Home / Advanced Search

  • Title/Keywords

  • Author/Affliations

  • Journal

  • Article Type

  • Start Year

  • End Year

Update SearchingClear
  • Articles
  • Online
Search Results (140)
  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    3RVAV: A Three-Round Voting and Proof-of-Stake Consensus Protocol with Provable Byzantine Fault Tolerance

    Abeer S. Al-Humaimeedy*

    CMC-Computers, Materials & Continua, Vol.85, No.3, pp. 5207-5236, 2025, DOI:10.32604/cmc.2025.068273 - 23 October 2025

    Abstract This paper presents 3RVAV (Three-Round Voting with Advanced Validation), a novel Byzantine Fault Tolerant consensus protocol combining Proof-of-Stake with a multi-phase voting mechanism. The protocol introduces three layers of randomized committee voting with distinct participant roles (Validators, Delegators, and Users), achieving -threshold approval per round through a verifiable random function (VRF)-based selection process. Our security analysis demonstrates 3RVAV provides resistance to Sybil attacks with participants and stake , while maintaining communication complexity. Experimental simulations show 3247 TPS throughput with 4-s finality, representing a 5.8× improvement over Algorand’s committee-based approach. The proposed protocol achieves approximately 4.2-s More >

  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    Tolerance of Sweet Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) to Water Deficit and Irrigation Water Salinity: Water Relations and Production

    Rodrigo Rafael da Silva1,*, Gabriela Carvalho Maia de Queiroz1, Amanda Cibele da Paz Sousa1, Antônio Gustavo de Luna Souto1, Francisco Hélio Alves de Andrade 2, Francimar Maik da Silva Morais1, Rita Magally Oliveira da Silva Marcelino1, Fagner Nogueira Ferreira1, Alex Alvares da Silva3, Maria Isabela Batista Clemente1, Baltazar Cirino Junior1, Wedson Aleff Oliveira da Silva1, Mateus de Freitas Almeida dos Santos1, José Francismar de Medeiros1,*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.9, pp. 2797-2814, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.068089 - 30 September 2025

    Abstract Due to its tolerance to water deficit and salinity, sorghum is considered a suitable crop for cultivation in regions affected by these stress conditions, enabling the efficient use of limited water resources. This study evaluated the resilience of the sweet sorghum cultivar BRS 506 under water deficit and salinity stress, focusing on water relations and yield performance in semiarid conditions. A randomized complete block design was employed in a 3 × 3 factorial arrangement with four replicates. Treatments consisted of three levels of irrigation water salinity (1.50, 3.75, and 6.00 dS m−1) and three irrigation levels… More >

  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    An Efficient and Verifiable Data Aggregation Protocol with Enhanced Privacy Protection

    Yiming Zhang1, Wei Zhang1,2,*, Cong Shen3

    CMC-Computers, Materials & Continua, Vol.85, No.2, pp. 3185-3211, 2025, DOI:10.32604/cmc.2025.067563 - 23 September 2025

    Abstract Distributed data fusion is essential for numerous applications, yet faces significant privacy security challenges. Federated learning (FL), as a distributed machine learning paradigm, offers enhanced data privacy protection and has attracted widespread attention. Consequently, research increasingly focuses on developing more secure FL techniques. However, in real-world scenarios involving malicious entities, the accuracy of FL results is often compromised, particularly due to the threat of collusion between two servers. To address this challenge, this paper proposes an efficient and verifiable data aggregation protocol with enhanced privacy protection. After analyzing attack methods against prior schemes, we implement… More >

  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    Comparative Analyses of Physiological and Transcriptomic Responses Reveal Chive (Allium ascalonicum L.) Bolting Tolerance Mechanisms

    Siyang Ou1, Liuyan Yang1, Tingting Yuan1, Mutong Li1, Guohui Liao2, Wanping Zhang1, Guangdong Geng1,*, Suqin Zhang1,*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.8, pp. 2441-2460, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.068368 - 29 August 2025

    Abstract Chive (Allium ascalonicum L.), a seeding-vernalization-type vegetable, is prone to bolting. To explore the physiological and molecular mechanisms of its bolting, bolting-prone (‘BA’) and bolting-resistant (‘WA’) chives were sampled at the vegetative growth, floral bud differentiation, and bud emergence stages. No bolting was observed in bolting-resistant ‘WA’ on the 130th day after planting, whereas the bolting reached 39.22% in bolting-prone ‘BA’, which was significantly higher than that of ‘WA’. The contents of gibberellins, abscisic acid, and zeatin riboside after floral bud differentiation in ‘WA’ were significantly less than in ‘BA’, whereas the indoleacetic acid content in… More >

  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    Hypoglycemic Lignans from Amomum tsao-ko Leaves: Their α-Glucosidase Inhibitory Mechanism Integrated In Silico and In Vivo Validation

    Yun Wang1,2,#, Xin-Yu Li1,3,#, Sheng-Li Wu1,3, Pianchou Gongpan1, Da-Hong Li2, Chang-An Geng1,3,*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.8, pp. 2563-2574, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.068185 - 29 August 2025

