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18 pages, 1719 KB  
Article
Numerical Analysis of In-Plane Stiffness of Light-Timber-Framed Wall Elements with Various Sheathing Materials
by Jelena Vilotijević and Miroslav Premrov
Buildings 2026, 16(3), 629; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16030629 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
This paper numerically analyses numerous parameters with the most sensitive impact on the in-plane lateral behaviour of light timber-framed (LTF) wall elements. Different types of sheathing material (fibre-plaster boards, OSB) are studied according to the parametrically chosen distance between the fasteners, using three [...] Read more.
This paper numerically analyses numerous parameters with the most sensitive impact on the in-plane lateral behaviour of light timber-framed (LTF) wall elements. Different types of sheathing material (fibre-plaster boards, OSB) are studied according to the parametrically chosen distance between the fasteners, using three different calculation procedures: (a) a previously developed semi-analytical procedure using the Modified Gamma Method (MGM) accounts for bending, shear, and timber-to-framing connection flexibility simultaneously; (b) a previously developed FEM Spring Model as the most accurate approach; and (c) in this study, a specially developed innovative FEM 2D Hinge Model using the two-dimensional hinge layer to simulate the deformability between the sheathing boards and the timber frame, which enables significantly faster FEM analysis compared to the already developed FEM Spring Model. This, in turn, realistically allows for much faster analysis of real multi-storey timber structures. In order to only judge the influence of the sheathing material and fastener disposition, in all cases, the tensile and compressive vertical supports are considered to be stiff-supported wall elements as prescribed by the valid Eurocode 5 standard; however, it is possible to additionally include all three possible supporting flexibilities. The study places particular emphasis on the deformation of sliding fasteners between the sheathing boards and the timber frame, which arises from fastener flexibility and can significantly reduce the overall in-plane stiffness of LTF wall elements. For specially selected parametric values of fastener spacing (s = 20, 37.5, 75, and 150 mm), parametric FEM analysis using a special 2D hinge layer is additionally developed and performed to validate the previously developed semi-analytical expressions by the MGM for the in-plane wall stiffness, which seems to be the most appropriate for designing engineering implementation. All applied approaches to modelling wall elements considered the same parameters for evaluating the stiffness of an individual wall element, which represents a fundamental input parameter in the modelling of frame wall elements within the overall structure. The aim of the study is to determine the most suitable and accurate model, as the response of the entire structure to horizontal loading depends on the design of the individual wall element. Among these, it has been demonstrated that the thickness of the load-bearing timber frame and the type of resisting LTF walls (internal or external) have practically no significant effect on the in-plane stiffness of such wall elements. Consequently, the type of sheathing material (FPB or OSB) and especially the spacing between the fasteners are much more sensitive parameters, which would probably need to be given further consideration in future FEM studies. Full article
21 pages, 741 KB  
Article
Governing Collaborative Technological Innovation for Net-Zero Transition in Micro-Jurisdictions: Evidence from Macao’s New Qualitative Productivity Framework
by Bowen Chen, Xiaoyu Wei, Shenghua Lou, Hongfeng Zhang, Iek Hang Ngan and Kei Un Wong
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1509; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031509 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Against the backdrop of China’s dual-carbon goals and the global push toward net-zero emissions, Macao faces not only an innovation deficit but also the urgent need to reconfigure its economic structure toward green and low-carbon development. This study investigates collaborative innovation mechanisms within [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of China’s dual-carbon goals and the global push toward net-zero emissions, Macao faces not only an innovation deficit but also the urgent need to reconfigure its economic structure toward green and low-carbon development. This study investigates collaborative innovation mechanisms within Macao’s technological ecosystem through the lens of new qualitative productivity, a paradigm emphasizing structural optimization and systemic innovation capacity. As a micro-jurisdiction within