1,123 research outputs found

    Editorial

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    Editorial

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    Lactic Acid Bacteria and Yeast Inocula Modulate the Volatile Profile of Spanish-Style Green Table Olive Fermentations

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    In this work, Manzanilla Spanish-style green table olive fermentations were inoculated with Lactobacillus pentosus LPG1, Lactobacillus pentosus Lp13, Lactobacillus plantarum Lpl15, the yeast Wickerhanomyces anomalus Y12 and a mixed culture of all them. After fermentation (65 days), their volatile profiles in brines were determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. A total of 131 volatile compounds were found, but only 71 showed statistical differences between at least, two fermentation processes. The major chemical groups were alcohols (32), ketones (14), aldehydes (nine), and volatile phenols (nine). Results showed that inoculation with Lactobacillus strains, especially L. pentosus Lp13, reduced the formation of volatile compounds. On the contrary, inoculation with W. anomalus Y12 increased their concentrations with respect to the spontaneous process, mainly of 1-butanol, 2-phenylethyl acetate, ethanol, and 2-methyl-1-butanol. Furthermore, biplot and biclustering analyses segregated fermentations inoculated with Lp13 and Y12 from the rest of the processes. The use of sequential lactic acid bacteria and yeasts inocula, or their mixture, in Spanish-style green table olive fermentation could be advisable practice for producing differentiated and high-quality products with improved aromatic profile.Gobierno de España-OliFilm-AGL-2013-48300-

    Madinat al-Zahra'

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    Duración 00:10:11. Necesita tener instalado Adobe Flash Player. Instalador incluido en el DVD.Este DVD contiene, en video de formato estandard y en HD, una reconstrucción virtual de la ciudad palatina de Madinat al-Zahra, levantada por los califas omeyas de al-Andalus entre los años 936 y 1010, situada a ocho kilómetros de Córdoba. Esta reconstrucción puede verse tanto a través de la animación con explicación sonora como mediante panoramas esféricos enlazados que permiten un recorrido inter-activo por las zonas hasta ahora descubiertas del alcázar, accesibles a través de la aplicación al-Zahra.exe. El audiovisual ha sido realizado por el Laboratorio de Arqueología y Arquitectura de la Ciudad (LAAC) de la Escuela de Estudios Árabes de Granada, perteneciente al Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), en colaboración con la Fundación El Legado Andalusí.Peer reviewe

    Traffic Crimes and risky driving: The role of personality and driving anger

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    The current study aims to examine the influence of personality traits (alternative Zuckerman model) and driving anger in the explanation of risky driving style in individuals convicted for road safety offences (N = 245), using as a basis an adaptation of the context-mediated model. This is a transversal, descriptive study designed to be implemented by means of surveys, in which took part 245 men convicted of road safety offences from five prisons in Galicia (a region in northwestern Spain) took part. The average age of the participants was 38.73 years (Sx-9.61), with a range between 18 and 64 years. All participants had three or more years of driving experience. Our data shows that the Impulsive-Sensation Seeking (Imp-SS) personality trait had a direct and positive effect on dangerous driving, while the Activity (Act) trait had a direct but negative effect. The Aggression-Hostility (Agg-Host) trait, in turn, influenced the risky driving style, but not directly, but by raising driving anger levels, so it acted as a powerful mediator between the Aggression-Hostility (Agg-Hos) trait and the risky driving style. In general, our research partially replicates and expands previous findings regarding the model used, the aggression-hostility personality trait (Agg-Host) was placed in the distal context, driving anger in the proximal context, while age and personality traits Activity (Act) and Impulsive-Sensation Seeking (Imp-SS) were direct predictors. The results of this study may have practical implications for the detection and rehabilitation of offenders and penalties for road safety offences.Universidade de Vigo/CISU

