339 results on '"P. Memeo"'
Search Results
2. Open, laparoscopic liver resection and percutaneous thermal ablation in elderly patients with hepatocellular carcinoma: outcomes and therapeutic strategy
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Delvecchio, Antonella, Conticchio, Maria, Casella, Annachiara, Ratti, Francesca, Gelli, Maximiliano, Anelli, Ferdinando Massimiliano, Laurent, Alexis, Vitali, Giulio Cesare, Magistri, Paolo, Felli, Emanuele, Wakabayashi, Taiga, Pessaux, Patrick, Piardi, Tullio, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, de’Angelis, Nicola, Briceño-Delgado, Javier, Rampoldi, Antonio, Adam, Rene, Cherqui, Daniel, Aldrighetti, Luca, and Memeo, Riccardo
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- 2024
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3. A micro-opto-mechanical glass interferometer for megahertz modulation of optical signals
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Memeo, Roberto, Crespi, Andrea, and Osellame, Roberto
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Physics - Optics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Waveguide-based interferometric circuits are widely employed in optical communications, sensing and computing applications. In particular, glass-based devices are appealing due to the transparency and bio-compatibility of this substrate, or where low-loss interfacing with fiber networks is required. However, fast electro-optic phase modulation is hard to achieve in glass materials. Here, we demonstrate an optical phase and intensity modulator in glass, working in the megahertz range. This modulator exploits the elasto-optic effect inside a mechanical microstructure, brought to oscillation at resonance, and is entirely realized by femtosecond laser micromachining. In detail, we demonstrate 23-dB optical intensity modulation at 1.17 MHz, with an internal optical loss of the phase-modulator component as low as 0.04 dB., Comment: Raw data of the graphs reported in the figures are publicly available on Zenodo (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11354220)
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- 2024
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4. The revolution of metaverse in surgery: a mini-review with video
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Ammendola, Michele, Memeo, Riccardo, and Al Ansari, Mohanad
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- 2024
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5. Cornerstones and divergencies in the implementation and use of liver hypertrophy techniques: results from a nationwide survey for the set-up of the prospective registry
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Ratti, Francesca, Serenari, Matteo, Avolio, Alfonso, Batignani, Giacomo, Boggi, Ugo, Brolese, Alberto, Caccamo, Lucio, Celotti, Andrea, Cillo, Umberto, Cinardi, Nicola, Cotsoglou, Christian, Dalla Valle, Raffaele, De Carlis, Luciano, De Simone, Paolo, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Ercolani, Giorgio, Ettorre, Giuseppe Maria, Fedi, Massimo, Ferrero, Alessandro, Giuliani, Antonio, Giuliante, Felice, Grazi, Gian Luca, Gruttadauria, Salvatore, Guglielmi, Alfredo, Izzo, Francesco, Lai, Quirino, Lorenzin, Dario, Maestri, Marcello, Massani, Marco, Mazzaferro, Vincenzo, Memeo, Riccardo, Nardo, Bruno, Portolani, Nazario, Ravaioli, Matteo, Rocca, Aldo, Romagnoli, Renato, Romano, Fabrizio, Saladino, Edoardo, Tisone, Giuseppe, Troisi, Roberto, Veneroni, Luigi, Vennarecci, Giovanni, Viganò, Luca, Viola, Giuseppe, Vivarelli, Marco, Zanus, Giacomo, Aldrighetti, Luca, and Jovine, Elio
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- 2024
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6. Toward a new paradigm of care: a surgical leaders’ Delphi consensus on the organizational factors of the new pancreas units (E-AHPBA PUECOF study)
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Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Dal Mas, Francesca, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, Adham, Mustapha, Alfieri, Sergio, Balzano, Gianpaolo, Barauskas, Giedrius, Bassi, Claudio, Besselink, Marc G., Bockhorn, Maximilian, Boggi, Ugo, Conlon, Kevin C., Coppola, Roberto, Dervenis, Christos, Dokmak, Safi, Falconi, Massimo, Fusai, Giuseppe Kito, Gumbs, Andrew A., Ivanecz, Arpad, Memeo, Riccardo, Radenković, Dejan, Ramia, Jose M., Rangelova, Elena, Salvia, Roberto, Sauvanet, Alain, Serrablo, Alejandro, Siriwardena, Ajith K., Stättner, Stefan, Strobel, Oliver, Zerbi, Alessandro, Malleo, Giuseppe, Butturini, Giovanni, and Frigerio, Isabella
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- 2024
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7. Correction to: Role of Hippo pathway dysregulation from gastrointestinal premalignant lesions to cancer
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Schiavoni, Giulia, Messina, Beatrice, Scalera, Stefano, Memeo, Lorenzo, Colarossi, Cristina, Mare, Marzia, Blandino, Giovanni, Ciliberto, Gennaro, Bon, Giulia, and Maugeri-Saccà, Marcello
