1,345 results on '"Nicolas Martin"'
Search Results
152. Exploring attitudes towards more sustainable dentistry among adults living in the UK
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Harriet M. Baird, Steven Mulligan, Thomas L. Webb, Sarah R. Baker, and Nicolas Martin
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Adult ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Oral Health ,Esthetics, Dental ,General Dentistry ,United Kingdom - Abstract
Introduction Despite evidence that public pressure can promote sustainability in various domains (for example, retail and travel), no research has considered the public's attitudes towards sustainability in dentistry.Methods A questionnaire was developed to measure attitudes towards sustainable dentistry among adults living in the UK and their willingness to make compromises to reduce the impact of their dental treatment on the environment. In total, 344 adults completed the questionnaire that also measured pro-environmental identity and concern, general willingness to make compromises for the environment, and the tendency to engage in ecological behaviours.Results Participants reported positive attitudes towards sustainable dentistry, and were willing to compromise their time, convenience and durability of their dental treatment, as well as pay more, to reduce the impact of their dental work on the environment. Participants were not willing to compromise their health or the aesthetics of their teeth. There was also evidence that participants' current oral health shaped their attitudes towards sustainable dentistry, such that better oral health was associated with more positive attitudes towards more sustainable dentistry.Conclusions Given that public pressure can be a significant driver of change, these findings provide valuable insight into the kind of compromises that may be accepted by the public in order to improve the sustainability of dental services.
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- 2022
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153. The Pristine survey - XVIII. C-19: tidal debris of a dark matter-dominated globular cluster?
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Raphaël Errani, Julio F Navarro, Rodrigo Ibata, Nicolas Martin, Zhen Yuan, David S Aguado, Piercarlo Bonifacio, Elisabetta Caffau, Jonay I González Hernández, Khyati Malhan, Rubén Sánchez-Janssen, Federico Sestito, Else Starkenburg, Guillaume F Thomas, Kim A Venn, and Astronomy
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FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,galaxies: dwarf ,globular clusters: general ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,dark matter ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,galaxies: evolution ,Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
The recently discovered C-19 stellar stream is a collection of kinematically associated metal-poor stars in the halo of the Milky Way lacking an obvious progenitor. The stream spans an arc of ~15 degrees in the sky, and orbit-fitting suggests an apocentric distance of ~20 kpc and a pericentre of ~10 kpc. The narrow metallicity dispersion of stars with available spectra, together with light element abundance variations, suggests a globular cluster (GC) origin. The observed metallicity ([Fe/H] ~ -3.4), however, is much lower than that of any known GC. In addition, the width and velocity dispersion of the stream are similar to those expected from disrupting dwarf galaxies, and substantially larger than the tidal debris of GCs able to disrupt on C-19's orbit. We propose here an unconventional model where the C-19 progenitor is a dark matter-dominated stellar system with GC-like abundance patterns. We use N-body simulations to show that the tidal disruption of a ~100 pc King-model stellar component embedded in a ~20 km/s cuspy cold dark matter halo yields debris consistent with C-19's observed width and velocity dispersion. The stellar component of the progenitor is fully disrupted, and is spread over two distinct streams; one corresponding to C-19 and another possibly hiding behind the Galactic plane. If such companion stream were found, it would suggest that dark matter-dominated dwarfs may also develop GC-like enrichment patterns, a finding that would inform our theoretical understanding of the formation of multiple populations in GCs and dwarf galaxies alike., Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures. minor edits to match accepted version
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- 2022
154. The diagnostic challenge of patients with anti-U1-RNP antibodies
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Ines Elhani, Kathy Khoy, Delphine Mariotte, Elisabeth Comby, Christian Marcelli, Brigitte Le Mauff, Alexandra Audemard-Verger, Jonathan Boutemy, Gwénola Maigné, Nicolas Martin Silva, Achille Aouba, and Hubert de Boysson
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Rheumatology ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Anti-U1-RNP antibodies are necessary for the diagnosis of mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD), but they are also prevalent in other connective tissue diseases, especially systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), from which distinction remains challenging. We aimed to describe the presentation and outcome of patients with anti-U1-RNP antibodies and to identify factors to distinguish MCTD from SLE. We retrospectively applied the criteria sets for MCTD, SLE, systemic sclerosis (SSc) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to all patients displaying anti-U1-RNP antibodies in the hospital of Caen from 2000 to 2020. Thirty-six patients were included in the analysis. Eighteen patients (50%) satisfied at least one of the MCTD classifications, 11 of whom (61%) also met 2019 ACR/EULAR criteria for SLE. Twelve other patients only met SLE without MCTD criteria, and a total of 23 patients (64%) met SLE criteria. The most frequent manifestations included Raynaud's phenomenon (RP, 91%) and arthralgia (67%). We compared the characteristics of patients meeting only the MCTD (n = 7), SLE (n = 12), or both (n = 11) criteria. Patients meeting the MCTD criteria were more likely to display SSc features, including sclerodactyly (p 0.01), swollen hands (p 0.01), RP (p = 0.04) and esophageal reflux (p 0.01). The presence of scleroderma features (swollen hands, sclerodactyly, gastro-oesophageal reflux), was significantly associated with the diagnosis of MCTD. Conversely, the absence of those manifestations suggested the diagnosis of another definite connective tissue disease, especially SLE.
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- 2022
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155. Pregnancy outcomes in women with primary Sjögren's syndrome: an analysis of data from the multicentre, prospective, GR2 study
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de Frémont, Grégoire Martin, primary, Costedoat-Chalumeau, Nathalie, additional, Lazaro, Estibaliz, additional, Belkhir, Rakiba, additional, Guettrot-Imbert, Gaëlle, additional, Morel, Nathalie, additional, Nocturne, Gaétane, additional, Molto, Anna, additional, Goulenok, Tiphaine, additional, Diot, Elisabeth, additional, Perard, Laurent, additional, Ferreira-Maldent, Nicole, additional, Le Besnerais, Maelle, additional, Limal, Nicolas, additional, Martis, Nihal, additional, Abisror, Noémie, additional, Debouverie, Odile, additional, Richez, Christophe, additional, Sobanski, Vincent, additional, Maurier, François, additional, Sauvetre, Gaëtan, additional, Levesque, Hervé, additional, Timsit, Marie-Agnès, additional, Tieulié, Nathalie, additional, Orquevaux, Pauline, additional, Bienvenu, Boris, additional, Mahevas, Matthieu, additional, Papo, Thomas, additional, Lartigau-Roussin, Céline, additional, Chauvet, Elodie, additional, Berthoux, Emilie, additional, Sarrot-Reynauld, Françoise, additional, Raffray, Loïc, additional, Couderc, Marion, additional, Silva, Nicolas Martin, additional, Jourde-Chiche, Noémie, additional, Belhomme, Nicolas, additional, Thomas, Thierry, additional, Poindron, Vincent, additional, Queyrel-Moranne, Viviane, additional, Delforge, Juliette, additional, Le Ray, Camille, additional, Pannier, Emmanuelle, additional, Mariette, Xavier, additional, Le