493 research outputs found
Exp. Penal N° 410-2000 Violación De La Libertad Sexual
El presente expediente, tiene como tema el desalojo de un inmueble. Se determinará la
calidad de las sentencias en todas las instancias. Cuando el bien es adquirido por la
demandante, ésta observa que el bien está siendo ocupado por una inquilina a quien la
define como ocupante precaria. Se presenta una demanda contra la ocupante del
inmueble. Sin embargo, en Primera Instancia se declara infundada la demanda. Porque,
la ocupante no tiene la condición de precaria y se demuestra que es arrendataria. Con
recurso de apelación, por parte de la demandante, en Segunda Instancia, la Cuarta Sala
Civil de la Corte Superior de Justicia favorece a la demandante declarando fundada la
demanda de desalojo por ocupante precaria, pero con votos en discordia.
Como último Recurso, la demandada solicita el Recurso de Casación, fundamentando
que se ha aplicado de manera errónea el artículo 1708, inciso 2 del Código Civil. Es así
que, la Sala Civil de la Corte Suprema de Justicia declara fundando el recurso de
casación. Pronunciándose que, la demandada no tiene la calidad de ocupante precaria
porque, sustenta con título su condición de arrendataria la cual no es permanente.
Declarando nula la sentencia de segunda instancia y revocando la sentencia de primera
instancia; reformándola declararon improcedente la demanda de desalojo por ocupante
precaria. Es así que, la Sala Suprema se pronuncia que la demandante debe de proceder
demandando a la arrendataria, por la conclusión del contrato de arrendamiento que, tiene
la demandada con su anterior propietario.The present file has as its theme the eviction of a property. The quality of the sentences
will be determined in all instances. When the property is acquired by the applicant, it
observes that the property is being occupied by a tenant who defines it as a precarious
occupant. A lawsuit is filed against the occupant of the property. However, in the First
Instance the claim is declared unfounded. Because, the occupant does not have
precarious status and it is proven that she is a tenant. With appeal by the plaintiff, in
Second Instance, the Fourth Civil Chamber of the Superior Court of Justice favors the
plaintiff by declaring the demand for eviction founded by a precarious occupant, but
with votes in discord.
As a last Appeal, the defendant requests the Appeal, on the grounds that Article 1708,
subsection 2 of the Civil Code has been applied erroneously. Thus, the Civil Chamber of
the Supreme Court of Justice declares founding the appeal. Pronouncing that the
defendant does not have the status of precarious occupant because, she sustains with title
her tenant status which is not permanent.
Declaring the second instance ruling null and repealing the first instance ruling;
reforming it declared inadmissible the demand for eviction by precarious occupant.
Thus, the Supreme Court pronounces that the plaintiff must proceed to sue the lessee, for
the conclusion of the lease contract that the defendant has with its previous owner.Trabajo de suficiencia profesiona
Vision as a compensatory mechanism for disturbance rejection in upwind flight
Recent experimental results demonstrate that flies possess a robust tendency to orient towards the frontally-centered focus of the visual motion field that typically occurs during upwind flight. We present a closed loop flight model, with a control algorithm based on feedback of the location of the visual focus of contraction, which is affected by changes in wind direction. The feasibility of visually guided upwind orientation is demonstrated with a model derived from current understanding of the biomechanics and sensorimotor computation of insects. The matched filter approach used to model the visual system computations compares extremely well with open-loop experimental data
Live-virus exposure of vaccine-protected macaques alters the anti-HIV-1 antibody repertoire in the absence of viremia
Background: We addressed the question whether live-virus challenges could alter vaccine-induced antibody (Ab) responses in vaccinated rhesus macaques (RMs) that completely resisted repeated exposures to R5-tropic simian-human immunodeficiency viruses encoding heterologous HIV clade C envelopes (SHIV-Cs). Results: We examined the Ab responses in aviremic RMs that had been immunized with a multi-component protein vaccine (multimeric HIV-1 gp160, HIV-1 Tat and SIV Gag-Pol particles) and compared anti-Env plasma Ab titers before and after repeated live-virus exposures. Although no viremia was ever detected in these animals, they showed significant increases in anti-gp140 Ab titers after they had encountered live SHIVs. When we investigated the dynamics of anti-Env Ab titers during the immunization and challenge phases further, we detected the expected, vaccine-induced increases of Ab responses about two weeks after the last protein immunization. Remarkably, these titers kept rising during the repeated virus challenges, although no viremia resulted. In contrast, in vaccinated RMs that were not exposed to virus, anti-gp140 Ab titers declined after the peak seen two weeks after the last immunization. These data suggest boosting of pre-existing, vaccine-induced Ab responses as a consequence of repeated live-virus exposures. Next, we screened polyclonal plasma samples from two of the completely protected vaccinees by peptide phage display and designed a strategy that selects for recombinant phages recognized only by Abs present after – but not before – any SHIV challenge. With this “subtractive biopanning” approach, we isolated V3 mimotopes that were only recognized after the animals had been exposed to live virus. By detailed epitope mapping of such anti-V3 Ab responses, we showed that the challenges not only boosted pre-existing binding and neutralizing Ab titers, but also induced Abs targeting neo-antigens presented by the heterologous challenge virus. Conclusions: Anti-Env Ab responses induced by recombinant protein vaccination were altered by the multiple, live SHIV challenges in vaccinees that had no detectable viral loads. These data may have implications for the interpretation of “vaccine only” responses in clinical vaccine trials
