27 results on '"SINISCALCHI A"'
Search Results
2. Elemental and isotopic analysis of leaves predicts nitrogen-fixing phenotypes
- Author
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Joshua R. Doby, Carolina M. Siniscalchi, Mariela Pajuelo, John Krigbaum, Douglas E. Soltis, Robert P. Guralnick, and Ryan A. Folk
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Nitrogen (N)-fixing symbiosis is critical to terrestrial ecosystems, yet possession of this trait is known for few plant species. Broader presence of the symbiosis is often indirectly determined by phylogenetic relatedness to taxa investigated via manipulative experiments. This data gap may ultimately underestimate phylogenetic, spatial, and temporal variation in N-fixing symbiosis. Still needed are simpler field or collections-based approaches for inferring symbiotic status. N-fixing plants differ from non-N-fixing plants in elemental and isotopic composition, but previous investigations have not tested predictive accuracy using such proxies. Here we develop a regional field study and demonstrate a simple classification model for fixer status using nitrogen and carbon content measurements, and stable isotope ratios (δ15N and δ13C), from field-collected leaves. We used mixed models and classification approaches to demonstrate that N-fixing phenotypes can be used to predict symbiotic status; the best model required all predictors and was 80–94% accurate. Predictions were robust to environmental context variation, but we identified significant variation due to native vs. non-native (exotic) status and phylogenetic affinity. Surprisingly, N content—not δ15N—was the strongest predictor, suggesting that future efforts combine elemental and isotopic information. These results are valuable for understudied taxa and ecosystems, potentially allowing higher-throughput field-based N-fixer assessments.
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- 2024
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3. Relationship between asymmetric nostril use and human emotional odours in cats
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d’Ingeo, Serenella, Siniscalchi, Marcello, Straziota, Valeria, Ventriglia, Gianluca, Sasso, Raffaella, and Quaranta, Angelo
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- 2023
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4. Relationship between asymmetric nostril use and human emotional odours in cats
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Serenella d’Ingeo, Marcello Siniscalchi, Valeria Straziota, Gianluca Ventriglia, Raffaella Sasso, and Angelo Quaranta
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Cat social behaviour and cognition has received a growing interest during the last decades. Recent studies reported that cats efficiently engage in interspecific communication with humans and suggest that cats are sensitive to human emotional visual and auditory cues. To date, there is no evidence on the social and informative role of human emotional odours, which may affect human-cat communication. In this study, we presented cats with human odours collected in different emotional contexts (fear, happiness, physical stress and neutral) and evaluated the animals’ behavioural responses. We found that “fear” odours elicited higher stress levels than “physical stress” and “neutral”, suggesting that cats perceived the valence of the information conveyed by “fear” olfactory signals and regulate their behaviour accordingly. Moreover, the prevalent use of the right nostril (right hemisphere activation) with the increase of stress levels, particularly in response to “fear” odours, provides first evidence of lateralized emotional functions of olfactory pathways in cats.
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- 2023
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5. Facial asymmetry in dogs with fear and aggressive behaviors towards humans
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Marcello Siniscalchi, Serenella d’Ingeo, Michele Minunno, and Angelo Quaranta
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract There is now scientific evidence that, in dogs, distinctive facial actions are produced in response to different emotionally-arousing stimuli suggesting a relationship between lateralized facial expressions and emotional states. Although in humans, relationships between facial asymmetry and both emotional and physiological distress have been reported, there are currently no data on the laterality of dogs’ facial expressions in response to social stimuli with respect to canine behavioral disorders. The aim of the present work was to investigate the facial asymmetries of dogs with fear and aggressive behavior towards humans during two different emotional situations: (1) while the dogs were alone in the presence of their owners and (2) during the approach of an unfamiliar human being. Overall, our results demonstrated high levels of asymmetries in facial expressions of dogs displaying fear and aggressive behaviors towards humans indicating that measuring facial asymmetries in dogs could prove to be a useful non-invasive tool for investigating physiology-based behavioral disorders.
