2,790 results on '"Magnasco, A."'
Search Results
52. Alessandro Magnasco. Milan
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Brigstocke, Hugh
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- 1996
53. Challenges in the diagnosis and treatment of candidemia due to multidrug-resistant Candida auris
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Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, Malgorzata Mikulska, Antonio Vena, Vincenzo Di Pilato, Laura Magnasco, Anna Marchese, and Matteo Bassetti
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Candida auris ,candidemia ,diagnosis ,treatment ,MDR ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Published
- 2023
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54. Odyssey 20.356-57 and the eclipse of 1178 B.C.E.: a response to Baikouzis and Magnasco
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Gainsford, Peter
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Archeoastronomy ,Homer ,Astronomy ,Greek epic ,Odyssey ,Trojan War - Abstract
The 2008 argument of C. Baikouzis and M. Magnasco that Odyssey 20.356-57 preserves a reference to the solar eclipse of 26 April 1178 BCE has received widespread attention in generalist publications. Unlike Carl Schoch’s 1926 argument, which came to the same conclusion, the new argument cannot be rejected on the basis of the passage’s context. Baikouzis-Magnasco require several other tacit assumptions, however, and many of these may be rejected with great confidence.
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- 2012
55. MAGNASCO AND TITIAN: FURTHER EVIDENCE FOR THE SECOND VERSION OF 'THE FLAYING OF MARSYAS'
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Lubomír Konečný
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Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art history ,Art ,media_common - Published
- 2000
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56. Clinical significance of inflammatory markers of bacterial infection in critically ill patients with COVID-19 after treatment with anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory drugs: a complex new scenario
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Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, Lorenzo Ball, Laura Magnasco, Chiara Dentone, Denise Battaglini, Chiara Robba, Paolo Pelosi, and Matteo Bassetti
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Biochemistry ,QD415-436 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2021
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57. Anti-glutathione S-transferase theta 1 antibodies correlate with graft loss in non-sensitized pediatric kidney recipients
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Patrizia Comoli, Michela Cioni, Bryan Ray, Augusto Tagliamacco, Annalisa Innocente, Gianluca Caridi, Maurizio Bruschi, Jayasree Hariharan, Iris Fontana, Antonella Trivelli, Alberto Magnasco, Angela Nocco, Catherine Klersy, Stella Muscianisi, Gian Marco Ghiggeri, Massimo Cardillo, Enrico Verrina, Arcangelo Nocera, and Fabrizio Ginevri
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kidney transplantation ,non-HLA antigens ,autoantibodies ,alloantibodies ,antibody mediated rejection ,allograft loss ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
IntroductionImmunity to Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) cannot explain all cases of ABMR, nor the differences observed in the outcome of kidney recipients with circulating DSAs endowed with similar biologic characteristics. Thus, increasing attention has recently been focused on the role of immunity to non-HLA antigenic targets.MethodsWe analyzed humoral auto- and alloimmune responses to the non-HLA antigen glutathione S-transferase theta 1 (GSTT1), along with development of de novo (dn)HLA-DSAs, in a cohort of 146 pediatric non-sensitized recipients of first kidney allograft, to analyze its role in ABMR and graft loss. A multiplex bead assay was employed to assess GSTT1 antibodies (Abs).ResultsWe observed development of GSTT1 Abs in 71 recipients after transplantation, 16 with MFI > 8031 (4th quartile: Q4 group). In univariate analyses, we found an association between Q4-GSTT1Abs and ABMR and graft loss, suggesting a potential role in inducing graft damage, as GSTT1 Abs were identified within ABMR biopsies of patients with graft function deterioration in the absence of concomitant intragraft HLA-DSAs. HLA-DSAs and GSTT1 Abs were independent predictors of graft loss in our cohort. As GSTT1 Ab development preceded or coincided with the appearance of dnHLA-DSAs, we tested and found that a model with the two combined parameters proved more fit to classify patients at risk of graft loss.DiscussionOur observations on the harmful effects of GSTT1Abs, alone or in combination with HLA-DSAs, add to the evidence pointing to a negative role of allo- and auto-non-HLA Abs on kidney graft outcome.
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- 2022
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58. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid characteristics and outcomes of invasively mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 pneumonia in Genoa, Italy
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Dentone, Chiara, Vena, Antonio, Loconte, Maurizio, Grillo, Federica, Brunetti, Iole, Barisione, Emanuela, Tedone, Elisabetta, Mora, Sara, Di Biagio, Antonio, Orsi, Andrea, De Maria, Andrea, Nicolini, Laura, Ball, Lorenzo, Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto, Magnasco, Laura, Delfino, Emanuele, Mastracci, Luca, Mangerini, Rosa, Taramasso, Lucia, Sepulcri, Chiara, Pincino, Rachele, Bavastro, Martina, Cerchiaro, Matteo, Mikulska, Malgorzata, Bruzzone, Bianca, Icardi, Giancarlo, Frisoni, Paolo, Gratarola, Angelo, Patroniti, Nicolò, Pelosi, Paolo, and Bassetti, Matteo
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- 2021
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59. THE METAPHOR AS A MECHANISM OF INTELLIGENCE, CREATION AND COMMUNICATION IN HARD SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING AND ITS RECOVERY IN UNIVERSITY TEACHING
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Humberto Manuel Magnasco
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enseñanza de la ciencia ,epistemología ,metáfora ,proceso cognitivo ,Education - Abstract
We present here a synthesis of our research on the epistemic validity of the use of metaphor in higher education as a mechanism of intelligence, creation and communication in “hard sciences” and engineering. It was forged in a master's thesis in university teaching in which we trace the presence of the metaphorical mechanism in the inaugural and basal productions of modern science (Galileo, Newton, Faraday, Maxwell, Fourier, Ohm). The method used was qualitative and exploratory, descriptive and genetic in scope, inferring from empirical indicators the potential of intelligence, creation and communication of the mechanism. The design was dialectical, proposing data matrices that gave coherence and epistemic entity to them. We detect in the advance of scientific knowledge in this fundamental stage the sine qua non use of creative metaphors, which, by stepping into the “foreign fields” of daily life and from foreign disciplines, allowed creatively understand intriguing and challenging phenomena. We found that the latter, producing a kind of "hermeneutical vacuum" in the spirit, challenged the researcher and drove an initially metaphorical creative “filling” (trying to know the unknown from the known). This initial metaphor —cognitively vivid and implicating— was later made parched under a mathematical dress that turned it into a model. We conclude that if the metaphor creatively helped to understand and mathematize phenomena in the production of scientific knowledge, its recovery by teaching is timely in order to promote the construction of scientific knowledge in an interesting and meaningful way.
