3,969 results on '"M Torres"'
Search Results
2. InterMiG: international differences in the therapeutic approach to migraine patients in specialized headache centers
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AB Gago-Veiga, J-I Huhn, N Latysheva, A Vieira Campos, M Torres-Ferrus, A Alpuente Ruiz, S Sacco, I Frattale, R Ornello, R Ruscheweyh, IB Marques, A Gryglas-Dworak, C Stark, VJ Gallardo, and P Pozo-Rosich
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Migraine ,Preventive treatment ,International ,Differences ,Antidepressant ,Antiepileptic ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background There is currently a wide therapeutic arsenal for migraine patients, without a single first-line preventive drug and we choose the different available alternatives taking into account comorbidities, national guidelines, previous treatments and personal experiences. Our objective was to evaluate the differences in the use of migraine treatments between neurologists from different countries. Methods This is a multi-centre observational study carried out by neurologists from specialized headache units in seven countries, retrospective with consecutive inclusion of all patients presenting with a migraine diagnosis, over a period of three months. Results A total of 734 patients were recruited but only 600 were considered in the analysis in order to homogenize the patient cohorts from countries: 200 Spain (ES), 100 Italy (IT), 85 Russia (RUS), 80 Germany (DE), 60 Portugal (PT), 45 Poland (PL) and 30 Australia (AU). 85.4 % of patients were women with a mean age of 42.6 ± 11.8 years. Considering previous and current preventive treatment, the order of use was: antidepressants (69.3 %), antiepileptic drugs (54.7 %), beta-blockers and antihypertensive drugs (49.7 %), OnabotulinumtoxinA (44.0 %) and others (36.2 %). Statistically significant differences were found between all pharmacological classes: antidepressants were commonly used in all countries, with the exception of Poland (AU: 76.7 %, IT: 71.0 %, DE: 60.0 %, PL: 31.1 %, PT: 71.7 %, RUS: 70.6 %, ES: 78.5 %; p
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- 2021
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3. Online Doctoral Students' Perception of Autonomy Support to Progress in Dissertation
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Crissie M. Jameson, Kelly M. Torres, Joel B. Goodin, and Shereeza F. Mohamm
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Following the worldwide shift, partially or fully, to virtual education during the COVID-19 pandemic, online education has received renewed attention. Bal et al. (2020) noted the issues faced by higher degree students during that period in which they struggled with time management, access to resources, and balancing work and personal life. Over 61% of doctoral students writing their dissertations reported increased hardship during the transition, but not necessarily due to online education (Donohue et al., 2021). The most prominent struggles involved data collection during times of lockdown (Donohue et al., 2021), but many students also struggled with a shift to online mentorship with their chairs and committee members (Niño & Martinez, 2022). Given the changes and struggles, Atkinson et al. (2022) pondered the professional and societal value of earning a PhD, arguably due to some concerns that the partially or fully online process of doctoral education could not support students' academic outcomes and success. Therefore, perhaps the forced shift to virtual education methods elucidated a need to better understand the online doctoral education process (Mullen, 2021). Given that several online higher educational institutions developed models for providing online doctoral education prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, they may present an opportunity to understand the long-term online doctoral education experience during times of greater normalcy. Exploring how online higher education institutions support students who are writing dissertations should provide insight into best practices of supporting online students during their dissertation processes.
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- 2023
4. Immune digital twins for complex human pathologies: applications, limitations, and challenges
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Anna Niarakis, Reinhard Laubenbacher, Gary An, Yaron Ilan, Jasmin Fisher, Åsmund Flobak, Kristin Reiche, María Rodríguez Martínez, Liesbet Geris, Luiz Ladeira, Lorenzo Veschini, Michael L. Blinov, Francesco Messina, Luis L. Fonseca, Sandra Ferreira, Arnau Montagud, Vincent Noël, Malvina Marku, Eirini Tsirvouli, Marcella M. Torres, Leonard A. Harris, T. J. Sego, Chase Cockrell, Amanda E. Shick, Hasan Balci, Albin Salazar, Kinza Rian, Ahmed Abdelmonem Hemedan, Marina Esteban-Medina, Bernard Staumont, Esteban Hernandez-Vargas, Shiny Martis B, Alejandro Madrid-Valiente, Panagiotis Karampelesis, Luis Sordo Vieira, Pradyumna Harlapur, Alexander Kulesza, Niloofar Nikaein, Winston Garira, Rahuman S. Malik Sheriff, Juilee Thakar, Van Du T. Tran, Jose Carbonell-Caballero, Soroush Safaei, Alfonso Valencia, Andrei Zinovyev, and James A. Glazier
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Digital twins represent a key technology for precision health. Medical digital twins consist of computational models that represent the health state of individual patients over time, enabling optimal therapeutics and forecasting patient prognosis. Many health conditions involve the immune system, so it is crucial to include its key features when designing medical digital twins. The immune response is complex and varies across diseases and patients, and its modelling requires the collective expertise of the clinical, immunology, and computational modelling communities. This review outlines the initial progress on immune digital twins and the various initiatives to facilitate communication between interdisciplinary communities. We also outline the crucial aspects of an immune digital twin design and the prerequisites for its implementation in the clinic. We propose some initial use cases that could serve as “proof of concept” regarding the utility of immune digital technology, focusing on diseases with a very different immune response across spatial and temporal scales (minutes, days, months, years). Lastly, we discuss the use of digital twins in drug discovery and point out emerging challenges that the scientific community needs to collectively overcome to make immune digital twins a reality.
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- 2024
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5. Búsqueda intencionada y reclasificación de muertes maternas: información de calidad y su análisis para reducir la mortalidad materna
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Bremen De Mucio, Antonio Sanhueza, Patricia Soliz, Sebastián García Saiso, Suzanne Serruya, Aline P. Jiménez, Arturo Barranco, Manuel Yañez, and Luis M. Torres
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mortalidad materna ,vigilancia sanitaria ,gestión de la información en salud ,américa latina ,Medicine ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Objetivo. Describir la metodología de la búsqueda intencionada y reclasificación de muertes maternas (BIRMM), que permite identificar y corregir la clasificación errónea y el subregistro de defunciones maternas. Métodos. Se utiliza la metodología BIRMM, desarrollada inicialmente en México en el 2003 y difundida en otros países de América Latina a partir del 2012. La BIRMM consta de cuatro componentes clave: i) reclasificación de muertes maternas confirmadas; ii) identificación e investigación de casos sospechosos de muerte materna; iii) confronta con otras fuentes de información; y iv) publicación de resultados y análisis estadístico de la mortalidad materna. Resultados. La aplicación de la BIRMM permite identificar y analizar las muertes maternas en comités de mortalidad materna, lo que ha facilitado la implementación de planes de respuesta efectivos, contribuyendo a una reducción sostenida de la mortalidad materna en los países. Conclusiones. La metodología BIRMM es una herramienta efectiva para corregir el subregistro y la mala clasificación de muertes maternas, lo que permite una mejor vigilancia y respuesta a este problema. Su adopción y ejecución rutinaria son esenciales para mejorar la calidad de la información sobre mortalidad materna y reducir las muertes maternas en la Región de las Américas. La sostenibilidad de esta metodología depende del compromiso institucional y la voluntad política en los países.
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- 2024
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6. Impact of Ableist Microaggressions on Dis/Abled Youth: Perceptions of School Climate and Academic Motivation
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Nitza M. Torres Gonzalez
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Ableist microaggressions are often subtle and covert negative attributions and behaviors towards people with dis/abilities that perpetuate stereotypes and inequities (Conover et al., 2021). Although limited research exists that has explored the impact of ableist microaggressions, some scholars have noted similar findings to studies to that have focused on racial microaggressions. Specifically, exposure to ableist microaggressions has been associated with negative mental health outcomes and increased negative affect, feelings of exclusion, and low academic performance and self-concept (Kattari, 2017; Kattari, 2020; Keller & Galgay, 2010; Lett et al., 2019; Nadal et al., 2014; Storey, 2007). Most of these findings have been noted among college students and adults, leaving a gap in what we know about adolescents' experiences. As part of the current study, I sought to explore the impact of exposure to ableist microaggressions among dis/abled adolescents on their academic motivation and perceptions of school climate. I recruited 82 middle school and high school dis/abled students who completed online questionnaires that assessed for their exposure to ableist microaggressions, academic motivation, and perceptions of school climate. I hypothesized that dis/abled participants in my sample would endorse exposure to ableist microaggressions. Additionally, I hypothesized that exposure to ableist microaggressions would predict academic motivation, social relationships, and school connectedness and that race would surface as a moderator. Exposure to ableist microaggressions predicted some aspects of academic motivation and perceptions of climate. Additionally, race emerged as a significant moderator for some of the relations between exposure to ableist microaggressions and dependent variables. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2024
7. First-Year Latinas' Acculturation Experiences While Enrolled in a Predominantly White Institution: Four Narratives
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Samantha Tackett, Kelly M. Torres, and Meagan Arrastía-Chisholm
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The authors explored the influence of family background and students' perceived socioeconomic status with minoritized students' acculturation and transition experiences during their first-year, first-time enrollment at a predominantly White institution in the southeastern United States. Narrative interviews and "a priori" codes from the Model of Hispanic Identity Development (MHID, Torres, 2003) were implemented to construct case studies of first-year Latina students. Although Latina students' positive and negative acculturation experiences aligned with the MHID, each participant had a unique profile and distinctly different transition experience. The authors discuss expansion of the MHID, engagement and retention implications of early extracurricular involvement, belongingness uncertainty, and student advisement for minoritized first-year students at predominantly White higher education institutions.
