13 research outputs found

    Applications of RFN (Reconceptualized Family resemblance approach to Nature of science) to high school physics teaching

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    This thesis project fits into the research’s area of science education called Nature of Science (NOS). The aims of the thesis are: to understand what “image of physics” emerges in high school teaching; to provide suggestions to recognise implicit or explicit limits and potentialities of the official curriculum to guide, in class, students to get acquainted with the authenticity of science and its societal relevance. The thesis contains two studies. Both of them have been carried out by using a well-known framework in science education: Reconceptualized Family research approach to Nature of science (RFN) by Erduran and Dagher (2014). The framework has been used in the first analysis to investigate the presence of NOS elements in physics guidelines adopted by the “Liceo Scientifico” high school in Italy. The study highlighted a significant presence of epistemic and cognitive aspects of science in the guidelines, in contrast to a scarce presence of social and institutional aspects of science. Through an Epistemic Network Analysis (ENA) on the connections between the NOS categories in the curriculum, a structural difference emerged between the general part of the guidelines, where the goals and values are mainly stressed, and the specific part, where the contents are described. In the latter, the main node of connections is “knowledge”, making the other NOS categories little valued. The second analysis uses RFN to investigate how a sample of five physics teachers implement, in their teaching, NOS elements related to epistemic and cognitive practices. The results highlight not only the room that teachers can find to teach NOS, independently of the official guidelines, but also the great relevance that these elements can have to boost understanding in the discipline, to authentically engage students with physics, and to develop cultural and emotional skills crucial for becoming a responsible and aware citizens

    Plasma D-dimer concentration in patients with systemic sclerosis

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    BACKGROUND: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is an autoimmune disorder of the connective tissue characterized by widespread vascular lesions and fibrosis. Little is known so far on the activation of the hemostatic and fibrinolytic systems in SSc, and most preliminary evidences are discordant. METHODS: To verify whether SSc patients might display a prothrombotic condition, plasma D-dimer was assessed in 28 consecutive SSc patients and in 33 control subjects, matched for age, sex and environmental habit. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: When compared to healthy controls, geometric mean and 95% confidence interval (IC95%) of plasma D-dimer were significantly increased in SSc patients (362 ng/mL, IC 95%: 361–363 ng/mL vs 229 ng/mL, IC95%: 228–231 ng/mL, p = 0.005). After stratifying SSc patients according to disease subset, no significant differences were observed between those with limited cutaneous pattern and controls, whereas patients with diffuse cutaneous pattern displayed substantially increased values. No correlation was found between plasma D-dimer concentration and age, sex, autoantibody pattern, serum creatinine, erythrosedimentation rate, nailfold videocapillaroscopic pattern and pulmonary involvement. CONCLUSION: We demonstrated that SSc patients with diffuse subset are characterized by increased plasma D-dimer values, reflecting a potential activation of both the hemostatic and fibrinolytic cascades, which might finally predispose these patients to thrombotic complications

    FEDORA. Excerpts from essays on students’ future perception. Italy

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    The data set consists of a selection and organization of pre-existing raw data on students’ future perception. This raw data have been collected in Italian implementations of the Erasmus+ project “I SEE” (GA 2016-1-IT02-KA201-024373, https://iseeproject.eu) and consists of more than 100 anonymized essays on “a typical day in 2030 or 2040”. In these essays, 17-19 years old students describe how they imagine their future (the job, the technologies, the social and natural environments). The dataset includes transcriptions of the most relevant parts of “I SEE” essays and the results of their quantitative and qualitative software analysis. The aims of these analyses are to build a framework on students (15-19 years old) perception of the future and to point out markers for assessing eventual changes in students’ perception of the future, through teaching

    Genome-Wide Scan Identifies TNIP1, PSORS1C1, and RHOB as Novel Risk Loci for Systemic Sclerosis

