2,013 research outputs found
Making sense of the sharing economy: a category formation approach
The sharing economy (SE) has drawn significant attention from several society stakeholders in the last five years. While business actors are interested in financial opportunities to meet consumer needs, new business models, academia and governmental organisations are concerned with potential unintended effects on society and the environment. Despite its notable global growth, there is still a lack of more solid ground in understanding its origins and respective mechanisms through which it has been evolving as a category. This research addresses the problematics of the origins and ascendency of the SE by examining the process by which it is arising as a new category, searching for conceptual clarification, and pinpointing the legitimacy granted by stakeholders. Our guiding research questions are: how the SE was formed and evolved as a category, and as a category, is the SE legitimate? Additionally, we attempt to identify the nature of the SE as a category. Making a historical analysis of the expression SE and its equivalents, this paper deepens the discussion about the SE’s nature by providing evidence that it has predominantly been formed by emergence processes, comprising social movement, similarity clustering, and truce components, which render the SE a particular case of category formation and allow communication, entrepreneurship, regulation, and research about what it is. Moreover, the findings reveal a generalised legitimacy granted to the SE by a vast number of stakeholders, although still lacking the consolidation of socio-political legitimation. The SE’s nature seems to fall into a metaphorical approach, notably, the notion of radial categories.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Individual optical variability of Active Galactic Nuclei from the MEXSAS2 sample
Most of the variability studies of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are based on
ensemble analyses. Nevertheless, it is interesting to provide estimates of the
individual variability properties of each AGN, in order to relate them with
intrinsic physical quantities. A useful dataset is provided by the Catalina
Surveys Data Release 2 (CSDR2), which encompasses almost a decade of
photometric measurements of million objects repeatedly observed
hundreds of times. We aim to investigate the individual optical variability
properties of 795 AGNs originally included in the Multi-Epoch XMM Serendipitous
AGN Sample 2 (MEXSAS2). Our goals consist in: (i) searching for correlations
between variability and AGN physical quantities; (ii) extending our knowledge
of the variability features of MEXSAS2 from the X-ray to the optical. We use
the structure function (SF) to analyse AGN flux variations. We model the SF as
a power-law, , and we compute its
variability parameters. We introduce the V-correction as a simple tool to
correctly quantify the amount of variability in the rest frame of each source.
We find a significant decrease of variability amplitude with increasing
bolometric, optical and X-ray luminosity. We obtain the indication of an
intrinsically weak positive correlation between variability amplitude and
redshift, . Variability amplitude is also positively correlated with
. The slope of the SF, , is weakly correlated with
the bolometric luminosity and/or with the black hole mass
. When comparing optical to X-ray variability properties, we find
that X-ray variability amplitude is approximately the same for those AGNs with
larger or smaller variability amplitude in the optical. On the contrary, AGNs
with steeper SF in the optical do present steeper SF in the X-ray, and vice
versa.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
X-HESS: a large sample of highly accreting serendipitous AGN under the XMM-Newton microscope
The bulk of X-ray spectroscopic studies of active galactic nuclei (AGN) are
focused on local () sources with low-to-moderate () Eddington
ratio (). It is then mandatory to overcome this
limitation and improve our understanding of highly accreting AGN. In this work
we present the preliminary results from the analysis of a sample of
high- radio-quiet AGN at , based on
the 10th release of the XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalogue, that we
named as XMM-Newton High-Eddington Serendipitous AGN Sample (X-HESS). Almost
of the X-HESS AGN have multi-epoch archival observations and
of the sources can rely on simultaneous OM optical data. First
results reveal sources showing signatures of ultra-fast outflows and remarkable
long- and short-term X-ray flux variations. Indeed in J095847.88+690532.7 (), one of the most densely monitored objects hosting a
supermassive black hole, we discovered a variation of the
soft X-ray flux by a factor of > 2 over approximately one week (rest-frame).
Large variations in the power-law continuum photon index are also
observed, questioning expectations from previously reported relations, for which would be a
ubiquitous hallmark of AGN with .Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, proceedings of the XMM-Newton Workshop 2022
"Black hole accretion under the X-ray microscope". Accepted for publication
in Astronomische Nachrichte
Mortality due to systemic mycoses as a primary cause of death or in association with AIDS in Brazil: a review from 1996 to 2006
Deaths caused by systemic mycoses such as paracoccidioidomycosis, cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, candidiasis, aspergillosis, coccidioidomycosis and zygomycosis amounted to 3,583 between 1996-2006 in Brazil. When analysed as the underlying cause of death, paracoccidioidomycosis represented the most important cause of deaths among systemic mycoses (~ 51.2%). When considering AIDS as the underlying cause of death and the systemic mycoses as associated conditions, cryptococcosis (50.9%) appeared at the top of the list, followed by candidiasis (30.2%), histoplasmosis (10.1%) and others. This mortality analysis is useful in understanding the real situation of systemic mycoses in Brazil, since there is no mandatory notification of patients diagnosed with systemic mycoses in the official health system.FAPESPCNP
Epidemiology of intensive care unit-acquired sepsis in Italy: results of the SPIN-UTI network
BACKGROUND:
Sepsis is the major cause of mortality from any infectious disease worldwide. Sepsis may be the result of a healthcare associated infection (HAI): the most frequent adverse events during care delivery especially in Intensive Care Units (ICUs). The main aim of the present study was to describe the epidemiology of ICU-acquired sepsis and related outcomes among patients enrolled in the framework of the Italian Nosocomial Infections Surveillance in ICUs - SPIN-UTI project.
STUDY DESIGN:
Prospective multicenter study.
METHODS:
The SPIN-UTI network adopted the European protocols for patient-based HAI surveillance.
RESULTS:
During the five editions of the SPIN-UTI project, from 2008 to 2017, 47.0% of HAIs has led to sepsis in 832 patients. Overall, 57.0% episodes were classified as sepsis, 20.5% as severe sepsis and 22.5% as septic shock. The most common isolated microorganisms from sepsis episodes were Acinetobacter baumannii, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The case fatality rate increased with the severity of sepsis and the mean length of ICU-stay was significantly higher in patients with ICU-acquired sepsis than in patients without.
CONCLUSION:
Our study provides evidence that ICU-acquired sepsis occurs frequently in Italian ICU patients and is associated with a high case fatality rate and increased length of stay. However, in order to explain these findings further analyses are needed in this population of ICU patient
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