45 results on '"Benvenuto C"'
Search Results
2. Laparoscopic right hemicolectomy: the SICE (Società Italiana di Chirurgia Endoscopica e Nuove Tecnologie) network prospective trial on 1225 cases comparing intra corporeal versus extra corporeal ileo-colic side-to-side anastomosis
- Author
-
Anania G., Agresta F., Artioli E., Rubino S., Resta G., Vettoretto N., Petz W. L., Bergamini C., Arezzo A., Valpiani G., Morotti C., Silecchia G., Adamo V., Agrusa A., Alemanno G., Allaix M. E., Alo A., Altamura A., Ambrosi A., Antoniutti M., Apa D., Arcuri G., Baiocchi G. L., Balani A., Baldazzi G., Basti M., Benvenuto C., Berti S., Boni L., Borghi F., Botteri E., Brachet Contul R., Brescia A., Budassi A., Cafagna L., Calgaro M., Calo P. G., Campagnacci R., Canova G., Canu G. L., Caracino V., Carcoforo P., Carlini M., Casali L., Cassetti D., Cassinotti E., Catarci M., Cesari M., Checcacci P., Ciano P., Clementi M., Cocorullo G., Colombo F., Concone G., Contine A., Coppola M., Coratti A., Corcione F., Corleone P., Covotta L., Cuccurullo D., Cumbo P., D'ambrosio G., De Angelis F., De Luca M., De Manzini N., De Nisco C., De Palma G. D., De Paolis P., Degiuli M., Delogu D., Delrio P., Deserra A., Donini A., Elmore U., Ercolani G., Erdas E., Fabris L., Ferrari G., Feo G., Fidanza F., Foschi D., Galleano R., Garulli G., Gatti F., Gattolin A., Gelati S., Gelmini R., Ghazouani O., Gioffre A., Gobbi S., Grammatico V., Guariniello A., Giannessi S., Guerrieri M., Guerriero L., Gullotta G., Impellizzeri H., Izzo M., Jovine E., Lezoche G., Lirusso C., Lombardi R., Longoni M., Lucchi A., Luzzi A. P., Marini P., Marrosu A. G., Martino A., Mazza R., Mazzoccato S., Medas F., Meloni A., Milone M., Minciotti E., Monari F., Moretto G., Muttillo I. A., Navarra G., Neri S., Oldani A., Olmi S., Opocher E., Osenda E., Ottonello R., Panebianco V., Pavanello M., Pecchini F., Pellegrino L., Pennisi D., Perrotta N., Pertile D., Petri R., Picchetto A., Piccoli M., Pirrera B., Pisani Ceretti A., Pisano M., Podda M., Portolani N., Presenti L., Puzziello A., Razzi S., Rega D., Restini E., Ricci G., Rigamonti M., Rivolta U., Robustelli V., Romairone E., Rosati R., Rosso E., Roviello F., Sala S., Santarelli M., Sarro G., Sartori A., Scabini S., Scognamillo F., Sechi R., Solaini L., Soliani G., Soliani P., Soligo E., Sorrentino M., Spinoglio G., Stratta E., Taddei A., Talamo G., Targa S., Tartaglia N., Testa S., Ubiali P., Valeri A., Vasta F., Verzelli A., Vicentini R., Viola G., Violi V., Zago M., Zampino L., Anania, G., Agresta, F., Artioli, E., Rubino, S., Resta, G., Vettoretto, N., Petz, W. L., Bergamini, C., Arezzo, A., Valpiani, G., Morotti, C., Silecchia, G., Adamo, V., Agrusa, A., Alemanno, G., Allaix, M. E., Alo, A., Altamura, A., Ambrosi, A., Antoniutti, M., Apa, D., Arcuri, G., Baiocchi, G. L., Balani, A., Baldazzi, G., Basti, M., Benvenuto, C., Berti, S., Boni, L., Borghi, F., Botteri, E., Brachet Contul, R., Brescia, A., Budassi, A., Cafagna, L., Calgaro, M., Calo, P. G., Campagnacci, R., Canova, G., Canu, G. L., Caracino, V., Carcoforo, P., Carlini, M., Casali, L., Cassetti, D., Cassinotti, E., Catarci, M., Cesari, M., Checcacci, P., Ciano, P., Clementi, M., Cocorullo, G., Colombo, F., Concone, G., Contine, A., Coppola, M., Coratti, A., Corcione, F., Corleone, P., Covotta, L., Cuccurullo, D., Cumbo, P., D'Ambrosio, G., De Angelis, F., De Luca, M., De Manzini, N., De Nisco, C., De Palma, G. D., De Paolis, P., Degiuli, M., Delogu, D., Delrio, P., Deserra, A., Donini, A., Elmore, U., Ercolani, G., Erdas, E., Fabris, L., Ferrari, G., Feo, G., Fidanza, F., Foschi, D., Galleano, R., Garulli, G., Gatti, F., Gattolin, A., Gelati, S., Gelmini, R., Ghazouani, O., Gioffre, A., Gobbi, S., Grammatico, V., Guariniello, A., Giannessi, S., Guerrieri, M., Guerriero, L., Gullotta, G., Impellizzeri, H., Izzo, M., Jovine, E., Lezoche, G., Lirusso, C., Lombardi, R., Longoni, M., Lucchi, A., Luzzi, A. P., Marini, P., Marrosu, A. G., Martino, A., Mazza, R., Mazzoccato, S., Medas, F., Meloni, A., Milone, M., Minciotti, E., Monari, F., Moretto, G., Muttillo, I. A., Navarra, G., Neri, S., Oldani, A., Olmi, S., Opocher, E., Osenda, E., Ottonello, R., Panebianco, V., Pavanello, M., Pecchini, F., Pellegrino, L., Pennisi, D., Perrotta, N., Pertile, D., Petri, R., Picchetto, A., Piccoli, M., Pirrera, B., Pisani Ceretti, A., Pisano, M., Podda, M., Portolani, N., Presenti, L., Puzziello, A., Razzi, S., Rega, D., Restini, E., Ricci, G., Rigamonti, M., Rivolta, U., Robustelli, V., Romairone, E., Rosati, R., Rosso, E., Roviello, F., Sala, S., Santarelli, M., Sarro, G., Sartori, A., Scabini, S., Scognamillo, F., Sechi, R., Solaini, L., Soliani, G., Soliani, P., Soligo, E., Sorrentino, M., Spinoglio, G., Stratta, E., Taddei, A., Talamo, G., Targa, S., Tartaglia, N., Testa, S., Ubiali, P., Valeri, A., Vasta, F., Verzelli, A., Vicentini, R., Viola, G., Violi, V., Zago, M., Zampino, L., Anania G., Agresta F., Artioli E., Rubino S., Resta G., Vettoretto N., Petz W.L., Bergamini C., Arezzo A., Valpiani G., Morotti C., Silecchia G, and Adamo V, Agrusa A, Alemanno G, Allaix ME, Alò A, Altamura A, Ambrosi A, Antoniutti M, Apa D, Arcuri G, Baiocchi GL, Balani A, Baldazzi G, Basti M, Benvenuto C, Berti S, Boni L, Borghi F, Botteri E, Brachet Contul R, Brescia A, Budassi A, Cafagna L, Calgaro M, Calò PG, Campagnacci R, Canova G, Canu GL, Caracino V, Carcoforo P, Carlini M, Casali L, Cassetti D, Cassinotti E, Catarci M, Cesari M, Checcacci P, Ciano P, Clementi M, Cocorullo G, Colombo F, Concone G, Contine A, Coppola M, Coratti A, Corcione F, Corleone P, Covotta L, Cuccurullo D, Cumbo P, D'Ambrosio G, De Angelis F, De Luca M, De Manzini N, De Nisco C, De Palma GD, De Paolis P, Degiuli M, Delogu D, Delrio P, Deserra A, Donini A, Elmore U, Ercolani G, Erdas E, Fabris L, Ferrari G, Feo C, Fidanza F, Foschi D, Galleano R, Garulli G, Gatti F, Gattolin A, Gelati S, Gelmini R, Ghazouani O, Gioffrè A, Gobbi S, Grammatico V, Guariniello A, Giannessi S, Guerrieri M, Guerriero L, Guerriero G, Impellizzeri H, Izzo M, Jovine E, Lezoche G, Lirusso C, Lombardi R, Longoni M, Lucchi A, Luzzi AP, Marini P, Marrosu AG, Martino A, Mazza R, Mazzoccato S, Medas F, Meloni A, Milone M, Minciotti E, Monari F, Moretto G, Muttillo IA, Navarra G, Neri S, Oldani A, Olmi S, Opocher E, Osenda E, Ottonello R, Panebianco V, Pavanello M, Pecchini F, Pellegrino L, Pennisi D, Perrotta N, Pertile D, Petri R, Picchetto A, Piccoli M, Pirrera B, Pisani Ceretti A, Pisano M, Podda M, Portolani N, Presenti L, Puzziello A, Razzi S, Rega D, Restini E, Ricci G, Rigamonti M, Rivolta U, Robustelli V, Romairone E, Rosati R, Rosso E, Roviello F, Sala S, Santarelli M, Sarro G, Sartori A, Scabini S, Scognamillo F, Sechi R, Solaini L, Soliani G, Soliani P, Soligo E, Sorrentino M, Spinoglio G, Stratta E, Taddei A, Talamo G, Targa S, Tartaglia N, Testa S, Ubiali P, Valeri A, Vasta F, Verzelli A, Vicentini R, Viola G, Violi V, Zago M, Zampino L.
