19 results on '"Amati, Viviana"'
Search Results
2. Classic Maya bloodletting and the cultural evolution of religious rituals: quantifying patterns of variation in hieroglyphic texts.
- Author
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Munson, Jessica, Amati, Viviana, Collard, Mark, and Macri, Martha J
- Subjects
Humans ,Bloodletting ,Models ,Statistical ,Ceremonial Behavior ,Cultural Evolution ,History ,Ancient ,Religion ,Writing ,Computer Graphics ,Documentation ,Pattern Recognition ,Automated ,Ethnic Groups ,Americas ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Religious rituals that are painful or highly stressful are hypothesized to be costly signs of commitment essential for the evolution of complex society. Yet few studies have investigated how such extreme ritual practices were culturally transmitted in past societies. Here, we report the first study to analyze temporal and spatial variation in bloodletting rituals recorded in Classic Maya (ca. 250-900 CE) hieroglyphic texts. We also identify the sociopolitical contexts most closely associated with these ancient recorded rituals. Sampling an extensive record of 2,480 hieroglyphic texts, this study identifies every recorded instance of the logographic sign for the word ch'ahb' that is associated with ritual bloodletting. We show that documented rituals exhibit low frequency whose occurrence cannot be predicted by spatial location. Conversely, network ties better capture the distribution of bloodletting rituals across the southern Maya region. Our results indicate that bloodletting rituals by Maya nobles were not uniformly recorded, but were typically documented in association with antagonistic statements and may have signaled royal commitments among connected polities.
- Published
- 2014
3. Social relations and life satisfaction: the role of friends
- Author
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Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, and Zaccarin, Susanna
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Influence of Hospital Characteristics on Hospital Transfer Destinations for Patients With Stroke
- Author
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Zachrison, K, Amati, V, Schwamm, L, Yan, Z, Nielsen, V, Christie, A, Reeves, M, Sauser, J, Lomi, A, Onnela, J, Zachrison, Kori S, Amati, Viviana, Schwamm, Lee H, Yan, Zhiyu, Nielsen, Victoria, Christie, Anita, Reeves, Mathew J, Sauser, Joseph P, Lomi, Alessandro, Onnela, Jukka-Pekka, Zachrison, K, Amati, V, Schwamm, L, Yan, Z, Nielsen, V, Christie, A, Reeves, M, Sauser, J, Lomi, A, Onnela, J, Zachrison, Kori S, Amati, Viviana, Schwamm, Lee H, Yan, Zhiyu, Nielsen, Victoria, Christie, Anita, Reeves, Mathew J, Sauser, Joseph P, Lomi, Alessandro, and Onnela, Jukka-Pekka
- Abstract
Background: Patients with stroke are frequently transferred between hospitals. This may have implications on the quality of care received by patients; however, it is not well understood how the characteristics of sending and receiving hospitals affect the likelihood of a transfer event. Our objective was to identify hospital characteristics associated with sending and receiving patients with stroke. Methods: Using a comprehensive statewide administrative dataset, including all 78 Massachusetts hospitals, we identified all transfers of patients with ischemic stroke between October 2007 and September 2015 for this observational study. Hospital variables included reputation (US News and World Report ranking), capability (stroke center status, annual stroke volume, and trauma center designation), and institutional affiliation. We included network variables to control for the structure of hospital-to-hospital transfers. We used relational event modeling to account for complex temporal and relational dependencies associated with transfers. This method decomposes a series of patient transfers into a sequence of decisions characterized by transfer initiations and destinations, modeling them using a discrete-choice framework. Results: Among 73 114 ischemic stroke admissions there were 7189 (9.8%) transfers during the study period. After accounting for travel time between hospitals and structural network characteristics, factors associated with increased likelihood of being a receiving hospital (in descending order of relative effect size) included shared hospital affiliation (5.8× higher), teaching hospital status (4.2× higher), stroke center status (4.3× and 3.8× higher when of the same or higher status), and hospitals of the same or higher reputational ranking (1.5× higher). Conclusions: After accounting for distance and structural network characteristics, in descending order of importance, shared hospital affiliation, hospital capabilities, and hospital reputation were im
- Published
- 2022
5. Influence of Hospital Characteristics on Hospital Transfer Destinations for Patients With Stroke
- Author
