13 research outputs found

    Vague heuristics

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    Even when they are defined with precision, one can often read and hear judgments about the vagueness of heuristics in debates about heuristic reasoning. This opinion is not just frequent but also quite reasonable. In fact, during the 1990s, there was a certain controversy concerning this topic that confronted two of the leading groups in the field of heuristic reasoning research, each of whom held very different perspectives. In the present text, we will focus on two of the papers published in Psychological Review, wherein the arguments of each of these groups were presented:

    Deep-sequencing reveals broad subtype-specific HCV resistance mutations associated with treatment failure

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    A percentage of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients fail direct acting antiviral (DAA)-based treatment regimens, often because of drug resistance-associated substitutions (RAS). The aim of this study was to characterize the resistance profile of a large cohort of patients failing DAA-based treatments, and investigate the relationship between HCV subtype and failure, as an aid to optimizing management of these patients. A new, standardized HCV-RAS testing protocol based on deep sequencing was designed and applied to 220 previously subtyped samples from patients failing DAA treatment, collected in 39 Spanish hospitals. The majority had received DAA-based interferon (IFN) a-free regimens; 79% had failed sofosbuvir-containing therapy. Genomic regions encoding the nonstructural protein (NS) 3, NS5A, and NS5B (DAA target regions) were analyzed using subtype-specific primers. Viral subtype distribution was as follows: genotype (G) 1, 62.7%; G3a, 21.4%; G4d, 12.3%; G2, 1.8%; and mixed infections 1.8%. Overall, 88.6% of patients carried at least 1 RAS, and 19% carried RAS at frequencies below 20% in the mutant spectrum. There were no differences in RAS selection between treatments with and without ribavirin. Regardless of the treatment received, each HCV subtype showed specific types of RAS. Of note, no RAS were detected in the target proteins of 18.6% of patients failing treatment, and 30.4% of patients had RAS in proteins that were not targets of the inhibitors they received. HCV patients failing DAA therapy showed a high diversity of RAS. Ribavirin use did not influence the type or number of RAS at failure. The subtype-specific pattern of RAS emergence underscores the importance of accurate HCV subtyping. The frequency of “extra-target” RAS suggests the need for RAS screening in all three DAA target regions

    I Congreso Nacional: La Ciencia en la Educación Infantil y Primaria

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    Documento PDF de 236 páginas donde se resume las conferencias, ponencias, comunicaciones y carteles presentados en el I Congreso Nacional "La Ciencia en la Educación Infantil y Primaria" celebrado los días 5,6,7 y 8 de septiembre de 2001. La organización del congreso estuvo a cargo del Grupo de Extensión Científica del IMAFF del CSIC (El CSIC en la Escuela) y de la Real Sociedad Española de Física.Resumen de las ponencias, comunicaciones y posters del I Congreso Nacional "La Ciencia en la Educación Infantil y Primaria" celebrado en Granada en septiembre de 2001. El objetivo de este congreso es propiciar el acercamiento del mundo de la Ciencia al de la enseñanza en las primeras etapas. La enseñanza de la Ciencia, concebida como parte de la cultura, es un elemento fundamental de los contenidos con los que un niño tiene que contar para afrontar un mundo de creciente complejidad, en el que la Ciencia irrumpe como ingrediente cotidiano. Despertar su curiosidad y espíritu crítico, fomentar la creatividad y desarrollar destrezas y actitudes, a la vez que se transmiten contenidos científicos, son actividades esenciales para ayudarle a entender un mundo en el que el valor de la observación y la experimentación adquieren la categoría de requisito en el nuevo humanismo.Real Sociedad Española de Física. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. Instituto de Matemáticas y Física Fundamental. Instituto de Historia. Universidad de Granada. Centro de Estudios Superiores Don Bosco. Centro de Apoyo al Profesorado de Vallecas. Parque de las Ciencias de Granada. Caja Duero. FECyTN

    Cartographic Style in the First Urban Maps of Cadiz, Spain: A Technique in Transition

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    This article deals with the cartometric analysis of various seventeenth-century urban maps of the city of Cadiz (Spain), from among which the so-called Vista Arámburu and the map belonging to the atlas of the Marquis of Heliche, discovered in the Krigsarkivet (Military Archive) of Stockholm, stand out for their uniqueness. These hitherto relatively unknown documents present evidence of an evolution of cartographic style towards greater topographic accuracy and hence cannot just be considered as simple drawings. In this seventeenth-century period of transition, the cartography of the city evolved from sixteenth-century aerial-view perspectives to the exhaustive planimetric maps of the eighteenth century, made by Spanish and French Military Corps of Engineers. These documents hold great historical value, not only due to the importance of Cadiz during the Modern Age but also because these maps constitute a graphic testimony of the fortification and growth of the city in this period. © 2019 British Cartographic Society
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