich ◽  
Liming Zhang
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 20150041 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom C. B. McLeish

We examine the analogy between evolutionary dynamics and statistical mechanics to include the fundamental question of ergodicity —the representative exploration of the space of possible states (in the case of evolution this is genome space). Several properties of evolutionary dynamics are identified that allow a generalization of the ergodic dynamics, familiar in dynamical systems theory, to evolution. Two classes of evolved biological structure then arise, differentiated by the qualitative duration of their evolutionary time scales. The first class has an ergodicity time scale (the time required for representative genome exploration) longer than available evolutionary time, and has incompletely explored the genotypic and phenotypic space of its possibilities. This case generates no expectation of convergence to an optimal phenotype or possibility of its prediction. The second, more interesting, class exhibits an evolutionary form of ergodicity—essentially all of the structural space within the constraints of slower evolutionary variables have been sampled; the ergodicity time scale for the system evolution is less than the evolutionary time. In this case, some convergence towards similar optima may be expected for equivalent systems in different species where both possess ergodic evolutionary dynamics. When the fitness maximum is set by physical, rather than co-evolved, constraints, it is additionally possible to make predictions of some properties of the evolved structures and systems. We propose four structures that emerge from evolution within genotypes whose fitness is induced from their phenotypes. Together, these result in an exponential speeding up of evolution, when compared with complete exploration of genomic space. We illustrate a possible case of application and a prediction of convergence together with attaining a physical fitness optimum in the case of invertebrate compound eye resolution.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matt Beekman ◽  
Daniel B. Moore ◽  
Ryan Atkins ◽  
Colby Heideman ◽  
Qiyin Lin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA recently discovered synthetic route to new kinetically stable [(MSe)y]m[TSe2]n layered intergrowths has been applied to prepare several different compositions (M = Pb or Sn, T = Ta, Nb, Mo, or W) with m = n = 1, in thin film form. Scanning transmission electron microscopy and synchrotron X-ray diffraction show the nanostructure of these materials is characterized by a combination of in-plane component crystallinity with misregistration and rotational mis-orientation between adjacent layers. Extremely low cross-plane thermal conductivity as low as 0.1 W m-1 K-1 are attributed to the turbostratic nanostructure. By appropriate choice of M and T, we demonstrate that a range of electrical transport properties are possible, from metallic to semiconducting. Annealing (PbSe)0.99WSe2 and (PbSe)1.00MoSe2 specimens in a controlled atmosphere of PbSe or WSe2 is observed to systematically influence carrier properties, and is interpreted in terms of reduction of the concentration of electrically active defects. Considering these observations and the large composition and structural space that can be explored in such [(MSe)y]m[TSe2]n intergrowths, these materials are of interest for further investigation as potential thermoelectric materials.


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