293 research outputs found

    Transparency, asymmetric information and cooperation

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    Effect of Cereals and Legumes Processing on In Situ Rumen Protein Degradability: A Review

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    The determination of the ruminal degradability rate of feeds, mainly starch and crude protein, is one of the most common methods to evaluate the nutritional value of ruminant feed. The protein requirements for ruminants are met from microbial protein and undegraded dietary protein digested in the small intestine. In order to reach maximum productivity, high-quality proteins are needed, and the requirement for undegraded dietary protein increases with the performance of the animal. This protein can be supplied by reducing the ruminal degradation to increase the amount of protein digested post-rumen, but the form in which a feed is administered influences degradability, and grain processing, especially, is a common practice to improve feed efficiency. Despite these aspects, studies on the effects of feed processing methods on protein degradability are limited, even though more and more ruminants are fed with processed feeds. For these reasons, this review investigated the protein degradability of different processed cereals and legumes in ruminants based on the analysis of available literature in order to take stock of the state of the art on this topic. Results showed that: First, the majority of the papers are focused on the energy aspects mainly due to carbohydrate-rich feeds; second, the majority of the studies in the literature are quite old, probably because the changes occurred in the animal testing legislation that made in vivo studies more and more difficult in the last 20 years; third, as a consequence, the few data available in recent years concern in vitro experiments; fourth, we found a high variability of the experimental conditions thus affecting protein degradability and making it quite difficult to compare the different results

    Inflammasomes contributing to inflammation in arthritis.

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    Inflammasomes are intracellular multiprotein signaling platforms that initiate inflammatory responses in response to pathogens and cellular damage. Active inflammasomes induce the enzymatic activity of caspase-1, resulting in the induction of inflammatory cell death, pyroptosis, and the maturation and secretion of inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-18. Inflammasomes are activated in many inflammatory diseases, including autoinflammatory disorders and arthritis, and inflammasome-specific therapies are under development for the treatment of inflammatory conditions. In this review, we outline the different inflammasome platforms and recent findings contributing to our knowledge about inflammasome biology in health and disease. In particular, we discuss the role of the inflammasome in the pathogenesis of arthritic diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, gout, ankylosing spondylitis, and juvenile idiopathic arthritis, and the potential of newly developed therapies that specifically target the inflammasome or its products for the treatment of inflammatory diseases

    Improving Zero-Shot Translation of Low-Resource Languages

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    Recent work on multilingual neural machine translation reported competitive performance with respect to bilingual models and surprisingly good performance even on (zeroshot) translation directions not observed at training time. We investigate here a zero-shot translation in a particularly lowresource multilingual setting. We propose a simple iterative training procedure that leverages a duality of translations directly generated by the system for the zero-shot directions. The translations produced by the system (sub-optimal since they contain mixed language from the shared vocabulary), are then used together with the original parallel data to feed and iteratively re-train the multilingual network. Over time, this allows the system to learn from its own generated and increasingly better output. Our approach shows to be effective in improving the two zero-shot directions of our multilingual model. In particular, we observed gains of about 9 BLEU points over a baseline multilingual model and up to 2.08 BLEU over a pivoting mechanism using two bilingual models. Further analysis shows that there is also a slight improvement in the non-zero-shot language directions

    Correlação entre as alterações osteocondrais evidenciadas à ressonância magnética e a progressão da doença

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    PURPOSE: To determine the consequences of the chronic use of systemic corticosteroids in children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis by means of evaluating osteochondral effects depicted by magnetic resonance imaging. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed clinical and magnetic resonance imaging findings in 69 children (72 knees) with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Two groups were studied. Group I: 34 (49.3%) children had previous or current use of systemic corticotherapy (22 girls; 12 boys; mean age: 11.3 years; mean disease duration: 5.9 years; mean corticotherapy duration: 2.9 years; mean cumulative dose of previous corticosteroids: 5000 mg); Group II: 35 (50.7%) children had no previous use of corticosteroids (27 girls; 8 boys; mean age: 11.7 years; mean disease duration: 5.3 years). The groups were compared statistically. RESULTS: In the group that had received corticotherapy (Group I), osteochondral abnormalities were significantly correlated to long-standing disease (>;3.5 years; pOBJETIVO: Determinar as conseqüências do uso crônico de corticosteróides sistêmicos em crianças com artrite reumatóide juvenil através da avaliação dos efeitos osteocondrais à ressonância magnética. PACIENTES E MÉTODOS: Achados clínicos e imaginológicos (ressonância magnética) de 72 joelhos em 69 crianças com artrite reumatóide juvenil foram revisados. Trinta e quatro (49.3%) pacientes fizeram uso prévio de corticoterapia sistêmica (22 pacientes do sexo feminino; 12 pacientes do sexo masculino; idade média: 11.3 anos; duração média da doença: 5.9 anos; duração média da corticoterapia: 2.9 anos; dose média cumulativa de corticosteróides: 5000 mg); 35 (50.7%) pacientes não haviam feito uso prévio de corticoterapia sistêmica (27 pacientes do sexo feminino; 8 pacientes do sexo masculino; idade média: 11.7 anos; duração média da doença: 5.3 anos). RESULTADOS: No grupo que recebeu corticoterapia sistêmica prévia (Grupo I) a presença de alterações osteocondrais à ressonância magnética relacionou-se de uma forma estatisticamente significativa com longo tempo de duração da doença (>;3.5 years;