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- 2024
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8. Lessons learned from the co-development of operational climate forecast services for vineyards management
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N. Pérez-Zanón, V. Agudetse, E. Baulenas, P.A. Bretonnière, C. Delgado-Torres, N. González-Reviriego, A. Manrique-Suñén, A. Nicodemou, M. Olid, Ll. Palma, M. Terrado, B. Basile, F. Carteni, A. Dente, C. Ezquerra, F. Oldani, M. Otero, F. Santos-Alves, M. Torres, J. Valente, and A. Soret
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Climate services ,Wine sector ,Climate forecast ,Sustainability ,Co-production ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
This study describes the process of co-developing an operational climate forecast service for the viticulture sector. Weather and climate conditions affect grapevine development in cultivars: anticipating the atmospheric variables in the coming weeks and months is thus relevant for effectively managing vineyards, as impacts will be felt in wine production, biodiversity, and a wide range of related aspects. The operational service was co-developed with two types of users: impact modellers, who are the intermediary users incorporating climate forecast outputs in phenological and disease models, and end-users from the wine sector with vineyards in various European locations. For the operational service, sub-seasonal and seasonal climate forecasts were tailored considering their needs. The initial steps of the co-production process identified relevant decisions for which the service was essential and co-defined effective ways to deliver the climate information. Afterwards the climate forecasts outputs were integrated with impact model data. Substantial efforts were directed at the harmonisation of climate services information with the decision-making system of end-users. Because end-users need to navigate, comprehend, and select from various alternative options amidst uncertainty, significant emphasis has been placed on crafting the visual representation of the climate service, incorporating interactive elements, and cognitive considerations, thereby enhancing the overall user experience. Practical implications: Weather and climate conditions affect the development of cultivars: phenological stages, disease risk, or wine quality. This study presents the co-production process for deploying a climate service for vineyard management. The service consists of the near-real-time operational provision of sub-seasonal and seasonal climate forecasts. This service aims to help vineyard managers make decisions by anticipating the climate conditions up to three months in advance for a set of essential climate variables. The service includes the requirements of a set of intermediary users, which are disease risk and phenology researchers who feed their impact models with the provided climate forecasts. To our knowledge, it is the first time that sub-seasonal and seasonal climate forecasts have been integrated into an operational service for vineyard management.The service was developed during the VitiGEOSS project, the primary outcome of which is the VitiGEOSS platform: a single entry-point solution for wine producers aiming to boost vineyard sustainability. Three pilot plots are used for the service development: the Douro region in Portugal, the Catalonia region in Spain, and the Campania region in Italy. The co-production is seen as an iterative, interactive and collaborative process that brings together a plurality of knowledge sources to mutually define problems and develop usable products to address these problems. The process can be divided into three phases: initial co-exploration, co-design and co-development.The co-exploration phase consisted of conducting a benchmark analysis, identifying available services to viticulture and highlighting the gap that the newly developed solution could fill in. In the co-design phase, more intense engagement methods were implemented to communicate the capabilities of climate forecasts and design the product’s visualisation. Finally, the co-evaluation consisted of an ad hoc and ongoing process during the recurring meetings and a final workshop conducted with direct and potential users to obtain feedback on using the platform and potential further developments.As a result, the operational post-processing workflow of the sub-seasonal and seasonal state-of-the-art model outputs was adapted to include users’ requirements. The workflow includes the downscaling of model outputs to increase their spatial resolution, the storage of sub-seasonal climate forecasts at daily frequencies to feed phenological impact models, the provision of past climate simulations to train the impact models, the bias-adjust of climate forecasts to reduce systematic model errors, the assessment of the climate forecasts to aware users on their quality and the deployment of a server to allow access to impact modellers.The variables provided are mean, minimum and maximum temperature, accumulated precipitation and solar radiation. The final co-designed product consists of a graphic of bars. The user can select the location and variable, and the forecasts for the next four weeks or the next three months are displayed for the sub-seasonal and seasonal climate forecasts, respectively. For each week or month, three bars show the tercile probabilities of above-normal, normal or below-normal conditions for the time of the year. The limits of the tercile categories are also displayed, which helps to understand the averaged values of the variable in the selected region and the time of the year calculated with information from the past. The probabilities of extremes, i.e. exceeding (non-exceeding) the percentile 90th (10th), are displayed as extra bars for each week and month in case the prediction is skilful and they are greater than 40%.Last but not least, the results of the skill assessment are shown. This skill assessment consists of calculating a metric for each location, initialisation date and forecast time. When this metric, known as skill score, is positive (negative), the climate model forecast is better (worse) than the climatology (the climatology is a naive forecast which considers all categories equiprobable by definition). If the skill is negative, which means there is no proof of the added value of using the numerical model prediction, the bars are blurred, and the user can still be informed of the tercile category limits.The service has been provided for almost two consecutive years. During this period, we have confirmed the value of some key recommendations from literature when co-producing a climate service. Especially relevant is the need to invest time and resources to conduct a good co-production process by repeating the iterative process. We also tested the idea of providing information in the format of seasonal climate forecast outlooks to end-users before the service was operational. In this way, the climate service process would be ‘slowed down’, by which the use of climate data is incorporated more slowly and allows for place-based knowledge from the resource managers to be included too.One of the most challenging questions is the communication of the probabilistic forecasts product and their quality. The probabilistic nature of climate forecasts is sometimes understood by novice users as the incapacity to provide a deterministic forecast. Similarly, negative skill leads users to interpret the forecast fails. Overall, the perception of the service quality can be low. To avoid this perception, the co-producing process is essential to engage with users and redefine the service if possible.In this work, we have tried different ways to overcome low-quality perception. The users requested access to the climate forecasts for their vineyard plots. For that reason, the downscaling technique was applied to increase the spatial resolution, and the bar plots were designed to show the forecast for a specific location. However, to improve the perception of the forecast quality, the forecast can be contextualised by providing the forecast in the format of a map of the surrounding areas.Despite all these limitations, end-users reported on the extreme importance of climate information. Furthermore, end-users can benefit from getting the climate services integrated with the impact models to take maximum advantage of all services and make timely decisions, but also receiving this information in a clear, parsimonious and direct format that is intuitive and can be easily incorporated into the decision-making processes is key for the sustainability of their farm fields.After the operational provision of the climate forecast service, some implications of our findings have been detected: ● Combined downscaling and contextualisation. Downscaling techniques help to provide more accurate information at the location scale. Nevertheless, the spatial visualization over large regions may help to contextualize the climate forecasts, and that is also beneficial for end-user interpretation of the climate-related information. ● Skill. Efforts to provide more skilful climate forecasts are required, as well as alternative information to be used in situations where skill is lacking (e.g.: past climate information). The skill assessment is crucial to inform users about forecast reliability and accuracy. It enhances user understanding and trust in the service by generating realistic expectations. ● Operationalisation. Reducing the time for data processing or increasing the computational resources will allow the provision of climate forecasts that are closer to the date of production. Users will benefit from earlier access to the information than the current time-lapse. ● Co-production. The co-production process ensures the service is designed based on user needs and feedback which is more likely to be adopted and effectively utilized by users. This process never ends, so, it needs to be applied if future developments or requests are included in the current service. ● Support for sustainability. End-users benefit from the integration of the climate forecast along with phenological and disease risk services. Further explorations to include more climate variables in the service and in the impact models will be beneficial for end-users. For instance, the probabilities of extreme events help vineyard managers prepare for potential adverse conditions, while, safeguarding vineyards against weather impacts through proactive measures. ● Capacity building. By training users about the nature of climate forecasts, they can enhance the preparedness and resilience response to varying climate conditions. New information and products could be co-explored to co-evaluate their utility and usefulness.
