398 results on '"Huc P"'
Search Results
2. Assessing electoral volatility through ecological inference: the case of the 2014 and 2020 municipal elections in Montpellier
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Audemard, Julien, Gouard, David, and Huc, Arnaud
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- 2023
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3. Scenarios for the Altamira cave CO2 concentration from 1950 to 2100
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Marina Sáez, David Benavente, Soledad Cuezva, Mireille Huc, Ángel Fernández-Cortés, Arnaud Mialon, Yann Kerr, Sergio Sánchez-Moral, and Sylvain Mangiarotti
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract A data-driven approach insensitive to the initial conditions was developed to extract governing equations for the concentration of CO2 in the Altamira cave (Spain) and its two main drivers: the outside temperature and the soil moisture. This model was then reformulated in order to use satellite observations and meteorological predictions, as a forcing. The concentration of CO2 inside the cave was then investigated from 1950 to 2100 under various scenarios. It is found that extreme levels of CO2 were reached during the period 1950–1972 due to the massive affluence of visitors. It is demonstrated that it is possible to monitor the CO2 in the cave in real time using satellite information as an external forcing. For the future, it is shown that the maximum values of CO2 will exceed the levels reached during the 1980s and the 1990s when the CO2 introduced by the touristic visits, although intentionally reduced, still enhanced considerably the micro corrosion of walls and pigments.
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- 2024
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4. Colloidal Synthesis of Nanoparticles: from Bimetallic to High Entropy Alloys
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da Silva, Cora Moreira, Amara, Hakim, Fossard, Frédéric, Girard, Armelle, Huc, Vincent, and Loiseau, Annick
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
At the nanometric scale, the synthesis of a random alloy (i.e. without phase segregation, whatever the composition) by chemical synthesis remains a not easy task, even for simple binary type systems. In this context, a unique approach based on the colloidal route is proposed enabling the synthesis of face-centred cubic and monodisperse bimetallic, trimetallic, tetrametallic and pentametallic nanoparticles with diameters around 5 nm as solid solutions. The Fe-Co-Ni-Pt-Ru alloy and its subsets are considered which is a challenging task as each element has fairly different physico-chemical properties. Nanoparticles are prepared by temperature-assisted co-reduction of metal acetylacetonate precursors in the presence of surfactants. It is highlighted how the correlation between precursors' degradation temperatures and reduction potentials values of the metal cations is the driving force to achieve a homogenous distribution of all elements within the nanoparticles.
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- 2022
5. Acylation of glycerolipids in mycobacteria
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Angala, Shiva Kumar, Carreras-Gonzalez, Ana, Huc-Claustre, Emilie, Anso, Itxaso, Kaur, Devinder, Jones, Victoria, Palčeková, Zuzana, Belardinelli, Juan M., de Sousa-d’Auria, Célia, Shi, Libin, Slama, Nawel, Houssin, Christine, Quémard, Annaïk, McNeil, Michael, Guerin, Marcelo E., and Jackson, Mary
- Published
- 2023
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6. A simple and efficient process for the synthesis of 2D carbon nitrides and related materials
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Moreira Da Silva, Cora, Vallet, Maxime, Semion, Clément, Blin, Thomas, Saint-Martin, Romuald, Leroy, Jocelyne, Dragoé, Diana, Brisset, François, Gillet, Cynthia, Guillot, Régis, and Huc, Vincent
- Published
- 2023
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7. Induction of human hepatic cytochrome P-450 3A4 expression by antifungal succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors
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Marie Kerhoas, Jennifer Carteret, Lilou Huchet, Elodie Jouan, Laurence Huc, Marc Le Vée, and Olivier Fardel
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Cytochrome P-450 3A4 ,Fungicides ,HepaRG cells ,Human hepatocytes ,Pregnane X Receptor ,Succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors ,Environmental pollution ,TD172-193.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors (SDHIs) are widely-used fungicides, to which humans are exposed and for which putative health risks are of concern. In order to identify human molecular targets for these agrochemicals, the interactions of 15 SDHIs with expression and activity of human cytochrome P-450 3A4 (CYP3A4), a major hepatic drug metabolizing enzyme, were investigated in vitro. 12/15 SDHIs, i.e., bixafen, boscalid, fluopyram, flutolanil, fluxapyroxad, furametpyr, isofetamid, isopyrazam, penflufen, penthiopyrad, pydiflumetofen and sedaxane, were found to enhance CYP3A4 mRNA expression in human hepatic HepaRG cells and primary human hepatocytes exposed for 48 h to 10 µM SDHIs, whereas 3/15 SDHIs, i.e., benzovindiflupyr, carboxin and thifluzamide, were without effect. The inducing effects were concentrations-dependent for boscalid (EC50=22.5 µM), fluopyram (EC50=4.8 µM) and flutolanil (EC50=53.6 µM). They were fully prevented by SPA70, an antagonist of the Pregnane X Receptor, thus underlining the implication of this xenobiotic-sensing receptor. Increase in CYP3A4 mRNA in response to SDHIs paralleled enhanced CYP3A4 protein expression for most of SDHIs. With respect to CYP3A4 activity, it was directly inhibited by some SDHIs, including bixafen, fluopyram, fluxapyroxad, isofetamid, isopyrazam, penthiopyrad and sedaxane, which therefore appears as dual regulators of CYP3A4, being both inducer of its expression and inhibitor of its activity. The inducing effect nevertheless predominates for these SDHIs, except for isopyrazam and sedaxane, whereas boscalid and flutolanil were pure inducers of CYP3A4 expression and activity. Most of SDHIs appear therefore as in vitro inducers of CYP3A4 expression in cultured hepatic cells, when, however, used at concentrations rather higher than those expected in humans in response to environmental or dietary exposure to these agrochemicals.
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- 2024
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8. Acylation of glycerolipids in mycobacteria
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Shiva Kumar Angala, Ana Carreras-Gonzalez, Emilie Huc-Claustre, Itxaso Anso, Devinder Kaur, Victoria Jones, Zuzana Palčeková, Juan M. Belardinelli, Célia de Sousa-d’Auria, Libin Shi, Nawel Slama, Christine Houssin, Annaïk Quémard, Michael McNeil, Marcelo E. Guerin, and Mary Jackson
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Science - Abstract
Abstract We report on the existence of two phosphatidic acid biosynthetic pathways in mycobacteria, a classical one wherein the acylation of the sn-1 position of glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) precedes that of sn-2 and another wherein acylations proceed in the reverse order. Two unique acyltransferases, PlsM and PlsB2, participate in both pathways and hold the key to the unusual positional distribution of acyl chains typifying mycobacterial glycerolipids wherein unsaturated substituents principally esterify position sn-1 and palmitoyl principally occupies position sn-2. While PlsM selectively transfers a palmitoyl chain to the sn-2 position of G3P and sn-1-lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), PlsB2 preferentially transfers a stearoyl or oleoyl chain to the sn-1 position of G3P and an oleyl chain to sn-2-LPA. PlsM is the first example of an sn-2 G3P acyltransferase outside the plant kingdom and PlsB2 the first example of a 2-acyl-G3P acyltransferase. Both enzymes are unique in their ability to catalyze acyl transfer to both G3P and LPA.
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- 2023
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9. A simple and efficient process for the synthesis of 2D carbon nitrides and related materials
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Cora Moreira Da Silva, Maxime Vallet, Clément Semion, Thomas Blin, Romuald Saint-Martin, Jocelyne Leroy, Diana Dragoé, François Brisset, Cynthia Gillet, Régis Guillot, and Vincent Huc
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract We describe here a new process for the synthesis of very high quality 2D Covalent Organic Frameworks (COFs), such a C2N and CN carbon nitrides. This process relies on the use of a metallic surface as both a reagent and a support for the coupling of small halogenated building blocks. The conditions of the assembly reaction are chosen so as to leave the inorganic salts by-products on the surface, to further confine the assembly reaction on the surface and increase the quality of the 2D layers. We found that under these conditions, the process directly returns few layers material. The structure/quality of these materials is demonstrated by extensive cross-characterizations at different scales, combining optical microscopy, Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)/Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (EDS). The availability of such very large, high-quality layers of these materials opens interesting perspectives, for example in photochemistry and electronics (intrinsic transport properties, high gap substrate for graphene, etc...).
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- 2023
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10. Recognition of masked and unmasked facial expressions in males and females and relations with mental wellness
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Marie Huc, Katie Bush, Gali Atias, Lindsay Berrigan, Sylvia Cox, and Natalia Jaworska
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emotion ,face mask ,sex differences ,mental health ,loneliness ,anxiety/stress ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
BackgroundWhile the effects of mask wearing/facial occlusion are known to impair facial expression recognition, little is known about the role of mental wellness on facial expression recognition, as well as the influence of sex on misattribution errors (i.e., confusions between emotions). In this large study, we aimed to address the relation between facial expression recognition and loneliness, perceived stress, anxiety, and depression symptoms in male and female adults.MethodsWe assessed the influence of mask-wearing on facial expression recognition [i.e., accuracy and response time (RT)] via an online study in N = 469 adult males and females across Canada.ResultsExpectedly, recognition was impaired under masked conditions (i.e., lower accuracy, longer RTs, more misattribution errors). Females were faster and more accurate than males, with less misattribution errors. A novel finding was that people with higher perceived stress were less accurate at identifying masked fearful faces. Perceived stress influenced the relation between sex and RT to masked happy faces; males with high stress scores were slower to recognize masked happy faces, the opposite was true for females. Finally, this study was among the first to show that higher loneliness predicted shorter RT to unmasked faces.ImpactOur results show that facial expression recognition is impaired by mask-wearing, and that sex and mental health features are important predictors of performance. Such insight could be detrimental in certain sectors of the population (e.g., health care or education), and inform policies being adopted in future pandemics.