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- 2024
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8. Role of Hippo pathway dysregulation from gastrointestinal premalignant lesions to cancer
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Schiavoni, Giulia, Messina, Beatrice, Scalera, Stefano, Memeo, Lorenzo, Colarossi, Cristina, Mare, Marzia, Blandino, Giovanni, Ciliberto, Gennaro, Bon, Giulia, and Maugeri-Saccà, Marcello
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- 2024
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9. Action prediction in psychosis
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Montobbio, Noemi, Zingarelli, Enrico, Folesani, Federica, Memeo, Mariacarla, Croce, Enrico, Cavallo, Andrea, Grassi, Luigi, Fadiga, Luciano, Panzeri, Stefano, Belvederi Murri, Martino, and Becchio, Cristina
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- 2024
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10. Impact of Liver Cirrhosis, Severity of Cirrhosis, and Portal Hypertension on the Difficulty and Outcomes of Laparoscopic and Robotic Major Liver Resections for Primary Liver Malignancies
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Cipriani, Federica, Aldrighetti, Luca, Ratti, Francesca, Wu, Andrew G. R., Kabir, Tousif, Scatton, Olivier, Lim, Chetana, Zhang, Wanguang, Sijberden, Jasper, Aghayan, Davit L., Siow, Tiing-Foong, Dokmak, Safi, Coelho, Fabricio Ferreira, Herman, Paulo, Marino, Marco V., Mazzaferro, Vincenzo, Chiow, Adrian K. H., Sucandy, Iswanto, Ivanecz, Arpad, Choi, Sung-Hoon, Lee, Jae Hoon, Gastaca, Mikel, Vivarelli, Marco, Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Yong, Chee-Chien, Yin, Mengqiu, Fondevila, Constantino, Efanov, Mikhail, Morise, Zenichi, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Brustia, Raffaele, Dalla Valle, Raffaele, Boggi, Ugo, Geller, David, Belli, Andrea, Memeo, Riccardo, Gruttadauria, Salvatore, Mejia, Alejandro, Park, James O., Rotellar, Fernando, Choi, Gi-Hong, Robles-Campos, Ricardo, Wang, Xiaoying, Sutcliffe, Robert P., Pratschke, Johann, Lai, Eric C. H., Chong, Charing C. N., D’Hondt, Mathieu, Monden, Kazuteru, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Kingham, T. Peter, Ferrero, Alessandro, Ettorre, Giuseppe Maria, Cherqui, Daniel, Liang, Xiao, Soubrane, Olivier, Wakabayashi, Go, Troisi, Roberto I., Cheung, Tan-To, Kato, Yutaro, Sugioka, Atsushi, Han, Ho-Seong, Long, Tran Cong duy, Liu, Qu, Liu, Rong, Edwin, Bjørn, Fuks, David, Chen, Kuo-Hsin, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, and Goh, Brian K. P.
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- 2024
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11. Robotic versus laparoscopic distal pancreatectomy in obese patients
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Ausania, Fabio, Landi, Filippo, Martinie, John B., Vrochides, Dionisios, Walsh, Matthew, Hossain, Shanaz M., White, Steven, Prabakaran, Viswakumar, Melstrom, Laleh G., Fong, Yuman, Butturini, Giovanni, Bignotto, Laura, Valle, Valentina, Bing, Yuntao, Xiu, Dianrong, Di Franco, Gregorio, Sanchez-Bueno, Francisco, de’Angelis, Nicola, Laurent, Alexis, Giuliani, Giuseppe, Pernazza, Graziano, Esposito, Alessandro, Salvia, Roberto, Bazzocchi, Francesca, Esposito, Ludovica, Pietrabissa, Andrea, Pugliese, Luigi, Memeo, Riccardo, Uyama, Ichiro, Uchida, Yuichiro, Rios, José, Coratti, Andrea, Morelli, Luca, and Giulianotti, Pier C.
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- 2023
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12. Prospective minimally invasive pancreatic resections from the IGOMIPS registry: a snapshot of daily practice in Italy on 1191 between 2019 and 2022
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Boggi, Ugo, Donisi, Greta, Napoli, Niccolò, Partelli, Stefano, Esposito, Alessandro, Ferrari, Giovanni, Butturini, Giovanni, Morelli, Luca, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, Viola, Massimo, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Troisi, Roberto, Vivarelli, Marco, Jovine, Elio, Ferrero, Alessandro, Bracale, Umberto, Alfieri, Sergio, Casadei, Riccardo, Ercolani, Giorgio, Moraldi, Luca, Molino, Carlo, Dalla Valle, Raffaele, Ettorre, Giuseppe, Memeo, Riccardo, Zanus, Giacomo, Belli, Andrea, Gruttadauria, Salvatore, Brolese, Alberto, Coratti, Andrea, Garulli, Gianluca, Romagnoli, Renato, Massani, Marco, Borghi, Felice, Belli, Giulio, Coppola, Roberto, Falconi, Massimo, Salvia, Roberto, and Zerbi, Alessandro
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- 2023
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13. Quantitative predictions of neoadjuvant chemotherapy effects in breast cancer by individual patient data assimililation
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Castorina, P., Carco', D., Colarossi, C., Mare, M., Memeo, L., Pace, M., Puliafito, I., and Giuffrida, D.