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    Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is an orphan, complex, inflammatory disease affecting the immune system and connective tissue. SSc stands out as a severely incapacitating and life-threatening inflammatory rheumatic disease, with a largely unknown pathogenesis. We have designed a two-stage genome-wide association study of SSc using case-control samples from France, Italy, Germany, and Northern Europe. The initial genome-wide scan was conducted in a French post quality-control sample of 564 cases and 1,776 controls, using almost 500 K SNPs. Two SNPs from the MHC region, together with the 6 loci outside MHC having at least one SNP with a P<10−5 were selected for follow-up analysis. These markers were genotyped in a post-QC replication sample of 1,682 SSc cases and 3,926 controls. The three top SNPs are in strong linkage disequilibrium and located on 6p21, in the HLA-DQB1 gene: rs9275224, P = 9.18×10−8, OR = 0.69, 95% CI [0.60–0.79]; rs6457617, P = 1.14×10−7 and rs9275245, P = 1.39×10−7. Within the MHC region, the next most associated SNP (rs3130573, P = 1.86×10−5, OR = 1.36 [1.18–1.56]) is located in the PSORS1C1 gene. Outside the MHC region, our GWAS analysis revealed 7 top SNPs (P<10−5) that spanned 6 independent genomic regions. Follow-up of the 17 top SNPs in an independent sample of 1,682 SSc and 3,926 controls showed associations at PSORS1C1 (overall P = 5.70×10−10, OR:1.25), TNIP1 (P = 4.68×10−9, OR:1.31), and RHOB loci (P = 3.17×10−6, OR:1.21). Because of its biological relevance, and previous reports of genetic association at this locus with connective tissue disorders, we investigated TNIP1 expression. A markedly reduced expression of the TNIP1 gene and also its protein product were observed both in lesional skin tissue and in cultured dermal fibroblasts from SSc patients. Furthermore, TNIP1 showed in vitro inhibitory effects on inflammatory cytokine-induced collagen production. The genetic signal of association with TNIP1 variants, together with tissular and cellular investigations, suggests that this pathway has a critical role in regulating autoimmunity and SSc pathogenesis

    Evaluation of cardiac laboratory markers in patients with systemic sclerosis.

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    OBJECTIVES: Myocardial involvement is frequent in systemic sclerosis, but symptoms are usually delayed and non-specific, thus often misrecognized. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the early subclinical cardiac involvement in patients with systemic sclerosis by means of non-invasive laboratory cardiac markers. DESIGN AND METHODS: Cardiac troponin T (cTnT), ischemia modified albumin (IMA) and NT-prohormone-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) were measured in 40 female patients with systemic sclerosis and in 40 matched healthy controls. RESULTS: Patients with systemic sclerosis displayed significantly increased concentrations of serum IMA (106 versus 93.5 kunits/l, P < 0.0001) and NT-proBNP (89 versus 37 pg/ml, P < 0.0001), whereas no significant differences could be observed in both IMA and NT-proBNP values in limited versus diffuse pattern of disease. CONCLUSIONS: The increased levels of NT-proBNP and IMA could be considered a sign of early myocardial involvement, warranting further heart examination and a regular follow-up

    Clinical, serologic and instrumental data of ten patients affected by sclerodermatous chronic graft versus host disease: similarities and differences in respect to systemic sclerosis

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    Chronic graft versus host disease (cGVHD), the most common late complication of allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), may present with sclerodermatous lesions resembling in some cases the cutaneous involvement of systemic sclerosis (SSc). Certain pathogenetic findings connect the two diseases. In this report we describe ten subjects affected by cGVHD who underwent the examinations routinely carried out to stage SSc patients. Demographic, clinical, serologic and instrumental data were recorded. These patients showed differences in appearance, extent and progression of the sclerodermatous lesions with greater involvement of the trunk and proximal part of the limbs than the extremities. In seven subjects ANA test was positive; scleroderma-associated autoantibodies were not detected in any of the cases. Moreover, typical organ involvement of SSc was not found. Only one patient developed Raynauds phenomenon after HSCT and only one patient demonstrated a nailfold videocapillaroscopic scleroderma pattern. Except for cutaneous involvement of cGVHD, that may resemble SSc, the clinical features of the two diseases are quite different, suggesting that the fibrotic process characterizing cGVHD and SSc has different etiologies and different initial pathobiologic events
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