Browsing by Author "Zhou H"
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- ItemA Blockchain Based Data Monitoring and Sharing Approach for Smart Grids(IEEE, 2019-11-11) Yang Y; Liu M; Zhou Q; Zhou H; Wang RWith the development of science and technology, human beings cannot live without electricity. The introduction of smart grid systems brings new ideas to break the shackle of existing electricity systems. This paper proposes a mechanism with data monitoring and sharing capabilities based on the consortium blockchain, realizing comprehensive monitoring of smart devices, and promoting the effective sharing of electrical data in smart grids. When a smart device is out of order, the smart contract connected to it will be triggered, and the users can check the running status through the smart phone. This approach allows nodes in the consortium blockchain to request transactions, using the prepaid payment smart contract with time-lock script to protect the consumer right of request nodes. In addition, we use a (t, n) -threshold secret sharing scheme to realize multiparty sharing of electrical data. Paillier encryption arithmetic is used to guarantee the confidentiality of messages in node transaction.
- ItemEarnings quality and crash risk in China: an integrated analysis(Emerald Publishing Limited, 16/03/2021) Wongchoti U; Tian G; Hao W; Ding Y; Zhou H; thanh, SDPurpose – The authors provide a comprehensive empirical examination on the impact of earnings quality on stock price crash risk in China. Design/methodology/approach – The authors acknowledge and distinguish two-dimensional proxies for earnings quality – accounting-based (earnings management degree) and market-based (earnings transparency) known in accounting and finance literature. Findings – The authors find that both generally indicate that better earnings quality is associated with less crashes. However, extremely high earnings transparency interacted with insider trading profit can also actually exacerbate stock price crashes. Originality/value – This study is the first to highlight the pertinence of accounting-based measures to proxy for earnings quality in a fast-growing emerging market environment such as China.
- ItemHow Reproducible are Surface Areas Calculated from the BET Equation?(Wiley-VCH GmbH, 2022-05-23) Osterrieth JWM; Rampersad J; Madden D; Rampal N; Skoric L; Connolly B; Allendorf MD; Stavila V; Snider JL; Ameloot R; Marreiros J; Ania C; Azevedo D; Vilarrasa-Garcia E; Santos BF; Bu X-H; Chang Z; Bunzen H; Champness NR; Griffin SL; Chen B; Lin R-B; Coasne B; Cohen S; Moreton JC; Colón YJ; Chen L; Clowes R; Coudert F-X; Cui Y; Hou B; D'Alessandro DM; Doheny PW; Dincă M; Sun C; Doonan C; Huxley MT; Evans JD; Falcaro P; Ricco R; Farha O; Idrees KB; Islamoglu T; Feng P; Yang H; Forgan RS; Bara D; Furukawa S; Sanchez E; Gascon J; Telalović S; Ghosh SK; Mukherjee S; Hill MR; Sadiq MM; Horcajada P; Salcedo-Abraira P; Kaneko K; Kukobat R; Kenvin J; Keskin S; Kitagawa S; Otake K-I; Lively RP; DeWitt SJA; Llewellyn P; Lotsch BV; Emmerling ST; Pütz AM; Martí-Gastaldo C; Padial NM; García-Martínez J; Linares N; Maspoch D; Suárez Del Pino JA; Moghadam P; Oktavian R; Morris RE; Wheatley PS; Navarro J; Petit C; Danaci D; Rosseinsky MJ; Katsoulidis AP; Schröder M; Han X; Yang S; Serre C; Mouchaham G; Sholl DS; Thyagarajan R; Siderius D; Snurr RQ; Goncalves RB; Telfer S; Lee SJ; Ting VP; Rowlandson JL; Uemura T; Iiyuka T; van der Veen MA; Rega D; Van Speybroeck V; Rogge SMJ; Lamaire A; Walton KS; Bingel LW; Wuttke S; Andreo J; Yaghi O; Zhang B; Yavuz CT; Nguyen TS; Zamora F; Montoro C; Zhou H; Kirchon A; Fairen-Jimenez DPorosity and surface area analysis play a prominent role in modern materials science. At the heart of this sits the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) theory, which has been a remarkably successful contribution to the field of materials science. The BET method was developed in the 1930s for open surfaces but is now the most widely used metric for the estimation of surface areas of micro- and mesoporous materials. Despite its widespread use, the calculation of BET surface areas causes a spread in reported areas, resulting in reproducibility problems in both academia and industry. To prove this, for this analysis, 18 already-measured raw adsorption isotherms were provided to sixty-one labs, who were asked to calculate the corresponding BET areas. This round-robin exercise resulted in a wide range of values. Here, the reproducibility of BET area determination from identical isotherms is demonstrated to be a largely ignored issue, raising critical concerns over the reliability of reported BET areas. To solve this major issue, a new computational approach to accurately and systematically determine the BET area of nanoporous materials is developed. The software, called "BET surface identification" (BETSI), expands on the well-known Rouquerol criteria and makes an unambiguous BET area assignment possible.
