222 research outputs found

    Lana e olio? Alcune riflessioni sulle prime fasi di lavorazione della fibra

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    Publications on roman textiles have described the processing of wool in the following operational sequence: shearing, scouring, combing and spinning. As one can exclude large scale spinning of ‘crude’ wool and degreasing makes fibers too dry and tangled to be worked with, it seems likely that even in the classical world it was common practice to oil wool before combing and spinning. This procedure has been regularly attested from the late Medieval period up to the present day but was first described in detail in a fifteenth century manuscript from Florence. There are however a few clues that might suggest that the oiling of wool was already known and indeed widespread in classical times and that olive oil was in common use for this purpose. Archaeological evidence for a connection between oil and wool would seem to be limited to a site in Cyprus where it is believed that scented oils were produced, amongst other things, to perfume wool. A reference to this technique could be inferred by Homer’s description of the looms in Alcinoo’s palace “dripping with oil”; and on several attic vases there are scenes of women engaged in processing or perhaps more specifically in the oiling of wool. The possibility that the Romans used oil for softening wool seems convincing above all for the number of classical references to the initial degreasing of untreated wool to remove lanolin, as well as to the degreasing of finished textiles with fuller’s earth, perhaps to remove oil added in the process. Further information may be gleaned from inscribed lead tags that refer to initial washing and degreasing (indicating lana purgata as opposed to lana sucida), perhaps followed by softening (lana mulsa). Confirmation of the antiquity of this missing link in wool to textile processing has clear implications for future archaeological research in the fields both of textiles and the production/distribution of olive oil for industrial use

    Die Genossenschaft als Nachfolgemodell bei Klein- und Mittelunternehmungen in der Schweiz

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    "Obschon erfolgreiche PraxisfĂ€lle bekannt sind, wird die Genossenschaft bei der Unternehmensnachfolge kaum berĂŒcksichtigt. Ausgehend von den Besonderheiten der genossenschaftlichen Rechtsform des Schweizerischen Obligationenrechts zeigt der vorliegende Beitrag thesenartig Konstellationen auf, die fĂŒr die Genossenschaft als Nachfolgeoption sprechen.

    Improving Fairness using Vision-Language Driven Image Augmentation

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    Fairness is crucial when training a deep-learning discriminative model, especially in the facial domain. Models tend to correlate specific characteristics (such as age and skin color) with unrelated attributes (downstream tasks), resulting in biases which do not correspond to reality. It is common knowledge that these correlations are present in the data and are then transferred to the models during training. This paper proposes a method to mitigate these correlations to improve fairness. To do so, we learn interpretable and meaningful paths lying in the semantic space of a pre-trained diffusion model (DiffAE) -- such paths being supervised by contrastive text dipoles. That is, we learn to edit protected characteristics (age and skin color). These paths are then applied to augment images to improve the fairness of a given dataset. We test the proposed method on CelebA-HQ and UTKFace on several downstream tasks with age and skin color as protected characteristics. As a proxy for fairness, we compute the difference in accuracy with respect to the protected characteristics. Quantitative results show how the augmented images help the model improve the overall accuracy, the aforementioned metric, and the disparity of equal opportunity. Code is available at: https://github.com/Moreno98/Vision-Language-Bias-Control.Comment: Accepted for publication in WACV 202

    Description of the vessel traffic within the north Pelagos Sanctuary: Inputs for Marine Spatial Planning and management implications within an existing international Marine Protected Area

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    International shipping, although considered a safe and environment-friendly form of transportation, has many direct and indirect impacts on cetaceans in many ways, particularly in the Mediterranean Sea, one of the world's busiest waterways. An AIS receiver located at 44.30 °N and 8.45 °E, operating between 3 May 2013 and 31 October 2014, provided a detailed description of the distribution, number, type and operation of vessels within the Pelagos Sanctuary, an international protected area dedicated to the conservation of marine mammals. A total of 3,757,587 km of vessel traffic was recorded from 82,831 transits by 4205 distinct vessels. The spatial and temporal distribution of traffic was not uniform and dependent on vessel type (0.0

    Antioxidative potential of a combined therapy of anti TNFα and Zn acetate in experimental colitis.