the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA), Macao faces challenges due to its tourism-dependent economy and spatial constraints. Employing a qualitative methodology grounded in collaborative governance theory, the research combines theoretical framework construction with empirical case studies of technology enterprises, notably Enterprise B, to analyze stakeholder interactions, resource integration, and institutional dynamics. This study examines how collaborative technological innovation governance in a micro-jurisdiction can underpin net-zero and green supply chain transitions by mobilizing cross-border resources and institutional synergies. Key findings reveal a polycentric governance model involving government, enterprises, academic institutions, and civil society organizations. This model leverages cross-border synergies, platformization, and adaptive recalibration to overcome structural limitations. Results highlight tripartite drivers—policy incentives, market forces, and corporate strategies—that enhance innovation throughput. Despite advancements in institutional coordination, challenges persist, including low enterprise absorption of government funding, talent attrition, and fragmented academic–industrial linkages. The study proposes strategic recalibrations, such as refining policy architectures, strengthening industry–academia–research symbiosis, and optimizing transnational collaboration through Macao’s Lusophone networks. The findings provide governance insights for micro-jurisdictions seeking to align new qualitative productivity with decarbonization, renewable energy integration, and participation in regional green supply chains. Full article
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19 pages, 4560 KB  
Article
Experimental Study on Plume Diffusion Characteristics of Particle-Driven Gravity Current Under Wall Confinement
by Yuyao Li, Guocheng Zhao, Longfei Xiao and Lixin Xu
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2026, 14(3), 295; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse14030295 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Gravity currents constrained by bottom walls are prevalent in engineering applications such as industrial discharges and deep-sea mining, and will pose significant environmental risks. In this study, the influence of jet source parameters on the dynamics and diffusion characteristics of particle-driven bottom currents [...] Read more.
Gravity currents constrained by bottom walls are prevalent in engineering applications such as industrial discharges and deep-sea mining, and will pose significant environmental risks. In this study, the influence of jet source parameters on the dynamics and diffusion characteristics of particle-driven bottom currents was investigated through physical experiments using Digital Image Processing (DIP). This non-invasive technology is cost-effective and exhibits broad applicability. The results demonstrated that the downstream plume front dLmax, the maximum lift height hLmax and the average lift height have all exhibit a decreasing trend with increasing Richardson number (Ri) after impingement, and show a linear increase with rising Reynolds number (Re). The plume diffusion scale S follows a two-stage evolution: during the inertia-dominated stage, S evolves exponentially over time t as S=aebt, while in the equilibrium stage of negative buoyancy and turbulent dissipation, S follows a power-law relationship S=atb (b < 1). The rate of change of S increases with smaller jet angles α, and the variations with dimensionless bottom clearance H/D remain within 10%. The dimensionless average longitudinal expansion rate E¯g/D reaches minimum values at α = 75°, peaks at H/D = 10, and exhibits a linear decreasing trend with Ri. As Re increases, E¯g/D displays a three-stage fluctuating behavior. This study provides valuable experimental data that improve the understanding of gravity current behavior under wall confinement and support the predictive modelling of gravity current. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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23 pages, 975 KB  
Article
Grape-Associated Yeasts as Promising Antagonists Against Fungal Pathogens
by Tamar Maghradze, Alessandra Di Canito, Carmen Cris De Oliveira Nobre Bezerra, Mathabatha Evodia Setati, Roberto Carmine Foschino, Daniela Fracassetti and Ileana Vigentini
Microbiol. Res. 2026, 17(2), 32; https://doi.org/10.3390/microbiolres17020032 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Biocontrol, a practice for using living organisms to target plant pathogens, offers a promising, sustainable agricultural strategy. This study involves epiphytic yeasts isolated from Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris and ssp. vinifera as natural antagonists against Aspergillus carbonarius, Botrytis cinerea, and Penicillium [...] Read more.