Guern, Véronique, additional, Seror, Raphaèle, additional, AUDEMARD-VERGER, Alexandra, additional, AZZI, Emmanuel, additional, BANNEVILLE, Béatrice, additional, BAUDET, Antoine, additional, BEAUDOUIN BAZIRE, Constance, additional, BELIZNA, Cristina, additional, Belot, Alexandre, additional, BENHAMOU, Ygal, additional, Berezné, Alice, additional, BERNARD-GUERVILLY, Fanny, additional, BERTHIER, Sabine, additional, BEZANAHARY, Holy, additional, BIALE, Lisa, additional, BIGOT, Adrien, additional, BLANCHARD-DELAUNAY, Claire, additional, CALAS, Anne, additional, CAMPAGNE, Julien, additional, CATHEBRAS, Pascal, additional, CAZALETS, Claire, additional, CHAIGNE, Benjamin, additional, CHANDESRIS, Olivia, additional, CHATELAIS, Jérémy, additional, CHATELUS, Emmanuel, additional, COHEN, Fleur, additional, Combe, Bernard, additional, COMPARON, Céline, additional, COQUERELLE, Pascal, additional, DAMIAN, Louise, additional, DAUGAS, Eric, additional, DE MENTHON, Mathilde, additional, DE MOREUIL, Claire, additional, DELATTRE, Estelle, additional, DELLAL, Azeddine, additional, Deneux-Tharaux, Catherine, additional, DENIS, Amélie, additional, DEPROUW, Camille, additional, DERNIS, Emmanuelle, additional, DEROUX, Alban, additional, DESOUCHES, Sandra, additional, Dieudé, Philippe, additional, DIREZ, Guillaume, additional, Dougados, Maxime, additional, DRIESSEN, Marine, additional, DU THANH, Aurélie, additional, DUNOGEANT, Laetitia, additional, DURANT, Cécile, additional, DUREL, Cécile-Audrey, additional, DURIEU, Isabelle, additional, EBOUE, Florence, additional, Elefant, Elisabeth, additional, FAIN, Olivier, additional, FAUTREL, Bruno, additional, FLIPO, René-Marc, additional, FRAZIER, Aline, additional, FROISSART, Antoine, additional, GEORGIN-LAVIALLE, Sophie, additional, GERVAIS, Elisabeth, additional, GODEAU, Bertrand, additional, Goffinet, François, additional, GOMPEL, Anne, additional, GOSSEC, Laure, additional, GOUPILLE, Philippe, additional, GRANGE, Claire, additional, GUILLAUD-DANIS, Constance, additional, HACHULLA, Eric, additional, HOEFSLOOT, Sabine, additional, HUMMEL, Aurélie, additional, JEGO, Patrick, additional, JOBARD, Stéphanie, additional, JOSSELIN-MAHR, Laurence, additional, LAMBERT, Marc, additional, LANGLOIS, Vincent, additional, LARIVIERE, Delphine, additional, LARROCHE, Claire, additional, LATOURTE, Augustin, additional, LAVIGNE, Christian, additional, LE GALLOU, Thomas, additional, LEROUX, Gaëlle, additional, LETAROUILLY, Jean Guillaume, additional, LIOTÉ, Frédéric, additional, Loeuillet, Laurence, additional, London, Jonathan, additional, Loustau, Valentine, additional, LOZAC'H, Pierre, additional, MAHEU, Emmanuel, additional, MAILLARD, Hélène, additional, MAROTTE, Hubert, additional, MASSEAU, Agathe, additional, MEKINIAN, Arsène, additional, Melboucy Belkhir, Sara, additional, Miceli-Richard, Corinne, additional, MICHAUD, Martin, additional, MICHEL, Marc, additional, MORANNE, Olivier, additional, MORATI-HAFSAOUI, Chafika, additional, MOULIS, Guillaume, additional, MOUTHON, Luc, additional, NICOLAS, Barbara, additional, Nizard, Jacky, additional, ORA, Jérémy, additional, OUTH, Rodérau, additional, PASQUIER, Elisabeth, additional, PENNAFORTE, Jean-Loup, additional, PERLAT, Antoinette, additional, PETIT-BAUER, Hélène, additional, PILLEBOUT, Evangeline, additional, PIOT, Jean-Maxime, additional, PORTIER, Agnès, additional, Pourrat, Olivier, additional, PUECHAL, Xavier, additional, PUGNET, Gregory, additional, REDONDIN, Manon, additional, REGENT, Alexis, additional, RORIZ, Mélanie, additional, SAILLER, Laurent, additional, SAVEY, Léa, additional, SCHERLINGER, Marc, additional, SCHLEINITZ, Nicolas, additional, Sellam, Jérémie, additional, Sentilhes, Loïc, additional, SERVAIS, Aude, additional, SMETS, Perrine, additional, SORDET, Christelle, additional, SOUBRIER, Martin, additional, STANKOVIC-STOJANOVIC, Katia, additional, URBANSKI, Geoffrey, additional, VEIT, Véronique, additional, WEBER, Emmanuelle, additional, and YELNIK, Cécile, additional
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- 2023
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156. The UHECR dipole and quadrupole in the latest data from the original Auger and TA surface detectors
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Tinyakov, Peter, Kuznetsov, Mikhail, Maris, Ioana Codrina, Gonzalez, Nicolas Martin, Suarez-Duran, Mauricio, Zapparrata, Orazio, Tinyakov, Peter, Kuznetsov, Mikhail, Maris, Ioana Codrina, Gonzalez, Nicolas Martin, Suarez-Duran, Mauricio, and Zapparrata, Orazio
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The sources of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays are still unknown, but assuming standard physics, they are expected to lie within a few hundred megaparsecs from us. Indeed, over cosmological distances cosmic rays lose energy to interactions with background photons, at a rate depending on their mass number and energy and properties of photonuclear interactions and photon backgrounds. The universe is not homogeneous at such scales, hence the distribution of the arrival directions of cosmic rays is expected to reflect the inhomogeneities in the distribution of galaxies; the shorter the energy loss lengths, the stronger the expected anisotropies. Galactic and intergalactic magnetic fields can blur and distort the picture, but the magnitudes of the largest-scale anisotropies, namely the dipole and quadrupole moments, are the most robust to their effects. Measuring them with no bias regardless of any higher-order multipoles is not possible except with full-sky coverage. In this work, we achieve this in three energy ranges (approximately 8–16 EeV, 16–32 EeV, and 32–∞ EeV) by combining surface-detector data collected at the Pierre Auger Observatory until 2020 and at the Telescope Array (TA) until 2019, before the completion of the upgrades of the arrays with new scintillator detectors. We find that the full-sky coverage achieved by combining Auger and TA data reduces the uncertainties on the north-south components of the dipole and quadrupole in half compared to Auger-only results., 0, 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference, ICRC 2021 Virtual, Berlin12 July 2021 through 23 July 2021 Code 177942, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2023
157. Constraining the sources of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays across and above the ankle with the spectrum and composition data measured at the Pierre Auger Observatory
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Abdul Halim, A., Gonzalez, Nicolas Martin, Maris, Ioana Codrina, Suarez-Duran, Mauricio, Zapparrata, Orazio, Abdul Halim, A., Gonzalez, Nicolas Martin, Maris, Ioana Codrina, Suarez-Duran, Mauricio, and Zapparrata, Orazio
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In this work we present the interpretation of the energy spectrum and mass composition data as measured by the Pierre Auger Collaboration above 6 × 1017 eV. We use an astrophysical model with two extragalactic source populations to model the hardening of the cosmic-ray flux at around 5 × 1018 eV (the so-called "ankle"feature) as a transition between these two components. We find our data to be well reproduced if sources above the ankle emit a mixed composition with a hard spectrum and a low rigidity cutoff. The component below the ankle is required to have a very soft spectrum and a mix of protons and intermediate-mass nuclei. The origin of this intermediate-mass component is not well constrained and it could originate from either Galactic or extragalactic sources. To the aim of evaluating our capability to constrain astrophysical models, we discuss the impact on the fit results of the main experimental systematic uncertainties and of the assumptions about quantities affecting the air shower development as well as the propagation and redshift distribution of injected ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs)., 0, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2023
158. How much does VPD drive tree water stress and forest disturbances?
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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)
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[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.
