209 research outputs found
Hallazgos electromiográficos y electroneurográficos en el pie cavo esencial
La etiología del pie cavo cuando ésta es conocida, suele ser debida a un trastorno
de tipo neurológico o miopático, aunque en determinados casos nos encontramos con pacientes
que padecen esta deformidad en el pie, en los cuales no podemos descubrir ningún
antecedente de este tipo, por lo que lo calificamos de pie cavo «esencial». A un grupo de estos
pacientes con pie cavo «esencial», en los que no hemos encontrado ningún tipo de antecedente
neurológico, lo hemos sometido a una exploración electroneurográfica, encontrando que la
mitad de ellos padecían algún trastorno neuropático/miopático, que no había sido detectado
en la exploración clínica inicial.Neurological or myopathic diseases are frequently involved in the etiology of flat
foot. In some cases, no antecedents of disease can be found and therefore these flat foots are
classified as «essential». We have undertaken an electrophysiologic study in a series of patients
with «essential» flat food in order to explore unsuspected neurological disorders. In half of the
patients, neuropathic and myopathic electroneurographic patterns of different severity were detected
Thermal transport in glassy selenium: The role of low-frequency librations
The experimental curves giving the temperature dependence of the thermal conductivity of glassy selenium are considered in detail. The observed behavior can be taken into account quantitatively if the densities of states for short-wavelength phonons as well as for low-energy librations arising from computer simulations are used for the calculations. In particular, it is shown that the lowest frequency excitations of a chain of selenium atoms can give due account of the plateau observed at temperatures about 2-10 K. The implications of the present findings for the current debate regarding the mechanisms for thermal transport in glasses are finally discussedDirección General de Investigación Científica y Técnica PB92-0114-C0
Comparing series of rankings with ties by using complex networks: An analysis of the Spanish stock market (IBEX-35 index)
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in [Networks and Heterogeneous Media] following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version [Pedroche, F… (et al.) (2015). Comparing series of rankings with ties by using complex networks: An analysis of the Spanish stock market (IBEX-35 index). Springfield, MO: American Institute of Mathematical Science. Networks and Heterogeneous Media.Volume 10, Number 1, March 2015, pp. 101-125. eISSN 1556-181X] is available online at: https://aimsciences.org/journals/pdfs.jsp?paperID=10842&mode=fullIn this paper we extend the concept of Competitivity Graph to
compare series of rankings with ties (partial rankings). We extend the usual
method used to compute Kendall's coe cient for two partial rankings to the
concept of evolutive Kendall's coe cient for a series of partial rankings. The
theoretical framework consists of a four-layer multiplex network. Regarding
the treatment of ties, our approach allows to de ne a tie between two values
when they are close enough, depending on a threshold. We show an application
using data from the Spanish Stock Market; we analyse the series of rankings
de ned by 25 companies that have contributed to the IBEX-35 return and
volatility values over the period 2003 to 2013.This work was partially supported by Spanish MICINN Funds and FEDER Funds MTM2009-13848, MTM2010-16153 and MTM2010-18674, and Junta de Andalucia Funds FQM-264. The authors would like to thank the referees for their valuable comments and remarks.Pedroche Sánchez, F.; Criado, R.; García, EH.; Romance, M.; Sánchez, VE. (2015). Comparing series of rankings with ties by using complex networks: An analysis of the Spanish stock market (IBEX-35 index). Networks and Heterogeneous Media. 10(1):101-125. https://doi.org/10.3934/nhm.2015.10.101S10112510
Low-frequency excitations in glassy selenium: A comparison of neutron-scattering and molecular-dynamics results
The microscopic low-frequency dynamics of glassy selenium is investigated by means of the concurrent use of neutron inelastic scattering and computer simulations. A separation of the dynamic response in terms of intra- and interchain processes is achieved from the analysis of the simulation results. The S(Q,E) dynamic structure factors are analyzed in terms of the frequency moments or from a model scattering law, and the wave-vector dependence of the relevant quantities is established. Finally, the anomalous behavior of the heat capacity at moderately low temperatures is shown to be originated by mostly interchain interactions.Dirección General de Investigación Científica y Técnica PB89-0037-C
Cortistain is expressed in a distinct subset of cortical interneurons
