1,929 research outputs found

    China\u27s Unbalanced Development, And What We Can Learn From It

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    This paper argues that China’s development is unbalanced, and to see the unbalance we must divide the concept of development into different categories representing its different aspects, such as economic, urban, social, and sustainable. By looking at the different characteristics of development through time, it is possible to see where the unbalance lies. Furthermore, we learn that by categorizing the nature of development, we can gain a more comprehensive insight into the development of individual countries. In conclusion, this paper proposes the creation of a possible Development Index, as it can provide greater understanding of each country’s development

    On the Solved Turbulent Scales in Turbulent Plume Fires

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    Plume fires are characterized by a turbulent nature with a large number of different scales. LES is often used to solve the largest structures and to model the smallest ones. Grid size and time steps become decisive to place the limit between resolved and modelled turbulence. Significant information on this limit and its placement can be obtained with spectral analyses of the specific turbulent kinetic energy. While frequency analysis is relatively easy, an analysis in the wavenumber domain is more challenging. The IWC method, typically used in structures and acoustics, is used here for this purpose. IWC method allows to obtain wavenumber spectra with a better resolution than those obtained with a direct approach. Furthermore, in this paper the IWC method is also used in its reverse form to obtain frequency spectra. Although rather dense grids have been chosen, the number of nodes along the plume and their spacing is not such as to guarantee detailed wavenumber spectra with the direct approach and consequently with the reverse IWC. On the contrary, the IWC method provides wavenumber spectra in agreement with those obtained directly, but of much higher quality

    Ecological Distribution and Oenological Characterization of Native Saccharomyces cerevisiae in an Organic Winery

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    The relation between regional yeast biota and the organoleptic characteristics of wines has attracted growing attention among winemakers. In this work, the dynamics of a native Saccharomyces cerevisiae population was investigated in an organic winery. In this regard, the occurrence and the persistence of native S. cerevisiae were evaluated in the vineyard and winery and during spontaneous fermentation of two nonconsecutive vintages. From a total of 98 strains, nine different S. cerevisiae biotypes were identified that were distributed through the whole winemaking process, and five of them persisted in both vintages. The results of the oenological characterization of the dominant biotypes (I and II) show a fermentation behavior comparable to that exhibited by three common commercial starter strains, exhibiting specific aromatic profiles. Biotype I was characterized by some fruity aroma compounds, such as isoamyl acetate and ethyl octanoate, while biotype II was differentiated by ethyl hexanoate, nerol, and β-damascenone production also in relation to the fermentation temperature. These results indicate that the specificity of these resident strains should be used as starter cultures to obtain wines with distinctive aromatic profiles

    Selection signatures of fat tail in sheep

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    The investigation of the genes with a role in lipid metabolism enjoy considerable scientific and commercial interest because of the strong correlations between fat deposition and the risk of cardiovascular disease. The fat tail characteristic of sheep is the adaptive response to harsh environment, and beyond representing a valuable energy reserve for facing future climate changes provides clues for elucidating the physiology of fat deposition. Studies on various sheep populations detected fat-tail signatures on chromosomes 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 13. Fat-tailed sheep represent about 25% of the world\u2019s sheep population, and the genes with a role in this phenotype are likely not the same for every breed, since the wild ancestor of sheep had a thin tail, and the fat tail was selected by humans in longstanding husbandry practices in different regions. In the present work, a genome-wide scan using ~50,000 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms was performed to identify selection signatures for the f at tail in the Barbaresca sheep, an Italian breed originating from North Africa. Fst values of differentiation, and \u3c72 test of significance of allele frequency were calculated, for each marker, between the Barbaresca and each of 13 Italian thin-tailed breeds. Strong signals of selection were detected for all 13 breeds on chromosome 6, in a region encoding the SLIT homolog 2 gene, this gene acting as a molecular guidance cue in cellular migration. The signature on chromosome 7 was very strong only in some of the breeds used for comparison: the detected signal was located in proximity of the Vertnin gene, a candidate for variation in vertebral number, and was already revealed in Iranian and Mediterranean fat-tailed breeds, but not in the Chinese sheep, so confirming the complexity of the fat-tail phenotype, which is associated in some breeds to long and pendulous tail, while, in other breeds, to the short tail

    Cortisol levels of shelter dogs in animal assisted interventions in a prison: An exploratory study