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- 2022
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6. Facial asymmetry in dogs with fear and aggressive behaviors towards humans
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Siniscalchi, Marcello, d’Ingeo, Serenella, Minunno, Michele, and Quaranta, Angelo
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- 2022
- Full Text
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7. A geo-chemo-mechanical study of a highly polluted marine system (Taranto, Italy) for the enhancement of the conceptual site model
- Author
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Cotecchia, F., Vitone, C., Sollecito, F., Mali, M., Miccoli, D., Petti, R., Milella, D., Ruggieri, G., Bottiglieri, O., Santaloia, F., De Bellis, P., Cafaro, F., Notarnicola, M., Todaro, F., Adamo, F., Di Nisio, A., Lanzolla, A. M. L., Spadavecchia, M., Moretti, M., Agrosì, G., De Giosa, F., Fago, P., Lacalamita, M., Lisco, S., Manzari, P., Mesto, E., Romano, G., Scardino, G., Schingaro, E., Siniscalchi, A., Tempesta, G., Valenzano, E., Mastronuzzi, G., Cardellicchio, N., Di Leo, A., Spada, L., Giandomenico, S., Calò, M., Uricchio, V. F., Mascolo, G., Bagnuolo, G., Ciannarella, R., Tursi, A., Cipriano, G., Cotugno, P., Sion, L., Carlucci, R., Capasso, G., De Chiara, G., Pisciotta, G., Velardo, R., and Corbelli, V.
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- 2021
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8. Comparative analyses of Mikania (Asteraceae: Eupatorieae) plastomes and impact of data partitioning and inference methods on phylogenetic relationships
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Thode, Verônica A., Oliveira, Caetano T., Loeuille, Benoît, Siniscalchi, Carolina M., and Pirani, José R.
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- 2021
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9. Author Correction: Hypothermic Oxygenated New Machine Perfusion System in Liver and Kidney Transplantation of Extended Criteria Donors: First Italian Clinical Trial
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Ravaioli, Matteo, De Pace, Vanessa, Angeletti, Andrea, Comai, Giorgia, Vasuri, Francesco, Baldassarre, Maurizio, Maroni, Lorenzo, Odaldi, Federica, Fallani, Guido, Caraceni, Paolo, Germinario, Giuliana, Donadei, Chiara, Malvi, Deborah, Del Gaudio, Massimo, Bertuzzo, Valentina Rosa, Siniscalchi, Antonio, Ranieri, Vito Marco, D’Errico, Antonietta, Pasquinelli, Gianandrea, Morelli, Maria Cristina, Pinna, Antonio Daniele, Cescon, Matteo, and La Manna, Gaetano
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- 2020
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10. Horses associate individual human voices with the valence of past interactions: a behavioural and electrophysiological study
- Author
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d’Ingeo, Serenella, Quaranta, Angelo, Siniscalchi, Marcello, Stomp, Mathilde, Coste, Caroline, Bagnard, Charlotte, Hausberger, Martine, and Cousillas, Hugo
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- 2019
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11. Long term results of down-staging and liver transplantation for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma beyond the conventional criteria
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Ravaioli, Matteo, Odaldi, Federica, Cucchetti, Alessandro, Trevisani, Franco, Piscaglia, Fabio, De Pace, Vanessa, Bertuzzo, Valentina Rosa, Neri, Flavia, Golfieri, Rita, Cappelli, Alberta, D’Errico, Antonietta, Cescon, Matteo, Del Gaudio, Massimo, Fallani, Guido, Siniscalchi, Antonio, Morelli, Maria Cristina, Ciccarese, Francesca, Di Marco, Maria, Farinati, Fabio, Giannini, Edoardo Giovanni, and Pinna, Antonio Daniele
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- 2019
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12. Relationship between asymmetric nostril use and human emotional odours in cats.