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anastomosis ,Colon ,Intracorporeal anastomosis ,Outcomes ,Laparoscopic colectomy ,Article ,Intracorporeal anastomosi ,Ileo-colic anastomosis ,Laparoscopy ,Postoperative complications ,Right hemicolectomy ,Aged ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Colectomy ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Female ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Economica ,Surgical ,medicine ,LS7_1 ,LS7_4 ,Right hemicolectomy, Ileo-colic anastomosis, Laparoscopy, Postoperative complications, Intracorporeal anastomosis, Outcomes ,Outcome ,LS7_9 ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Right hemicolectomy · Ileo-colic anastomosis · Laparoscopy · Postoperative complications · Intracorporeal anastomosis · Outcomes ,Correction ,Postoperative complication ,Ileo-colic anastomosi ,Prospective trial ,Surgery ,Side to side anastomosis ,business ,Laparoscopic right hemicolectomy - Abstract
Background While laparoscopic approach for right hemicolectomy (LRH) is considered appropriate for the surgical treatment of both malignant and benign diseases of right colon, there is still debate about how to perform the ileo-colic anastomosis. The ColonDxItalianGroup (CoDIG) was designed as a cohort, observational, prospective, multi-center national study with the aims of evaluating the surgeons’ attitude regarding the intracorporeal (ICA) or extra-corporeal (ECA) anastomotic technique and the related surgical outcomes. Methods One hundred and twenty-five Surgical Units experienced in colorectal and advanced laparoscopic surgery were invited and 85 of them joined the study. Each center was asked not to change its surgical habits. Data about demographic characteristics, surgical technique and postoperative outcomes were collected through the official SICE website database. One thousand two hundred and twenty-five patients were enrolled between March 2018 and September 2018. Results ICA was performed in 70.4% of cases, ECA in 29.6%. Isoperistaltic anastomosis was completed in 85.6%, stapled in 87.9%. Hand-sewn enterotomy closure was adopted in 86%. Postoperative complications were reported in 35.4% for ICA and 50.7% for ECA; no significant difference was found according to patients’ characteristics and technologies used. Median hospital stay was significantly shorter for ICA (7.3 vs. 9 POD). Postoperative pain in patients not prescribed opioids was significantly lower in ICA group. Conclusions In our survey, a side-to-side isoperistaltic stapled ICA with hand-sewn enterotomy closure is the most frequently adopted technique to perform ileo-colic anastomosis after any indications for elective LRH. According to literature, our study confirmed better short-term outcomes for ICA, with reduction of hospital stay and postoperative pain. Trial registration Clinical trial (Identifier: NCT03934151).
- Published
- 2020
3. Multiple hatching events in clam shrimp: Implications for mate guarding behaviour and community ecology
- Author
-
Benvenuto, C., Calabrese, A., Reed, S. K., and Knott, B.
- Published
- 2009
4. A field test of a model for the stability of androdioecy in the freshwater shrimp, Eulimnadia texana
- Author
-
Weeks, S. C., Benvenuto, C., Reed, S. K., Duff, R. J., Duan, Z.-H., and David, P.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Sex chromosome evolution in the clam shrimp, Eulimnadia texana
- Author
-
WEEKS, S. C., BENVENUTO, C., SANDERSON, T. F., and DUFF, R. J.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Behavioural responses in a congested sea: an observational study on a coastal nest-guarding fish.
- Author
-
Mascolino, S., Mariani, S., and Benvenuto, C.
- Subjects
NOISE pollution ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,ANIMAL communication ,TERRITORIAL waters ,SCIENTIFIC observation - Abstract
The deleterious effects of anthropogenic noise on animal communication are nowadays recognised, not only in urban environments but also in terrestrial habitats and along coasts and in open waters. Yet, the assessment of short- and long-term exposure consequences of anthropogenic noise in marine organisms remains challenging, especially in fish and invertebrates. Males of the Mediterranean damselfish Chromis chromis vocalise and perform visual displays (multimodal communication) to attract mates. The frequency-range of courtship vocalisations overlaps with low-frequency noise generated by maritime activities, resulting in a reduced detection distance among conspecifics. We quantified the number of courtship-related visual displays performed by males living in areas with different levels of maritime traffic. We also tried to manipulate ambient noise in the field to test male short-term response to increased noise levels. Males living in busier areas (near to a harbour) performed significantly more visual displays than those living in less congested areas. When exposed to artificially-increased ambient noise level (playback of boat noise), males did not adjust the number of visual displays accordingly. Yet, we note how assessing the actual effect of maritime traffic in marine populations in their natural environments is particularly difficult, as the effects of boat noise cannot be easily disentangled from a variety of other intrinsic or environmental factors, discussed in the paper. We thus present suggestions to obtain more robust analyses of variations of courtship behaviours in territorial fishes. We hope this will facilitate a further understanding of the potential long-term effects of anthropogenic noise, whose analyses should be prioritised in the context of environmental impact assessment, resource management and biodiversity conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The ART of mating : alternative reproductive tactics and mating success in a nest-guarding fish
- Author
-
Mascolino, S, Benvenuto, C, Gubili, C, Sacchi, C, Boufana, B, and Mariani, S
- Abstract
Fish use different modalities to access mates for reproduction, often referred to as Alternative Reproductive Tactics (ARTs). ARTs are an example of coexisting phenotypes, which have to hold some degree of reproductive success to persist in a population. In the Mediterranean damselfish (Chromis chromis), territorial males colonise nests on rocky reefs, competing for females, while sneaker males attempt to parasitically spawn in those nests. Here we combine behavioural observations in the field with molecular analyses, using bi-parentally and maternally inherited markers, to investigate reproductive success patterns of the two observed male ARTs in terms of number of eggs sired and number of females contributing to each nest. Cuckoldry was observed in every nest sampled, with at least two and up to seven sneakers per nest; however, the nesting male always significantly fathered the large majority of the eggs (on average 49%) in each clutch. Each sneaker fathered around 7% of the clutch. The average number of females whose eggs were fertilised by nesting males was 6.76 (ranging 2-13), while each sneaker on average fertilised the eggs of 1.74 (range 1-8) females. Using this sibship reconstruction, we investigated some of the factors involved in the regulation of the dynamic equilibrium of reproductive success between the two ARTs showed by C. chromis males. Our results show that the sneakers’ reproductive success was positively linked to egg clutch size; the density of individuals in the nesting area negatively affected the size of egg clutches; the rate of defence behaviours performed by nesting males negatively influenced the number of females contributing to each nest.
- Published
- 2016
8. A Randomized Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Clinical Study to Evaluate the Effect on the Weight of a Medical Device with Polyglucosamine L112 in a Group of Overweight and Obese Subjects
- Author
-
Mariangela Rondanelli, Simone Perna, Matteo Della Porta, Federico Lombardoni, Zaira Patelli, Mara Nichetti, Clara Gasparri, Elvira Pistolesi, Benvenuto Cestaro, and Roberta Cazzola
- Subjects
polyglucosamine L112 ,body weight ,cholesterol levels ,glucosamine ,insulin resistance ,fat-soluble vitamins ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
Background. Overweight and obesity have reached epidemic proportions and safe treatments are needed to heal these diseases. Objective. The objective of this study is to examine the activity of a medical device based on polyglucosamine polymers (PG) on body weight (BW) reduction, insulin resistance, and the serum levels of fat-soluble vitamins and glucosamine. Methods. A double-blind placebo-controlled interventional study comparing PG and a placebo (PL) was conducted. One hundred and fifty overweight or obese cases were treated, divided into two groups for a period of 90 days at the dosage of 3 g/day. Results. One hundred and nineteen cases (58 with PG and 61 with PL, respectively) concluded the treatment. PG was more effective than the PL on the reduction of BW and insulin resistance. No modification of fat-soluble vitamins (Vit A, E, D3, K1) and glucosamine levels was shown. Total cholesterol levels were significantly more reduced in the PG group compared to the PL group as it was for subjects with a BW decrease of >5%. Conclusions. PG acts as a safe medical device, is not absorbed, and binds lipids in the upper gastrointestinal tract, reducing their availability, with a significant activity on the reduction of BW, insulin resistance, and cholesterol levels without the modification of fat-soluble vitamins.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Seasonal cycle of Jassa marmorata Holmes, 1903 (Crustacea, Amphipoda) in the Ligurian Sea (Mediterranean Sea, Italy)
- Author
-
Scinto, A, Benvenuto, C, Cerrano, Carlo, and Mori, M.