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    Previous studies regarding the Animal Assisted Interventions (AAI) have mainly focused on the beneficial effects of human–animal interactions on human health; whereas the impact of such activities on the welfare of the animals involved has received limited attention. So far, few studies have addressed this issue by evaluating the physiological and behavioral reactions of therapy dogs during the interventions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential effect of AAI on the cortisol levels of shelter dogs. Five dogs participated in weekly AAI working activities with adult inmates held at a prison of the South of Italy for two months. Saliva samples were collected every two weeks in three conditions: at the kennel (baseline), after transportation and at the end of the working sessions. The results revealed a significant decrease in the cortisol baseline at the end of the AAI program, suggesting that the activities carried out with humans and in a different environment could improve the welfare of dogs housed in kennels. Moreover, we found that transportation significantly increased subjects’ cortisol levels, suggesting that it is a critical phase that deserves particular care

    Exercise training for chronic heart failure (ExTraMATCH II): individual participant data meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from NIHR Journals Library via the DOI in this record.Background: Current national and international guidelines on the management of heart failure (HF) recommend exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation (ExCR), but do not differentiate this recommendation according to patient subgroups. Objective(s): (1) to obtain definitive estimates of the impact of ExCR interventions versus control (no exercise intervention) on mortality, hospitalisation, exercise capacity, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in HF patients; (2) to determine the differential (subgroup) effects of ExCR in HF patients according to their age, gender, ejection fraction, aetiology, New York Heart Association (NYHA) class, and baseline exercise capacity; (3) to assess whether the change in exercise capacity mediates for the impact of the ExCR on final outcomes (mortality, hospitalisation, and HRQoL) and is an acceptable surrogate endpoint. Design: Individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis Setting: An international literature review Participants: HF patients in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of ExCR Interventions: ExCR for at least 3 weeks compared with no exercise control with 6 months follow-up Main outcome measures: mortality (all cause and HF-specific), hospitalisation (all-cause & HF-specific), exercise capacity, and HRQoL Data sources: Individual participant data from eligible RCTs 3 Review methods: RCTs from ExTraMATCH IPD meta-analysis and 2014 Cochrane systematic review of ExCR Results: Out of the 23 eligible RCTs (4,398 patients), 19 RCTs (3,990 patients) contributed data to this IPD meta-analysis. There was a wide variation in exercise programme prescriptions across included studies. Compared with control, there was no statistically significant difference in pooled time to event estimates in favour of ExCR although confidence intervals were wide: all-cause mortality: hazard ratio (HR) 0.83 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.67 to 1.04), HF-related mortality: HR 0.84 (95% CI: 0.49 to 1.46), all-cause hospitalisation: HR 0.90 (95% CI: 0.76 to 1.06), and HF-related hospitalisation: HR 0.98 (95% CI: 0.72 to 1.35). There was a statistically significant difference in favour of ExCR for exercise capacity and HRQoL. Compared to control, at 12-months follow-up, improvements were seen in the six-minute walk test (6MWT) (mean: 21.0 metres, 95% CI: 1.57 to 40.4, and Minnesota Living with HF Questionnaire score (mean: -5.94, 95% CI: -1.0 to -10.9, lower scores indicate improved HRQoL). No strong evidence for differential intervention effects across patient characteristics was found for any outcomes. Moderate to good levels of correlation (R2 trial>50% & ρ>0.50) between peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) or 6MWT with mortality and HRQoL were seen. Estimated surrogate threshold effect (STE) was an increase of 1.6 to 4.6 ml/kg/min for VO2peak. Limitations: Lack consistency in how included RCTs defined and collected the outcomes; we were unable to obtain IPD from all includable trials for all outcomes; and we did not seek patient level on exercise adherence. . Conclusions: In comparison to no exercise control, participation in ExCR improves the exercise and HRQoL in HF patients but appears to have no effect on their mortality or hospitalisation. No strong evidence was found of differential intervention effects of ExCR across patient characteristics. VO2peak and 6MWT may be suitable surrogate endpoints for the treatment effect of ExCR on mortality and HRQoL in HF.NIHR Health Technology Assessment programm