    Effective current-driven memory operations for low-power ReRAM applications

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    © 2023 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works. Al document ha d’aparèixer l’enllaç a la publicació original a IEEE, o bé al Digital Object Identifier (DOI).Resistive switching (RS) devices are electronic components which exhibit a resistive state that can be adjusted to different nonvolatile levels via electrical stressing, fueling the development of future resistive memories (ReRAM) and enabling innovative solutions for several applications. Most works so far have used voltage-based driving schemes for both WRITE and READ operations. However, results from current-driven WRITE operations have shown high uniformity in switching performance, and thus constitute a valid alternative to consider, but current-driven READ operations have rarely been explored. In this context, here we tested a current-based READ/WRITE memory driving scheme on commercial self-directed channel (SDC) devices, while operating constantly at low current levels between tenths of nA and 1.5 uA. We propose a novel method to carry out efficient READ operations exploiting the transient response of the voltage on the current-driven ReRAM memory cells. For READ operations performed at 100 nA, we calculated the cumulative probability distribution of the standard deviation of the measured voltage ( σV ) on the devices and we observed a ratio σV−HRS/σV−LRS∼10× . Moreover, the HRS and LRS states were distinguishable in all the tested devices with less than 0.5% error. Finally, the calculated energy consumption ( ESET≈10 nJ, ERESET≈30 nJ, and EREAD between 80–400 pJ) was competitive even when the duration of the READ/WRITE current pulses was suboptimal in the millisecond range. Therefore, the presented results validate the promising characteristics and the power-efficiency of the proposed READ method for current-driven ReRAM circuits and applications.This work was supported in part by the Chilean Government through the National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FONDECYT) under Grant 1221747; in part by the National Agency for Research and Development (ANID)-Basal under Grant FB0008; in part by the MICINN, Spain, through PRITES Project under Grant PID2019-105658RB-I00; and in part by FLEXRRAM Project under Grant TED2021-129643B-I00.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    La Terapia Familiar en el tratamiento de las adicciones

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    En este trabajo se presenta un breve recorrido histórico sobre el papel de la terapia familiar en el tratamiento de las adicciones. Siguiendo la propuesta de Rolland y Walsh (1996) se analizan con detenimiento los modelos centrados en la resolución de problemas y los modelos intergeneracionales. El objetivo básico del artículo es mostrar las aportaciones de las diferentes perspectivas y contribuir a enfoques más integradores en el tratamiento familiar de las adicciones. En esta línea se concluye con una revisión de los estudios de eficacia de la terapia familiar y se proponen líneas futuras de investigación.This paper presents a brief historical review on the role of family therapy in the treatment of addictions. Following the proposal of Rolland & Walsh (1996) discusses in detail the models that focus on solving problems and intergenerational models. The purpose of the article is to show the contributions of the different perspectives and contribute to more inclusive approaches in family treatment of addictions. In this line concludes with a review of studies of effectiveness of family therapy and proposes future directions for research

    Automatic detection of falls and fainting

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    Healthcare environments have always been considered an important scenario in which to apply new technologies to improve residents and employees conditions, solve problems and facilitate the performance of tasks. In this way, the use of sensors based on user movement interaction allows solving complicated situations that should be immediately addressed, such as controlling falls and fainting spells in residential care homes. However, ensuring that all the residents are always visually controlled by at least one employee is quite complicated. In this paper, we present a ubiquitous and context-aware system focused on geriatrics and residential care homes, but it could be applied to any other healthcare centre. This system has been designed to automatically detect falls and fainting spells, alerting the most appropriate employees to address the emergency. To that end, the system is based on movement interaction through a set of Kinect devices that allows the identification of the position of a person. These devices imply some development problems that authors have had to deal with, including camera location, the detection of head movements and people in horizontal position. The proposed system allows controlling each resident posture through a notification and warning procedure. When an anomalous situation is detected, the system analyses the resident posture and, if necessary, the most adequate employee will be warned to react urgently. Ubiquity and context-awareness are essential features since the proposed system has to be able to know where any employee is and what they are doing at any time. Finally, we present the outcomes of an evaluation based on the ISO 9126-4 about the usability of the system.We would like to acknowledge the project CICYT TIN2011-27767-C02-01 from the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación and the Regional Goverment: Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha PPII10-0300-4174 and PII2C09-0185-1030 projects for partially funding this work