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- 2023
159. Insights into the expanding intestinal phenotypic spectrum of SOCS1 haploinsufficiency and therapeutic options
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Marco M. Rodari, Dominique Cazals-Hatem, Mathieu Uzzan, Nicolas Martin Silva, Anis Khiat, Minh Chau Ta, Ludovic Lhermitte, Aurore Touzart, Sylvain Hanein, Cléa Rouillon, Francisca Joly, Adrienne Elmorjani, Julie Steffann, Nadine Cerf-Bensussan, Marianna Parlato, and Fabienne Charbit-Henrion
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Purpose Hyper activation of the JAK-STAT signaling underlies the pathophysiology of many human immune–mediated diseases. Herein, the study of 2 adult patients with SOCS1 haploinsufficiency illustrates the severe and pleomorphic consequences of its impaired regulation in the intestinal tract. Methods Two unrelated adult patients presented with gastrointestinal manifestations, one with Crohn’s disease-like ileo-colic inflammation refractory to anti-TNF and the other with lymphocytic leiomyositis causing severe chronic intestinal pseudo-occlusion. Next-generation sequencing was used to identify the underlying monogenic defect. One patient received anti-IL-12/IL-23 treatment while the other received the JAK1 inhibitor, ruxolitinib. Peripheral blood, intestinal tissues, and serum samples were analyzed before-and-after JAK1 inhibitor therapy using mass cytometry, histology, transcriptomic, and Olink assay. Results Novel germline loss-of-function variants in SOCS1 were identified in both patients. The patient with Crohn-like disease achieved clinical remission with anti-IL-12/IL-23 treatment. In the second patient with lymphocytic leiomyositis, ruxolitinib induced rapid resolution of the obstructive symptoms, significant decrease of the CD8+ T lymphocyte muscular infiltrate, and normalization of serum and intestinal cytokines. Decreased frequencies of circulating Treg cells, MAIT cells, and NK cells, with altered CD56bright:CD16lo:CD16hi NK subtype ratios were not modified by ruxolitinib. Conclusion SOCS1 haploinsufficiency can result in a broad spectrum of intestinal manifestations and need to be considered as differential diagnosis in cases of severe treatment-refractory enteropathies, including the rare condition of lymphocytic leiomyositis. This provides the rationale for genetic screening and considering JAK inhibitors in such cases.
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- 2023
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160. Palpebral perforation secondary to a dacryoadenitis: a rare complication of granulomatosis with polyangiitis
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Rémi Philip, Achille Aouba, and Nicolas Martin-Silva
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Rheumatology ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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161. Solid precipitation and its relationship with the Hess and Brezowsky classification: case in the French department of the Alpes-Maritimes
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Guillaume Guerin and Nicolas Martin
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General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2023
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162. EL RECEPTOR COMO VOYEUR : IMPLICANCIAS POLÍTICAS DEL PENSAMIENTO SOBRE LAS ARTES DE DIDEROT
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OLSZEVICKI, Nicolás Martín
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- 2016
163. 80 GHz co-designed LNA and antenna for automotive radar.
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Nicolas Martin, Thierry Taris, Jean-Baptiste Bégueret, Christian Person, and Didier Belot
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- 2014
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164. Sea surface salinity signatures of tropical instability waves: New evidences from SMOS.
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Xiaobin Yin, Jacqueline Boutin, Gilles Reverdin, Tong Lee, Sabine Arnault, and Nicolas Martin 0001
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- 2014
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165. Artritis séptica de cadera luego de una fractura cerrada de acetábulo tratada en forma conservadora. Reporte de caso
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Guido Carabelli, MARTIN BUTTARO, Fernando Diaz Dilernia, María Liliana Soruco, Marcos Raul Latorre, and NICOLAS MARTIN MOLHO
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General Medicine - Abstract
Las fracturas de acetábulo asociadas a traumatismos de baja energía, son una identidad frecuente hoy en día en los adultos mayores. La indicación del tratamiento quirúrgico o conservador, depende de múltiples factores como la edad y las comorbilidades del paciente, el tipo y localización de la fractura, y el medio socio-económico. Independientemente del tratamiento elegido, ninguno está exento de complicaciones. Se describe a continuación un paciente con una fractura de acetábulo cerrada, de tratamiento conservador, que derivó en artritis séptica de la articulación coxofemoral.
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- 2022
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166. W. E. B. Du Bois, « Les âmes du peuple blanc » (1920)
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Nicolas Martin-Breteau
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General Social Sciences - Published
- 2022
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167. William Edward Burghardt Du Bois, « Les âmes du peuple blanc » et la critique de la suprématie blanche
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Nicolas Martin-Breteau
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General Social Sciences - Published
- 2022
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168. Drought acclimation of Quercus ilex leaves improves tolerance to moderate drought but not resistance to severe water stress
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Jean‐Marc Limousin, Amélie Roussel, Jesús Rodríguez‐Calcerrada, José M. Torres‐Ruiz, Myriam Moreno, Laura Garcia de Jalon, Jean‐Marc Ourcival, Guillaume Simioni, Hervé Cochard, Nicolas Martin‐StPaul, Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD [France-Sud])-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Université de Montpellier (UM), Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM), 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), Ecologie des Forêts Méditerranéennes (URFM), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), OSU OREME UMS3282, and Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE)
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Dehydration ,leaf ,Plasticity ,tomatal regulation ,Hydraulic vulnerability ,Physiology ,Acclimatization ,evergreen broad ,safety margins ,Osmotic adjustment ,Water potential ,Plant Science ,Evergreen broadleaf ,Stomatal regulation ,Droughts ,Trees ,Plant Leaves ,Quercus ,Rainfall exclusion ,[SDV.SA.SF]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Silviculture, forestry ,Turgor loss ,Safety margin ,[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology ,[SDV.EE.BIO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology, environment/Bioclimatology - Abstract
International audience; Increasing temperature and drought can result in leaf dehydration and defoliation even in drought-adapted tree species such as the Mediterranean evergreen Quercus ilex L. The stomatal regulation of leaf water potential plays a central role in avoiding this phenomenon and is constrained by a suite of leaf traits including hydraulic conductance and vulnerability, hydraulic capacitance, minimum conductance to water vapour, osmotic potential and cell wall elasticity. We investigated whether the plasticity in these traits may improve leaf tolerance to drought in two long-term rainfall exclusion experiments in Mediterranean forests. Osmotic adjustment was observed to lower the water potential at turgor loss in the rainfall-exclusion treatments, thus suggesting a stomatal closure at more negative water potentials and a more anisohydric behaviour in drier conditions. Conversely, leaf hydraulic conductance and vulnerability did not exhibit any plasticity between treatments so the hydraulic safety margins were narrower in the rainfall-exclusion treatments. The sequence of leaf responses to seasonal drought and dehydration was conserved among treatments and sites but trees were more likely to suffer losses of turgor and hydraulic functioning in the rainfall-exclusion treatments. We conclude that leaf plasticity might help the trees to tolerate moderate drought but not to resist severe water stress.
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- 2022
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169. Building micro-capsules using water-in-water emulsion droplets as templates
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Adeline Perro, Noëmie Coudon, Jean-Paul Chapel, Nicolas Martin, Laure Béven, and Jean-Paul Douliez
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Biomaterials ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Polymers ,Solvents ,Water ,Capsules ,Emulsions ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
The use of templates in materials chemistry is a well-established approach for producing membrane-bounded hollow spheres used for microencapsulation applications, but also in synthetic biology to assemble artificial cell-like compartments. Sacrificial solid or gel micro-particles, but also liquid-like oil-in-water or water-in-oil emulsion droplets are routinely used as templates to produce capsules. Yet, disruption of the core sacrificial material often requires harsh experimental conditions, such as organic solvents, which limits the use of such approach to encapsulate fragile solutes, including biomolecules. Recently, water-in-water emulsion droplets have emerged as promising alternative templates to produce capsules in solvent-free conditions. These water-in-water droplets result from liquid-liquid phase separation in dilute aqueous polymer or surfactants solutions. Their ease of preparation, the large palette of components they can be assembled from and the lack of harsh solvent or oil used for their production make water-in-water emulsions of practical importance in materials chemistry. Water-in-water droplets can also spontaneously sequester solutes by equilibrium partitioning, which provides a simple strategy to locally accumulate molecules of interest and encapsulate them in capsules after interfacial shell formation. Here, we review recent works that employ water-in-water emulsion droplets to prepare capsules and suggest possible additional applications in materials chemistry.