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Zachrison, Kori S., primary, Amati, Viviana, additional, Schwamm, Lee H., additional, Yan, Zhiyu, additional, Nielsen, Victoria, additional, Christie, Anita, additional, Reeves, Mathew J., additional, Sauser, Joseph P., additional, Lomi, Alessandro, additional, and Onnela, Jukka-Pekka, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Abstract P124: Stroke Patient Transfer Destination is Influenced by Hospital Affiliation
- Author
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Zachrison, Kori S, primary, Amati, Viviana, additional, Schwamm, Lee H, additional, Yan, Zhiyu, additional, Nielsen, Victoria, additional, Christie, Anita, additional, Reeves, Mathew J, additional, Sauser, Joseph, additional, Lomi, Alessandro, additional, and Onnela, Jukka-Pekka, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Binding Properties, Cell Delivery, and Gene Transfer of Adenoviral Penton Base Displaying Bacteriophage
- Author
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Di Giovine, Monica, Salone, Barbara, Martina, Yuri, Amati, Viviana, Zambruno, Giovanna, Cundari, Enrico, Failla, Cristina M., and Saggio, Isabella
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Relational Resources of Individuals Living in Couple: Evidence from an Italian Survey
- Author
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Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, Zaccarin, Susanna, Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121), Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, Zaccarin, Susanna, and Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121)
- Abstract
The need for support becomes stronger in situations of pressure, uncertainty and overload caused by unfavorable economic, demographic or social circumstances. Especially in countries—such as Italy—where an adequate welfare system is lacking, the individual’s social space can represent a resilience (anti-frailty) tool through the activation of a support network. While the literature has mainly analyzed the support that some vulnerable categories (e.g., elderly and youths) receive from their family, we focus on individuals living in Italy in the first stages of their family life, with the aim of describing their support network. We construct the potential support ego-centered (PSE) network—at partner and couple level—of individuals living in couple using data from the survey “Family and Social Subjects” carried out in Italy in 2009 by the Italian National Statistical Institute. Furthermore, we compare the network typologies detected using two alternative clustering techniques with the objective of finding the partners’ and couples’ network types and verifying whether traditional strong support received by the family persists in Italy and/or whether new kinds of support networks are emerging. Several PSE network typologies, ranging from empty to comprehensive networks, were determined with a fair match between the two procedures. Analysis revealed the importance of friends and neighbors, especially in the North of Italy, to the support of partners and couple as a whole.
- Published
- 2017
9. Relational Resources of Individuals Living in Couple: Evidence from an Italian Survey
- Author
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Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, Zaccarin, Susanna, Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121), Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, Zaccarin, Susanna, and Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121)
- Abstract
The need for support becomes stronger in situations of pressure, uncertainty and overload caused by unfavorable economic, demographic or social circumstances. Especially in countries—such as Italy—where an adequate welfare system is lacking, the individual’s social space can represent a resilience (anti-frailty) tool through the activation of a support network. While the literature has mainly analyzed the support that some vulnerable categories (e.g., elderly and youths) receive from their family, we focus on individuals living in Italy in the first stages of their family life, with the aim of describing their support network. We construct the potential support ego-centered (PSE) network—at partner and couple level—of individuals living in couple using data from the survey “Family and Social Subjects” carried out in Italy in 2009 by the Italian National Statistical Institute. Furthermore, we compare the network typologies detected using two alternative clustering techniques with the objective of finding the partners’ and couples’ network types and verifying whether traditional strong support received by the family persists in Italy and/or whether new kinds of support networks are emerging. Several PSE network typologies, ranging from empty to comprehensive networks, were determined with a fair match between the two procedures. Analysis revealed the importance of friends and neighbors, especially in the North of Italy, to the support of partners and couple as a whole.