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- 2024
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9. 21251. IMPACTO DEL PERFIL DE RASGOS DE PERSONALIDAD Y SÍNTOMAS AFECTIVOS EN LA RESPUESTA AL TRATAMIENTO CON ERENUMAB
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S. Gil Luque, M. Iza Achutegui, M. Torres-Ferrús, J. Rosell-Mirmi, A. Alpuente, E. Caronna, and P. Pozo-Rosich
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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10. 21255. DESCRIPCIÓN DE RASGOS DE PERSONALIDAD Y SÍNTOMAS AFECTIVOS EN PACIENTES CON MIGRAÑA Y CONTROLES
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M. Iza Achutegui, S. Gil, M. Torres Ferrús, J. Rosell, A. Alpuente, E. Caronna, and P. Pozo
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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11. 20774. DIFERENCIAS EN NEUROIMAGEN ESTRUCTURAL EN MIGRAÑA Y CONTROLES SANOS
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E. Caronna, J. Rosell Mirmi, V. Gallardo, D. Pareto, A. Alpuente, M. Torres Ferrús, A. Rovira, and P. Pozo Rosich
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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12. 20917. ANÁLISIS DE LA DISCONTINUACIÓN DE TRATAMIENTO CON ANTICUERPOS MONOCLONALES ANTI-CGRP
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T. Mateu Peláez, V. Gallardo López, E. Caronna, A. Alpuente Ruiz, E. Giné Ciprés, M. Torres Ferrús, and P. Pozo Rosich
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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13. 20647. EVALUACIÓN DE LA RESPUESTA A LOS ANTICUERPOS MONOCLONALES CONTRA EL CGRP EN PACIENTES CON MIGRAÑA TRATADOS DURANTE 2 AÑOS EN VIDA REAL
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L. Gómez Dabó, E. Caronna, R. Mas de les Valls, V. Gallardo, A. Alpuente, M. Torres Ferrús, and P. Pozo Rosich
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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14. Feasibility Study and Aspen Plus Simulation for the Manufacture of Virgin Polylactic Acid (PLA) Resins via Ring-Opening Polymerization: A Pilot Plant Proposal in the Philippines
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Tristan Roy L Panaligan, Jesuniño Aquino, Dane Kimberly D Collado, Jan Paolo M Maceren, and Gio Andrey M Torres
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Chemical engineering ,TP155-156 ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 - Abstract
Globally, plastic pollution has become a major concern environmentally due to its affinity to degrade for generations. The Philippines is known to be the 3rd ranking contributor to plastic pollution in the world as around 2.7 Mt of plastics are generated yearly. A large portion of these non-biodegradable plastics enter the oceans which negatively impacts marine life and even the livelihood of vulnerable coastal communities. From this perspective, biodegradable plastics have been introduced to remedy the problem, and polylactic acid (PLA) has been known to be both biobased and biodegradable, with good mechanical qualities, biocompatibility, low toxicity, and high compostability. PLA is produced by using lactic acid as the main raw material in the process which involves 3 stages: pre-polymerization, lactide formation, and ring-opening polymerization (ROP). This study seeks to design, simulate, and establish a polylactic acid production plant in the Philippines and evaluate its economic feasibility. Using Aspen Plus v11 as a plant design simulation software, the final product has a desirable weight-average molecular weight of 261,364.22 g/mol in the form of pellets for further use. From the results of the feasibility study of this plant design, the simulation can produce about 30,000 t of PLA which will be exported to China, South Korea, Italy, and Belgium. Financial calculations for this pilot plant proposal have been proven to provide a high return of investment at 28.15 % with a short payback period of 5 y.
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- 2024
15. Photoactive self-cleaning zinc oxychloride coatings
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Israel Salas-Espinosa, Leticia M. Torres-Martínez, and Edith Luévano-Hipólito
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Zinc oxychloride ,ZOC ,Self-cleaning ,Photocatalysis ,Photoactive surfaces ,Industrial electrochemistry ,TP250-261 - Abstract
Zinc oxychloride cement (ZOC) is considered a promising quick-drying material for fabricating photoactive coatings composed of three components: zinc oxide (ZnO), zinc chloride (ZnCl2), and water. However, its massive application has not been implemented due to the lack of research about its stability and mechanical performance. Thus, this article aims to provide insights about the self-cleaning photoactivity of ZOC coatings incorporated with titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles to boost the photocatalytic performance. Two stoichiometries of ZnO:ZnCl:H2O (112 and 415) were studied to investigate the influence of the molar ratio of the components on the physical and chemical properties. According to these results, no significant differences were observed in the physical and chemical properties between the two stoichiometries studied; however, the mechanical properties were affected. The coatings crystallized as simonkolleite Zn5(OH)8Cl2·H2O with a laminar hexagonal morphology, show high surface area, and absorbs light in the UVA region. The self-cleaning activity was evaluated using four model pollutants: Rhodamine B, Methylene blue, Orange G, and Carbon under accelerated weathering conditions. All the ZOC coatings were photoactive to decompose the pollutants from their surface. The addition of TiO2 nanoparticles into the coatings did not significantly enhance the self-cleaning efficiency, but it improves the mechanical performance of the coatings. These results could be associated with the fact that TiO2 works as filler for voids in the coatings without affecting its settings. The stability of the coatings was confirmed after the exposure to accelerated weathering at high humidity conditions, which places them as an attractive, low-cost, and easy to apply self-cleaning material.
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- 2024
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16. Madera de compresión en Pinus radiata III: propiedades de pulpas kraft Compression wood in Pinus radiata III: kraft pulp properties
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J.E Diaz-vaz, R. A Ananias, L Valenzuela, M Torres, and S Rodriguez
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madera de reacción ,madera opuesta ,pulpa cruda ,pulpa blanqueada ,rendimiento de pulpa ,densidad ,índice de tensión ,índice de rasgado ,índice de explosión ,Reaction wood ,opposite wood ,unbleached pulp ,bleached pulp ,pulp yield ,density ,tension index ,tear index ,burst index ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 ,Manufactures ,TS1-2301 - Abstract
Estudios anteriores en estos mismos árboles de Pinus radiata con fustes levemente inclinados, demostraron que la madera de compresión leve que ellos exhibían presentaba: traqueidas más cortas, mayor densidad, mayor proporción de lignina, mayor proporción de extraíbles en etanol tolueno y menor proporción de alfa celulosa que la madera opuesta y que la madera de árboles sin madera de compresión. En el presente estudio se analiza las propiedades pulpables de la madera de compresión y la de sus respectivas maderas opuestas de los quince árboles de Pinus radiata estudiados, crecidos en suelos de arena húmeda en Chile. Se estudió separadamente la madera de compresión y la madera opuesta. Con distintas proporciones, de entre 0, 40, 70 y 100 % de madera de compresión y madera opuesta, se efectuaron pulpajes kraft para cada una de las mezclas. De estos pulpajes con y sin blanqueo se informan valores de 501 kg y 695 kg de densidad; 28 a 51 en índice de tensión, 18 a 25 en índice de rasgado, 2.2 a 4.1 en índice de explosión y rendimiento de 44 a 50.6 en las mezclas de la pulpa estudiada. En la pulpa cruda de MC, de la madera pulpable y de la madera exterior aserrable, se registró menor densidad, mayor índice de tensión, de rasgado y de explosión, en comparación con los resultados obtenidos en la pulpa cruda de MO. En el caso de las pulpas blanqueadas, la densidad y el índice de tensión resultaron mayores en la MC. En el resto de las propiedades las diferencias entre MC y MO fueron oscilantes y reducidas. El aumento de la proporción de MC en la mezcla de MC y MO, produjo una reducción de rendimiento. Los rendimiento de las mezclas de la madera pulpable indicaron para el 100 % de MO un 50.6 % y para el 100% de MC un 44 %: En los casos de las pulpas de madera exterior aserrable el 100% de MO tuvo un rendimiento de de 48.4% en cambio el 100% de la MC registró un 44.3%. Los resultados obtenidos indicaron que la MC leve, que se encuentra en árboles con inclinaciones menores, tuvo un efecto de menor magnitud que él que se produce en la MC severa sobre las características y rendimiento de la pulpa kraft.Previous studies with radiata pine trees growing slightly leaned towards one side showed that they have small amounts of compression wood with different characteristics than the opposite wood at the other side of the annual rings. These differences include shorter tracheids, higher density, higher proportion of lining, higher proportion of extractives in toluene ethanol, and a smaller amount of alpha-cellulose. The present study compares the properties of kraft pulp, with and without bleaching, for mixtures of compression and opposite wood obtained from fifteen 22-year-old radiata pine trees that grew in humid sand soils of Chile. The kraft pulp mixture was studied for different proportions of 0, 40, 70 and 100% compression wood. Considering all mixtures with and without bleaching, the study reports values between 501 and 695 kg/m³ density, 28 and 51 tension index, 18 and 25 tear index, 2,2 and 4,1 burst index, and 44% and 50,6% pulp yield. It was found that the pulp without bleaching from compression wood (for both the internal pulp and the external lumber areas) had lower density, but higher tension, tear, and burst indexes. The pulp with bleaching from compression wood had both higher density and tension index, but the other properties only show small random differences with respect to opposite wood. A higher proportion of compression wood in the mixture reduced pulp yield. The yield for the internal pulp area was 50,6 % with pure opposite wood and 44% with pure compression wood, while the yield for external lumber area was 48,4% with pure opposite wood and 44,3% with pure compression wood. I was concluded, however, that the relatively small amount of compression wood found in these trees had only a minor effect in the properties and yield of kraft pulp.
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- 2012
17. Development in Ecuador oil irrigation conservation practices
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A E Vorobyev and M Torres Zaruma
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нефть ,водонасыщенность ,механизм ,окружающая среда ,экология ,технология ,методы добычи нефти ,шахта ,the minе ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
We studied: the need for environmental technology development flooded oil fields in the Ecuador; mechanism of the oil recovery; various problems ingress of water in oil wells; the distribution of water saturation.