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- 2022
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170. Uncertainty Quantification Approach for the Versatile Test Reactor Core Design
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Adam G. Nelson, Nicolas Martin, Alisha Kasam-Griffith, Zhiwen Xu, and Florent Heidet
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering - Published
- 2022
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171. When and where do feed-forward neural networks learn localist representations?
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Ella M. Gale, Nicolas Martin, and Jeffrey S. Bowers
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- 2018
172. Effects of immersive virtual reality stimulation and/or multicomponent physical exercise on cognitive and functional performance in hospitalized older patients with severe functional dependency: study protocol for a randomized clinical trial
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Antón de la Casa-Marín, Fabiola Zambom-Ferraresi, Maria Cristina Ferrara, Iranzu Ollo-Martínez, Arkaitz Galbete, Belén González-Glaría, Débora Moral-Cuesta, Itxaso Marín-Epelde, Chenhui Chenhuichen, Marta Lorente-Escudero, Rodrigo Molero-de-Ávila, Agurne García Baztán, Fabricio Zambom-Ferraresi, and Nicolás Martínez-Velilla
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Hospital-associated functional decline ,Cognitive stimulation ,Virtual reality ,Multicomponent physical exercise ,Acute care ,Older adults ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background Hospital-associated functional decline affects nearly one-third of the hospitalized older adults. The aim of this trial is to investigate the effect of a cognitive stimulation intervention provided via immersive virtual reality (IVR), with or without a multicomponent physical exercise intervention (ME) in hospitalized patients aged 75 or older with severe functional dependency at admission (Barthel Index
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- 2024
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173. Natural radioactivity in European drinking water: A review
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Marta Gómez, Siiri Suursoo, Nicolas Martin-Sanchez, Taavi Vaasma, and Maria Leier
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Environmental Engineering ,Pollution ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
More than three quarters of the dose from ionizing radiation is caused by natural radiation sources. In most European countries, groundwater is used as a source of drinking water, what can be an additional source of radiation since naturally occurring radionuclides in the bedrock can dissolve into groundwater. Although the Directive 2013/51/EURATOM establishes several parametric and screening values for different radioactivity parameters, there is a lack of harmonized information and publications available that evaluate the overall condition of drinking water in EU. Thereby, it is challenging to uniformly assess the current situation in European countries in regards of effective doses caused by the consumption of drinking water. This paper aims to collect the available information on the main radionuclides of interest in drinking waters of different European countries and create an overview of the existing situation.
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- 2022
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174. The REPAIR Study
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Andrew J. Peacock, Anton Vonk Noordegraaf, Nicolas Martin, Nazzareno Galiè, Adam Torbicki, J. Tim Marcus, David G. Kiely, Olga Moiseeva, Stephan Rosenkranz, Ahmed Tawakol, Emmanuelle Cottreel, Andrew J. Swift, and Richard N. Channick
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,medicine.disease ,Structure and function ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Ventricular remodeling ,Cardiac magnetic resonance ,business ,Macitentan - Abstract
Objectives The REPAIR (Right vEntricular remodeling in Pulmonary ArterIal hypeRtension) study evaluated the effect of macitentan on right ventricular (RV) and hemodynamic outcomes in patie...
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- 2022
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175. Spatial variability and temporal stability of corn response to nitrogen and seed rates in on-farm precision experiments
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Carlos Agustin Alesso and Nicolas Martin
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Geographically weighted regression (GWR) analysis and on-farm precision experiments (OFPE) allow the quantification of the within-field spatial variability of crop response to controllable inputs. Few studies have quantified the magnitude and consistency of these responses across years, and their relationship with site-specific characteristics. In this study we: (1) assessed the within-field spatial variability of corn response to nitrogen (NR) and seed (SR) rates using OFPE data and GWR models; (2) determined the spatial agreement between NR and SR response classes, and their temporal stability; and (3) modeled the effect of weather and site-specific features on the spatial distribution of the responses. Response maps were estimated by fitting GWR models to yields and as-applied NR and SR from 14 OFPE. Response maps classified into positive and non-positive response classes were spatially joined to weather, soil, and landscape covariates to train a random forest model. Zones with positive responses to NR and SR were detected in all fields. In most cases, these zones were inconsistent across years due to weather. The higher spatial agreement between NR and SR response classes for the same year suggests that factors controlling the crop response to these inputs are similar. In both cases, weather variables were the most important predictors followed by landscape and soil attributes. Whereas weather variables acted at a field level, i.e. field-year, the latter reflected the effect of within-field variability on crop response. To reduce this seasonal uncertainty, future research should consider conducting larger numbers of OFPE across multiple seasons.
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- 2023
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176. Nonlocal corrections to dynamical mean-field theory from the two-particle self-consistent method
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A.-M.S. Tremblay, Nicolas Martin, and Chloé Gauvin-Ndiaye
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Strongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el) ,FOS: Physical sciences - Abstract
Theoretical methods that are accurate for both short-distance observables and long-wavelength collective modes are still being developed for the Hubbard model. Here, we benchmark an approach that combines dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) observables with the two-particle self-consistent theory (TPSC). This offers a way to include non-local correlations in DMFT while also improving TPSC. The benchmarks are published diagrammatic quantum Monte Carlo results for the two-dimensional square lattice Hubbard model with nearest-neighbor hopping. This method (TPSC+DMFT) is relevant for weak to intermediate interaction, satisfies the local Pauli principle and allows us to compute a spin susceptibility that satisfies the Mermin-Wagner theorem. The DMFT double occupancy determines the spin and charge vertices through local spin and charge sum rules. The TPSC self-energy is also improved by replacing its local part with the local DMFT self-energy. With this method, we find improvements for both spin and charge fluctuations and for the self-energy. We also find that the accuracy check developed for TPSC is a good predictor of deviations from benchmarks for this model. TPSC+DMFT can be used in regimes where quantum Monte Carlo is inaccessible. In addition, this method paves the way to multi-band generalizations of TPSC that could be used in advanced electronic structure codes that include DMFT., Comment: 15 pages, 19 figures. Changes from v2: added panels on some figures showing relative deviation from benchmarks, updated references. The self-energy results subsection has been slightly reworded
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- 2023
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177. Plant hydraulic modelling of leaf and canopy fuel moisture content reveals increasing vulnerability of a Mediterranean forest to wildfires under extreme drought
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Julien Ruffault, Jean‐Marc Limousin, François Pimont, Jean‐Luc Dupuy, Miquel De Càceres, Hervé Cochard, Florent Mouillot, Chris J. Blackman, José M. Torres‐Ruiz, Russell A. Parsons, Myriam Moreno, Sylvain Delzon, Steven Jansen, Albert Olioso, Brendan Choat, Nicolas Martin‐StPaul, Ecologie des Forêts Méditerranéennes (URFM), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Université de Montpellier (UM), Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD [France-Sud])-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Université de Montpellier (UM), CREAF - Centre for Ecological Research and Applied Forestries, 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), University of Tasmania [Hobart, Australia] (UTAS), US Forest Service, Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés (BioGeCo), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Universität Ulm - Ulm University [Ulm, Allemagne], and Western Sydney University
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Physiology ,rought ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,tree mortality ,plant hydraulics ,process-based modelling ,Plant Science ,live fuel moisture content ,forest flammability ,climate changed ,wildfire - Abstract
Fuel moisture content (FMC) is a crucial driver of forest fires in many regions world-wide. Yet, the dynamics of FMC in forest canopies as well as their physiological and environmental determinants remain poorly understood, especially under extreme drought.We embedded a FMC module in the trait-based, plant-hydraulic SurEau-Ecos model to provide innovative process-based predictions of leaf live fuel moisture content (LFMC) and canopy fuel moisture content (CFMC) based on leaf water potential (psi Leaf$$ {\psi}_{\mathrm{Leaf}} $$). SurEau-Ecos-FMC relies on pressure-volume (p-v) curves to simulate LFMC and vulnerability curves to cavitation to simulate foliage mortality.SurEau-Ecos-FMC accurately reproduced psi Leaf$$ {\psi}_{\mathrm{Leaf}} $$ and LFMC dynamics as well as the occurrence of foliage mortality in a Mediterranean Quercus ilex forest. Several traits related to water use (leaf area index, available soil water, and transpiration regulation), vulnerability to cavitation, and p-v curves (full turgor osmotic potential) had the greatest influence on LFMC and CFMC dynamics. As the climate gets drier, our results showed that drought-induced foliage mortality is expected to increase, thereby significantly decreasing CFMC.Our results represent an important advance in our capacity to understand and predict the sensitivity of forests to wildfires.