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- 2021
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60. Real-Life Use of Ceftolozane/Tazobactam for the Treatment of Bloodstream Infection Due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Neutropenic Hematologic Patients: a Matched Control Study (ZENITH Study)
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Alba Bergas, Adaia Albasanz-Puig, Ana Fernández-Cruz, Marina Machado, Andrés Novo, David van Duin, Carolina Garcia-Vidal, Morgan Hakki, Isabel Ruiz-Camps, José Luis del Pozo, Chiara Oltolini, Catherine DeVoe, Lubos Drgona, Oriol Gasch, Malgorzata Mikulska, Pilar Martín-Dávila, Maddalena Peghin, Lourdes Vázquez, Júlia Laporte-Amargós, Xavier Durà-Miralles, Natàlia Pallarès, Eva González-Barca, Ana Álvarez-Uría, Pedro Puerta-Alcalde, Juan Aguilar-Company, Francisco Carmona-Torre, Teresa Daniela Clerici, Sarah B. Doernberg, Lucía Petrikova, Silvia Capilla, Laura Magnasco, Jesús Fortún, Nadia Castaldo, Jordi Carratalà, and Carlota Gudiol
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multidrug-resistant ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,bacteremia ,bloodstream infection ,neutropenia ,hematologic malignancy ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT We sought to assess the characteristics and outcomes of neutropenic hematologic patients with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) bloodstream infection (BSI) treated with ceftolozane-tazobactam (C/T). We conducted a multicenter, international, matched-cohort study of PA BSI episodes in neutropenic hematologic patients who received C/T. Controls were patients with PA BSI treated with other antibiotics. Risk factors for overall 7-day and 30-day case fatality rates were analyzed. We compared 44 cases with 88 controls. Overall, 91% of episodes were caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains. An endogenous source was the most frequent BSI origin (35.6%), followed by pneumonia (25.8%). There were no significant differences in patient characteristics between groups. C/T was given empirically in 11 patients and as definitive therapy in 41 patients. Treatment with C/T was associated with less need for mechanical ventilation (13.6% versus 33.3%; P = 0.021) and reduced 7-day (6.8% versus 34.1%; P = 0.001) and 30-day (22.7% versus 48.9%; P = 0.005) mortality. In the multivariate analysis, pneumonia, profound neutropenia, and persistent BSI were independent risk factors for 30-day mortality, whereas lower mortality was found among patients treated with C/T (adjusted OR [aOR] of 0.19; confidence interval [CI] 95% of 0.07 to 0.55; P = 0.002). Therapy with C/T was associated with less need for mechanical ventilation and reduced 7-day and 30-day case fatality rates compared to alternative agents in neutropenic hematologic patients with PA BSI. IMPORTANCE Ceftolozane-tazobactam (C/T) has been shown to be a safe and effective alternative for the treatment of difficult to treat infections due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) in the general nonimmunocompromised population. However, the experience of this agent in immunosuppressed neutropenic patients is very limited. Our study is unique because it is focused on extremely immunosuppressed hematological patients with neutropenia and bloodstream infection (BSI) due to PA (mainly multidrug resistant [MDR]), a scenario which is often associated with very high mortality rates. In our study, we found that the use of C/T for the treatment of MDR PA BSI in hematological neutropenic patients was significantly associated with improved outcomes, and, in addition, it was found to be an independent risk factor associated with increased survival. To date, this is the largest series involving neutropenic hematologic patients with PA BSI treated with C/T.
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- 2022
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61. Alessandro Magnasco BENNO GEIGER
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Biermann
- Published
- 1915
62. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid characteristics and outcomes of invasively mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 pneumonia in Genoa, Italy
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Chiara Dentone, Antonio Vena, Maurizio Loconte, Federica Grillo, Iole Brunetti, Emanuela Barisione, Elisabetta Tedone, Sara Mora, Antonio Di Biagio, Andrea Orsi, Andrea De Maria, Laura Nicolini, Lorenzo Ball, Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, Laura Magnasco, Emanuele Delfino, Luca Mastracci, Rosa Mangerini, Lucia Taramasso, Chiara Sepulcri, Rachele Pincino, Martina Bavastro, Matteo Cerchiaro, Malgorzata Mikulska, Bianca Bruzzone, Giancarlo Icardi, Paolo Frisoni, Angelo Gratarola, Nicolò Patroniti, Paolo Pelosi, and Matteo Bassetti
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COVID-19 ,Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid ,Macrophages ,Lymphocytes ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background The primary objective of the study is to describe the cellular characteristics of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of COVID-19 patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation; the secondary outcome is to describe BALF findings between survivors vs non-survivors. Materials and methods Patients positive for SARS-CoV-2 RT PCR, admitted to ICU between March and April 2020 were enrolled. At ICU admission, BALF were analyzed by flow cytometry. Univariate, multivariate and Spearman correlation analyses were performed. Results Sixty-four patients were enrolled, median age of 64 years (IQR 58–69). The majority cells in the BALF were neutrophils (70%, IQR 37.5–90.5) and macrophages (27%, IQR 7–49) while a minority were lymphocytes, 1%, TCD3+ 92% (IQR 82–95). The ICU mortality was 32.8%. Non-survivors had a significantly older age (p = 0.033) and peripheral lymphocytes (p = 0.012) were lower compared to the survivors. At multivariate analysis the percentage of macrophages in the BALF correlated with poor outcome (OR 1.336, CI95% 1.014–1.759, p = 0.039). Conclusions In critically ill patients, BALF cellularity is mainly composed of neutrophils and macrophages. The macrophages percentage in the BALF at ICU admittance correlated with higher ICU mortality. The lack of lymphocytes in BALF could partly explain a reduced anti-viral response.