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d'Ingeo, Serenella, Siniscalchi, Marcello, Straziota, Valeria, Ventriglia, Gianluca, Sasso, Raffaella, and Quaranta, Angelo
- Subjects
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CATS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *SOCIAL perception , *OLFACTORY perception , *HUMAN beings , *ODORS - Abstract
Cat social behaviour and cognition has received a growing interest during the last decades. Recent studies reported that cats efficiently engage in interspecific communication with humans and suggest that cats are sensitive to human emotional visual and auditory cues. To date, there is no evidence on the social and informative role of human emotional odours, which may affect human-cat communication. In this study, we presented cats with human odours collected in different emotional contexts (fear, happiness, physical stress and neutral) and evaluated the animals' behavioural responses. We found that "fear" odours elicited higher stress levels than "physical stress" and "neutral", suggesting that cats perceived the valence of the information conveyed by "fear" olfactory signals and regulate their behaviour accordingly. Moreover, the prevalent use of the right nostril (right hemisphere activation) with the increase of stress levels, particularly in response to "fear" odours, provides first evidence of lateralized emotional functions of olfactory pathways in cats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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13. Long term results of down-staging and liver transplantation for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma beyond the conventional criteria
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Massimo Del Gaudio, Guido Fallani, Antonietta D'Errico, Valentina Rosa Bertuzzo, Maria Cristina Morelli, Alberta Cappelli, Antonio Siniscalchi, Edoardo G. Giannini, Matteo Ravaioli, Matteo Cescon, Franco Trevisani, Rita Golfieri, Alessandro Cucchetti, Fabio Farinati, Fabio Piscaglia, Vanessa De Pace, Antonio Daniele Pinna, Francesca Ciccarese, Federica Odaldi, Maria Di Marco, Flavia Neri, and Matteo Ravaioli, Federica Odaldi, Alessandro Cucchetti, Franco Trevisani, Fabio Piscaglia, Vanessa De Pace, Valentina Rosa Bertuzzo, Flavia Neri, Rita Golfieri, Alberta Cappelli, Antonietta D’Errico, Matteo Cescon, Massimo Del Gaudio, Guido Fallani, Antonio Siniscalchi, Maria Cristina Morelli, Francesca Ciccarese, Maria Di Marco, Fabio Farinati, Edoardo Giovanni Giannini, Antonio Daniele Pinna
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Down staging ,lcsh:Medicine ,Milan criteria ,Liver transplantation ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surgical oncology ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,Humans ,lcsh:Science ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,lcsh:R ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Liver Transplantation ,Survival Rate ,030104 developmental biology ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,down-staging, liver transplantation, hepatocellular carcinoma, criteria ,Outcomes research ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The objective of the study is to evaluate 10 years of down-staging strategy for liver transplantation (LT) with a median follow-up of 5 years. Data on long-term results are poor and less information is available for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) non-responder patients or those ineligible for down-staging. The outcome of 308 HCC candidates and the long-term results of 231 LTs for HCC performed between 2003 and 2013 were analyzed. HCCs were divided according to tumor stage and response to therapy: 145 patients were T2 (metering Milan Criteria, MC), 43 were T3 successfully down-staged to T2 (Down-Achieved), 20 were T3 not fully down-staged to T2 (Down-not Achieved), and 23 patients were T3 not receiving down-staging treatments (No-Down). The average treatment effect (ATE) of LT for T3 tumors was estimated using the outcome of 535 T3 patients undergoing non-LT therapies, using inverse probability weighting regression adjustment. The 24-month drop-out rate during waiting time was significantly higher in the down-staging groups: 27.6% vs. 9.2%, p
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- 2019
14. Hypothermic Oxygenated New Machine Perfusion System in Liver and Kidney Transplantation of Extended Criteria Donors:First Italian Clinical Trial
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Federica Odaldi, Massimo Del Gaudio, Maurizio Baldassarre, Guido Fallani, Vito Marco Ranieri, Antonietta D'Errico, Deborah Malvi, Lorenzo Maroni, Gianandrea Pasquinelli, Vanessa De Pace, Gaetano La Manna, Matteo Cescon, Paolo Caraceni, Matteo Ravaioli, Giuliana Germinario, Valentina Rosa Bertuzzo, Giorgia Comai, Francesco Vasuri, Antonio Daniele Pinna, Andrea Angeletti, Antonio Siniscalchi, Maria Cristina Morelli, Chiara Donadei, Ravaioli M., De Pace V., Angeletti A., Comai G., Vasuri F., Baldassarre M., Maroni L., Odaldi F., Fallani G., Caraceni P., Germinario G., Donadei C., Malvi D., Del Gaudio M., Bertuzzo V.R., Siniscalchi A., Ranieri V.M., D'Errico A., Pasquinelli G., Morelli M.C., Pinna A.D., Cescon M., and La Manna G.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Cold storage ,030230 surgery ,Liver transplantation ,Kidney ,Article ,Kidney transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Extended Criteria Donor ,Hypothermic oxygenated machine perfusion ,Medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Machine perfusion ,Kidney diseases ,Multidisciplinary ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Kidney metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial design ,Transplantation ,Clinical trial ,nervous system ,lcsh:Q ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,tissues ,Perfusion - Abstract
With the aim to explore innovative tools for organ preservation, especially in marginal organs, we hereby describe a clinical trial of ex-vivo hypothermic oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) in the field of liver (LT) and kidney transplantation (KT) from Extended Criteria Donors (ECD) after brain death. A matched-case analysis of donor and recipient variables was developed: 10 HOPE-ECD livers and kidneys (HOPE-L and HOPE-K) were matched 1:3 with livers and kidneys preserved with static cold storage (SCS-L and SCS-K). HOPE and SCS groups resulted with similar basal characteristics, both for recipients and donors. Cumulative liver and kidney graft dysfunction were 10% (HOPE L-K) vs. 31.7%, in SCS group (p = 0.05). Primary non-function was 3.3% for SCS-L vs. 0% for HOPE-L. No primary non-function was reported in HOPE-K and SCS-K. Median peak aspartate aminotransferase within 7-days post-LT was significantly higher in SCS-L when compared to HOPE-L (637 vs.344 U/L, p = 0.007). Graft survival at 1-year post-transplant was 93.3% for SCS-L vs. 100% of HOPE-L and 90% for SCS-K vs. 100% of HOPE-K. Clinical outcomes support our hypothesis of machine perfusion being a safe and effective system to reduce ischemic preservation injuries in KT and in LT.