- Published
- 2007
10. Effects of different recovery methods following futsal matches
- Author
-
Tessitore, Antonio, Meeusen, Romain, Pagano, R., Benvenuto, C., Tiberi, M., Capranica, Laura, Human Physiology and Special Physiology of Physical Education, and Vrije Universiteit Brussel
- Published
- 2005
11. Isernia La Pineta (Molise, Italy): type and distribution of the finds on the living floor 3A in sector I of the excavation
- Author
-
Peretto, C., Benvenuto, C., Bisi, F., Cavallini, E., Corti, P., Evangelista, L., Ferioli, V., Guerreschi, A., Longo, L., Milliken, S., Thun Hohenstein, U., and Vullo, N.
- Subjects
prehistory ,Socio-culturale ,lower Palaeolithic ,archaeosurfaces ,prehistory, lower Palaeolithic, archaeosurfaces - Published
- 2000
12. Isernia La Pineta (Molise): type and distribution of the finds on living floors 3a and 3c in sector I of the excavation
- Author
-
Peretto, C., Benvenuto, C., Bisi, F., Cavallini, E., Corti, P., Evangelista, L., Ferioli, V., Guerreschi, A., Longo, L., Milliken, S., Thun Hohenstein, U., and Vullo, N.
- Subjects
Socio-culturale - Published
- 1999
13. Effect of Polyglucosamine on Weight Loss and Metabolic Parameters in Overweight and Obesity: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Author
-
Simone Perna, Sana N. M. Basharat, Khawla F. Ali, Abdulla Eid, Clara Gasparri, Vittoria Infantino, Milena A. Faliva, Maurizio Naso, Roberta Cazzola, Benvenuto Cestaro, and Mariangela Rondanelli
- Subjects
polyglucosamine ,obesity ,overweight ,weight loss ,waist circumference ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
The use of dietary supplements for weight loss has gained significant momentum. Polyglucosamine, a chitosan derivative, is a dietary supplement increasingly used for weight loss. In this meta-analysis, we systematically summarized and quantified the key findings of four randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials examining the effects of polyglucosamine supplementation and caloric restriction, and physical activity on body weight, body mass index (BMI), and waist circumference in subjects with overweight and obesity. The control group was set with a physical activity from 6–7 MET-h/week activity and up to 21 MET-h/week activity with caloric restriction. Compliance in the latter trials was reported via a follow-up questionnaire with the individual participants. The analysis included 399 subjects followed for a period ranging from 12 weeks to one year. Subjects’ age ranged from 21–75 years, BMI from 26–45 kg/m2, and all were white European or Caucasian in ethnicity. The meta-analyzed mean differences for random effects showed that polyglucosamine supplementation improves weight loss by −1.78 kg [−2.78, −0.79], BMI by −1.52 kg/m2 [−3.58, 0.54], and improves waist circumference reduction by −1.45 cm [−2.77, −0.12]. In conclusion, the use of polyglucosamine supplementation in conjunction with lifestyle behavioral therapies can be effective for weight reduction. Further studies are needed to examine the long-term effects of polyglucosamine supplementation on weight loss and other metabolic parameters
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Competitive dynamics of a Mediterranean hermit crab assemblage: the role of interference and exploitative competition for shells.
- Author
-
Busato, P., Benvenuto, C., and Gherardi, F.
- Subjects
- *
HERMIT crabs , *COMPETITION (Biology) , *MOLLUSKS - Abstract
Discusses the role of interference and exploitative competition for shells in the competitive dynamics of a Mediterranean hermit crab assemblage. Clibanarius erythropus and Calcinus tubularis composing the shallow-water hermit crab assemblage; Dominance expressed by Clibanarius over Calcinus not resulting from an active competitive exclusion.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Concentration-Dependent Effects of N-3 Long-Chain Fatty Acids on Na,K-ATPase Activity in Human Endothelial Cells
- Author
-
Roberta Cazzola, Matteo Della Porta, Sara Castiglioni, Luciano Pinotti, Jeanette A.M. Maier, and Benvenuto Cestaro
- Subjects
endothelium ,sodium pump ,eicosapentaenoic acid ,docosahexaenoic acid ,membrane fluidity ,lipid peroxidation ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
N-3 eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) seem to prevent endothelial dysfunction, a crucial step in atherogenesis, by modulating the levels of vasoactive molecules and by influencing Na,K-ATPase activity of vascular myocytes. The activity of endothelial Na,K-ATPase controls the ionic homeostasis of the neighboring cells, as well as cell function. However, controversy exists with respect to the vascular protective effect of EPA and DHA. We argue that this dispute might be due to the use of different concentrations of EPA and DHA in different studies. Therefore, this study was designed to define an optimal concentration of EPA and DHA to investigate endothelial function. For this purpose, human endothelial cells were exposed for 24 h to different concentrations of DHA or EPA (0−20 μM) to study membrane fluidity, peroxidation potential and Na,K-ATPase activity. EPA and DHA were linearly incorporated and this incorporation was mirrored by the linear increase of unsaturation index, membrane fluidity, and peroxidation potential. Na,K-ATPase activity peaked at 3.75 μM of EPA and DHA and then gradually decreased. It is noteworthy that DHA effects were always more pronounced than EPA. Concluding, low concentrations of EPA and DHA minimize peroxidation sensitivity and optimize Na,K-ATPase activity.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. SPARC 2022 book of abstracts
- Author
-
Ardo, A, Bass, J, Gaber, T, Abdullahi, A, Dargahi, T, Babaie, M, Bennett, A, Searle, D, Mbabu, A, Underwood, J, Munir, M, Woodman, A, Coffey, M, Cooper-Ryan, A, Foster, A, Greensmith, D, Stein, A, Dubrow-Marshall, R, Gumel, A, Malevicius, R, Rana, M, Baatz, A, Young, R, Bidgood, A, Davison, A, McDevitt, A, Rahimi Toudeshki, A, Parker, D, Price, C, Bird, S, Sabir, A, Withers, S, Latimer, J, Hamdan, A, Elkadi, H, Warburton, B, Kosmidou, S, Hiriart, J, Martin, C, Nourian, A, Nasr, G, Chinigo, C, Lisanti, M, Sotgia, F, Hargreaves, C, Newbery, S, Hall, B, Poolay Mootien, C, Beevers, D, Thompson, C, Lomas, M, Harris, D, Sharples, N, Gilbert, D, Cook, P, Allely, C, Mukherjee, R, Ajibade, D, Chen, Y, Watson, N, Maguire, D, Thompson, J, Vadera, S, Smith, E, Coscia, I, Cooper, E, Bown, K, Blezard, E, Clarke, A, Ahmed, A, Alkashti, F, Sharifi, S, Mtonga, V, Plahe, G, James, C, Goodhead, I, Elgamodi, H, Krpetic, Z, Broadhurst, H, Kolawole, H, Ferry, N, Bakoji, I, Nduka, I, Arrigo, R, Namvar, S, Homer, J, Mandal, J, Wood, M, Hutchinson, S, Mondal, D, Jackman, J, Sarwar, J, Howard, D, Kenney, L, Yuen, J, Roddy, J, Widdowson, M, Maloney yorganci, K, Coen, S, McMurty, L, Barnes, K, Magennis, C, Lineshah, L, Clarry, L, Long, T, Wood, A, Chrimes, L, Byrne, A, Stout, L, Stephens, M, Hashmi, F, Barton, L, Elliott, A, Smith, J, Irwin, L, Loi, M, O'Donnell, M, Sales, N, Gray, A, Kimamo, M, Fenton, A, Yousif, M, Alani, O, Hassunu Saleh, M, Takruri, H, Linge, N, Usman, N, Griffiths, M, Alam, M, Xu, O, Willis, A, Blaker, L, Gonen, P, Syme, R, Rafati, P, Abubakar, R, Ji, Y, Sam, R, Robinson, N, O'Chiobi, R, Kutar, M, Al Ben Jasim, S, Fitton, S, Talbot, R, Wilkie, I, Gowda, S, Fletcher, G, Webb, S, Halstead, T, Beech, D, Makarfi, U, Wu, Y, Brettle, A, Ure, C, Sant, A, Moftakhar, Z, Naeem, Z, Clark, A, Brown, T, Preece, S, Prasetyo, A, Benvenuto, C, Mariani, S, Murray, J, Ochoche, G, Lord, J, Bell, R, Shukla, K, Holderbaum, W, Theodoridis, T, Wei, G, Ritchie, M, Asdullah, M, Hazdifar, H, Taylor, T, Parnell, S, Yates, K, and Ireland, TJ
- Abstract
Welcome to the Book of Abstracts for the 2022 SPARC conference. Our conference is called “Moving \ud Forwards” reflecting our re-emergence from the pandemic and our desire to reconnect our PGR \ud community, in celebration of their research. PGRs have continued with their research endeavours \ud despite many challenges, and their ongoing successes are underpinned by the support and guidance \ud of dedicated supervisors and the Doctoral School Team. To recognise supervision excellence we will \ud be awarding our annual Supervisor of the Year prizes, based on the wonderful nominations received \ud from their PGR students.\ud Once again, we have received a tremendous contribution from our postgraduate research community; \ud with over 60 presenters, 12 Three-Minute Thesis finalists, and 20 poster presentations, the conference \ud showcases our extraordinarily vibrant, inclusive, and resilient PGR community at Salford. This year \ud there will be prizes to be won for ‘best in conference’ presentations, in addition to the winners from \ud each parallel session. Audience members too could be in for a treat, with judges handing out spot \ud prizes for the best questions asked, so don’t miss the opportunity to put your hand up. \ud These abstracts provide a taster of the diverse and impactful research in progress and provide \ud delegates with a reference point for networking and initiating critical debate. Take advantage of the \ud hybrid format: in online sessions by posting a comment or by messaging an author to say “Hello”, or \ud by initiating break time discussions about the amazing research you’ve seen if you are with us in \ud person. Who knows what might result from your conversation? With such wide-ranging topics being \ud showcased, we encourage you to take up this great opportunity to engage with researchers working \ud in different subject areas from your own. As recent events have shown, researchers need to \ud collaborate to meet global challenges. Interdisciplinary and international working is increasingly \ud recognised and rewarded by all major research funders. We do hope, therefore, that you will take this \ud opportunity to initiate interdisciplinary conversations with other researchers. A question or comment \ud from a different perspective can shed new light on a project and could lead to exciting collaborations, \ud and that is what SPARC is all about. \ud SPARC is part of a programme of personal and professional development opportunities offered to all \ud postgraduate researchers at Salford. More information about this programme is available on our \ud website: Doctoral School | University of Salford. Registered Salford students can access full details on \ud the Doctoral School hub: Doctoral School Hub - Home (sharepoint.com) You can follow us on Twitter \ud @SalfordPGRs and please use the #SPARC2022 to share your conference experience.\ud We particularly welcome taught students from our undergraduate and master’s programmes as \ud audience members. We hope you enjoy the presentations on offer and that they inspire you to pursue \ud your own research career. If you would like more information about studying for a PhD here at the \ud University of Salford, your lecturers can advise, or you can contact the relevant PGR Support Officer; \ud their details can be found at Doctoral School | University of Salford. \ud We wish you a rich and rewarding conference experience.