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- 2011
18. Compression wood in Pinus radiata II: Density and chemical composition Madera de compresión en Pinus radiata II: Densidad y compuestos químicos
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J. E Díaz-vaz, R.A Ananías, S Rodríguez, M Torres, A Fernández, and H Poblete
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Madera de compresión ,pino radiata ,densidad básica ,lignina ,holocelulosa ,alfa-celulosa ,pentosano ,etanol-tolueno ,cenizas ,Compression wood ,radiata pine ,basic density ,lignin ,holocellulose ,alpha-cellulose ,pentose ,ethanol-toluene ,ash ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 ,Manufactures ,TS1-2301 - Abstract
Ten 22 year old radiata pine trees growing in two stands in Chile, one in clay and the other in humid sand soils showing some lean, were assessed for chemical composition and wood density of compression wood. Significant differences in type of wood in density (33 kg/m³), lignin (1.944 %), alpha-cellulose (-2.634 %), ethanol toluene extractives (0.567 %) and pentose (0.742 %) were found between matched sample of compression and opposite woods. Differences in juvenile and mature wood were significant for both density (-4 kg/m³) and pentose (1.628 %), and site differences were found for wood density (28 kg/m³), extractives (0.978 %) and apparent for alpha cellulose (1.223%). In comparison with other studies, our results suggested that the compression wood formed from trees with light visible lean corresponded to a mild compression class.Se analizó la madera de compresión en diez árboles de 22 años de edad de Pinus radiata D Don creciendo en dos sitios en Chile, uno en suelo de arena húmeda y el otro en suelo arcilloso. Singularidades de la madera de compresión y madera opuesta se compararon en estos árboles con inclinaciones menores a 10º y excentricidades reducidas. Diferencias significativas se registraron entre madera de compresión y opuesta en los valores registrados para la densidad básica de 33 (kg/m³), en proporción de lignina de 1.944 (%), en alfa-celulosa de -2.634 (%), en pentosanos de 0.742 (%) y en extraíbles en etanol-tolueno de 0.978 (%) y aparentemente diferente en el caso de alfa celulosa en 1.223 (%). Las diferencias entre madera juvenil y madera madura fueron significativas en los casos de la densidad de -4 (kg/m³) y en pentosanos en 1.628 (%), y diferencias entre los dos sitios para los casos de la densidad con 28 (kg/m³), en extractivos con 0.978 (%) y diferencias moderadas en alfa celulosa con 1.223 (%). Las diferencias y coincidencias de estos resultados con los de otros autores se han considerado para estimar que la madera de compresión formada por estos árboles, con inclinaciones reducidas, correspondería al tipo de madera de compresión leve.
- Published
- 2009
19. MADERA DE COMPRESIÓN EN PINUS RADIATA D. DON: I, CARACTERÍSTICAS ANATÓMICAS COMPRESSION WOOD IN RADIATA PINE: I, ANATOMICAL FEATURES
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J.E Diaz-vaz, A Fernandez, L Valenzuela, and M Torres
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Fustes inclinados ,madera de compresión leve ,largo de traqueidas ,pino radiata ,coarseness ,diámetros de traqueidas ,madera opuesta ,madera juvenil ,madera madura ,Lend stems ,mild compression wood ,tracheid length ,pino radiate ,tracheid diameter ,opposite wood ,earlywood ,laterwood ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 ,Manufactures ,TS1-2301 - Abstract
Se caracterizó la madera de compresión en 10 árboles de Pinus radiata D.Don con inclinaciones menores a 10 º en dos sitios. Los diámetros de traqueidas de los árboles del sitio Arena húmeda resultaron estadísticamente mayores que los del sitio Arcilla; pero no resultaron diferentes al comparar madera juvenil y madura o al compara madera de compresión con madera opuesta. Diferencias significativas se determinaron en el largo de traqueida entre sitios (Arena húmeda-Arcilla), tipo de madera (madera de compresión-opuesta) y edad (madera juvenil-madura), resultados coincidentes con otros autores. Para el coarseness diferencias no significativas entre sitios, así como entre madera juvenil y madura y entre madera de compresión y opuesta coinciden y difieren de los de otros autores que comparan árboles de distintos sitios. Las discrepancias y coincidencias de estos resultados con los de otros autores se explican considerando el comportamiento diferente de las dimensiones celulares de la madera temprana y tardía y las diferencias que hay entre madera de compresión leve y la madera de compresión severaCompression wood in 10 Pinus radiata D. Don trees with lean smaller to 10º from two sites were characterized. The tracheid diameters of the trees of the humid sand site were statistically greater than those from the clay site; but they were not different when comparing juvenile wood with mature wood or to it compares compression wood with opposite wood. Significant differences were determined in the tracheid length between sites (humid sand-clay), type of wood (compression-opposite wood) and age (juvenile-mature wood), were similar results with other authors. For coarseness non significant differences between sites, as well as between juvenile and mature wood and compression and opposite and agree and different from those of other authors who compare trees of different sites. The discrepancies and coincidences of these results with those of other authors are explained considering the behavior from the cellular dimensions of the earlywood and latewood wood and the differences between severe compression and mild compression wood
- Published
- 2007
20. 20886. EFECTIVIDAD DEL TRATAMIENTO CON TOXINA BOTULÍNICA Y ANTICUERPOS MONOCLONALES ANTI-CGRP EN LA MIGRAÑA ASOCIADA A LA MENSTRUACIÓN
- Author
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L. Gómez Dabó, R. Mas de les Valls, V. Gallardo Gómez-Dabó, A. Alpuente, M. Torres Ferrús, E. Caronna, E. Giné Ciprés, and P. Pozo Rosich
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Mecánica y energética durante la marcha en cinta caminadora en adultos uruguayos saludables
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Carol M Torres, Carlo Biancardi, Germán Pequera, and Gabriel Fábrica Barrios
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análisis clínico de la marcha ,cinta caminadora ,variables espacio- temporales ,energía mecánica ,consumo de oxígeno ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
La evaluación de la marcha en cinta caminadora puede resultar relevante para la toma de decisiones clínicas. No obstante, factores demográficos como la edad y el IMC pueden alterar la interpretación de los resultados. Nuestro objetivo fue obtener variables espacio- temporales, energéticas y costo de transporte durante la velocidad autoseleccionada en cinta caminadora para una muestra representativa de adultos uruguayos (n=28) y evaluar si diferentes rangos de edades e IMC pueden ser factores a tener en cuenta en pruebas clínicas donde se consideren dichas variables. Participaron 17 hombres y 11 mujeres (39,3 ± 14,8 años, 75,9 ± 12,5 kg, 1,74 ± 0,09 m, IMC 25,2 ± 4,06). Se realizó una reconstrucción 3D del movimiento en forma sincronizada con el consumo energético. Se obtuvieron valores de referencia y luego de agrupar los participantes según su IMC y rango de edad se compararon los datos mediante test de t (p≤0.05). Los resultados revelaron discrepancias significativas en las medidas espacio-temporales y energéticas de los adultos uruguayos al caminar en cinta con respecto a la literatura. La marcha difiere entre adultos jóvenes y de mediana edad en su velocidad autoseleccionada (p=0,03), longitud de zancada (p=0,01), trabajo mecánico externo (
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Modelo analítico para el transporte electrónico en películas delgadas semiconductoras
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M Torres-Luengo, H M Martínez, J Torres, and L D López-Carreño
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Semiconductores ,Conducción eléctrica ,modelo ,Technology ,Science ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Los semiconductores policristalinos son materiales que a menudo presentan propiedades eléctricas inusuales. En el modelo se supone que los cristales están formados por material semiconductor, el grano en sí, el cual está rodeado por material altamente desordenado y resistivo, la frontera de grano. La frontera de grano perturba la periodicidad estructural del cristal dando origen a estados electrónicos localizados en el interior de la brecha de energía prohibida. La existencia de estos estados favorece el atrapamiento de carga en las fronteras de grano y al doblamiento de las bandas de energía. Este doblamiento se caracteriza por un potencial de barrera y una zona de carga espacial, las cuales gobiernan el transporte electrónico a través de la frontera de grano. El modelo utiliza las teorías de difusión y deriva de portadores, de emisión termoiónica e incluye además, la teoría de tunelamiento cuántico de portadores a través de la barrera de potencial. Dado que la estructura de las películas delgadas de trióxido de Molibdeno (MoO3) obtenidas por atomización pirolítica es de tipo granular y de tamaño nanométrico, el modelo analítico explica el comportamiento de la característica Corriente - Voltaje (I-V) de las películas. PACS: 73.25.+i, 73.50.Gr, 73.61.Cw MSC: 74K35, 82D37, 03C90
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- 2013
- Full Text
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23. Optimal Control of Microcephaly Under Vertical Transmission of Zika
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Dilara Yapışkan, Cristiana J. Silva, and Delfim F. M. Torres
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optimal control ,vertical transmission ,vector-borne diseases ,Zika virus ,microcephaly ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
The Zika virus, known for its potential to induce neurological conditions such as microcephaly when transmitted vertically from infected mothers to infants, has sparked widespread concerns globally. Motivated by this, we propose an optimal control problem for the prevention of vertical Zika transmission. The novelty of this study lies in its consideration of time-dependent control functions, namely, insecticide spraying and personal protective measures taken to safeguard pregnant women from infected mosquitoes. New results provide a way to minimize the number of infected pregnant women through the implementation of control strategies while simultaneously reducing both the associated costs of control measures and the mosquito population, resulting in a decline in microcephaly cases.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
24. Evaluation of the Gulf of California as a potential source of bioactive marine actinobacteria
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M Torres-Beltrán, F Cardoso-Martínez, N Millán-Aguiñaga, A Becerril-Espinosa, and IE Soria-Mercado
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Actinobacteria produce many bioactive compounds currently used as antibiotics and anticancer drugs. The objective of this project was to evaluate the Gulf of California as a novel source of bioactive actinobacterial strains. A total of 235 actinobacterial strains were isolated from marine sediment collected in Concepción and los Ángeles bays (Mexico). Based on their morphology, seawater requirements, and 16S rRNA sequencing, actinobacterial strains were classified as Streptomyces, Micromonospora, and Salinispora. Sixty-nine organic and aqueous extracts were obtained using liquid-liquid extraction with ethyl acetate; 17 showed cytotoxic activity against breast cancer cells (MCF7) and cervical cancer cells (HeLa). The highest activity values observed, expressed as survival percentage, were 20–25% against MCF7 cells (strains S-365, S-355, and S-361) and 24–25% against HeLa cells (strains S-165, S-361, and S-353). Only three aqueous extracts showed antibiotic activity towards methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, with activity values of 3% and 6% for strains S-370 and S-369, respectively. Molecular weights found by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis are reported for Micromonospora species isolated from soil, but no species specific secondary metabolite evidence was observed for Salinispora isolates. The biological activity observed in this work offers opportunities for further chemical studies to define the compounds responsible for this activity in order to contribute to the discovery of new drugs and to acknowledge the Gulf of California as a reservoir of marine bioactive actinobacteria strains that are important for human health.
