1,225 research outputs found
Maximal-entropy random walks in complex networks with limited information
J.G.-G. was supported by MICINN through the Ramon y Cajal program and by grants FIS2008-01240 and MTM2009-13848
Elongated theropod tracks from the Cretaceous Apenninic Carbonate Platform of southern Latium (central Italy)
New dinosaur footprints were recently discovered in southern Latium (Italy). The
tracks all appear slightly differently preserved and are characterized by elongated
metatarsal impressions, recording the complex locomotor behaviour of a medium-sized
theropod. The spatial distribution and the features of the footprints indicate that the
trackmaker adopted a “crouched” position as part of an activity as well as a resting
phase suggested by sub-parallel, calcigrade tracks. These new data once again highlight
the great potential of ichnological evidence in the study of the biology and
behaviour of extinct tetrapods
Subadult Growth Stunting at Schroeder Mounds (11He177): A Late Woodland Sample from Illinois
Constitutional growth delay in subadults may be caused by chronic illness, malnutrition, and/or undernutrition. Very little is known about the community health of the presumptive forager-farmers of the Late Woodland (~ AD 900-1150) period site of Schroeder Mounds (Henderson County, Illinois). In an effort to increase understanding of community health, the subadults (N=15) were examined by age-at-death for evidence of growth stunting as reflected in forelimb shortening. Crural and brachial indices were calculated for those subadults preserving measurable femora and tibiae and/or measurable humeri and radii. These indices were compared by age category to indices calculated from normal bone lengths taken from published clinical data. Stunting was evident for all ages-at-death in the Schroeder Mounds sample. The stunting was contextualized by assessing the presence/absence of potentially causative or synergistically related skeletally visible chronic health stress indicators (i.e., porotic hyperostosis, cribra orbitalia, linear enamel hypoplasia, periostosis). The results indicated that all subadults exhibited growth stunting regardless of the presence of the quantified health issues. This may suggest that stunting is potentially a free-standing osteological marker of developmental stress. Within Schroeder Mounds, stunting may ultimately be due to various environmental (e.g., harvest or resource shortfall) and cultural (e.g., weaning, child labor) factors
Influence of a Corpus Luteum Tissue Extract on Rabbit Ovarian Mesothelial Cells
This study investigates rabbit ovarian mesothelial (OM) cells exposed in vitro to a crude corpus luteum extract (CLE; 60 μg/ml). The growth of OM cells was evaluated by measuring the change in cell number (mean % ± standard error of mean, SEM), the number of cell population doublings (CPD ± SEM), and the cell population doubling time in hours (CPDT ± SEM) after 7.5 days of culture in a serum-poor medium. Quantitative estimates of surface morphology changes were obtained by analyzing the total number (mean no. ± SEM), density (mean no./100 μ.m2 ± SEM), and length-to-diameter ratio (mean L/D ± SEM) of microvilli. OM cells in control medium formed loosely cohesive monolayers, and grew 152.53 ± 11.01% with a CPD of 0.59 ± 0.08 and a CPDT of 117.29 ± 6.43 hours. The exposed surface area of these cells was over 8,000 μ.m2 and was covered in its epinuclear region by long and slender microvilli with a L/D of 6.01 ± 0.29. The total number of microvilli in each control cell was 1977.52 ± 120.49 with a density of 0.58 ± 0.03/100 μ.m2 in the epinuclear region and of 0.05 ± 0.003/150 μ.m2 in the remaining surface area (5,161.62 ± 354.43 μ.m2). In contrast, CLE-rich cells cultures grew 329.57 ± 16.65%, with a CPD of 1.71 ± 0.07 and a CPDT of 53.43 + 2.93 hours. These cells formed confluent monolayers of smaller (2104.86 ± 103.71 μ.m2), tightly juxtaposed epithelioid cells with a microvillar density of 0.70 ± 0.03/100 μ.m2 in over 78% of their surface. These data support the existence of an intra-ovarian factor capable of enhancing growth and differentiation of OM cells
Experimental sorting of municipal-like waste in the hospital “Civico”, Palermo (IT)