    Serum Oxytocin, Cortisol and Social Behavior in Calves: A Study in the Impossible Task Paradigm

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    In this study, we explored the correlations between circulating levels of oxytocin, cortisol, and different social behaviors toward humans in 26 Italian Red Pied calves (all females, with an average age of 174 ± 24 days) using the impossible task paradigm. This paradigm has proved fruitful in highlighting the effect of socialization on the willingness to interact with humans in several domesticated species. The test consists of the violation of an expectation (recovering food from an experimental apparatus) while a caregiver and a stranger are present. Immediately after the end of the test (less than one minute), blood was collected from the coccygeal vein. Statistics were performed by the Spearman’s rank correlation; significant differences were adjusted according to Bonferroni’s correction. Cortisol correlates positively (ρ = 0.565; p < 0.05) with the latency of behaviors directed at the caregiver, and the duration of behaviors directed at the apparatus correlates negatively with both the caregiver (ρ = −0.654; p < 0.05) and a stranger (ρ = −0.644; p < 0.05). Contrary to what is reported in the literature on cows, no correlations were found between oxytocin levels and direct behaviors toward the caregiver. This highlights a different behavioral strategy between calves and cows when placed in front of an impossible task

    FBK’s Multilingual Neural Machine Translation System for IWSLT 2017

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    Neural Machine Translation has been shown to enable in-ference and cross-lingual knowledge transfer across multi-ple language directions using a single multilingual model.Focusing on this multilingual translation scenario, this worksummarizes FBK’s participation in the IWSLT 2017 sharedtask. Our submissions rely on two multilingual systemstrained on five languages (English, Dutch, German, Ital-ian, and Romanian). The first one is a20language direc-tion model, which handles all possible combinations of thefive languages. The second multilingual system is trainedonly on16directions, leaving the others as zero-shot trans-lation directions (i.erepresenting a more complex inferencetask on language pairs not seen at training time). Morespecifically, our zero-shot directions are DutchGermanandItalianGermanand ItalianRomanian (resulting in four language combi-nations). Despite the small amount of parallel data usedfor training these systems, the resulting multilingual modelsare effective, even in comparison with models trained sepa-rately for every language pair (i.e.in more favorable condi-tions). We compare and show the results of the two multi-lingual models against a baseline single language pair sys-tems. Particularly, we focus on the four zero-shot directionsand show how a multilingual model trained with small datacan provide reasonable results. Furthermore, we investigatehow pivoting (i.eusing a bridge/pivot language for inferencein a source!pivot!target translations) using a multilingualmodel can be an alternative to enable zero-shot translation ina low resource setting

    A quantitative description of the transition between intuitive altruism and rational deliberation in iterated Prisoner's Dilemma experiments

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    What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent studies analyse decision times in game theory experiments under the assumption that intuitive decisions are fast and that deliberation is slow. These analyses keep track of the average time taken to make decisions under different conditions. Lacking any knowledge of the underlying dynamics, such simplistic approach might however lead to erroneous interpretations. Here we model the cognitive basis of strategic cooperative decision making using the Drift Diffusion Model to discern between deliberation and intuition and describe the evolution of the decision making in iterated Prisoner's Dilemma experiments. We find that, although initially people's intuitive decision is to cooperate, rational deliberation quickly becomes dominant over an initial intuitive bias towards cooperation, which is fostered by positive interactions as much as frustrated by a negative one. However, this initial pro-social tendency is resilient, as after a pause it resets to the same initial value. These results illustrate the new insight that can be achieved thanks to a quantitative modelling of human behavior
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