- Published
- 2020
15. Comparative analyses of Mikania (Asteraceae: Eupatorieae) plastomes and impact of data partitioning and inference methods on phylogenetic relationships
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Benoît Loeuille, Caetano Troncoso Oliveira, Carolina M. Siniscalchi, Verônica A. Thode, and José Rubens Pirani
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Plant genetics ,Science ,Eupatorieae ,Mikania ,Biology ,Asteraceae ,Genes, Plant ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Article ,Coalescent theory ,03 medical and health sciences ,Monophyly ,Plant evolution ,Stevia ,Ageratina ,Plastids ,Clade ,Phylogeny ,Multidisciplinary ,Phylogenetic tree ,Genetic Variation ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,MORFOLOGIA VEGETAL ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,Tandem Repeat Sequences ,Medicine ,Plant sciences ,Sequence Alignment - Abstract
We assembled new plastomes of 19 species of Mikania and of Ageratina fastigiata, Litothamnus nitidus, and Stevia collina, all belonging to tribe Eupatorieae (Asteraceae). We analyzed the structure and content of the assembled plastomes and used the newly generated sequences to infer phylogenetic relationships and study the effects of different data partitions and inference methods on the topologies. Most phylogenetic studies with plastomes ignore that processes like recombination and biparental inheritance can occur in this organelle, using the whole genome as a single locus. Our study sought to compare this approach with multispecies coalescent methods that assume that different parts of the genome evolve at different rates. We found that the overall gene content, structure, and orientation are very conserved in all plastomes of the studied species. As observed in other Asteraceae, the 22 plastomes assembled here contain two nested inversions in the LSC region. The plastomes show similar length and the same gene content. The two most variable regions within Mikania are rpl32-ndhF and rpl16-rps3, while the three genes with the highest percentage of variable sites are ycf1, rpoA, and psbT. We generated six phylogenetic trees using concatenated maximum likelihood and multispecies coalescent methods and three data partitions: coding and non-coding sequences and both combined. All trees strongly support that the sampled Mikania species form a monophyletic group, which is further subdivided into three clades. The internal relationships within each clade are sensitive to the data partitioning and inference methods employed. The trees resulting from concatenated analysis are more similar among each other than to the correspondent tree generated with the same data partition but a different method. The multispecies coalescent analysis indicate a high level of incongruence between species and gene trees. The lack of resolution and congruence among trees can be explained by the sparse sampling (~ 0.45% of the currently accepted species) and by the low number of informative characters present in the sequences. Our study sheds light into the impact of data partitioning and methods over phylogenetic resolution and brings relevant information for the study of Mikania diversity and evolution, as well as for the Asteraceae family as a whole.