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- 2012
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25. Evaluation of the commercially important clam fishery in the Alvarado Lagoon System, Veracruz, Mexico
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P., Oviedo-Velazquez Brenda, M., Torres-Tadeo Cesar, Asiain-Hoyos, Alberto, J., Lopez-Escudero Roberto, and Lango-Reynoso, Veronica
- Published
- 2023
26. Tomodensitometria e métodos radioisotópicos no estudo das hipertransparências pulmonares unilaterais de causa vascular.
- Author
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M F Baganha, M A Marques, M F Botelho, M L Teixeira, V Carvalheira, J Calisto, A Silva, A Fernandes, M Torres, and J Brito
- Subjects
Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Among the causes of the radiological entity known as unilateral or total hyperlucent lung is the decreased blood flow in the lungs. Unilateral and total hyperlucent lung results, among other factors, from the decreased intrapulmonary blood flow. Classically, the diagnosis and haemodynamic evaluation of these situations were usually made through invasive methods: right heart catheterism to perform angiopneumography and pressure evaluations as well as oximetry at several levels of the vascular network, thoracic aortography eventually associated with selective arteriography to detect the abnormalities of the systemic thoracic circulation. In this context, the authors propose for the diagnosis and study of this pathology, a new non-invasive methodology. In order to achieve this propose, we studied 8 patients, all of them performed clinical and laboratory evaluations, chest chi-ray, electrocardiographic and functional respiratory exams, as well angiopneumography, thoracic aortography tomodensitometry including qualitative (to study the lung arterial vasculature) and quantitative (to evaluate CT density of each lung in Hounsefield unit and two radioisotopic tests, including a ventilation/perfusion study with 133 chi e and HAM-99mTc, through an original software--four parameter histograms allowing simultaneous information of ventilation and perfusion at the pixel level and estimation of the V/Q; the other is the pulmonary gating through which it is possible to identify and quantify the arterio-arterial shunts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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- 1993
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27. 1D-model of the human liver circulatory system
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Rojas, Aimee M. Torres and Lorente, Sylvie
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- 2023
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28. An IoT Platform for Data Management in an Industrial-Scale Microalgae Cultivation Plant
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M. Munoz, J. L. Guzman, M. Torres, and F. G. Acien
- Subjects
Cloud ,data management ,IoT ,microalgae ,photobioreactor ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Microalgae biomass production technology is in continuous progress. One of the challenges deals with scaling up existing medium-scale facilities to industrial-scale production systems. This new expanding infrastructure requires adequate data management and data accessibility tools for all the process variables. In this sense, this work presents a novel solution for microalgae production systems based on Internet of Things (IoT) technology as an important ally in the digitalization of these industrial processes. The paper summarizes the development of an IoT-based platform for data management in a large-scale microalgae cultivation plant with more than 12 industrial photobioreactors. A cloud-based architecture is provided for a solution for data management and a graphical front-end for data access (real-time and historical data). Different profiles can be managed for technicians and researchers depending on their skills and needs.
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- 2022
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29. Efecto de la reparación en concreto carbonatado de alta relación agua/cemento y bajo espesor de recubrimiento
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E.I Moreno, R.G Solís-Carcaño, and M Torres-López
- Subjects
agregado calizo ,carbonatación ,concreto ,corrosión ,reparación ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
La carbonatación del concreto afecta la vida útil de las estructuras de concreto armado y aunque existen procedimientos de reparación definidos en manuales, por lo general se aplican procedimientos tradicionales. Esta investigación evaluó tres procedimientos de reparación de elementos de concreto armado dañados por la corrosión inducida por la carbonatación, bajo condiciones críticas (alta relación agua/cemento y poco recubrimiento). Los procedimientos A y B (técnica tradicional) consistieron en eliminar el concreto hasta la cara externa de la barra de acero y posteriormente reponerlo; en el procedimiento B se adicionó una solución de NaOH al concreto de reparación. El procedimiento C consistió en eliminar el concreto contaminado rebasando la barra de acero y su posterior reposición sin adición alguna. Los resultados mostraron que debido a las condiciones críticas utilizadas, ningún procedimiento de reparación permitió un incremento notable en la vida útil de la estructura.
30. A multi-purpose, rolled-up, double-helix resonator
- Author
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Silva, Pedro F., Delgado, Saraí M. Torres, Jouda, Mazin, Mager, Dario, and Korvink, Jan G.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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31. Photocatalytic CO2 conversion by MgAl layered double hydroxides: Effect of Mg2+ precursor and microwave irradiation time
- Author
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Flores-Flores, M., Luévano-Hipólito, E., Martínez, Leticia M. Torres, Morales-Mendoza, Getsemaní, and Gómez, Ricardo
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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32. Overexpression of Catalase in Mitochondria Mitigates Changes in Hippocampal Cytokine Expression Following Simulated Microgravity and Isolation
- Author
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Linda Rubinstein, Ann-sofie Schreurs, Samantha M. Torres, Sonette Steczina, Moniece G. Lowe, Frederico Kiffer, Antiño R. Allen, April E. Ronca, Marianne B. Sowa, Ruth K. Globus, and Candice G. T. Tahimic
- Subjects
Aerospace Medicine - Abstract
Isolation on Earth can alter physiology and signaling of organs systems, including the central nervous system. Although not in complete solitude, astronauts operate in an isolated environment during spaceflight. In this study, we determined the effects of isolation and simulated microgravity solely or combined, on the inflammatory cytokine milieu of the hippocampus. Adult female wild-type mice underwent simulated microgravity by hindlimb unloading for 30 days in single or social (paired) housing. In hippocampus, simulated microgravity and isolation each regulate a discrete repertoire of cytokines associated with inflammation. Their combined effects are not additive. A model for mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) quenching via targeted overexpression of the human catalase gene to the mitochondria (MCAT mice), are protected from isolation- and/or simulated microgravity-induced changes in cytokine expression. These findings suggest a key role for mitochondrial ROS signaling in neuroinflammatory responses to spaceflight and prolonged bedrest, isolation, and confinement on Earth.
- Published
- 2021
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33. Thiabendazole adsorption on montmorillonite, octadecyltrimethylammonium- and Acremonium sp.-loaded products and their copper complexes
- Author
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Gamba, Martina, Olivelli, Melisa, Lázaro-Martínez, Juan M., Gaddi, Gisella, Curutchet, Gustavo, and Sánchez, Rosa M. Torres
- Published
- 2017
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34. Pavlovian bias in Parkinson’s disease: an objective marker of impulsivity that modulates with deep brain stimulation
- Author
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Eisinger, Robert S., Scott, Bonnie M., Le, Anh, Ponce, Elena M. Torres, Lanese, Joseph, Hundley, Christopher, Nelson, Brawn, Ravy, Tasmeah, Lopes, Janine, Thompson, Sable, Sathish, Sneha, O’Connell, Rebecca L., Okun, Michael S., Bowers, Dawn, and Gunduz, Aysegul
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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35. Suboptimal Sleep Duration Is Associated With Poorer Neuroimaging Brain Health Profiles in Middle-Aged Individuals Without Stroke or Dementia.
- Author
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Clocchiatti-Tuozzo, Santiago, Rivier, Cyprien A., Renedo, Daniela, Lopez, Victor M. Torres, Geer, Jacqueline H., Miner, Brienne, Yaggi, Henry K., de Havenon, Adam, Payabvash, Seyedmehdi, Sheth, Kevin N., Gill, Thomas M., and Falcone, Guido J.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Dead Firms: Causes and Effects of Cross-Border Corporate Insolvency
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Miguel M. Torres, Virginia Cathro, Maria Alejandra Gonzalez-Perez, Miguel M. Torres, Virginia Cathro, Maria Alejandra Gonzalez-Perez
- Published
- 2016
37. Spray-dried extract from the Amazonian adaptogenic plant Ampelozizyphus amazonicus Ducke (Saracura-mirá): Chemical composition and immunomodulatory properties
- Author
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Simen, Tatiana Jotha Mattos, Finotelli, Priscilla Vanessa, Barboza, Fernanda Ferreira, Pereira, MarinaVieira Agostinho, Pierucci, Anna Paola Trindade Rocha, Moura, Mirian Ribeiro Leite, de Oliveira, Danilo Ribeiro, Abraçado, Leida Gomes, Celano, Rita, de Souza Figueiredo, Fabiana, Piccinelli, Anna Lisa, Rastrelli, Luca, Leitão, Gilda Guimarães, Peçanha, Ligia M. Torres, and Leitão, Suzana Guimarães
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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38. How much does VPD drive tree water stress and forest disturbances?