Tagvisor: A Privacy Advisor for Sharing Hashtags
Hashtag has emerged as a widely used concept of popular culture and campaigns, but its implications on people's privacy have not been investigated so far. In this paper, we present the first systematic analysis of privacy issues induced by hashtags. We concentrate in particular on location, which is recognized as one of the key privacy concerns in the Internet era. By relying on a random forest model, we show that we can infer a user's precise location from hashtags with accuracy of 70% to 76%, depending on the city. To remedy this situation, we introduce a system called Tagvisor that systematically suggests alternative hashtags if the user-selected ones constitute a threat to location privacy. Tagvisor realizes this by means of three conceptually different obfuscation techniques and a semantics-based metric for measuring the consequent utility loss. Our findings show that obfuscating as little as two hashtags already provides a near-optimal trade-off between privacy and utility in our dataset. This in particular renders Tagvisor highly time-efficient, and thus, practical in real-world settings
Identification of Mimotopes with Diagnostic Potential for Trypanosoma brucei gambiense Variant Surface Glycoproteins Using Human Antibody Fractions
Background: At present, screening of the population at risk for gambiense human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) is based on detection of antibodies against native variant surface glycoproteins (VSGs) of Trypanosoma brucei (T.b.) gambiense. Drawbacks of these native VSGs include culture of infective T.b. gambiense trypanosomes in laboratory rodents, necessary for production, and the exposure of non-specific epitopes that may cause cross-reactions. We therefore aimed at identifying peptides that mimic epitopes, hence called “mimotopes,” specific to T.b. gambiense VSGs and that may replace the native proteins in antibody detection tests. Methodology/Principal Findings A Ph.D.-12 peptide phage display library was screened with polyclonal antibodies from patient sera, previously affinity purified on VSG LiTat 1.3 or LiTat 1.5. The peptide sequences were derived from the DNA sequence of the selected phages and synthesised as biotinylated peptides. Respectively, eighteen and twenty different mimotopes were identified for VSG LiTat 1.3 and LiTat 1.5, of which six and five were retained for assessment of their diagnostic performance. Based on alignment of the peptide sequences on the original protein sequence of VSG LiTat 1.3 and 1.5, three additional peptides were synthesised. We evaluated the diagnostic performance of the synthetic peptides in indirect ELISA with 102 sera from HAT patients and 102 endemic negative controls. All mimotopes had areas under the curve (AUCs) of ≥0.85, indicating their diagnostic potential. One peptide corresponding to the VSG LiTat 1.3 protein sequence also had an AUC of ≥0.85, while the peptide based on the sequence of VSG LiTat 1.5 had an AUC of only 0.79. Conclusions/Significance: We delivered the proof of principle that mimotopes for T.b. gambiense VSGs, with diagnostic potential, can be selected by phage display using polyclonal human antibodies
Quantifying Privacy Risks of Prompts in Visual Prompt Learning
Large-scale pre-trained models are increasingly adapted to downstream tasks
through a new paradigm called prompt learning. In contrast to fine-tuning,
prompt learning does not update the pre-trained model's parameters. Instead, it
only learns an input perturbation, namely prompt, to be added to the downstream
task data for predictions. Given the fast development of prompt learning, a
well-generalized prompt inevitably becomes a valuable asset as significant
effort and proprietary data are used to create it. This naturally raises the
question of whether a prompt may leak the proprietary information of its
training data. In this paper, we perform the first comprehensive privacy
assessment of prompts learned by visual prompt learning through the lens of
property inference and membership inference attacks. Our empirical evaluation
shows that the prompts are vulnerable to both attacks. We also demonstrate that
the adversary can mount a successful property inference attack with limited
cost. Moreover, we show that membership inference attacks against prompts can
be successful with relaxed adversarial assumptions. We further make some
initial investigations on the defenses and observe that our method can mitigate
the membership inference attacks with a decent utility-defense trade-off but
fails to defend against property inference attacks. We hope our results can
shed light on the privacy risks of the popular prompt learning paradigm. To
facilitate the research in this direction, we will share our code and models
with the community.Comment: To appear in the 33rd USENIX Security Symposium, August 14-16, 202
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Calcium puffs are generic InsP<sub>3</sub>-activated elementary calcium signals and are downregulated by prolonged hormonal stimulation to inhibit cellular calcium responses
