396 research outputs found
Le Turbe psichiche nella sclerosi multipla: un prodotto della inadeguatezza della risposta sociale e sanitaria ai bisogni dei malati
Questa relazione si propone di richiamare l'attenzione su alcuni aspetti medico-sociali di un gruppo fra i più deboli e indifesi all'interno della società: quello degli individui affetti da sclerosi multipla
On the simulation of the seismic energy transmission mechanisms
In recent years, considerable attention has been paid to research and
development methods able to assess the seismic energy propagation on the
territory. The seismic energy propagation is strongly related to the complexity
of the source and it is affected by the attenuation and the scattering effects
along the path. Thus, the effect of the earthquake is the result of a complex
interaction between the signal emitted by the source and the propagation
effects. The purpose of this work is to develop a methodology able to reproduce
the propagation law of seismic energy, hypothesizing the "transmission"
mechanisms that preside over the distribution of seismic effects on the
territory, by means of a structural optimization process with a predetermined
energy distribution. Briefly, the approach, based on a deterministic physical
model, determines an objective correction of the detected distributions of
seismic intensity on the soil, forcing the compatibility of the observed data
with the physical-mechanical model. It is based on two hypotheses: (1) the
earthquake at the epicentre is simulated by means of a system of distortions
split into three parameters; (2) the intensity is considered coincident to the
density of elastic energy. The optimal distribution of the beams stiffness is
achieved, by reducing the difference between the values of intensity
distribution computed on the mesh and those observed during four regional
events historically reported concerning the Campania region (Italy)
Cutaneous Force Feedback as a Sensory Subtraction Technique in Haptics
A novel sensory substitution technique is presented. Kinesthetic and
cutaneous force feedback are substituted by cutaneous feedback (CF) only,
provided by two wearable devices able to apply forces to the index finger and
the thumb, while holding a handle during a teleoperation task. The force
pattern, fed back to the user while using the cutaneous devices, is similar, in
terms of intensity and area of application, to the cutaneous force pattern
applied to the finger pad while interacting with a haptic device providing both
cutaneous and kinesthetic force feedback. The pattern generated using the
cutaneous devices can be thought as a subtraction between the complete haptic
feedback (HF) and the kinesthetic part of it. For this reason, we refer to this
approach as sensory subtraction instead of sensory substitution. A needle
insertion scenario is considered to validate the approach. The haptic device is
connected to a virtual environment simulating a needle insertion task.
Experiments show that the perception of inserting a needle using the
cutaneous-only force feedback is nearly indistinguishable from the one felt by
the user while using both cutaneous and kinesthetic feedback. As most of the
sensory substitution approaches, the proposed sensory subtraction technique
also has the advantage of not suffering from stability issues of teleoperation
systems due, for instance, to communication delays. Moreover, experiments show
that the sensory subtraction technique outperforms sensory substitution with
more conventional visual feedback (VF)
Effect of visual distraction and auditory feedback on patient effort during robot-assisted movement training after stroke
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Practicing arm and gait movements with robotic assistance after neurologic injury can help patients improve their movement ability, but patients sometimes reduce their effort during training in response to the assistance. Reduced effort has been hypothesized to diminish clinical outcomes of robotic training. To better understand patient slacking, we studied the role of visual distraction and auditory feedback in modulating patient effort during a common robot-assisted tracking task.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Fourteen participants with chronic left hemiparesis from stroke, five control participants with chronic right hemiparesis and fourteen non-impaired healthy control participants, tracked a visual target with their arms while receiving adaptive assistance from a robotic arm exoskeleton. We compared four practice conditions: the baseline tracking task alone; tracking while also performing a visual distracter task; tracking with the visual distracter and sound feedback; and tracking with sound feedback. For the distracter task, symbols were randomly displayed in the corners of the computer screen, and the participants were instructed to click a mouse button when a target symbol appeared. The sound feedback consisted of a repeating beep, with the frequency of repetition made to increase with increasing tracking error.