There has been a long-standing bottleneck in the quantitative analysis of the frequencies of homoblock polyads beyond triads using H and C NMR for linear polysaccharides, primarily because monosaccharides within a long homoblock share similar chemical environments due to identical neighboring units, resulting in indistinct NMR peaks. In this study, through rigorous mathematical induction, inequality relations were established that enabled the calculation of frequency ranges of homoblock polyads from historically reported NMR-derived frequency values of diads and/or triads of alginates, chitosans, homogalacturonans, and galactomannans. The calculated homoblock frequency ranges were then applied to evaluate three chain growth statistical models, including the Bernoulli chain, first-order Markov chain, and second-order Markov chain, for predicting homoblock frequencies in these polysaccharides. Furthermore, based on the mathematically derived inequality relations, a novel 2D array was constructed, enabling the graphical visualization of homoblock features in polysaccharides. It was demonstrated, as a proof of concept, that the novel 2D array, along with a 1D code generated from it, could serve as an effective feature engineering tool for polymer classification using machine learning algorithms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carres.2024.109189 | DOI Listing |
Front Nutr
December 2024
Department of Clinical Laboratory, The Fifth Affiliated Hospital, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China.
Background: Gallbladder and biliary tract cancers (GBTCs) are aggressive with poor prognosis, often undetected until advanced stages. High Body Mass Index (BMI) is a significant risk factor, contributing substantially to GBTC mortality and Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs). This study aimed to quantify the global burdens of GBTCs attributable to high BMI from 1990 to 2021, thereby developing more rational prevention and treatment strategies for GBTC.
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March 2025
National Women's Law Center, Washington, DC 20005, United States.
Drawing on a unique survey of US workers with information about their employers' policies on pay discussions and whether workers engage in such talk with their coworkers, we provide the most comprehensive investigation into pay talk in workplaces to date. Unlike existing treatments, we focus on core organizational and relational factors that influence whether workers talk about pay. We theorize pay talk as a challenge to managerial discretion, and we hypothesize that organizational attributes related to pay-setting influence workers' willingness to discuss wages and salaries with colleagues.
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March 2025
Brown University, Department of Sociology, Providence, RI, 02912, United States.
In the United States, exclusionary public policies generate inequalities within and across labor, financial, and legal status hierarchies, which together undermine immigrant well-being. But can inclusive public policies improve immigrant health? We examine whether and how an immigrant-inclusive federal program, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), shaped health care access and use among farmworkers over nearly three decades, paying particular attention to disparities at the intersection of nativity and legal status. Linking historical administrative data on the location and funding of FQHCs with the National Agricultural Workers Survey from 1989-2017, we first document trends in farmworkers' county-level proximity to FQHCs and identify a steady increase in FQHC access among undocumented farmworkers following the Affordable Care Act.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
February 2025
Department of Computer Decision and Sciences, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia.
This dataset examines the interplay between socioeconomic status and educational outcomes among students at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Collected from publicly available data in collaboration with the National Directorate of Information, the dataset includes anonymized records of 3361 students from multiple university campuses during the first semester of 2021. It captures a diverse array of socioeconomic and academic variables, such as family income, residence type, tuition fee, and career choice, providing a unique basis for studying educational access in Colombia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPublic Health Pract (Oxf)
June 2025
Karolinska Institutet, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Division of Nursing, 141 83, Huddinge, Sweden.
Background: Families residing in disadvantaged communities encounter inequalities that restrict their engagement in physical activity. Family-based interventions and health coordinators have been proposed as promising approaches to encourage physical activity among parents and children. However, there is a paucity of knowledge regarding family experiences of such programmes and the ways health coordinators facilitate continued participation in programmes delivered in disadvantaged communities.
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