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An Adaptive Immersive Training Framework for Miner Self-Escape Readiness in Underground Mining Emergencies
Muhammad Raza
,Samuel Frimpong
,Saima Ghazal
Posted: 06 January 2026
“Are You Feeling the Rush?” Quantifying Emotional Ambiguity in Situationships and Its Impact on Well-Being
Yu-Cheng Lin
Posted: 06 January 2026
Comparing Neural Architectures for English-Spanish Machine Translation: From LSTM to Transformer
Jingyuan Zhu
,Anbang Chen
,Bowen Wang
,Sining Huang
,Yukun Song
,Yixiao Kang
Posted: 06 January 2026
Technological Asymmetries and Financial Performance of Industrial Joint‑Stock Companies: AI‑Driven Risk Factors and Efficiency in Capital Management
Aneta Ejsmont
This article examines how technological asymmetries—understood as differences in access to advanced digital tools, AI capabilities and IT infrastructure—shape the financial stability and market performance of enterprises of various sizes. The study integrates comparative analyses of 100 industrial joint-stock companies from multiple countries, including technologically advanced large corporations and innovative SMEs, to assess how disparities in digitization and AI implementation influence financial resilience. Using multivariate regression models and index-based financial metrics such as MC, EV, P/E, PEG, P/S, P/B, EV/R and EV/EBITDA, the research identifies relationships between technological advancement, operational efficiency and risk exposure. The findings indicate that companies with higher levels of digitization and AI adoption demonstrate stronger resistance to market disruptions, more effective risk management and more favorable capital structures than SMEs with limited technological resources. However, restricted access to detailed operational data for smaller firms may affect the precision of comparative assessments. The study concludes that investments in digital competences and international cooperation enhance financial stability and support strategic decision-making, while SMEs play an important complementary role by providing outsourcing services that facilitate AI implementation in larger corporations.
This article examines how technological asymmetries—understood as differences in access to advanced digital tools, AI capabilities and IT infrastructure—shape the financial stability and market performance of enterprises of various sizes. The study integrates comparative analyses of 100 industrial joint-stock companies from multiple countries, including technologically advanced large corporations and innovative SMEs, to assess how disparities in digitization and AI implementation influence financial resilience. Using multivariate regression models and index-based financial metrics such as MC, EV, P/E, PEG, P/S, P/B, EV/R and EV/EBITDA, the research identifies relationships between technological advancement, operational efficiency and risk exposure. The findings indicate that companies with higher levels of digitization and AI adoption demonstrate stronger resistance to market disruptions, more effective risk management and more favorable capital structures than SMEs with limited technological resources. However, restricted access to detailed operational data for smaller firms may affect the precision of comparative assessments. The study concludes that investments in digital competences and international cooperation enhance financial stability and support strategic decision-making, while SMEs play an important complementary role by providing outsourcing services that facilitate AI implementation in larger corporations.
Posted: 06 January 2026
A Multi-Module Decision-Support Model for Prioritizing Rural Fortification Heritage Under Post-Dam Landscape Transformation: The Case of Yusufeli Castles
Mehmet Fatih Aydin
Posted: 06 January 2026
A Cross-Sectional Study to Identify a Possible Relationship Between Coffee Consumption and Metabolic Syndrome Based on the 5th Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey in 2010 (KNHANES V-1) Data
Beom Jun Lee
,Robert Kim
Posted: 06 January 2026
PT-Projected Projective Palatini Gravity: Two-Derivative Operator Basis, Admissible Equivalences, and a Local IR Residual
Chien-Chih Chen