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- 2021
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63. Masks and distancing during COVID-19: a causal framework for imputing value to public-health interventions
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Andres Babino and Marcelo O. Magnasco
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract During the COVID-19 pandemic, the scientific community developed predictive models to evaluate potential governmental interventions. However, the analysis of the effects these interventions had is less advanced. Here, we propose a data-driven framework to assess these effects retrospectively. We use a regularized regression to find a parsimonious model that fits the data with the least changes in the $$R_t$$ R t parameter. Then, we postulate each jump in $$R_t$$ R t as the effect of an intervention. Following the do-operator prescriptions, we simulate the counterfactual case by forcing $$R_t$$ R t to stay at the pre-jump value. We then attribute a value to the intervention from the difference between true evolution and simulated counterfactual. We show that the recommendation to use facemasks for all activities would reduce the number of cases by 200,000 ( $$95\%$$ 95 % CI 190,000–210,000) in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York State. The framework presented here might be used in any case where cause and effects are sparse in time.
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- 2021
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64. A comment on 'A fast L_p spike alignment metric' by A. J. Dubbs, B. A. Seiler and M. O. Magnasco [arXiv:0907.3137]
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HOUGHTON, CONOR JAMES
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Pure & Applied Mathematics ,GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries) - Abstract
PUBLISHED, Measuring the transmitted information in metric-based clustering has become something of a standard test for the performance of a spike train metric. In this comment, the recently proposed L_p Victor-Purpura metric is used to cluster spiking responses to zebra finch songs, recorded from field L of anesthetized zebra finch. It is found that for these data the L_p metrics with p>1 modestly outperform the standard, p=1, Victor-Purpura metric. It is argued that this is because for larger values of p, the metric comes closer to performing windowed coincidence detection.
- Published
- 2009
65. Enterococcal bloodstream infections in critically ill patients with COVID-19: a case series
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Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, Laura Labate, Stefania Tutino, Federico Baldi, Chiara Russo, Chiara Robba, Lorenzo Ball, Silvia Dettori, Anna Marchese, Chiara Dentone, Laura Magnasco, Francesca Crea, Edward Willison, Federica Briano, Denise Battaglini, Nicolò Patroniti, Iole Brunetti, Paolo Pelosi, and Matteo Bassetti
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Enterococcus ,VRE ,BSI ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Medicine - Abstract
AbstractBackground An unexpected high prevalence of enterococcal bloodstream infection (BSI) has been observed in critically ill patients with COVID-19 in the intensive care unit (ICU).Materials and methods The primary objective was to describe the characteristics of ICU-acquired enterococcal BSI in critically ill patients with COVID-19. A secondary objective was to exploratorily assess the predictors of 30-day mortality in critically ill COVID-19 patients with ICU-acquired enterococcal BSI.Results During the study period, 223 patients with COVID-19 were admitted to COVID-19-dedicated ICUs in our centre. Overall, 51 episodes of enterococcal BSI, occurring in 43 patients, were registered. 29 (56.9%) and 22 (43.1%) BSI were caused by Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium, respectively. The cumulative incidence of ICU-acquired enterococcal BSI was of 229 episodes per 1000 ICU admissions (95% mid-p confidence interval [CI] 172–298). Most patients received an empirical therapy with at least one agent showing in vitro activity against the blood isolate (38/43, 88%). The crude 30-day mortality was 42% (18/43) and 57% (4/7) in the entire series and in patients with vancomycin-resistant E. faecium BSI, respectively. The sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA) score showed an independent association with increased mortality (odds ratio 1.32 per one-point increase, with 95% confidence interval 1.04–1.66, p = .021).Conclusions The cumulative incidence of enterococcal BSI is high in critically ill patients with COVID-19. Our results suggest a crucial role of the severity of the acute clinical conditions, to which both the underlying viral pneumonia and the enterococcal BSI may contribute, in majorly influencing the outcome.KEY MESSAGESThe cumulative incidence of enterococcal BSI is high in critically ill patients with COVID-19.The crude 30-day mortality of enterococcal BSI in critically ill patients with COVID-19 may be higher than 40%.There could be a crucial role of the severity of the acute clinical conditions, to which both the underlying viral pneumonia and the enterococcal BSI may contribute, in majorly influencing the outcome.
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- 2021
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66. Clinical characteristics, management and in-hospital mortality of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 in Genoa, Italy