17. Decreased membrane fluidity and altered susceptibility to peroxidation and lipid composition in overweight and obese female erythrocytes
- Author
-
Roberta Cazzola, Mariangela Rondanelli, Samantha Russo-Volpe, Ettore Ferrari, and Benvenuto Cestaro
- Subjects
fluorescence anisotropy ,oxidative stress ,essential fatty acids ,membrane cholesterol ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 - Abstract
The increased generation of reactive oxygen species that occurs in the condition of obesity may be responsible for oxidative injury to erythrocyte membranes, which could lead to a decrease in tissue oxygenation. Therefore, we have looked into the effects of obesity on both indexes of oxidative damage and physical-chemical properties of erythrocyte membranes in 50 overweight or obese [25 < body mass index (BMI) < 33], normotensive, nondiabetic women and 50 age-matched lean healthy women (BMI < 25). In the obese group compared with the lean group, we found that a) the onset of free radical-induced erythrocyte hemolysis and the ratio between reduced and oxidized glutathione were reduced, whereas the rate of free radical-induced damage increased; b) the n-3 fatty acid and the phospholipid contents decreased; c) the ratio between cholesterol and phospholipids increased; and d) the membrane fluidity decreased.These findings suggest an impairment of erythrocyte membrane physical-chemical properties in overweight and obese people as a consequence of oxidative injury that might be part of a pathogenetic mechanism responsible for obesity-related pathologies such as atherosclerosis and hypertension.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. CALIDAD DE VIDA EN MUJERES CON SÍNDROME DE OVARIO POLIQUÍSTICO
- Author
-
Andrea Aguirre M., Giovanna Benvenuto C., and Maria Teresa Urrutia S.
- Subjects
Síndrome de ovario poliquístico ,calidad de vida ,Polycystic ovary syndrome ,quality of life ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
El síndrome de ovario poliquístico (SOP) afecta entre un 5-10% de las mujeres en edad reproductiva y constituye la endocrinopatía más frecuente de la población adolescente de nuestro país. Su diversa sintomatología puede provocar un impacto en la calidad de vida de las mujeres, lo que amenaza la identidad femenina en ellas. Esta revisión bibliográfica tiene como objetivo conocer de qué manera el SOP afecta la calidad de vida de las mujeres. La literatura señala que al comparar la calidad de vida entre mujeres sanas y con SOP, éstas últimas presentan un deterioro en diversos dominios estudiados con instrumentos generales. Al ser evaluada la calidad de vida de mujeres con SOP, por medio de un instrumento específico para dicha patología, los dominios más afectados fueron: el área de problemas menstruales, emociones y vello corporal. Investigaciones que evalúan el efecto de la sintomatología del SOP por separado en la calidad de vida de las mujeres señalan igualmente un impacto negativo. Se concluye en base a esta revisión que el SOP afecta la calidad de vida en sus diferentes dimensiones, por lo que se postula la importancia de evaluar este parámetro en las mujeres afectadas y la necesidad de que los profesionales de la salud lo consideren al momento de evaluar la intervención realizadaPolycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) has a prevalence of 5-10% in women of reproductive age, and constitutes the most frequent endocrine disease among teenagers in our country. Its very diverse clinical manifestations can impact women's quality of life, which can also be responsible of jeopardizing their female identity. The objective of this study is to know how polycystic ovary syndrome affects quality of life among women. In comparison to normal women, literature suggests that the ones suffering from PQOS appear to have a degree of deterioration in different domains studied with general instruments. The quality of life of women having PQOS was evaluated, using a specific instrument for this pathology. The domains found to be most affected were: menstrual problems, emotional aspects and body hair. Other investigations which separately evaluate clinical manifestations of PQOS from quality of life equally suggest a negative impact. Based on this study, it is concluded that PCOS affects women's quality of life in a multidimensional way, therefore its importance of evaluating this parameter in affected women. It also outlines the need of health professionals to consider this at the time of evaluating a given intervention
- Published
- 2005
19. Correction to: Laparoscopic right hemicolectomy: the SICE (Società Italiana di Chirurgia Endoscopica e Nuove Tecnologie) network prospectivetrial on 1225 cases comparing intra corporeal versus extra corporeal ileo‑colic side‑to‑side anastomosis (Surgical Endoscopy, (2019), 10.1007/s00464-019-07255-2)
- Author
-
M. Sorrentino, A. Alo, G. L. Canu, F. Monari, A. G. Marrosu, E. Soligo, Wanda Petz, A. Gattolin, R. Vicentini, S. Razzi, M. Zago, S. Neri, A. Pisani Ceretti, D. Apa, F. Gatti, A. Donini, F. Medas, D. Cassetti, S. Rubino, R. Lombardi, G. D. DePalma, Alberto Arezzo, G. Soliani, P. Checcacci, G. Concone, Emanuele Botteri, F. Scognamillo, Ferdinando Agresta, Pierluigi Marini, S. Gelati, Luigi Boni, A. Coratti, Andrea Picchetto, G. Guerriero, M. Calgaro, Francesca Pecchini, A. Contine, Andrea Valeri, N. DeManzini, M. Clementi, A. Balani, F. Fidanza, R. Galleano, Carlo Bergamini, A. Brescia, G. Arcuri, Elio Jovine, E. Rosso, A. Oldani, E. Artioli, Nereo Vettoretto, Giuseppe Navarra, G. Sarro, E. Restini, Chiara Morotti, S. Giannessi, F. DeAngelis, M. Degiuli, G. Talamo, G. Alemanno, L. Cafagna, P. Cumbo, V. Violi, S. Targa, Irnerio Angelo Muttillo, A. Martino, M. DeLuca, Elisa Cassinotti, Alessandro Puzziello, S. Sala, Riccardo Rosati, E. Erdas, R. Petri, A. Deserra, A. Gioffre, G. Viola, E. Stratta, Mario Guerrieri, E. Minciotti, Mauro Podda, Giuseppe Spinoglio, F. Borghi, Micaela Piccoli, C. DeNisco, P. Carcoforo, D. Delogu, Giuseppe Resta, P. Corleone, D. Pennisi, Gianfranco Silecchia, E. Opocher, A. Taddei, A. Budassi, Paolo Delrio, A. Meloni, Marco E. Allaix, A. Ambrosi, H. Impellizzeri, N. Portolani, L. Guerriero, G. Ercolani, A. Guariniello, M. Antoniutti, M. Cesari, A. P. Luzzi, M. Izzo, M. Longoni, R. Mazza, C. Benvenuto, S. Gobbi, P. G. Calo, C. Feo, Antonino Agrusa, L. Covotta, L. Presenti, V. Adamo, Gian Luca Baiocchi, E. Osenda, R. Ottonello, Giancarlo D'Ambrosio, F. Roviello, V. Grammatico, G. Moretto, L. Zampino, Valerio Caracino, Giovanni Ferrari, D. Rega, V. Robustelli, Diego Cuccurullo, F. Vasta, Ugo Elmore, R. Campagnacci, Gianfranco Cocorullo, O. Ghazouani, G. Ricci, S. Berti, F. Colombo, Alberto Sartori, S. Scabini, S. Mazzoccato, B. Pirrera, A. Altamura, N. Tartaglia, E. Romairone, G. Baldazzi, Marco Catarci, G. Garulli, Lorenzo Casali, S. Testa, R. Brachet Contul, M. Basti, U. Rivolta, D. Pertile, M. Pavanello, M. Pisano, Marco Milone, A. Verzelli, P. Ubiali, L. Solaini, M. Coppola, G Anania, Massimo Carlini, F. Corcione, P. DePaolis, P. Ciano, M. Santarelli, V. Panebianco, Nicola Perrotta, R. Sechi, M. Rigamonti, G. Lezoche, L. Fabris, C. Lirusso, D. Foschi, G. Canova, P. Soliani, Roberta Gelmini, Stefano Olmi, A. Lucchi, Giorgia Valpiani, L. Pellegrino, Anania, G., Agresta, F., Artioli, E., Rubino, S., Resta, G., Vettoretto, N., Petz, W. L., Bergamini, C., Arezzo, A., Valpiani, G., Morotti, C., Silecchia, G., Adamo, V., Agrusa, A., Alemanno, G., Allaix, M. E., Alo, A., Altamura, A., Ambrosi, A., Antoniutti, M., Apa, D., Arcuri, G., Baiocchi, G. L., Balani, A., Baldazzi, G., Basti, M., Benvenuto, C., Berti, S., Boni, L., Borghi, F., Botteri, E., Brachet