Biocontrol, a practice for using living organisms to target plant pathogens, offers a promising, sustainable agricultural strategy. This study involves epiphytic yeasts isolated from Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris and ssp. vinifera as natural antagonists against Aspergillus carbonarius, Botrytis cinerea, and Penicillium expansum. Twenty-one of 37 yeasts were chosen based on the Pathology Intensity (PA) score during preliminary in vivo screening. Following identification, dual-culture assays, VOC production, copper tolerance, and commercial fungicide resistance were assessed. On YPD and GJ medium, Saccharomyces isolates were the strongest antagonists, whereas P. terricola UMY197 inhibited Penicillium and Aspergillus. H. uvarum UMY1473 was notably effective against B. cinerea. VOC analysis confirmed that S. cerevisiae UMY1430 was the most effective against Aspergillus, likely owing to its production of oxalic acid, while S. cerevisiae UMY1438 was a producer of various esters and phenylethyl alcohol. C. intermedia UMY189, M. pulcherrima UMY1472, H. uvarum UMY1473, and S. cerevisiae UMY1436 were the most copper-resistant. Yeast activity on chemical fungicide SWITCH (up to 1 g/L) depended on culture media usage; in fact, a higher viability on YPD than on GJ was observed, where only 4 yeasts were able to grow. Thus, since several yeasts exhibit promising inhibitory activity through various mechanisms and against different molds, the use of synthetic consortia could represent a powerful and essential tool in field trials to limit fungicide use while preventing the emergence of resistance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Plant–Pathogen Interactions)
19 pages, 586 KB  
Article
Perceived Stress and Sociodemographic Factors Among Saudi Women with Breast Cancer: A Cross-Sectional Study
by Sahar Abdulkarim Al-Ghareeb, Ahmad Aboshaiqah, Mousa Yahia Asiri, Homoud Ibrahim Alanazi and Ahmad M. Rayani
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(3), 1168; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15031168 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Background: and objective: Globally, breast cancer (BC) raises global health concerns, being the most common cancer. Women with BC experience a significant increase in perception of stress. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate the stress levels and associated sociodemographic and clinical factors among [...] Read more.
Background: and objective: Globally, breast cancer (BC) raises global health concerns, being the most common cancer. Women with BC experience a significant increase in perception of stress. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate the stress levels and associated sociodemographic and clinical factors among BC women in Saudi Arabia. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted between January and May 2025. Women diagnosed with BC, who were at least 18 years old, were recruited conveniently from outpatient and inpatient departments in King Fahad Specialist Hospital, Dammam, Saudi Arabia. Data were collected in the Arabic language through self-reported questionnaires, including sociodemographic/clinical characteristics and the Cohen’s Perceived Stress Scale. The data were analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) version 27. Results: A total of 200 participants were included in the study. The mean stress perception score was 26.52 ± 7.34. A high proportion (71.5%) of the sample reported elevated stress. A significant association was observed between age and stress levels. Most women aged 20–40 and 41–60 reported high stress, compared to women in the 61–80 age group (p = 0.003). Among all predictors, age was the only variable significantly associated with stress scores. Increasing age was associated with lower stress levels (B = −0.179, p = 0.013), indicating that younger participants tended to report higher stress. This corresponds to an adjusted decrease of approximately 1.8 points in the PSS-10 score per 10-year increase in age. Although participants with Stage IV cancer showed higher stress scores compared to those with Stage I cancer, this association approached but did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.054). Conclusions: This study highlights the substantial psychological burden experienced by women living with BC in Saudi Arabia. The majority of participants reported high levels of perceived stress. Younger women were particularly vulnerable to elevated stress. These findings highlight the need for targeted psychosocial support within oncology care to improve emotional well-being and quality of life. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Oncology)
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15 pages, 4680 KB  
Article
Design and Voltage-Controlled Reconfigurability of an Interdigital Bandpass Filter
by Mohamed Guermal, Jamal Zbitou, Fouad Aytouna, Stephane Ginestar and Mohammed El Gibari
Telecom 2026, 7(1), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/telecom7010016 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
This paper presents the design of a highly reconfigurable interdigital bandpass filter (BPF) developed through a three-stage design approach. In the first stage, the influence of four low-loss dielectric substrates on the filter response is systematically analyzed to identify the optimal [...] Read more.
