15,054 research outputs found

    A traça-do-tomateiro (Tuta absoluta) em Rondônia: ocorrência, danos e indicações de controle.

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    Este trabalho tem como objetivo evidenciar as características da traça do tomateiro e indicar ações de manejo que assegurem a viabilidade da produção de tomate no Estado de Rondônia.bitstream/item/79852/1/FOL-6126-0001.pd

    Eventos: ferramentas estratégicas de comunicação.

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    A Comunicação Organizacional na Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa) é definida, em sua política, como um processo gerencial permanente e sistêmico, que integra as atividades de relacionamento entre organização e públicos, tendo como objetivo criar e manter os fluxos de informação. Nesse contexto a promoção e realização de eventos é uma das ferramentas de comunicação usadas estrategicamente com o objetivo de criar e reforçar relacionamentos entre empresa e públicos de interesse, bem como apoiar o processo de transferência de tecnologia na Embrapa

    Vaccines in Congenital Toxoplasmosis: Advances and Perspectives

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    Congenital toxoplasmosis has a high impact on human disease worldwide, inducing serious consequences from fetus to adulthood. Despite this, there are currently no human vaccines available to prevent this infection. Most vaccination studies against Toxoplasma gondii infection used animal models in which the infection was established by exogenous inoculation. Here, we review recent research on potential T. gondii vaccines using animal models in which infection was congenitally established. Endeavors in this field have so far revealed that live or subunit vaccines previously found to confer protection against extrinsically established infections can also protect, at least partially, from vertically transmitted infection. Nevertheless, there is no consensus on the more adequate immune response to protect the host and the fetus in congenital infection. Most of the vaccination studies rely on the assessment of maternal systemic immune responses, quantification of parasitic loads in the fetuses, and survival indexes and/or brain parasitic burden in the neonates. More research must be carried out not only to explore new vaccines but also to further study the nature of the elicited immune protection at the maternal-fetal interface. Particularly, the cellular and molecular effector mechanisms at the maternal-fetal interface induced by immunization remain poorly characterized. Deeper knowledge on the immune response at this specific location will certainly help to refine the vaccine-induced immunity and, consequently, to provide the most effective and safest protection against T. gondii vertical infection.This work was supported by the Applied Molecular Biosciences Unit-UCIBIO, which is financed by national funds from FCT (UIDP/04378/2020 and UIDB/04378/2020). AC was supported by FCT Individual CEEC 2017 Assistant Researcher Grant 352 CEECIND/01514/2017

    Future dynamics in f(R) theories

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    The f(R)f(R) gravity theories provide an alternative way to explain the current cosmic acceleration without invoking dark energy matter component. However, the freedom in the choice of the functional forms of f(R)f(R) gives rise to the problem of how to constrain and break the degeneracy among these gravity theories on theoretical and/or observational grounds. In this paper to proceed further with the investigation on the potentialities, difficulties and limitations of f(R)f(R) gravity, we examine the question as to whether the future dynamics can be used to break the degeneracy between f(R)f(R) gravity theories by investigating the future dynamics of spatially homogeneous and isotropic dust flat models in two f(R)f(R) gravity theories, namely the well known f(R)=R+αRnf(R) = R + \alpha R^{n} gravity and another by A. Aviles et al., whose motivation comes from the cosmographic approach to f(R)f(R) gravity. To this end we perform a detailed numerical study of the future dynamic of these flat model in these theories taking into account the recent constraints on the cosmological parameters made by the Planck team. We show that besides being powerful for discriminating between f(R)f(R) gravity theories, the future dynamics technique can also be used to determine the fate of the Universe in the framework of these f(R)f(R) gravity theories. Moreover, there emerges from our numerical analysis that if we do not invoke a dark energy component with equation-of-state parameter ω<1\omega < -1 one still has dust flat FLRW solution with a big rip, if gravity deviates from general relativity via f(R)=R+αRnf(R) = R + \alpha R^n . We also show that FLRW dust solutions with f<0f''<0 do not necessarily lead to singularity.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. V2: Generality and implications of the results are emphasized, connection with the recent literature improved, typos corrected, references adde

    Modelling competing risks in nephrology research: an example in peritoneal dialysis

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    BACKGROUND: Modelling competing risks is an essential issue in Nephrology Research. In peritoneal dialysis studies, sometimes inappropriate methods (i.e. Kaplan-Meier method) have been used to estimate probabilities for an event of interest in the presence of competing risks. In this situation a competing risk analysis should be preferable. The objectives of this study are to describe the bias resulting from the application of standard survival analysis to estimate peritonitis-free patient survival and to provide alternative statistical approaches taking competing risks into account. METHODS: The sample comprises patients included in a university hospital peritoneal dialysis program between October 1985 and June 2011 (n = 449). Cumulative incidence function and competing risk regression models based on cause-specific and subdistribution hazards were discussed. RESULTS: The probability of occurrence of the first peritonitis is wrongly overestimated using Kaplan-Meier method. The cause-specific hazard model showed that factors associated with shorter time to first peritonitis were age (>=55 years) and previous treatment (haemodialysis). Taking competing risks into account in the subdistribution hazard model, age remained significant while gender (female) but not previous treatment was identified as a factor associated with a higher probability of first peritonitis event. CONCLUSIONS: In the presence of competing risks outcomes, Kaplan-Meier estimates are biased as they overestimated the probability of the occurrence of an event of interest. Methods which take competing risks into account provide unbiased estimates of cumulative incidence for each specific outcome experienced by patients. Multivariable regression models such as those based on cause-specific hazard and on subdistribution hazard should be used in this competing risk setting

    Food safety as a field in supply chain management studies: a systematic literature review.

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    The increasing number of food contamination events has called the attention of both practitioners and scholars to food safety problems and their consequences. Many of these events are related to the supply chain because food production is now a global process of commoditized goods, made by large corporations that purchase inputs from producers in many countries. Given the linkage between supply chain and food safety issues, we investigated how studies in the supply chain management area have examined food safety issues, exploring some of their important characteristics. To do so, we conducted a systematic literature review of 46 papers, published in 23 journals, indexed in the Web of Science database. As a result, we pointed out some main characteristics of these papers, including journal attributes, authorship data, citation network, methodological characteristics, and theoretical approaches. Results serve as a reference to scholars and allow us to discuss some potential opportunities for future research in the field of food safety in the supply chain management area. Keywords: supply chain management, food safety, systematic literature review. JEL code: M11, L66, L23, Q56, M1

    Perceived associations between excessive sugar intake and health conditions

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    Excessive sugar intake represents an increased risk of developing non-communicable diseases (e.g., obesity, cardiometabolic diseases, and dental diseases). Still, it is unclear whether people are aware of these adverse health outcomes. The current study systematically examined the extent to which people associate health conditions with excessive sugar intake. Participants (N = 1010 Portuguese volunteers) freely reported all health conditions they associated with excessive sugar consumption and rated the strength of these associations for eight specific health conditions. All participants reported health conditions associated with excessive sugar intake, with the most frequent being risk factors for cardiometabolic diseases (e.g., diabetes), cardiovascular diseases, oral problems, oncological and mental health conditions. Moreover, participants considered diabetes, overweight/obesity, and oral problems as being the conditions most related to excessive sugar intake. Women, participants with children in the household, and experts in health/nutrition rated excessive sugar intake as being more strongly linked to some of the health conditions. The identification of the health conditions that people associate with excessive sugar consumption may inform policymakers, educators, and health professionals and support interventions targeting the general public or specific groups (e.g., overweight people) in raising awareness of potential adverse health outcomes and, ultimately, contribute to reducing sugar intake.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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