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Alessandrini, Anna, Camera, Marco, Delfino, Emanuele, De Maria, Andrea, Dentone, Chiara, Di Biagio, Antonio, Dodi, Ferdinando, Ferrazin, Antonio, Mazzarello, Giovanni, Mikulska, Malgorzata, Nicolini, Laura, Toscanini, Federica, Giacobbe, Daniele R., Vena, Antonio, Taramasso, Lucia, Balletto, Elisa, Portunato, Federica, Schenone, Eva, Rosseti, Nirmala, Baldi, Federico, Berruti, Marco, Briano, Federica, Dettori, Silvia, Labate, Laura, Magnasco, Laura, Mirabella, Michele, Pincino, Rachele, russo, Chiara, Sarteschi, Giovanni, sepulcri, Chiara, Tutino, Stefania, Pontremoli, Roberto, Beccati, Valentina, Casciaro, Salvatore, Casu, Massimo, Gavaudan, Francesco, Ghinatti, Maria, Gualco, Elisa, Leoncini, Giovanna, pitto, Paola, salam, Kassem, Gratarola, Angelo, Bixio, Mattia, Amelia, Annalisa, Balestra, Andrea, Ballarino, Paola, Bardi, Nicholas, Boccafogli, Roberto, Caserza, Francesca, Calzolari, Elisa, Castelli, Marta, Cenni, Elisabetta, Cortese, Paolo, Cuttone, Giuseppe, Feltrin, Sara, Giovinazzo, Stefano, Giuntini, Patrizia, Natale, Letizia, Orsi, Davide, Pastorino, Matteo, Perazzo, Tommaso, Pescetelli, Fabio, Schenone, Federico, Serra, Maria G., Sottano, Marco, Tallone, Roberto, Amelotti, Massimo, Majabò, Marie J., Merlini, Massimo, Perazzo, Federica, Ahamd, Nidal, Barbera, Paolo, Bovio, Marta, Campodonico, Paola, Collidà, Andrea, Cutuli, Ombretta, Lomeo, Agnese, Fezza, Francesca, Gentilucci, Nicola, Hussein, Nadia, Malvezzi, Emanuele, Massobrio, Laura, Motta, Giula, Pastorino, Laura, Pollicardo, Nicoletta, Sartini, Stefano, Vacca, Paola, Virga, Valentina, Porto, Italo, Bezante, Giampaolo, Della Bona, Roberta, La Malfa, Giovanni, Valbusa, Alberto, Ad, Vered G., Barisione, Emanuela, Bellotti, Michele, Teresita, Aloe’, Blanco, Alessandro, Grosso, Marco, Piroddi, Maria Grazia, Moscatelli, Paolo, Caiti, Matteo, Magnani, Ottavia, Sukkar, Samir, Cogorno, Ludovica, Gradaschi, Raffaella, Guiddo, Erica, Martino, Eleonora, Pisciotta, Livia, Cavagliere, Bruno, Cristina, Rossi, Francesca, Farina, Garibotto, Giacomo, Esposito, Pasquale, Bellezza, Carmen, Harusha, Emirjona, Rossi, Francesca, Arboscello, Eleonora, Arzani, Laura, De Mattei, Laura, Spadaro, Marzia, Passalacqua, Giovanni, Bagnasco, Diego, Braido, Fulvio, Riccio, Annamaria, Tagliabue, Elena, Gustavino, Claudio, Ferraiolo, Antonella, Monacelli, Fiammetta, Mahmoud, Mona, Tagliafico, Luca, Napolitano, Armando, Fiorio, Maria, Pizzonia, Monica, Giannotti, Chiara, Nencioni, Alessio, Giuffrida, Salvatore, Rosso, Nicola, Morando, Alessandra, Papalia, Riccardo, Passerini, Donata, Tiberio, Gabriella, Orengo, Giovanni, Battaglini, Alberto, Ruffoni, Silvano, Caglieris, Sergio, Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto, Ball, Lorenzo, Brunetti, Iole, Loconte, Maurizio, Patroniti, Nicolò A., Robba, Chiara, Bavastro, Martina, Cerchiaro, Matteo, Giacomini, Mauro, Mora, Sara, Sepulcri, Chiara, Russo, Chiara, Pelosi, Paolo, and Bassetti, Matteo
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- 2020
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67. Lower (1,3)-beta-d-glucan sensitivity and in vitro levels in Candida auris and Candida parapsilosis strains
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Mikulska, Malgorzata, primary, Ullah, Nadir, additional, Magnasco, Laura, additional, Codda, Giulia, additional, Bartalucci, Claudia, additional, Miletich, Franca, additional, Sepulcri, Chiara, additional, Willison, Edward, additional, Vena, Antonio, additional, Giacobbe, Daniele R., additional, di Pilato, Vincenzo, additional, Robba, Chiara, additional, Ball, Lorenzo, additional, Marchese, Anna, additional, and Bassetti, Matteo, additional
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- 2024
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68. Extracting Hidden Hierarchies in 3D Distribution Networks
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Modes, Carl D., Magnasco, Marcelo O., and Katifori, Eleni
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
Natural and man-made transport webs are frequently dominated by dense sets of nested cycles. The architecture of these networks, as defined by the topology and edge weights, determines how efficiently the networks perform their function. Yet, the set of tools that can characterize such a weighted cycle-rich architecture in a physically relevant, mathematically compact way is sparse. In order to fill this void, we have developed a new algorithm that rests on an abstraction of the physical `tiling' in the case of a two dimensional network to an effective tiling of an abstract surface in space that the network may be thought to sit in. Generically these abstract surfaces are richer than the flat plane and as a result there are now two families of fundamental units that may aggregate upon cutting weakest links -- the plaquettes of the tiling and the longer `topological' cycles associated with the abstract surface itself. Upon sequential removal of the weakest links, as determined by the edge weight, neighboring plaquettes merge and a tree characterizing this merging process results. The properties of this characteristic tree can provide the physical and topological data required to describe the architecture of the network and to build physical models. The new algorithm can be used for automated phenotypic characterization of any weighted network whose structure is dominated by cycles, such as mammalian vasculature in the organs, the root networks of clonal colonies like quaking aspen, or the force networks in jammed granular matter.
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- 2014
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69. Structural Self-Assembly and Glassy Dynamics in Locally Adaptive Networks
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Gräwer, Johannes, Modes, Carl D., Magnasco, Marcelo O., and Katifori, Eleni
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Nonlinear Sciences - Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems ,Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution - Abstract
Transport networks play a key role across four realms of eukaryotic life: slime molds, fungi, plants, and animals. In addition to the developmental algorithms that build them, many also employ adaptive strategies to respond to stimuli, damage, and other environmental changes. We model these adapting network architectures using a generic dynamical system on weighted graphs and find in simulation that these networks ultimately develop a hierarchical organization of the final weighted architecture accompanied by the formation of a system-spanning backbone. In addition, we find that the long term equilibration dynamics exhibit glassy behavior characterized by long periods of slow changes punctuated by bursts of reorganization events.
