RESUMO
Online forumpost evaluationis an effective way for instructors to assess students' knowledge understanding and writing mechanics. Manually evaluating massive posts costs a lot of time. Automatically grading online posts could significantly alleviate instructors' burden. Similar text assessment tasks like Automated Text Scoring evaluate the writing quality of independent texts or relevance between text and prompt. And Automatic Short Answer Grading measures the semantic matching of short answers according to given problems and correct answers. Different from existing tasks, we propose a novel task, Automated Post Scoring (APS), which grades all online discussion posts in each thread of each student with given topics and quoted posts. APS evaluates not only the writing quality of posts automatically but also the relevance to topics. To measure the relevance, we model the semantic consistency between posts and topics. Supporting arguments are also extracted from quoted posts to enhance posts evaluation. Specifically, we propose a mixture model including a hierarchical text model to measure the writing quality, a semantic matching model to model topic relevance, and a semantic representation model to integrate quoted posts. We also construct a new dataset called Online Discussion Dataset containing 2,542 online posts from 694 students of a social science course. The proposed models are evaluated on the dataset with correlation and residual based evaluation metrics. Compared with measuring posts alone, experimental results demonstrate that incorporating topics and quoted posts could improve the performance of APS by a large margin, more than 9 percent on QWK.
RESUMO
Biogeochemical processes critically control the groundwater arsenic (As) enrichment; however, the key active As-mobilizing biogeochemical processes and associated microbes in high dissolved As and sulfate aquifers are poorly understood. To address this issue, the groundwater-sediment geochemistry, total and active microbial communities, and their potential functions in the groundwater-sediment microbiota from the western Hetao basin were determined using 16S rRNA gene (rDNA) and associated 16S rRNA (rRNA) sequencing. The relative abundances of either sediment or groundwater total and active microbial communities were positively correlated. Interestingly, groundwater active microbial communities were mainly associated with ammonium and sulfide, while sediment active communities were highly related to water-extractable nitrate. Both sediment-sourced and groundwater-sourced active microorganisms (rRNA/rDNA ratios > 1) noted Fe(III)-reducers (induced by ammonium oxidation) and As(V)-reducers, emphasizing the As mobilization via Fe(III) and/or As(V) reduction. Moreover, active cryptic sulfur cycling between groundwater and sediments was implicated in affecting As mobilization. Sediment-sourced active microorganisms were potentially involved in anaerobic pyrite oxidation (driven by denitrification), while groundwater-sourced organisms were associated with sulfur disproportionation and sulfate reduction. This study provides an extended whole-picture concept model of active As-N-S-Fe biogeochemical processes affecting As mobilization in high dissolved As and sulfate aquifers.
Assuntos
Arsênio , Água Subterrânea , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Arsênio/análise , DNA , Compostos Férricos , Sedimentos Geológicos , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análiseAssuntos
Galinhas , Citrobacter , Infecções por Enterobacteriaceae , Fazendas , Plasmídeos , Galinhas/microbiologia , Animais , Citrobacter/genética , Citrobacter/efeitos dos fármacos , Citrobacter/isolamento & purificação , Citrobacter/classificação , Plasmídeos/genética , Infecções por Enterobacteriaceae/microbiologia , Doenças das Aves Domésticas/microbiologia , Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , Genes BacterianosRESUMO
An anaerobic nitrate-reducing Fe(II)-oxidizing bacterium, Pseudogulbenkiania sp. strain 2002, was used to investigate As immobilization by biogenic Fe oxyhydroxides under different initial molar ratios of Fe/As in solutions. Results showed that Fe(II) was effectively oxidized, mainly forming lepidocrocite, which immobilized more As(III) than As(V) without changing the redox state of As. When the initial Fe/As ratios were kept constant, higher initial Fe(II) concentrations immobilized more As with higher Asimmobilized/Feprecipitated in biogenic lepidocrocite. EXAFS analysis showed that variations of initial Fe(II) concentrations did not change the As-Fe complexes (bidentate binuclear complexes ((2)C)) with a fixed As(III) or As(V) initial concentration of 13.3 µM. On the other hand, variations in initial As concentrations but fixed Fe(II) initial concentration induced the co-occurrence of bidentate binuclear and bidentate mononuclear complexes ((2)E) and bidentate binuclear and monodentate mononuclear complexes ((1)V) for As(III) and As(V)-treated series, respectively. The coexistence of (2)C and (2)E complexes (or (2)C and (1)V complexes) could contribute to higher As removal in experimental series with higher initial Fe(II) concentrations at the same initial Fe/As ratio. Simultaneous removal of soluble As and nitrate by anaerobic nitrate-reducing Fe(II)-oxidizing bacteria provides a feasible approach for in situ remediation of As-nitrate cocontaminated groundwater.
Assuntos
Arsênio , Compostos Ferrosos , Água Subterrânea , Nitratos , OxirreduçãoRESUMO
Slippery solid surfaces with low droplet contact angle hysteresis (CAH) are crucial for applications in thermal management, energy harvesting, and environmental remediation. Traditionally, reducing CAH has been achieved by enhancing surface homogeneity. This work challenges this conventional approach by developing slippery yet hydrophilic surfaces through hybrid monolayers composed of hydrophilic polyethylene glycol (PEG)-silane and hydrophobic alkyl-silane molecules. These hybrid surfaces exhibited exceptionally low CAH (<2°), outperforming well-established homogeneous slippery surfaces. Molecular structural analyses suggested that the remarkable slipperiness is due to a unique spatially staggered molecular configuration, where longer PEG chains shield shorter alkyl chains, thus creating additional free volume while ensuring surface coverage. This was supported by the observation of decreased CAH with increasing temperature, highlighting the role of grafted chain mobility in enhancing slipperiness by self-smoothing and fluid-like behaviors. Furthermore, condensation experiments demonstrated the exceptional performance of the hydrophilic slippery surfaces in dew harvesting due to superior condensation nucleation, droplet coalescence, and self-sweeping efficiency. These findings offer a novel paradigm for designing advanced slippery surfaces and provide valuable insights into the molecular mechanisms governing dynamic wetting.