This paper presents the design of a highly reconfigurable interdigital bandpass filter (BPF) developed through a three-stage design approach. In the first stage, the influence of four low-loss dielectric substrates on the filter response is systematically analyzed to identify the optimal configuration. The selected substrate demonstrates excellent performance, achieving an input return loss of −38 dB, an insertion loss of −0.9 dB at 4.30 GHz, and a wide passband corresponding to a bandwidth (BW) of 2.20 GHz. In the second stage, two variable capacitors were incorporated into the baseline geometry, enabling manual tuning of the center frequency (f0) from 5.10 to 6.34 GHz, with (S11) better than −25 dB and (S12) close to −0.60 dB. In the final stage, the capacitors were replaced by SMV1413 varactor diodes, transforming the design into a fully voltage-controlled tunable filter. This configuration provides continuous frequency agility from 4.70 to 5 GHz without modifying the physical structure, while achieving (S11) levels down to −40 dB and insertion loss as low as −0.7 dB. The proposed architecture offers a compact, low-loss, and electrically reconfigurable solution, making it a promising solution for next-generation RF front-ends, adaptive wireless systems, and cognitive radio applications. Two independent Electromagnetic solvers (EM) were employed to validate the filter’s performance: an EM based on the Finite Integration Technique and the Advanced Design System 2026 (ADS) solver using the Method of Moments (MoM). The close agreement between the results produced by both platforms confirms the accuracy and robustness of the proposed reconfigurable bandpass filter structure. Full article
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17 pages, 4803 KB  
Communication
Effect of Lap Joint Configuration and Seam Strategy in Green-Laser Welding on Multi-Layer Cu Foil Stacks to Lead-Tab Joints for Pouch Cell Application
by Seong Min Hong, Bum-Su Go and Hee-Seon Bang
Materials 2026, 19(3), 573; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19030573 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
This study examines the joining characteristics of Cu foil stacks to lead tabs using green-laser welding in the main-welding step of a sequential welding process for lithium-ion pouch cells. The influence of lap configuration, line and wobble seam strategies, and process parameters was [...] Read more.
This study examines the joining characteristics of Cu foil stacks to lead tabs using green-laser welding in the main-welding step of a sequential welding process for lithium-ion pouch cells. The influence of lap configuration, line and wobble seam strategies, and process parameters was systematically investigated in terms of bead morphology, mechanical performance, metallurgical characteristics, and electrical resistance. Under the present line-welding parameter window (2.0 kW, 100–200 mm/s), humping, pinholes, and porosity were observed, particularly in the upper lead-tab configuration, which is attributed to melt-pool/keyhole instability under the applied conditions. Wobble welding effectively suppressed these defects in the foil-stack configuration by promoting stable melt flow and efficient bubble expulsion. Mechanical tests revealed that the wobble-based seam strategy achieved a maximum tensile–shear load of approximately 1.28 kN at a wobble amplitude of 0.8 mm. Fracture analysis confirmed a transition from seam-type interfacial failure in line welding to ductile tearing in the heat-affected zone with wobble welding. In electrical performance, wobble welding reduced resistance to as low as 45 µΩ at a wobble amplitude of 1.2 mm, while line welding yielded higher and scattered values. These results should be interpreted as the combined outcome of the wobble-based seam strategy (beam oscillation together with overlapped stitch welding at a lower travel speed) under the present processing windows. A strictly matched A/B comparison at identical linear energy density and seam layout will be investigated in future work to isolate the effect of oscillation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Welding and Joining Processes of Materials)
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26 pages, 2695 KB  
Article
LoRa/LoRaWAN Time Synchronization: A Comprehensive Analysis, Performance Evaluation, and Compensation of Frame Timestamping
by Stefano Rinaldi, Elia Mondini, Paolo Ferrari, Alessandra Flammini and Emiliano Sisinni
Future Internet 2026, 18(2), 80; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi18020080 (registering DOI) - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
This paper examines precise timestamping of LoRaWAN messages (particularly beacons) to enable wide-area synchronization for end devices without GNSS. The need for accuracy demands hardware-level timestamping architectures, possibly using time-domain cross-correlation (matched filtering) against internally generated chirp references. Focusing on Time-of-Arrival (TOA [...] Read more.
