44 research outputs found

    Smelly maps: the digital life of urban smellscapes

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    Smell has a huge influence over how we perceive places. Despite its importance, smell has been crucially overlooked by urban planners and scientists alike, not least because it is difficult to record and analyze at scale. One of the authors of this paper has ventured out in the urban world and conducted ``smellwalks'' in a variety of cities: participants were exposed to a range of different smellscapes and asked to record their experiences. As a result, smell-related words have been collected and classified, creating the first dictionary for urban smell. Here we explore the possibility of using social media data to reliably map the smells of entire cities. To this end, for both Barcelona and London, we collect geo-referenced picture tags from Flickr and Instagram, and geo-referenced tweets from Twitter. We match those tags and tweets with the words in the smell dictionary. We find that smell-related words are best classified in ten categories. We also find that specific categories (e.g., industry, transport, cleaning) correlate with governmental air quality indicators, adding validity to our study

    IMMUNE CORRELATES OF SIV-­PROTECTION AND HIV­-CONTROL: STUDY OF AN EFFECTIVE ALVAC/SIV ¿ GP120/ALUM VACCINE AND OF HIV-­INFECTED LONG TERM NON PROGRESSORS

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    Background The ALVAC/HIV+ gp120/Alum RV144 vaccine trial conducted in Thailand resulted in 31% vaccine efficacy in a low-risk cohort of 16.000 volunteers. We aimed to mirror these results in an SIVmac251 model, to explore the effect of the adjuvant MF59 in a similar vaccine regimen and to investigate the immune correlates of protection. Post-hoc analysis of RV144 demonstrated that antibodies targeting the V2 region of gp120 correlated with decreased risk of infection. The same response has been detected in SIV-infected rhesus macaques that achived substained SIV control after treatment with monoclonal antibody anti-\u3b14\u3b27 and an intermittent period of antiretroviral therapy. To date, V2 antibody response data in HIV infected individual that naturally control HIV progression are lacking. We compared the V2 humoral response in a group of chronic HIV infected patients that never received ART and compare that to the response in HIV infected patients Long Term Non Progressors (LTNPs). Methods We immunized 54 rhesus macaques with an RV144 like vaccine regimen adjuvanted either in alum or MF59. We compared the efficacy of the vaccine to 24 simultaneous controls, as well as 23 historical controls. We challenged all the animals with repeated intra-rectal low doses of SIVmac251. We evaluated vaccine efficacy, measured humoral systemic and mucosal humoral responses by multiple antibody detection assays (with particular regard to the V2 response), we measured frequency and quality of plasma-cell precursors, Plasmablasts and Natural Killer cells by flow-citometry. We enrolled 14 HIV italian patients LTNP and 12 pre-ART chronic HIV-infected (CHI) patients and studied their systemic response to V2, with both linear and cyclic peptides. Results Our study mirrored the RV144 human trial: the ALVAC-simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) and gp120 alum (ALVAC-SIV + gp120) reduced the risk of SIV mucosal infection. Interestingly the ALVAC-SIV + gp120 MF59 vaccine did not, despite the general higher systemic and mucosal immunogenicity. Vaccine efficacy was associated with alum-induced envelope Env-dependent mucosal NK-cells that produce interleukin 17 (IL-17), as well as with mucosal IgG to the gp120 variable region 2 (V2). Notably, this latter humoral mucosal response was the only response higher in the alum group. MF59 skewed the traffic of PBs from the mucosal to the inflammatory sites. We observed similar differences, consistent with the macaque results, in \u3b14\u3b27 levels on circulating PBs in humans immunized in the RV135 and RV132 trials, which used the RV144 immunogens adjuvanted either with alum or MF59, respectively. The systemic antibody V2 response in LTNP was higher compared to the V2 response in pre-ART CHI patients. Conclusions Our data confirm the protection achieved in human by the immunization with a prime/boost approach with an ALVAC-HIV + gp120-Alum vaccine in a SIVmac251 model. We found novel immune features (NK-cells and PBs) that might represent immune correlated of protection. Furthermore, we confirmed in our model similar responses showed in humans vaccinated with the RV144 regimen. As already described in vaccinated humans, we now demonstrate the importance of the antibodies to V2 in prevention from SIV mucosal acquisition. The importance of antibody to V2 region of SIV/HIV has been recently corroborated by a rhesus macaque study in which substained virologic control was achived after ART suspension. We remarkably found in a group of italian LTNPs an higher antibody response to the linear and cyclic form of the V2 region of gp120 compared to a group of pre-ART CHI patients. Understanding the mechanism in which these antibody might contribute to mediate protection from HIV/SIV acqusition and HIV/SIV control will require further studies

    Topology-aware indexing system for Urban Knowledge

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    Maps are being widely used as tools for presenting or retrieving information with spatial attributes. Existing map-based applications do not use the full potential of digital maps and geographical data: social media are disconnected from the underlying geographical entities; maps as visualization tools do not use the urban topology to cluster point of interest; maps as input systems are intrinsically ambiguous. This work presents a topology-aware indexing system supporting a new metaphor for a real integration between social media and digital maps. The methodology and technical solutions required to build and populate the indexing table starting from OpenStreetMap spatial primitives are introduced

    Collaborative Multi-Perspective Urban Knowledge and Civic Media: A Never-Ending Design Challenge

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    Developing a civic social network requires to consider users meeting in real life, collaborating on digital entries related to real urban entities. This makes necessary to think about collaboration tools in a new perspective: ensuring the participation of users with different levels and forms of legitimacy to represent complex relations among entities, and ensuring the accountability of each contributor. We present a set of technical solutions allowing the collaboration on complex entities, keeping interactions simple, and representing multiple perspectives about shared entities
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