- Published
- 2016
10. New statistics for the parameters estimation of the stochastic actor-oriented model for network change
- Author
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AMATI, VIVIANA, Amati, V, and QUATTO, PIERO
- Subjects
SECS-S/01 - STATISTICA ,network analysis, longitudinal data, stochastic-actor oriented model, generalized method of moments, stochastic approximation - Abstract
The Stochastic actor-oriented model (SAO) is a statistical model for longitudinal network data. The most often used procedure for the estimation of the parameter of the SAO model is the Method of Moments (MoM), which estimates the parameters using one observed statistic for each estimated parameter. A new set of statistics is defined taking into account the different ways of creating and deleting ties to which a certain effect can contribute. This definition leads to having more than one statistic for a single parameter, i.e. to an over-determined system of equations. Thus, the ordinary MoM cannot be applied. A suitable method then is the Generalized Method of Moments (GMM), an estimation technique mainly used in econometrics, and potentially more efficient than the MoM. Like the regular MoM, the GMM is based on the differences between the expected values of the statistics and their sample counterparts, but the GMM involves the minimization of a quadratic function of these differences rather than setting all differences to 0. This means that an extra problem arises: the determination of a matrix of weights reflecting the different importance and correlations of the statistics involved. An optimization-simulation algorithm is used, following the approach suggested by Gelman (1995) and based on the Newton-Raphson algorithm, to compare the estimators deriving from the MoM and the GMM. Simulation results suggest that the new set of statistics performs better when network observations are close. In fact, in this context the standard errors of the GMM estimators are lower than those of the MoM.
- Published
- 2011
11. Network-based Sources of Social Capital. Evidence from the Italian Multipurpose Survey
- Author
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Crocetta, Corrado, Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, RIVELLINI, GIULIA, ZACCARIN, SUSANNA, Crocetta, Corrado, Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, RIVELLINI, GIULIA, and ZACCARIN, SUSANNA
- Published
- 2015
12. Potential and Effective Support Networks of Young Italian Adults
- Author
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Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, RIVELLINI, GIULIA, ZACCARIN, SUSANNA, Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, RIVELLINI, GIULIA, and ZACCARIN, SUSANNA
- Published
- 2015
13. Potential and Effective Support Networks of Young Italian Adults
- Author
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Amati, Viviana, Rivellini, Giulia, Zaccarin, Susanna, Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121), Amati, Viviana, Rivellini, Giulia, Zaccarin, Susanna, and Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121)
- Abstract
International literature on individual behavior has shown the importance of the network of relationships binding individuals to the people who are close to them in everyday life. Family and other role relations are important sources of emotional and instrumental support, as well as social companionship. For the Italian scenario, the 2003 Generations and Gender Survey offers some challenges for constructing ego-centered support networks based on reasonable assumptions of the frequency of contacts and residential proximity of respondents with kin, friends and neighbors. Focusing on young Italian adults aged 18–34 years who are single or have a partner, we define two kinds of support networks—the potential support ego network and the effective support family network—with the aim of analyzing the effects of network characteristics (size and composition) on the probability of receiving help. Our findings show that couples received more support and more often than singles. Although singles’ potential support networks were more characterized by no family ties than the ones of partners, the availability of a ‘‘comprehensive’’ network or a network not ‘‘encapsulated’’ only in the family increased the probability of receiving help in both groups. Moreover, gender differences provide evidence of distinct behavior between partners in activating their network for (family) support.