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been used for breast cancer aiming at downgrading before surgery. In this article we propose a new quantitative analysis of the effects of the neoadjuvant therapy to obtain numerical, personalized, predictions on the shrinkage of the tumor size after the drug doses, by data assimilation of the individual patient. The algorithm has been validated by a sample of 37 patients with histological diagnosis of locally advanced primary breast carcinoma. The biopsy specimen, the initial tumor size and its reduction after each treatment were known for all patients. We find that: a) the measure of tumor size at the diagnosis and after the first dose permits to predict the size reduction for the follow up; b) the results are in agreement with our data sample, within 10-20 %, for about 90% of the patients. The quantitative indications suggest the best time for surgery. The analysis is patient oriented, weakly model dependent and can be applied to other cancer phenotypes., Comment: In press on Annals of Hematology and Oncology
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- 2021
14. Blind people can actively manipulate virtual objects with a novel tactile device
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Memeo, Mariacarla, Sandini, Giulio, Cocchi, Elena, and Brayda, Luca
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- 2023
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15. 2023 WSES guidelines for the prevention, detection, and management of iatrogenic urinary tract injuries (IUTIs) during emergency digestive surgery
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de’Angelis, Nicola, Schena, Carlo Alberto, Marchegiani, Francesco, Reitano, Elisa, De Simone, Belinda, Wong, Geoffrey Yuet Mun, Martínez-Pérez, Aleix, Abu-Zidan, Fikri M., Agnoletti, Vanni, Aisoni, Filippo, Ammendola, Michele, Ansaloni, Luca, Bala, Miklosh, Biffl, Walter, Ceccarelli, Graziano, Ceresoli, Marco, Chiara, Osvaldo, Chiarugi, Massimo, Cimbanassi, Stefania, Coccolini, Federico, Coimbra, Raul, Di Saverio, Salomone, Diana, Michele, Dioguardi Burgio, Marco, Fraga, Gustavo, Gavriilidis, Paschalis, Gurrado, Angela, Inchingolo, Riccardo, Ingels, Alexandre, Ivatury, Rao, Kashuk, Jeffry L., Khan, Jim, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Kim, Fernando J., Kluger, Yoram, Lakkis, Zaher, Leppäniemi, Ari, Maier, Ronald V., Memeo, Riccardo, Moore, Ernest E., Ordoñez, Carlos A., Peitzman, Andrew B., Pellino, Gianluca, Picetti, Edoardo, Pikoulis, Manos, Pisano, Michele, Podda, Mauro, Romeo, Oreste, Rosa, Fausto, Tan, Edward, Ten Broek, Richard P., Testini, Mario, Tian Wei Cheng, Brian Anthony, Weber, Dieter, Sacco, Emilio, Sartelli, Massimo, Tonsi, Alfredo, Dal Moro, Fabrizio, and Catena, Fausto
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- 2023
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16. Multi-visceral resection for left-sided pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: a multicenter retrospective analysis from European countries
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Ferrari, Cecilia, Leon, Piera, Falconi, Massimo, Boggi, Ugo, Piardi, Tullio, Sulpice, Laurent, Cavaliere, Davide, Rosso, Edoardo, Chirica, Mircea, Ravazzoni, Ferruccio, Memeo, Riccardo, Pessaux, Patrick, De Blasi, Vito, Mascherini, Matteo, De Cian, Franco, Navarro, Francis, and Panaro, Fabrizio
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- 2023
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17. Recapitulating thyroid cancer histotypes through engineering embryonic stem cells
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Veschi, Veronica, Turdo, Alice, Modica, Chiara, Verona, Francesco, Di Franco, Simone, Gaggianesi, Miriam, Tirrò, Elena, Di Bella, Sebastiano, Iacono, Melania Lo, Pantina, Vincenzo Davide, Porcelli, Gaetana, Mangiapane, Laura Rosa, Bianca, Paola, Rizzo, Aroldo, Sciacca, Elisabetta, Pillitteri, Irene, Vella, Veronica, Belfiore, Antonino, Bongiorno, Maria Rita, Pistone, Giuseppe, Memeo, Lorenzo, Colarossi, Lorenzo, Giuffrida, Dario, Colarossi, Cristina, Vigneri, Paolo, Todaro, Matilde, and Stassi, Giorgio
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- 2023
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18. Training curriculum in minimally invasive emergency digestive surgery: 2022 WSES position paper
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de’Angelis, Nicola, Marchegiani, Francesco, Schena, Carlo Alberto, Khan, Jim, Agnoletti, Vanni, Ansaloni, Luca, Barría Rodríguez, Ana Gabriela, Bianchi, Paolo Pietro, Biffl, Walter, Bravi, Francesca, Ceccarelli, Graziano, Ceresoli, Marco, Chiara, Osvaldo, Chirica, Mircea, Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Coccolini, Federico, Coimbra, Raul, Cotsoglou, Christian, D’Hondt, Mathieu, Damaskos, Dimitris, De Simone, Belinda, Di Saverio, Salomone, Diana, Michele, Espin‐Basany, Eloy, Fichtner‐Feigl, Stefan, Fugazzola, Paola, Gavriilidis, Paschalis, Gronnier, Caroline, Kashuk, Jeffry, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Ammendola, Michele, Kouwenhoven, Ewout A., Laurent, Alexis, Leppaniemi, Ari, Lesurtel, Mickaël, Memeo, Riccardo, Milone, Marco, Moore, Ernest, Pararas, Nikolaos, Peitzmann, Andrew, Pessaux, Patrick, Picetti, Edoardo, Pikoulis, Manos, Pisano, Michele, Ris, Frederic, Robison, Tyler, Sartelli, Massimo, Shelat, Vishal G., Spinoglio, Giuseppe, Sugrue, Michael, Tan, Edward, Van Eetvelde, Ellen, Kluger, Yoram, Weber, Dieter, and Catena, Fausto