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- 2021
16. Author Correction: Hypothermic Oxygenated New Machine Perfusion System in Liver and Kidney Transplantation of Extended Criteria Donors: First Italian Clinical Trial
- Author
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Deborah Malvi, Antonietta D'Errico, Federica Odaldi, Massimo Del Gaudio, Lorenzo Maroni, Andrea Angeletti, Maria Cristina Morelli, Giorgia Comai, Maurizio Baldassarre, Vito Marco Ranieri, Giuliana Germinario, Antonio Daniele Pinna, Guido Fallani, Matteo Ravaioli, Gaetano La Manna, Matteo Cescon, Francesco Vasuri, Chiara Donadei, Valentina Rosa Bertuzzo, Paolo Caraceni, Antonio Siniscalchi, Vanessa De Pace, and Gianandrea Pasquinelli
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Medicine ,Kidney ,Extended criteria ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Author Correction ,lcsh:Science ,Infusion Pumps ,Aged ,Oxygenators, Membrane ,Machine perfusion ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Liver and kidney ,Graft Survival ,lcsh:R ,Organ Preservation ,Middle Aged ,Kidney Transplantation ,Tissue Donors ,Liver Transplantation ,Surgery ,Cold Temperature ,Perfusion ,Clinical trial ,Transplantation ,Liver ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,business - Abstract
With the aim to explore innovative tools for organ preservation, especially in marginal organs, we hereby describe a clinical trial of ex-vivo hypothermic oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) in the field of liver (LT) and kidney transplantation (KT) from Extended Criteria Donors (ECD) after brain death. A matched-case analysis of donor and recipient variables was developed: 10 HOPE-ECD livers and kidneys (HOPE-L and HOPE-K) were matched 1:3 with livers and kidneys preserved with static cold storage (SCS-L and SCS-K). HOPE and SCS groups resulted with similar basal characteristics, both for recipients and donors. Cumulative liver and kidney graft dysfunction were 10% (HOPE L-K) vs. 31.7%, in SCS group (p = 0.05). Primary non-function was 3.3% for SCS-L vs. 0% for HOPE-L. No primary non-function was reported in HOPE-K and SCS-K. Median peak aspartate aminotransferase within 7-days post-LT was significantly higher in SCS-L when compared to HOPE-L (637 vs.344 U/L, p = 0.007). Graft survival at 1-year post-transplant was 93.3% for SCS-L vs. 100% of HOPE-L and 90% for SCS-K vs. 100% of HOPE-K. Clinical outcomes support our hypothesis of machine perfusion being a safe and effective system to reduce ischemic preservation injuries in KT and in LT.
- Published
- 2020
17. A geo-chemo-mechanical study of a highly polluted marine system (Taranto, Italy) for the enhancement of the conceptual site model
- Author
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Pietro Cotugno, Federica Cotecchia, Anna Maria Lucia Lanzolla, V. F. Uricchio, Massimo Moretti, F. Cafaro, A. Di Nisio, Maurizio Spadavecchia, Giulia Cipriano, V. Corbelli, Claudia Vitone, F. De Giosa, A. Tursi, D. Milella, A. Siniscalchi, Emanuela Schingaro, M. Calò, G. Ruggieri, Ernesto Mesto, Daniela Miccoli, G. Romano, G. Capasso, Francesco Todaro, L. Spada, G. Tempesta, Maria Lacalamita, Giuseppe Mascolo, G. Pisciotta, Ruggiero Ciannarella, R. Velardo, Francesco Adamo, A. Di Leo, Stefania Nunzia Lisco, P. De Bellis, N. Cardellicchio, Letizia Sion, Francesca Santaloia, Roberto Carlucci, Michele Notarnicola, Matilda Mali, P. Fago, G. Scardino, Giovanna Agrosì, Francesca Sollecito, P. Manzari, G. Mastronuzzi, S. Giandomenico, Osvaldo Bottiglieri, R. Petti, G. Bagnuolo, Eliana Valenzano, and G. De Chiara
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polluted sediments ,Solid Earth sciences ,Multidisciplinary research, marine ecosystem, polluted sediments, environmental, remediation, geo-chemo-hydro-mechanical properties, mineralogy, lithology, ecology ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Hydraulic engineering ,Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,010501 environmental sciences ,Structural basin ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,environmental ,Land reclamation ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Limnology ,remediation ,geo-chemo-hydro-mechanical properties ,Risk management ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary research ,Government ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Biogeochemistry ,lithology ,Environmental sciences ,marine ecosystem ,Redevelopment ,Conceptual model ,Medicine ,Environmental science ,Hydrology ,mineralogy ,ecology ,business - Abstract
The paper presents the results of the analysis of the geo-chemo-mechanical data gathered through an innovative multidisciplinary investigation campaign in the Mar Piccolo basin, a heavily polluted marine bay aside the town of Taranto (Southern Italy). The basin is part of an area declared at high environmental risk by the Italian government. The cutting-edge approach to the environmental characterization of the site was promoted by the Special Commissioner for urgent measures of reclamation, environmental improvements and redevelopment of Taranto and involved experts from several research fields, who cooperated to gather a new insight into the origin, distribution, mobility and fate of the contaminants within the basin. The investigation campaign was designed to implement advanced research methodologies and testing strategies. Differently from traditional investigation campaigns, aimed solely at the assessment of the contamination state within sediments lying in the top layers, the new campaign provided an interpretation of the geo-chemo-mechanical properties and state of the sediments forming the deposit at the seafloor. The integrated, multidisciplinary and holistic approach, that considered geotechnical engineering, electrical and electronical engineering, geological, sedimentological, mineralogical, hydraulic engineering, hydrological, chemical, geochemical, biological fields, supported a comprehensive understanding of the influence of the contamination on the hydro-mechanical properties of the sediments, which need to be accounted for in the selection and design of the risk mitigation measures. The findings of the research represent the input ingredients of the conceptual model of the site, premise to model the evolutionary contamination scenarios within the basin, of guidance for the environmental risk management. The study testifies the importance of the cooperative approach among researchers of different fields to fulfil the interpretation of complex polluted eco-systems.