    Human-animal relationship dysfunction: A case study of animal hoarding in italy

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    “Animal hoarding” or “compulsive hoarding of animals” is a psychiatric disease, which has important social implications and a profound influence on animal welfare. To date, this phenomenon has been little investigated and largely unexplored. The present study aims to systematically describe a case of animal hoarding, which remains unresolved. The report refers to a case of a woman suffering from animal hoarding that emerged in 2005. From March 2014 to December 2019, 450 animals were seized over nine different occasions. This disease had significant implications on the welfare of the animals collected, which lived in poor housing and hygiene conditions that frequently led to their death. Since animal hoarding cases involve sanitary, legal, and veterinary aspects, we believe that a multidisciplinary approach is necessary in order to prevent a recurrence and a new accumulation of animals. A holistic approach should be taken according to the One Health principle that involves different stakeholders at every level in order to adopt an efficient solution

    Influences of dietary supplementation with Lepidium meyenii (Maca) on stallion sperm production and on preservation of sperm quality during storage at 5 °C.

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    Stallion semen is damaged by oxidative stress during cooling and transport. Semen processing and extenders have been tested to improve the fertilizing capacity of semen and to preserve semen during transport. Dietary supplementation with natural antioxidants has been proposed to prevent oxidative damages. In this study, for the first time, the effect of dietary supplementation with Lepidium meyenii (Maca) on the characteristics of fresh and chilled stallion semen was evaluated. Maca is a traditional Andean crop used as a nutraceutical for the fertility-enhancing properties that are linked with antioxidant activity. The diet of five stallions was supplemented with 20 g of Maca powder daily for a total of 60 days. A control group of five stallions received the same diet without Maca. Semen was collected once before the administration of Maca (D0), twice during the administration at 30 and 60 days (D30 and D60), and finally twice at 30 and 60 days after the end of the administration (D90 and D120). Ejaculates were processed for cooled shipping at 5 °C and evaluated in the laboratory for total and progressive motility, acrosome integrity, and lipid peroxidation after collection and after 24, 48, and 72 h of storage. Dietary supplementation with Maca improved sperm concentration (from 213 ± 80.4 to 447 ± 73.1 × 106 spz/mL) and total sperm count (from 10,880 ± 4377 to 24,783 ± 4419 × 106 spz). The beneficial effects of Maca supplementation on motility and acrosome integrity in the raw semen were detected from the end of treatment with Maca (D60) until the end of the study (D120). Furthermore, during cooling storage, total motility, progressive motility, and acrosome integrity declined more slowly in the Maca-treated group than in the control group. Lipid peroxidation did not change during cooling storage in either group and did not show a significant difference between the two groups. In this study, the dietary supplementation with Maca increased sperm production and stabilized semen quality during chilled storage

    Heavy sulphur compounds, higher alcohols and esters production profile of Hanseniaspora uvarum and Hanseniaspora guilliermondii grown as pure and mixed cultures in grape must

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    Hanseniaspora guilliermondii and Hanseniaspora uvarum were tested in grape must fermentations as pure and mixed starter cultures with Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In pure cultures, the specific growth rates found were 0.29 h⁻¹ for H. uvarum, 0.23 h⁻¹ for H. guilliermondii and 0.18 h⁻¹ for S. cerevisiae. No significant differences were observed between these values and those obtained in mixed cultures. Results presented in this work show that growth of apiculate yeasts during the first days of fermentation enhances the production of desirable compounds, such as esters, and may not have a negative influence on the production of higher alcohols and undesirable heavy sulphur compounds. Growth of apiculate yeasts reduced the total content of higher alcohols in wines, when compared to those produced by a pure culture of S. cerevisiae. Furthermore, the highest levels of 2-phenylethyl acetate were obtained when H. guilliermondii was inoculated in grape musts, whereas H. uvarum increased the isoamyl acetate content of wines. Apiculate yeasts produced high amounts of ethyl acetate; however, the level of this compound decreased in mixed cultures of apiculate yeasts and S. cerevisiae. When S. cerevisiae was used as a starter culture, wines showed higher concentrations of glycerol, 2-phenylethanol and ethyl hexanoate. In mixed cultures of apiculate yeasts and S. cerevisiae, wines presented amounts of methionol, acetic acid-3-(methylthio)propyl ester, 4-(methylthio)-1-butanol, 2-mercaptoethanol and cis-2-methyltetrahydro-thiophen-3-ol similar to those produced by a pure culture of S. cerevisiae. An increase in the amounts of 3-(ethylthio)-1-propanol, trans-2-methyltetrahydro-thiophen-3-ol and 3- mercapto-1-propanol was obtained in wines produced from mixed cultures with H. guilliermondii
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