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- 2023
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178. Intraoperative unfractionated heparin before femoral component cementation should be avoided in femoral neck fracture treated with hybrid total hip arthroplasty
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Agustín García-Mansilla, Agustina Castro Lalín, Fernando Holc, Nicolas Martin Molho, Anibal Vescovo, Pablo Ariel Slullitel, and Martin Alejandro Buttaro
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Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery - Published
- 2023
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179. Experimental study of polarisation observables T, P and H in π0 and η photoproduction off quasifree nucleons with the Crystal Barrel/TAPS setup
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Jermann, Nicolas Martin
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- 2023
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180. PsABIOnd study and edaily substudy design: long-term effectiveness and safety of guselkumab and il-17 inhibitors in routine clinical practice in patients with psoriatic arthritis
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Stefan Siebert, Frank Behrens, Ennio Lubrano, Nicolas Martin, Mohamed Sharaf, Christine Contré, Elke Theander, Rubén Queiro, Miriam Zimmermann, and Laure Gossec
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Rheumatology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Randomised clinical studies in psoriatic arthritis (PsA) do not always reflect patients in routine clinical practice. Large-scale data from routine practice are needed to better understand drug persistence, effectiveness and long-term safety of therapeutic agents.PsABIOnd is an international, prospective, observational study designed to collect long-term routine care data in patients with PsA who receive guselkumab (an interleukin-23 [IL-23] inhibitor) or an interleukin-17 (IL-17) inhibitor. Adult patients (≥ 18 years) with a confirmed diagnosis of PsA who are starting guselkumab or any approved IL-17 inhibitor as a first, second, third or fourth line of PsA treatment and who provide written informed consent will be eligible to participate. Participants will be followed for a maximum of 36 months (+3 months) from the start of treatment. Study visits will occur in line with the standard of care, approximately every 6 months, plus an additional visit at 3 months after the start of treatment. eDaily by PsABIOnd - aneHealth substudy, will document the impact of these treatments on wellbeing and symptoms in a subgroup of participants over a 24-week (+4 weeks) observation period on treatment.The primary objective of PsABIOnd is to evaluate treatment persistence with guselkumab and IL-17 inhibitors. Data sources will include validated electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs) and physician-completed assessments. Safety data will be collected through reporting adverse events. The eDaily by PsABIOnd substudy will use wearable and digital technologies for continuous activity and sleep monitoring, and frequent patient eDiary and ePRO collection to provide a more detailed and comprehensive picture of PsA.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT05049798.Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is a type of arthritis associated with inflammation that occurs in almost one-third of patients with the inflammatory skin condition psoriasis. PsA can vary between individuals, and typically causes joint pain, swelling and stiffness, affecting both physical and social well-being. Over the past decade, several new PsA treatments have become available. However, there is currently a lack of agreement about the best treatment options. As PsA is a chronic (long-term) disease, the duration of time a patient continues taking a prescribed treatment (termed “treatment persistence”) is important. The randomised clinical trials used to determine if a treatment works use strict rules to select patients. Therefore, large studies from everyday practice are needed to better understand the effectiveness and safety of these PsA treatments for a wider range of patients. PsABIOnd is a real-life study that will compare guselkumab (an interleukin-23 inhibitor) and interleukin-17 inhibitors, which are two relatively new types of PsA treatments. The study will provide information about how long patients remain on these treatments and how effectively and safely they work over a 3-year period. PsABIOnd will also explore the impact of PsA on participants’ lives by collecting information about their quality of life, disease activity and treatment satisfaction. In addition, participants also taking part in the eDaily by PsABIOnd substudy will wear a watch-like device and use a smartphone-based app to record measurements including activity, sleep, pain and well-being to give a detailed picture of PsA and its impact on patients’ daily lives.
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- 2023
181. Is a seasonally reduced growth potential a convergent strategy to survive drought and frost in plants?
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Florence Volaire, Karim Barkaoui, David Grémillet, Guillaume Charrier, Olivier Dangles, Laurent J Lamarque, Nicolas Martin-StPaul, Isabelle Chuine, Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD [France-Sud])-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Université de Montpellier (UM), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Agrosystèmes Biodiversifiés (UMR ABSys), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Méditerranéennes - Institut Agronomique Méditerranéen de Montpellier (CIHEAM-IAMM), Centre International de Hautes Études Agronomiques Méditerranéennes (CIHEAM)-Centre International de Hautes Études Agronomiques Méditerranéennes (CIHEAM)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro), Département Performances des systèmes de production et de transformation tropicaux (Cirad-PERSYST), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad), University of Cape Town, Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, 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), Departement des sciences de l’environnement [Trois-Rivieres], Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières (UQTR), and Ecologie des Forêts Méditerranéennes (URFM)
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dormancy ,mortality threshold ,seasonality ,‘growth-stress survival’ trade-off ,embolism resistance ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,‘fast-slow’ economics spectrum ,frost survival ,drought survival ,Plant Science ,strategy ,phenology ,dehydration tolerance - Abstract
Background Plants have adapted to survive seasonal life-threatening frost and drought. However, the timing and frequency of such events are impacted by climate change, jeopardizing plant survival. Understanding better the strategies of survival to dehydration stress is therefore timely and can be enhanced by the cross-fertilization of research between disciplines (ecology, physiology), models (woody, herbaceous species) and types of stress (drought, frost). Scope We build upon the ‘growth–stress survival’ trade-off, which underpins the identification of global plant strategies across environments along a ‘fast–slow’ economics spectrum. Although phenological adaptations such as dormancy are crucial to survive stress, plant global strategies along the fast–slow economic spectrum rarely integrate growth variations across seasons. We argue that the growth–stress survival trade-off can be a useful framework to identify convergent plant ecophysiological strategies to survive both frost and drought. We review evidence that reduced physiological activity, embolism resistance and dehydration tolerance of meristematic tissues are interdependent strategies that determine thresholds of mortality among plants under severe frost and drought. We show that complete dormancy, i.e. programmed growth cessation, before stress occurrence, minimizes water flows and maximizes dehydration tolerance during seasonal life-threatening stresses. We propose that incomplete dormancy, i.e. the programmed reduction of growth potential during the harshest seasons, could be an overlooked but major adaptation across plants. Quantifying stress survival in a range of non-dormant versus winter- or summer-dormant plants, should reveal to what extent incomplete to complete dormancy could represent a proxy for dehydration tolerance and stress survival. Conclusions Our review of the strategies involved in dehydration stress survival suggests that winter and summer dormancy are insufficiently acknowledged as plant ecological strategies. Incorporating a seasonal fast–slow economics spectrum into global plant strategies improves our understanding of plant resilience to seasonal stress and refines our prevision of plant adaptation to extreme climatic events.
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- 2023
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182. Subpixel Scanning Invariant to Indirect Lighting Using Quadratic Code Length.
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Nicolas Martin, Vincent Couture, and Sébastien Roy 0001
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- 2013
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183. Domina el arte del storytelling: Las claves para atraer y persuadir a través de una buena historia
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Nicolas Martin
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- 2016
184. Rires noirs: Anthologie romancée de l'humour et du grotesque dans le roman africain
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Nicolas Martin-Granel
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- 2016
185. A 60GHz class F-E power VCO with vector-modulator feedback in 65nm CMOS technology.
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Sophie Drean, Nicolas Martin, Nathalie Deltimple, Eric Kerherve, Baudouin Martineau, and Didier Belot
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- 2012
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186. On systematic biases between modeled and measured SMOS brightness temperature.
