763 research outputs found
Properties of Multisymplectic Manifolds
This lecture is devoted to review some of the main properties of
multisymplectic geometry. In particular, after reminding the standard
definition of multisymplectic manifold, we introduce its characteristic
submanifolds, the canonical models, and other relevant kinds of multisymplectic
manifolds, such as those where the existence of Darboux-type coordinates is
assured. The Hamiltonian structures that can be defined in these manifolds are
also studied, as well as other important properties, such as their invariant
forms and the characterization by automorphisms.Comment: 10 pp. Changes in Sections 5 and 7 (where brief guides to the proofs
of theorems have been added). Lecture given at the workshop on {\sl Classical
and Quantum Physics: Geometry, Dynamics and Control. (60 Years Alberto Ibort
Fest), Instituto de Ciencias Matem\'aticas (ICMAT)}, Madrid (Spain), 5--9
March 201
Topological features for monitoring human activities at distance
In this paper, a topological approach for monitoring human activities is presented. This approach makes possible to protect the person’s privacy hiding details that are not essential for processing a security alarm. First, a stack of human silhouettes, extracted by background subtraction and thresholding, are glued through their gravity centers, forming a 3D digital binary image I. Secondly, different orders of the simplices are applied on a simplicial complex obtained from I, which capture relations among the parts of the human body when walking. Finally, a topological signature is extracted from the persistence diagrams according to each order. The measure cosine is used to give a similarity value between topological signatures. In this way, the powerful topological tool known as persistent homology is novelty adapted to deal with gender classification, person identification, carrying bag detection and simple action recognition. Four experiments show the strength of the topological feature used; three of they use the CASIA-B database, and the fourth use the KTH database to present the results in the case of simple actions recognition. In the first experiment the named topological signature is evaluated, obtaining 98.8% (lateral view) of correct classification rates for gender identification. In the second one are shown results for person identification, obtaining an average of 98.5%. In the third one the result obtained is 93.8% for carrying bag detection. And in the last experiment the results were 97.7% walking and 97.5% running, which were the actions took from the KTH database
A Standardised Procedure for Evaluating Creative Systems: Computational Creativity Evaluation Based on What it is to be Creative
Computational creativity is a flourishing research area, with a variety of creative systems being produced and developed. Creativity evaluation has not kept pace with system development with an evident lack of systematic evaluation of the creativity of these systems in the literature. This is partially due to difficulties in defining what it means for a computer to be creative; indeed, there is no consensus on this for human creativity, let alone its computational equivalent. This paper proposes a Standardised Procedure for Evaluating Creative Systems (SPECS). SPECS is a three-step process: stating what it means for a particular computational system to be creative, deriving and performing tests based on these statements. To assist this process, the paper offers a collection of key components of creativity, identified empirically from discussions of human and computational creativity. Using this approach, the SPECS methodology is demonstrated through a comparative case study evaluating computational creativity systems that improvise music
A word of caution: do not wake sleeping dogs; micrometastases of melanoma suddenly grew after progesterone treatment
Background: Hormonal treatment might affect the immune response to tumor antigens induced in cancer patients who are being vaccinated.
Case presentation: A 33 years-old woman was diagnosed with cutaneous melanoma in May 2009. Her melanoma was located in the intermammary sulcus, had a Breslow thickness of 4 mm, a Clark’s level IV, it was ulcerated and highly melanotic. The bilateral sentinel node biopsy was negative. She entered into a randomized Phase II/III clinical study comparing a vaccine composed of irradiated melanoma cells plus BCG plus GM-CSF versus IFN-alpha 2b and she was assigned to the vaccine arm. During the two years treatment she remained disease-free; the final CAT scan being performed in August 2011. Between November and December 2011, her gynecologist treated her with three cycles of 200 mg progesterone/day for ten days, every two weeks, for ovary dysfunction. In November 2011 the patient returned to the Hospital for clinical and imaging evaluation and no evidence of disease was found. At the next visit in March 2012 an ultrasound revealed multiple, large metastases in the liver. A CAT scan confirmed the presence of liver, adrenal glands and spleen metastases. A needle biopsy of a liver lesion revealed metastatic melanoma of similar characteristics to the original tumor. We suggest that progesterone treatment triggered proliferation of so far dormant micrometastases that were controlled during CSF470 vaccine treatment.
Conclusion: The use of progesterone in patients with melanoma that are under immunological treatments should be carefully considered, since progesterone could modify the balance of pro-inflammatory and Th1 functions to a regulatory and anti-inflammatory profile of the immune system that could have an impact in tumor progression.Fil: Mordoh, Jose. Fundacion Cancer. Centro de Investigaciones Oncologicas; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Tapia, Ivana Jaqueline. Fundacion Cancer. Centro de Investigaciones Oncologicas; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Barrio, Maria Marcela. Fundacion Cancer. Centro de Investigaciones Oncologicas; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentin
Physical activity to improve cognition in older adults: can physical activity programs enriched with cognitive challenges enhance the effects? A systematic review and meta-analysis
: EPHPP quality rating scores (DOCX 38 kb
Silicon-hydroxyapatite bioactive coatings (Si-HA) from diatomaceous earth and silica. Study of adhesion and proliferation of osteoblast-like cells
The aim of this study consisted on investigating
the influence of silicon substituted hydroxyapatite (Si–HA)
coatings over the human osteoblast-like cell line (SaOS-2)
behaviour. Diatomaceous earth and silica, together with
commercial hydroxyapatite were respectively the silicon
and HA sources used to produce the Si–HA coatings. HA
coatings with 0 wt% of silicon were used as control of the
experiment. Pulsed laser deposition (PLD) was the selected
technique to deposit the coatings. The Si–HA thin films
were characterized by Fourier Transformed Infrared
Spectroscopy (FTIR) demonstrating the efficient transfer of
Si to the HA structure. The in vitro cell culture was
established to assess the cell attachment, proliferation and
osteoblastic activity respectively by, Scanning Electron
Microscopy (SEM), DNA and alkaline phosphatase (ALP)
quantification. The SEM analysis demonstrated a similar
adhesion behaviour of the cells on the tested materials and
the maintenance of the typical osteoblastic morphology
along the time of culture. The Si–HA coatings did not
evidence any type of cytotoxic behaviour when compared
with HA coatings. Moreover, both the proliferation rate
and osteoblastic activity results showed a slightly better
performance on the Si–HA coatings from diatoms than on
the Si–HA from silica.This work was supported by the UE-Interreg IIIA (SP1.P151/03) Proteus project and Xunta de Galicia ( Projects: 2006/12 and PGIDITO5PXIC30301PN)
Bullous lesions as a manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus in two Mexican teenagers
Rarely, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) presents with bullous lesions due to severe edema and hydropic degeneration of the basal layer, or as a subepidermal blistering disease. Here, we describe two Mexican teenagers, one with SLE with blisters and another with bullous SLE. We also discuss the mechanisms and clinical implications of lesion formation in patients with SLE and bullae
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