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- 2023
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19. Liver resection versus radiofrequency ablation in octogenarian patients for hepatocellular carcinoma: a propensity score multicenter analysis
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Filippo, Rosalinda, Conticchio, Maria, Ratti, Francesca, Inchingolo, Riccardo, Gelli, Maximiliano, Anelli, Ferdinando Massimiliano, Laurent, Alexis, Vitali, Giulio Cesare, Magistri, Paolo, Assirati, Giacomo, Felli, Emanuele, Wakabayashi, Taiga, Pessaux, Patrick, Piardi, Tullio, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, de’Angelis, Nicola, Briceno, Delgado Francisco Javier, Rampoldi, Antonio Gaetano, Adam, Renè, Cherqui, Daniel, Aldrighetti, Luca, and Memeo, Riccardo
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- 2023
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20. Correction to: Prospective minimally invasive pancreatic resections from the IGOMIPS registry: a snapshot of daily practice in Italy on 1191 between 2019 and 2022
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Boggi, Ugo, Donisi, Greta, Napoli, Niccolò, Partelli, Stefano, Esposito, Alessandro, Ferrari, Giovanni, Butturini, Giovanni, Morelli, Luca, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, Viola, Massimo, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Troisi, Roberto, Vivarelli, Marco, Jovine, Elio, Ferrero, Alessandro, Bracale, Umberto, Alfieri, Sergio, Casadei, Riccardo, Ercolani, Giorgio, Moraldi, Luca, Molino, Carlo, Dalla Valle, Raffaele, Ettorre, Giuseppe, Memeo, Riccardo, Zanus, Giacomo, Belli, Andrea, Gruttadauria, Salvatore, Brolese, Alberto, Coratti, Andrea, Garulli, Gianluca, Romagnoli, Renato, Massani, Marco, Borghi, Felice, Belli, Giulio, Coppola, Roberto, Falconi, Massimo, Salvia, Roberto, and Zerbi, Alessandro
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- 2024
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21. Hippo pathway dysregulation in gastric cancer: from Helicobacter pylori infection to tumor promotion and progression
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Messina, Beatrice, Lo Sardo, Federica, Scalera, Stefano, Memeo, Lorenzo, Colarossi, Cristina, Mare, Marzia, Blandino, Giovanni, Ciliberto, Gennaro, Maugeri-Saccà, Marcello, and Bon, Giulia
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- 2023
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22. Robotic surgery in emergency setting: 2021 WSES position paper
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de’Angelis, Nicola, Khan, Jim, Marchegiani, Francesco, Bianchi, Giorgio, Aisoni, Filippo, Alberti, Daniele, Ansaloni, Luca, Biffl, Walter, Chiara, Osvaldo, Ceccarelli, Graziano, Coccolini, Federico, Cicuttin, Enrico, D’Hondt, Mathieu, Di Saverio, Salomone, Diana, Michele, De Simone, Belinda, Espin-Basany, Eloy, Fichtner-Feigl, Stefan, Kashuk, Jeffry, Kouwenhoven, Ewout, Leppaniemi, Ari, Beghdadi, Nassiba, Memeo, Riccardo, Milone, Marco, Moore, Ernest, Peitzmann, Andrew, Pessaux, Patrick, Pikoulis, Manos, Pisano, Michele, Ris, Frederic, Sartelli, Massimo, Spinoglio, Giuseppe, Sugrue, Michael, Tan, Edward, Gavriilidis, Paschalis, Weber, Dieter, Kluger, Yoram, and Catena, Fausto
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- 2022
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23. Laparoscopic major hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma in elderly patients: a multicentric propensity score‑based analysis
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Delvecchio, Antonella, Conticchio, Maria, Ratti, Francesca, Gelli, Maximiliano, Anelli, Ferdinando Massimiliano, Laurent, Alexis, Vitali, Giulio Cesare, Magistri, Paolo, Assirati, Giacomo, Felli, Emanuele, Wakabayashi, Taiga, Pessaux, Patrick, Piardi, Tullio, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, de’Angelis, Nicola, Briceño-Delgado, Javier, Adam, Rene, Cherqui, Daniel, Aldrighetti, Luca, and Memeo, Riccardo
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- 2021
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24. Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Partial Mesorectal Excision for Cancer of the High Rectum: A Single-Center Study with Propensity Score Matching Analysis