- Published
- 2014
14. Potential and effective support network of young Italian adults
- Author
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Rivellini, Giulia, Amati, Viviana, Zaccarin, Susanna, Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121), Rivellini, Giulia, Amati, Viviana, Zaccarin, Susanna, and Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121)
- Abstract
International literature on individual behavior has shown the importance of the network of relationships binding individuals to the people who are close to them in everyday life. Family and other role relations are important sources of emotional and instrumental support, as well as social companionship. For the Italian scenario, the 2003 Generations and Gender Survey offers some challenges for constructing ego-centered support networks based on reasonable assumptions of the frequency of contacts and residential proximity of respondents with kin, friends and neighbors. Focusing on young Italian adults aged 18-34 years who are single or have a partner, we defne two kinds of support networks - the potential support ego network and the efective family network - with the aim of analyzing the efects of network characteristics (size and composition) on the probability of receiving help. Our findings show that couples received more support more often than singles. Although singles' potential support networks were more characterized by no family ties than the ones of partners, the availability of a 'comprehensive' network or a network not 'encapsulated' only in the family increased the probability of receiving help in both groups. Moreover, gender diferences provide evidence of distinct behavior between partners in activating their network for (family) support.
- Published
- 2013
15. New statistics for the parameters estimation of the stochastic actor-oriented model for network change
- Author
-
SNIJDERS, TOM AB, Amati, V, QUATTO, PIERO, AMATI, VIVIANA, SNIJDERS, TOM AB, Amati, V, QUATTO, PIERO, and AMATI, VIVIANA
- Abstract
The Stochastic actor-oriented model (SAO) is a statistical model for longitudinal network data. The most often used procedure for the estimation of the parameter of the SAO model is the Method of Moments (MoM), which estimates the parameters using one observed statistic for each estimated parameter. A new set of statistics is defined taking into account the different ways of creating and deleting ties to which a certain effect can contribute. This definition leads to having more than one statistic for a single parameter, i.e. to an over-determined system of equations. Thus, the ordinary MoM cannot be applied. A suitable method then is the Generalized Method of Moments (GMM), an estimation technique mainly used in econometrics, and potentially more efficient than the MoM. Like the regular MoM, the GMM is based on the differences between the expected values of the statistics and their sample counterparts, but the GMM involves the minimization of a quadratic function of these differences rather than setting all differences to 0. This means that an extra problem arises: the determination of a matrix of weights reflecting the different importance and correlations of the statistics involved. An optimization-simulation algorithm is used, following the approach suggested by Gelman (1995) and based on the Newton-Raphson algorithm, to compare the estimators deriving from the MoM and the GMM. Simulation results suggest that the new set of statistics performs better when network observations are close. In fact, in this context the standard errors of the GMM estimators are lower than those of the MoM.
- Published
- 2011
16. Individual, dyadic and network effects in friendship relations among Italian and foreign schoolmates
- Author
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Rivellini, Giulia, Terzera, Laura, Amati, Viviana, Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121), Rivellini, Giulia, Terzera, Laura, Amati, Viviana, and Rivellini, Giulia (ORCID:0000-0002-4615-7121)
- Abstract
One of the effects of the increasing number of foreigners in Italy is the growing presence of immigrants’ children. The transformation of a group of workers into a population involves a perspective aimed above all at analysing integration processes. Among all the factors useful for empirically describing this process, the analysis of friendship relationships uses a perspective that is not yet widely explored and full of interesting implications. The schools attended by native and foreign pupils represent a privileged observatory to analyse social relationships. Thanks to a survey conducted during 2006 on over 17,000 pupils (Italian and foreign) attending first grade secondary school in Lombardy, the most foreign-populated region in Italy, this study intends to investigate the friendship relationships observed inside and outside school classrooms. In particular, the attention is focused on how the actors’ (pupils) characteristics (individual and migratory) support inter-ethnic social relations. In this paper, we use statistical models for the analysis of closed friendship networks. This approach enables us to estimate the actors’ and structural effects on the friendship ties’ presence. The results mainly show that pupils prefer to interact with classmates who are like themselves, even if school classes are privileged places where children of migrants and native pupils come in contact, and therefore where inter-ethnic relationships are encouraged.