Cortistatin is a presumptive neuropeptide that shares 11 of its 14 amino acids with somatostatin. In contrast to somatostatin, administration of cortistatin into the rat brain ventricles specifically enhances slow wave sleep, apparently by antagonizing the effects of acetylcholine on cortical excitability. Here we show that preprocortistatin mRNA is expressed in a subset of GABAergic cells in the cortex and hippocampus that partially overlap with those containing somatostatin. A significant percentage of cortistatin-positive neurons is also positive for parvalbumin. In contrast, no colocalization was found between cortistatin and calretinin, cholecystokinin, or vasoactive intestinal peptide. During development there is a transient increase in cortistatin-expressing cells in the second postnatal week in all cortical areas and in the dentate gyrus. A transient expression of preprocortistatin mRNA in the hilar region at P16 is paralleled by electrophysiological changes in dentate granule cells. Together, these observations suggest mechanisms by which cortistatin may regulate cortical activity
Competitivity graphs analysis and structural comparison of rankings
[EN] A complex networks based method is introduced for comparing different complete rankings of a finite family of elements. The concepts of competitivity graph and evolutive competitivity graph are introduced as the main tools for analyzing an (ordered) family of rankings of a fixed set of elements. It is shown how the structural properties of these competitivity graphs give deep information about the competitiveness of the elements according to the rankings considered. The relationships between competitivity graphs and some other well-known families of graphs, such as permutation graphs, comparability graphs and chordal graphs are also presented. Finally some applications are presented, including the analysis of sports rankings and, more precisely, the study of European soccer leagues.This work was partially supported by Spanish MICINN Funds and FEDER Funds MTM2009-13848, MTM2010-16153 and MTM2010-18674, and Junta de Andalucía Funds FQM-264.Criado, R.; García, E.; Pedroche Sánchez, F.; Romance, M.; Sánchez-García, VE. (2013). Competitivity graphs analysis and structural comparison of rankings. International Journal of Complex Systems in Science. 3(1):113-119. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/46243S1131193
Rotational dynamics in the plastic-crystal phase of ethanol: Relevance for understanding the dynamics during the structural glass transition
12 págs.; 14 figs.; 1 tab.; 1 apéndiceThe reorientational dynamics within the rotationally disordered cubic plastic phase of solid ethanol is investigated by means of the concurrent use of computer molecular dynamics and quasielastic neutron scattering. Motions involving widely different time scales are shown to take place above the calorimetric >glass transition> which is centered at Tg≈97 K. These correspond to well-defined reorientations belonging to the cubic point group. The dynamics of this solid exhibits features remarkably close to those of the supercooled liquid that can exist at the same temperature. Such similitude of dynamic behavior serves to provide some clues for the understanding of the nature of molecular motions at temperatures close to the canonical liquid→glass transition. ©2000 The American Physical Society.This work was supported in part by Grant No. DGICYTPB95-
0072-C03 (Spain). Work at ANL was supported by the
U.S. Department of Energy, BES–Materials Sciences, under
Contract No. W-31-109-ENG-38.Peer Reviewe
Host virus and pneumococcus-specific immune responses in high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis and chronic lymphocytic leukemia: implications for disease progression
[EN]Patients diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) display a high incidence of infections due to an associated immunodeficiency that includes hypogammaglobulinemia. A higher risk of infections has also been recently reported for high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis, while no information is available in low-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis. Here, we evaluated the status of the humoral immune system in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (n=58), as well as in low- (n=71) and high- (n=29) count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis versus healthy donors (n=91). Total free plasma immunoglobulin titers and specific levels of antibodies against cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, influenza and S.pneumoniae were measured by nephelometry and ELISA-based techniques, respectively. Overall, our results show that both CLL and high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis patients, but not low-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis subjects, present with relatively high levels of antibodies specific for the latent viruses investigated, associated with progressively lower levels of S.pneumoniae-specific immunoglobulins
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