91 research outputs found

    Il Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory – 2 nel contesto forense: studio su coppie di genitori in fase di separazione e affidamento minori

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    Obiettivo di questo lavoro è analizzare i profili medi di genitori valutati in sede di consulenza tecnica per l'affidamento di figli minori attraverso il Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory 2 (MMPI-2), il questionario di personalità maggiormente utilizzato in ambito giuridico. Si tratta di uno studio iniziale ed esplorativo, condotto su un campione di 200 periziandi divisi equamente tra uomini e donne, che si propone in primis di rispondere all’esigenza dello psicodiagnosta forense di avere dati statistici specifici a cui far riferimento quando utilizza tale strumento. Il lavoro ha anche l'obiettivo di osservare la presenza di eventuali differenze significative tra i dati emersi dal campione peritale ed i valori normativi generali della popolazione italiana

    Does the combination with handgrip increase the sensitivity of dipyridamole-echocardiography test?

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    The aim of this study was to assess the possibility of increasing the sensitivity of dipyridamole-echocardiography testing (DET:2-D echo monitoring during dipyridamole infusion) by combining this procedure with handgrip testing. Dipyridamole-handgrip test (DHT) was therefore performed in 24 patients with rest/effort angina, negative DET, and negative handgrip-echo (without dipyridamole pretreatment). DHT consisted of 4.5 min of sustained 25% maximum grip strength, started 4 min after the end of dipyridamole infusion (0.56 mg/kg for 4 min). Interpretable studies were obtained in all patients. Of the 24 patients tested (10 without and 14 with significant coronary artery disease, CAD), only one CAD patient had a positive DHT, which indicates an increased sensitivity of 7% versus DET alone. In conclusion, DHT is feasible in all patients and--if compared to DET--has the same specificity. However, in spite of the theoretical premises, it provides only a modest step up in sensitivity

    Development and Validation of the Facial Expression Recognition Test (FERT)

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    Detecting the emotional state of others from facial expressions is a key ability in emotional competence and several instruments have been developed to assess it. Typical emotion recognition tests are assumed to be unidimensional, use pictures or videos of emotional portrayals as stimuli, and ask the participant which emotion is depicted in each stimulus. However, using actor portrayals adds a layer of difficulty in developing such a test: the portrayals may fail to be convincing and may convey a different emotion than intended. For this reason, evaluating and selecting stimuli is of crucial importance. Existing tests typically base item evaluation on consensus or expert judgment, but these methods could favor items with high agreement over items that better differentiate ability levels and they could not formally test the item pool for unidimensionality. To address these issues, the authors propose a new test, named Facial Expression Recognition Test (FERT), developed using an item response theory two-parameter logistic model. Data from 1,002 online participants were analyzed using both a unidimensional and a bifactor model, and showed that the item pool could be considered unidimensional. The selection was based on the items' discrimination parameters, retaining only the most informative items to investigate the latent ability. The resulting 36-item test was reliable and quick to administer. The authors found both a gender difference in the ability to recognize emotions and a decline of such ability with age. The PsychoPy implementation of the test and the scoring script are available on a Github repository

    A New Approach for Human Factor Integration into Ship Design Process

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    Ship safety and operations are driving issues of ship design and it is well recognized that such performances are strongly related to Human Factor (HF). In the paper a methodology to integrate HF into the ship design process since an early stage is envisaged, with the aim to improve the overall ship resilience when dealing with uncertainty of performance implied by HF element. The System-Theoretic Accident Model Process (STAMP, Leveson 2003) is investigated as a suitable methodology able to provide a significant asset in such perspective. The approach is widely applied in many industrial and transportation fields but in order to better understand its application into the marine context, a specific application will be briefly commented. In the attempt to define a comprehensive procedure, as a preliminary overview, some selected models suitable to classify the human behavior will be considered with specific focus on the reasons for performance degrade and/or uncertainty

    Implicit evidence on the dissociation of identity and emotion recognition

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    Recognition of identity and of emotional facial expressions of individuals are both based on processing of the human face. While most studies show these abilities to be dissociated, some others find evidence of a connection. One possible explanation for these contradictory results comes from neurological evidence, which points to identity recognition being mostly based on holistic processing, while emotion recognition seems to be based on both an explicit, fine-grained process, and an implicit, mostly-holistic one. Our main hypothesis, that would explain the contradictory findings, is that holistic implicit emotion recognition, specifically, would be related to identity recognition, while explicit emotion recognition would be a process separate to identity recognition. To test this hypothesis, we employed an experimental paradigm in which spatial frequencies of visual stimuli are manipulated so that automatic, holistic-based, implicit emotion recognition influences perceived friendliness of unfamiliar faces. We predicted the effect to be related to identity recognition ability, since they both require holistic face processing. After a successful replication study, we employed the paradigm with 140 participants, measuring also identity recognition ability and explicit emotion recognition ability. Results showed that the effect is not moderated by these two variables (p = .807 and .373, respectively), suggesting that the independence of identity and emotion recognition holds even when considering, specifically, implicit emotion recognition

    Short-term reproducibility of dipyridamole-echocardiography test.