Contul, R., Brescia, A., Budassi, A., Cafagna, L., Calgaro, M., Calo, P. G., Campagnacci, R., Canova, G., Canu, G. L., Caracino, V., Carcoforo, P., Carlini, M., Casali, L., Cassetti, D., Cassinotti, E., Catarci, M., Cesari, M., Checcacci, P., Ciano, P., Clementi, M., Cocorullo, G., Colombo, F., Concone, G., Contine, A., Coppola, M., Coratti, A., Corcione, F., Corleone, P., Covotta, L., Cuccurullo, D., Cumbo, P., D'Ambrosio, G., Deangelis, F., Deluca, M., Demanzini, N., Denisco, C., Depalma, G. D., Depaolis, P., Degiuli, M., Delogu, D., Delrio, P., Deserra, A., Donini, A., Elmore, U., Ercolani, G., Erdas, E., Fabris, L., Ferrari, G., Feo, C., Fidanza, F., Foschi, D., Galleano, R., Garulli, G., Gatti, F., Gattolin, A., Gelati, S., Gelmini, R., Ghazouani, O., Gioffre, A., Gobbi, S., Grammatico, V., Guariniello, A., Giannessi, S., Guerrieri, M., Guerriero, L., Guerriero, G., Impellizzeri, H., Izzo, M., Jovine, E., Lezoche, G., Lirusso, C., Lombardi, R., Longoni, M., Lucchi, A., Luzzi, A. P., Marini, P., Marrosu, A. G., Martino, A., Mazza, R., Mazzoccato, S., Medas, F., Meloni, A., Milone, M., Minciotti, E., Monari, F., Moretto, G., Muttillo, I. A., Navarra, G., Neri, S., Oldani, A., Olmi, S., Opocher, E., Osenda, E., Ottonello, R., Panebianco, V., Pavanello, M., Pecchini, F., Pellegrino, L., Pennisi, D., Perrotta, N., Pertile, D., Petri, R., Picchetto, A., Piccoli, M., Pirrera, B., Pisani Ceretti, A., Pisano, M., Podda, M., Portolani, N., Presenti, L., Puzziello, A., Razzi, S., Rega, D., Restini, E., Ricci, G., Rigamonti, M., Rivolta, U., Robustelli, V., Romairone, E., Rosati, R., Rosso, E., Roviello, F., Sala, S., Santarelli, M., Sarro, G., Sartori, A., Scabini, S., Scognamillo, F., Sechi, R., Solaini, L., Soliani, G., Soliani, P., Soligo, E., Sorrentino, M., Spinoglio, G., Stratta, E., Taddei, A., Talamo, G., Targa, S., Tartaglia, N., Testa, S., Ubiali, P., Valeri, A., Vasta, F., Verzelli, A., Vicentini, R., Viola, G., Violi, V., Zago, M., and Zampino, L.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,colon cancer right hemcolectomy ,business.industry ,medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Side to side anastomosis ,Surgical endoscopy ,Laparoscopic right hemicolectomy ,NO ,LS7_4 - Abstract
Due to an error in production the members of SICE CoDIG (Colon Dx Italian Group) listed in the Acknowledgments were not tagged correctly as authors in the XML of this article. This listing is presented again here:.
- Published
- 2019
20. Microhabitat use by the white-clawed crayfish in a Tuscan stream
- Author
-
Maria Ilhéu, Chiara Benvenuto, Francesca Gherardi, Benvenuto, C., Gherardi, F., and Ilhéu, M.
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Extinction ,biology ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Biodiversity ,Crayfish ,biology.organism_classification ,Substrate (marine biology) ,Austropotamobius pallipes ,Competition (biology) ,Fishery ,Species of concern ,Habitat ,freshwater streams ,biodiversity conservation ,education ,CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS ,AUSTROPOTAMOBIUS-PALLIPES ,PROCAMBARUS-CLARKII ,NATIVE CRAYFISH ,FOOD SELECTION ,HABITAT USE ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Habitat modification, pollution, overfishing, poaching, competition from nonindigenous species, and diseases have led to the extinction in Europe of many populations of indigenous crayfish. Under the rationale that any programme of reintroduction should be preceded by a thorough understanding of habitat requirements of the species of concern, we studied the microhabitat use of an Austropotamobius pallipes population in Tuscany, central Italy. Microhabitat use was assessed for water depth, current velocity, substrate, percentages of boulders, underwater tree roots, and in-stream vegetation cover. Results show that A. pallipes’ habitat use is size-partitioned. Smaller individuals mostly occupy stream edges in shallow waters with submerged roots, whereas larger individuals use deeper waters, often associated with boulders. Crayfish spatial distribution is restricted mostly to the microhabitats characterised by extensive cover and slow current velocity. The study highlights the importance of habitat heterogeneity and cover elements for the protection of this indigenous species.
- Published
- 2008
21. Using environmental DNA metabarcoding to monitor fish biodiversity and assess anthropogenic barrier impacts on the river Mersey, UK
- Author
-
Perkins, JC, McDevitt, A, Coscia, I, Benvenuto, C, and Sales, NG
- Abstract
Freshwater habitats, despite their limited volume, support almost 10% of global biodiversity and are facing increased anthropogenic threats worldwide. Dams and weirs, for example, create habitat fragmentation, changing water flow and water levels, blocking crucial nutrients passing through river systems, and, above all, preventing crucial movements and migrations of aquatic organisms. Fish passes alleviate the problem, increasing river connectivity, but there is an evident need for a better understanding of their efficiency for fish movements and migration. Monitoring aquatic systems is notoriously difficult and traditional methods such as electrofishing and trapping can be invasive, costly and not always effective. The use of a novel molecular approach, environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding, is now revolutionising biomonitoring. In this thesis, data collected from non-invasive monitoring techniques (camera recordings and eDNA metabarcoding) were combined to monitor Atlantic salmon migration at the Woolston weir fish pass, on the river Mersey, UK. In addition, a fine-scale spatial-temporal sampling approach was employed to investigate changes in fish communities below and above two weirs, from the Mersey estuary to the upper Mersey, in autumn and spring. Atlantic salmon was detected above and below Woolston weir, showing a good degree of connectivity and demonstrating the power of eDNA metabarcoding in detecting even few individuals (as revealed from the camera data). In total, 30 species were detected, including all main UK migratory species except for shad. Temporal variation was found in the detected communities, in line with expectations of different species’ migratory patterns. No correlation was found between barriers and community composition along the river, although lower species richness was detected at sites directly above each weir. Highest species richness was found at sampling sites at the geographical border of the lower and upper estuary, possibly due to tidal and river flow combination, suggesting that these types of environments could be optimal sampling areas to monitor the whole river biodiversity at once. Environmental parameters (pH, oxygen, salinity and temperature) were also integrated in the analyses. For example, the salmonid species showed a positive relationship with oxygen, and are known to require well oxygenated water to spawn. Overall, this work reinforces the potential of eDNA metabarcoding for ongoing and future biomonitoring efforts of fish communities (including migratory species) in a recovering river.
22. Biological and ecological processes during the establishment of a marine invasion : the Siganus rabbitfishes from the Red Sea to the coastal areas of Cyrenaica, Libya
- Author
-
Abdulghani, AAH, Mariani, S, and Benvenuto, C
- Abstract
The rabbitfishes Siganus luridus and S. rivulatus are two Lessepsian species that have invaded a large part of the Mediterranean Sea and offer a unique opportunity to examine ecological and morphological variation during the process of invasion and establishment.\ud Using and integrated geometric morphometric and stable isotope approach we investigated ecological adaptation in these two species from native into novel Southern Mediterranean habitats. A total of 490 fish were collected over two years (2014 and 2015), which showed a greater overlap in morphological variation in the novel habitat (Mediterranean Sea) compared to the native Red Sea. On the other hand, stable isotopes indicated that the invading populations segregated trophic niches more starkly than in the native habitat.\ud The introduction of genetic markers to infer population expansion uncovered a more marked decrease in genetic variation in S. luridus compared to S. rivulatus, during the process of invasion. Collectively, data contribute to reconstruct the jigsaw puzzle underpinning the success and ecological diversification of these coastal species, raising considerations for their management and that of the environment that changes around them.