- Published
- 2021
18. Hypothermic Oxygenated New Machine Perfusion System in Liver and Kidney Transplantation of Extended Criteria Donors:First Italian Clinical Trial
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Ravaioli, Matteo, primary, De Pace, Vanessa, additional, Angeletti, Andrea, additional, Comai, Giorgia, additional, Vasuri, Francesco, additional, Baldassarre, Maurizio, additional, Maroni, Lorenzo, additional, Odaldi, Federica, additional, Fallani, Guido, additional, Caraceni, Paolo, additional, Germinario, Giuliana, additional, Donadei, Chiara, additional, Malvi, Deborah, additional, Del Gaudio, Massimo, additional, Bertuzzo, Valentina Rosa, additional, Siniscalchi, Antonio, additional, Ranieri, Vito Marco, additional, D’Errico, Antonietta, additional, Pasquinelli, Gianandrea, additional, Morelli, Maria Cristina, additional, Pinna, Antonio Daniele, additional, Cescon, Matteo, additional, and La Manna, Gaetano, additional
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- 2020
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19. Lateralized behavior and cardiac activity of dogs in response to human emotional vocalizations
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Marcello Siniscalchi, Serenella d’Ingeo, Angelo Quaranta, and Serena Fornelli
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,lcsh:Medicine ,Cardiac activity ,Emotional functioning ,Audiology ,Lateralization of brain function ,Article ,Functional Laterality ,Arousal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dogs ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Valence (psychology) ,lcsh:Science ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,Behavior, Animal ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:R ,Brain ,Cognition ,Heart ,Sadness ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Heart Function Tests ,Happiness ,lcsh:Q ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Over the recent years, the study of emotional functioning has become one of the central issues in dog cognition. Previous studies showed that dogs can recognize different emotions by looking at human faces and can correctly match the human emotional state with a vocalization having a negative emotional valence. However, to this day, little is known about how dogs perceive and process human non-verbal vocalizations having different emotional valence. The current research provides new insights into emotional functioning of the canine brain by studying dogs’ lateralized auditory functions (to provide a first insight into the valence dimension) matched with both behavior and physiological measures of arousal (to study the arousal dimension) in response to playbacks related to the Ekman’s six basic human emotions. Overall, our results indicate lateralized brain patterns for the processing of human emotional vocalizations, with the prevalent use of the right hemisphere in the analysis of vocalizations with a clear negative emotional valence (i.e. “fear” and “sadness”) and the prevalent use of the left hemisphere in the analysis of positive vocalization (“happiness”). Furthermore, both cardiac activity and behavior response support the hypothesis that dogs are sensitive to emotional cues of human vocalizations.
- Published
- 2018
20. Lateralized behavior and cardiac activity of dogs in response to human emotional vocalizations
- Author
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Siniscalchi, Marcello, primary, d’Ingeo, Serenella, additional, Fornelli, Serena, additional, and Quaranta, Angelo, additional
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- 2018
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21. Relationship between visuospatial attention and paw preference in dogs
- Author
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Angelo Quaranta, Serenella d’Ingeo, Serena Fornelli, and Marcello Siniscalchi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multidisciplinary ,Human studies ,05 social sciences ,Audiology ,Attentional bias ,Preference ,Lateralization of brain function ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dogs ,Laterality ,Forelimb ,medicine ,Visual Perception ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Attention ,Female ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The relationship between visuospatial attention and paw preference was investigated in domestic dogs. Visuospatial attention was evaluated using a food detection task that closely matches the so-called “cancellation” task used in human studies. Paw preference was estimated by quantifying the dog’s use of forepaws to hold a puzzle feeder device (namely the “Kong”) while eating its content. Results clearly revealed a strong relationship between visuospatial attention bias and motor laterality, with a left-visuospatial bias in the left-pawed group, a right-visuospatial bias in the right-pawed group and with the absence of significant visuospatial attention bias in ambi-pawed subjects. The current findings are the first evidence for the presence of a relationship between motor lateralization and visuospatial attentional mechanisms in a mammal species besides humans.