Posted: 06 January 2026
Gauge-Invariant Gravitational Wave Polarization in Metric f(R) Gravity with Cosmological Implications
Gauge-Invariant Gravitational Wave Polarization in Metric f(R) Gravity with Cosmological Implications
Ramesh Radhakrishnan
,David McNutt
,Delaram Mirfendereski
,Alejandro Pinero
,Eric Davis
,William Julius
,Gerald Cleaver
Posted: 06 January 2026
From Patient Emotion Recognition to Provider Understanding: A Multimodal Data Mining Framework for Clinical Counseling Communication Analysis
Saahithi Mallarapu
,Xinyan Liu
,Pegah Zargarian
,SeyyedehFatemeh Mottaghian
,Ramyashree Suresha
,Vasudha Jain
,Akram Bayat
Posted: 06 January 2026
Boron Theranostic Nanoplatform Utilizing a GO@Carborane@Au Hybrid Framework for Targeted Delivery
Václav Ranc
,Ludmila Žárská
Posted: 06 January 2026
Flight Control System for Ultra-Light Aircraft Conversion to VTOL Unmanned Aircraft Vehicle
Ion Guta Dragos Daniel
,Gheorma Cristian-Tudor
,Pascale Catalin
,Berceanu Radu
,Neagu Mihai
Posted: 06 January 2026
The Occupational Indoor Pyrethroid Exposome: Mechanistic Insights into Chronic Multisystem Toxicity and Regulatory Gaps
Ahmed Adel Mansour Kamar
,Ioannis Mavroudis
,Foivos Petridis
,Dimitrios Kazis
,Alin Ciobîcă
,Diana Gheban
,Catalin Morosan
,Bogdan Gurzu
,Otilia Novac
,Bogdan Novac
Posted: 06 January 2026
The Allosteric Tug-of-War: Competitive Zinc and Dopamine Binding at the N-Terminal G14R Mutation Site of α-Synuclein
The Allosteric Tug-of-War: Competitive Zinc and Dopamine Binding at the N-Terminal G14R Mutation Site of α-Synuclein
Rajendra Nath Dasari
The G14R mutation in α-synuclein is associated with aggressive, early-onset Parkinson’s disease, yet its impact on the protein’s N-terminal regulatory domain remains poorly understood. As an intrinsically disordered protein, α-synuclein’s conformational landscape is highly sensitive to sequence perturbations and ligand interactions. This study investigates a hypothesized "allosteric tug-of-war" between pro-aggregatory zinc ions and inhibitory dopamine at the N-terminus. Using a Python-based physicochemical structural proxy model, we assessed residue-level charge, volume, and interaction heuristics for the first 20 residues of the G14R variant. Our results demonstrate that the substitution of glycine with arginine at residue 14 creates a localized "rigidity hotspot" characterized by enhanced electrostatic coordination with Zn2+ ions. Crucially, we found that dopamine competitively attenuates this stabilization at overlapping residues, suggesting a displacement-based mechanism. This modeling framework provides a mechanistic basis for the G14R phenotype, suggesting that dopamine depletion may permit persistent zinc-mediated structural stabilization, thereby promoting aggregation. These findings highlight the N-terminus as a critical switch for modulating α-synuclein pathology through small-molecule competition.
The G14R mutation in α-synuclein is associated with aggressive, early-onset Parkinson’s disease, yet its impact on the protein’s N-terminal regulatory domain remains poorly understood. As an intrinsically disordered protein, α-synuclein’s conformational landscape is highly sensitive to sequence perturbations and ligand interactions. This study investigates a hypothesized "allosteric tug-of-war" between pro-aggregatory zinc ions and inhibitory dopamine at the N-terminus. Using a Python-based physicochemical structural proxy model, we assessed residue-level charge, volume, and interaction heuristics for the first 20 residues of the G14R variant. Our results demonstrate that the substitution of glycine with arginine at residue 14 creates a localized "rigidity hotspot" characterized by enhanced electrostatic coordination with Zn2+ ions. Crucially, we found that dopamine competitively attenuates this stabilization at overlapping residues, suggesting a displacement-based mechanism. This modeling framework provides a mechanistic basis for the G14R phenotype, suggesting that dopamine depletion may permit persistent zinc-mediated structural stabilization, thereby promoting aggregation. These findings highlight the N-terminus as a critical switch for modulating α-synuclein pathology through small-molecule competition.