23. Comparative analysis of wild and long term captive bred Partula snails using morphometrics and population data
- Author
-
Trickett, E, Antwis, RE, and Benvenuto, C
- Abstract
Partula snails are one genus of the Partulidae family of air breathing, land snails that are endemic to the Pacific Islands. Over 100 partulid species are recognised with over half these species known to have existed and endemic to the Society Islands (within the Pacific islands). It is thought that 56 of these endemic Partula species are now extinct on the Society Islands with the remaining species critically endangered. This devastating extinction is mainly the result of the introduced carnivorous rosy wolf snail, Euglandina rosea in 1974. The most imposing threat today is the introduced New Guinea flatworm, Platydemus manokwari. To save the remaining Partula species from extinction, specimens have been collected since 1962 to start a captive breeding programme coordinated by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL). Over 15 species are kept in captivity currently. Several reintroductions have taken place with over 10,000 snails being reintroduced to the islands with varying levels of success. Partula have been in captivity now for over 60 years, with many of the species founded with small numbers. There is concern about how this species may be adapting morphologically to their captive environment as they are known to be sensitive to environmental changes. This study focused on ten species of Partula with multiple generations in captivity, which made it possible to compare the morphology of wild to captive-bred specimens. The study found that seven of the ten species displayed no significant morphological changes during long-term captivity (P. clara, P. garrettii, P. hebe bella, P. otaheitana, P. rosea, P. suturalis strigosa and P. varia). Three species did show significant morphological changes at various stages throughout captivity. The morphological changes that P. faba displayed were likely adaptations to its captive environment. Partula faba did not survive in captivity as a result of the low genetic diversity within the captive population due to the depleted wild population. Partula affinis appears to have gradually changed morphologically to presumably adapt to the captive environment. Partula tohievana displayed morphological changes between two generations only, suggesting a local mutation event caused by low genetic diversity. This species should be monitored in captivity as it may suffer a similar fate to P. faba and face extinction in captivity. Overall, long-term captivity does not appear to have negatively affected the morphology of Partula and therefore suggests positive outcomes for future reintroductions.
24. Percutaneous retrieval of a subcutaneous contraceptive device migrated in pulmonary circulation.
- Author
-
Cappannoli L, Pollio Benvenuto C, Oliva C, de Dominicis A, Trani C, and Burzotta F
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Social regulation of reproduction: control or signal?
- Author
-
Benvenuto C and Lorenzi MC
- Abstract
Traditionally, dominant breeders have been considered to be able to control the reproduction of other individuals in multimember groups that have high variance in reproductive success/reproductive skew (e.g., forced sterility/coercion of conspecifics in eusocial animals; sex-change suppression in sequential hermaphrodites). These actions are typically presented as active impositions by reproductively dominant individuals. However, how can individuals regulate the reproductive physiology of others? Alternatively, all contestants make reproductive decisions, and less successful individuals self-downregulate reproduction in the presence of dominant breeders. Shifting perspective from a top-down manipulation to a broader view, which includes all contenders, and using a multitaxon approach, we propose a unifying framework for the resolution of reproductive skew conflicts based on signalling rather than control, along a continuum of levels of strategic regulation of reproduction., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Craniotomy, a Love Story.
- Author
-
Benvenuto C
- Subjects
- Craniotomy
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Switches, stability and reversals in the evolutionary history of sexual systems in fish.
- Author
-
Pla S, Benvenuto C, Capellini I, and Piferrer F
- Subjects
- Animals, Bayes Theorem, Fishes genetics, Male, Phylogeny, Biological Evolution, Disorders of Sex Development
- Abstract
Sexual systems are highly diverse and have profound consequences for population dynamics and resilience. Yet, little is known about how they evolved. Using phylogenetic Bayesian modelling and a sample of 4614 species, we show that gonochorism is the likely ancestral condition in teleost fish. While all hermaphroditic forms revert quickly to gonochorism, protogyny and simultaneous hermaphroditism are evolutionarily more stable than protandry. In line with theoretical expectations, simultaneous hermaphroditism does not evolve directly from gonochorism but can evolve slowly from sequential hermaphroditism, particularly protandry. We find support for the predictions from life history theory that protogynous, but not protandrous, species live longer than gonochoristic species and invest the least in male gonad mass. The distribution of teleosts' sexual systems on the tree of life does not seem to reflect just adaptive predictions, suggesting that adaptations alone may not fully explain why some sexual forms evolve in some taxa but not others (Williams' paradox). We propose that future studies should incorporate mating systems, spawning behaviours, and the diversity of sex determining mechanisms. Some of the latter might constrain the evolution of hermaphroditism, while the non-duality of the embryological origin of teleost gonads might explain why protogyny predominates over protandry in teleosts., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Fungal microbiomes are determined by host phylogeny and exhibit widespread associations with the bacterial microbiome.
- Author
-
Harrison XA, McDevitt AD, Dunn JC, Griffiths SM, Benvenuto C, Birtles R, Boubli JP, Bown K, Bridson C, Brooks DR, Browett SS, Carden RF, Chantrey J, Clever F, Coscia I, Edwards KL, Ferry N, Goodhead I, Highlands A, Hopper J, Jackson J, Jehle R, da Cruz Kaizer M, King T, Lea JMD, Lenka JL, McCubbin A, McKenzie J, de Moraes BLC, O'Meara DB, Pescod P, Preziosi RF, Rowntree JK, Shultz S, Silk MJ, Stockdale JE, Symondson WOC, de la Pena MV, Walker SL, Wood MD, and Antwis RE
- Subjects
- Animals, Bacteria genetics, Host Microbial Interactions, Phylogeny, Microbiota, Mycobiome
- Abstract
Interactions between hosts and their resident microbial communities are a fundamental component of fitness for both agents. Though recent research has highlighted the importance of interactions between animals and their bacterial communities, comparative evidence for fungi is lacking, especially in natural populations. Using data from 49 species, we present novel evidence of strong covariation between fungal and bacterial communities across the host phylogeny, indicative of recruitment by hosts for specific suites of microbes. Using co-occurrence networks, we demonstrate marked variation across host taxonomy in patterns of covariation between bacterial and fungal abundances. Host phylogeny drives differences in the overall richness of bacterial and fungal communities, but the effect of diet on richness was only evident in the mammalian gut microbiome. Sample type, tissue storage and DNA extraction method also affected bacterial and fungal community composition, and future studies would benefit from standardized approaches to sample processing. Collectively these data indicate fungal microbiomes may play a key role in host fitness and suggest an urgent need to study multiple agents of the animal microbiome to accurately determine the strength and ecological significance of host-microbe interactions.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A phylogenetic comparative analysis on the evolution of sequential hermaphroditism in seabreams (Teleostei: Sparidae).
- Author
-
Pla S, Benvenuto C, Capellini I, and Piferrer F
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, Body Size, Female, Male, Models, Biological, Phylogeny, Reproduction, Spermatogenesis, Sea Bream classification, Sea Bream growth & development, Sex Determination Processes, Spermatozoa physiology
- Abstract
The Sparids are an ideal group of fishes in which to study the evolution of sexual systems since they exhibit a great sexual diversity, from gonochorism (separate sexes) to protandrous (male-first) and protogynous (female-first) sequential hermaphroditism (sex change). According to the size-advantage model (SAM), selection should favour sex change when the second sex achieves greater reproductive success at a larger body size than the first sex. Using phylogenetic comparative methods and a sample of 68 sparid species, we show that protogyny and protandry evolve from gonochorism but evolutionary transitions between these two forms of sequential hermaphroditism are unlikely to happen. Using male gonadosomatic index (GSI) as a measure of investment in gametes and proxy for sperm competition, we find that, while gonochoristic and protogynous species support the predictions of SAM, protandrous species do not, as they exhibit higher GSI values than expected even after considering mating systems and spawning modes. We suggest that small males of protandrous species have to invest disproportionally more in sperm production than predicted not only when spawning in aggregations, with high levels of sperm competition, but also when spawning in pairs due to the need to fertilize highly fecund females, much larger than themselves. We propose that this compensatory mechanism, together with Bateman's principles in sequential hermaphrodites, should be formally incorporated in the SAM.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Environmental DNA metabarcoding as an effective and rapid tool for fish monitoring in canals.
- Author
-
McDevitt AD, Sales NG, Browett SS, Sparnenn AO, Mariani S, Wangensteen OS, Coscia I, and Benvenuto C
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, DNA genetics, Ecosystem, England, Fishes classification, Fishes genetics, Fresh Water, Temperature, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Environmental Monitoring methods, Fishes physiology
- Abstract
We focus on a case study along an English canal comparing environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding with two types of electrofishing techniques (wade-and-reach and boom-boat). In addition to corroborating data obtained by electrofishing, eDNA provided a wider snapshot of fish assemblages. Given the semi-lotic nature of canals, we encourage the use of eDNA as a fast and cost-effective tool to detect and monitor whole fish communities., (© 2019 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Metabarcoding of shrimp stomach content: Harnessing a natural sampler for fish biodiversity monitoring.