Elementary Ca2+ signals, such as "Ca2+ puffs", which arise from the activation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors, are building blocks for local and global Ca2+ signalling. We characterized Ca2+ puffs in six cell types that expressed differing ratios of the three inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor isoforms. The amplitudes, spatial spreads and kinetics of the events were similar in each of the cell types. The resemblance of Ca2+ puffs in these cell types suggests that they are a generic elementary Ca2+ signal and, furthermore, that the different inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate isoforms are functionally redundant at the level of subcellular Ca2+ signalling. Hormonal stimulation of SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells and HeLa cells for several hours downregulated inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate expression and concomitantly altered the properties of the Ca2+ puffs. The amplitude and duration of Ca2+ puffs were substantially reduced. In addition, the number of Ca2+ puff sites active during the onset of a Ca2+ wave declined. The consequence of the changes in Ca2+ puff properties was that cells displayed a lower propensity to trigger regenerative Ca2+ waves. Therefore, Ca2+ puffs underlie inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate signalling in diverse cell types and are focal points for regulation of cellular responses
Data Poisoning Attacks Against Multimodal Encoders
Traditional machine learning (ML) models usually rely on large-scale labeled
datasets to achieve strong performance. However, such labeled datasets are
often challenging and expensive to obtain. Also, the predefined categories
limit the model's ability to generalize to other visual concepts as additional
labeled data is required. On the contrary, the newly emerged multimodal model,
which contains both visual and linguistic modalities, learns the concept of
images from the raw text. It is a promising way to solve the above problems as
it can use easy-to-collect image-text pairs to construct the training dataset
and the raw texts contain almost unlimited categories according to their
semantics. However, learning from a large-scale unlabeled dataset also exposes
the model to the risk of potential poisoning attacks, whereby the adversary
aims to perturb the model's training dataset to trigger malicious behaviors in
it. Previous work mainly focuses on the visual modality. In this paper, we
instead focus on answering two questions: (1) Is the linguistic modality also
vulnerable to poisoning attacks? and (2) Which modality is most vulnerable? To
answer the two questions, we conduct three types of poisoning attacks against
CLIP, the most representative multimodal contrastive learning framework.
Extensive evaluations on different datasets and model architectures show that
all three attacks can perform well on the linguistic modality with only a
relatively low poisoning rate and limited epochs. Also, we observe that the
poisoning effect differs between different modalities, i.e., with lower MinRank
in the visual modality and with higher Hit@K when K is small in the linguistic
modality. To mitigate the attacks, we propose both pre-training and
post-training defenses. We empirically show that both defenses can
significantly reduce the attack performance while preserving the model's
utility
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Inducing Cross-Clade Neutralizing Antibodies against HIV-1 by Immunofocusing
Background: Although vaccines are important in preventing viral infections by inducing neutralizing antibodies (nAbs), HIV-1 has proven to be a difficult target and escapes humoral immunity through various mechanisms. We sought to test whether HIV-1 Env mimics may serve as immunogens. Methodology/Principal Findings: Using random peptide phage display libraries, we identified the epitopes recognized by polyclonal antibodies of a rhesus monkey that had developed high-titer, broadly reactive nAbs after infection with a simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) encoding env of a recently transmitted HIV-1 clade C (HIV-C). Phage peptide inserts were analyzed for conformational and linear homology using computational analysis; some peptides mimicked various domains of the original HIV-C Env, such as conformational V3 loop epitopes and the conserved linear region of the gp120 C-terminus. Next, we devised a novel prime/boost strategy to test the immunogenicity of such phage-displayed peptides and primed mice only once with HIV-C gp160 DNA followed by boosting with mixtures of recombinant phages. Conclusions/Significance: This strategy, which was designed to focus the immune system on a few Env epitopes (immunofocusing), not only induced HIV-C gp160 binding antibodies and cross-clade nAbs, but also linked a conserved HIV Env region for the first time to the induction of nAbs: the C-terminus of gp120. The identification of conserved antigen mimics may lead to novel immunogens capable of inducing broadly reactive nAbs
A Control-Oriented Analysis of Bio-inspired Visuomotor Convergence
Insects exhibit incredibly robust closed loop fight dynamics in the face of uncertainties. A fundamental principle contributing to this unparalleled behavior is rapid processing and convergence of visual sensory information to fight motor commands via spatial wide-field integration, accomplished by retinal motion pattern sensitive interneurons (LPTCs) in the lobula plate portion of the visual ganglia. With in a control- theoretic frame work, models for spatially continuous retinal image flow and wide-field integration processing are developed, establishing the connection between image flow kernels (retinal motion pattern sensitivities) and the feedback terms they represent. It is shown that these out puts are sufficient to stabilize speed regulation and terrain following tasks. Hence, extraction of global retinal motion cues through computationally efficient wide-field integration processing provides a novel and promising methodology for utilizing visual sensory information in autonomous robotic navigation and fight control applications
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