1,079 research outputs found

    Palladium catalyzed hydrodechlorination of *-chloroacetophenones by hydrogen transfer from the H2O-CO system

    Get PDF
    Advertisements for gambling products have historically been restricted due to their potential to normalize gambling and contribute to excessive gambling behaviours among vulnerable populations. However, social media enables gambling operators to promote products and brands with fewer constraints than in traditional forms of media. This study investigated how social media is used by gambling operators to promote gambling activities including an analysis of the latent messages that are conveyed. A representative sample of major land-based and online gambling venues and operators, including casinos, clubs, hotels, lottery and wagering operators (n = 101), was obtained. Websites and social media profiles of gambling operators were audited to investigate the types of social media used, content of promotions, and prevalence of responsible gambling messaging. The results showed that Facebook and Twitter were the dominant platforms used, most commonly by casinos and online wagering operators. A key finding was that online gambling operators included gambling content in conjunction with related news and events, as well as unrelated content, as way of normalizing gambling within a broader social context. Unlike land-based gambling promotions, responsible gambling information tended not to feature in operators’ posts and profiles. The key messages propagated in social media gambling promotions were positively framed, and tended to encourage gambling using a range of cross-promotional tactics to emphasize the winning aspect of gambling. The implications of freely accessible and pervasive gambling promotions via social media are discussed with respect to the general community as well as vulnerable populations.This study was commissioned by Gambling Research Australia—a partnership between the Commonwealth, State and Territory Governments. GRA had no involvement in the research design, conduct, analysis or the preparation of this paper

    Imaging-based representation and stratification of intra-tumor heterogeneity via tree-edit distance

    Get PDF
    Personalized medicine is the future of medical practice. In oncology, tumor heterogeneity assessment represents a pivotal step for effective treatment planning and prognosis prediction. Despite new procedures for DNA sequencing and analysis, non-invasive methods for tumor characterization are needed to impact on daily routine. On purpose, imaging texture analysis is rapidly scaling, holding the promise to surrogate histopathological assessment of tumor lesions. In this work, we propose a tree-based representation strategy for describing intra-tumor heterogeneity of patients affected by metastatic cancer. We leverage radiomics information extracted from PET/CT imaging and we provide an exhaustive and easily readable summary of the disease spreading. We exploit this novel patient representation to perform cancer subtyping according to hierarchical clustering technique. To this purpose, a new heterogeneity-based distance between trees is defined and applied to a case study of prostate cancer. Clusters interpretation is explored in terms of concordance with severity status, tumor burden and biological characteristics. Results are promising, as the proposed method outperforms current literature approaches. Ultimately, the proposed method draws a general analysis framework that would allow to extract knowledge from daily acquired imaging data of patients and provide insights for effective treatment planning

    Carbon monoxide–ethylene copolymerization catalyzed by a Pd(OAc)2/dppp/formic acid system [dppp=1,3-bis(diphenylphosphino)propane]

    Get PDF
    none3Polyketones are obtained by the copolymerization of carbon monoxide and ethylene in the presence of a palladium catalyst formed in situ from Pd(OAc)2, dppp and formic acid in methanol which acted as a solvent. The productivity (g polymer/g Pd* h) is significantly influenced by the concentration of formic acid. Using the ratio Pd/dppp/HCOOH=1/1/3000 at 90 °C and 45 atm, a productivity of 7500 h−1 is obtained. It is suggested that the efficiency of HCOOH as a promoter is due to its capability to act as a source of Pd-hydride species, which initiates the catalytic cycle.noneA. VAVASORI; CAVINATO G.; L. TONIOLOA., Vavasori; Cavinato, Gianni; L., Toniol
    • …
    corecore