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    AIM: To evaluate whether combination therapy with anti-tumour necrosis factor α (TNFα) antibody and Zn acetate is beneficial in dextran sodium sulphate (DSS) colitis. METHODS: Colitis was induced in CD1-Swiss mice with 5% DSS for 7 d. The experimental mice were then randomised into the following subgroups: standard diet + DSS treated (induced colitis group); standard diet + DSS + subcutaneous 25 Όg anti-TNFα treated group; Zn acetate treated group + DSS + subcutaneous 25 Όg anti-TNFα; standard diet + DSS + subcutaneous 6.25 Όg anti-TNFα treated group and Zn acetate treated group + DSS + subcutaneous 6.25 Όg anti-TNFα. Each group of mice was matched with a similar group of sham control animals. Macroscopic and histological features were scored blindly. Homogenates of the colonic mucosa were assessed for myeloperoxidase activity as a biochemical marker of inflammation and DNA adducts (8OH-dG) as a measure of oxidative damage. RESULTS: DSS produced submucosal erosions, ulcers, inflammatory cell infiltration and cryptic abscesses which were reduced in both groups of mice receiving either anti-TNFα alone or combined with zinc. The effect was more pronounced in the latter group (vs Zn diet, P < 0.02). Myeloperoxidase activity (vs controls, P < 0.02) and DNA adducts, greatly elevated in the DSS fed colitis group (vs controls, P < 0.05), were significantly reduced in the treated groups, with a more remarkable effect in the group receiving combined therapy (vs standard diet, P < 0.04). CONCLUSION: DSS induces colonic inflammation which is modulated by the administration of anti-TNFα. Combining anti-TNFα with Zn acetate offers marginal benefit in colitis severity

    Detection of a fluorescent-labeled avidin-nucleic acid nanoassembly by confocal laser endomicroscopy in the microvasculature of chronically inflamed intestinal mucosa

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    Inflammatory bowel diseases are chronic gastrointestinal pathologies causing great discomfort in both children and adults. The pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases is not yet fully understood and their diagnosis and treatment are often challenging. Nanoparticle-based strategies have been tested in local drug delivery to the inflamed colon. Here, we have investigated the use of the novel avidin-nucleic acid nanoassembly (ANANAS) platform as a potential diagnostic carrier in an experimental model of inflammatory bowel diseases. Fluorescent- labeled ANANAS nanoparticles were administered to mice with chemically induced chronic inflammation of the large intestine. Localization of mucosal nanoparticles was assessed in vivo by dual-band confocal laser endomicroscopy. This technique enables characterization of the mucosal microvasculature and crypt architecture at subcellular resolution. Intravascular nanoparticle distribution was observed in the inflamed mucosa but not in healthy controls, demonstrating the utility of the combination of ANANAS and confocal laser endomicroscopy for highlighting intestinal inflammatory conditions. The specific localization of ANANAS in inflamed tissues supports the potential of this platform as a targeted carrier for bioactive moieties in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease

    MiR-155 modulates the inflammatory phenotype of intestinal myofibroblasts by targeting SOCS1 in ulcerative colitis

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    Abnormal levels of microRNA (miR)-155, which regulate inflammation and immune responses, have been demonstrated in the colonic mucosa of patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), although its role in disease pathophysiology is unknown. We investigated the role of miR-155 in the acquisition and maintenance of an activated phenotype by intestinal myofibroblasts (IMF), a key cell population contributing to mucosal damage in IBD. IMF were isolated from colonic biopsies of healthy controls, ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) patients. MiR-155 in IMF was quantified by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR in basal condition and following exposure to TNF-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1 beta, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or TGF-beta 1. The effects of miR-155 mimic or inhibitor transfection on cytokine release and suppressor of cytokine signaling 1 (SOCS1) expression were assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and western blot, respectively. Regulation of the target gene SOCS1 expression by miR-155 was assessed using luciferase reporter construct. We found that miR-155 was significantly upregulated in UC as compared with control-and CD-derived IMF. Moreover, TNF-alpha and LPS, but not TGF-beta 1 and IL-1 beta, significantly increased miR-155 expression in IMF. Ectopic expression of miR-155 in control IMF augmented cytokines release, whereas it downregulated SOCS1 expression. MiR-155 knockdown in UC-IMF reduced cytokine production and enhanced SOCS1 expression. Luciferase reporter assay demonstrated that miR-155 directly targets SOCS1. Moreover, silencing of SOCS1 in control IMF significantly increased IL-6 and IL-8 release. In all, our data suggest that inflammatory mediators induce miR-155 expression in IMF of patients with UC. By downregulating the expression of SOCS1, miR-155 wires IMF inflammatory phenotype
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