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Sequence simulators play an important role in phylogenetics. Simulated data has many applications, such as evaluating the performance of different methods, hypothesis testing with parametric bootstraps, and, more recently, generating data for training machine-learning applications. Many sequence simulation programmes exist, but the most feature-rich programmes tend to be rather slow, and the fastest programmes tend to be feature-poor. Here, we introduce AliSim, a new tool that can efficiently simulate biologically realistic alignments under a large range of complex evolutionary models. To achieve high performance across a wide range of simulation conditions, AliSim implements an adaptive approach that combines the commonly used rate matrix and probability matrix approaches. AliSim takes 1.4 h and 1.3 GB RAM to simulate alignments with one million sequences or sites, whereas popular software Seq-Gen, Dawg, and INDELible require 2-5 h and 50-500 GB of RAM. We provide AliSim as an extension of the IQ-TREE software version 2.2, freely available at www.iqtree.org, and a comprehensive user tutorial at http://www.iqtree.org/doc/AliSim.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msac092 | DOI Listing |
Adv Mater
September 2025
School of Physical Science and Technology, College of Energy, School of Optoelectronic Science and Engineering, Soochow University, Suzhou, 215000, P. R. China.
Polymer additives exhibit unique advantages in suppressing lead leaching from perovskite solar cells (PSCs). However, polymers tend to excessively aggregate in the perovskite film, which hinders comprehensive encapsulation and disrupts charge transport efficiency, degrading lead leakage inhibition and device performance. Herein, a polymer dynamic soft encapsulation strategy driven by molecular extrusion is introduced to mitigate lead leakage in PSCs, achieved through the incorporation of poly(propylene adipate) (PPA) as a multifunctional additive in the perovskite formulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Nutr
September 2025
Department of Drug Discovery and Biomedical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of South Carolina, Columbia, 715 Sumter Street, CLS 513C, SC 29208, USA.
Human activities contribute to large shifts in the global climate, with far-reaching impacts on ecosystems, societies, and human health. Modern food systems-designed to produce convenience foods that tend to have high inflammatory potential-exacerbate environmental degradation and shape the interwoven challenges of climate, nutrition, and health. Over the past three decades, extreme weather has worsened and poor diets have led to more inflammation-related health problems-two parallel trends that are exposing system-wide weaknesses and harming global health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America.
Citizen science enables volunteers from the public to contribute to scientific research. While citizen science may be an avenue for "democratizing" science and facilitating learning among volunteers, projects tend to attract homogeneous volunteers already highly engaged in science. The emergence of facilitator organizations such as schools, churches and corporations, that connect existing volunteer-oriented groups with citizen science, offers a potentially viable avenue through which to attract more diverse volunteers, with more to gain from their experience.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeath Stud
September 2025
Logos Health Design Institute, College of Nursing, Sahmyook University, Seoul, Korea.
As traditional Koreans tend to avoid talking about death, this study purposed to help university students overcome the grief caused by death by using their inner strength through logotherapy. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a sudden bereavement programme using a randomized controlled pretest-posttest experimental design. Participants were 48 university students recruited online and randomly assigned to either the experimental or the no-treatment control group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
August 2025
Human Movement Science, Oakland University, Rochester, USA.
This comprehensive narrative review examines how social support influences participation in Phase 2 cardiac rehabilitation (CR2), a commonly structured 12-week outpatient program focused on supervised exercise, education, and lifestyle change. Literature published between 2005 and the present was reviewed across four databases, resulting in four studies that met the inclusion criteria. Social support was described across three dimensions (emotional, informational, and practical) to explore how these forms of support intersect with gender‑related patterns in health behaviors, coping, and engagement in CR2.
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