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Xiaobin Yin, Jacqueline Boutin, Nicolas Martin 0001, and Paul Spurgeon
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- 2012
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187. Efficacy and safety of immune checkpoint inhibitors in elderly patients (≥70 years) with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck
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F.R. Ferrand, Khalil Saleh, Anne Auperin, Edith Borcoman, Amaury Daste, Christophe Le Tourneau, M. Iacob, Neus Baste, Nicolas Martin, Nadine Khalife, Caroline Even, Esma Saada-Bouzid, Nouritza Torossian, and Joël Guigay
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Adult ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immune checkpoint inhibitors ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Head and neck ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Performance status ,Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Confounding ,Age Factors ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Radiological weapon ,business - Abstract
Background Recent meta-analysis showed that immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have comparable activity between younger and older patients. However, little is known about efficacy and safety of ICI in elderly patients with relapsed/metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (R/M SCCHN). The aim of this study is to compare the efficacy of ICI for patients aged ≥70 y to that for younger patients, while taking into account potential confounding factors. Methods A retrospective study was conducted at four hospitals in France. Patients treated with ICI for R/M SCCHN between September 2014 and December 2018 were eligible. Patients’ charts were reviewed for clinical and radiological data as well as oncologic outcomes. Results We included 226 patients, of whom 67 were aged ≥70 years. Objective response rate (ORR), median overall survival (OS) and median progression-free survival (PFS) were 23%, 9.7 months and 2.7 months, respectively, for elderly patients, compared to 13%, 8.7 months and 1.9 months for younger patients (respective p-values: 0.071, 0.87 and 0.21). After adjustment for performance status, site of progression, number of ICI drugs, time between initial diagnosis and ICI start and number of previous lines, age ≥70 years was significantly associated with a better PFS (hazard ratio [HR], 0.66; p = 0.021) but not OS (HR, 0.91; p = 0.59). Grade 3-5 adverse events (AEs) occurred in 15% of patients aged ≥70 years and in 8% of younger patients (p = 0.13). Conclusion Patients aged ≥70 years with R/M SCCHN may respond to ICI similarly as younger patients in terms of ORR, OS and PFS, while maintaining comparable rate of AEs.
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- 2021
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188. Reducing the split-attention effect of subtitles during video learning: might the use of occasional keywords be an effective solution?
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Nicolas Martin and Salomé Cojean
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Video learning ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,Humanities ,General Psychology ,Effective solution - Abstract
Les videos pedagogiques presentent des benefices (e.g., animations, multi-modalite) mais egalement des contraintes a prendre en compte. Par exemple, en presence de sous-titres, un effet d’attention divisee peut apparaitre entre l’audio, le texte ecrit et les illustrations. Une solution serait de presenter des mots-cles a la place des sous-titres afin d’eviter une redondance inutile et de guider l’apprenant a selectionner l’information pertinente. Dans cette etude, 96 participants ont appris une video de 12 minutes avec ou sans sous-titres, et avec ou sans information mise en saillance (i.e., mots-cles). Les resultats n’ont montre aucun effet des sous-titres, mais les mots-cles ont un effet negatif sur la memorisation, la comprehension et le temps d’apprentissage. Ces resultats sont discutes en termes de strategies mises en place. Les apprenants n’auraient pas utilise les mots-cles pour les guider dans la selection de l’information, mais les auraient consideres comme remplacant ce processus, surestimant ainsi leur apprentissage.
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- 2021
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189. Three- Versus Two-Drug Therapy for Patients With Newly Diagnosed Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
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Vallerie V. McLaughlin, David Poch, Martin Doelberg, J. Simon R. Gibbs, Marius M. Hoeper, Jeremy Feldman, Gérald Simonneau, Loïc Perchenet, Olivier Sitbon, Nicolas Martin, Nazzareno Galiè, Kelly Chin, Rajan Saggar, Stephen C. Mathai, Ekkehard Grünig, Chin, Kelly M., Sitbon, Olivier, Doelberg, Martin, Feldman, Jeremy, Gibbs, J. Simon R., Grünig, Ekkehard, Hoeper, Marius M., Martin, Nicola, Mathai, Stephen C., McLaughlin, Vallerie V., Perchenet, Loïc, Poch, David, Saggar, Rajan, Simonneau, Gérald, and Galiè, Nazzareno
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Adult ,Endothelin Receptor Antagonists ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiovascular pharmacology ,Newly diagnosed ,Selexipag ,macitentan pulmonary arterial hypertension randomized controlled trial selexipag triple combination therapy ,Tadalafil ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pharmacotherapy ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Acetamides ,medicine ,Humans ,Oral therapy ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Aged ,Macitentan ,Preventive healthcare ,Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension ,Sulfonamides ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Phosphodiesterase 5 Inhibitors ,stomatognathic diseases ,Pyrimidines ,chemistry ,Pyrazines ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: In pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), there are no data comparing initial triple oral therapy with initial double oral therapy. OBJECTIVES: TRITON (The Efficacy and Safety of Initial Triple Versus Initial Dual Oral Combination Therapy in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; NCT02558231), a multicenter, double-blind, randomized phase 3b study, evaluated initial triple (macitentan, tadalafil, and selexipag) versus initial double (macitentan, tadalafil, and placebo) oral therapy in newly diagnosed, treatment-naive patients with PAH. METHODS: Efficacy was assessed until the last patient randomized completed week 26 (end of main observation period). The primary endpoint was change in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) at week26. RESULTS: Patients were assigned to initial triple (n=123) or initial double therapy (n=124). At week 26, both treatment strategies reduced PVR compared with baseline (by 54% and 52%), with no significant difference between groups (ratio of geometric means: 0.96; 95% confidence interval: 0.86-1.07; P=0.42). Six-minute walk distance and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide improved by week 26, with no difference between groups. Risk for disease progression (to end of main observation period) was reduced with initial triple versus initial double therapy (hazard ratio: 0.59; 95% confidence interval: 0.32-1.09). Most common adverse events with initial triple therapy included headache, diarrhea, and nausea. By the end of the main observation period, 2 patients in the initial triple and 9 in the initial double therapy groups had died. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with newly diagnosed PAH, both treatment strategies markedly reduced PVR by week 26, with no significant difference between groups (primary endpoint not met). Exploratory analyses suggested a possible signal for improved long-term outcomes with initial triple versus initial double oral therapy.
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- 2021
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190. Unstructured light scanning to overcome interreflections.
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Vincent Chapdelaine-Couture, Nicolas Martin, and Sébastien Roy 0001
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- 2011
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191. Focused Crawling Using Name Disambiguation on Search Engine Results.
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Nicolas Martin and Khaled Khelif
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- 2011
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192. Validation of SMOS measurements over ocean and improvement of sea surface emissivity modelat L band.
