428 research outputs found
Esperienze progettuali di edifici per attivitĂ natatorie
Alla cittĂ di Milano manca un centro natatorio di spicco atto ad ospitare eventi sportivi di caratura internazionale. Lâarticolo affronta il tema della progettazione di edifici per attivitĂ natatorie proponendo lâinquadramento di possibili soluzioni progettuali attraverso degli studi eseguiti nellâambito del corso âBuilding Technology Studioâ al Politecnico di Milano. I progetti sono contestualizzati nellâambito di un quartiere originariamente pensato per il rapporto con lâacqua, ovvero Porto di Mare, sito alla periferia sud-est di Milano
Environmental impact reduction of precast multi-storey buildings by crescent-moon seismic dampers hidden in beam-column joints
The growing demand of sustainable precast structures for multi-storey con-structions is often driven by the optimisation of cross-sections and reinforcement volumes of the structural elements. The present paper describes a real building recently designed and assembled with the installation of crescent-moon hysteretic dampers in the beam-column joints, recently proposed and patented. The joint continuity allows for an optimisation of the lateral load resist-ing system, reducing the size of the columns with respect to the classical precast frame structural arrangement with hinged joints, whilst protecting columns and beams from the large actions deriving from the classical moment-resisting cast-in-situ or partially precast technological solu-tions. After the complete detailed design of the case study building employing the 3 solutions described above, the precast dissipative one being designed with dynamic non-linear analysis, the results of an environmental impact analysis are compared and discussed, confirming a reduced environmental impact for the dissipative solution, with respect to both precast with hinged beam-column joints and moment-resisting cast-in-situ alternatives
Quantitative Behavioural Reasoning for Higher-order Effectful Programs: Applicative Distances (Extended Version)
This paper studies the quantitative refinements of Abramsky's applicative
similarity and bisimilarity in the context of a generalisation of Fuzz, a
call-by-value -calculus with a linear type system that can express
programs sensitivity, enriched with algebraic operations \emph{\`a la} Plotkin
and Power. To do so a general, abstract framework for studying behavioural
relations taking values over quantales is defined according to Lawvere's
analysis of generalised metric spaces. Barr's notion of relator (or lax
extension) is then extended to quantale-valued relations adapting and extending
results from the field of monoidal topology. Abstract notions of
quantale-valued effectful applicative similarity and bisimilarity are then
defined and proved to be a compatible generalised metric (in the sense of
Lawvere) and pseudometric, respectively, under mild conditions
The Power of Non-Determinism in Higher-Order Implicit Complexity
We investigate the power of non-determinism in purely functional programming
languages with higher-order types. Specifically, we consider cons-free programs
of varying data orders, equipped with explicit non-deterministic choice.
Cons-freeness roughly means that data constructors cannot occur in function
bodies and all manipulation of storage space thus has to happen indirectly
using the call stack.
While cons-free programs have previously been used by several authors to
characterise complexity classes, the work on non-deterministic programs has
almost exclusively considered programs of data order 0. Previous work has shown
that adding explicit non-determinism to cons-free programs taking data of order
0 does not increase expressivity; we prove that this - dramatically - is not
the case for higher data orders: adding non-determinism to programs with data
order at least 1 allows for a characterisation of the entire class of
elementary-time decidable sets.
Finally we show how, even with non-deterministic choice, the original
hierarchy of characterisations is restored by imposing different restrictions.Comment: pre-edition version of a paper accepted for publication at ESOP'1
Impulse Control Disorder in Parkinson's Disease: A Meta-Analysis of Cognitive, Affective, and Motivational Correlates
Background: In Parkinson's disease (PD), impulse control disorders (ICDs) develop as side-effect of dopaminergic replacement therapy (DRT). Cognitive, affective, and motivational correlates of ICD in medicated PD patients are debated. Here, we systematically reviewed and meta-analyzed the evidence for an association between ICD in PD and cognitive, affective, and motivational abnormalities.Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis was performed on PubMed, Science Direct, ISI Web of Science, Cochrane, EBSCO for studies published between 1-1-2000 and 8-3-2017 comparing cognitive, affective, and motivational measures in PD patients with ICD (ICD+) vs. those without ICD (ICDâ). Exclusion criteria were conditions other than PD, substance and/or alcohol abuse, dementia, drug naĂŻve patients, cognition assessed by self-report tools. Standardized mean difference (SMD) was used, and random-effect model applied.Results: 10,200 studies were screened (title, abstract), 79 full-texts were assessed, and 25 were included (ICD+: 625 patients; ICDâ: 938). Compared to ICDâ, ICD+ showed worse performance reward-related decision-making (0.42 [0.02, 0.82], p = 0.04) and set-shifting tasks (SMD = â0.49 [95% CI â0.78, â0.21], p = 0.0008). ICD in PD was also related to higher self-reported rate of depression (0.35 [0.16, 0.54], p = 0.0004), anxiety (0.43 [0.18, 0.68], p = 0.0007), anhedonia (0.26 [0.01, 0.50], p = 0.04), and impulsivity (0.79 [0.50, 1.09], p < 0.00001). Heterogeneity was low to moderate, except for depression (I2 = 61%) and anxiety (I2 = 58%).Conclusions: ICD in PD is associated with worse set-shifting and reward-related decision-making, and increased depression, anxiety, anhedonia, and impulsivity. This is an important area for further studies as ICDs have negative impact on the quality of life of patients and their caregivers
Fetal and Infant Effects of Maternal Opioid Use during Pregnancy: A Literature Review including Clinical, Toxicological, Pharmacogenomic, and Epigenetic Aspects for Forensic Evaluation
The two primary classes of opioid substances are morphine and its synthetic derivative, heroin. Opioids can cross the placental barrier, reaching fetal circulation. Therefore, at any gestational age, the fetus is highly exposed to pharmacologically active opioid metabolites and their associated adverse effects. This review aimed to investigate all the studies reported in a timeframe of forty years about prenatal and postnatal outcomes of opioid exposition during pregnancy. Clinical and toxicological aspects, as well as pharmacogenetic and epigenetic research focusing on fetal and infant effects of opioid use during pregnancy together with their medico-legal implications are exposed and discussed
Cosmic ray short burst observed with the Global Muon Detector Network (GMDN) on June 22, 2015
We analyze the short cosmic ray intensity increase ("cosmic ray burst": CRB)
on June 22, 2015 utilizing a global network of muon detectors and derive the
global anisotropy of cosmic ray intensity and the density (i.e. the
omnidirectional intensity) with 10-minute time resolution. We find that the CRB
was caused by a local density maximum and an enhanced anisotropy of cosmic rays
both of which appeared in association with Earth's crossing of the heliospheric
current sheet (HCS). This enhanced anisotropy was normal to the HCS and
consistent with a diamagnetic drift arising from the spatial gradient of cosmic
ray density, which indicates that cosmic rays were drifting along the HCS from
the north of Earth. We also find a significant anisotropy along the HCS,
lasting a few hours after the HCS crossing, indicating that cosmic rays
penetrated into the inner heliosphere along the HCS. Based on the latest
geomagnetic field model, we quantitatively evaluate the reduction of the
geomagnetic cut-off rigidity and the variation of the asymptotic viewing
direction of cosmic rays due to a major geomagnetic storm which occurred during
the CRB and conclude that the CRB is not caused by the geomagnetic storm, but
by a rapid change in the cosmic ray anisotropy and density outside the
magnetosphere.Comment: accepted for the publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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