An experiment of source sorting - based management of Health Care Waste (HCW) was carried out in 2011 in 4 Departments of the Public Hospital “Civico” (Palermo, IT), where the basic mandatory separation between hazardous and non-hazardous waste was already going on since year 2000.The experiment consisted in weighing every day for 15 days 4 predefined fractions collected in the Infirmaries (namely paper, plastics, glass and unsorted fraction), and the bags with unsorted waste from the patient’s stay room. Furthermore, in 1 of the 4 Departments also the boxes of Infectious Waste (IW)were weighed for a week.As a result a weighted average value of 0.56 kg of Municipal-like Waste (MLW) per bed and per day was obtained for the Infirmaries of the 4 Departments (1.89 kg for the whole Department). The potentially recoverable waste
fractions of MLW were about 65.7 %, the balance being unsorted waste.The actual production of IW − monitored in just one
of the Departments, OU 1− brought to a generation rate of 0.74 kg/bed-day with a range 0.50−1.00. This production
represents the 54 % of total waste from that Infirmary but just 34 % of the overall waste stream from the Unit. This pilot experiment confirms the wide finding that IW are a minor part of the overall waste stream produced in a health care structure
Hybrid recommendation methods in complex networks
We propose here two new recommendation methods, based on the appropriate
normalization of already existing similarity measures, and on the convex
combination of the recommendation scores derived from similarity between users
and between objects. We validate the proposed measures on three relevant data
sets, and we compare their performance with several recommendation systems
recently proposed in the literature. We show that the proposed similarity
measures allow to attain an improvement of performances of up to 20\% with
respect to existing non-parametric methods, and that the accuracy of a
recommendation can vary widely from one specific bipartite network to another,
which suggests that a careful choice of the most suitable method is highly
relevant for an effective recommendation on a given system. Finally, we studied
how an increasing presence of random links in the network affects the
recommendation scores, and we found that one of the two recommendation
algorithms introduced here can systematically outperform the others in noisy
data sets.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
On the spectral properties of Feigenbaum graphs
A Horizontal Visibility Graph (HVG) is a simple graph extracted from an
ordered sequence of real values, and this mapping has been used to provide a
combinatorial encryption of time series for the task of performing network
based time series analysis. While some properties of the spectrum of these
graphs --such as the largest eigenvalue of the adjacency matrix-- have been
routinely used as measures to characterise time series complexity, a theoretic
understanding of such properties is lacking. In this work we explore some
algebraic and spectral properties of these graphs associated to periodic and
chaotic time series. We focus on the family of Feigenbaum graphs, which are
HVGs constructed in correspondence with the trajectories of one-parameter
unimodal maps undergoing a period-doubling route to chaos (Feigenbaum
scenario). For the set of values of the map's parameter for which the
orbits are periodic with period , Feigenbaum graphs are fully
characterised by two integers (n,k) and admit an algebraic structure. We
explore the spectral properties of these graphs for finite n and k, and among
other interesting patterns we find a scaling relation for the maximal
eigenvalue and we prove some bounds explaining it. We also provide numerical
and rigorous results on a few other properties including the determinant or the
number of spanning trees. In a second step, we explore the set of Feigenbaum
graphs obtained for the range of values of the map's parameter for which
the system displays chaos. We show that in this case, Feigenbaum graphs form an
ensemble for each value of and the system is typically weakly
self-averaging. Unexpectedly, we find that while the largest eigenvalue can
distinguish chaos from an iid process, it is not a good measure to quantify the
chaoticity of the process, and that the eigenvalue density does a better job.Comment: 33 page
Extracting information from multiplex networks
11 pages; 5 figure
Listeria Monocytogenes in a Young Patient with Non Hodgkin's Lymphoma: Case Report
Listeria monocytogenes is an intracellular food-borne pathogen, widely distributed in the environment, which rarely causes clinical infection in healthy people, but may cause severe disease in immunocompromised patients. A case of listeriosis is certified in an immunocompromised patient, thus confirming this microorganism to be an opportunistic human pathogen
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