- Published
- 2014
70. Masks and distancing during COVID-19: a causal framework for imputing value to public-health interventions
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Babino, Andres and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
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- 2021
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71. The Use of Different Components of Brain Oxygenation for the Assessment of Cerebral Haemodynamics: A Prospective Observational Study on COVID-19 Patients
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Chiara Robba, Danilo Cardim, Lorenzo Ball, Denise Battaglini, Wojciech Dabrowski, Matteo Bassetti, Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, Marek Czosnyka, Rafael Badenes, Paolo Pelosi, Basil Matta, The GeCovid group, Iole Brunetti, Maurizio Loconte, Fabio Tarantino, Marco Sottano, Francesco Marramao, Angelo Gratarola, Paolo Frisoni, Elena Ciaravolo, Chiara Dentone, Lucia Taramasso, Laura Magnasco, Antonio Vena, Gianluigi Zona, and Pietro Fiaschi
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cerebral oxygenation ,brain injury ,autoregulation dysfunction ,intensive care ,NIRS (near infrared reflectance spectroscopy) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: The role of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) for the evaluation of cerebral haemodynamics is gaining increasing popularity because of its noninvasive nature. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of the integral components of regional cerebral oxygenation (rSO2) measured by NIRS [i.e., arterial-oxyhemoglobin (O2Hbi) and venous-deoxyhemoglobin (HHbi)-components], as indirect surrogates of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in a cohort of critically ill patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We compared these findings to the gold standard technique for noninvasive CBF assessment, Transcranial Doppler (TCD).Methods: Mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of Policlinico San Martino Hospital, Genova, Italy, who underwent multimodal neuromonitoring (including NIRS and TCD), were included. rSO2 and its components [relative changes in O2Hbi, HHbi, and total haemoglobin (cHbi)] were compared with TCD (cerebral blood flow velocity, CBFV). Changes (Δ) in CBFV and rSO2, ΔO2Hbi, ΔHHbi, and ΔcHbi after systemic arterial blood pressure (MAP) modifications induced by different manoeuvres (e.g., rescue therapies and haemodynamic manipulation) were assessed using mixed-effect linear regression analysis and repeated measures correlation coefficients. All values were normalised as percentage changes from the baseline (Δ%).Results: One hundred and four measurements from 25 patients were included. Significant effects of Δ%MAP on Δ%CBF were observed after rescue manoeuvres for CBFV, ΔcHbi, and ΔO2Hbi. The highest correlation was found between ΔCBFV and ΔΔO2Hbi (R = 0.88, p < 0.0001), and the poorest between ΔCBFV and ΔΔHHbi (R = 0.34, p = 0.002).Conclusions: ΔO2Hbi had the highest accuracy to assess CBF changes, reflecting its role as the main component for vasomotor response after changes in MAP. The use of indexes derived from the different components of rSO2 can be useful for the bedside evaluation of cerebral haemodynamics in mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19.
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- 2021
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72. Purulent vaginal discharge in grazing dairy cows: Risk factors, reproductive performance, and prostaglandin F2α treatment
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Giuliodori, M.J., Magnasco, M., Magnasco, R.P., Lacau-Mengido, I.M., and de la Sota, R.L.
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- 2017
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73. T2Bacteria and T2Resistance Assays in Critically Ill Patients with Sepsis or Septic Shock: A Descriptive Experience
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Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, Francesca Crea, Paola Morici, Laura Magnasco, Vincenzo Di Pilato, Federica Briano, Edward Willison, Rachele Pincino, Silvia Dettori, Stefania Tutino, Simone Esposito, Erika Coppo, Chiara Dentone, Federica Portunato, Malgorzata Mikulska, Chiara Robba, Antonio Vena, Denise Battaglini, Iole Brunetti, Lorenzo Ball, Paolo Pelosi, Anna Marchese, and Matteo Bassetti
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T2 ,rapid tests ,diagnosis ,sepsis ,septic shock ,BSI ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
The use of rapid molecular tests may anticipate the identification of causative agents and resistance determinants in the blood of critically ill patients with sepsis. From April to December 2021, all intensive care unit patients with sepsis or septic shock who were tested with the T2Bacteria and T2Resistance assays were included in a retrospective, single center study. The primary descriptive endpoints were results of rapid molecular tests and concomitant blood cultures. Overall, 38 combinations of T2Bacteria and T2Resistance tests were performed. One or more causative agent(s) were identified by the T2Bacteria assay in 26% of episodes (10/38), whereas negative and invalid results were obtained in 66% (25/38) and 8% (3/38) of episodes, respectively. The same pathogen detected by the T2Bacteria test grew from blood cultures in 30% of cases (3/10). One or more determinant(s) of resistance were identified by the T2Resistance assay in 11% of episodes (4/38). Changes in therapy based on T2Bacteria and/or T2Resistance results occurred in 21% of episodes (8/38). In conclusion, T2Bacteria/T2Resistance results can influence early treatment decisions in critically ill patients with sepsis or septic shock in real-life practice. Large, controlled studies remain necessary to confirm a favorable impact on patients’ outcomes and antimicrobial stewardship interventions.
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- 2022
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74. Frequency of Detection of Candida auris Colonization Outside a Highly Endemic Setting: What Is the Optimal Strategy for Screening of Carriage?
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Magnasco, Laura, Mikulska, Malgorzata, Sepulcri, Chiara, Ullah, Nadir, Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto, Vena, Antonio, Di Pilato, Vincenzo, Willison, Edward, Orsi, Andrea, Icardi, Giancarlo, Marchese, Anna, and Bassetti, Matteo
- Subjects
INTENSIVE care units ,MEDICAL screening ,CANDIDA ,ENDEMIC diseases - Abstract
Candida auris outbreaks are increasingly frequent worldwide. In our 1000-bed hospital, an endemic transmission of C. auris was established in two of five intensive care units (ICUs). Aims of our study were to describe the occurrence of new cases of C. auris colonization and infection outside the endemic ICUs, in order to add evidence for future policies on screening in patients discharged as negative from an endemic setting, as well as to propose a new algorithm for screening of such high-risk patients. From 26 March 2021 to 26 January 2023, among 392 patients who were diagnosed as colonized or infected with C. auris in our hospital, 84 (21.4%) received the first diagnosis of colonization or infection outside the endemic ICUs. A total of 68 patients out of 84 (81.0%) had a history of prior admission to the endemic ICUs. All were screened and tested negative during their ICU stay with a median time from last screening to discharge of 3 days. In 57/68 (83.8%) of patients, C. auris was detected through screening performed after ICU discharge, and 90% had C. auris colonization detected within 9 days from ICU discharge. In 13 cases (13/57 screened, 22.8%), the first post-ICU discharge screening was negative. In those not screened, candidemia was the most frequent event of the first C. auris detection (6/11 patients not screened). In settings where the transmission of C. auris is limited to certain wards, we suggest screening both at discharge from the endemic ward(s) even in case of a recent negative result, and at least twice after admission to nonendemic settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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75. A Geometric Knotspace Template
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Modes, Carl D. and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Geometric Topology ,Mathematical Physics ,Physics - Biological Physics ,Physics - Computational Physics ,57M25 - Abstract