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de’Angelis, Nicola, Notarnicola, Margerita, Martínez-Pérez, Aleix, Memeo, Riccardo, Charpy, Cecile, Urciuoli, Irene, Maroso, Fabio, Sommacale, Daniele, Amiot, Aurelien, Canouï-Poitrine, Florence, Levesque, Eric, and Brunetti, Francesco
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- 2020
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25. Outcomes of surgical treatment of the tibial tuberosity fractures in skeletally immature patients: an update
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Formiconi, Federica, D’Amato, Raffaele Dario, Voto, Andrea, Panuccio, Elena, and Memeo, Antonio
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- 2020
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26. Hepatocellular carcinoma surgical and oncological trends in a national multicentric population: the HERCOLES experience
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Famularo, Simone, Donadon, Matteo, Cipriani, Federica, Ardito, Francesco, Carissimi, Francesca, Perri, Pasquale, Iaria, Maurizio, Dominioni, Tommaso, Zanello, Matteo, Conci, Simone, Molfino, Sarah, LaBarba, Giuliano, Ferrari, Cecilia, Germani, Paola, Patauner, Stefan, Pinotti, Enrico, Lodo, Enrico, Garatti, Marco, Sciannamea, Ivano, Troci, Albert, Conticchio, Maria, Floridi, Antonio, Chiarelli, Marco, Fumagalli, Luca, Memeo, Riccardo, Crespi, Michele, Antonucci, Adelmo, Zimmitti, Giuseppe, Zanus, Giacomo, Zago, Mauro, Frena, Antonio, Tarchi, Paola, Griseri, Guido, Ercolani, Giorgio, Baiocchi, Gian Luca, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Jovine, Elio, Maestri, Marcello, DallaValle, Raffaele, Grazi, Gian Luca, Giuliante, Felice, Aldrighetti, Luca, Torzilli, Guido, and Romano, Fabrizio
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- 2020
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27. Intracorporeal versus extracorporeal anastomosis in laparoscopic right hemicolectomy: results from the CLIMHET study group
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Bou Saleh, N., Voron, T., De’Angelis, N., Franco, I., Canoui-Poitrine, F., Mutter, D., Brunetti, F., Gagnière, J., Memeo, R., Pezet, D., Monange, B., Pereira, B., and Le Roy, B.
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- 2020
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28. Functional outcome and quality of life evaluation of graciloplasty for the treatment of complex recto-vaginal and recto-urethral fistulas
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Picciariello, Arcangelo, Papagni, Vincenzo, De Fazio, Michele, Martines, Gennaro, Memeo, Riccardo, Vitarelli, Antonio, Dibra, Rigers, and Altomare, Donato F.
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- 2020
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29. Disruptive environmental chemicals and cellular mechanisms that confer resistance to cell death
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Narayanan, Kannan Badri, Ali, Manaf, Barclay, Barry J, Cheng, Qiang Shawn, D'Abronzo, Leandro, Dornetshuber-Fleiss, Rita, Ghosh, Paramita M, Gonzalez Guzman, Michael J, Lee, Tae-Jin, Leung, Po Sing, Li, Lin, Luanpitpong, Suidjit, Ratovitski, Edward, Rojanasakul, Yon, Romano, Maria Fiammetta, Romano, Simona, Sinha, Ranjeet K, Yedjou, Clement, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Al-Temaimi, Rabeah, Amedei, Amedeo, Brown, Dustin G, Ryan, Elizabeth P, Colacci, Annamaria, Hamid, Roslida A, Mondello, Chiara, Raju, Jayadev, Salem, Hosni K, Woodrick, Jordan, Scovassi, A Ivana, Singh, Neetu, Vaccari, Monica, Roy, Rabindra, Forte, Stefano, Memeo, Lorenzo, Kim, Seo Yun, Bisson, William H, Lowe, Leroy, and Park, Hyun Ho
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Generic health relevance ,Animals ,Carcinogenesis ,Carcinogens ,Environmental ,Cell Death ,Environmental Exposure ,Hazardous Substances ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Cell death is a process of dying within biological cells that are ceasing to function. This process is essential in regulating organism development, tissue homeostasis, and to eliminate cells in the body that are irreparably damaged. In general, dysfunction in normal cellular death is tightly linked to cancer progression. Specifically, the up-regulation of pro-survival factors, including oncogenic factors and antiapoptotic signaling pathways, and the down-regulation of pro-apoptotic factors, including tumor suppressive factors, confers resistance to cell death in tumor cells, which supports the emergence of a fully immortalized cellular phenotype. This review considers the potential relevance of ubiquitous environmental chemical exposures that have been shown to disrupt key pathways and mechanisms associated with this sort of dysfunction. Specifically, bisphenol A, chlorothalonil, dibutyl phthalate, dichlorvos, lindane, linuron, methoxychlor and oxyfluorfen are discussed as prototypical chemical disruptors; as their effects relate to resistance to cell death, as constituents within environmental mixtures and as potential contributors to environmental carcinogenesis.
