Coastal sediment cores provide important records of land-based antibiotics' deposition. This study examined sediment cores from the Hangzhou Bay, East China Sea, dating back to 1980–2020 using 210Pbex. The 40-year analysis revealed a mismatch between sediment depth and age. Wastewater treatment facilities have significantly reduced antibiotics discharge into the sea. We identified 27 antibiotics, with enrofloxacin (ERFX) and nadifloxacin (NDFX) exhibiting the highest average concentrations of 84.9 and 83.4 ng/g, respectively. Quinolones (QNs) were prominent, displaying strong co-occurrence and similar distribution patterns shaped by comparable soil-water distribution coefficient (Kd). QNs correlated positively with total antibiotic concentration, serving as indicators. We proposed a multi-dimensional risk assessment of antibiotics, encompassing ecological and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) risks, complementing each other. The assessment revealed antibiotics with distinct risks: sulfacetamide (SCM) and clindamycin (CLIN) exhibited high ecological risks, while ERFX, ciprofloxacin (CFX), norfloxacin (NFX), gatifloxacin (GTFX), moxifloxacin (MXFX), and marbofloxacin (MBFX) presented high AMR risks.
The digital economy has become a driving force for global economic development, resulting in high demand for balanced regional development. Using surname distance as a proxy variable for cultural distance, this study examined the impact of cultural differences on the development of a regional digital economy. The results of the analysis of panel data from 31 Chinese provinces from 2011 to 2019 indicated that the development of a region's digital economy positively contributes to the development of the digital economy in areas of cultural proximity. Further analysis of the mechanisms of cultural differences in the digital economy showed that cultural distance affects the development of the digital economy in a province through three mechanisms: birth rate, divorce rate, and the share of small families. Moreover, the findings suggest regional, divorce, and demographic heterogeneity in the impact of cultural distance on the digital economy.
Existing methods utilizing spatial information for sound source separation require prior knowledge of the direction of arrival (DOA) of the source or utilize estimated but imprecise localization results, which impairs the separation performance, especially when the sound sources are moving. In fact, sound source localization and separation are interconnected problems, that is, sound source localization facilitates sound separation while sound separation contributes to refined source localization. This paper proposes a method utilizing the mutual facilitation mechanism between sound source localization and separation for moving sources. The proposed method comprises three stages. The first stage is initial tracking, which tracks each sound source from the audio mixture based on the source signal envelope estimation. These tracking results may lack sufficient accuracy. The second stage involves mutual facilitation: Sound separation is conducted using preliminary sound source tracking results. Subsequently, sound source tracking is performed on the separated signals, thereby refining the tracking precision. The refined trajectories further improve separation performance. This mutual facilitation process can be iterated multiple times. In the third stage, a neural beamformer estimates precise single-channel separation results based on the refined tracking trajectories and multi-channel separation outputs. Simulation experiments conducted under reverberant conditions and with moving sound sources demonstrate that the proposed method can achieve more accurate separation based on refined tracking results.
Integration between electronics and biology is often facilitated by iontronics, where ion migration in aqueous media governs sensing and memory. However, the Debye screening effect limits electric fields to the Debye length, the distance over which mobile ions screen electrostatic interactions, necessitating external voltages that constrain the operation speed and device design. Here we report a high-speed in-memory sensor based on vanadium dioxide (VO2) that operates without an external voltage by leveraging built-in electric fields within the Debye length. When VO2 contacts a low-work-function metal (for example, indium) in a salt solution, electrochemical reactions generate indium ions that migrate into the VO2 surface under the native electric field, inducing a surface insulator-to-metal phase transition of VO2. The VO2 conductance increase rate reflects the salt concentration, enabling in-memory sensing, or memsensing of the solution. The memsensor mimics Caenorhabditis elegans chemosensory plasticity to guide a miniature boat for adaptive chemotaxis, illustrating low-power aquatic neurorobotics with fewer memory units.