    Abstract Twelve lignans (1–12) isolated from Amomum tsao-ko leaves were evaluated for the inhibitory effects against α-glucosidase and PTP1B. Compounds 1−4 and 10 showed inhibition on α-glucosidase with inhibitory ratios ranging from 53.8% to 90.0%, while compound 10 demonstrated 56.1% inhibition on PTP1B at 200 μM. Notably, erythro-5-methoxy-dadahol A (2) and threo-5-methoxy-dadahol A (3) displayed obvious inhibition on α-glucosidase with IC50 values of 33.3 μM and 22.1 μM, significantly outperforming acarbose (IC50 = 344.0 μM). Kinetic study revealed that compound 3 maintained a mixed-type mode, engaging with both free enzyme and enzyme-substrate complex via non-competitive and uncompetitive mechanisms. Molecular docking simulations further clarified its More >

  • Open Access

    REVIEW

    Unraveling the Functional Diversity of MYB Transcription Factors in Plants: A Systematic Review of Recent Advances

    Imene Tatar Caliskan1,2, George Dzorgbenya Ametefe3, Aziz Caliskan4, Su-Ee Lau1,5, Yvonne Jing Mei Liew6, Nur Kusaira Khairul Ikram5, Boon Chin Tan1,*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.8, pp. 2229-2254, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.067225 - 29 August 2025

    Abstract Myeloblastosis (MYB) transcription factors (TFs) are evolutionarily conserved regulatory proteins that are crucial for plant growth, development, secondary metabolism, and stress adaptation. Recent studies have highlighted their crucial role in coordinating growth–defense trade-offs through transcriptional regulation of key biosynthetic and stress-response genes. Despite extensive functional characterization in model plants such as Arabidopsis thaliana, systematically evaluating the broader functional landscape of MYB TFs across diverse species and contexts remains necessary. This systematic review integrates results from 24 peer-reviewed studies sourced from Scopus and Web of Science, focusing on the functional diversity of MYB TFs, particularly in relation… More >

  • Open Access

    REVIEW

    A Comprehensive Review on Urban Resilience via Fault-Tolerant IoT and Sensor Networks

    Hitesh Mohapatra*

    CMC-Computers, Materials & Continua, Vol.85, No.1, pp. 221-247, 2025, DOI:10.32604/cmc.2025.068338 - 29 August 2025

    Abstract Fault tolerance is essential for reliable and sustainable smart city infrastructure. Interconnected IoT systems must function under frequent faults, limited resources, and complex conditions. Existing research covers various fault-tolerant methods. However, current reviews often lack system-level critique and multidimensional analysis. This study provides a structured review of fault tolerance strategies across layered IoT architectures in smart cities. It evaluates fault detection, containment, and recovery techniques using specific metrics. These include fault visibility, propagation depth, containment score, and energy-resilience trade-offs. The analysis uses comparative tables, architecture-aware discussions, and conceptual plots. It investigates the impact of fault… More >

  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    The Addition of Calcium and Strontium Improves Salt Tolerance of Chinese Cabbage at the Germination Stage

    Shiyang Li1,#, Jia Song1,#, Bingxuan Fan1, Yunshu Tang2, Yamin Xing1, Yuqi Gao1, Nianwei Qiu1,*, Hongxia Zhang1,3,*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.6, pp. 1811-1826, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.065751 - 27 June 2025

    Abstract Strontium has similar chemical properties to calcium and has recently been recognized as a non-essential beneficial element for plants. In order to compare the effects of strontium and calcium on improving salt tolerance of Chinese cabbage during the germination stage, 2, 4, and 8 mmol/L of SrCl2, CaCl2 or an equimolar mixture of both were added separately to a 150 mmol/L NaCl solution. The results showed that Ca-Sr addition significantly increased seed viability, seed vigor, seed germination rate and seed germination uniformity of Chinese cabbage compared with the salt-control group. The differences in germination percentage (GP)… More >

  • Open Access

    ARTICLE

    Salt Tolerance of Different Maize Genotypes during Germination and Seedling Stages

    Gülay Zulkadir*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.6, pp. 1879-1896, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.064144 - 27 June 2025

    Abstract Soil salinization is a prominent global environmental issue that considerably affects the sustainable development of agriculture worldwide. Maize, a key crop integral to the global agricultural economy, is especially susceptible to the detrimental impacts of salt stress, which can impede its growth and development from the germination phase through to the seedling stage. Soil salinity tends to escalate due to improper irrigation methods, particularly in arid and semi-arid environments. Consequently, it is essential to evaluate potential genotypes and select those with high salt tolerance. In this study, 39 popcorn kernel genotypes were examined under varying… More >

  • Open Access

    REVIEW

    Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles: Abiotic Stress Tolerance in Fruit Crops Focusing on Sustainable Production

    Meryam Manzoor1, Konstantin Korolev2, Maryam3, Riaz Ahmad4,*

    Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol.94, No.5, pp. 1401-1418, 2025, DOI:10.32604/phyton.2025.063930 - 29 May 2025

    Abstract The productivity of fruit crops is badly affected by abrupt changes in climatic conditions. It is a matter of concern for fruit tree researchers to feed the huge population within the available resources. The adverse effects of abiotic stresses are increasing due to fluctuations in climate change. Several abiotic stresses (salinity, drought, water logging, minerals deficiency, temperature extremities and heavy metals) are reducing the overall productivity of crops. Therefore, the application of different management approaches, i.e., phytohormones, nanoparticles, organic amendments, microbes and molecular aspects are effective for the mitigation of abiotic stresses in fruit crops.… More >

Displaying 1-10 on page 1 of 140. Per Page