Early last century witnessed both the complete classification of 2-dimensional manifolds and a proof that classification of 4-dimensional manifolds is undecidable, setting up 3-dimensional manifolds as a central battleground of topology to this day. A rather important subset of the 3-manifolds has turned out to be the knotspaces, the manifolds left when a thin tube around a knot in 3D space is excised. Given a knot diagram it would be desirable to provide as compact a description of its knotspace as feasible; hitherto this has been done by computationally tessellating the knotspace of a given knot into polyhedral complexes using ad hoc methods of uncontrolled computational complexity. Here we present an extremely compact representation of the knotspace obtainable directly from a knot diagram; more technically, an explicit, geometrically-inspired polygonal tessellation of a deformation retract of the knotspace of arbitrary knots and links. Our template can be constructed directly from a planar presentation of the knot with C crossings using at most 12C polygons bounded by 64C edges, in time O(C). We show the utility of our template by deriving a novel presentation of the fundamental group, from which we motivate a measure of complexity of the knot diagram., Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2013
76. Minimal Bounds on Nonlinearity in Auditory Processing
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Oppenheim, Jacob N., Isakov, Pavel, and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Physics - Biological Physics - Abstract
Time-reversal symmetry breaking is a key feature of nearly all natural sounds, caused by the physics of sound production. While attention has been paid to the response of the auditory system to "natural stimuli," very few psychophysical tests have been performed. We conduct psychophysical measurements of time-frequency acuity for both "natural" notes (sharp attack, long decay) and time-reversed ones. Our results demonstrate significantly greater precision, arising from enhanced temporal acuity, for such "natural" sounds over both their time-reversed versions and theoretically optimal gaussian pulses, without a corresponding decrease in frequency acuity. These data rule out models of auditory processing that obey a modified "uncertainty principle" between temporal and frequency acuity and suggest the existence of statistical priors for naturalistic stimuli, in the form of sharp-attack, long-decay notes. We are additionally able to calculate a minimal theoretical bound on the order of the nonlinearity present in auditory processing. We find that only matching pursuit, spectral derivatives, and reassigned spectrograms are able to satisfy this criterion., Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2013
77. Le cortège de la mariée / Al. Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
78. Intérieur de taverne / Al. Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
79. Pulcinella suonatore di chitarra / Aless. Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
80. Petit danseur et joueur de colachon dans une auberge / Al. Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
81. L'organiste et ses élèves / Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
82. Concert / A. Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
83. Dame et musicien / Magnasco
- Abstract
Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Mirimonde1
- Published
- 1945
84. The Relevance of Human Whistled Languages for the Analysis and Decoding of Dolphin Communication
- Author
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Julien Meyer, Marcelo O. Magnasco, and Diana Reiss
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human whistled languages ,dolphin communication ,whistled speech ,interspecies communication ,whistle signal processing ,Silbo ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Humans use whistled communications, the most elaborate of which are commonly called “whistled languages” or “whistled speech” because they consist of a natural type of speech. The principle of whistled speech is straightforward: people articulate words while whistling and thereby transform spoken utterances by simplifying them, syllable by syllable, into whistled melodies. One of the most striking aspects of this whistled transformation of words is that it remains intelligible to trained speakers, despite a reduced acoustic channel to convey meaning. It constitutes a natural traditional means of telecommunication that permits spoken communication at long distances in a large diversity of languages of the world. Historically, birdsong has been used as a model for vocal learning and language. But conversely, human whistled languages can serve as a model for elucidating how information may be encoded in dolphin whistle communication. In this paper, we elucidate the reasons why human whistled speech and dolphin whistles are interesting to compare. Both are characterized by similar acoustic parameters and serve a common purpose of long distance communication in natural surroundings in two large brained social species. Moreover, their differences – e.g., how they are produced, the dynamics of the whistles, and the types of information they convey – are not barriers to such a comparison. On the contrary, by exploring the structure and attributes found across human whistle languages, we highlight that they can provide an important model as to how complex information is and can be encoded in what appears at first sight to be simple whistled modulated signals. Observing details, such as processes of segmentation and coarticulation, in whistled speech can serve to advance and inform the development of new approaches for the analysis of whistle repertoires of dolphins, and eventually other species. Human whistled languages and dolphin whistles could serve as complementary test benches for the development of new methodologies and algorithms for decoding whistled communication signals by providing new perspectives on how information may be encoded structurally and organizationally.
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- 2021
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85. Healthcare Worker Study Cohort to Determine the Level and Durability of Cellular and Humoral Immune Responses after Two Doses of SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination
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Chiara Dentone, Daniela Fenoglio, Marta Ponzano, Matteo Cerchiaro, Tiziana Altosole, Diego Franciotta, Federica Portunato, Malgorzata Mikulska, Lucia Taramasso, Laura Magnasco, Chiara Uras, Federica Magne, Francesca Ferrera, Graziana Scavone, Alessio Signori, Antonio Vena, Valeria Visconti, Gilberto Filaci, Alessandro Sette, Alba Grifoni, Antonio Di Biagio, and Matteo Bassetti
- Subjects
SARS-CoV-2 ,cellular and humoral immune responses ,second dose ,variants ,Medicine - Abstract
We prospectively studied immunological response against SARS-CoV-2 after vaccination among healthcare workers without (group A) and with previous infection (group B). The analyses were collected at T0 (before the BNT162b2), T1 (before the second dose), T2 and T6 (1 and 6 months after the second dose). For cellular immune response, the activation-induced cell marker assay was performed with CD4 and CD8 Spike peptide megapools expressed as Stimulation Index. For humoral immune response, we determined antibodies to Spike-1 and nucleocapsid protein. The linear mixed model compared specific times to T0. The CD4+ Spike response overall rate of change was significant at T1 (p = 0.038) and at T2 (p < 0.001), while decreasing at T6. For CD8+ Spike reactivity, the interaction between the time and group was significant (p = 0.0265), and the p value for group comparison was significant at the baseline (p = 0.0030) with higher SI in previously infected subjects. Overall, the anti-S Abs significantly increased from T1 to T6 compared to T0. The group B at T6 retained high anti-S titer (p < 0.001). At T6, in both groups we found a persistent humoral response and a high CD4+ T cell response able to cross recognize SARS-COV-2 variants including epsilon, even if not a circulating virus at that time.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. Tableaux anciens du XVIe au XIXe siècle par Harlow, Maes, Magnasco...: tableaux modernes par Auberjonois, Barraud, Blanchet... vente aux enchères, Galerie Georges Moos, 12, rue Diday, Genève, le 28 février 1942 : par le ministère de Me Ch. D. Cosandier assisté par M. Georges Moos
87. Human Time-Frequency Acuity Beats the Fourier Uncertainty Principle
- Author
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Oppenheim, Jacob N. and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