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- 2023
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11. Tuning bimetallic catalysts for a selective growth of SWCNTs
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Forel, Salomé, Castan, Alice, Amara, Hakim, Florea, Ileana, Fossard, Frédéric, Catala, Laure, Bichara, Christophe, Mallah, Talal, Huc, Vincent, Loiseau, Annick, and Cojocaru, Costel-Sorin
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Physics - Applied Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Recent advances in structural control during the synthesis of SWCNTs have in common the use of bimetallic nanoparticles as catalysts, despite the fact that their exact role is not fully understood. We therefore analyze the effect of the catalyst' s chemical composition on the structure of the resulting SWCNTs by comparing three bimetallic catalysts (FeRu, CoRu and NiRu). A specific synthesis protocol is designed to impede the catalyst nanoparticle coalescence mechanisms and stabilize their diameter distributions throughout the growth. Owing to the ruthenium component which has a limited carbon solubility, tubes grow in tangential mode and their diameter is close to that of their seeding nanoparticle. By using as-synthesized SWCNTs as a channel material in field effect transistors, we show how the chemical composition of the catalysts and temperature can be used as parameters to tune the diameter distribution and semiconducting-to-metallic ratio of SWCNT samples. Finally, a phenomenological model, based on the dependence of the carbon solubility as a function of catalyst nanoparticle size and nature of the alloying elements, is proposed to interpret the results., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2018
12. Cuidado bucal en pacientes en la Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos (UCI) de Hospital Público en la Ciudad de Guayaquil
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Ana Paula Chonillo González and María Angélica Terreros de Huc
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enfermeras ,cuidado bucal ,unidad de cuidados intensivos ,higiene oral ,protocolo ,actitudes ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
INTRODUCCIÓN: La salud oral de los pacientes en Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos suele deteriorarse, la tasa general de infección puede llegar al 50-60 % de pacientes que se encuentran internos por más de cinco días. Es por eso por lo que el personal de enfermería posee una responsabilidad especial en el mantenimiento de la higiene bucal y prevención de trastornos bucales. OBJETIVO: Establecer cuál es el protocolo del cuidado bucal que se ofrece a los pacientes de la Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos (UCI) por parte del personal de enfermería. MATERIALES Y MÉTODOS: Estudio de enfoque cuali-cuantitativo de tipo descriptivo transversal, observacional. La muestra está conformada por 72 licenciado(a)s y auxiliares en enfermería, de diseño descriptivo-analítico RESULTADOS: Se determinó que el 94.44% del personal de enfermería está muy de acuerdo en la prioridad del cuidado bucal, el 76.39% concuerdan en recibir más información sobre atención de salud bucodental y el 97.22%. en la necesaria asistencia a talleres de formación. CONCLUSIÓN: Los resultados manifiestan la necesidad de información y entrenamiento sobre la mejor forma de ofrecer atención profesional de higiene bucal por parte de las enfermeras del servicio del UCI.
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- 2023
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13. η-Carbides (Co, Mo, or W) Nanoparticles from Octacyanometalates Precursors-Based Network
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Fossard Frédéric, Blin Thomas, Girard Armelle, Guillou Nathalie, Catala Laure, Loiseau Annick, and Huc Vincent
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eta-carbides ,stem/haadf ,catalysts ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Physiology ,QP1-981 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Published
- 2024
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14. The Effects of Local Weed Species on Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Communities in an Organic Winter Wheat (Triticum durum L.) Field in Lebanon
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Soukayna Hayek, Camille Marchal, Stéphanie Huc, Ludivine Lapébie, Sylvain Abdulhak, Jérémie Van Es, Viviane Barbreau, Bello Mouhamadou, and Marie-Noëlle Binet
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arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi ,Triticum durum ,local weed species ,organic management ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
We examined the potential effects of weed species on the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) in an organic winter wheat (Triticum durum) field in Lebanon. In this agroecosystem, the field and its surroundings were covered with spontaneous vegetation corresponding to local weeds. The coexistence between wheat and weeds did not modify AM fungal community diversity and colonization in T. durum but changed their composition. We evidenced 22 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) specifically shared between wheat associated with weeds (Tdw) and weeds, regardless of their localization and 12 OTUs with an abundance of variation between wheat without neighboring weeds (Td) and Tdw. The number of AM propagules and total C and N contents were higher in soil covered with wheat associated with weeds (TdWsoil) vs. wheat without neighboring weeds (Tdsoil). In greenhouse experiments, the shoot biomass and root mycorrhizal intensity of Medicago sativa, used as a trap plant, were higher using TdWsoil vs. Tdsoil as the inoculum. Positive correlations were observed between soil AM propagule numbers and M. sativa shoot biomass, on the one hand and M. sativa mycorrhizal intensity, on the other hand. Weeds seemed to exert significant effects on root AM fungal composition in T. durum and these effects may contribute to enhanced AMF development in the field.
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- 2023
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15. New Directions in Digital Modern Languages: Introduction
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Orhan Elmaz, Saskia Huc-Hepher, Paul Spence, and Naomi Wells
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Language and Literature - Abstract
In this article, the editors introduce the Digital Modern Languages Special Collection that results from an open call that sought out new and emerging research at the intersection of Modern Languages and digital culture, media and technologies. They explain the intentionally wide-ranging and transdisciplinary scope of the Collection, which reflects an openness to the many ways Digital Modern Languages research is practised. The Collection also includes research on a wide range of geographical and linguistic contexts, reflecting wider calls to move beyond the limited range of languages traditionally associated with “Modern Languages”. Through this combined transdisciplinary and cross-languages focus, the Collection seeks to contribute to the broader strategic identity transformation of the wider field.
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- 2023
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16. Transcriptomic analysis in zebrafish larvae identifies iron-dependent mitochondrial dysfunction as a possible key event of NAFLD progression induced by benzo[a]pyrene/ethanol co-exposure
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Imran, Muhammad, Chalmel, Frédéric, Sergent, Odile, Evrard, Bertrand, Le Mentec, Hélène, Legrand, Antoine, Dupont, Aurélien, Bescher, Maëlle, Bucher, Simon, Fromenty, Bernard, Huc, Laurence, Sparfel, Lydie, Lagadic-Gossmann, Dominique, and Podechard, Normand
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- 2022
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17. Gaia Data Release 1. Testing the parallaxes with local Cepheids and RR Lyrae stars
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Gaia Collaboration, Clementini, G., Eyer, L., Ripepi, V., Marconi, M., Muraveva, T., Garofalo, A., Sarro, L. M., Palmer, M., Luri, X., Molinaro, R., Rimoldini, L., Szabados, L., Musella, I., Anderson, R. I., Prusti, T., de Bruijne, J. H. J., Brown, A. G. A., Vallenari, A., Babusiaux, C., Bailer-Jones, C. A. L., Bastian, U., Biermann, M., Evans, D. W., Jansen, F., Jordi, C., Klioner, S. A., Lammers, U., Lindegren, L., Mignard, F., Panem, C., Pourbaix, D., Randich, S., Sartoretti, P., Siddiqui, H. I., Soubiran, C., Valette, V., van Leeuwen, F., Walton, N. A., Aerts, C., Arenou, F., Cropper, M., Drimmel, R., Høg, E., Katz, D., Lattanzi, M. G., O'Mullane, W., Grebel, E. K., Holland, A. D., Huc, C., Passot, X., Perryman, M., Bramante, L., Cacciari, C., Castañeda, J., Chaoul, L., Cheek, N., De Angeli, F., Fabricius, C., Guerra, R., Hernández, J., Jean-Azntoine-Piccolo, A., Masana, E., Messineo, R., Mowlavi, N., Nienartowicz, K., Ordóñez-Blanco, D., Panuzzo, P., Portell, J., Richards, P. J., Riello, M., Seabroke, G. M., Tanga, P., Thévenin, F., Torra, J., Els, S. G., Gracia-Abril, G., Comoretto, G., Garcia-Reinaldos, M., Lock, T., Mercier, E., Altmann, M., Andrae, R., Astraatmadja, T. L., Bellas-Velidis, I., Benson, K., Berthier, J., Blomme, R., Busso, G., Carry, B., Cellino, A., Cowell, S., Creevey, O., Cuypers, J., Davidson, M., De Ridder, J., de