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Xiaobin Yin, Jacqueline Boutin, Nicolas Martin 0001, and Paul Spurgeon
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- 2011
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193. Consensus on Environmentally Sustainable Oral Healthcare A Joint Stakeholder Statement
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Nicolas Martin, Steven Mulligan, Ian J. Shellard, and Paul V. Hatton
- Abstract
The Oral Healthcare community, including clinical professionals and industry, acknowledges the shared responsibility to deliver products and interventions that improve oral health in a more sustainable manner. To deliver this, the community is working in alignment with the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Key to establishing this collaborative stakeholder consensus is a deep contextual understanding of the challenge. This is achieved through a comprehensive account of the levels of awareness of the environmental impacts, the challenges to resolve these impacts together with the drivers and opportunities to promote sustainable practices. This report concludes with a strategic action framework that makes specific recommendations and identifies best practice to achieve these goals. The promotion of excellent oral healthcare and the development of a circular economy are core to this strategy. Additionally, it is also important to recognise the opportunities to collaborate across the sector, and throughout supply chains, to develop and promote sustainable practices to achieve meaningful and measurable environmental outcomes in the sector. In this context, the FDI World Dental Federation convened the development of this volume, Consensus on Environmentally Sustainable Oral Healthcare: A Joint Stakeholder Statement. This consensus statement brings together a global coalition of stakeholders, representing all aspects of industry, health professionals, experts, legislative authorities and governments. The statement uses a truly collaborative, multi-stakeholder approach to identify the major challenges facing oral healthcare, the complex drivers that underpin current behaviours and practices, and the best opportunities to improve and deliver sustainable oral healthcare for people and the planet. Concluding with an impactful and robust strategic action plan that crosses all boundaries, the statement identifies a series of actions and recommendations for best practice that address the sustainability issues facing the whole sector. Written by The University of Sheffield colleagues Prof Nicolas Martin, Dr Steven Mulligan, Hon. Prof Ian J Shellard and Prof Paul V Hatton, Consensus on Environmentally Sustainable Oral Healthcare: A Joint Stakeholder Statement is the result of a collaborative working partnership between the FDI-Sustainability in Dentistry Task Team and the project founding partners (Colgate-Palmolive, Dentsply Sirona, Haleon, Procter & Gamble and TePe) with the wide participation of stakeholders throughout the oral healthcare supply chain.
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- 2022
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194. Tunable Electrical Properties of Ti-B-N Thin Films Sputter-Deposited by the Reactive Gas Pulsing Process
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Charalampos Sakkas, Jean-Marc Cote, Joseph Gavoille, Jean-Yves Rauch, Pierre-Henri Cornuault, Anna Krystianiak, Olivier Heintz, and Nicolas Martin
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Ti-B-N ,reactive sputtering ,gas pulsing ,electrical conductivity ,percolation ,Materials Chemistry ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films - Abstract
Titanium-boron-nitrogen (Ti-B-N) thin films were deposited by RF reactive magnetron sputtering using a titanium diboride (TiB2) target in an argon + nitrogen mixture. The argon mass flow rate was kept constant, whereas that of nitrogen was pulsed during the deposition. A constant pulsing period of P = 10 s was used, and the introduction time of the nitrogen gas (duty cycle (dc)) was systematically varied from dc = 0 to 100% of the pulsing period. This reactive gas pulsing process allowed the deposition of Ti-B-N thin films with various boron and nitrogen concentrations. Such adjustable concentrations in the films also led to changes in their electronic transport properties. Boron and nitrogen contents exhibited a reverse evolution as a function of the nitrogen duty cycle, which was correlated with the transition from a metallic to semiconducting-like behavior. A percolation model was applied to the electrical conductivity as a function of the nitrogen pulsing parameters, assuming some correlations with the evolution of the Ti-B-N thin film nanostructure.
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- 2022
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195. Probing hadronic interactions using the latest data measured by the Pierre Auger Observatory
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Caterina Trimarelli, Pedro Abreu, Marco Aglietta, Ingomar Allekotte, Kévin Almeida Cheminant, Alejandro Almela, Jaime Alvarez-Muniz, Juan Ammerman Yebra, Gioacchino Alex Anastasi, Luis A. Anchordoqui, Belén Andrada, Sofia Andringa, Carla Aramo, Paulo Ricardo Araújo Ferreira, Enrico Arnone, Juan Carlos Arteaga Velazquez, Hernán Gonzalo Asorey, Pedro Assis, Gualberto Avila, Emanuele Avocone, Alina Mihaela Badescu, Alena Bakalova, Alexandru Balaceanu, Felicia Barbato, Jose A. Bellido, Corinne Berat, Mario Edoardo Bertaina, Gopal Bhatta, Peter L. Biermann, Virginia Binet, Kathrin Bismark, Teresa Bister, Jonathan Biteau, Jiri Blazek, Carla Bleve, Johannes Blümer, Martina Bohacova, Denise Boncioli, Carla Bonifazi, Luan Bonneau Arbeletche, Nataliia Borodai, Jeffrey Brack, Thomas Bretz, P. Gabriel Brichetto Orchera, Florian Lukas Briechle, Peter Buchholz, Antonio Bueno, Stijn Buitink, Mario Buscemi, Max Büsken, Anthony Bwembya, Karen S. Caballero-Mora, Lorenzo Caccianiga, Ioana Caracas, Rossella Caruso, Antonella Castellina, Fernando Catalani, Gabriella Cataldi, Lorenzo Cazon, Marcos Cerda, Jose Augusto Chinellato, Jiří Chudoba, Ladislav Chytka, Roger W Clay, Agustín Cobos Cerutti, Roberta Colalillo, Alan Coleman, Maria Rita Coluccia, Rúben Conceição, Antonio Condorelli, Giovanni Consolati, Fernando Contreras, Fabio Convenga, Diego Correia dos Santos, Corbin Covault, Markus Cristinziani, Sergio Dasso, Kai Daumiller, Bruce R. Dawson, Jarryd A. Day, Rogerio M. de Almeida, Joaquin de Jesus, Sijbrand J. de Jong, João de Mello Neto, Ivan De Mitri, Jaime de Oliveira, Danelise de Oliveira Franco, Francesco de Palma, Vitor de Souza, Emanuele De Vito, Antonino Del Popolo, Olivier Deligny, Luca Deval, Armando di Matteo, Madalina Dobre, Carola Dobrigkeit, Juan Carlos D'Olivo, Luis Miguel Domingues Mendes, Rita Cassia dos Anjos, Maria Teresa Dova, Jan Ebr, Mohamed Eman, Ralph Engel, Italo Epicoco, Martin Erdmann, Carlos O. Escobar, Alberto Etchegoyen, Heino Falcke, John Farmer, Glennys R. Farrar, Anderson Campos Fauth, Norberto Fazzini, Fridtjof Feldbusch, Francesco Fenu, Brian Fick, Juan Manuel Figueira, Andrej Filipcic, Thomas Fitoussi, Tomáš Fodran, Toshihiro Fujii, Alan Fuster, Cristina Galea, Claudio Galelli, Beatriz García, Hartmut Gemmeke, Flavia Gesualdi, Alexandru Gherghel-Lascu, Piera Luisa Ghia, Ugo GIACCARI, Marco Giammarchi, Jonas Glombitza, Fabian Gobbi, Fernando Gollan, Geraldina Golup, Mariano Gómez Berisso, Primo F. Gómez Vitale, Juan Pablo Gongora, Juan Manuel González, Nicolas Martin Gonzalez, Isabel Goos, Dariusz Gora, Alessio Gorgi, Marvin Gottowik, Trent D. Grubb, Fausto Guarino, Germano Guedes, Eleonora Guido, Steffen Traugott Hahn, Petr Hamal, Matías Rolf Hampel, Patricia María Hansen, Diego Harari, Violet M. Harvey, Andreas Haungs, Thomas Hebbeker, Dieter Heck, Carlos Hojvat, Jörg R. Hörandel, Pavel Horvath, Miroslav Hrabovsky, Tim Huege, Antonio Insolia, Paula Gina Isar, Petr Janecek, Jeffrey A. Johnsen, Jakub Jurysek, Alex Kääpä, Karl-Heinz Kampert, Bianca Keilhauer, Abha Khakurdikar, Varada Varma Kizakke Covilakam, Hans Klages, Matthias