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- 2016
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22. A cost-effective and efficient reprogramming platform for large-scale production of integration-free human induced pluripotent stem cells in chemically defined culture
- Author
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Kaari L. Linask, Mahendra S. Rao, Lauren I. Siniscalchi, Guokai Chen, Jane A. Chen, Wei Zheng, Yongshun Lin, and Jeanette Beers
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Multidisciplinary ,Cellular Reprogramming Techniques ,Computer science ,Scale (chemistry) ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Transfection ,computer.software_genre ,Cellular Reprogramming ,Article ,Cell Line ,Culture Media ,Cell culture ,Production (economics) ,Humans ,Biochemical engineering ,Data mining ,Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Induced pluripotent stem cell ,Reprogramming ,computer - Abstract
Factors limiting the adoption of iPSC technology include the cost of developing lines and the time period that it takes to characterize and bank them, particularly when integration free, feeder free and Xeno-free components are used. In this manuscript we describe our optimization procedure that enables a single technician to make 20–40 lines at a time in a 24–96 well format in a reliable and reproducible fashion. Improvements spanned the entire workflow and included using RNA virus, reducing cytotoxicity of reagents, developing improved transfection and freezing efficiencies, modifying the manual colony picking steps, enhancing passaging efficiency and developing early criteria of success. These modifications allowed us to make more than two hundred well-characterized lines per year.
- Published
- 2015
23. Relationship between visuospatial attention and paw preference in dogs
- Author
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Siniscalchi, Marcello, primary, d’Ingeo, Serenella, additional, Fornelli, Serena, additional, and Quaranta, Angelo, additional
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- 2016
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24. A cost-effective and efficient reprogramming platform for large-scale production of integration-free human induced pluripotent stem cells in chemically defined culture
- Author
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Beers, Jeanette, primary, Linask, Kaari L., additional, Chen, Jane A., additional, Siniscalchi, Lauren I., additional, Lin, Yongshun, additional, Zheng, Wei, additional, Rao, Mahendra, additional, and Chen, Guokai, additional
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- 2015
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25. Horses associate individual human voices with the valence of past interactions: a behavioural and electrophysiological study.
- Author
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d'Ingeo, Serenella, Quaranta, Angelo, Siniscalchi, Marcello, Stomp, Mathilde, Coste, Caroline, Bagnard, Charlotte, Hausberger, Martine, and Cousillas, Hugo
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ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,HUMAN-animal relationships ,BRAIN physiology ,SENSORY perception - Abstract
Brain lateralization is a phenomenon widely reported in the animal kingdom and sensory laterality has been shown to be an indicator of the appraisal of the stimulus valence by an individual. This can prove a useful tool to investigate how animals perceive intra- or hetero-specific signals. The human-animal relationship provides an interesting framework for testing the impact of the valence of interactions on emotional memories. In the present study, we tested whether horses could associate individual human voices with past positive or negative experiences. Both behavioural and electroencephalographic measures allowed examining laterality patterns in addition to the behavioural reactions. The results show that horses reacted to voices associated with past positive experiences with increased attention/arousal (gamma oscillations in the right hemisphere) and indicators of a positive emotional state (left hemisphere activation and ears held forward), and to those associated with past negative experiences with negative affective states (right hemisphere activation and ears held backwards). The responses were further influenced by the animals' management conditions (e.g. box or pasture). Overall, these results, associating brain and behaviour analysis, clearly demonstrate that horses' representation of human voices is modulated by the valence of prior horse-human interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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26. Comparative analyses of Mikania (Asteraceae: Eupatorieae) plastomes and impact of data partitioning and inference methods on phylogenetic relationships
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Verônica A. Thode, Caetano T. Oliveira, Benoît Loeuille, Carolina M. Siniscalchi, and José R. Pirani