Torres, A., Delchambre, L., Dell'Oro, A., Ducourant, C., Frémat, Y., García-Torres, M., Gosset, E., Halbwachs, J. -L., Hambly, N. C., Harrison, D. L., Hauser, M., Hestroffer, D., Hodgkin, S. T., Huckle, H. E., Hutton, A., Jasniewicz, G., Jordan, S., Kontizas, M., Korn, A. J., Lanzafame, A. C., Manteiga, M., Moitinho, A., Muinonen, K., Osinde, J., Pancino, E., Pauwels, T., Petit, J. -M., Recio-Blanco, A., Robin, A. C., Siopis, C., Smith, M., Smith, K. W., Sozzetti, A., Thuillot, W., van Reeven, W., Viala, Y., Abbas, U., Aramburu, A. Abreu, Accart, S., Aguado, J. J., Allan, P. M., Allasia, W., Altavilla, G., Álvarez, M. A., Alves, J., Andrei, A. H., Varela, E. Anglada, Antiche, E., Antoja, T., Antón, S., Arcay, B., Bach, N., Baker, S. G., Balaguer-Núñez, L., Barache, C., Barata, C., Barbier, A., Barblan, F., Navascués, D. Barrado y, Barros, M., Barstow, M. A., Becciani, U., Bellazzini, M., García, A. Bello, Belokurov, V., Bendjoya, P., Berihuete, A., Bianchi, L., Bienaymé, O., Billebaud, F., Blagorodnova, N., Blanco-Cuaresma, S., Boch, T., Bombrun, A., Borrachero, R., Bouquillon, S., Bourda, G., Bouy, H., Bragaglia, A., Breddels, M. A., Brouillet, N., Brüsemeister, T., Bucciarelli, B., Burgess, P., Burgon, R., Burlacu, A., Busonero, D., Buzzi, R., Caffau, E., Cambras, J., Campbell, H., Cancelliere, R., Cantat-Gaudin, T., Carlucci, T., Carrasco, J. M., Castellani, M., Charlot, P., Charnas, J., Chiavassa, A., Clotet, M., Cocozza, G., Collins, R. S., Costigan, G., Crifo, F., Cross, N. J. G., Crosta, M., Crowley, C., Dafonte, C., Damerdji, Y., Dapergolas, A., David, P., David, M., De Cat, P., de Felice, F., de Laverny, P., De Luise, F., De March, R., de Souza, R., Debosscher, J., del Pozo, E., Delbo, M., Delgado, A., Delgado, H. E., Di Matteo, P., Diakite, S., Distefano, E., Dolding, C., Anjos, S. Dos, Drazinos, P., Durán, J., Dzigan, Y., Edvardsson, B., Enke, H., Evans, N. W., Bontemps, G. Eynard, Fabre, C., Fabrizio, M., Faigler, S., Falcão, A. J., Casas, M. Farràs, Federici, L., Fedorets, G., Fernández-Hernánde, J., Fernique, P., Fienga, A., Figueras, F., Filippi, F., Findeisen, K., Fonti, A., Fouesneau, M., Fraile, E., Fraser, M., Fuchs, J., Gai, M., Galleti, S., Galluccio, L., Garabato, D., García-Sedano, F., Garralda, N., Gavras, P., Gerssen, J., Geyer, R., Gilmore, G., Girona, S., Giuffrida, G., Gomes, M., González-Marcos, A., González-Núñez, J., González-Vidal, J. J., Granvik, M., Guerrier, A., Guillout, P., Guiraud, J., Gúrpide, A., Gutiérrez-Sánchez, R., Guy, L. P., Haigron, R., Hatzidimitriou, D., Haywood, M., Heiter, U., Helmi, A., Hobbs, D., Hofmann, W., Holl, B., Holland, G., Hunt, J. A. S., Hypki, A., Icardi, V., Irwin, M., de Fombelle, G. Jevardat, Jofré, P., Jonker, P. G., Jorissen, A., Julbe, F., Karampelas, A., Kochoska, A., Kohley, R., Kolenberg, K., Kontizas, E., Koposov, S. E., Kordopatis, G., Koubsky, P., Krone-Martins, A., Kudryashova, M., Kull, I., Bachchan, R. K., Lacoste-Seris, F., Lanza, A. F., Lavigne, J. -B., Poncin-Lafitte, C. Le, Lebreton, Y., Lebzelter, T., Leccia, S., Leclerc, N., Lecoeur-Taibi, I., Lemaitre, V., Lenhardt, H., Leroux, F., Liao, S., Licata, E., Lindstrøm, H. E. P., Lister, T. A., Livanou, E., Lobel, A., Löffler, W., López, M., Lorenz, D., MacDonald, I., Fernandes, T. Magalhães, Managau, S., Mann, R. G., Mantelet, G., Marchal, O., Marchant, J. M., Marinoni, S., Marrese, P. M., Marschalkó, G., Marshall, D. J., Martín-Fleitas, J. M., Martino, M., Mary, N., Matijevič, G., Mazeh, T., McMillan, P. J., Messina, S., Michalik, D., Millar, N. R., Miranda, B. M. H., Molina, D., Molinaro, M., Molnár, L., Moniez, M., Montegriffo, P., Mor, R., Mora, A., Morbidelli, R., Morel, T., Morgenthaler, S., Morris, D., Mulone, A. F., Narbonne, J., Nelemans, G., Nicastro, L., Noval, L., Ordénovic, C., Ordieres-Meré, J., Osborne, P., Pagani, C., Pagano, I., Pailler, F., Palacin, H., Palaversa, L., Parsons, P., Pecoraro, M., Pedrosa, R., Pentikäinen, H., Pichon, B., Piersimoni, A. M., Pineau, F. -X., Plachy, E., Plum, G., Poujoulet, E., Prša, A., Pulone, L., Ragaini, S., Rago, S., Rambaux, N., Ramos-Lerate, M., Ranalli, P., Rauw, G., Read, A., Regibo, S., Reylé, C., Ribeiro, R. A., Riva, A., Rixon, G., Roelens, M., Romero-Gómez, M., Rowell, N., Royer, F., Ruiz-Dern, L., Sadowski, G., Sellés, T. Sagristà, Sahlmann, J., Salgado, J., Salguero, E., Sarasso, M., Savietto, H., Schultheis, M., Sciacca, E., Segol, M., Segovia, J. C., Segransan, D., Shih, I-C., Smareglia, R., Smart, R. L., Solano, E., Solitro, F., Sordo, R., Nieto, S. Soria, Souchay, J., Spagna, A., Spoto, F., Stampa, U., Steele, I. A., Steidelmüller, H., Stephenson, C. A., Stoev, H., Suess, F. F., Süveges, M., Surdej, J., Szegedi-Elek, E., Tapiador, D., Taris, F., Tauran, G., Taylor, M. B., Teixeira, R., Terrett, D., Tingley, B., Trager, S. C., Turon, C., Ulla, A., Utrilla, E., Valentini, G., van Elteren, A., Van Hemelryck, E., van Leeuwen, M., Varadi, M., Vecchiato, A., Veljanoski, J., Via, T., Vicente, D., Vogt, S., Voss, H., Votruba, V., Voutsinas, S., Walmsley, G., Weiler, M., Weingrill, K., Wevers, T., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Yoldas, A., Žerjal, M., Zucker, S., Zurbach, C., Zwitter, T., Alecu, A., Allen, M., Prieto, C. Allende, Amorim, A., Anglada-Escudé, G., Arsenijevic, V., Azaz, S., Balm, P., Beck, M., Bernstein, H. -H., Bigot, L., Bijaoui, A., Blasco, C., Bonfigli, M., Bono, G., Boudreault, S., Bressan, A., Brown, S., Brunet, P. -M., Bunclark, P., Buonanno, R., Butkevich, A. G., Carret, C., Carrion, C., Chemin, L., Chéreau, F., Corcione, L., Darmigny, E., de Boer, K. S., de Teodoro, P., de Zeeuw, P. T., Luche, C. Delle, Domingues, C. D., Dubath, P., Fodor, F., Frézouls, B., Fries, A., Fustes, D., Fyfe, D., Gallardo, E., Gallegos, J., Gardiol, D., Gebran, M., Gomboc, A., Gómez, A., Grux, E., Gueguen, A., Heyrovsky, A., Hoar, J., Iannicola, G., Parache, Y. Isasi, Janotto, A. -M., Joliet, E., Jonckheere, A., Keil, R., Kim, D. -W., Klagyivik, P., Klar, J., Knude, J., Kochukhov, O., Kolka, I., Kos, J., Kutka, A., Lainey, V., LeBouquin, D., Liu, C., Loreggia, D., Makarov, V. V., Marseille, M. G., Martayan, C., Martinez-Rubi, O., Massart, B., Meynadier, F., Mignot, S., Munari, U., Nguyen, A. -T., Nordlander, T., O'Flaherty, K. S., Ocvirk, P., Sanz, A. Olias, Ortiz, P., Osorio, J., Oszkiewicz, D., Ouzounis, A., Park, P., Pasquato, E., Peltzer, C., Peralta, J., Péturaud, F., Pieniluoma, T., Pigozzi, E., Poels, J., Prat, G., Prod'homme, T., Raison, F., Rebordao, J. M., Risquez, D., Rocca-Volmerange, B., Rosen, S., Ruiz-Fuertes, M. I., Russo, F., Sembay, S., Vizcaino, I. Serraller, Short, A., Siebert, A., Silva, H., Sinachopoulos, D., Slezak, E., Soffel, M., Sosnowska, D., Straižys, V., ter Linden, M., Terrell, D., Theil, S., Tiede, C., Troisi, L., Tsalmantza, P., Tur, D., Vaccari, M., Vachier, F., Valles, P., Van Hamme, W., Veltz, L., Virtanen, J., Wallut, J. -M., Wichmann, R., Wilkinson, M. I., Ziaeepour, H., and Zschocke, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Parallaxes for 331 classical Cepheids, 31 Type II Cepheids and 364 RR Lyrae stars in common between Gaia and the Hipparcos and Tycho-2 catalogues are published in Gaia Data Release 1 (DR1) as part of the Tycho-Gaia Astrometric Solution (TGAS). In order to test these first parallax measurements of the primary standard candles of the cosmological distance ladder, that involve astrometry collected by Gaia during the initial 14 months of science operation, we compared them with literature estimates and derived new period-luminosity ($PL$), period-Wesenheit ($PW$) relations for classical and Type II Cepheids and infrared $PL$, $PL$-metallicity ($PLZ$) and optical luminosity-metallicity ($M_V$-[Fe/H]) relations for the RR Lyrae stars, with zero points based on TGAS. The new relations were computed using multi-band ($V,I,J,K_{\mathrm{s}},W_{1}$) photometry and spectroscopic metal abundances available in the literature, and applying three alternative approaches: (i) by linear least squares fitting the absolute magnitudes inferred from direct transformation of the TGAS parallaxes, (ii) by adopting astrometric-based luminosities, and (iii) using a Bayesian fitting approach. TGAS parallaxes bring a significant added value to the previous Hipparcos estimates. The relations presented in this paper represent first Gaia-calibrated relations and form a "work-in-progress" milestone report in the wait for Gaia-only parallaxes of which a first solution will become available with Gaia's Data Release 2 (DR2) in 2018., Comment: 29 pages, 25 figures. Accepted for publication by A&A
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- 2017
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18. Gaia Data Release 1. Open cluster astrometry: performance, limitations, and future prospects