- Author
-
Siegenthaler A, Wangensteen OS, Soto AZ, Benvenuto C, Corrigan L, and Mariani S
- Subjects
- Animals, Electron Transport Complex IV, Estuaries, Europe, Feeding Behavior, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, RNA, Ribosomal genetics, Biodiversity, Crangonidae physiology, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic methods, Fishes classification, Fishes genetics, Gastrointestinal Contents, Metagenomics methods
- Abstract
Given their positioning and biological productivity, estuaries have long represented key providers of ecosystem services and consequently remain under remarkable pressure from numerous forms of anthropogenic impact. The monitoring of fish communities in space and time is one of the most widespread and established approaches to assess the ecological status of estuaries and other coastal habitats, but traditional fish surveys are invasive, costly, labour intensive and highly selective. Recently, the application of metabarcoding techniques, on either sediment or aqueous environmental DNA, has rapidly gained popularity. Here, we evaluate the application of a novel, high-throughput DNA-based monitoring tool to assess fish diversity, based on the analysis of the gut contents of a generalist predator/scavenger, the European brown shrimp, Crangon crangon. Sediment and shrimp samples were collected from eight European estuaries, and DNA metabarcoding (using both 12S and COI markers) was carried out to infer fish assemblage composition. We detected 32 teleost species (16 and 20, for 12S and COI, respectively). Twice as many species were recovered using metabarcoding than by traditional net surveys. By comparing and interweaving trophic, environmental DNA and traditional survey-based techniques, we show that the DNA-assisted gut content analysis of a ubiquitous, easily accessible, generalist species may serve as a powerful, rapid and cost-effective tool for large-scale, routine estuarine biodiversity monitoring., (© 2018 The Authors. Molecular Ecology Resources Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. DNA metabarcoding unveils multiscale trophic variation in a widespread coastal opportunist.
- Author
-
Siegenthaler A, Wangensteen OS, Benvenuto C, Campos J, and Mariani S
- Subjects
- Amphipoda genetics, Amphipoda physiology, Animals, Brachyura chemistry, DNA genetics, Electron Transport Complex IV genetics, Estuaries, Feeding Behavior, Fishes, Gastrointestinal Contents chemistry, Phylogeography, Brachyura physiology, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Ecology, Environmental Monitoring
- Abstract
A thorough understanding of ecological networks relies on comprehensive information on trophic relationships among species. Since unpicking the diet of many organisms is unattainable using traditional morphology-based approaches, the application of high-throughput sequencing methods represents a rapid and powerful way forward. Here, we assessed the application of DNA metabarcoding with nearly universal primers for the mitochondrial marker cytochrome c oxidase I in defining the trophic ecology of adult brown shrimp, Crangon crangon, in six European estuaries. The exact trophic role of this abundant and widespread coastal benthic species is somewhat controversial, while information on geographical variation remains scant. Results revealed a highly opportunistic behaviour. Shrimp stomach contents contained hundreds of taxa (>1,000 molecular operational taxonomic units), of which 291 were identified as distinct species, belonging to 35 phyla. Only twenty ascertained species had a mean relative abundance of more than 0.5%. Predominant species included other abundant coastal and estuarine taxa, including the shore crab Carcinus maenas and the amphipod Corophium volutator. Jacobs' selectivity index estimates based on DNA extracted from both shrimp stomachs and sediment samples were used to assess the shrimp's trophic niche indicating a generalist diet, dominated by crustaceans, polychaetes and fish. Spatial variation in diet composition, at regional and local scales, confirmed the highly flexible nature of this trophic opportunist. Furthermore, the detection of a prevalent, possibly endoparasitic fungus (Purpureocillium lilacinum) in the shrimp's stomach demonstrates the wide range of questions that can be addressed using metabarcoding, towards a more robust reconstruction of ecological networks., (© 2018 The Authors. Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Consequences of sex change for effective population size.
- Author
-
Waples RS, Mariani S, and Benvenuto C
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Genetic Fitness, Male, Models, Biological, Hermaphroditic Organisms physiology, Population Density, Sex Determination Processes, Sex Ratio
- Abstract
Sequential hermaphroditism, where males change to females (protandry) or the reverse (protogyny), is widespread in animals and plants, and can be an evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) if fecundity rises faster with age in the second sex. Sequential hermaphrodites also generally have sex ratios skewed towards the initial sex, and standard theory based on fixed sexes indicates that this should reduce effective population size ( N
e ) and increase the deleterious effects of genetic drift. We show that despite having skewed sex ratios, populations that change sex at the ESS age do not have reduced Ne compared with fixed-sex populations with an even sex ratio. This implies that the ability of individuals to operate as both male and female allows the population to avoid some evolutionary constraints imposed by fixed sexes. Furthermore, Ne would be maximized if sex change occurred at a different (generally earlier) age than is selected for at the individual level, which suggests a potential conflict between individual and group selection. We also develop a novel method to quantify the strength of selection for sex reversal.- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Background matching in the brown shrimp Crangon crangon: adaptive camouflage and behavioural-plasticity.
- Author
-
Siegenthaler A, Mastin A, Dufaut C, Mondal D, and Benvenuto C
- Subjects
- Animals, Pigmentation, Seafood, Adaptation, Biological physiology, Behavior, Animal physiology, Ecosystem, Penaeidae physiology
- Abstract
A combination of burrowing behaviour and very efficient background matching makes the brown shrimp Crangon crangon almost invisible to potential predators and prey. This raises questions on how shrimp succeed in concealing themselves in the heterogeneous and dynamic estuarine habitats they inhabit and what type of environmental variables and behavioural factors affect their colour change abilities. Using a series of behavioural experiments, we show that the brown shrimp is capable of repeated fast colour adaptations (20% change in dark pigment cover within one hour) and that its background matching ability is mainly influenced by illumination and sediment colour. Novel insights are provided on the occurrence of non-adaptive (possibly stress) responses to background changes after long-time exposure to a constant background colour or during unfavourable conditions for burying. Shrimp showed high levels of intra- and inter-individual variation, demonstrating a complex balance between behavioural-plasticity and environmental adaptation. As such, the study of crustacean colour changes represents a valuable opportunity to investigate colour adaptations in dynamic habitats and can help us to identify the mayor environmental and behavioural factors influencing the evolution of animal background matching.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Ecological and evolutionary consequences of alternative sex-change pathways in fish.
- Author
-
Benvenuto C, Coscia I, Chopelet J, Sala-Bozano M, and Mariani S
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Genetic Variation, Genotype, Male, Biological Evolution, Ecology, Fishes genetics, Sexual Behavior, Animal
- Abstract
Sequentially hermaphroditic fish change sex from male to female (protandry) or vice versa (protogyny), increasing their fitness by becoming highly fecund females or large dominant males, respectively. These life-history strategies present different social organizations and reproductive modes, from near-random mating in protandry, to aggregate- and harem-spawning in protogyny. Using a combination of theoretical and molecular approaches, we compared variance in reproductive success (V
k *) and effective population sizes (Ne ) in several species of sex-changing fish. We observed that, regardless of the direction of sex change, individuals conform to the same overall strategy, producing more offspring and exhibiting greater Vk * in the second sex. However, protogynous species show greater Vk *, especially pronounced in haremic species, resulting in an overall reduction of Ne compared to protandrous species. Collectively and independently, our results demonstrate that the direction of sex change is a pivotal variable in predicting demographic changes and resilience in sex-changing fish, many of which sustain highly valued and vulnerable fisheries worldwide.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Quantifying pigment cover to assess variation in animal colouration.
- Author
-
Siegenthaler A, Mondal D, and Benvenuto C
- Abstract
The study of animal colouration addresses fundamental and applied aspects relevant to a wide range of fields, including behavioural ecology, environmental adaptation and visual ecology. Although a variety of methods are available to measure animal colours, only few focus on chromatophores (specialized cells containing pigments) and pigment migration. Here, we illustrate a freely available and user-friendly method to quantify pigment cover (PiC) with high precision and low effort using digital images, where the foreground (i.e. pigments in chromatophores) can be detected and separated from the background. Images of the brown shrimp, Crangon crangon , were used to compare PiC with the traditional Chromatophore Index (CI). Results indicate that PiC outcompetes CI for pigment detection and transparency measures in terms of speed, accuracy and precision. The proposed methodology provides researchers with a useful tool to answer essential physiological, behavioural and evolutionary questions on animal colouration in a wide range of species., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The ART of mating: alternative reproductive tactics and mating success in a nest-guarding fish.
