601 research outputs found
Learning from the Route: a Pilot Project on Landscape Reading along the Itinerary of Via Lauretana Senese
The essay investigates the opportunities generated by recovering a European Pilgrimage Route’s pathway as device for landscape perception and territorial analysis. It is focused on a project conducted by Verdiana Network in collaboration with the Municipality of Asciano (Siena). The project aims to activate processes of landscape planning and management, and promote local tourism within the context of Asciano’s rural landscape and among the cultural and natural heritage intercepted by this pilgrimage route. It concerns the Siena branch of the Via Lauretana, the pilgrimage route toward the Sanctuary of Loreto in the Marche Region. The project focuses on the landscape structure of the route, modelled by the territorial dimension and spatial configuration of the itinerary, together with the social processes of landscape perception activated by the route itself. From this point of view, the project consisted of a process of discovering the landscape along the route and intercepting polar elements that make the itinerary the basis for the development of local tourism and cultural activities
Controversies in Surgical Staging of Endometrial Cancer
Endometrial cancer is the most common gynaecological malignancy and its incidence is increasing. In 1998, international federation of gynaecologists and obstetricians (FIGO) required a change from clinical to surgical staging in endometrial cancer, introducing pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy. This staging requirement raised controversies around the importance of determining nodal status and impact of lymphadenectomy on outcomes. There is agreement about the prognostic value of lymphadenectomy, but its extent, therapeutic value, and benefits in terms of survival are still matter of debate, especially in early stages. Accurate preoperative risk stratification can guide to the appropriate type of surgery by selecting patients who benefit of lymphadenectomy. However, available preoperative and intraoperative investigations are not highly accurate methods to detect lymph nodes and a complete surgical staging remains the most precise method to evaluate extrauterine spread of the disease. Laparotomy has always been considered the standard approach for endometrial cancer surgical staging. Traditional and robotic-assisted laparoscopic techniques seem to provide equivalent results in terms of disease-free survival and overall survival compared to laparotomy. These minimally invasive approaches demonstrated additional benefits as shorter hospital stay, less use of pain killers, lower rate of complications and improved quality of life
Intra- and interobserver agreement with regard to describing adnexal masses using International Ovarian Tumor Analysis terminology: reproducibility study involving seven observers
To estimate intraobserver repeatability and interobserver agreement in assessing the presence of papillary projections in adnexal masses and in classifying adnexal masses using the International Ovarian Tumor Analysis terminology for ultrasound examiners with different levels of experience. We also aimed to identify ultrasound findings that cause confusion and might be interpreted differently by different observers, and to determine if repeatability and agreement change after consensus has been reached on how to interpret 'problematic' ultrasound images
Giant Sigmoid Diverticulum: A Rare Presentation of a Common Pathology
Although colonic diverticulum is a common disease, affecting about 35% of patients above the age of 60, giant sigmoid diverticulum is an uncommon variant of which only relatively few cases have been described in the literature. We report on our experience with a patient affected by giant sigmoid diverticulum who was treated with diverticulectomy. Resection of the diverticulum is a safe surgical procedure, provided that the colon section close to the lesion presents no sign of flogosis or diverticula; in addition, recurrences are not reported after 6-year follow-up
Classifying A-field and B-field configurations in the presence of D-branes
We "solve" the Freed-Witten anomaly equation, i.e., we find a geometrical
classification of the B-field and A-field configurations in the presence of
D-branes that are anomaly-free. The mathematical setting being provided by the
geometry of gerbes, we find that the allowed configurations are jointly
described by a coset of a certain hypercohomology group. We then describe in
detail various cases that arise according to such classification. As is
well-known, only under suitable hypotheses the A-field turns out to be a
connection on a canonical gauge bundle. However, even in these cases, there is
a residual freedom in the choice of the bundle, naturally arising from the
hypercohomological description. For a B-field which is flat on a D-brane,
fractional or irrational charges of subbranes naturally appear; for a suitable
gauge choice, they can be seen as arising from "gauge bundles with not integral
Chern class": we give a precise geometric interpretation of these objects.Comment: 28 pages, no figure
Non-simply-laced Lie algebras via F theory strings
In order to describe the appearance in F theory of the non--simply--laced Lie
algebras, we use the representation of symmetry enhancements by means of string
junctions. After an introduction to the techniques used to describe symmetry
enhancement, that is algebraic geometry, BPS states analysis and string
