Publications by authors named "Keliang Zhao"

Time-lapse microscopy imaging is a crucial technique in biomedical studies for observing cellular behavior over time, providing essential data on cell numbers, sizes, shapes, and interactions. Manual analysis of hundreds or thousands of cells is impractical, necessitating the development of automated cell segmentation approaches. Traditional image processing methods have made significant progress in this area, but the advent of deep learning methods, particularly those using U-Net-based networks, has further enhanced performance in medical and microscopy image segmentation.

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The emergence of Homo sapiens in Eastern Asia is a topic of significant research interest. However, well-preserved human fossils in secure, dateable contexts in this region are extremely rare, and often the subject of intense debate owing to stratigraphic and geochronological problems. Tongtianyan cave, in Liujiang District of Liuzhou City, southern China is one of the most important fossils finds of H.

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This transition from gathering to cultivation is a significant aspect of studying early agricultural practices. Fruit trees are an essential component of food resources and have played a vital role in both ancient and modern agricultural production systems. The jujube (Ziziphus jujuba Mill.

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Article Synopsis
  • Homo sapiens began expanding into southeastern Europe around 47,000 years ago, using Initial Upper Palaeolithic (IUP) tools, and reached western Siberia by approximately 45,000 years ago.
  • H. sapiens also appeared in northeastern Asia around 40,000 years ago, with evidence of their presence at a site in China dating back to 43-41,000 years ago.
  • The site of Shiyu in northern China, dated to about 45,000 years ago, showcases advanced cultural behaviors through its stone tools, long-distance trade of obsidian, enhanced hunting techniques, and the discovery of a human cranial bone.
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The automatic detection of cells in microscopy image sequences is a significant task in biomedical research. However, routine microscopy images with cells, which are taken during the process whereby constant division and differentiation occur, are notoriously difficult to detect due to changes in their appearance and number. Recently, convolutional neural network (CNN)-based methods have made significant progress in cell detection and tracking.

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To investigate the effects of rumen-protected choline (RPC) and rumen-protected nicotinamide (RPM) on liver metabolic function based on transcriptome in periparturient dairy cows, 10 healthy Holstein dairy cows with similar parity were allocated to RPC and RPM groups ( = 5). The cows were fed experimental diets between 14 days before and 21 days after parturition. The RPC diet contained 60 g RPC per day, and the RPM diet contained 18.

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Copper nanoparticles have attracted a wide attention because of their low cost and high specific surface area. At present, the synthesis of copper nanoparticles has the problems of complicated process and environmentally unfriendly materials like hydrazine hydrate and sodium hypophosphite that would pollute water, harm human health and may even cause cancer. In this paper, a simple and low-cost two-step synthesis method was used to prepare highly stable and well-dispersed spherical copper nanoparticles in solution with a particle size of about 34 nm.

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Article Synopsis
  • Homo sapiens arrived in northern Asia around 40,000 years ago, replacing earlier archaic populations through previous expansions and interbreeding.
  • The archaeological site Xiamabei in northern China, dating back 40,000 years, features unique traits like the earliest ochre-processing evidence in East Asia and specialized tools.
  • Findings from Xiamabei suggest a distinct cultural and technological development in northern Asia that differs from other sites associated with archaic humans and early H. sapiens expansions.
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Ancient DNA research has developed rapidly over the past few decades due to improvements in PCR and next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, but challenges still exist. One major challenge in relation to ancient DNA research is to recover genuine endogenous ancient DNA sequences from raw sequencing data. This is often difficult due to degradation of ancient DNA and high levels of contamination, especially homologous contamination that has extremely similar genetic background with that of the real ancient DNA.

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The oasis villages of the Tarim Basin served as hubs along the ancient Silk Road, and they played an important role in facilitating communication between the imperial centers of Asia. These villages were supported by an irrigated form of cereal farming that was specifically adapted to these early oasis settlements. In this manuscript, we present the results from new archaeobotanical analyses, radiocarbon dating, and organic carbon isotopic studies directly from carbonized seeds at the Wupaer site (1500-400 BC) in the Kashgar Oasis of the western Tarim Basin.

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Wheat and barley evolved from large-seeded annual grasses in the arid, low latitudes of Asia; their spread into higher elevations and northern latitudes involved corresponding evolutionary adaptations in these plants, including traits for frost tolerance and shifts in photoperiod sensitivity. The adaptation of farming populations to these northern latitudes was also a complex and poorly understood process that included changes in cultivation practices and the varieties of crops grown. In this article, we push back the earliest dates for the spread of wheat and barley into northern regions of Asia as well as providing earlier cultural links between East and West Asia.

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Based on chronological and archaeobotanical studies of 15 Neolithic and Bronze Age sites from the northern Chinese Loess Plateau and southern Inner Mongolia-the agro-pastoral zone of China-we document changes in the agricultural system over time. The results show that wheat and rice were not the major crops of the ancient agricultural systems in these areas, since their remains are rarely recovered, and that millet cultivation was dominant. Millet agriculture increased substantially from 3000 BC-2000 BC, and foxtail millet evidently comprised a high proportion of the cultivated crop plants during this period.

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