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Gaia Collaboration, van Leeuwen, F., Vallenari, A., Jordi, C., Lindegren, L., Bastian, U., Prusti, T., de Bruijne, J. H. J., Brown, A. G. A., Babusiaux, C., Bailer-Jones, C. A. L., Biermann, M., Evans, D. W., Eyer, L., Jansen, F., Klioner, S. A., Lammers, U., Luri, X., Mignard, F., Panem, C., Pourbaix, D., Randich, S., Sartoretti, P., Siddiqui, H. I., Soubiran, C., Valette, V., Walton, N. A., Aerts, C., Arenou, F., Cropper, M., Drimmel, R., Høg, E., Katz, D., Lattanzi, M. G., O'Mullane, W., Grebel, E. K., Holland, A. D., Huc, C., Passot, X., Perryman, M., Bramante, L., Cacciari, C., Castañeda, J., Chaoul, L., Cheek, N., De Angeli, F., Fabricius, C., Guerra, R., Hernández, J., Jean-Antoine-Piccolo, A., Masana, E., Messineo, R., Mowlavi, N., Nienartowicz, K., Ordóñez-Blanco, D., Panuzzo, P., Portell, J., Richards, P. J., Riello, M., Seabroke, G. M., Tanga, P., Thévenin, F., Torra, J., Els, S. G., Gracia-Abril, G., Comoretto, G., Garcia-Reinaldos, M., Lock, T., Mercier, E., Altmann, M., Andrae, R., Astraatmadja, T. L., Bellas-Velidis, I., Benson, K., Berthier, J., Blomme, R., Busso, G., Carry, B., Cellino, A., Clementini, G., Cowell, S., Creevey, O., Cuypers, J., Davidson, M., De Ridder, J., de Torres, A., Delchambre, L., Dell'Oro, A., Ducourant, C., Frémat, Y., García-Torres, M., Gosset, E., Halbwachs, J. -L., Hambly, N. C., Harrison, D. L., Hauser, M., Hestroffer, D., Hodgkin, S. T., Huckle, H. E., Hutton, A., Jasniewicz, G., Jordan, S., Kontizas, M., Korn, A. J., Lanzafame, A. C., Manteiga, M., Moitinho, A., Muinonen, K., Osinde, J., Pancino, E., Pauwels, T., Petit, J. -M., Recio-Blanco, A., Robin, A. C., Sarro, L. M., Siopis, C., Smith, M., Smith, K. W., Sozzetti, A., Thuillot, W., van Reeven, W., Viala, Y., Abbas, U., Aramburu, A. Abreu, Accart, S., Aguado, J. J., Allan, P. M., Allasia, W., Altavilla, G., Álvarez, M. A., Alves, J., Anderson, R. I., Andrei, A. H., Varela, E. Anglada, Antiche, E., Antoja, T., Antón, S., Arcay, B., Bach, N., Baker, S. G., Balaguer-Núñez, L., Barache, C., Barata, C., Barbier, A., Barblan, F., Navascués, D. Barrado y, Barros, M., Barstow, M. A., Becciani, U., Bellazzini, M., García, A. Bello, Belokurov, V., Bendjoya, P., Berihuete, A., Bianchi, L., Bienaymé, O., Billebaud, F., Blagorodnova, N., Blanco-Cuaresma, S., Boch, T., Bombrun, A., Borrachero, R., Bouquillon, S., Bourda, G., Bouy, H., Bragaglia, A., Breddels, M. A., Brouillet, N., Brüsemeister, T., Bucciarelli, B., Burgess, P., Burgon, R., Burlacu, A., Busonero, D., Buzzi, R., Caffau, E., Cambras, J., Campbell, H., Cancelliere, R., Cantat-Gaudin, T., Carlucci, T., Carrasco, J. M., Castellani, M., Charlot, P., Charnas, J., Chiavassa, A., Clotet, M., Cocozza, G., Collins, R. S., Costigan, G., Crifo, F., Cross, N. J. G., Crosta, M., Crowley, C., Dafonte, C., Damerdji, Y., Dapergolas, A., David, P., David, M., De Cat, P., de Felice, F., de Laverny, P., De Luise, F., De March, R., de Martino, D., de Souza, R., Debosscher, J., del Pozo, E., Delbo, M., Delgado, A., Delgado, H. E., Di Matteo, P., Diakite, S., Distefano, E., Dolding, C., Anjos, S. Dos, Drazinos, P., Durán, J., Dzigan, Y., Edvardsson, B., Enke, H., Evans, N. W., Bontemps, G. Eynard, Fabre, C., Fabrizio, M., Faigler, S., Falcão, A. J., Casas, M. Farràs, Federici, L., Fedorets, G., Fernández-Hernández, J., Fernique, P., Fienga, A., Figueras, F., Filippi, F., Findeisen, K., Fonti, A., Fouesneau, M., Fraile, E., Fraser, M., Fuchs, J., Gai, M., Galleti, S., Galluccio, L., Garabato, D., García-Sedano, F., Garofalo, A., Garralda, N., Gavras, P., Gerssen, J., Geyer, R., Gilmore, G., Girona, S., Giuffrida, G., Gomes, M., González-Marcos, A., González-Núñez, J., González-Vidal, J. J., Granvik, M., Guerrier, A., Guillout, P., Guiraud, J., Gúrpide, A., Gutiérrez-Sánchez, R., Guy, L. P., Haigron, R., Hatzidimitriou, D., Haywood, M., Heiter, U., Helmi, A., Hobbs, D., Hofmann, W., Holl, B., Holland, G., Hunt, J. A. S., Hypki, A., Icardi, V., Irwin, M., de Fombelle, G. Jevardat, Jofré, P., Jonker, P. G., Jorissen, A., Julbe, F., Karampelas, A., Kochoska, A., Kohley, R., Kolenberg, K., Kontizas, E., Koposov, S. E., Kordopatis, G., Koubsky, P., Krone-Martins, A., Kudryashova, M., Kull, I., Bachchan, R. K., Lacoste-Seris, F., Lanza, A. F., Lavigne, J. -B., Poncin-Lafitte, C. Le, Lebreton, Y., Lebzelter, T., Leccia, S., Leclerc, N., Lecoeur-Taibi, I., Lemaitre, V., Lenhardt, H., Leroux, F., Liao, S., Licata, E., Lindstrøm, H. E. P., Lister, T. A., Livanou, E., Lobel, A., Löffer, W., López, M., Lorenz, D., MacDonald, I., Fernandes, T. Magalhães, Managau, S., Mann, R. G., Mantelet, G., Marchal, O., Marchant, J. M., Marconi, M., Marinoni, S., Marrese, P. M., Marschalkó, G., Marshall, D. J., Martín-Fleitas, J. M., Martino, M., Mary, N., Matijevič, G., Mazeh, T., McMillan, P. J., Messina, S., Michalik, D., Millar, N. R., Miranda, B. M. H., Molina, D., Molinaro, R., Molinaro, M., Molnár, L., Moniez, M., Montegrio, P., Mor, R., Mora, A., Morbidelli, R., Morel, T., Morgenthaler, S., Morris, D., Mulone, A. F., Muraveva, T., Musella, I., Narbonne, J., Nelemans, G., Nicastro, L., Noval, L., Ordénovic, C., Ordieres-Meré, J., Osborne, P., Pagani, C., Pagano, I., Pailler, F., Palacin, H., Palaversa, L., Parsons, P., Pecoraro, M., Pedrosa, R., Pentikäinen, H., Pichon, B., Piersimoni, A. M., Pineau, F. -X., Plachy, E., Plum, G., Poujoulet, E., Prša, A., Pulone, L., Ragaini, S., Rago, S., Rambaux, N., Ramos-Lerate, M., Ranalli, P., Rauw, G., Read, A., Regibo, S., Reylé, C., Ribeiro, R. A., Rimoldini, L., Ripepi, V., Riva, A., Rixon, G., Roelens, M., Romero-Gómez, M., Rowell, N., Royer, F., Ruiz-Dern, L., Sadowski, G., Sellés, T. Sagristà, Sahlmann, J., Salgado, J., Salguero, E., Sarasso, M., Savietto, H., Schultheis, M., Sciacca, E., Segol, M., Segovia, J. C., Segransan, D., Shih, I-C., Smareglia, R., Smart, R. L., Solano, E., Solitro, F., Sordo, R., Nieto, S. Soria, Souchay, J., Spagna, A., Spoto, F., Stampa, U., Steele, I. A., Steidelmüller, H., Stephenson, C. A., Stoev, H., Suess, F. F., Süveges, M., Surdej, J., Szabados, L., Szegedi-Elek, E., Tapiador, D., Taris, F., Tauran, G., Taylor, M. B., Teixeira, R., Terrett, D., Tingley, B., Trager, S. C., Turon, C., Ulla, A., Utrilla, E., Valentini, G., van Elteren, A., Van Hemelryck, E., van Leeuwen, M., Varadi, M., Vecchiato, A., Veljanoski, J., Via, T., Vicente, D., Vogt, S., Voss, H., Votruba, V., Voutsinas, S., Walmsley, G., Weiler, M., Weingril, K., Wevers, T., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Yoldas, A., Žerjal, M., Zucker, S., Zurbach, C., Zwitter, T., Alecu, A., Allen, M., Prieto, C. Allende, Amorim, A., Anglada-Escudé, G., Arsenijevic, V., Azaz, S., Balm, P., Beck, M., Bernsteiny, H. -H., Bigot, L., Bijaoui, A., Blasco, C., Bonfigli, M., Bono, G., Boudreault, S., Bressan, A., Brown, S., Brunet, P. -M., Bunclarky, P., Buonanno, R., Butkevich, A. G., Carret, C., Carrion, C., Chemin, L., Chéreau, F., Corcione, L., Darmigny, E., de Boer, K. S., de Teodoro, P., de Zeeuw, P. T., Luche, C. Delle, Domingues, C. D., Dubath, P., Fodor, F., Frézouls, B., Fries, A., Fustes, D., Fyfe, D., Gallardo, E., Gallegos, J., Gardio, D., Gebran, M., Gomboc, A., Gómez, A., Grux, E., Gueguen, A., Heyrovsky, A., Hoar, J., Iannicola, G., Parache, Y. Isasi, Janotto, A. -M., Joliet, E., Jonckheere, A., Keil, R., Kim, D. -W., Klagyivik, P., Klar, J., Knude, J., Kochukhov, O., Kolka, I., Kos, J., Kutka, A., Lainey, V., LeBouquin, D., Liu, C., Loreggia, D., Makarov, V. V., Marseille, M. G., Martayan, C., Martinez-Rubi, O., Massart, B., Meynadier, F., Mignot, S., Munari, U., Nguyen, A. -T., Nordlander, T., O'Flaherty, K. S., Ocvirk, P., Sanz, A. Olias, Ortiz, P., Osorio, J., Oszkiewicz, D., Ouzounis, A., Palmer, M., Park, P., Pasquato, E., Peltzer, C., Peralta, J., Péturaud, F., Pieniluoma, T., Pigozzi, E., Poelsy, J., Prat, G., Prod'homme, T., Raison, F., Rebordao, J. M., Risquez, D., Rocca-Volmerange, B., Rosen, S., Ruiz-Fuertes, M. I., Russo, F., Sembay, S., Vizcaino, I. Serraller, Short, A., Siebert, A., Silva, H., Sinachopoulos, D., Slezak, E., Soffel, M., Sosnowska, D., Straižys, V., ter Linden, M., Terrell, D., Theil, S., Tiede, C., Troisi, L., Tsalmantza, P., Tur, D., Vaccari, M., Vachier, F., Valles, P., Van Hamme, W., Veltz, L., Virtanen, J., Wallut, J. -M., Wichmann, R., Wilkinson, M. I., Ziaeepour, H., and Zschocke, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. The first Gaia Data Release contains the Tycho-Gaia Astrometric Solution (TGAS). This is a subset of about 2 million stars for which, besides the position and photometry, the proper motion and parallax are calculated using Hipparcos and Tycho-2 positions in 1991.25 as prior information. Aims. We investigate the scientific potential and limitations of the TGAS component by means of the astrometric data for open clusters. Methods. Mean cluster parallax and proper motion values are derived taking into account the error correlations within the astrometric solutions for individual stars, an estimate of the internal velocity dispersion in the cluster, and, where relevant, the effects of the depth of the cluster along the line of sight. Internal consistency of the TGAS data is assessed. Results. Values given for standard uncertainties are still inaccurate and may lead to unrealistic unit-weight standard deviations of least squares solutions for cluster parameters. Reconstructed mean cluster parallax and proper motion values are generally in very good agreement with earlier Hipparcos-based determination, although the Gaia mean parallax for the Pleiades is a significant exception. We have no current explanation for that discrepancy. Most clusters are observed to extend to nearly 15 pc from the cluster centre, and it will be up to future Gaia releases to establish whether those potential cluster-member stars are still dynamically bound to the clusters. Conclusions. The Gaia DR1 provides the means to examine open clusters far beyond their more easily visible cores, and can provide membership assessments based on proper motions and parallaxes. A combined HR diagram shows the same features as observed before using the Hipparcos data, with clearly increased luminosities for older A and F dwarfs., Comment: Accepted for publication by A&A. 21 pages main text plus 46 pages appendices. 34 figures main text, 38 figures appendices. 8 table in main text, 19 tables in appendices
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- 2017
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19. Probing the Closed Association of Oligoquinoline Foldamers by Time-Resolved Fluorescence Anisotropy.
