An analyte that is introduced onto a column as a finite band broadens as it moves along the column. This band-broadening is generally attributed to three independent processes, including flow path inequalities, molecular diffusion, and resistance to mass transfer. Many equations have been derived in attempts to mathematically model the process. Some of the more popular of these include the equations of van Deemter, Giddings, Horvath and Lin, and Knox. Although the basis of each equation is theoretically different, the differences among them are minor, and most of the equations can be used to adequately fit plate height data. Chromatographers often collect efficiency data to monitor the performance of their columns, and then use one of the above equations to fit the data. The choice of which equation to use can be daunting, since the theories are conflicting. Using an extensive collection of data, we have compared these equations on the basis of the resulting fit. This study was performed using analytes covering a wide range of retention values and mobile phases of differing strengths. The Foley-Dorsey equation was used to calculate the number of theoretical plates for the efficiency study and special precautions were taken to ensure that the observed broadening was due to only processes occurring in the column and that the peaks were adequately sampled. The variance from extra-column sources was measured and subtracted from the system variance. Although more complex equations gave very slightly better fits, 50 years after its introduction the van Deemter equation remains an incredibly accurate representation of band-broadening processes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2008.05.073 | DOI Listing |
BMJ Mil Health
November 2024
Department of Traumatology, University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Introduction: The introduction of wireless sensors will enable military care providers to continuously and remotely assess/monitor vital signs. Prediction models are needed to use such data adequately and aid military care providers in their on-scene decision-making to optimise prehospital triage and improve patient outcomes.
Methods: A prospective cohort comprising data from eight Emergency Medical Services and seven inclusive trauma regions was used to develop and validate prediction models that could aid military care providers in their prehospital triage decisions.
Front Artif Intell
May 2024
Department of Information & Computing Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Asking annotators to explain "why" they labeled an instance yields annotator rationales: natural language explanations that provide reasons for classifications. In this work, we survey the collection and use of annotator rationales. Human-annotated rationales can improve data quality and form a valuable resource for improving machine learning models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Artif Intell
September 2023
Institute of Linguistics and Language Technology, University of Malta, Msida, Malta.
When applied to Image-to-text models, explainability methods have two challenges. First, they often provide token-by-token explanations namely, they compute a visual explanation for each token of the generated sequence. This makes explanations expensive to compute and unable to comprehensively explain the model's output.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Rev
April 2019
Department of Communication and Cognition, Tilburg University.
In psycholinguistics, there has been relatively little work investigating conceptualization-how speakers decide which concepts to express. This contrasts with work in natural language generation (NLG), a subfield of artificial intelligence, where much research has explored content determination during the generation of referring expressions. Existing NLG algorithms for conceptualization during reference production do not fully explain previous psycholinguistic results, so we developed new models that we tested in three language production experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
October 2017
MRC/University of Edinburgh Centre for Reproductive Health, Edinburgh Medical School, Queen's Medical Research Institute, 47 Little France Crescent, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Background: Abdominal surgery and disease cause persistent abdominal adhesions, pelvic pain, infertility and occasionally, bowel obstruction. Current treatments are ineffective and the aetiology is unclear, although excessive collagen deposition is a consistent feature. Lysyl oxidase (Lox) is a key enzyme required for crosslinking and deposition of insoluble collagen, so we investigated whether targeting Lox might be an approach to reduce abdominal adhesions.
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