junctions, we concentrate on the latter. We give an explicit description of the
folding of D_{2n} to B_n of the folding of E_6 to F_4 and that of D_4 to G_2 in
terms of junctions and Jordan strings. We also discuss the case of C_n, but we
are unable in this case to provide a string interpretation.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figure
Process development and validation of expanded regulatory T cells for prospective applications: an example of manufacturing a personalized advanced therapy medicinal product
Background: A growing number of clinical trials have shown that regulatory T (Treg) cell transfer may have a favorable effect on the maintenance of self-tolerance and immune homeostasis in different conditions such as graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), solid organ transplantation, type 1 diabetes, and others. In this context, the availability of a robust manufacturing protocol that is able to produce a sufficient number of functional Treg cells represents a fundamental prerequisite for the success of a cell therapy clinical protocol. However, extended workflow guidelines for nonprofit manufacturers are currently lacking. Despite the fact that different successful manufacturing procedures and cell products with excellent safety profiles have been reported from early clinical trials, the selection and expansion protocols for Treg cells vary a lot. The objective of this study was to validate a Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP)-compliant protocol for the production of Treg cells that approaches the whole process with a risk-management methodology, from process design to completion of final product development. High emphasis was given to the description of the quality control (QC) methodologies used for the in-process and release tests (sterility, endotoxin test, mycoplasma, and immunophenotype). Results: The GMP-compliant protocol defined in this work allows at least 4.11
7 109 Treg cells to be obtained with an average purity of 95.75 \ub1 4.38% and can be used in different clinical settings to exploit Treg cell immunomodulatory function. Conclusions: These results could be of great use for facilities implementing GMP-compliant cell therapy protocols of these cells for different conditions aimed at restoring the Treg cell number and function, which may slow the progression of certain diseases
On Flux Quantization in F-Theory
We study the problem of four-form flux quantization in F-theory
compactifications. We prove that for smooth, elliptically fibered Calabi-Yau
fourfolds with a Weierstrass representation, the flux is always integrally
quantized. This implies that any possible half-integral quantization effects
must come from 7-branes, i.e. from singularities of the fourfold. We
subsequently analyze the quantization rule on explicit fourfolds with Sp(N)
singularities, and connect our findings via Sen's limit to IIB string theory.
Via direct computations we find that the four-form is half-integrally quantized
whenever the corresponding 7-brane stacks wrap non-spin complex surfaces, in
accordance with the perturbative Freed-Witten anomaly. Our calculations on the
fourfolds are done via toric techniques, whereas in IIB we rely on Sen's
tachyon condensation picture to treat bound states of branes. Finally, we give
general formulae for the curvature- and flux-induced D3 tadpoles for general
fourfolds with Sp(N) singularities.Comment: 46 page
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All dried up: the materiality of drought in Ladismith, South Africa
This paper conceptualizes droughts as socioecological phenomena coproduced by the recursive engagement of human and non-human transformations. Through an interdisciplinary approach that integrates political ecology, material geographies and hydroclimatology, this work simultaneously apprehends the role of politics and power in reshaping drought, along with the agency of biophysical processes —soil, vegetation, hydrology and microclimate— that co-produce droughts and their spatiotemporal patterning. The drought-stricken Ladismith in Western Cape, South Africa, is the instrumental case study and point of departure of our empirical analysis. To advance a materiality of drought that seriously accounts for the coevolution of biophysical and political transformations, we alter the spatiotemporal and empirical foci of drought analyses thereby retracing Ladismith’s socioecological history since colonial times. In turn, such extended framework exposes the agency of soil, vegetation, hydrology and microclimate and their metabolic exchanges with processes of colonization, apartheid, capitalist and neoliberal transformations of South African economy. We argue that the narrow pursuit of profits and capital accumulation of the few has produced a fundamental disruption between nature and society which contributed to transform Ladismith’s drought into a socioecological crisis. Whilst advancing debates on materiality, we note two fundamental contributions to the study of drought. First, our approach makes hydrological accounts of droughts less politically naive and socially blind. Second, it develops a political ecology of droughts and socioecological crises more attuned to the materiality of drought. We contend that apprehending the materiality of drought and the active role of its non-human processes can further understandings of the workings of power and the production of socioecological injustices
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