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Lulic, Kristijan, Wang, Jingqi, Li, Xuesong, Markandeya, Nagula, Huc, Ivan, Maurizot, Victor, and Duhamel, Jean
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- 2024
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20. Up-Skilling through E-Collaboration
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Huc-Hepher, Saskia and Barros, Elsa Huertas
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This paper presents an e-collaboration project involving real-time videoconferencing exchanges between students from the University of Westminster and the Université Catholique de Lille. Students drew on diverse resources, including written quantitative data and first-hand qualitative data in French/English to complete weekly tasks. Follow-up work was an integral component of the co-project, taking the form of a series of adaptations in French/English based on the source materials studied and the knowledge of the intercultural issues explored collaboratively. These adaptations, which ensured the development of wider employability expertise, ranged from professional reports to newspaper articles, and from conference papers to information leaflets. A short list of references and links is included. [For the complete volume, "Employability for Languages: A Handbook," see ED566902.]
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- 2016
21. Correlation of diagnostic tests ANB Angle, Wits assessment and A:B ratio in determination of intermaxillary sagital relationship
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Emily Patricia Icaza Terán and María Angélica Terreros de Huc
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ANB angle, Wits assessment, A:B ratio, connections, diagnostic tests ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Among the diagnostic tests to evaluate sagittal maxillomandibular skeletal discrepancies and the different changes that occur during growth, the following are presented: ANB angle, (Riedel 1948); the Wits Assessment, (Jacobson 1975) of linear type and the A:B Ratio (Terreros 2020), study of geometric proportions, as alternative diagnostic tests to establish the intermaxillary sagittal relationship. OBJECTIVE: To analyze the correlation of intermaxillary sagittal appreciation between angular diagnostic tests (ANB), linear (WITS) and A:B ratio (geometric proportional) in different facial types. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Comparative radiographic study with a quantitative, cross-sectional, retrospective approach in search of 55 cephalometric radiographs of boys and girls aged 8 to 13 years, descriptive-analytical design study, deductive method. RESULTS: In this study it was shown that between the ANB Angle and the A:B Ratio there is a moderate negative relationship of -0.59, between the Wits assessment and the A:B Ratio the correlation is -0.504, which indicates that there is a moderate negative relationship and Angle ANB with the Wits Rating the value is 0.501 which indicates that there is a moderate positive correlation. CONCLUSION: It is established that the ANB angle diagnostic test uses the Nasion point as a reference and that its position affects its diagnosis. There is a moderate to good correlation between the diagnostic tests ANB Angle, A:B Ratio and Wits Assessment in the determination of the intermaxillary sagittal relationship.
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- 2023
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22. Queering the web archive: A xenofeminist approach to gender, function, language and culture in the London French Special Collection
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Saskia Huc-Hepher
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History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Abstract Based on the author’s experience of curating a collection of migrant community web objects within the UK Web Archive, this paper combines conceptual interrogation with empirical analysis. The central premise is that the incorporation of multilingual, diasporic micro-archives serves to queer the anglophone UK Web Archive, or “patriarchive”, by dismantling steadfast binaries and implicit postcolonial hegemonies. The article challenges Jacques Derrida’s contention that the mal d’archive is the result of the archive’s ‘troubling’ duality, and posits, on the contrary, that such boundary-crossings are the very incarnation of a positive, transgressive form of xenofeminism (XF). From the dualism at the origin of the archive itself, to that comprised in the concept of genre/gender, and from the spatiotemporal in-betweenness of the archived diasporic (web)site to the translanguaging present therein, the article demonstrates how the diasporic micro-archive is the embodiment of a non-binary, trans-inclusive XF ideology. Taking French migrant women’s blogs preserved in the London French Special Collection as a primary source and examining their transformation over time, the paper explores how blog repurposing can be apprehended as a technomaterialist XF act and how the blogs’ increasing multimodal translanguaging bears witness to a form of culturo-linguistic transitioning that transcends binary hybridity.
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- 2021
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23. Defectos del esmalte y factores asociados en dentición mixta. Pacientes de clínica de odontopediatría UCSG
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Linda Salomé López Correa and María Angélica Terreros de Huc
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Defectos del desarrollo del esmalte, extensión, localización, etiología, edad, sexo. ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introducción: Los defectos de esmalte (DDE) son un conjunto de alteraciones clínicamente visibles, debido a desórdenes ocurridos durante la biomineralización de la matriz del esmalte.1 Las alteraciones producidas durante la fase inicial de la secreción de la matriz en el proceso de amelogénesis pueden provocar defectos como hipoplasias y afectaciones en los procesos de maduración como las hipomineralizaciones .7 Objetivo: Analizar los defectos del desarrollo del esmalte y los factores asociados en dentición mixta en pacientes de clínica de odontopediatría clínica UCSG. Materiales y métodos: Se realizó un trabajo de investigación observacional de enfoque cualitativo y cuantitativo de tipo transversal, diseño descriptivo y analítico Se obtuvo un universo de 104 niños de sexo femenino y masculino con dentición mixta con una muestra de 80 según los criterios de inclusión y exclusión, Resultados: La prevalencia de DDE en el grupo de estudio fue de 66.07%, opacidad lineal 21.43% y confluente 16.07%, el maxilar superior es el más afectado 17.88% en opacidad difusa con extensión grado 1, el presente estudió determinó que no existe relación entre factores como deficiencia de vitaminas durante el embarazo , infecciones del tracto urinario y bajo peso al nacer. Conclusiones: Según el tipo de defecto en el desarrollo del esmalte de la población pediátrica estudiada se identifica que existió un mayor porcentaje de opacidad difusa lineal, el DDE se presenta con mayor frecuencia en maxilar superior, de acuerdo a la extensión se determinó que presentan grado I y II en opacidad difusa confluente.
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- 2022
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24. COVID-19 in Africa: Underreporting, demographic effect, chaotic dynamics, and mitigation strategy impact.
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Nathan Thenon, Marisa Peyre, Mireille Huc, Abdoulaye Touré, François Roger, and Sylvain Mangiarotti
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
The epidemic of COVID-19 has shown different developments in Africa compared to the other continents. Three different approaches were used in this study to analyze this situation. In the first part, basic statistics were performed to estimate the contribution of the elderly people to the total numbers of cases and deaths in comparison to the other continents; Similarly, the health systems capacities were analysed to assess the level of underreporting. In the second part, differential equations were reconstructed from the epidemiological time series of cases and deaths (from the John Hopkins University) to analyse the dynamics of COVID-19 in seventeen countries. In the third part, the time evolution of the contact number was reconstructed since the beginning of the outbreak to investigate the effectiveness of the mitigation strategies. Results were compared to the Oxford stringency index and to the mobility indices of the Google Community Mobility Reports. Compared to Europe, the analyses show that the lower proportion of elderly people in Africa enables to explain the lower total numbers of cases and deaths by a factor of 5.1 on average (from 1.9 to 7.8). It corresponds to a genuine effect. Nevertheless, COVID-19 numbers are effectively largely underestimated in Africa by a factor of 8.5 on average (from 1.7 to 20. and more) due to the weakness of the health systems at country level. Geographically, the models obtained for the dynamics of cases and deaths reveal very diversified dynamics. The dynamics is chaotic in many contexts, including a situation of bistability rarely observed in dynamical systems. Finally, the contact number directly deduced from the epidemiological observations reveals an effective role of the mitigation strategies on the short term. On the long term, control measures have contributed to maintain the epidemic at a low level although the progressive release of the stringency did not produce a clear increase of the contact number. The arrival of the omicron variant is clearly detected and characterised by a quick increase of interpeople contact, for most of the African countries considered in the analysis.