Posted: 06 January 2026
Evolution of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation over 12 Years: A Single High-Volume Center Perspective
Nicola Corcione
,Salvatore Giordano
,Paolo Ferraro
,Alberto Morello
,Michele Cimmino
,Michele Albanese
,Raffaella Avellino
,Giuseppe Biondi-Zoccai
,Martino Pepe
,Arturo Giordano
Posted: 06 January 2026
New Breeding Information on the Pinto’s Spinetail Synallaxis infuscata in the Atlantic Rainforest of Northeastern Brazil
Anita Studer
,Leïla Perroulaz
Posted: 06 January 2026
Rooftop Photovoltaics as Negative Load to Mitigate Electric Vehicle Charging Peaks in the Jamali Grid by 2060 to Achieve Net Zero Emission in Indonesia
Joshua Veli Tampubolon
,Rinaldy Dalimi
,Budi Sudiarto
Posted: 06 January 2026
From Technological Disruption to Institutionalised Assimilation—A Computational Content Analysis, Semantic Embedding and Longitudinal Discourse Drift Study Based on the Proceedings of the 2025 Intelligence Research Summit at the US Intelligence University
Wei Meng
Posted: 06 January 2026
Integrated Meta-QTL and Genome-wide Association Study of Ethiopian Sesame (Sesamum indicum L.) Identifies Novel Loci for Plant Height and Seed Coat Color
Adane Gebeyehu
,Ramesh Vetukuri
,Rodomiro Ortiz
Sesame (Sesamum indicum L.) is a nutrient-rich oilseed valued for its high-quality oil and protein-rich seeds. Sesame breeding can be accelerated by unlocking the untapped genetic variation present in African landraces. This study integrated a global meta-quantitative trait loci (QTL) analysis with genome‑wide association study (GWAS) of Ethiopian germplasm to identify molecular markers for two key agronomic traits: plant height and seed coat color. To address inconsistencies among published studies, we explicitly documented the genetic maps, marker systems, mapping populations, linkage mapping and GWAS analysis methods used in each source study before conducting the meta-analysis. Only QTL whose markers could be reliably anchored to the sesame reference genome v3.0 were retained. Meta-analysis of eight published studies identified six conserved QTL hotspots on chromosomes 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 11. Field evaluation of 200 Ethiopian accessions over two seasons revealed wide phenotypic variation and high heritability (H² > 0.85). Using 3,633 genome-wide SNPs, GWAS detected 36 significant marker-trait associations, including multiple novel loci on chromosomes 12 and 13 not reported in Asian germplasm-focused studies. Key SNPs explained up to 14.2% (plant height) and 9.2% (seed coat color) of phenotypic variance. Candidate genes linked to significant SNPs included brassinosteroid-related CYP90B1 and ethylene-responsive AP2/ERF for plant height, and transcription factors WRKY23, DOF3.1, and SBP-like for seed coat color. Population structure showed two distinct groups (K = 2), and linkage disequilibrium decayed rapidly (~204 kb), enabling fine‑mapping. The study provides validated meta‑QTL intervals, trait-associated SNPs, and candidate genes that form a molecular foundation for marker-assisted selection in sesame improvement programs.
Sesame (Sesamum indicum L.) is a nutrient-rich oilseed valued for its high-quality oil and protein-rich seeds. Sesame breeding can be accelerated by unlocking the untapped genetic variation present in African landraces. This study integrated a global meta-quantitative trait loci (QTL) analysis with genome‑wide association study (GWAS) of Ethiopian germplasm to identify molecular markers for two key agronomic traits: plant height and seed coat color. To address inconsistencies among published studies, we explicitly documented the genetic maps, marker systems, mapping populations, linkage mapping and GWAS analysis methods used in each source study before conducting the meta-analysis. Only QTL whose markers could be reliably anchored to the sesame reference genome v3.0 were retained. Meta-analysis of eight published studies identified six conserved QTL hotspots on chromosomes 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 11. Field evaluation of 200 Ethiopian accessions over two seasons revealed wide phenotypic variation and high heritability (H² > 0.85). Using 3,633 genome-wide SNPs, GWAS detected 36 significant marker-trait associations, including multiple novel loci on chromosomes 12 and 13 not reported in Asian germplasm-focused studies. Key SNPs explained up to 14.2% (plant height) and 9.2% (seed coat color) of phenotypic variance. Candidate genes linked to significant SNPs included brassinosteroid-related CYP90B1 and ethylene-responsive AP2/ERF for plant height, and transcription factors WRKY23, DOF3.1, and SBP-like for seed coat color. Population structure showed two distinct groups (K = 2), and linkage disequilibrium decayed rapidly (~204 kb), enabling fine‑mapping. The study provides validated meta‑QTL intervals, trait-associated SNPs, and candidate genes that form a molecular foundation for marker-assisted selection in sesame improvement programs.
Posted: 06 January 2026
From GWAS to Mechanism: Synaptic Pruning Emerges as a Key Polygenic Driver of Cognitive Ability
Ngo Cheung
Posted: 06 January 2026
Securing U.S. Leadership in Agentic AI Literacy and Adoption: U.S. vs Chinese Government Policies and Initiatives
Satyadhar Joshi
Posted: 06 January 2026
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