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- 2015
30. The effect of environmental chemicals on the tumor microenvironment
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Casey, Stephanie C, Vaccari, Monica, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Al-Temaimi, Rabeah, Amedei, Amedeo, Barcellos-Hoff, Mary Helen, Brown, Dustin G, Chapellier, Marion, Christopher, Joseph, Curran, Colleen S, Forte, Stefano, Hamid, Roslida A, Heneberg, Petr, Koch, Daniel C, Krishnakumar, PK, Laconi, Ezio, Maguer-Satta, Veronique, Marongiu, Fabio, Memeo, Lorenzo, Mondello, Chiara, Raju, Jayadev, Roman, Jesse, Roy, Rabindra, Ryan, Elizabeth P, Ryeom, Sandra, Salem, Hosni K, Scovassi, A Ivana, Singh, Neetu, Soucek, Laura, Vermeulen, Louis, Whitfield, Jonathan R, Woodrick, Jordan, Colacci, Annamaria, Bisson, William H, and Felsher, Dean W
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Stem Cell Research ,Cancer ,Prevention ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Animals ,Carcinogenesis ,Environmental Exposure ,Hazardous Substances ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Tumor Microenvironment ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Potentially carcinogenic compounds may cause cancer through direct DNA damage or through indirect cellular or physiological effects. To study possible carcinogens, the fields of endocrinology, genetics, epigenetics, medicine, environmental health, toxicology, pharmacology and oncology must be considered. Disruptive chemicals may also contribute to multiple stages of tumor development through effects on the tumor microenvironment. In turn, the tumor microenvironment consists of a complex interaction among blood vessels that feed the tumor, the extracellular matrix that provides structural and biochemical support, signaling molecules that send messages and soluble factors such as cytokines. The tumor microenvironment also consists of many host cellular effectors including multipotent stromal cells/mesenchymal stem cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cell precursors, antigen-presenting cells, lymphocytes and innate immune cells. Carcinogens can influence the tumor microenvironment through effects on epithelial cells, the most common origin of cancer, as well as on stromal cells, extracellular matrix components and immune cells. Here, we review how environmental exposures can perturb the tumor microenvironment. We suggest a role for disrupting chemicals such as nickel chloride, Bisphenol A, butyltins, methylmercury and paraquat as well as more traditional carcinogens, such as radiation, and pharmaceuticals, such as diabetes medications, in the disruption of the tumor microenvironment. Further studies interrogating the role of chemicals and their mixtures in dose-dependent effects on the tumor microenvironment could have important general mechanistic implications for the etiology and prevention of tumorigenesis.