- ItemOvine FABP4 Variation and Its Association With Flystrike Susceptibility(Frontiers Media S.A., 2021-06-15) Burrows LER; Zhou H; Frampton CMA; Forrest RHJ; Hickford JGH; Su RFlystrike is a major cost and a welfare issue for the New Zealand sheep industry. There are several factors that can predispose sheep to flystrike, such as having fleecerot, a urine-stained breech, and “dags” (an accumulation of fecal matter in the wool of the breech). The FABP4 gene (FABP4) has been associated with variation in ovine fleecerot resistance, with a strong genetic correlation existing between fleecerot and flystrike occurrence. In this study, blood samples were collected from sheep with and without flystrike for DNA typing. PCR-SSCP analyses were used to genotype two regions of ovine FABP4. Sheep with the A1 variant of FABP4 were found to be less likely (odds ratio 0.689, P = 0.014) to have flystrike than those without A1. The likelihood of flystrike occurrence decreased as copy number of A1 increased (odds ratio 0.695, P = 0.006). This suggests that FABP4 might be a candidate gene for flystrike resilience in sheep, although further research is required to verify this association.
- ItemThe COVID-19 outbreak and corporate cash-holding levels: Evidence from China(Frontiers Media S.A., 2022-10-17) Zhou D; Zhou H; Bai M; Qin Y; Husin MMBy employing data from Shanghai and Shenzhen A-share markets for the period of 2019-2020, this paper examines the relationship between the degree of the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on firms' cash-holdings levels in China. We find that firms that are severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic have higher current cash holdings levels, suggesting that the more positive (negative) the management tone in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic impact, the lower (higher) the firm's current cash holdings. However, future corporate cash holdings decrease considerably irrespective of the corporate sentiment towards COVID-19. The positive sentiment of each firm's management team towards the supply chain and the government policies results in a relative reduction of current cash holdings, whereas the severe impact on operating performance, especially the impact of the outbreak on the supply chain, demand, production and operations, and government policies, reduces the firm' s future cash holdings. In addition, the impact of the pandemic has increased the current cash holdings of state-owned enterprises and reduced the future cash holdings of non-state-owned enterprises. Meanwhile, companies located in a city with a higher density of population or companies that experience relatively higher competition in the industry tend to undergo a severer impact on their current and future cash holdings due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Overall, this study sheds the light on stimulating the vitality of enterprise investment and promoting the domestic economic cycle.
- ItemWhole-genome resequencing of the native sheep provides insights into the microevolution and identifies genes associated with reproduction traits(BioMed Central Ltd, 2023-07-11) Zhu M; Yang Y; Yang H; Zhao Z; Zhang H; Blair HT; Zheng W; Wang M; Fang C; Yu Q; Zhou H; Qi HBACKGROUND: Sheep genomes undergo numerous genes losses, gains and mutation that generates genome variability among breeds of the same species after long time natural and artificial selection. However, the microevolution of native sheep in northwest China remains elusive. Our aim was to compare the genomes and relevant reproductive traits of four sheep breeds from different climatic environments, to unveil the selection challenges that this species cope with, and the microevolutionary differences in sheep genomes. Here, we resequenced the genomes of 4 representative sheep breeds in northwest China, including Kazakh sheep and Duolang sheep of native breeds, and Hu sheep and Suffolk sheep of exotic breeds with different reproductive characteristics. RESULTS: We found that these four breeds had a similar expansion experience from ~ 10,000 to 1,000,000 years ago. In the past 10,000 years, the selection intensity of the four breeds was inconsistent, resulting in differences in reproductive traits. We explored the sheep variome and selection signatures by FST and θπ. The genomic regions containing genes associated with different reproductive traits that may be potential targets for breeding and selection were detected. Furthermore, non-synonymous mutations in a set of plausible candidate genes and significant differences in their allele frequency distributions across breeds with different reproductive characteristics were found. We identified PAK1, CYP19A1 and PER1 as a likely causal gene for seasonal reproduction in native sheep through qPCR, Western blot and ELISA analyses. Also, the haplotype frequencies of 3 tested gene regions related to reproduction were significantly different among four sheep breeds. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide insights into the microevolution of native sheep and valuable genomic information for identifying genes associated with important reproductive traits in sheep.