The time-frequency uncertainty principle states that the product of the temporal and frequency extents of a signal cannot be smaller than $1/(4\pi)$. We study human ability to simultaneously judge the frequency and the timing of a sound. Our subjects often exceeded the uncertainty limit, sometimes by more than tenfold, mostly through remarkable timing acuity. Our results establish a lower bound for the nonlinearity and complexity of the algorithms employed by our brains in parsing transient sounds, rule out simple "linear filter" models of early auditory processing, and highlight timing acuity as a central feature in auditory object processing., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; Accepted at PRL
- Published
- 2012
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88. A phase transition in the first passage of a Brownian process through a fluctuating boundary: implications for neural coding
- Author
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Taillefumier, Thibaud and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Mathematical Physics - Abstract
Finding the first time a fluctuating quantity reaches a given boundary is a deceptively simple-looking problem of vast practical importance in physics, biology, chemistry, neuroscience, economics and industry. Problems in which the bound to be traversed is itself a fluctuating function of time include widely studied settings in neural coding, such as neuronal integrators with irregular inputs and internal noise. We show that the probability p(t) that a Gauss-Markov process will first exceed the boundary at time t suffers a phase transition as a function of the roughness of the boundary, as measured by its H\"older exponent H, with critical value Hc = 1/2. For smoother boundaries, H > 1/2, the probability density is a continuous func- tion of time. For rougher boundaries, H < 1/2, the probability is concentrated on a Cantor-like set of zero measure: the probability density becomes divergent, almost everywhere either zero or infin- ity. The critical point Hc = 1/2 corresponds to a widely-studied case in the theory of neural coding, where the external input integrated by a model neuron is a white-noise process, such as uncorrelated but precisely balanced excitatory and inhibitory inputs. We argue this transition corresponds to a sharp boundary between rate codes, in which the neural firing probability varies smoothly, and temporal codes, in which the neuron fires at sharply-defined times regardless of the intensity of internal noise.
- Published
- 2012
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89. A Topological Phase Transition in the Scheidegger Model of River Networks
- Author
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Oppenheim, Jacob N. and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics - Abstract
We investigate the canonical Scheidegger Model of river network morphology for the case of convergent and divergent underlying topography, by embedding it on a cone. We find two distinct phases corresponding to few, long basins and many, short basins, respectively, separated by a singularity in number of basins, indicating a phase transition. Quantifying basin shape through Hack's Law $l\sim a^h$ gives distinct values for the exponent $h$, providing a method of testing our hypotheses. The generality of our model suggests implications for vascular morphology, in particular differing number and shapes of arterial and venous trees., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
90. Quantifying loopy network architectures
- Author
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Katifori, Eleni and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems - Abstract
Biology presents many examples of planar distribution and structural networks having dense sets of closed loops. An archetype of this form of network organization is the vasculature of dicotyledonous leaves, which showcases a hierarchically-nested architecture containing closed loops at many different levels. Although a number of methods have been proposed to measure aspects of the structure of such networks, a robust metric to quantify their hierarchical organization is still lacking. We present an algorithmic framework, the hierarchical loop decomposition, that allows mapping loopy networks to binary trees, preserving in the connectivity of the trees the architecture of the original graph. We apply this framework to investigate computer generated graphs, such as artificial models and optimal distribution networks, as well as natural graphs extracted from digitized images of dicotyledonous leaves and vasculature of rat cerebral neocortex. We calculate various metrics based on the Asymmetry, the cumulative size distribution and the Strahler bifurcation ratios of the corresponding trees and discuss the relationship of these quantities to the architectural organization of the original graphs. This algorithmic framework decouples the geometric information (exact location of edges and nodes) from the metric topology (connectivity and edge weight) and it ultimately allows us to perform a quantitative statistical comparison between predictions of theoretical models and naturally occurring loopy graphs., Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. During preparation of this manuscript the authors became aware of the work of Mileyko at al., concurrently submitted for publication
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
91. Associations Between Genetic Risk, Physical Activities, and Distressing Psychotic-like Experiences.
- Author
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Ku BS, Yuan Q, Arias-Magnasco A, Lin BD, Walker EF, Druss BG, Ren J, van Os J, and Guloksuz S
- Abstract
Background and Hypothesis: Persistent distressing psychotic-like experiences (PLE) are associated with impaired functioning and future psychopathology. Prior research suggests that physical activities may be protective against psychopathology. However, it is unclear whether physical activities may interact with genetics in the development of psychosis., Study Design: This study included 4679 participants of European ancestry from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. Persistent distressing PLE was derived from the Prodromal-Questionnaire-Brief Child Version using four years of data. Generalized linear mixed models tested the association between polygenic risk score for schizophrenia (PRS-SCZ), physical activities, and PLE. The models adjusted for age, sex, parental education, income-to-needs ratio, family history of psychosis, body mass index, puberty status, principal components for PRS-SCZ, study site, and family., Study Results: PRS-SCZ was associated with a greater risk for persistent distressing PLE (adjusted relative risk ratio (RRR) = 1.14, 95% CI [1.04, 1.24], P = .003). Physical activity was associated with less risk for persistent distressing PLE (adjusted RRR = 0.87, 95% CI [0.79, 0.96], P = .008). Moreover, physical activities moderated the association between PRS-SCZ and persistent distressing PLE (adjusted RRR = 0.89, 95% CI [0.81, 0.98], P = .015), such that the association was weaker as participants had greater participation in physical activities., Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that the interaction between genetic liability and physical activities is associated with trajectories of distressing PLE. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms of physical activities and genetic liability for schizophrenia in the development of psychosis., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. A Fast $\mathcal{L}_p$ Spike Alignment Metric
- Author
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Dubbs, Alexander J., Seiler, Brad A., and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
The metrization of the space of neural responses is an ongoing research program seeking to find natural ways to describe, in geometrical terms, the sets of possible activities in the brain. One component of this program are the {\em spike metrics}, notions of distance between two spike trains recorded from a neuron. Alignment spike metrics work by identifying "equivalent" spikes in one train and the other. We present an alignment spike metric having $\mathcal{L}_p$ underlying geometrical structure; the $\mathcal{L}_2$ version is Euclidean and is suitable for further embedding in Euclidean spaces by Multidimensional Scaling methods or related procedures. We show how to implement a fast algorithm for the computation of this metric based on bipartite graph matching theory.