This paper examines precise timestamping of LoRaWAN messages (particularly beacons) to enable wide-area synchronization for end devices without GNSS. The need for accuracy demands hardware-level timestamping architectures, possibly using time-domain cross-correlation (matched filtering) against internally generated chirp references. Focusing on Time-of-Arrival (TOA) estimation from raw IQ samples, the authors analyze effects of non-idealities—additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN), Carrier Frequency Offset (CFO), Sampling Phase and Frequency Offset (SPO and SFO, respectively), and radio parameters such as spreading factor (SF) and sampling rate of the baseband signals. A MATLAB (R2020) simulation mimics preamble detection and Start-of-Frame Delimiter (SFD) timestamping while sweeping SF (7, 9, 12), sampling rates (0.25–10 MSa/s), SNR (−20 to +20 dB), and CFO/SFO offsets (−10–10 ppm frequency deviation). Errors are evaluated in terms of mean and dispersion, the latter represented by the P95–P5 range metric. Results show that oversampling not only improves temporal resolution, but sub-microsecond error dispersion can be achieved with high sampling rates in favorable SNR and SF cases. Indeed, SPO and SNR greatly contribute to error dispersion. On the other hand, higher SF values increase correlation robustness at the cost of longer chirps, making SFO a dominant error source; ±10 ppm SFO can induce roughly ±3 μs SFD bias for SF12. CFO largely cancels after up-/down-chirp averaging. As a concluding remark, matched-filter hardware timestamping can ensure sub-μs errors thanks to oversampling but requires SFO compensation for accurate real-world synchronization in practice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Edge and Fog Computing for the Internet of Things, 2nd Edition)
17 pages, 1006 KB  
Article
Using Neural Networks to Generate A Basis for OFDM Acoustic Signal Decomposition in Non-Stationary Underwater Media to Provide for Reliability and Energy Efficiency
by Aleksandr Yu. Rodionov, Lyubov G. Statsenko, Andrey A. Chusov, Denis A. Kuzin and Mariia. M. Smirnova
Acoustics 2026, 8(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics8010010 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
The high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) in classical high-speed digital data transmission systems with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) limits energy efficiency and communication range. This paper proposes a method for randomizing OFDM signals via frequency coding using synthesized pseudorandom sequences with improved [...] Read more.
The high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) in classical high-speed digital data transmission systems with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) limits energy efficiency and communication range. This paper proposes a method for randomizing OFDM signals via frequency coding using synthesized pseudorandom sequences with improved autocorrelation properties, obtained through machine learning, to minimize PAPR in complex, non-stationary hydroacoustic channels for communicating with underwater robotic systems. A neural network architecture was developed and trained to generate codes of up to 150 elements long based on an analysis of patterns in previously found best short sequences. The obtained class of OFDM signals does not require regular and accurate estimation of channel parameters while remaining resistant to various types of impulse noise, Doppler shifts, and significant multipath interference typical of the underwater environment. The attained spectral efficiency values (up to 0.5 bits/s/Hz) are relatively high for existing hydroacoustic communication systems. It has been shown that the peak power of such multi-frequency information transmission systems can be effectively reduced by an average of 5–10 dB, which allows for an increase in the communication range compared to classical OFDM methods in non-stationary hydrological conditions at acceptable bit error rates (from 10−2 to 10−3 and less). The effectiveness of the proposed methods of randomization with synthesized codes and frequency coding for OFDM signals was confirmed by field experiments at sea on the shelf, over distances of up to 4.2 km, with sea waves of up to 2–3 Beaufort units and mutual movement of the transmitter and receiver. Full article
21 pages, 4373 KB  
Article
Identification and Expression Analysis of Transcription Factor Family in Highland Barley Seedlings Under Na2SeO3 Treatment
by Xiaozhuo Wu, Feng Qiao, Guigong Geng, Jianxia Ma and Huichun Xie
Life 2026, 16(2), 255; https://doi.org/10.3390/life16020255 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Transcription factors (TFs) are ubiquitously distributed in plants and play pivotal roles in regulating plant growth and development. The present study aims to elucidate the function of transcription factors (TFs) in highland barley’s response to selenium stress. The results show that 89, 218, [...] Read more.