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Participants with stroke halved their effort and doubled their tracking error when performing the visual distracter task with their left hemiparetic arm. With sound feedback, however, these participants increased their effort and decreased their tracking error close to their baseline levels, while also performing the distracter task successfully. These effects were significantly smaller for the participants who used their non-paretic arm and for the participants without stroke.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Visual distraction decreased participants effort during a standard robot-assisted movement training task. This effect was greater for the hemiparetic arm, suggesting that the increased demands associated with controlling an affected arm make the motor system more prone to slack when distracted. Providing an alternate sensory channel for feedback, i.e., auditory feedback of tracking error, enabled the participants to simultaneously perform the tracking task and distracter task effectively. Thus, incorporating real-time auditory feedback of performance errors might improve clinical outcomes of robotic therapy systems.</p
Analytical solution of elastic fields induced by a 2D inclusion of arbitrary polygonal shape
Abstract We generalize a recent application of the equivalent inclusion method, Jin et al. (2011), to derive the elastic field induced by a constant eigenstrain applied to an elliptic inclusion whose boundary is approximated by a polygon, the number of sides being assigned so as to recover the analytical values of the entries of the Eshelby tensor. The generalization consists in the fact that displacements, strains, stresses and the Eshelby tensor can be given a unique expression, holding inside and outside the inclusion, thus avoiding the recourse to the derivation of distinct expressions, based upon different approaches, for the elastic fields. The proposed approach has been successfully applied to evaluate the elastic fields induced by an elliptical cavity in a linear isotropic infinite plate subjected to a remote loading by recovering the classical solutions by Inglis (1913) and Maugis (1992). Furthermore it can easily be applied to elliptical holes arbitrarily oriented with respect to the loading direction
Il riuso dell’Antico. Attività e progetti collaborativi archeologici nel mondo wiki come processi di archeologia pubblica.
La rivoluzione apportata dalla connessione via web ha comportato la nascita di processi collaborativi tra utenti, portando alla creazione di vere e proprie comunità digitali ingrado di attuare una progettualità basata sulla condivisione, ottimizzando le risorse epromuovendo il coinvolgimento attivo a partire dal basso. Tale dinamica si riscontraanche nell’archeologia pubblica, coinvolgendo il pubblico nella ricerca, conservazione e divulgazione del patrimonio archeologico. Basato su principi di accessibilità, partecipazione e condivisione delle informazioni, include diversi attori, tra cui archeologi, istituzioni culturali e volontari. Uno dei principi chiave è la condivisione dei dati archeologic iattraverso piattaforme online, consentendo a ricercatori e pubblico di accedere e utilizzare informazioni per ulteriori progetti di ricerca. Tuttavia, in Italia, l’adozione di questa filosofia è in crescita ma limitata dalla mancan-za di progetti collaborativi e di dati archeologici aperti, spesso a causa di una legislazione che non supporta appieno la cultura libera
inkjet sensors produced by consumer printers with smartphone impedance readout
Abstract Inkjet printing technology is showing a disruptive potential for low-cost optical and electrochemical biosensors fabrication. This technology is becoming affordable for every laboratory, potentially allowing every research group to implement a biosensors fabrication platform with consumer inkjet printers, commercially available inks and smartphones for readout. In the present work we developed an example of such platform testing several inks, printers, and substrates. We defined and optimized the protocols assessing the printing limits and the fabricated biosensors electrochemical properties in standard solutions. Our platform has a total cost of less than 450 Euro and a single sensor fabrication cost of 0.026 Euro. Finally, we tested the sensitivity of smartphone-performed impedance measurements with printed biosensors surface coverage by Self Assembling Monolayers (SAM), validating them with standard instruments