- Published
- 2011
17. Processing of GB virus B non-structural proteins in cultured cells requires both NS3 protease and NS4A cofactor
- Author
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Sbardellati, Andrea, primary, Scarselli, Elisa, additional, Amati, Viviana, additional, Falcinelli, Sabrina, additional, Kekulé, Alexander S., additional, and Traboni, Cinzia, additional
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Social relations and life satisfaction: the role of friends
- Author
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Viviana Amati, Susanna Zaccarin, Silvia Meggiolaro, Giulia Rivellini, Amati, V, Meggiolaro, S, Rivellini, G, Zaccarin, S, Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, and Zaccarin, Susanna
- Subjects
Social resource ,media_common.quotation_subject ,social capital ,Multipurpose survey ,Friendship relationships ,Life satisfaction ,050109 social psychology ,Settore SECS-S/05 - STATISTICA SOCIALE ,Personal network ,Friendship relationship ,Social capital ,0502 economics and business ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Quality (business) ,050207 economics ,media_common ,Demography ,05 social sciences ,Social relation ,Friendship ,lcsh:HB848-3697 ,lcsh:Demography. Population. Vital events ,Original Article ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Social capital is defined as the individual’s pool of social resources found in his/her personal network. A recent study on Italians living as couples has shown that friendship relationships, beyond those within an individual’s family, are an important source of support. Here, we used data from Aspects of Daily Life, the Italian National Statistical Institute’s 2012 multipurpose survey, to analyze the relation between friendship ties and life satisfaction. Our results show that friendship, in terms of intensity (measured by the frequency with which individuals see their friends) and quality (measured by the satisfaction with friendship relationships), is positively associated to life satisfaction.
- Published
- 2018
19. Relational Resources of Individuals Living in Couple: Evidence from an Italian Survey
- Author
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Susanna Zaccarin, Viviana Amati, Silvia Meggiolaro, Giulia Rivellini, Amati, V, Meggiolaro, S, Rivellini, G, Zaccarin, S, Amati, Viviana, Meggiolaro, Silvia, Rivellini, Giulia, and Zaccarin, Susanna
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Potential support ego-centered network typologie ,050109 social psychology ,Settore SECS-S/05 - STATISTICA SOCIALE ,Social Sciences (all) ,Potential support ,Social support ,Settore SPS/07 - SOCIOLOGIA GENERALE ,Social space ,Ego-centered support network ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Italian couples ,Settore SECS-S/04 - DEMOGRAFIA ,Human geography ,050602 political science & public administration ,medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Italian couple ,Clustering technique ,media_common ,Clustering techniques ,Ego-centered network typologies ,Public health ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Potential support ego-centered network typologies ,Family life ,0506 political science ,Welfare system ,Psychological resilience ,Psychology ,Construct (philosophy) ,Social psychology - Abstract
The need for support becomes stronger in situations of pressure, uncertainty and overload caused by unfavorable economic, demographic or social circumstances. Especially in countries—such as Italy—where an adequate welfare system is lacking, the individual’s social space can represent a resilience (anti-frailty) tool through the activation of a support network. While the literature has mainly analyzed the support that some vulnerable categories (e.g., elderly and youths) receive from their family, we focus on individuals living in Italy in the first stages of their family life, with the aim of describing their support network. We construct the potential support ego-centered (PSE) network—at partner and couple level—of individuals living in couple using data from the survey ‘‘Family and Social Subjects’’ carried out in Italy in 2009 by the Italian National Statistical Institute. Furthermore, we compare the network typologies detected using two alternative clustering techniques with the objective of finding the partners’ and couples’ network types and verifying whether traditional strong support received by the family persists in Italy and/or whether new kinds of support networks are emerging. Several PSE network typologies, ranging from empty to comprehensive networks, were determined with a fair match between the two procedures. Analysis revealed the importance of friends and neighbors, especially in the North of Italy, to the support of partners and couple as a whole.
- Published
- 2016
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