Transcription factors (TFs) are ubiquitously distributed in plants and play pivotal roles in regulating plant growth and development. The present study aims to elucidate the function of transcription factors (TFs) in highland barley’s response to selenium stress. The results show that 89, 218, 141, 92, 23, and 34 genes were identified from the bHLH, MYB, NAC, WRKY, GATA, and HSF families, respectively. We analyzed the physicochemical properties of the transcription factor family, including amino acid number and molecular weight, theoretical PI, instability index, hydrophilicity index, and subcellular location. The majority of proteins encoded by these gene families are hydrophilic and predominantly localized in the nucleus. Structural analysis demonstrates that each family contains conserved motifs and domains. Most bHLH genes, such as KAE8811666.1 and KAE8789390.1, contain bHLH_SF superfamily domains. 45 MYB genes possess the myb_SHAQKYF domain. Most NAC genes possess typical NAM domains. Most WRKY proteins showed the WRKY superfamily domain. The 22 members of GATA possess the ZnF_GATA domain. HSF gene family showed that 24 gene family members contained HSF domains. Systematic evolutionary analysis indicates that the bHLH and NAC families can each be divided into nine subfamilies, while the remaining four families are categorized into five to eight subfamilies, respectively. Based on transcriptome data, under low selenium treatment, 56.25%, 76%, 67.39%, 47.37%, 50%, and 56.25% of the genes belonging to the bHLH, MYB, NAC, WRKY, GATA, and HSF transcription factor families were significantly upregulated, respectively. In contrast, under high selenium treatment, the proportions of upregulated genes in these families were 81.25%, 80%, 65.22%, 63.16%, 75%, and 75%, respectively. Additionally, qRT-PCR results were consistent with the trends of the transcriptome expression data, corroborating the reliability and accuracy of the transcriptomic findings. These results elucidate the molecular characteristics and response patterns of six transcription factor families to selenium stress in highland barley, laying a foundation for further in-depth research on the functions of transcription factors in highland barley plants. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Genetics and Genomics)
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27 pages, 516 KB  
Article
How the Representation of Retrieved Context Affects In-Context Prompting for Commit Message Generation
by Dokyeong An and Geunseok Yang
Electronics 2026, 15(3), 652; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15030652 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
High-quality commit messages are essential software artifacts because they succinctly communicate the intent and scope of code changes, yet large language models (LLMs) often fail to reflect project-specific writing conventions when used in a zero-shot setting without contextual signals. This study investigates not [...] Read more.
High-quality commit messages are essential software artifacts because they succinctly communicate the intent and scope of code changes, yet large language models (LLMs) often fail to reflect project-specific writing conventions when used in a zero-shot setting without contextual signals. This study investigates not whether retrieval helps, but how the same retrieved example, when represented differently in the prompt, quantitatively changes generation outcomes. We implement a retrieve-then-generate framework where the target commit’s diff is used as a query for BM25 (Best Matching 25)-based sparse retrieval over a commit-level database, and the top-1 similar commit is optionally injected as an example context. We compare a no-context condition (K = 0) against a minimal-context condition (K = 1) under three context representations: Diff-only, Message-only, and Diff+Message pair. Using Qwen-7B on 8000 evaluation samples with a fixed prompt skeleton, deterministic decoding, and identical post-processing across conditions, we observe negligible differences at K = 0 (BLEU-4 1.14, ROUGE-L 7.47–7.48, METEOR 4.88–4.91), establishing a stable baseline. At K = 1, the same top-1 retrieved case yields systematically different metric responses depending on how it is represented (Diff-only, Message-only, or Diff+Message), even under an identical prompt skeleton, deterministic decoding, and identical post-processing. This indicates that “context representation” is not a cosmetic formatting choice but a first-class prompt-design variable in retrieval-augmented in-context learning for commit message generation. Accordingly, practitioners should select the representation based on the intended objective (e.g., lexical/style alignment vs. change-intent grounding), rather than assuming a universally optimal format. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue AI-Powered Natural Language Processing Applications)
56 pages, 2923 KB  
Article
FileCipher: A Chaos-Enhanced CPRNG-Based Algorithm for Parallel File Encryption
by Yousef Sanjalawe, Ahmad Al-Daraiseh, Salam Al-E’mari and Sharif Naser Makhadmeh
Algorithms 2026, 19(2), 119; https://doi.org/10.3390/a19020119 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
The exponential growth of digital data and the escalating sophistication of cyber threats have intensified the demand for secure yet computationally efficient encryption methods. Conventional algorithms (e.g., AES-based schemes) are cryptographically strong and widely deployed; however, some implementations can face performance bottlenecks in [...] Read more.
