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Over the years, numerous techniques have been explored to assess the composition and quality of sheep carcasses. This study focuses on the utilization of video image analysis (VIA) to evaluate the composition of light lamb carcasses (4.52 ± 1.34 kg, mean cold carcass weight ± SD). Photographic images capturing the lateral and dorsal sides of fifty-five light lamb carcasses were subjected to analysis. A comprehensive set of measurements was recorded, encompassing dimensions such as lengths, widths, angles, areas, and perimeters, totaling 21 measurements for the lateral view images and 29 for the dorsal view images. K-Folds stepwise multiple regression analyses were employed to construct prediction models for carcass tissue weights (including muscle, subcutaneous fat, intermuscular fat, and bone) and their respective percentages. The most effective prediction equations were established using data from cold carcass weight (CCW) and measurements from both dorsal and lateral views. These models accounted for a substantial portion of the observed variation in the weights of all carcass tissues (with K-fold-R ranging from 0.83 to 0.98). In terms of carcass tissue percentages, although the degree of variation explained was slightly lower (with K-fold-R ranging from 0.41 to 0.78), the VIA measurements remained integral to the predictive models. These findings underscore the efficacy of VIA as an objective tool for assessing the composition of light lamb carcasses, which are carcasses weighing ≈ 4-8 kg.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani14111593 | DOI Listing |
Mov Disord
September 2025
Department of Neurology, Mass General Brigham, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Background: Light therapy (LT) in Parkinson's disease improves sleep. Specific LT parameters require further study, including optimal frequency.
Objectives: We aimed to determine if once- or twice-daily bright white light therapy (BWLT) improves sleep.
Biology (Basel)
August 2025
School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Mediterranean ecosystems have been grazed by livestock for thousands of years. While considered both a major anthropogenic stressor and a potential habitat conservation tool, the effects of livestock grazing on vertebrate populations remain poorly understood. Our study focused on goat and sheep grazing on a large island off the coast of Greece in order to shed light on (1) the nature of the relationship between livestock grazing and vertebrate assemblages, and (2) the mediating mechanisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
September 2025
Key Laboratory of Grassland Resources of the Ministry of Education, College of Grassland Science, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, Hohhot, 010011, China.
Background: Grazing, as one of the most important methods of utilizing natural grasslands, can significantly impact the accumulation and stabilization of soil organic carbon within grassland ecosystems. Soil microbial necromass carbon (MNC), including fungal necromass carbon (FNC) and bacterial necromass carbon (BNC), is an important source of soil organic carbon (SOC) and plays a critical role in the formation and stabilization of SOC. However, the effects of grazing intensity on soil MNC and its underlying drivers remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Sotrovimab is a neutralising monoclonal antibody targeting the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of sotrovimab in the RECOVERY trial, an investigator-initiated, individually randomised, controlled, open-label, adaptive platform trial testing treatments for patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19.
Methods: Patients admitted with COVID-19 pneumonia to 107 UK hospitals were randomly assigned (1:1) to either usual care alone or usual care plus a single 1 g infusion of sotrovimab, using web-based unstratified randomisation.
Entropy (Basel)
August 2025
University of Bordeaux, CNRS, Laboratoire IMS, (Intégration du Matériau au Système), UMR 5218, F-33400 Talence, France.
The complex systems approach to cognitive-motor processing values multifractal nonlinearity as a key formalism in understanding internal interactions across multiple scales that preserve adequate task-directed behaviors. By using a computer task with increasing difficulty, we focused on the potential link between the difficulty threshold during a task, assessed by the individual's score ceiling, and the corresponding level of multifractal nonlinearity in movement behavior, assessed based on a time series of cursor displacements. Entropy-based multifractality (MF) and multifractal nonlinearity obtained using a -test comparison between the original and linearized surrogate series (t) of the time series characterized individual adaptive capacity.
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