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract We assembled new plastomes of 19 species of Mikania and of Ageratina fastigiata, Litothamnus nitidus, and Stevia collina, all belonging to tribe Eupatorieae (Asteraceae). We analyzed the structure and content of the assembled plastomes and used the newly generated sequences to infer phylogenetic relationships and study the effects of different data partitions and inference methods on the topologies. Most phylogenetic studies with plastomes ignore that processes like recombination and biparental inheritance can occur in this organelle, using the whole genome as a single locus. Our study sought to compare this approach with multispecies coalescent methods that assume that different parts of the genome evolve at different rates. We found that the overall gene content, structure, and orientation are very conserved in all plastomes of the studied species. As observed in other Asteraceae, the 22 plastomes assembled here contain two nested inversions in the LSC region. The plastomes show similar length and the same gene content. The two most variable regions within Mikania are rpl32-ndhF and rpl16-rps3, while the three genes with the highest percentage of variable sites are ycf1, rpoA, and psbT. We generated six phylogenetic trees using concatenated maximum likelihood and multispecies coalescent methods and three data partitions: coding and non-coding sequences and both combined. All trees strongly support that the sampled Mikania species form a monophyletic group, which is further subdivided into three clades. The internal relationships within each clade are sensitive to the data partitioning and inference methods employed. The trees resulting from concatenated analysis are more similar among each other than to the correspondent tree generated with the same data partition but a different method. The multispecies coalescent analysis indicate a high level of incongruence between species and gene trees. The lack of resolution and congruence among trees can be explained by the sparse sampling (~ 0.45% of the currently accepted species) and by the low number of informative characters present in the sequences. Our study sheds light into the impact of data partitioning and methods over phylogenetic resolution and brings relevant information for the study of Mikania diversity and evolution, as well as for the Asteraceae family as a whole.
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- 2021
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27. A geo-chemo-mechanical study of a highly polluted marine system (Taranto, Italy) for the enhancement of the conceptual site model
- Author
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F. Cotecchia, C. Vitone, F. Sollecito, M. Mali, D. Miccoli, R. Petti, D. Milella, G. Ruggieri, O. Bottiglieri, F. Santaloia, P. De Bellis, F. Cafaro, M. Notarnicola, F. Todaro, F. Adamo, A. Di Nisio, A. M. L. Lanzolla, M. Spadavecchia, M. Moretti, G. Agrosì, F. De Giosa, P. Fago, M. Lacalamita, S. Lisco, P. Manzari, E. Mesto, G. Romano, G. Scardino, E. Schingaro, A. Siniscalchi, G. Tempesta, E. Valenzano, G. Mastronuzzi, N. Cardellicchio, A. Di Leo, L. Spada, S. Giandomenico, M. Calò, V. F. Uricchio, G. Mascolo, G. Bagnuolo, R. Ciannarella, A. Tursi, G. Cipriano, P. Cotugno, L. Sion, R. Carlucci, G. Capasso, G. De Chiara, G. Pisciotta, R. Velardo, and V. Corbelli
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The paper presents the results of the analysis of the geo-chemo-mechanical data gathered through an innovative multidisciplinary investigation campaign in the Mar Piccolo basin, a heavily polluted marine bay aside the town of Taranto (Southern Italy). The basin is part of an area declared at high environmental risk by the Italian government. The cutting-edge approach to the environmental characterization of the site was promoted by the Special Commissioner for urgent measures of reclamation, environmental improvements and redevelopment of Taranto and involved experts from several research fields, who cooperated to gather a new insight into the origin, distribution, mobility and fate of the contaminants within the basin. The investigation campaign was designed to implement advanced research methodologies and testing strategies. Differently from traditional investigation campaigns, aimed solely at the assessment of the contamination state within sediments lying in the top layers, the new campaign provided an interpretation of the geo-chemo-mechanical properties and state of the sediments forming the deposit at the seafloor. The integrated, multidisciplinary and holistic approach, that considered geotechnical engineering, electrical and electronical engineering, geological, sedimentological, mineralogical, hydraulic engineering, hydrological, chemical, geochemical, biological fields, supported a comprehensive understanding of the influence of the contamination on the hydro-mechanical properties of the sediments, which need to be accounted for in the selection and design of the risk mitigation measures. The findings of the research represent the input ingredients of the conceptual model of the site, premise to model the evolutionary contamination scenarios within the basin, of guidance for the environmental risk management. The study testifies the importance of the cooperative approach among researchers of different fields to fulfil the interpretation of complex polluted eco-systems.
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- 2021
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