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- 2022
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25. The well now course: a service evaluation of a health gain approach to weight management
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Fiona Clarke, Daryll Archibald, Valerie MacDonald, Sara Huc, and Christina Ellwood
- Subjects
Public health ,Obesity ,Healthy weight ,Non-diet approach ,Service evaluation ,Health at every size (HAES) ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The Well Now health and weight course teaches body respect and health gain for all. The course validates peoples’ lived experiences and knowledge through group activities and discussion with the aim of helping people to better understand their food and body stories. Well Now explores different ways of knowing, including the use and limits of body signals, like energy levels, hunger, taste and emotions and helps people keep food and behaviours in perspective by drawing attention to other factors that impact on health and wellbeing. This study undertook a service evaluation of the Well Now course to understand its acceptability for participants and its impact on diet quality, food preoccupation, physical activity and mental wellbeing. Methods This service evaluation combined quantitative pre- and post-course measures with telephone interviews with previous attendees. Paired t-tests were used to determine if there were statistically significant differences in the intended outcomes. Semi-structured qualitative telephone interviews were undertaken with previous attendees 6–12 months after attendance to understand how participants experienced the Well Now course. Results Significant improvements were demonstrated in diet quality, food preoccupation, physical activity and mental wellbeing outcomes. Medium effect sizes are demonstrated for mental wellbeing and diet quality, with smaller effect sizes shown for physical activity and food preoccupation. The weight and Body Mass Index (BMI) of attendees remained stable in this timeframe. The qualitative data corroborates and extends elements of the quantitative outcomes and highlights areas of the course that may benefit from further development and improvement. The findings further indicate that the Well Now approach is largely acceptable for attendees. Conclusions Well Now’s non-judgemental holistic approach facilitates change for those who complete the course, and for those who do not. This health gain approach upholds non-maleficence and beneficence, and this is demonstrated with this service evaluation for both completers and partial completers.
- Published
- 2021
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26. Aspectos bioéticos en el uso de dientes humanos como estrategia pedagógica
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María Angélica Terreros de Huc, Raúl Zumba Macay, Jimmy Salazar Arrata, and Alfredo Toala Reyes
- Subjects
Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Problema.- Aspectos éticos y legales en obtención de órganos dentales como estrategia pedagógica y en investigación, probabilidad de contaminación cruzada, medidas de bioseguridad y creación de banco de dientes. Material y Métodos.- Estudio descriptivo basado en Encuesta con variables cuali – cuantitativas dirigida a 172 estudiantes de último semestre de la Facultad de Odontología de la Universidad de Guayaquil; Resultados.- uso de dientes extraídos en las asignaturas de endodoncia(28%), operatoria dental(26%), morfología (23%); compra u obsequio es el tipo de adquisición de mayor frecuencia (77%); alumno conoce que diente es portador de elementos patógenos pero (92%) no conoce que diente adquirido proceda de persona con enfermedad infecciosa; guantes 86% o mascarilla 87% son las barreras de mayor uso; 70% realizó desinfección del diente antes de usarlo; 63% realizó proceso de limpieza y descontaminación; 41% los conservó en algún líquido; 58% sin líquido; 62% usa la esterilización en autoclave; 37% en formalina. Alumno considera aplicación de la Bioética en proceso quirúrgico al usar el consentimiento informado, pero la obtención de dientes solo fue a través de la compra u obsequio, no relaciona el proceso de donación al proceso de exodoncia. Conclusiones.- Es frecuente uso de dientes humanos en endodoncia, operatoria dental y morfología, su obtención es a través de compra u obsequio, conoce que diente es portador de elementos patógenos, pero no si procede de persona con enfermedad infecciosa; da importancia al consentimiento informado previa exodoncia, no se promociona proceso de donación de órganos dentarios
- Published
- 2021
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27. Sortase A-Cleavable CD1d Identifies Sphingomyelins as Major Class of CD1d-Associated Lipids
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Maren Rudolph, Yuting Wang, Theresa Simolka, Emilie Huc-Claustre, Lingyun Dai, Gijsbert Grotenbreg, Gurdyal Singh Besra, Anna Shevchenko, Andrej Shevchenko, and Sebastian Zeissig
- Subjects
CD1d ,NKT cell ,Sortase A ,shotgun lipidomics ,sphingomyelin ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
CD1d is an atypical MHC class I molecule which binds endogenous and exogenous lipids and can activate natural killer T (NKT) cells through the presentation of lipid antigens. CD1d surveys different cellular compartments including the secretory and the endolysosomal pathway and broadly binds lipids through its two hydrophobic pockets. Purification of the transmembrane protein CD1d for the analysis of bound lipids is technically challenging as the use of detergents releases CD1d-bound lipids. To address these challenges, we have developed a novel approach based on Sortase A-dependent enzymatic release of CD1d at the cell surface of live mammalian cells, which allows for single step release and affinity tagging of CD1d for shotgun lipidomics. Using this system, we demonstrate that CD1d carrying the Sortase A recognition motif shows unimpaired subcellular trafficking through the secretory and endolysosomal pathway and is able to load lipids in these compartments and present them to NKT cells. Comprehensive shotgun lipidomics demonstrated that the spectrum and abundance of CD1d-associated lipids is not representative of the total cellular lipidome but rather characterized by preferential binding to long chain sphingolipids and glycerophospholipids. As such, sphingomyelin species recently identified as critical negative regulators of NKT cell activation, represented the vast majority of endogenous CD1d-associated lipids. Moreover, we observed that inhibition of endolysosomal trafficking of CD1d surprisingly did not affect the spectrum of CD1d-bound lipids, suggesting that the majority of endogenous CD1d-associated lipids load onto CD1d in the secretory rather than the endolysosomal pathway. In conclusion, we present a novel system for the analysis of CD1d-bound lipids in mammalian cells and provide new insight into the spectrum of CD1d-associated lipids, with important functional implications for NKT cell activation.
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- 2022
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28. Valorisation agro-écologique de sédiments lacustres en contexte de revégétalisation de pelouse subalpine (Barrage du Mont Cenis, Alpes, France)
- Author
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Stéphanie HUC, Gilles FRIBOULET, and David PAULIN
- Subjects
indicateur agro-environnemental ,système agropastoral ,semence locale ,suivi des sols ,suivi de la végétation ,sédiment lacustre ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Utiliser les sédiments lacustres lors d’une vidange de barrage est un moyen d’enrichir le sol dans un contexte agropastoral de montagne. A partir d’une expérience menée dans les Alpes françaises du Nord (barrage du Mont Cenis), deux mélanges grainiers, dont l’un avec des semences sauvages d’origine locale, ont été testés selon deux modalités de reconstitution de sol (deux mélanges de sédiments, compost et fumier). Cinq années de suivi de végétation et d’analyses du sol ont permis d’observer l’évolution du cortège floristique et l’amélioration physico-chimique du sol. Il en résulte des solutions opérationnelles apportées aux agriculteurs pour reconstituer le sol, améliorer la biodiversité des prairies et optimiser les pratiques de pâturages.
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- 2022
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29. Fluorosis dental en niños de 6 a 12 años, unidad educativa Andoas, Cubijíes, provincia de Chimborazo
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Stephany Morocho Vinueza and María Angélica Terreros de Huc
- Subjects
fluorosis dental, prevalencia, agua fluorada, flúor ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Objetivo: Determinar la prevalencia y severidad de fluorosis dental y su relación con la presencia de flúor en el agua, tipo de alimentación, higiene oral y caries dental. Materiales y métodos: Se realizó un estudio epidemiológico, transversal y descriptivo con una muestra de 112 niños y niñas de 6-12 años de edad matriculados en la Unidad Educativa ANDOAS, Parroquia Cubijíes , Provincia de Chimborazo, que cumplieron con los criterios de inclusión y de exclusión previamente establecidos. Resultados: Se determinó que el 86% de la población de estudio padece de fluorosis dental, en sus diferentes niveles. La concentración de flúor en agua a nivel domiciliario, presentó valores de 1,88 mg/dl y 1,84 mg/dl de flúor, superando los niveles establecidos por la OMS (0,5-1,5 mg/dl). Además se estableció que la proporción de pasta dental que utiliza la población es excesiva y que la dieta de la población tiene una relación estrecha con los alimentos que contienen flúor, observándose que la mayoría de la población consume productos del mar entre muchas veces y casi siempre (27%),los cuales tienen alta concentración de flúor; en la categoría de productos con concentración moderada de flúor , se consumen con frecuencia, el arroz (60%), el queso (45%), el pan (37%) y el pollo (36%), y de forma regular alimentos con concentración leve de flúor como la leche, el pan, el guineo, el huevo, el tomate y además el pepino, la cebolla y el apio. La población de estudio presentó un índice CPO-D de 1.16 (muy bajo) y un índice ceo-d de 3.16 (moderado), analizados bajos los criterios de la OMS. Conclusión: La prevalencia de fluorosis dental en sus diferentes niveles es alta en la población de estudio. La concentración de flúor en el agua a nivel domiciliario supera los límites que establece la OMS. La proporción de pasta colocada en la parte activa del cepillo es excesiva y la dieta se relaciona con el consumo de alimentos que contienen flúor. La prevalencia de caries es muy baja en el índice CPO-D y moderada en el índice ceo-d.
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- 2021
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30. Depletion Flocculation of High Internal Phase Pickering Emulsion Inks: A Colloidal Engineering Approach to Develop 3D Printed Porous Scaffolds with Tunable Bioactive Delivery.