    Use of a D-optimal design with constrains to quantify the effects of the mixture of sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium chloride salts on the growth parameters of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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    The combined effect of NaCl, KCl, CaCl(2), and MgCl(2) on the water activity (a (w)) and the growth parameters of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was studied by means of a D-optimal mixture design with constrains (total salt concentrationsor = 9.0%, w/v). The a (w) was linearly related to the concentrations of the diverse salts; its decrease, by similar concentrations of salts, followed the order NaClCaCl(2)KClMgCl(2), regardless of the reference concentrations used (total absence of salts or 5% NaCl). The equations that expressed the maximum specific growth (mu (max)), lag phase duration (lambda), and maximum population reached (N (max)) showed that the values of these parameters depended on linear effects and two-way interactions of the studied chloride salts. The mu (max) decreased as NaCl and CaCl(2) increased (regardless of the presence or not of previous NaCl); however, in the presence of a 5% NaCl, a further addition of KCl and MgCl(2) markedly increased mu (max). The lambda was mainly affected by MgCl(2) and the interactions NaCl x CaCl(2) and CaCl(2) x MgCl(2). The further addition of NaCl and CaCl(2) to a 5% NaCl medium increased the lag phase while KCl and MgCl(2) had negligible or slightly negative effect, respectively. N (max) was mainly affected by MgCl(2) and its interactions with NaCl, KCl, and CaCl(2); MgCl(2) stimulated N (max) in the presence of 5% NaCl while KCl, NaCl, and CaCl(2) had a progressive decreasing effect. These results can be of interest for the fermentation and preservation of vegetable products, and foods in general, in which this yeast could be present

    Petrogenesis of fertile mantle peridotites from the Monte del Estado massif (Southwest Puerto Rico): a preserved section of Proto-Caribbean lithospheric mantle?

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    The Monte del Estado massif is the largest and northernmost serpentinized peridotite belt in southwest Puerto Rico. It is mainly composed of spinel lherzolite and minor harzburgite with variable clinopyroxene modal abundances. Mineral and whole rock major and trace element compositions of peridotites coincide with those of fertile abyssal mantle rocks from mid ocean ridges. Peridotites lost 2-14 wt% of relative MgO and variable amounts of CaO by serpentinization and seafloor weathering. HREE contents in whole rock indicate that the Monte del Estado peridotites are residues after low to moderate degrees (2-15%) of fractional partial melting in the spinel stability field. However, very low LREE/HREE and MREE/HREE in clinopyroxene cannot be explained by melting models of a spinel lherzolite source and support that the Monte del Estado peridotites experienced initial low fractional melting degrees (~ 4%) in the garnet stability field. The relative enrichment of LREE in whole rock is not due to alteration processes but probably reflects the capture of percolating fluid/melt fractions or the crystallization of sub-percent amounts of hydrous minerals (e.g., amphibole, phlogopite) along grain boundaries or as microinclusions in minerals. We propose that the Monte del Estado peridotite belt represents a section of ancient Proto-Caribbean (Atlantic) lithospheric mantle originated by seafloor spreading between North and South America in the Late Jurassic- Early Cretaceous. This portion of oceanic lithospheric mantle was subsequently trapped in the forearc region of the Greater Antilles paleo-island arc generated by the northward subduction of the Caribbean plate beneath the Proto-Caribbean ocean. Finally, the Monte del Estado peridotites belt was emplaced in the Early Cretaceous probably as result of the change in subduction polarity of the Greater Antilles paleo-island arc without having been significantly modified by subduction processe
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