- Author
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Nicolas Martin-StPaul, Julien Ruffault, Joannes Guillemot, Renaud Barbero, Hervé Cochard, Maxime Cailleret, Miquel De Caceres, Jean-Luc Dupuy, François Pimont, José M. Torres-Ruiz, Jean-Marc Limousin, Ecologie des Forêts Méditerranéennes (URFM), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Cirad Direction Générale (Cirad-DG), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad), Risques, Ecosystèmes, Vulnérabilité, Environnement, Résilience (RECOVER), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Laboratoire de Physique et Physiologie Intégratives de l’Arbre en environnement Fluctuant (PIAF), and Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA)
- Subjects
[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Vapor Pressure Deficit (VPD, atmospheric drought) and soil water potential (Ψsoil, soil drought) have both been reported to affect terrestrial plant water stress, plant functions (growth, stomatal conductance, transpiration) and vulnerability to ecosystem disturbances (mortality or vulnerability to wildfires). Which of atmospheric drought or soil drought has the greatest influence on these responses is yet an unresolved question. Using a state-of-the-art soil-plant-atmosphere hydraulic model, we conducted an in-silico experiment where VPD and Ψsoil were manipulated one at a time to quantify the relative importance of atmospheric vs soil drought on most critical plant functions. The model simulates the combined effects of soil drought and atmospheric drought on plant water potential (ΨPlant), a physiologically meaningful metric of plant water status driving plant turgor, stomatal conductance, hydraulic conductance or water content, and thus mortality and fire risks. Contrary to expectations, we showed that VPD had a weaker effect than Ψsoil on tree water stress and forest disturbances risk (i.e leaf moisture content). While physiological responses associated with low water stress such as stomatal closure or turgor loss could be driven by both VPD or soil drought, consequences of extreme water stress such as hydraulic failure, leaf desiccation and vulnerability to wildfires were almost exclusively driven by low Ψsoil. Our results therefore suggest that most plant functions are affected by VPD through its cumulative effect on Ψsoil via increased plant transpiration, rather than through a direct instantaneous effect on plant water potential. We argue that plant hydraulics provide a strong foundation for predicting tree and terrestrial ecosystem responses to climate changes and propose a list of explanations and testable hypotheses to reconcile plant hydraulic theory and observations of soil and atmospheric drought effects on plant functions.
- Published
- 2023
39. Numerical Investigation of the Fractional Oscillation Equations under the Context of Variable Order Caputo Fractional Derivative via Fractional Order Bernstein Wavelets
- Author
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Ashish Rayal, Bhagawati Prasad Joshi, Mukesh Pandey, and Delfim F. M. Torres
- Subjects
Variable‐order fractional oscillation equations ,Fractional‐order Bernstein wavelets ,Error analysis ,General Mathematics ,FOS: Mathematics ,Computer Science (miscellaneous) ,Function approximations ,Collocation grid ,65T60, 26A33, 34K28, 65Z05 ,Numerical Analysis (math.NA) ,Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,Engineering (miscellaneous) ,fractional-order Bernstein wavelets ,variable-order fractional oscillation equations ,function approximations ,error analysis ,collocation grid - Abstract
This article describes an approximation technique based on fractional order Bernstein wavelets for the numerical simulations of fractional oscillation equations under variable order, and the fractional order Bernstein wavelets are derived by means of fractional Bernstein polynomials. The oscillation equation describes electrical circuits and exhibits a wide range of nonlinear dynamical behaviors. The proposed variable order model is of current interest in a lot of application areas in engineering and applied sciences. The purpose of this study is to analyze the behavior of the fractional force-free and forced oscillation equations under the variable-order fractional operator. The basic idea behind using the approximation technique is that it converts the proposed model into non-linear algebraic equations with the help of collocation nodes for easy computation. Different cases of the proposed model are examined under the selected variable order parameters for the first time in order to show the precision and performance of the mentioned scheme. The dynamic behavior and results are presented via tables and graphs to ensure the validity of the mentioned scheme. Further, the behavior of the obtained solutions for the variable order is also depicted. From the calculated results, it is observed that the mentioned scheme is extremely simple and efficient for examining the behavior of nonlinear random (constant or variable) order fractional models occurring in engineering and science., This is a preprint of a paper whose final and definite form is published Open Access in 'Mathematics' at [http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/math11112503]
- Published
- 2023
40. Dynamics of a Double-Impulsive Control Model of Integrated Pest Management Using Perturbation Methods and Floquet Theory
- Author
-
Fahad Al Basir, Jahangir Chowdhury, and Delfim F. M. Torres
- Subjects
Floquet theory ,Algebra and Number Theory ,Logic ,Impulsive differential equations ,Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE) ,Integrated pest management (IPM) ,92D45, 34D20 ,integrated pest management (IPM) ,impulsive differential equations ,stability ,perturbation method ,numerical simulations ,Optimization and Control (math.OC) ,FOS: Biological sciences ,FOS: Mathematics ,Numerical simulations ,Perturbation method ,Geometry and Topology ,Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Stability ,Mathematics - Optimization and Control ,Mathematical Physics ,Analysis - Abstract
We formulate an integrated pest management model to control natural pests of the crop through the periodic application of biopesticide and chemical pesticides. In a theoretical analysis of the system pest eradication, a periodic solution is found and established. All the system variables are proved to be bounded. Our main goal is then to ensure that pesticides are optimized, in terms of pesticide concentration and pesticide application frequency, and that the optimum combination of pesticides is found to provide the most benefit to the crop. By using Floquet theory and the small amplitude perturbation method, we prove that the pest eradication periodic solution is locally and globally stable. The acquired results establish a threshold time limit for the impulsive release of various controls as well as some valid theoretical conclusions for effective pest management. Furthermore, after a numerical comparison, we conclude that integrated pest management is more effective than single biological or chemical controls. Finally, we illustrate the analytical results through numerical simulations., This is a preprint of a paper whose final and definite form is published Open Access in 'Axioms' at [https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms12040391]
- Published
- 2023
41. Polygenic Susceptibility to Hypertension and Blood Pressure Control in Stroke Survivors
- Author
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Julián N. Acosta, Cameron P. Both, Zachariah S. Demarais, Carolyn J. Conlon, Audrey C. Leasure, Victor M. Torres-Lopez, Adam de Havenon, Nils H. Petersen, Thomas M. Gill, Lauren H. Sansing, Kevin N. Sheth, and Guido J. Falcone
- Subjects
Neurology (clinical) ,Research Article - Abstract
Background and ObjectivesBlood pressure (BP) is often not at goal in stroke survivors, leaving individuals vulnerable to additional vascular events. Given that BP is a highly heritable trait, we hypothesize that a higher polygenic susceptibility to hypertension (PSH) leads to worse BP control in stroke survivors.MethodsWe conducted a study within the UK Biobank evaluating persons of European ancestry who survived an ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke. To model the PSH, we created polygenic risk scores (PRSs) for systolic and diastolic BP using 732 genetic variants. We divided the PRSs into quintiles and used linear/logistic regression to test whether higher PSH led to higher observed BP, uncontrolled BP (systolic BP > 140 mm Hg or diastolic BP > 90 mm Hg), and resistant BP (uncontrolled BP despite being on ≥3 antihypertensive drugs). We conducted an independent replication using data from the Vitamin Intervention for Stroke Prevention (VISP) trial.ResultsWe analyzed 5,940 stroke survivors. When comparing stroke survivors with very low vs very high PSH, the mean systolic BP was 137 (SD 18) vs 143 (SD 20,p< 0.001), the mean diastolic BP was 81 (SD 10) vs 84 (SD 11,p< 0.001), the prevalence of uncontrolled BP was 42.8% vs 57.2% (p< 0.001), and the prevalence of resistant hypertension was 3.9% vs 11% (p< 0.001). Results remained significant using multivariable models (p< 0.001) and were replicated in the VISP study (all tests withp< 0.05).DiscussionA higher PSH is associated with worse BP control in stroke survivors. These findings point to genetic predisposition as an important determinant of poorly controlled BP in this population.
- Published
- 2023
42. Cerambyx cerdo and Cerambyx welensii Oak-Living Sympatric Populations Exhibit Species-Specific Responses to Face Ecological Factors in the Wild
- Author
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Luis M. Torres-Vila, F. Javier Mendiola-Díaz, and Tara Canelo
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Ecology ,Ecological Modeling ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Cerambyx cerdo ,Cerambyx welensii ,oak open woodlands ,ecological variables ,species-specific response ,occupancy–abundance ,habitat preference ,oak decline ,longhorn management ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Oak open woodlands (dehesas) have outstanding socioeconomic and ecological values, sustain traditional agro-silvo-pastoral uses, provide high-value ecosystem services, and constitute key biodiversity hotspots. Cerambyx cerdo and Cerambyx welensii are two large, oak-living, wood-boring, sympatric longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) that may reach pest status in SW Spain, contributing to oak decline. Understanding species-specific habitat requirements determining occupancy–abundance patterns is needed to develop management or control strategies. We conducted a large-scale, four-year study using 1650 feeding traps to ascertain longhorn abundance and species-specific habitat suitability in relation to 18 ecological variables, 9 biotic (oak species, forest mass, trunk diameter, tree density, basal area, forest cover, shrub cover, ground cover, oak renewal), and 9 abiotic (bedrock outcrops, altitude, ground slope, aspect, mean temperature: annual/July/January, annual precipitation, insolation). Results showed that longhorn abundance was sensitive to most ecological variables and to many interactions between them. Interestingly, interactions between ecological variables and longhorn species were widespread, signifying that responses were species-specific and therefore predictive Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMMs) were different between species. Our research contributes to the understanding of the ecological factors that shape longhorn species-specific occupancy–abundance patterns, delves into their sympatric relationship, and contributes toward improving sustainable forest practices that will mitigate longhorn impact in oak open forests.
