6,682 research outputs found
Sustainable Tourism in Campania Region: Statistical Analysis and Metrics for the Development of Tourist Destinations
This paper deals with the issue of the sustainable tourism in Campania region and its touristic offer in the four territorial clusters: art cities, marine, thermal and hilly locations. In the paper it is pointed out that the way the regional authorities incentivize or assist touristic firms to diversify into tourism may have implications for sustainability. In this work we measured the potential of tourism by the aggregation of 11 indicators. In this study was estimated by the Global Tourism Index (G) for the region and for the four territorial areas (cluster), obtained from the combination of structural variables (number of accommodation facilities and of beds) and of flows (arrivals and presences) registered in Campania tourism. Finally, some emerging territorial strategies are proposed for the integrated development of a tourist system in the Campania Region. That is, the tourist destinations and the territorial brand. The final aim of this research is to develop and test a new Global Index for evaluating the sustainable development in tourism industry context to address the integration of social, economic, and ecological elements of sustainable development
Thermal conductivity in harmonic lattices with random collisions
We review recent rigorous mathematical results about the macroscopic
behaviour of harmonic chains with the dynamics perturbed by a random exchange
of velocities between nearest neighbor particles. The random exchange models
the effects of nonlinearities of anharmonic chains and the resulting dynamics
have similar macroscopic behaviour. In particular there is a superdiffusion of
energy for unpinned acoustic chains. The corresponding evolution of the
temperature profile is governed by a fractional heat equation. In non-acoustic
chains we have normal diffusivity, even if momentum is conserved.Comment: Review paper, to appear in the Springer Lecture Notes in Physics
volume "Thermal transport in low dimensions: from statistical physics to
nanoscale heat transfer" (S. Lepri ed.
Adaptive upregulation of FOXD3 and resistance to PLX4032/4720-induced cell death in mutant B-RAF melanoma cells.
Melanoma cells driven by mutant v-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1 (B-RAF) are highly resistant to chemotherapeutic treatments. Recent phase 1 results with PLX4032/RG7204/vemurafenib, which selectively inhibits B-RAF/mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 signaling in mutant B-RAF cells, has given encouragement to this struggling field. Nearly all patients in the phase 1-3 studies saw at least some response and the overall response rates ranged from 48 and 81%. However, despite initial tumor shrinkage, most responders in the trial experienced tumor relapse over time. These findings indicate that both intrinsic and acquired resistance may affect the clinical efficacy of PLX4032. It is critical to optimize PLX4032 activity to improve response rates and understand why some patients with the B-RAF mutation do not respond. We have previously shown that the stemness factor, Forkhead box D3 (FOXD3), is upregulated following inhibition of B-RAF-MEK signaling in mutant B-RAF melanoma cells. Here, we show that upregulation of FOXD3 following treatment with PLX4032 and PLX4720 (the non-clinical tool compound for PLX4032) confers resistance to cell death. Small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of FOXD3 significantly enhanced the cell death response after PLX4032/4720 treatment in mutant B-RAF melanoma cell lines. Additionally, upregulation of FOXD3 after PLX4720 treatment was attenuated in non-adherent conditions and correlated with enhanced cell death. Ectopic expression of FOXD3 in non-adherent cells significantly reduced cell death in response to PLX4720 treatment. Together, these data indicate that upregulation of FOXD3 is an adaptive response to RAF inhibitors that promotes a state of drug resistance
Diffractive Higgs Production from Intrinsic Heavy Flavors in the Proton
We propose a novel mechanism for exclusive diffractive Higgs production in which the Higgs boson carries a significant fraction of the
projectile proton momentum. This mechanism will provide a clear experimental
signal for Higgs production due to the small background in this kinematic
region. The key assumption underlying our analysis is the presence of intrinsic
heavy flavor components of the proton bound state, whose existence at high
light-cone momentum fraction has growing experimental and theoretical
support. We also discuss the implications of this picture for exclusive
diffractive quarkonium and other channels.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figure
Destabilizing Taylor-Couette flow with suction
We consider the effect of radial fluid injection and suction on
Taylor-Couette flow. Injection at the outer cylinder and suction at the inner
cylinder generally results in a linearly unstable steady spiralling flow, even
for cylindrical shears that are linearly stable in the absence of a radial
flux. We study nonlinear aspects of the unstable motions with the energy
stability method. Our results, though specialized, may have implications for
drag reduction by suction, accretion in astrophysical disks, and perhaps even
in the flow in the earth's polar vortex.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figure
Protamine-like proteins have bactericidal activity. The first evidence in Mytilus galloprovincialis.