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- 2015
31. Assessing the carcinogenic potential of low-dose exposures to chemical mixtures in the environment: the challenge ahead
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Goodson, William H, Lowe, Leroy, Carpenter, David O, Gilbertson, Michael, Manaf Ali, Abdul, Lopez de Cerain Salsamendi, Adela, Lasfar, Ahmed, Carnero, Amancio, Azqueta, Amaya, Amedei, Amedeo, Charles, Amelia K, Collins, Andrew R, Ward, Andrew, Salzberg, Anna C, Colacci, Annamaria, Olsen, Ann-Karin, Berg, Arthur, Barclay, Barry J, Zhou, Binhua P, Blanco-Aparicio, Carmen, Baglole, Carolyn J, Dong, Chenfang, Mondello, Chiara, Hsu, Chia-Wen, Naus, Christian C, Yedjou, Clement, Curran, Colleen S, Laird, Dale W, Koch, Daniel C, Carlin, Danielle J, Felsher, Dean W, Roy, Debasish, Brown, Dustin G, Ratovitski, Edward, Ryan, Elizabeth P, Corsini, Emanuela, Rojas, Emilio, Moon, Eun-Yi, Laconi, Ezio, Marongiu, Fabio, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Chiaradonna, Ferdinando, Darroudi, Firouz, Martin, Francis L, Van Schooten, Frederik J, Goldberg, Gary S, Wagemaker, Gerard, Nangami, Gladys N, Calaf, Gloria M, Williams, Graeme, Wolf, Gregory T, Koppen, Gudrun, Brunborg, Gunnar, Lyerly, H Kim, Krishnan, Harini, Ab Hamid, Hasiah, Yasaei, Hemad, Sone, Hideko, Kondoh, Hiroshi, Salem, Hosni K, Hsu, Hsue-Yin, Park, Hyun Ho, Koturbash, Igor, Miousse, Isabelle R, Scovassi, A Ivana, Klaunig, James E, Vondráček, Jan, Raju, Jayadev, Roman, Jesse, Wise, John Pierce, Whitfield, Jonathan R, Woodrick, Jordan, Christopher, Joseph A, Ochieng, Josiah, Martinez-Leal, Juan Fernando, Weisz, Judith, Kravchenko, Julia, Sun, Jun, Prudhomme, Kalan R, Narayanan, Kannan Badri, Cohen-Solal, Karine A, Moorwood, Kim, Gonzalez, Laetitia, Soucek, Laura, Jian, Le, D'Abronzo, Leandro S, Lin, Liang-Tzung, Li, Lin, Gulliver, Linda, McCawley, Lisa J, Memeo, Lorenzo, Vermeulen, Louis, Leyns, Luc, Zhang, Luoping, Valverde, Mahara, Khatami, Mahin, Romano, Maria Fiammetta, Chapellier, Marion, Williams, Marc A, and Wade, Mark
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Animals ,Carcinogenesis ,Carcinogens ,Environmental ,Environmental Exposure ,Hazardous Substances ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Lifestyle factors are responsible for a considerable portion of cancer incidence worldwide, but credible estimates from the World Health Organization and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) suggest that the fraction of cancers attributable to toxic environmental exposures is between 7% and 19%. To explore the hypothesis that low-dose exposures to mixtures of chemicals in the environment may be combining to contribute to environmental carcinogenesis, we reviewed 11 hallmark phenotypes of cancer, multiple priority target sites for disruption in each area and prototypical chemical disruptors for all targets, this included dose-response characterizations, evidence of low-dose effects and cross-hallmark effects for all targets and chemicals. In total, 85 examples of chemicals were reviewed for actions on key pathways/mechanisms related to carcinogenesis. Only 15% (13/85) were found to have evidence of a dose-response threshold, whereas 59% (50/85) exerted low-dose effects. No dose-response information was found for the remaining 26% (22/85). Our analysis suggests that the cumulative effects of individual (non-carcinogenic) chemicals acting on different pathways, and a variety of related systems, organs, tissues and cells could plausibly conspire to produce carcinogenic synergies. Additional basic research on carcinogenesis and research focused on low-dose effects of chemical mixtures needs to be rigorously pursued before the merits of this hypothesis can be further advanced. However, the structure of the World Health Organization International Programme on Chemical Safety 'Mode of Action' framework should be revisited as it has inherent weaknesses that are not fully aligned with our current understanding of cancer biology.
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- 2015
32. 2020 WSES guidelines for the detection and management of bile duct injury during cholecystectomy