RESUMO
This study was designed to depict prevalence and antimicrobial resistance characteristics of Proteus mirabilis (P. mirabilis) strains in 4 chicken farms and to probe the transfer mechanism of resistance genes. A total of 187 P. mirabilis isolates were isolated from 4 chicken farms. The susceptibility testing of these isolates to 14 antimicrobials showed that the multidrug resistance (MDR) rate was as high as 100%. The ß-lactamase resistance genes blaOXA-1, blaCTX-M-1G, blaCTX-M-9G and colistin resistance gene mcr-1 were highly carried in the P. mirabilis isolates. An MDR strain W47 was selected for whole genome sequencing (WGS) and conjugation experiment. The results showed that W47 carried 23 resistance genes and 64 virulence genes, and an SXT/R391 integrated conjugative elements (ICEs) named ICEPmiChn5 carrying 17 genes was identified in chromosome. ICEPmiChn5 was able to be excised from the chromosome of W47 forming a circular intermediate, but repeated conjugation experiments were unsuccessful. Among 187 P. mirabilis isolates, 144 (77.01%, 144/187) isolates carried ICEPmiChn5-like ICEs, suggesting that ICEs may be the major vector for the transmission of resistance genes among MDR chicken P. mirabilis strains in this study. The findings were conducive to insight into the resistance mechanism of chicken P. mirabilis strains and provide a theoretical basis for the use of antibiotics for the treatment of MDR P. mirabilis infections in veterinary clinic.
Assuntos
Galinhas , Proteus mirabilis , Animais , Proteus mirabilis/genética , Fazendas , Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana/veterináriaRESUMO
High arsenic (As) groundwater usually has high concentrations of natural organic matter (NOM). Effects of NOM on arsenic adsorption were investigated to evaluate the efficiency of modified granular natural siderite (MGNS) as an adsorbent for groundwater arsenic remediation. Humic and fulvic acids (HA/FA) were selected as model NOM compounds. In batch tests, HA or FA was either first adsorbed onto the MGNS, or applied together with dissolved arsenic to investigate effects of both adsorbed and dissolved NOM on arsenic removal. The kinetic data showed no significant effects of both adsorbed and dissolved HA/FA on As(III) adsorption. However, As(V) removal was inhibited, whereby the adsorbed NOM compounds had greater inhibitory effect. The inhibitory effect on As(V) removal increased with increasing NOM concentrations. FA exhibited higher inhibitory effect than HA at the same concentration. Steric Exclusion Chromatography-HPLC (SEC-HPLC), and High-Performance Size Exclusion Chromatography-UV-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (HPSEC-UV-ICP-MS) revealed that As(V) removal was mostly achieved by the oxyanion adsorption and adversely affected by dissolved FA via competitive adsorption for surface sites. In addition to oxyanion adsorption, removal of As(V) was related to scavenging of ternary HA-As-Fe complexes, which led to the less inhibitory effect of dissolved HA on As(V) removal than dissolved FA via competitive adsorption.
Assuntos
Arsênio/química , Benzopiranos/química , Carbonatos/química , Recuperação e Remediação Ambiental/métodos , Compostos Férricos/química , Água Subterrânea/química , Substâncias Húmicas , Poluentes Químicos da Água/química , Adsorção , Arsênio/análise , Cromatografia em Gel , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Espectrometria de Massas , Compostos Orgânicos/química , Análise Espectral , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análiseRESUMO
Although As concentrations have been investigated in shallow groundwater from the Hetao basin, China, less is known about U and As distributions in deep groundwater, which would help to better understand their origins and fate controls. Two hundred and ninety-nine groundwater samples, 122 sediment samples, and 14 rock samples were taken from the northwest portion of the Hetao basin, and analyzed for geochemical parameters. Results showed contrasting distributions of groundwater U and As, with high U and low As concentrations in the alluvial fans along the basin margins, and low U and high As concentrations downgradient in the flat plain. The probable sources of both As and U in groundwater were ultimately traced to the bedrocks in the local mountains (the Langshan Mountains). Chemical weathering of U-bearing rocks (schist, phyllite, and carbonate veins) released and mobilized U as UO2(CO3)2(2-) and UO2(CO3)3(4-) species in the alluvial fans under oxic conditions and suboxic conditions where reductions of Mn and NO3(-) were favorable (OSO), resulting in high groundwater U concentrations. Conversely, the recent weathering of As-bearing rocks (schist, phyllite, and sulfides) led to the formation of As-bearing Fe(III) (hydr)oxides in sediments, resulting in low groundwater As concentrations. Arsenic mobilization and U immobilization occurred in suboxic conditions where reduction of Fe(III) oxides was favorable and reducing conditions (SOR). Reduction of As-bearing Fe(III) (hydr)oxides, which were formed during palaeo-weathering and transported and deposited as Quaternary aquifer sediments, was believed to release As into groundwater. Reduction of U(VI) to U(IV) would lead to the formation of uraninite, and therefore remove U from groundwater. We conclude that the contrasting distributions of groundwater As and U present a challenge to ensuring safe drinking water in analogous areas, especially with high background values of U and As.