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    The aim of this study was to assess the short-term reproducibility of dipyridamole-echocardiography test (DET) consisting of two-dimensional echo monitoring during dipyridamole infusion (up to 0.84 mg/kg in 10 min). The diagnostic end-point of the test is the detection of new onset or worsening regional asynergy. A group of 87 patients with rest and/or effort angina performed two DETS on two consecutive days. All 60 patients with a positive DET had a positive repeat test, and the 27 negative DETs were also negative on the following day. The timing of the asynergy was also very similar between the two tests, both in patients with angina on effort (r = .93, p less than 0.01) and at rest (r = .92, p less than 0.01). In conclusion, DET has a very high short-term reproducibility regarding the presence and timing of asynergy

    A Hardware-in-the-Loop Evaluation of the Impact of the V2X Channel on the Traffic-Safety Versus Efficiency Trade-offs

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    Vehicles are increasingly becoming connected and short-range wireless communications promise to introduce a radical change in the drivers' behaviors. Among the main use cases, the intersection management is surely one of those that could mostly impact on both traffic safety and efficiency. In this work, we consider an intersection collision warning application and exploit an hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) platform to verify the impact on the risk of accidents as well as the average time to travel a given distance. Besides including real ITS-G5 compliant message exchanges, the platform also includes a channel emulator with real signals. Results show that the risk of collisions can be drastically reduced, with an overall trade-off between safety and traffic efficiency. At the same time, it is shown that the presence of real channel conditions cannot guarantee the same condition of zero-risk as with ideal channel propagation, remarking the importance of channel conditions and signal processing

    3D multiphysics transient modeling of vertical Ge-on-Si pin waveguide photodetectors

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    We report transient simulations of Ge-on-Si vertical pin waveguide photodetectors (WPDs), where the optical generation term used by the time-domain model is the FDTD solution of the electromagnetic problem treated as a spatially-distributed pulsed signal. This approach, validated against experimental measurements of the frequency response, paves the way to future studies of the dynamic response of WPDs, enabling the description of complex modulation schemes including saturation effects and current tails due to slow carriers

    Microglial extracellular vesicles induce Alzheimer’s diseaserelated cortico-hippocampal network dysfunction.

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    β-Amyloid is one of the main pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease and plays a major role in synaptic dysfunction. It has been demonstrated that β-amyloid can elicit aberrant excitatory activity in cortical-hippocampal networks, which is associated with behavioural abnormalities. However, the mechanism of the spreading of β-amyloid action within a specific circuitry has not been elucidated yet. We have previously demonstrated that the motion of microglia-derived large extracellular vesicles carrying β-amyloid, at the neuronal surface, is crucial for the initiation and propagation of synaptic dysfunction along the entorhinal–hippocampal circuit. Here, using chronic EEG recordings, we show that a single injection of extracellular vesicles carrying β-amyloid into the mouse entorhinal cortex could trigger alterations in the cortical and hippocampal activity that are reminiscent of those found in Alzheimer’s disease mouse models and human patients. The development of EEG abnormalities was associated with progressive memory impairment as assessed by an associative (object-place context recognition) and non-associative (object recognition) task. Importantly, when the motility of extracellular vesicles, carrying β-amyloid, was inhibited, the effect on network stability and memory function was significantly reduced. Our model proposes a new biological mechanism based on the extracellular vesicles–mediated progression of β-amyloid pathology and offers the opportunity to test pharmacological treatments targeting the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease

    Modeling the frequency response of vertical and lateral Ge-on-Si waveguide photodetectors: Is 3D simulation unavoidable?

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    Using a 3D multiphysics model as a reference, we investigate the achievements and limitations of a simpler 2D drift-diffusion model to reproduce and optimize the electrooptical frequency response of vertical and lateral Ge-on-Si waveguide photodetectors
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