5 research outputs found

    Buscando inspiraciĂłn musical en el universo computacional

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    Throughout the history of western music, composers have relied on “outside-of-time” structures which have served as musical “prime matter” until the moment of their temporal inscription. These structures have traditionally been the scales, rhythmic values, formal schemes, harmonic rules, etc., that composers have employed over and over again. They are to the composer what marble is to the sculptor or colors are to the painter. The advent of computer technology has opened new avenues that allow composers to develop new structures and enlarge their creative horizon. I started my musical training at a very early age, and at the same time I had a lot of scientific curiosity. As soon as I had my first computer (a Commodore 64), I started to experiment, to establish relationships between scientific processes and the world of sound. To date, and following the footsteps of I. Xenakis (although from a different aesthetic perspective), my compositions have always been informed, to a lesser or greater degree, by some underlying scientific idea, and this task can hardly be achieved without computation. Furthermore, today, computer-composers open the possibility to access and use an ever-growing repository of musical material goes a step forward in this direction. And this raises many questions, some of them of a deep philosophical ground.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tec

    Empowering Latina scientists

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    International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortiu (INICC) report, data summary of 43 countries for 2007-2012. Device-associated module

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    We report the results of an International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC) surveillance study from January 2007-December 2012 in 503 intensive care units (ICUs) in Latin America, Asia, Africa, and Europe. During the 6-year study using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) U.S. National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) definitions for device-associated health care–associated infection (DA-HAI), we collected prospective data from 605,310 patients hospitalized in the INICC's ICUs for an aggregate of 3,338,396 days. Although device utilization in the INICC's ICUs was similar to that reported from ICUs in the U.S. in the CDC's NHSN, rates of device-associated nosocomial infection were higher in the ICUs of the INICC hospitals: the pooled rate of central line–associated bloodstream infection in the INICC's ICUs, 4.9 per 1,000 central line days, is nearly 5-fold higher than the 0.9 per 1,000 central line days reported from comparable U.S. ICUs. The overall rate of ventilator-associated pneumonia was also higher (16.8 vs 1.1 per 1,000 ventilator days) as was the rate of catheter-associated urinary tract infection (5.5 vs 1.3 per 1,000 catheter days). Frequencies of resistance of Pseudomonas isolates to amikacin (42.8% vs 10%) and imipenem (42.4% vs 26.1%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates to ceftazidime (71.2% vs 28.8%) and imipenem (19.6% vs 12.8%) were also higher in the INICC's ICUs compared with the ICUs of the CDC's NHSN
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