- Author
-
Mascolino S, Benvenuto C, Gubili C, Sacchi C, Boufana B, and Mariani S
- Subjects
- Animals, Clutch Size, Female, Genetic Markers, Male, Nesting Behavior, Perciformes physiology, Reproduction, Sexual Behavior, Animal
- Abstract
Behavioural observations in the field of male Mediterranean damselfish Chromis chromis were combined with molecular analyses, using bi-parentally and maternally inherited markers, to investigate reproductive success patterns of alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) in terms of number of eggs sired and number of females contributing to each nest. Cuckoldry was observed in every nest sampled, with at least two and up to seven sneaker males per nest. The nesting male, however, always significantly fertilized the greater number of eggs (on average 49%) in each clutch, whereas each sneaker fertilized around 7% of the clutch. The average number of females whose eggs were fertilized by nesting males was 6·76 (range 2-13), while each sneaker on average fertilized the eggs of 1·74 (range 1-8) females. Using this sibship reconstruction, some of the factors involved in the regulation of the dynamic equilibrium of reproductive success were investigated between the two ARTs shown by C. chromis males. Results show that the sneakers' reproductive success was positively linked to egg clutch size; the density of individuals in the nesting area negatively affected the size of egg clutches; the rate of defence behaviours performed by nesting males negatively influenced the number of females contributing to each nest., (© 2016 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Long waiting lists and health care spending The example of cholecystectomy.
- Author
-
Palmisano S, Benvenuto C, Casagranda B, Dobrinja C, Piccinni G, and de Manzini N
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic economics, Cholelithiasis surgery, Health Care Costs, Waiting Lists
- Abstract
Aim: Cholecystectomy is among surgical procedures with the longest waiting list and a significant amount of patients waiting for surgery suffer from symptoms related to complications of cholelithiasis. The aim of this study is to evaluate the economic impact caused by waiting lists., Material and Methods: A retrospective study was performed on patients undergoing intervention of cholecystectomy. 86 patients were included in the study. A comparative analysis was carried out among patients without complications (group A) and patients who faced complications while waiting for surgery, therefore requiring unplanned hospital admissions (group B), and patients who were operated in emergency for complications (group C)., Results: The overall cost of health care amounted to 1.849,4 € for each patient of group A, 3.513,2 € for each patient of group B and 2.584,6 € for each patient of group C. Each patient of group B was about 1.9 times more expensive than an asymptomatic one (group A) and about 1.36 times more expensive than one operated in emergency (group C). The conversion rate of the groups was not statistically significant, whereas the length of hospital stays was: patients in group B had longer hospital stays compared to patients in groups A and C., Conclusion: Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy for complicated cholelithiasis is the cheapest treatment considering the costs of health care, causing lower social costs related to absence from work and an improved perception of the quality of life.
- Published
- 2015
39. Long waiting lists and health care spending: the example of cholecystectomy.
- Author
-
Palmisano S, Benvenuto C, Casagranda B, Dobrinja C, Piccinni G, and de Manzini N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Cholecystectomy economics, Health Care Costs, Waiting Lists
- Abstract
Aim: Cholecystectomy is among surgical procedures with the longest waiting list and a significant amount of patients waiting for surgery suffer from symptoms related to complications of cholelithiasis. The aim of this study is to evaluate the economic impact caused by waiting lists., Material and Methods: A retrospective study was performed on patients undergoing intervention of cholecystectomy. 86 patients were included in the study. A comparative analysis was carried out among patients without complications (group A) and patients who faced complications while waiting for surgery, therefore requiring unplanned hospital admissions (group B), and patients who were operated in emergency for complications (group C)., Results: The overall cost of health care amounted to 1.849,4 € for each patient of group A, 3.513,2 € for each patient of group B and 2.584,6 € for each patient of group C. Each patient of group B was about 1.9 times more expensive than an asymptomatic one (group A) and about 1.36 times more expensive than one operated in emergency (group C). The conversion rate of the groups was not statistically significant, whereas the length of hospital stays was: patients in group B had longer hospital stays compared to patients in groups A and C., Conclusion: Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy for complicated cholelithiasis is the cheapest treatment considering the costs of health care, causing lower social costs related to absence from work and an improved perception of the quality of life., Key Words: Cholecystectomy, Complications, Medical care costs, Waiting list.
- Published
- 2014
40. Intraspecific variability in the parasitoid wasp Trichogramma chilonis: can we predict the outcome of hybridization?
- Author
-
Benvenuto C, Tabone E, Vercken E, Sorbier N, Colombel E, Warot S, Fauvergue X, and Ris N
- Abstract
In the framework of biological control, the selection of effective natural enemies determines the final pest control. Thus, the genetic improvement of biocontrol agents could enhance the efficiency of biocontrol programs. Although promising, this approach has rarely been applied in this field. At the intraspecific level, hybridization between divergent populations of biocontrol agents is expected to promote hybrid vigor (heterosis), but it is not clear to what extent. An even more difficult task is the ability to predict the fitness of hybrids from the biological characteristics of their parents. We investigated these general questions by crossing seven populations of the parasitoid wasp Trichogramma chilonis (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Our results show different levels of mating compatibilities among populations, including asymmetric or almost complete reproductive isolation. Hybrids' performance (fitness of the F(1) generation) ranges from inbreeding depression to heterosis. It was possible, to some extent, to predict hybrid fitness from pairwise genetic and phenotypic distances among parents, in accordance with the 'dominance' hypothesis. This may provide general guidelines for the genetic improvement of biological control agents.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. When males and hermaphrodites coexist: a review of androdioecy in animals.
- Author
-
Weeks SC, Benvenuto C, and Reed SK
- Abstract
Androdioecy (populations consisting of males and hermaphrodites) is a rare mating system in plants and animals: up to 50 plants and only 36 animals have been described as being androdioecious, with most of the latter being crustaceans. To date, a thorough comparative analysis of androdioecy in animals has not been undertaken. Herein we present such an analysis. Androdioecy has only been extensively surveyed in 2 animal taxa: the nematode Caenorhabditis and the clam shrimp Eulimnadia. The other major taxon having androdioecious species is the Cirripedia (barnacles), but there are only limited studies on androdioecy in this group. In animals, androdioecy is found either in species that have morphologically and ecologically distinct sexes (that is, hermaphrodites and small, "complemental" males) that are derived from hermaphroditic ancestors (that is, the barnacles) or in species that have similarly-sized males and hermaphrodites that have been derived from dioecious ancestors (the remaining androdioecious species). We suggest that the barnacles have evolved a sexual specialization in the form of these complemental males that can more efficiently use the constrained habitats that these barnacles often experience. For the remaining species, we suggest that androdioecy has evolved as a response to reproductive assurance in species that experience episodic low densities. Additionally, we hypothesize that the development of mechanisms allowing reproductive assurance in species with a number of sexually differentiated traits is most likely to result in androdioecy rather than gynodioecy (mixtures of females and hermaphrodites), and that these species may be developmentally constrained to stay androdioecious rather than being capable of evolving into populations solely consisting of efficient, self-compatible hermaphrodites. We conclude by suggesting several areas in need of further study to understand more completely the evolution and distribution of this interesting mating system in animals.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Chronic cutaneous herpes simplex in a patient with hypogammaglobulinemia.
- Author
-
Kraemer CK, Benvenuto C, Weber CW, Zampese MS, and Cestari TF
- Subjects
- Agammaglobulinemia diagnosis, Child, Chronic Disease, Herpes Simplex diagnosis, Herpes Simplex pathology, Humans, Male, Skin pathology, Agammaglobulinemia complications, Herpes Simplex immunology
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Familial epidermolysis bullosa with aplasia cutis congenita: Bart's syndrome?
- Author
-
Benvenuto C, Kraemer CK, Kruse RL, and Cestari TF
- Subjects
- Abnormalities, Multiple diagnosis, Abnormalities, Multiple therapy, Combined Modality Therapy, Ectodermal Dysplasia complications, Epidermolysis Bullosa complications, Epidermolysis Bullosa genetics, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pedigree, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Syndrome, Treatment Outcome, Wound Healing physiology, Ectodermal Dysplasia diagnosis, Ectodermal Dysplasia therapy, Epidermolysis Bullosa diagnosis, Epidermolysis Bullosa therapy
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Concreteness, context availability, and imageability ratings and word associations for abstract, concrete, and emotion words.
- Author
-
Altarriba J, Bauer LM, and Benvenuto C
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Female, Humans, Imagination, Male, New York, Reproducibility of Results, Sampling Studies, Semantics, Concept Formation, Emotions, Psycholinguistics, Word Association Tests
- Abstract
Normative values on various word characteristics were obtained for abstract, concrete, and emotion words in order to facilitate research on concreteness effects and on the similarities and differences among the three word types. A sample of 78 participants rated abstract, concrete, and emotion words on concreteness, context availability, and imagery scales. Word associations were also gathered for abstract, concrete, and emotion words. The data were used to investigate similarities and differences among these three word types on word attributes, association strengths, and number of associations. These normative data can be used to further research on concreteness effects, word type effects, and word recognition for abstract, concrete, and emotion words.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. On the molecular site of action of defibrotide.
- Author
-
Domenico B, Salvetti L, Giorgio B, Benvenuto CA, Marisa M, and Giuseppe P
- Subjects
- Animals, Binding Sites, Guinea Pigs, Male, Polydeoxyribonucleotides chemistry, Polydeoxyribonucleotides metabolism, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Synaptosomes metabolism, Polydeoxyribonucleotides pharmacology, Receptors, Purinergic metabolism, Synaptosomes drug effects
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.