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- 2023
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43. The Spanish version of the reflective functioning questionnaire: Validity data in the general population and individuals with personality disorders
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Eduardo Ruiz-Parra, Guadalupe Manzano-García, Roberto Mediavilla, Beatriz Rodríguez-Vega, Guillermo Lahera, Ana I. Moreno-Pérez, Alberto M. Torres-Cantero, Juan Rodado-Martínez, Amaia Bilbao, and Miguel Ángel González-Torres
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Multidisciplinary - Abstract
Introduction Mentalization or reflective functioning (RF) is the capacity to interpret oneself or the others in terms of internal mental states. Its failures have been linked to several mental disorders and interventions improving RF have a therapeutic effect. Mentalizing capacity of the parents influences the children’s attachment. The Reflective Functioning Questionnaire (RFQ-8) is a widely used tool for the assessment of RF. No instrument is available to assess general RF in Spanish-speaking samples. The aim of this study is to develop a Spanish version of the RFQ-8 and to evaluate its reliability and validity in the general population and in individuals with personality disorders. Methods 602 non-clinical and 41 personality disordered participants completed a Spanish translation of the RFQ and a battery of self-reported questionnaires assessing several RF related constructs (alexithymia, perspective taking, identity diffusion and mindfulness), psychopathology (general and specific) and interpersonal problems. Temporal stability was tested in a non-clinical sub-sample of 113 participants. Results Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses suggested a one-factor structure in the Spanish version of the RFQ-8. RFQ-8 understood as a single scale was tested, with low scorings reflecting genuine mentalizing, and high scorings uncertainty. The questionnaire showed good internal consistence in both samples and moderate temporal stability in non-clinical sample. RFQ correlated significantly with identity diffusion, alexithymia, and general psychopathology in both samples; and with mindfulness, perspective taking, and interpersonal problems in clinical sample. Mean values of the scale were significantly higher in the clinical group. Discussion This study provides evidence that the Spanish version of the RFQ-8, understood as a single scale, has an adequate reliability and validity assessing failures in reflective functioning (i.e., hypomentalization) in general population and personality disorders. The study received a Health Strategic Action fund from the Carlos III Health Institute of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. ID PI16/02058. https://www.isciii.es/QueHacemos/Financiacion/solicitudes/Paginas/default.aspx No researcher have received money from the fund. This kind of public funds are managed by public institutes (in this case BIOEF) that ensure this money is only used for some of the material resources necessary to carry out the investigation. https://www.bioef.org/es/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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- 2023
44. Mineralogical and microstructural changes in alkali-activated and hybrid materials exposed to accelerated leaching
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S. Shagñay, I. Garcia-Lodeiro, F. Velasco, A. Bautista, M. Torres-Carrasco, Comunidad de Madrid, and Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
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Materiales ,Mechanics of Materials ,Hybrid cements ,Geopolymers ,Architecture ,Accelerated leaching ,Building and Construction ,Química ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,Microstructure ,Durability ,Ingeniería Industrial ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
Alkali-activated materials (AAM) and hybrid cements (HC) have become sustainable alternatives to Portland cement (PC) due to their low carbon footprint. The main differences between AAM and HC lie in their content of clinker (none in the AAM and usually lower than 30% for HCs) and the type of activator used (strong alkaline solutions for AAM and small amounts of solid alkalis for HC). Durability problems related with microstructural changes due to decalcification and leaching of the cementitious paste have been well researched for PC pastes, but it is still not well known for AAM and HC. The present work aims to study the leaching process for cement pastes of both types of sustainable pastes. Blast furnace slag (BFS) was selected as a precursor to manufacture hybrid slag (HS) pastes and alkali-activated slag (AAS) pastes. A commercial CEM IV was selected as reference material. A 6 M NH4NO3 solution was used to accelerate leaching kinetics. After 28 days of immersion, the mineralogical and microstructural changes were evaluated. Results show that AAS pastes exhibited the highest leaching resistance of all the pastes under study, due to the absence of portlandite and the high level of polymerization of silicate chains. In HS pastes, the presence of portlandite (due to PC in the material) and gypsum (due to the activator) explains their intermediate performance, in between CEM IV and AAS. The authors have been able to carry out the present research thanks to financial support from the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades of Spain (RTI2018-096428-B-I00 and PID2020-116738RJ-I00 projects) and Madrid Government (Comunidad de Madrid) under the Multiannual Agreement UC3M in the line of "Fostering Young Doctors Research" (HORATSO-CS-UC3M) in the context of the V PRICIT (Regional Programme of Research and Technological Innovation).
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- 2023
45. Efecto de la restricción hídrica invernal en olivo (Olea europaea L.): el potencial hídrico xilemático y la conductancia estomática
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A.A. IBAÑEZ, C. PARERA, and M. TORRES
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olea europaea l ,relaciones hídricas ,riego deficitario ,Agriculture ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Published
- 2016
46. Human genetics uncovers MAP3K15 as an obesity-independent therapeutic target for diabetes
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Abhishek Nag, Ryan S. Dhindsa, Jonathan Mitchell, Chirag Vasavda, Andrew R. Harper, Dimitrios Vitsios, Andrea Ahnmark, Bilada Bilican, Katja Madeyski-Bengtson, Bader Zarrouki, Anthony W. Zoghbi, Quanli Wang, Katherine R. Smith, Jesus Alegre-Díaz, Pablo Kuri-Morales, Jaime Berumen, Roberto Tapia-Conyer, Jonathan Emberson, Jason M. Torres, Rory Collins, David M. Smith, Benjamin Challis, Dirk S. Paul, Mohammad Bohlooly-Y, Mike Snowden, David Baker, Regina Fritsche-Danielson, Menelas N. Pangalos, and Slavé Petrovski
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Multidisciplinary - Abstract
We performed collapsing analyses on 454,796 UK Biobank (UKB) exomes to detect gene-level associations with diabetes. Recessive carriers of nonsynonymous variants in MAP3K15 were 30% less likely to develop diabetes ( P = 5.7 × 10 −10 ) and had lower glycosylated hemoglobin (β = −0.14 SD units, P = 1.1 × 10 −24 ). These associations were independent of body mass index, suggesting protection against insulin resistance even in the setting of obesity. We replicated these findings in 96,811 Admixed Americans in the Mexico City Prospective Study ( P < 0.05)Moreover, the protective effect of MAP3K15 variants was stronger in individuals who did not carry the Latino-enriched SLC16A11 risk haplotype ( P = 6.0 × 10 −4 ). Separately, we identified a Finnish-enriched MAP3K15 protein-truncating variant associated with decreased odds of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes ( P < 0.05) in FinnGen. No adverse phenotypes were associated with protein-truncating MAP3K15 variants in the UKB, supporting this gene as a therapeutic target for diabetes.
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- 2023
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47. Selective Catalytic Reduction of NOx by CO over Cu(Fe)/SBA-15 Catalysts: Effects of the Metal Loading on the Catalytic Activity
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Monique S. Souza, Antonio J. Martins, Jackson Anderson S. Ribeiro, Adriana Campos, Alcineia C. Oliveira, Raí F. Jucá, Gilberto D. Saraiva, Marco Antonio M. Torres, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón, and Rinaldo S. Araujo
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CuO clusters ,metal loadings ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Fe ,Catalysis ,Cu ,General Environmental Science ,SCR-CO - Abstract
Mesoporous Cu(Fe)/SBA-15 catalysts were prepared with distinct metal loadings of ca. 2–10 wt.%. A detailed set of characterizations using X-ray diffraction (XRD), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electron microscopy coupled to energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), Mössbauer spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Raman spectroscopy was performed to correlate the relationship among structure, electronic properties and catalytic performances. All solids were evaluated in the selective catalytic reduction of NOx in the presence of CO (CO-SCR). The influence of the metal loadings on the overall activity indicated that introducing high amounts of Fe or Cu on the catalysts was beneficial to form either CuO or α-Fe2O3 clusters. Cux/SBA-15 series exhibited more efficient activity and poison-tolerant ability during CO-SCR reaction, in contrast to Fex/SBA-15. In spite of the Fe species introduced on SBA-15 having structural features similar to those of Cu ones, low interactions among Fe nanoparticles, silica and clusters impeded the high performances of Fe10/SBA-15. XPS revealed the Fe species in a more oxidized state, indicating the stability of the solid after the catalytic tests, in agreement with EPR and Raman spectroscopy. Cu8/SBA-15 worked better, being recyclable due to the interaction of the Cu2+ ions with SBA-15, avoiding the deactivation of the catalyst.