Kleifges, Jonny Kleinfeller, Felix Knapp, Norbert Kunka, Bruno L. Lago, Niklas Langner, Marcelo Augusto Leigui de Oliveira, Vladimir Lenok, Antoine Letessier-Selvon, Isabelle Lhenry-Yvon, Domenico Lo Presti, Luis LOPES, Rebeca López, Lu Lu, Quentin Luce, Jon Paul Lundquist, Allan Machado Payeras, Giovanni Mancarella, Dusan Mandat, Bradley C. Manning, Julien Manshanden, Paul Mantsch, Sullivan Marafico, Federico Maria Mariani, Analisa Mariazzi, Ioana Maris, Giovanni Marsella, Daniele Martello, Sara Martinelli, Oscar Martínez Bravo, Miguel Alexandre Martins, Massimo Mastrodicasa, Hermann-Josef Mathes, James Matthews, Giorgio Matthiae, Eric William Mayotte, Sonja Mayotte, Peter Mazur, Gustavo Medina-Tanco, Diego Melo, Alexander Menshikov, Stanislav Michal, Maria Isabel Micheletti, Lino Miramonti, Silvia Mollerach, François Montanet, Leonel Morejon, Carlo Morello, Ana L. Müller, Katharine Mulrey, Roberto Mussa, Marco Stein Muzio, Wilson M. Namasaka, Alina Nasr-Esfahani, Lukas Nellen, Gabriela Nicora, Mihai Niculescu-Oglinzanu, Marcus Niechciol, Dave Nitz, Ian Norwood, Dalibor Nosek, Vladimír Novotný, Libor Nozka, Achille Nucita, Luis A. Nunez, Cainã Oliveira, Miroslav Palatka, Juan Pallotta, Gonzalo Parente, Alejandra Parra, Jannis Pawlowsky, Miroslav Pech, Jan Pękala, Rodrigo Pelayo, Edyvania Emily Pereira Martins, Johnnier Perez Armand, Carmina Pérez Bertolli, Lorenzo Perrone, Sergio Petrera, Camilla Petrucci, Tanguy Pierog, Mário Pimenta, Manuel Platino, Bjarni Pont, Mart Pothast, Paolo Privitera, Michael Prouza, Andrew Puyleart, Sven Querchfeld, Julian Rautenberg, Diego Ravignani, Maximilian Reininghaus, Jan Ridky, Felix Riehn, Markus Risse, Vincenzo Rizi, Washington Rodrigues de Carvalho, Jorge Rubén Rodriguez Rojo, Matías J. Roncoroni, Simone Rossoni, Markus Roth, Esteban Roulet, Adrian Rovero, Philip Ruehl, Alexandra Saftoiu, Mohit Saharan, Francesco Salamida, Humberto Ibarguen Salazar, Gaetano Salina, Jose Sanabria Gomez, Federico Andrés Sánchez, Edivaldo Moura Santos, Eva Santos, Fred Sarazin, Raul Sarmento, Ricardo Sato, Pierpaolo Savina, Christoph M. Schäfer, Viviana Scherini, Harald Schieler, Martin Schimassek, Michael Schimp, Felix Schlüter, David Schmidt, Olaf Scholten, Harm Schoorlemmer, Petr Schovanek, Frank G. Schröder, Josina Schulte, Tobias Schulz, Sergio J Sciutto, Marina Scornavacche, Alberto Segreto, Srijan Sehgal, Shima Ujjani Shivashankara, Guenter Sigl, Gaia Silli, Octavian Sima, Raluca Smau, Radomir Smida, Paul Sommers, Jorge F. Soriano, Ruben Squartini, Maximilian Stadelmaier, Denis Stanca, Samo Stanič, Jaroslaw Stasielak, Patrick Stassi, Maximilian Straub, Alexander Streich, Mauricio Suárez-Durán, Tristan Sudholz, Tiina Suomijarvi, A. Daniel Supanitsky, Zbigniew Szadkowski, Alex Tapia, Carla Taricco, Charles Timmermans, Olena Tkachenko, Petr Tobiska, Carlos J. Todero Peixoto, Bernardo Tomé, Zoé Torrès, Andres Travaini, Petr Travnicek, Matias Jorge Tueros, Ralf Ulrich, Michael Unger, Lukáš Vaclavek, Martin Vacula, Jose F. Valdés Galicia, Laura Valore, Enrique Varela, Adriana Vásquez-Ramírez, Darko Veberic, Cynthia Ventura, Indira D. Vergara Quispe, Valerio Verzi, Jakub Vicha, Jacco Vink, Serguei Vorobiov, Hernan Wahlberg, Clara Keiko Oliveira Watanabe, Alan Watson, Andreas Weindl, Lawrence Wiencke, Henryk Wilczyński, David Wittkowski, Brian Wundheiler, Alexey Yushkov, Orazio Zapparrata, Enrique Zas, Danilo Zavrtanik, Marko Zavrtanik, and Lukas Zehrer
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
196. MEDFATE 2.8.1: A trait-enabled model to simulate Mediterranean forest function and dynamics at regional scales
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Miquel De Cáceres, Roberto Molowny-Horas, Antoine Cabon, Jordi Martínez-Vilalta, Maurizio Mencuccini, Raúl García-Valdés, Daniel Nadal-Sala, Santiago Sabaté, Nicolas Martin-StPaul, Xavier Morin, Enric Batllori, and Aitor Améztegui
- Abstract
Regional-level applications of dynamic vegetation models are challenging because they need to accommodate the variation in plant functional diversity, which requires moving away from broadly-defined functional types. Different approaches have been adopted in the last years to incorporate a trait-based perspective into modeling exercises. A common parametrization strategy involves using trait data to represent functional variation between individuals while discard taxonomic identity, but this strategy ignores the phylogenetic signal of trait variation and cannot be employed when predictions for specific taxa are needed, as in applications to inform forest management planning. An alternative strategy involves adapting the taxonomic resolution of model entities to that of the data source employed for large-scale initialization and estimating functional parameters from available plant trait databases while adopting alternative solutions for missing data and non-observable parameters. Here we report the advantages and limitations of this second strategy according to our experience in the development of MEDFATE (v. 2.8.1), a novel cohort-based and trait-enabled model of forest dynamics, for its application over a region in the Western Mediterranean Basin. First, 217 taxonomic entities were defined according to woody species codes of the Spanish National Forest Inventory. While forest inventory data were used to obtain some empirical parameter estimates, a large proportion of physiological, morphological, and anatomical parameters were mapped to measured plant traits, with estimates extracted from multiple databases and averaged at the required taxonomic level. Estimates for non-observable key parameters were obtained using meta-modeling and calibration exercises. Missing values were filled using imputation procedures based on trait coordination, taxonomic averages or both. The model properly simulated observed historical basal area changes, with a performance similar to an empirical model trained for the same region. While strong efforts are still required to parameterize trait-enabled models for multiple taxa, estimation procedures can be progressively refined, transferred to other regions or models and iterated following data source changes by employing automated workflows. We advocate for the adoption of trait-enabled population-structured models for regional-level projections of forest function and dynamics.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
197. Supplementary material to 'MEDFATE 2.8.1: A trait-enabled model to simulate Mediterranean forest function and dynamics at regional scales'
- Author
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Miquel De Cáceres, Roberto Molowny-Horas, Antoine Cabon, Jordi Martínez-Vilalta, Maurizio Mencuccini, Raúl García-Valdés, Daniel Nadal-Sala, Santiago Sabaté, Nicolas Martin-StPaul, Xavier Morin, Enric Batllori, and Aitor Améztegui
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
198. Fast probabilisitic estimation of egomotion from image intensities.
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Jamil Draréni, Nicolas Martin, and Sébastien Roy 0001
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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199. Overview of SMOS Level 2 Ocean Salinity processing and first results.
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Jordi Font, Jacqueline Boutin, Nicolas Reul, Paul Spurgeon, Joaquim Ballabrera, Andrei Chuprin, Carolina Gabarró, Jérôme Gourrion, Claire Henocq, Samantha J. Lavender, Nicolas Martin 0001, Justino Martínez, Michael McCulloch, Ingo Meirold-Mautner, François Petitcolin, Marcos Portabella, Roberto Sabia, Marco Talone, Joseph Tenerelli, Antonio Turiel, Jean-Luc Vergely, Philippe Waldteufel, Xiaobin Yin, and Sonia Zine
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- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. Unstructured Light Scanning Robust to Indirect Illumination and Depth Discontinuities.
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Vincent Couture, Nicolas Martin, and Sébastien Roy 0001
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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