2,190 research outputs found
Value of Information: A Tool to Improve Research Prioritization and Reduce Waste
In a Guest Editorial, Cosetta Minelli and Gianluca Baio explain how VOI analysis can prioritize research projects by identifying uncertainty in existing knowledge and then estimating expected benefits from reducing that uncertainty
Value of Information: A Tool to Improve Research Prioritization and Reduce Waste.
In a Guest Editorial, Cosetta Minelli and Gianluca Baio explain how VOI analysis can prioritize research projects by identifying uncertainty in existing knowledge and then estimating expected benefits from reducing that uncertainty
A basic protocol for the acoustic characterization of small and medium-sized classrooms
To promote a fast and effective characterization of the sound environment in small and medium-sized classrooms, a basic measurement protocol, based on a minimum number of parameters and positions, is provided. Measurements were taken in 29 occupied classrooms belonging to 13 primary schools in Turin, Italy, that differ in location and typology. The background noise level was acquired during silent and group activities, and the reverberation time, speech clarity, useful-to-detrimental ratio and speech level, were acquired along the main axis of each classroom and in one or two offset positions. To reduce the number of measured parameters that can be used to fully characterize classroom acoustics, data were divided into two groups on the basis of a cutoff value of maximum occupied reverberation time in the case of moderate and severe requirements. Given the strong correlation among the quantities, thresholds were identified for the other acoustical parameters, and their accuracy and precision were tested to assess their ability to classify the acoustic quality as compliant or non-compliant. Results suggest that more convenient parameters, like clarity in the central position of the classroom, can be used instead of reverberation time to classify classroom acoustics
Statistical test for an urn model with random multidrawing and random addition
We complete the study of the model introduced in [11]. It is a two-color urn
model with multiple drawing and random (non-balanced) time-dependent
reinforcement matrix. The number of sampled balls at each time-step is random.
We identify the exact rates at which the number of balls of each color grows to
infinity and define two strongly consistent estimators for the limiting
reinforcement averages. Then we prove a Central Limit Theorem, which allows to
design a statistical test for such averages.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2102.0628
Neogene to Quaternary evolution of the Calabrian Subduction System, (Central Mediterranean)
We construct an ESE striking to WNW geological cross-section across the Calabrian Subduction System (Central
Mediterranean) using seismic near vertical profiles and field data. The interpreted profiles were time-to-depth
converted, merged and translated in a geological section stretching from the Marsili Oceanic Basin (Southern
Tyrrhenian Sea) to the Ionian accretionary complex . Moving toward the east, the resulting section through the
Paola, Amantea, and Crati basins, the Coastal Chain and Sila Massif and Crotone basin. The maximum elongation
of these basins change progressively moving toward the east: from NNW in the Paola to NS in the Crati to the NNE
in the Crotone basins. Data we present suggest that: Across the Calabria Tyrrhenian Continental Margin (CTCM),
top of Kabilian-Calabrian Unit (KCU) is laterally variable in depth forming basins, which are separated by major
structures with contractional or transcurrent kinematics, filled by Oligo-Miocene clastic to evaporitic deposits up to
1500m thick. Plio-Quaternary deposits display a remarkable variation in thickness from 4.5 km in the Paola Basin
to less than 400m in the central sector of the margin. Plio-Quaternary sediments are internally sub-divisible into
four sub-units (namely D1-D4) separated by tectonics enhanced angular unconformities. W-ward vergent reverse
faults with limited vertical displacement offset the top of KCU as well as the Oligo-Miocene sedimentary and evaporitic
units in the eastern side of the Paola basin. On land (Amantea \u2013 Crati) and farther to the east (Crotone basin)
below a Messinian-Pleistocene deposits the top of KCU is variable structured and covered by a Oligo-Miocene
clastic deposits with different thickness. The Plio-Quaternary deposits, unconformably overlay the Messinian and
older deposits, show the maximum thickness in the Crotone basin. Two main tectonic unconformities within the
Plio-Quaternary deposits have been recognised allowing the separation of this unit into three sub-units. In the
offshore portion of the Crotone basin, SE-ward reverse faults dissect the KCU and the Oligo-Miocene up to the
Messinian deposits. While the pre-Messinian tectonic history across the Calabrian Subduction System seems to
be quite similar, a main reorganization of the system occurring during the (?) early and (?) middle-Pliocene. Geometrical
and stratigraphic relationship show that several W-ward and E-ward vergent reverse faults in the Paola
and Crotone basins, respectively, cut and offset Messinian evaporites and older sedimentary units, controlling the
geometry of the basins. In the Paola Basin the amount of subsidence gradually increase during deposition of subunits
D2 and D3, which are probably Pliocene in age. On land, the evidence of the unconformities in the Crotone
basin indicate that Pliocene deposition occurring during the uplift of the Sila Massif. Therefore uplift of the Sila
range occurred during the strong subsidence of the Paola and Crotone basins.
The evolution of the overall structure can be then divided in two different steps: 1)the onset of subsidence started
in the Late Miocene and covered a large areas presently occupied by the Paola and Crotone basins. This basin, was
probably already separated into sub-basins but evolved in a slowly subsiding and poorly deformed area located
between the active accretionary prism and the volcanic arc. Therefore in the Middle-Upper Miocene this basin
could be defined as forearc basin. 2)In the Pliocene the structure of this large basin was fragmented due to the uplift
of a central range (Sila Massif) with an overall pop-up like structure. 3)Uplift of the belt producing subsidence
along the flanks and simultaneously formation of two distinct basins: the Paola and Crotone basins. This process
probably occurred during episodes of fast roll-back of the subducting slab, as attested by the opening of two ocean
floor basins in the back-arc region
Morphology, Plasticity, and Transformation between Philosophy and Biology
In biology, interest in form was the prerogative of developmental biology, while it was practically neglected by evolutionary biology. This situation has changed a lot in recent decades and has led to a reinterpretation of the concept of evolution and evolutionism focusing more on the problem of form and morphology. In Italy, especially Alessandro Minelli, one of the editors of this issue, has dedicated his studies to the need to communicate form to structure, to reconnect morphology and evolution. This theme is a highly relevant one for philosophy, inasmuch as the question of form and morphology, since the days of Goethe and Bergson, has always been considered as the starting point for a philosophy of the living being endowed with its own categories that cannot be reduced to those of physics
EFFECT OF DIFFERENT ILLUMINATION SOURCES ON COLOUR AND OXIDATIVE STABILITY OF SEASONED COPPA DI PARMA PGI
The influence of different lighting durations, lamps and modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) on the colour and oxidative stability of lipids was studied in Coppa di Parma PGI. The samples were stored (4 degrees C) in darkness or lighted by UV-free lamps. In trials 1 and 2, the samples were lighted 24 and 12 h/day, respectively, and were packaged in air. In trial 3, samples were packaged in MA (70% N-2/30% CO2) and lighted 12 h/day. In air, illumination reduced oxidative stability, redness, colour saturation and increased the Hue angle. In MAP, the lighting conditions did not affect colour and oxidative stability. During storage the lipid oxidation increased. Overall, light negatively affected the studied parameters
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