3,858 research outputs found
Building up the âAccountable Ulyssesâ model. The impact of GDPR and national implementations, ethics, and health-data research: Comparative remarks.
The paper illustrates obligations emerging under articles 9 and 89 of the EU Reg. 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation, hereinafter âGDPRâ) within the health-related data pro- cessing for research purposes. Furthermore, through a comparative analysis of the national implementations of the GDPR on the topic, the paper highlights few practical issues that the researcher might deal with while accomplishing the GDPR obligations and the other ethical requirements. The result of the analyses allows to build up a model to achieve an acceptable standard of accountability in health-related data research. The legal remarks are framed within the myth of Ulysse
Accurate Determination of the Mass Distribution in Spiral Galaxies: II. Testing the Shape of Dark Halos
New high resolution CFHT Fabry-Perot data, combined with published VLA 21 cm
observations are used to determine the mass distribution of NGC 3109 and IC
2574. The multi-wavelength rotation curves allow to test with confidence
different dark halo functional forms from the pseudo-isothermal sphere to some
popular halo distributions motivated by N-body simulations. It appears that
density distribution with an inner logarithmic slope <= -1 are very hard to
reconcile with rotation curves of late type spirals. Modified Newtonian
Dynamics (MOND) is also considered as a potential solution to missing mass and
tested the same way. The new higher resolution data show that MOND can
reproduce in details the rotation curve of IC 2574 but confirm its difficulty
to fit the kinematics of NGC 3109.Comment: 28 pages, accepted by AJ. New HI profile increases the compatibility
of NGC 3109 rotation curve with MON
Fabry-Perot observations of the HH 110 jet
We have obtained a Halpha position-velocity cube from Fabry-Perot
interferometric observations of the HH 110 flow. We analyze the results in
terms of anisotropic wavelet transforms, from which we derive the spatial
distribution of the knots as well as their characteristic sizes (along and
across the outflow axis). We then study the spatial behaviour of the line width
and the central radial velocity. The results are interpreted in terms of a
simple ``mean flow+turbulent eddy'' jet/wake model. We find that most of the
observed kinematics appear to be a direct result of the mean flow, on which are
superposed low amplitude (35 km/s) turbulent velocities.Comment: 27 pages, 8 Postscript figures. Astronomical Journal (accepted
From P4 medicine to P5 medicine: transitional times for a more human-centric approach to AI-based tools for hospitals of tomorrow
Within the debate on shaping future clinical services, where different
robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) based technologies are
integrated to perform tasks, the authors take the chance to provide
an interdisciplinary analysis required to validate a tool aiming at
supporting the melanoma cancer diagnosis. In particular, they focus
on the ethical-legal and technical requirements needed to address the
Assessment List on Trustworthy AI (ALTAI), highlighting some pros
and cons of the adopted self-assessment checklist. The dialogue
stimulates additionally remarks on the EU regulatory initiatives on AI
in the healthcare systems
Are the school prevention programmes - aimed at de-normalizing smoking among youths - beneficial in the long term? An example from the Smoke Free Class Competition in Italy
Tobacco smoking by young people is of great concern because it usually leads to regular smoking, nicotine addiction and quitting difficulties. Young people "hooked" by tobacco maintain the profits of the tobacco industry by replacing smokers who quit or die. If new generations could be tobacco-free, as supported by tobacco endgame strategies, the tobacco epidemic could end within decades. Smoking prevention programmes for teens are offered by schools with the aim to prevent or delay smoking onset. Among these, the Smoke Free Class Competition (SFC) was widely implemented in Europe. Its effectiveness yielded conflicting results, but it was only evaluated at short/medium term (6 - 18 months). The aim of this study is to evaluate its effectiveness after a longer follow-up (3 to 5 years) in order to allow enough time for the maturing of the students and the internalization of the experience and its contents. Fifteen classes were randomly sampled from two Italian high schools of Bologna province that regularly offered the SFC to first year students; 382 students (174 participating in the SFC and 208 controls) were retrospectively followed-up and provided their "smoking histories". At the end of their last year of school (after 5 years from the SFC), the percentage of students who stated that they were regular smokers was lower among the SFC students than in controls: 13.5% vs 32.9% (p=0.03). From the students' "smoking histories", statistically significant protective ORs were observed for SFC students at the end of 1st and 5th year: 0.42 (95% CI 0.19-0.93) and 0.32 (95% CI 0.11-0.91) respectively. Absence of smokers in the family was also a strongly statistically significant factor associated with being a non-smoker student. These results suggest that SFC may have a positive impact on lowering the prevalence of smoking in the long term (5 years)
GHASP: an H kinematic survey of spiral galaxies - X. Surface photometry, decompositions and the Tully-Fisher relation in the Rc-band
We present Rc-band surface photometry for 170 of the 203 galaxies in GHASP,
Gassendi H-Alpha survey of SPirals, a sample of late-type galaxies for which
high-resolution Fabry-Perot H{\alpha} maps have previously been obtained. Our
data set is constructed by new Rc-band observations taken at the Observatoire
de Haute-Provence (OHP), supplemented with Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)
archival data, obtained with the purpose of deriving homogeneous photometric
profiles and parameters. Our results include Rc-band surface brightness
profiles for 170 galaxies and profiles for 108 of these objects. We
catalogue several parameters of general interest for further reference, such as
total magnitude, effective radius and isophotal parameters -- magnitude,
position angle, ellipticity and inclination. We also perform a structural
decomposition of the surface brightness profiles using a multi-component method
in order to separate disks from bulges and bars, and to observe the main
scaling relations involving luminosities, sizes and maximum velocities.
We determine the Rc-band Tully Fisher relation using maximum velocities
derived solely from H rotation curves for a sample of 80 galaxies,
resulting in a slope of , zero point of and an
estimated intrinsic scatter of . We note that, different from
the TF-relation in the near-infrared derived for the same sample, no change in
the slope of the relation is seen at the low-mass end (for galaxies with
km/s). We suggest that this different behaviour of the Tully
Fisher relation (with the optical relation being described by a single
power-law while the near-infrared by two) may be caused by differences in the
stellar mass to light ratio for galaxies with km/s.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
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