- Author
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Shahbazi, Mahdiyar, Jäger, Henry, Huc-Mathis, Delphine, Asghartabar Kashi, Peyman, Ettelaie, Rammile, Sarkar, Anwesha, and Chen, Jianshe
- Published
- 2024
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31. Anomaly Detection in IoT Networks: From Architectures to Machine Learning Transparency
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Aleks Huc and Denis Trcek
- Subjects
Computer networks ,Internet of Things ,security architectures ,anomaly detection ,machine learning ,functional transparency ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Machine learning (ML) is becoming an integral part of networks security arsenal, where Internet of Things (IoT) structures play an increasingly important role. However, IoT networks have many specific requirements, mostly due to limited energy availability and stringent computing resources. This results in limitations for traditional ML approaches to security, in particular for anomaly detection. Consequently, new focuses for solutions that range from architectural to data processing ones are necessary. Therefore, appropriate lightweight ML algorithms have to be designed and deployed in appropriate architectural settings, which is the main contribution of this paper. In addition, insights into ML functioning are needed to better understand the observed anomalies. To enable these insights (and support a wider applicability of ML based approaches), the results have to be as explainable as possible. The research presented in this paper addresses this problem through the functional and data transparency of ML applications, tailored to the specifics of anomaly detection in IoT networks. To tackle accordingly also the architectural issues, the presented approach builds on the well-established layering principle from computer communications reference models. This principle not only supports flexibility but also increases security in these new environments of growing importance.
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- 2021
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32. Emergence of low-symmetry foldamers from single monomers
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Pappas, Charalampos G., Mandal, Pradeep K., Liu, Bin, Kauffmann, Brice, Miao, Xiaoming, Komáromy, Dávid, Hoffmann, Waldemar, Manz, Christian, Chang, Rayoon, Liu, Kai, Pagel, Kevin, Huc, Ivan, and Otto, Sijbren
- Published
- 2020
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33. Hybrid thermochemical process for storage and conversion into cold and electricity based on a low temperature thermal source
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Ghazale Hasan, Morel Guillaume, Godefroy Alexis, Hernandez Emmanuel, Huc Jean-Jacques, Neveu Pierre, Mazet Nathalie, and Perier-Muzet Maxime
- Subjects
hybrid thermochemical processes ,cogeneration ,cold production ,electricity ,thermal storage ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
This paper presents a hybrid thermochemical process concept for the cogeneration of cold, electricity and thermal storage based on low temperature sources. Several innovative architectures of the process were defined at PROMES-CNRS and the ‘simultaneous mode’ architecture was chosen to be under study. It provides both cold and electricity productions in the discharging step of this storage system. A numerical model was developed at PROMES simulating the simultaneous mode of the hybrid cycle. Based on the results of the model, an experimental prototype was developed at the lab. The thermochemical reactor was tested and operated properly in the charging and discharging phase of the cycle, before its hybridization. The expander was set under the first experimental characterization using nitrogen before integrating it with the thermochemical reactor in the hybrid system to analyze the real performance of the cycle.
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- 2023
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34. Correction: Queering the web archive: A xenofeminist approach to gender, function, language and culture in the London French Special Collection
- Author
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Huc-Hepher, Saskia
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- 2021
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35. Queering the web archive: A xenofeminist approach to gender, function, language and culture in the London French Special Collection
- Author
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Huc-Hepher, Saskia
- Published
- 2021
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36. The well now course: a service evaluation of a health gain approach to weight management
- Author
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Clarke, Fiona, Archibald, Daryll, MacDonald, Valerie, Huc, Sara, and Ellwood, Christina
- Published
- 2021
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37. Determinación de cronología y secuencia de erupción en incisivos permanentes, niños 5-9 años, clínicaUCSG
- Author
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María Belén Macías Mendoza and Maria Terreros de Huc
- Subjects
Incisivos permanentes, cronología, formación dentaria, secuencia de erupcion, erupción dentaria, niños ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introducción.- Existen diversas causas relacionadas con la variación en la cronología y secuencia de la erupción de los dientes permanentes, los cuales pueden ser: edad, género y estado nutricional. Objetivo.- Establecer la determinación de la cronología y secuencia de erupción de los incisivos permanentes y factores asociados en los niños de 5 a 9 años de edad que acuden a la clínica de Odontopediatría de la Universidad Católica Santiago de Guayaquil durante el periodo académico B-2017. Materiales y métodos.- Estudio clínico y radiográfico de tipo transversal, descriptivo, analítico y observacional en 84 pacientes pediátricos de ambos sexos, de 5 a 9 años de edad, atendidos en la clínica de odontología de la UCSG; considerando los criterios de inclusión y exclusión. Conclusión.- La formación dentaria de la zona incisiva, en el género masculino presenta un ligero retraso en la formación dentaria a comparación con el género femenino. La secuencia de emergencia dentaria será primero en las niñas que en los niños. En cuanto a la relación del estado nutricional con la formación dentaria y la secuencia de erupción podemos determinar que no hubo relación ya que no se encontró diferencias estadísticamente significativas.
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- 2021
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38. Disfunción lingual y su impacto en el desarrollo del complejo dentomaxilofacial. Revisión sistemática
- Author
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Carlos Vélez Sánchez and María Angélica Terreros de Huc
- Subjects
Dentistry ,RK1-715 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Problema. –La lengua apoya funciones fisiológicas de alimentación, fonación y masticación, contribuye a la higiene oral y al desarrollo de ambos maxilares. La protracción lingual, macroglosia, deglución atípica y dislalia, son problemas asociados a la disfunción lingual. Objetivo. – analizar los procesos fisiológicos bucales donde interviene la lengua, determinar procedimientos de diagnóstico de disfunción lingual, evaluar factores de riesgo que coadyuvan a su presencia y determinar su impacto en el complejo dentomaxilofacial Material y Métodos. – Investigación bibliográfica documental, retrospectiva en la búsqueda, cualitativa, descriptiva, analítica, de método deductivo. Uso de análisis P.I.C.O.S para obtención de palabras clave: disfunción lingual, frenillo lingual, mordida abierta, hábitos bucales, tipos faciales, diagnóstico; utilizando los buscadores Pubmed, Science Hub, Google académico, Web of Sciences, se encontraron 96 artículos relacionados, que por criterios de inclusión y exclusión quedaron en 32. Resultados. – La lengua cumple funciones fisiológicas de deglución, masticación, degustación, fonación y formación del bolo alimenticio. El diagnóstico a través del examen clínico y electromiográfico, permite observar sus movimientos inapropiados y relación con hábitos bucales, maloclusiones, mordidas abiertas dentoalveolares y dislalias. La disfunción lingual está asociada a hábitos deformantes. Los pacientes dólicofaciales, de estructura neuromuscular débil, son más propensos a deformaciones dentomaxilofaciales relacionadas a la disfunción. Deben ser tratadas desde temprana edad, con terapia miofuncional de ortodoncia, terapia del lenguaje y posible frenectomía. Conclusiones. – La lengua apoya funciones fisiológicas de masticación, deglución y fonación; el diagnóstico clínico – funcional y electromiográfico, permiten una buena apreciación de disfunciones relacionadas, los cuales deben ser tratados a temprana edad.
- Published
- 2021
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39. Quality Control of CyGNSS Reflectivity for Robust Spatiotemporal Detection of Tropical Wetlands
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Hironori Arai, Mehrez Zribi, Kei Oyoshi, Karin Dassas, Mireille Huc, Shinichi Sobue, and Thuy Le Toan
- Subjects
CyGNSS ,GNSS-R ,inundation ,wetland ,Mekong Delta ,Science - Abstract
The aim of this study was to develop a robust methodology for evaluating the spatiotemporal dynamics of the inundation status in tropical wetlands with the currently available Global Navigation Satellite System-Reflectometry (GNSS-R) data by proposing a new quality control technique called the “precision index”. The methodology was applied over the Mekong Delta, one of the most important rice-production systems comprising aquaculture areas and natural wetlands (e.g., mangrove forests, peatlands). Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CyGNSS) constellation data (August 2018–December 2021) were used to evaluate the spatiotemporal dynamics of the reflectivity Γ over the delta. First, the reflectivity Γ, shape and size of each specular footprint and the precision index were calibrated at each specular point and reprojected to a 0.0045° resolution (approximately equivalent to 500 m) grid at a daily temporal resolution (Lv. 2 product); then, the results were obtained considering bias-causing factors (e.g., the velocity/effective scattering area/incidence angle). The Lv. 2 product was temporally integrated every 15 days with a Kalman smoother (+/− 14 days temporal localization with Gaussian kernel: 1σ = 5 days). By applying the smoother, the regional-annual dynamics over the delta could be clearly visualized. The behaviors of the GNSS-R reflectivity and the Advanced Land Observing Satellite-2 Phased-Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar-2 quadruple polarimetric scatter signals were compared and found to be nonlinearly correlated due to the influence of the incidence angle and the effective scattering area.
- Published
- 2022
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40. On Dynamic Distributed Computing
- Author
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Guerraoui, Rachid, Huc, Florian, and Kermarrec, Anne-Marie
- Subjects
Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing ,F.2.2 - Abstract
This paper shows for the first time that distributed computing can be both reliable and efficient in an environment that is both highly dynamic and hostile. More specifically, we show how to maintain clusters of size $O(\log N)$, each containing more than two thirds of honest nodes with high probability, within a system whose size can vary \textit{polynomially} with respect to its initial size. Furthermore, the communication cost induced by each node arrival or departure is polylogarithmic with respect to $N$, the maximal size of the system. Our clustering can be achieved despite the presence of a Byzantine adversary controlling a fraction $\bad \leq \{1}{3}-\epsilon$ of the nodes, for some fixed constant $\epsilon > 0$, independent of $N$. So far, such a clustering could only be performed for systems who size can vary constantly and it was not clear whether that was at all possible for polynomial variances.
- Published
- 2012
41. Scalable and Secure Aggregation in Distributed Networks
- Author
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Gambs, Sebastien, Guerraoui, Rachid, Harkous, Hamza, Huc, Florian, and Kermarrec, Anne-Marie
- Subjects
Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing ,Computer Science - Computational Complexity ,Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
We consider the problem of computing an aggregation function in a \emph{secure} and \emph{scalable} way. Whereas previous distributed solutions with similar security guarantees have a communication cost of $O(n^3)$, we present a distributed protocol that requires only a communication complexity of $O(n\log^3 n)$, which we prove is near-optimal. Our protocol ensures perfect security against a computationally-bounded adversary, tolerates $(1/2-\epsilon)n$ malicious nodes for any constant $1/2 > \epsilon > 0$ (not depending on $n$), and outputs the exact value of the aggregated function with high probability.