The exponential growth of digital data and the escalating sophistication of cyber threats have intensified the demand for secure yet computationally efficient encryption methods. Conventional algorithms (e.g., AES-based schemes) are cryptographically strong and widely deployed; however, some implementations can face performance bottlenecks in large-scale or real-time workloads. While many modern systems seed from hardware entropy sources and employ standardized cryptographic PRNGs/DRBGs, security can still be degraded in practice by weak entropy initialization, misconfiguration, or the use of non-cryptographic deterministic generators in certain environments. To address these gaps, this study introduces FileCipher. This novel file-encryption framework integrates a chaos-enhanced Cryptographically Secure Pseudorandom Number Generator (CPRNG) based on the State-Based Tent Map (SBTM). The proposed design achieves a balanced trade-off between security and efficiency through dynamic key generation, adaptive block reshaping, and structured confusion–diffusion processes. The SBTM-driven CPRNG introduces adaptive seeding and multi-key feedback, ensuring high entropy and sensitivity to initial conditions. A multi-threaded Java implementation demonstrates approximately 60% reduction in encryption time compared with AES-CBC, validating FileCipher’s scalability in parallel execution environments. Statistical evaluations using NIST SP 800-22, SP 800-90B, Dieharder, and TestU01 confirm superior randomness with over 99% pass rates, while Avalanche Effect analysis indicates bit-change ratios near 50%, proving strong diffusion characteristics. The results highlight FileCipher’s novelty in combining nonlinear chaotic dynamics with lightweight parallel architecture, offering a robust, platform-independent solution for secure data storage and transmission. Ultimately, this paper contributes a reproducible, entropy-stable, and high-performance cryptographic mechanism that redefines the efficiency–security balance in modern encryption systems. Full article
12 pages, 505 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Salusin-α and Salusin-β Levels in Human Saliva Samples from Patients with Gingivitis and Periodontitis: A Cross-Sectional Study
by Fatma Tuba Akdeniz, Zerrin Barut, Ahmet Mert Nalbantoglu and Turgay İsbir
Biomedicines 2026, 14(2), 346; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines14020346 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Background: Gingivitis and periodontitis are progressive inflammatory diseases affecting the tissues surrounding the teeth; gingivitis involves reversible gingival inflammation, whereas periodontitis is a more advanced condition characterized by irreversible tissue destruction, including clinical attachment and alveolar bone loss. Salusin-α and salusin-β are [...] Read more.
Background: Gingivitis and periodontitis are progressive inflammatory diseases affecting the tissues surrounding the teeth; gingivitis involves reversible gingival inflammation, whereas periodontitis is a more advanced condition characterized by irreversible tissue destruction, including clinical attachment and alveolar bone loss. Salusin-α and salusin-β are inflammation-related polypeptides that may reflect periodontal inflammatory burden; however, salivary data in periodontal diseases are lacking. This study aimed to evaluate the salivary salusin-α and salusin-β levels in individuals with gingivitis and periodontitis. Methods: Saliva samples were collected from a total of 80 systemically healthy non-smoker individuals classified into three groups: gingivitis (n = 27), stage III grade B periodontitis (n = 27), and healthy participant (n = 26) based on the 2017 Periodontal Classification criteria. Salusin-α and salusin-β levels in saliva were quantified using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). Statistical analysis utilized one-way ANOVA, Student’s t-test, and Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Results: Compared to the healthy group, salivary levels of salusin-α and salusin-β were found to be significantly elevated in periodontitis groups (p < 0.05), not gingivitis (p > 0.05); moreover, the increase in both markers was significantly greater in the periodontitis group than in the gingivitis group (p < 0.05). Conclusions: Our finding suggests that salusins play a role in the inflammatory processes of periodontal diseases. The increase in salusin-α and salusin-β levels in the periodontitis suggests that these parameters may serve as biomarkers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microbiology in Human Health and Disease)
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20 pages, 1995 KB  
Article
Optimized PAB-RRT Algorithm for Autonomous Vehicle Path Planning in Complex Scenarios
by Jinbo Wang, Weihai Zhang, Jinming Zhang, Wei Liao and Tingwei Du
Electronics 2026, 15(3), 651; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15030651 - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
Path planning is a pivotal technology for autonomous vehicles, directly influencing driving safety and comfort. Developing algorithms adaptable to diverse scenarios is critical for ensuring the safe operation of autonomous driving systems and advancing their engineering applications. The existing Rapidly exploring Random Tree [...] Read more.