The major acid-soluble protein components of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis sperm chromatin consist of the protamine-like proteins PL-II, PL-III and PL-IV, an intermediate group of sperm nuclear basic proteins between histones and protamines. The aim of this study was to investigate the bactericidal activity of these proteins since, to date, there are reports on bactericidal activity of protamines and histones, but not on protamine-like proteins. We tested the bactericidal activity of these proteins against Gram-positive bacteria: Enterococcus faecalis and two different strains of Staphylococcus aureus, as well as Gram-negative bacteria: Proteus mirabilis, Proteus vulgaris, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhmurium, Enterobacter aerogenes, Enterobacter cloacae, and Escherichia coli. Clinical isolates of the same bacterial species were also used to compare their sensitivity to these proteins. The results show that Mytilus galloprovincialis protamine-like proteins exhibited bactericidal activity against all bacterial strains tested with different minimum bactericidal concentration values, ranging from 15.7 to 250 µg/mL. Furthermore, these proteins were active against some bacterial strains tested that are resistant to conventional antibiotics. These proteins showed very low toxicity as judged by red blood cell lysis and viability MTT assays and seem to act both at the membrane level and within the bacterial cell. We also tested the bactericidal activity of the product obtained from an in vitro model of gastrointestinal digestion of protamine-like proteins on a Gram-positive and a Gram-negative strain, and obtained the same results with respect to undigested protamine-like proteins on the Gram-positive bacterium. These results provide the first evidence of bactericidal activity of protamine-like-proteins
Chiral symmetry restoration, eigenvalue density of Dirac operator and axial U(1) anomaly at finite temperature
We reconsider constraints on the eigenvalue density of the Dirac operator in
the chiral symmetric phase of 2 flavor QCD at finite temperature. To avoid
possible ultra-violet(UV) divergences, we work on a lattice, employing the
overlap Dirac operator, which ensures the exact "chiral" symmetry at finite
lattice spacings. Studying multi-point correlation functions in various
channels and taking their thermodynamical limit (and then taking the chiral
limit), we obtain stronger constraints than those found in the previous
studies: both the eigenvalue density at the origin and its first and second
derivatives vanish in the chiral limit of 2 flavor QCD. In addition we show
that the axial U(1) anomaly becomes invisible in susceptibilities of scalar and
pseudo scalar mesons, suggesting that the 2nd order chiral phase transition
with the O(4) scaling is not realized in 2 flavor QCD. Possible lattice
artifacts when non-chiral lattice Dirac operator is employed are briefly
discussed.Comment: 39 pages, 1 figure(2 eps files), a version published in PR
Association between Activity Space Exposure to Food Establishments and Individual Risk of Overweight
Objective: Environmental exposure to food sources may underpin area level differences in individual risk for overweight. Place of residence is generally used to assess neighbourhood exposure. Yet, because people are mobile, multiple exposures should be accounted for to assess the relation between food environments and overweight. Unfortunately, mobility data is often missing from health surveys. We hereby test the feasibility of linking travel survey data with food listings to derive food store exposure predictors of overweight among health survey participants. Methods: Food environment exposure measures accounting for non-residential activity places (activity spaces) were computed and modelled in Montreal and Quebec City, Canada, using travel surveys and food store listings. Models were then used to predict activity space food exposures for 5,578 participants of the Canadian Community Health Survey. These food exposure estimates, accounting for daily mobility, were used to model self-reported overweight in a multilevel framework. Median Odd Ratios were used to assess the proportion of between-neighborhood variance explained by such food exposure predictors. Results: Estimates of food environment exposure accounting for both residential and non-residential destinations were significantly and more strongly associated with overweight than residential-only measures of exposure for men. For women, residential exposures were more strongly associated with overweight than non-residential exposures. In Montreal, adjusted models showed men in the highest quartile of exposure to food stores were at lesser risk of being overweight considering exposure to restaurants (OR = 0.36 [0.21–0.62]), fast food outlets (0.48 [0.30–0.79]), or corner stores (0.52 [0.35–0.78]). Conversely, men experiencing the highest proportion of restaurants being fast-food outlets were at higher risk of being overweight (2.07 [1.25–3.42]). Women experiencing higher residential exposures were at lower risk of overweight. Conclusion: Using residential neighbourhood food exposure measures may underestimate true exposure and observed associations. Using mobility data offers potential for deriving activity space exposure estimates in epidemiological models
Les éléments traces métalliques naturels sont ils un facteur limitant pour l'épandage agricole sur les sols du Piton de la Fournaise ?
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