- Published
- 2011
42. Distributed Planarization and Local Routing Strategies in Sensor Networks
- Author
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Jarry, Aubin, Huc, Florian, Leone, Pierre, and Rolim, Jose
- Subjects
Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
We present an algorithm which computes a planar 2-spanner from an Unit Disk Graph when the node density is sufficient. The communication complexity in terms of number of node's identifier sent by the algorithm is $6n$, while the computational complexity is $O(n\Delta)$, with $\Delta$ the maximum degree of the communication graph. Furthermore, we present a simple and efficient routing algorithm dedicated to the computed graph. Last but not least, using traditional Euclidean coordinates, our algorithm needs the broadcast of as few as $3n$ node's identifiers. Under the hypothesis of sufficient node density, no broadcast at all is needed, reducing the previous best known complexity of an algorithm to compute a planar spanner of an Unit Disk Graph which was of $5n$ broadcasts.
- Published
- 2011
43. Subgraphs of weakly quasi-random oriented graphs
- Author
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Amini, Omid, Griffiths, Simon, and Huc, Florian
- Subjects
Mathematics - Combinatorics ,05C20, 05D40, 05C35 - Abstract
It is an intriguing question to see what kind of information on the structure of an oriented graph $D$ one can obtain if $D$ does not contain a fixed oriented graph $H$ as a subgraph. The related question in the unoriented case has been an active area of research, and is relatively well-understood in the theory of quasi-random graphs and extremal combinatorics. In this paper, we consider the simplest cases of such a general question for oriented graphs, and provide some results on the global behavior of the orientation of $D$. For the case that $H$ is an oriented four-cycle we prove: in every $H$-free oriented graph $D$, there is a pair $A,B\ssq V(D)$ such that $e(A,B)\ge e(D)^{2}/32|D|^{2}$ and $e(B,A)\le e(A,B)/2$. We give a random construction which shows that this bound on $e(A,B)$ is best possible (up to the constant). In addition, we prove a similar result for the case $H$ is an oriented six-cycle, and a more precise result in the case $D$ is dense and $H$ is arbitrary. We also consider the related extremal question in which no condition is put on the oriented graph $D$, and provide an answer that is best possible up to a multiplicative constant. Finally, we raise a number of related questions and conjectures., Comment: 35 pages
- Published
- 2009
44. VRAC: Simulation Results #1
- Author
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Huc, Florian and Jarry, Aubin
- Subjects
Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing - Abstract
In order to make full use of geographic routing techniques developed for large scale networks, nodes must be localized. However, localization and virtual localization techniques in sensor networks are dependent either on expensive and sometimes unavailable hardware (e.g. GPS) or on sophisticated localization calculus (e.g. triangulation) which are both error-prone and with a costly overhead. Instead of localizing nodes in a traditional 2-dimensional space, we use directly the raw distance to a set of anchors to route messages in a multi-dimensional space. This should enable us to use any geographic routing protocol in a robust and efficient manner in a very large range of scenarios. We test this technique for two different geographic routing algorithms, namely GRIC and ROAM. The simulation results show that using the raw coordinates does not decrease their efficiency.
- Published
- 2009
45. VRAC: Virtual Raw Anchor Coordinates Routing in Sensor Networks -- Concepts and Experimental Protocol
- Author
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Huc, Florian and Jarry, Aubin
- Subjects
Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
In order to make full use of geographic routing techniques developed for large scale networks, nodes must be localized. However, localization and virtual localization techniques in sensor networks are dependent either on expensive and sometimes unavailable hardware (e.g. GPS) or on sophisticated localization calculus (e.g. triangulation) which are both error-prone and with a costly overhead. Instead of localizing nodes in a traditional 2-dimensional space, we intend to use directly the raw distance to a set of anchors to route messages in the multi-dimensional space. This should enable us to use any geographic routing protocol in a robust and efficient manner in a very large range of scenarios.
- Published
- 2009
46. Large and Flat Graphene Flakes Produced by Epoxy Bonding and Reverse Exfoliation of Highly Oriented Pyrolitic Graphite
- Author
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Huc, Vincent, Bendiab, Nedjma, Rosman, Noel, Ebbesen, Thomas, Delacour, Cecile, and Bouchiat, Vincent
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We present a fabrication method producing large and flat graphene flakes that have a few layers down to a single layer based on substrate bonding of a thick sample of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), followed by its controlled exfoliation down to the few to single graphene atomic layers. As the graphite underlayer is intimately bonded to the substrate during the exfoliation process, the obtained graphene flakes are remarkably large and flat and present very few folds and pleats. The high occurrence of single layered graphene sheets having tens of micron wide in lateral dimensions is assessed by complementary probes including spatially resolved Micro-Raman Spectroscopy, Atomic Force Microscopy and Electrostatic Force Microscopy. This versatile method opens the way of deposition of graphene on any substrates including flexible ones., Comment: 15 pages 5 figures
- Published
- 2008
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47. Haem iron reshapes colonic luminal environment: impact on mucosal homeostasis and microbiome through aldehyde formation
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Océane C. B. Martin, Maïwenn Olier, Sandrine Ellero-Simatos, Nathalie Naud, Jacques Dupuy, Laurence Huc, Sylviane Taché, Vanessa Graillot, Mathilde Levêque, Valérie Bézirard, Cécile Héliès-Toussaint, Florence Blas Y. Estrada, Valérie Tondereau, Yannick Lippi, Claire Naylies, Lindsey Peyriga, Cécile Canlet, Anne Marie Davila, François Blachier, Laurent Ferrier, Elisa Boutet-Robinet, Françoise Guéraud, Vassilia Théodorou, and Fabrice H. F. Pierre
- Subjects
Lipoperoxidation ,Barrier function ,Metabolites ,Dysbiosis ,Meat ,Microbial ecology ,QR100-130 - Abstract
Abstract Background The World Health Organization classified processed and red meat consumption as “carcinogenic” and “probably carcinogenic”, respectively, to humans. Haem iron from meat plays a role in the promotion of colorectal cancer in rodent models, in association with enhanced luminal lipoperoxidation and subsequent formation of aldehydes. Here, we investigated the short-term effects of this haem-induced lipoperoxidation on mucosal and luminal gut homeostasis including microbiome in F344 male rats fed with a haem-enriched diet (1.5 μmol/g) 14–21 days. Results Changes in permeability, inflammation, and genotoxicity observed in the mucosal colonic barrier correlated with luminal haem and lipoperoxidation markers. Trapping of luminal haem-induced aldehydes normalised cellular genotoxicity, permeability, and ROS formation on a colon epithelial cell line. Addition of calcium carbonate (2%) to the haem-enriched diet allowed the luminal haem to be trapped in vivo and counteracted these haem-induced physiological traits. Similar covariations of faecal metabolites and bacterial taxa according to haem-induced lipoperoxidation were identified. Conclusions This integrated approach provides an overview of haem-induced modulations of the main actors in the colonic barrier. All alterations were closely linked to haem-induced lipoperoxidation, which is associated with red meat-induced colorectal cancer risk.
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- 2019
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48. A distributed algorithm for computing and updating the process number of a forest
- Author
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Coudert, David, Huc, Florian, and Mazauric, Dorian
- Subjects
Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics - Abstract
In this paper, we present a distributed algorithm to compute various parameters of a tree such as the process number, the edge search number or the node search number and so the pathwidth. This algorithm requires n steps, an overall computation time of O(n log(n)), and n messages of size log_3(n)+3. We then propose a distributed algorithm to update the process number (or the node search number, or the edge search number) of each component of a forest after adding or deleting an edge. This second algorithm requires O(D) steps, an overall computation time of O(D log(n)), and O(D) messages of size log_3(n)+3, where D is the diameter of the modified connected component. Finally, we show how to extend our algorithms to trees and forests of unknown size using messages of less than 2a+4+e bits, where a is the parameter to be determined and e=1 for updates algorithms.
- Published
- 2008
49. (l,k)-Routing on Plane Grids
- Author
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Huc, Florian, Valls, Ignasi Sau, and Zerovnik, Janez
- Subjects
Mathematics - Combinatorics - Abstract
The packet routing problem plays an essential role in communication networks. It involves how to transfer data from some origins to some destinations within a reasonable amount of time. In the $(\ell,k)$-routing problem, each node can send at most $\ell$ packets and receive at most $k$ packets. Permutation routing is the particular case $\ell=k=1$. In the $r$-central routing problem, all nodes at distance at most $r$ from a fixed node $v$ want to send a packet to $v$. In this article we study the permutation routing, the $r$-central routing and the general $(\ell,k)$-routing problems on plane grids, that is square grids, triangular grids and hexagonal grids. We use the \emph{store-and-forward} $\Delta$-port model, and we consider both full and half-duplex networks. We first survey the existing results in the literature about packet routing, with special emphasis on $(\ell,k)$-routing on plane grids. Our main contributions are the following: 1. Tight permutation routing algorithms on full-duplex hexagonal grids, and half duplex triangular and hexagonal grids. 2. Tight $r$-central routing algorithms on triangular and hexagonal grids. 3. Tight $(k,k)$-routing algorithms on square, triangular and hexagonal grids. 4. Good approximation algorithms (in terms of running time) for $(\ell,k)$-routing on square, triangular and hexagonal grids, together with new lower bounds on the running time of any algorithm using shortest path routing. These algorithms are all completely distributed, i.e., can be implemented independently at each node. Finally, we also formulate the $(\ell,k)$-routing problem as a \textsc{Weighted Edge Coloring} problem on bipartite graphs., Comment: Final version
- Published
- 2008
50. The synthesis and characterization of giant Calixarenes
- Author
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Vincent Guérineau, Marion Rollet, Stéphane Viel, Bénédicte Lepoittevin, Ludovic Costa, Pascale Saint-Aguet, Régis Laurent, Philippe Roger, Didier Gigmes, Cyril Martini, and Vincent Huc
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Calixarenes are cyclic oligomers obtained by condensation reactions between phenols and formaldehyde and usually include up to eight phenolic subunits. Here the authors demonstrate the synthesis of calixarenes with up to 90 phenolic subunits with up to 65% yield via a scalable process.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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