35 research outputs found

    Time heals all (shallow) wounds. A lesson on forgiveness of ingroup transgressors learned by the feyenoord vandal fans

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    This paper examines how a social threat posed by a deviant behavior affects second-hand forgiveness over time toward ingroup and outgroup transgressors. In Study 1, using real news reports, we investigated intergroup rivalries between soccer fans in order to understand the role of group membership in predicting the intention to forgive transgressors. Results suggested that transgressors were less likely to be forgiven by ingroup members rather than outgroup members, thus showing evidence of the black sheep effect. In Study 2 (using a different sample), we analyzed the same intergroup rivalries one year after the transgression in order to explore changes in intention to forgive over time. Results showed that, after one year, ingroup members were more likely to forgive ingroup than outgroup transgressors, but only when the threat to the group stereotype was not salient. The implications of the results for the subjective group dynamics theory and for the black sheep effect are discusse

    Rheology of Conductive High Reactivity Carbonaceous Material (HRCM)-Based Ink Suspensions: Dependence on Concentration and Temperature

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    The present case study reports a shear rheological characterization in the temperature domain of inks and pastes loaded with conductive High Reactivity Carbonaceous Material (HRCM) consisting mainly of few-layers graphene sheets. The combined effect of filler concentration and applied shear rate is investigated in terms of the shear viscosity response as a function of testing temperature. The non-Newtonian features of shear flow ramps at constant temperature are reported to depend on both the HRCM load and the testing temperature. Moreover, temperature ramps at a constant shear rate reveal a different viscosity-temperature dependence from what is observed in shear flow ramps while maintaining the same filler concentration. An apparent departure from the well-known Vogel-Fulcher-Tamman relationship as a function of the applied shear rate is also reported

    Enhancing Transformer for End-to-end Speech-to-Text Translation

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    Neural end-to-end architectures have beenrecently proposed for spoken languagetranslation (SLT), following the state-of-the-art results obtained in machine translation (MT) and speech recognition (ASR).Motivated by this contiguity, we proposean SLT adaptation of Transformer (thestate-of-the-art architecture in MT), whichexploits the integration of ASR solutionsto cope with long input sequences featuring low information density. Long audiorepresentations hinder the training of largemodels due to Transformer’s quadraticmemory complexity.Moreover, for thesake of translation quality, handling suchsequences requires capturing both short-and long-range dependencies between bi-dimensional features. Focusing on Trans-former’s encoder, our adaptation is basedon:i)downsampling the input with con-volutional neural networks, which enablesmodel training on non cutting-edge GPUs,ii)modeling the bidimensional nature ofthe audio spectrogram with 2D components, andiii)adding a distance penaltyto the attention, which is able to bias ittowards short-range dependencies.Ourexperiments show that our SLT-adaptedTransformer outperforms the RNN-basedbaseline both in translation quality andtraining time, setting the state-of-the-artperformance on six language directions

    Care pathways models and clinical outcomes in disorders of consciousness

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    Objective: Patients with Disorders of consciousness, are persons with extremely low functioning levels and represent a challenge for health care systems due to their high needs of facilitating environmental factors. Despite a common Italian health care path-way for these patients, no studies have analyzed information on how each region have implemented it in its welfare system correlating data with patients’ clinical outcomes. Materials and Methods: A multicenter observational pilot study was realized. Clinicians collected data on the care pathways of patients with Disorder of consciousness by ask-ing 90 patients’ caregivers to complete an ad hoc questionnaire through a structured phone interview. Questionnaire consisted of three sections: sociodemographic data, description of the care pathway done by the patient, and caregiver evaluation of health services and information received.Results: Seventy- three patients were analyzed. Length of hospital stay was different across the health care models and it was associated with improvement in clinical diag-nosis. In long- term care units, the diagnosis at admission and the number of caregivers available for each patient (median value=3) showed an indirect relationship with worsening probability in clinical outcome. Caregivers reported that communication with professionals (42%) and the answer to the need of information were the most critical points in the acute phase, whereas presence of Non- Governmental Organizations (25%) and availability of psychologists for caregivers (21%) were often missing during long-term care. The 65% of caregivers reported they did not know the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Conclusion: This study highlights relevant differences in analyzed models, despite a recommended national pathway of care. Future public health considerations and ac-tions are needed to guarantee equity and standardization of the care process in all European countries

    TBVAC2020: Advancing tuberculosis vaccines from discovery to clinical development

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    TBVAC2020 is a research project supported by the Horizon 2020 program of the European Commission (EC). It aims at the discovery and development of novel tuberculosis (TB) vaccines from preclinical research projects to early clinical assessment. The project builds on previous collaborations from 1998 onwards funded through the EC framework programs FP5, FP6, and FP7. It has succeeded in attracting new partners from outstanding laboratories from all over the world, now totaling 40 institutions. Next to the development of novel vaccines, TB biomarker development is also considered an important asset to facilitate rational vaccine selection and development. In addition, TBVAC2020 offers portfolio management that provides selection criteria for entry, gating, and priority settings of novel vaccines at an early developmental stage. The TBVAC2020 consortium coordinated by TBVI facilitates collaboration and early data sharing between partners with the common aim of working toward the development of an effective TB vaccine. Close links with funders and other consortia with shared interests further contribute to this goal

    LONG-TIME RURAL LANDSCAPES: NEW MODELS FOR SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT PROJECT

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    The concept of "long-time", as developed by human geography, could try to define better the features and outcomes of an entity such as the rural landscape, a complex and living system, in continuous modification and adaptation. The European policies identify rural landscape as a fundamental testing ground for advanced practices of sustainability. A ground provider of new common goods to the whole society, a place of new multi-functionality, where good architecture and beautiful landscape combine themselves with high-quality food, with ecological management of the land, with hospitality, identity, and culture. In this sense, the rural landscape becomes "an open work", in continuous evolution, in which local and natural materials are still the substrates of historical identities, but at the same time, they also lend themselves toward a resilient innovation, capable of approaching at the end of the cycle of consumption and life of manufactured goods and to propose reversible models with low or zero consumption of soil. The first results of the shared research for the new Landscape Plan of internal Sardinia offer in this sense perspectives that probably deserve to be presented and discussed

    Conflicts induce affiliative interactions among bystanders in a tolerant species of macaque (Macaca tonkeana)

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    International audienceAggression is potentially disruptive for social groups. Although individuals witnessing a conflict are not directly threatened by aggressive interactions, the aftermath of aggression appears to be a period of social instability.We expected bystanders to respond to conflicts by affiliating with other group members and so reducing social tension. To test this hypothesis we collected data on two captive groups of Tonkean macaques, Macaca tonkeana. After an agonistic interaction, the behaviours of focal individuals uninvolved in the conflict were recorded over 5 min postconflict periods, for comparison with baseline periods. The results showed that bystanders were more likely to show affiliation during postconflict periods than in baselines. We found that affiliation occurred more frequently between individuals linked by friendship, whereas no significant effect of kinship appeared, which may be related to the open social relationships reported in Tonkean macaques. Females initiated affiliation sooner than males and conflicts involving physical contact were more quickly followed by affiliation between bystanders. Rates of scratching tended to decrease after the first affiliative interaction. None the less, few signs of anxiety were observed in bystanders. Our results reflect the high propensity of Tonkean macaques to appease others and stop aggression. This study demonstrates that postconflict affiliation occurs between bystanders in a species characterized by tolerant social relationships. It could be a pervasive means of social cohesion among primates
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