- Published
- 2009
93. Damage and fluctuations induce loops in optimal transport networks
- Author
-
Katifori, Eleni, Szöllősi, Gergely J., and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Physics - Biological Physics ,Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networks ,Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs - Abstract
Leaf venation is a pervasive example of a complex biological network, endowing leaves with a transport system and mechanical resilience. Transport networks optimized for efficiency have been shown to be trees, i.e. loopless. However, dicotyledon leaf venation has a large number of closed loops, which are functional and able to transport fluid in the event of damage to any vein, including the primary veins. Inspired by leaf venation, we study two possible reasons for the existence of a high density of loops in transport networks: resilience to damage and fluctuations in load. In the first case, we seek the optimal transport network in the presence of random damage by averaging over damage to each link. In the second case, we seek the network that optimizes transport when the load is sparsely distributed: at any given time most sinks are closed. We find that both criteria lead to the presence of loops in the optimum state.
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
94. Alessandro Magnasco, Paesaggio con frati cappuccini in sosta e in preghiera
- Author
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TERZAGHI, MARIA CRISTINA, BONA CASTELLOTTI Marco, and Terzaghi, MARIA CRISTINA
- Published
- 1996
95. Alessandro Magnasco, Paesaggio con frati cappuccini in cammino
- Author
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TERZAGHI, MARIA CRISTINA, BONA CASTELLOTTI Marco, and Terzaghi, MARIA CRISTINA
- Published
- 1996
96. Controlled Molecular Diffusion in Fluorescent Polymer Films for Label‐Free Detection of Volatile Organic Compounds
- Author
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Megahd, Heba, primary, Carlotti, Marco, additional, Martusciello, Martina, additional, Magnasco, Laura, additional, Pucci, Andrea, additional, Comoretto, Davide, additional, and Lova, Paola, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Dynamical and Statistical Criticality in a Model of Neural Tissue
- Author
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Magnasco, Marcelo O., Piro, Oreste, and Cecchi, Guillermo A.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
For the nervous system to work at all, a delicate balance of excitation and inhibition must be achieved. However, when such a balance is sought by global strategies, only few modes remain balanced close to instability, and all other modes are strongly stable. Here we present a simple model of neural tissue in which this balance is sought locally by neurons following `anti-Hebbian' behavior: {\sl all} degrees of freedom achieve a close balance of excitation and inhibition and become "critical" in the dynamical sense. At long timescales, the modes of our model oscillate around the instability line, so an extremely complex "breakout" dynamics ensues in which different modes of the system oscillate between prominence and extinction. We show the system develops various anomalous statistical behaviours and hence becomes self-organized critical in the statistical sense.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Sensitivity of Serum Beta-D-Glucan in Candidemia According to Candida Species Epidemiology in Critically Ill Patients Admitted to the Intensive Care Unit
- Author
-
Malgorzata Mikulska, Laura Magnasco, Alessio Signori, Chiara Sepulcri, Silvia Dettori, Stefania Tutino, Antonio Vena, Franca Miletich, Nadir Ullah, Paola Morici, Lorenzo Ball, Paolo Pelosi, Anna Marchese, Daniele Roberto Giacobbe, and Matteo Bassetti
- Subjects
ICU ,sensitivity ,BDG ,Candida ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Serum beta-D-glucan (BDG) determination plays an important role in the diagnosis of candidemia among critically ill patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). However, BDG levels measured may be lower in the case of infections caused by some non-albicans species, such as C. parapsilosis and C. auris. The aim of this single-center study was to investigate the sensitivity of serum BDG for the diagnosis of candidemia stratified according to causative Candida species in ICU patients. This was a single-center, retrospective study, including all adult patients admitted to ICU during the period 2018–2021. All episodes of candidemia with a determination of BDG available within 3 days before or after positive blood culture were recorded. The preplanned primary objective was to investigate the sensitivity of serum BDG to detect candidemia early and the effect of different Candida species. The secondary objective was to measure serum BDG in patients with candidemia from different Candida species. In total, 146 candidemia episodes in 118 patients were analyzed. Median BDG value for C. albicans candidemia (182 pg/mL) was higher than that observed for C. parapsilosis (78 pg/mL, p = 0.015) and C. auris (48 pg/mL, p = 0.022). The overall sensitivity of BDG for the diagnosis of candidemia was low (47%, 95% CI 39–55%). In conclusion, in critically ill patients admitted to ICU, serum BDG levels for candidemia were different among species, with lower levels confirmed for C. parapsilosis and C. auris. Serum BDG sensitivity for early detection of candidemia was lower than previously reported in other ICU populations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. A Haar-like Construction for the Ornstein Uhlenbeck Process
- Author
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Taillefumier, Thibaud and Magnasco, Marcelo O.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Probability - Abstract
The classical Haar construction of Brownian motion uses a binary tree of triangular wedge-shaped functions. This basis has compactness properties which make it especially suited for certain classes of numerical algorithms. We present a similar basis for the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process, in which the basis elements approach asymptotically the Haar functions as the index increases, and preserve the following properties of the Haar basis: all basis elements have compact support on an open interval with dyadic rational endpoints; these intervals are nested and become smaller for larger indices of the basis element, and for any dyadic rational, only a finite number of basis elements is nonzero at that number. Thus the expansion in our basis, when evaluated at a dyadic rational, terminates in a finite number of steps. We prove the covariance formulae for our expansion and discuss its statistical interpretation and connections to asymptotic scale invariance., Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2007
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100. Combined Rituximab and Daratumumab Treatment in Difficult-to-Treat Nephrotic Syndrome Cases
- Author
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Angeletti, Andrea, Bin, Sofia, Kajana, Xhuliana, Spinelli, Sonia, Bigatti, Carolina, Caridi, Gianluca, Candiano, Giovanni, Lugani, Francesca, Verrina, Enrico E., La Porta, Edoardo, Magnasco, Alberto, Bruschi, Maurizio, Cravedi, Paolo, and Ghiggeri, Gian Marco
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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