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- 2023
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48. Alkali-activated and hybrid materials: Alternative to Portland cement as a storage media for solar thermal energy
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E. Enríquez, S. Sánchez-Delgado, Irene Ramón-Álvarez, M. Torres-Carrasco, C. Marugán-Cruz, Comunidad de Madrid, and Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
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Ingeniería Mecánica ,Solar thermal energy ,Materials science ,Sateriales de construcción alternativos ,Materiales ,Química ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,law.invention ,Portland cement ,Materiales híbridos ,Chemical engineering ,Mechanics of Materials ,law ,Alternative construction materials ,Energías Renovables ,Ceramics and Composites ,Alkali activated ,Hybrid materials ,Hybrid material ,Energía térmica solar - Abstract
This study is part of the research line that sees it necessary to develop materials that are alternatives for Portland cement (PC), using industrial by-products such as blast furnace slag and fly ash. This line arises because of the serious environmental consequences suffered by our planet throughout many decades, which have led the cement industry to reduce the amount of CO2 emitted in the production of PC, since it is a highly polluting process. The chemical and physical properties of the materials were studied. In this way, the study of the thermal properties is interesting to test the feasibility of the mortars to use them as solid media to storage thermal energy, since most of the research focus on the thermal properties of concrete is oriented toward fire resistance. Storing solar thermal energy improves the operation of solar power thermal plants. It is being studied that the use of concrete (composed of PC) contributes efficiently to concentrated solar power (CSP) technology. To avoid the use of PC due to environmental concerns, alkaline-activated mortars are manufactured with blast furnace slag using alkaline solutions such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and commercial sodium silicate (SiO2/Na2O = 0.8), as well as hybrid mortars using 80% fly ash or blast furnace slag and 20% PC. After experimental analysis and a simulation to measure the conduction within the mortars through a commercial Computational Fluid Dynamic software (CFD, ANSYS Fluent), it can be concluded that the mechanical and thermal properties of most of the alternative mortars manufactured in this study are better than the ones obtained in the PC. Most notably, the slag alkaline-activated mortar increases those properties significantly. Este estudio se enmarca en la línea de investigación que ve necesario el desarrollo de materiales alternativos al cemento Portland (PC), utilizando subproductos industriales como las escorias de alto horno y las cenizas volantes. Esta línea surge debido a las graves consecuencias medioambientales que ha sufrido nuestro planeta a lo largo de muchas décadas, que han llevado a la industria cementera a reducir la cantidad de CO2 emitida en la producción de PC, ya que es un proceso altamente contaminante. Se estudiaron las propiedades químicas y físicas de los materiales. Así, el estudio de las propiedades térmicas es interesante para comprobar la viabilidad de los morteros para utilizarlos como medios sólidos de almacenamiento de energía térmica, ya que la mayor parte de las investigaciones centradas en las propiedades térmicas del hormigón están orientadas a la resistencia al fuego. El almacenamiento de energía térmica solar mejora el funcionamiento de las centrales termosolares. Se está estudiando que el uso del hormigón (compuesto de PC) contribuye eficazmente a la tecnología de energía solar concentrada (CSP). Para evitar el uso del PC por motivos medioambientales, se fabrican morteros activados con escoria de alto horno utilizando soluciones alcalinas como el hidróxido de sodio (NaOH) y el silicato de sodio comercial (SiO2/Na2O = 0,8), así como morteros híbridos que utilizan un 80% de cenizas volantes o escoria de alto horno y un 20% de PC. Tras el análisis experimental y una simulación para medir la conducción dentro de los morteros mediante un software comercial de dinámica de fluidos computacional (CFD, ANSYS Fluent), se puede concluir que las propiedades mecánicas y térmicas de la mayoría de los morteros alternativos fabricados en este estudio son mejores que las obtenidas en el PC. En particular, el mortero activado alcalinamente con escoria aumenta significativamente esas propiedades. This work has been supported by the Madrid Government (Comunidad de Madrid) under the Multiannual Agreement with UC3M in the line of "Fostering Young Doctors Research" (HORATSO-CM-UC3M) in the context of the V PRICIT (Regional Programme of Research and Technological Innovation).
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- 2023
49. The giant diploid faba genome unlocks variation in a global protein crop
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Murukarthick Jayakodi, Agnieszka A. Golicz, Jonathan Kreplak, Lavinia I. Fechete, Deepti Angra, Petr Bednář, Elesandro Bornhofen, Hailin Zhang, Raphaël Boussageon, Sukhjiwan Kaur, Kwok Cheung, Jana Čížková, Heidrun Gundlach, Asis Hallab, Baptiste Imbert, Gabriel Keeble-Gagnère, Andrea Koblížková, Lucie Kobrlová, Petra Krejčí, Troels W. Mouritzen, Pavel Neumann, Marcin Nadzieja, Linda Kærgaard Nielsen, Petr Novák, Jihad Orabi, Sudharsan Padmarasu, Tom Robertson-Shersby-Harvie, Laura Ávila Robledillo, Andrea Schiemann, Jaakko Tanskanen, Petri Törönen, Ahmed O. Warsame, Alexander H. J. Wittenberg, Axel Himmelbach, Grégoire Aubert, Pierre-Emmanuel Courty, Jaroslav Doležel, Liisa U. Holm, Luc L. Janss, Hamid Khazaei, Jiří Macas, Martin Mascher, Petr Smýkal, Rod J. Snowdon, Nils Stein, Frederick L. Stoddard, Jens Stougaard, Nadim Tayeh, Ana M. Torres, Björn Usadel, Ingo Schubert, Donal Martin O’Sullivan, Alan H. Schulman, Stig Uggerhøj Andersen, Institute of Biotechnology, Computational genomics, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Genetics, Bioinformatics, Department of Agricultural Sciences, Viikki Plant Science Centre (ViPS), Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), Crop Science Research Group, Legume science, and Plant Production Sciences
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Multidisciplinary ,1184 Genetics, developmental biology, physiology ,ddc:500 ,11831 Plant biology ,metabolism ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Plant Proteins ,genetics ,Plant Breeding ,Vicia faba ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Diploidy ,4111 Agronomy - Abstract
Increasing the proportion of locally produced plant protein in currently meat-rich diets could substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions and loss of biodiversity1. However, plant protein production is hampered by the lack of a cool-season legume equivalent to soybean in agronomic value2. Faba bean (Vicia faba L.) has a high yield potential and is well suited for cultivation in temperate regions, but genomic resources are scarce. Here, we report a high-quality chromosome-scale assembly of the faba bean genome and show that it has expanded to a massive 13 Gb in size through an imbalance between the rates of amplification and elimination of retrotransposons and satellite repeats. Genes and recombination events are evenly dispersed across chromosomes and the gene space is remarkably compact considering the genome size, although with substantial copy number variation driven by tandem duplication. Demonstrating practical application of the genome sequence, we develop a targeted genotyping assay and use high-resolution genome-wide association analysis to dissect the genetic basis of seed size and hilum colour. The resources presented constitute a genomics-based breeding platform for faba bean, enabling breeders and geneticists to accelerate the improvement of sustainable protein production across the Mediterranean, subtropical and northern temperate agroecological zones.
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- 2023
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50. On the path from xylem hydraulic failure to downstream cell death
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Marylou Mantova, Hervé Cochard, Régis Burlett, Sylvain Delzon, Andrew King, Celia M. Rodriguez‐Dominguez, Mutez A. Ahmed, Santiago Trueba, José M. Torres‐Ruiz, Laboratoire de Physique et Physiologie Intégratives de l’Arbre en environnement Fluctuant (PIAF), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA), Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés (BioGeCo), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Synchrotron SOLEIL (SSOLEIL), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas (CSIC), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [Madrid] (CSIC), Universität Bayreuth, Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France), Mantova, Marylou, Cochard, H., Delzon, Sylvain, King, A., Rodríguez Domínguez, Celia M., Ahmed, Mutez Ali, Trueba, Santiago, Torres Ruiz, José Manuel, and Burlett, Regís
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cavitation ,relative water content ,Physiology ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,Plant Science ,drought ,cell dehydration ,membrane leakage - Abstract
14 páginas.- 8 figuras.- 1 tablas.- 62 referencias.- Supporting information the online version of the published article http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.18578, Xylem hydraulic failure (HF) has been identified as a ubiquitous factor in triggering drought-induced tree mortality through the damage induced by the progressive dehydration of plant living cells. However, fundamental evidence of the mechanistic link connecting xylem HF to cell death has not been identified yet. The main aim of this study was to evaluate, at the leaf level, the relationship between loss of hydraulic function due to cavitation and cell death under drought conditions and discern how this relationship varied across species with contrasting resistances to cavitation. Drought was induced by withholding water from potted seedlings, and their leaves were sampled to measure their relative water content (RWC) and cell mortality. Vulnerability curves to cavitation at the leaf level were constructed for each species. An increment in cavitation events occurrence precedes the onset of cell mortality. A variation in cells tolerance to dehydration was observed along with the resistance to cavitation. Overall, our results indicate that the onset of cellular mortality occurs at lower RWC than the one for cavitation indicating the role of cavitation in triggering cellular death. They also evidenced a critical RWC for cellular death varying across species with different cavitation resistance. © 2022 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2022 New Phytologist Foundation., This research was supported by La Region Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes ‘Pack Ambition International 2020’ through the project‘ ThirsTree’ 20-006175-01, 20-006175-02 and the Agence Nationale de la Recherche, grant/award no. ANR-18-CE20-0005, ‘Hydrauleaks’
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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