Current music recommender systems typically act in a greedy manner by recommending songs with the highest user ratings. Greedy recommendation, however, is suboptimal over the long term: it does not actively gather information on user preferences and fails to recommend novel songs that are potentially interesting. A successful recommender system must balance the needs to explore user preferences and to exploit this information for recommendation. This article presents a new approach to music recommendation by formulating this exploration-exploitation trade-off as a reinforcement learning task. To learn user preferences, it uses a Bayesian model that accounts for both audio content and the novelty of recommendations. A piecewise-linear approximation to the model and a variational inference algorithm help to speed up Bayesian inference. One additional benefit of our approach is a single unified model for both music recommendation and playlist generation. We demonstrate the strong potential of the proposed approach with simulation results and a user study.
Accumulating evidence indicates that microRNAs are implicated in tumor initiation and progression through negatively regulating oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes. In the present study, we report that the expression of miR-200a was significantly lower in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) specimens and RCC cell lines. Restoration of miR-200a suppressed cell growth, arrested cell cycle progression, and promoted cell apoptosis in RCC cell lines. We next used qRT-PCR array technology to identify Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) as one of the downregulated proteins during miR-200a overexpression in 786-O cells. Following a further assay by luciferase reporter system, SIRT1 was validated as a direct target of miR-200a. Moreover, siRNA-mediated knockdown of SIRT1 could partially phenocopy the effects of miR-200a overexpression. In contrast, overexpression of truncated SIRT1 (without an endogenous 3'-UTR) could rescue the effect of miR-200a overexpression on 786-O cells, which suggested that SIRT1 3'-UTR is targeted by miR-200a specifically. These observations provide further evidence for a critical tumor-suppressive role of the miR-200a in RCC in addition to identifying a novel regulatory mechanism, which may contribute to SIRT1 upregulation in RCC.
Based on 35-yr (1982-2016) best track and Statistical Hurricane Intensity Prediction Scheme data, this study examined climatology of rapidly intensifying (RI) and slowly intensifying (SI) events as well as their time evolutions of storm-related, and environmental parameters for tropical cyclones (TCs) in both North Atlantic (AL) and Eastern North Pacific (EP) basins. Major hurricanes were intensified mainly through RI while tropical depression and tropical storms through SI. The percentage of TCs that underwent RI peaks in the late hurricane season while that underwent SI peaks early. For the first time in the literature, this study found that RI events have significantly different storm-related and environmental characteristics than SI events for before-, during-, and after-event stages. In both AL and EP basins, RI events always intensify significantly faster during the previous 12 hours, locate further south, and have warmer sea surface and 200 hPa temperatures, greater ocean heat content, larger 200 hPa divergence, weaker vertical wind shear, and weaker 200 hPa westerly flow than SI events for all event-relative stages. In the AL basin, RI events have larger low-level and mid-level relative humidity and larger 850 hPa relative vorticity than SI events for all event-relative stages in the AL and most event-relative stages in the EP. RI events are associated with more convectively unstable atmosphere and further away from their maximum potential intensities than SI events for most event-relative stages in the AL and for all event-relative stages in the EP.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.