Path planning is a pivotal technology for autonomous vehicles, directly influencing driving safety and comfort. Developing algorithms adaptable to diverse scenarios is critical for ensuring the safe operation of autonomous driving systems and advancing their engineering applications. The existing Rapidly exploring Random Tree (RRT) algorithm has limitations such as low efficiency and tortuous, lengthy paths. To address these issues, this study proposes the PAB-RRT algorithm, which integrates probabilistic goal bias, adaptive step size, and bidirectional exploration into RRT. Comparative simulations were conducted to evaluate PAB-RRT against traditional RRT, RRT*, and single-strategy improved variants (A-RRT, P-RRT, B-RRT). Results show that in static multi-obstacle scenarios, PAB-RRT completes planning with 30 iterations (6.99% of traditional RRT), 0.1255 s computation time (21.9% of traditional RRT), and a 130.83 m path length (7.2% shorter than traditional RRT). In dynamic obstacle scenarios, it requires 19 iterations (0.0434 s) at the initial stage and 37 iterations (0.0861 s) after obstacle movement, with path length stably around 130 m. Overall, PAB-RRT outperforms traditional algorithms in exploration efficiency, path performance, and robustness in complex settings, better meeting the efficiency and reliability requirements of autonomous vehicle path planning under complex scenarios and providing a feasible reference for related technology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Electric Vehicles and Energy Storage Systems)
23 pages, 856 KB  
Article
Posting the Urban Tourism Experience: Motivations Behind Multimodal UGC Sharing
by Shangqing Liu, Liying Wang, Xiaolu Yang and Yuanxiang Peng
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(2), 88; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10020088 (registering DOI) - 2 Feb 2026
Abstract
As a vital component of urban tourism, urban theme parks increasingly face experience homogenization and intensifying competition. Accordingly, the implementation of refined digital marketing and operational strategies based on visitor digital behavior has become increasingly essential. In this context, tourists’ social media sharing [...] Read more.
As a vital component of urban tourism, urban theme parks increasingly face experience homogenization and intensifying competition. Accordingly, the implementation of refined digital marketing and operational strategies based on visitor digital behavior has become increasingly essential. In this context, tourists’ social media sharing has become a crucial link between destination marketing and visitors’ experience construction. Within the SOBC (Stimulus–Organism–Behavior–Consequence) framework, this study examines how theme park servicescapes (S) shape sharing motivations (O), which, in turn, influence multimodal sharing intentions (B—text, image + text, video) and subsequently contribute to memorable theme park experience (C). A two-stage, mixed-method design was employed, and the study considered visitors to Beijing Universal Studios and Shanghai Disney Resort. Semi-structured interviews and grounded analysis identified five motivations: altruism, self-presentation, affective expression, hedonic motivation, and community identification. Testing was performed using a survey (N = 604), along with structural equation modeling. The findings indicate that the staff-related social environment exerts significant positive effects on all five motivations, whereas the effects of the physical environment are more selective. Motivations differentially predict modal intentions: text aligns with altruism and affective expression; image + text aligns with altruism, community identification, and self-presentation; and video aligns with self-presentation, hedonism, community identification, and affective expression. All three intentions positively affect memorable theme park experience. These results clarify how motivations map onto content forms and validate a support SOBC framework from servicescapes to memorable experience, offering actionable implications for experience design and digital marketing. Full article
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