Probing LLMs for Joint Encoding of Linguistic Categories
Large Language Models (LLMs) exhibit impressive performance on a range of NLP
tasks, due to the general-purpose linguistic knowledge acquired during
pretraining. Existing model interpretability research (Tenney et al., 2019)
suggests that a linguistic hierarchy emerges in the LLM layers, with lower
layers better suited to solving syntactic tasks and higher layers employed for
semantic processing. Yet, little is known about how encodings of different
linguistic phenomena interact within the models and to what extent processing
of linguistically-related categories relies on the same, shared model
representations. In this paper, we propose a framework for testing the joint
encoding of linguistic categories in LLMs. Focusing on syntax, we find evidence
of joint encoding both at the same (related part-of-speech (POS) classes) and
different (POS classes and related syntactic dependency relations) levels of
linguistic hierarchy. Our cross-lingual experiments show that the same patterns
hold across languages in multilingual LLMs.Comment: Accepted in EMNLP Findings 202
Immunomodulation of fucosyl-lactose and lacto-N-fucopentaose on mononuclear cells from multiple sclerosis and healthy subjects
The 1,2-fucosyl-oligosaccharides, and among these the 2’-fucosyl-lactose (2’-FL) and lacto-N-fucopentaose (LNFP)-I, are quantitatively the most represented
oligosaccharides of human milk. They are also seen to represent an important
immune device to prevent nursing infants from severe infectious diarrhoea.
Recent evidences show that the appearance of 2’-FL and LNFP-I in human colostrums
is synchronised with the macrophage inhibition and that LNFP-III induces
a Th2 response from the mouse peripheral immune system. Since mannosyl-fucosyl
receptors are described on the macrophage surface, all these evidences allow
us to investigate on the possible immune function of human 2’-FL and LNFP-I in
vitro on LPS-activated mononuclear cells (MNC) from 12 patients with multiple
sclerosis (MS) and 20 matched health controls (HC). We found that 2’-FL and
LNFP-I significantly decrease, to a different extent, the MNC proliferation from
both HC and MS patients, in a linear and dose-dependent manner. 2’-FL and LNFPI
also reduce the production of IL-12 and IFN-γ, particularly in MS patients as
compared to HC (p=0.01 and p<0.001, respectively), while increasing that of IL-
10. The overall immunomodulatory effect of 2’-FL and LNFP I here presented may
represent a future therapeutic option for the abnormal immune response found in
some monocyte-mediated diseases
Morphology, ultrastructure, and molecular phylogeny of the ciliate Sonderia vorax with insights into the systematics of order Plagiopylida
BACKGROUND: Ciliates of the family Sonderiidae are common members of the eukaryotic communities in various anoxic environments. They host both ecto- and endosymbiotic prokaryotes (the latter associated with hydrogenosomes) and possess peculiar morpho-ultrastructural features, whose functions and homologies are not known. Their phylogenetic relationships with other ciliates are not completely resolved and the available literature, especially concerning electron microscopy and molecular studies, is quite scarce. RESULTS: Sonderia vorax Kahl, 1928 is redescribed from an oxygen-deficient, brackish-water pond along the Ligurian Sea coastlines of Italy. Data on morphology, morphometry, and ultrastructure are reported. S. vorax is ovoid-ellipsoid in shape, dorsoventrally flattened, 130 x 69 μm (mean in vivo); it shows an almost spherical macronucleus, and one relatively large micronucleus. The ventral kinetom has a “secant system” including fronto-ventral and fronto-lateral kineties. A distinctive layer of bacteria laying between kineties covers the ciliate surface. Two types of extrusomes and hydrogenosomes-endosymbiotic bacteria assemblages are present in the cytoplasm. The phylogeny based on 18S rRNA gene sequences places S. vorax among Plagiopylida; Sonderiidae clusters with Plagiopylidae, although lower-level relationships remain uncertain. The studied population is fixed as neotype and the ciliate is established as type species of the genus, currently lacking. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first description of a representative of Sonderiidae performed with both morphological and molecular data. To sum up, many previous hypotheses on this interesting, poorly known taxon are confirmed but confusion and contradictory data are as well highlighted
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