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de’Angelis, Nicola, Catena, Fausto, Memeo, Riccardo, Coccolini, Federico, Martínez-Pérez, Aleix, Romeo, Oreste M., De Simone, Belinda, Di Saverio, Salomone, Brustia, Raffaele, Rhaiem, Rami, Piardi, Tullio, Conticchio, Maria, Marchegiani, Francesco, Beghdadi, Nassiba, Abu-Zidan, Fikri M., Alikhanov, Ruslan, Allard, Marc-Antoine, Allievi, Niccolò, Amaddeo, Giuliana, Ansaloni, Luca, Andersson, Roland, Andolfi, Enrico, Azfar, Mohammad, Bala, Miklosh, Benkabbou, Amine, Ben-Ishay, Offir, Bianchi, Giorgio, Biffl, Walter L., Brunetti, Francesco, Carra, Maria Clotilde, Casanova, Daniel, Celentano, Valerio, Ceresoli, Marco, Chiara, Osvaldo, Cimbanassi, Stefania, Bini, Roberto, Coimbra, Raul, Luigi de’Angelis, Gian, Decembrino, Francesco, De Palma, Andrea, de Reuver, Philip R., Domingo, Carlos, Cotsoglou, Christian, Ferrero, Alessandro, Fraga, Gustavo P., Gaiani, Federica, Gheza, Federico, Gurrado, Angela, Harrison, Ewen, Henriquez, Angel, Hofmeyr, Stefan, Iadarola, Roberta, Kashuk, Jeffry L., Kianmanesh, Reza, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Kluger, Yoram, Landi, Filippo, Langella, Serena, Lapointe, Real, Le Roy, Bertrand, Luciani, Alain, Machado, Fernando, Maggi, Umberto, Maier, Ronald V., Mefire, Alain Chichom, Hiramatsu, Kazuhiro, Ordoñez, Carlos, Patrizi, Franca, Planells, Manuel, Peitzman, Andrew B., Pekolj, Juan, Perdigao, Fabiano, Pereira, Bruno M., Pessaux, Patrick, Pisano, Michele, Puyana, Juan Carlos, Rizoli, Sandro, Portigliotti, Luca, Romito, Raffaele, Sakakushev, Boris, Sanei, Behnam, Scatton, Olivier, Serradilla-Martin, Mario, Schneck, Anne-Sophie, Sissoko, Mohammed Lamine, Sobhani, Iradj, ten Broek, Richard P., Testini, Mario, Valinas, Roberto, Veloudis, Giorgos, Vitali, Giulio Cesare, Weber, Dieter, Zorcolo, Luigi, Giuliante, Felice, Gavriilidis, Paschalis, Fuks, David, and Sommacale, Daniele
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- 2021
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33. Enabling visually impaired people to learn three-dimensional tactile graphics with a 3DOF haptic mouse
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Memeo, Mariacarla, Jacono, Marco, Sandini, Giulio, and Brayda, Luca
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- 2021
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34. Adipose stem cell niche reprograms the colorectal cancer stem cell metastatic machinery
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Di Franco, Simone, Bianca, Paola, Sardina, Davide Stefano, Turdo, Alice, Gaggianesi, Miriam, Veschi, Veronica, Nicotra, Annalisa, Mangiapane, Laura Rosa, Lo Iacono, Melania, Pillitteri, Irene, van Hooff, Sander, Martorana, Federica, Motta, Gianmarco, Gulotta, Eliana, Lentini, Vincenzo Luca, Martorana, Emanuele, Fiori, Micol Eleonora, Vieni, Salvatore, Bongiorno, Maria Rita, Giannone, Giorgio, Giuffrida, Dario, Memeo, Lorenzo, Colarossi, Lorenzo, Mare, Marzia, Vigneri, Paolo, Todaro, Matilde, De Maria, Ruggero, Medema, Jan Paul, and Stassi, Giorgio
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- 2021
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35. Liver Resection vs Nonsurgical Treatments for Patients With Early Multinodular Hepatocellular Carcinoma
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Vitale, Alessandro, Romano, Pierluigi, Cillo, Umberto, Lauterio, Andrea, Sangiovanni, Angelo, Cabibbo, Giuseppe, Missale, Gabriele, Marseglia, Mariarosaria, Trevisani, Franco, Foschi, Francesco Giuseppe, Cipriani, Federica, Famularo, Simone, Marra, Fabio, Saitta, Carlo, Serenari, Matteo, Vidili, Gianpaolo, Morisco, Filomena, Caturelli, Eugenio, Mega, Andrea, Pelizzaro, Filippo, Nicolini, Daniele, Ardito, Francesco, Garancini, Mattia, Masotto, Alberto, Baroni, Gianluca Svegliati, Azzaroli, Francesco, Giannini, Edoardo, Perri, Pasquale, Scarinci, Andrea, Fontana, Andrea Pierluigi, Brunetto, Maurizia Rossana, Iaria, Maurizio, Di Marco, Maria, Nardone, Gerardo, Dominioni, Tommaso, Lai, Quirino, Ferrari, Cecilia, Rapaccini, Gian Ludovico, Rodolfo, Sacco, Romano, Maurizio, Conci, Simone, Zoli, Marco, Conticchio, Maria, Zanello, Matteo, Zimmitti, Giuseppe, Fumagalli, Luca, Troci, Albert, Germani, Paola, Gasbarrini, Antonio, La Barba, Giuliano, De Angelis, Michela, Patauner, Stefan, Molfino, Sarah, Zago, Mauro, Pinotti, Enrico, Frigo, Anna Chiara, Baiocchi, Gian Luca, Frena, Antonio, Boccia, Luigi, Ercolani, Giorgio, Tarchi, Paola, Crespi, Michele, Chiarelli, Marco, Abu Hilal, Moh’d, Cescon, Matteo, Memeo, Riccardo, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Zanus, Giacomo, Griseri, Guido, Rossi, Massimo, Maestri, Marcello, Della Valle, Raffaele, Ferrero, Alessandro, Grazi, Gian Luca, Romano, Fabrizio, Giuliante, Felice, Vivarelli, Marco, Jovine, Elio, Torzilli, Guido, Aldrighetti, Luca, and De Carlis, Luciano
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IMPORTANCE: The 2022 Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer algorithm currently discourages liver resection (LR) for patients with multinodular hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) presenting with 2 or 3 nodules that are each 3 cm or smaller. OBJECTIVE: To compare the efficacy of liver resection (LR), percutaneous radiofrequency ablation (PRFA), and transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) in patients with multinodular HCC. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study is a retrospective analysis conducted using data from the HE.RC.O.LE.S register (n = 5331) for LR patients and the ITA.LI.CA database (n = 7056) for PRFA and TACE patients. A matching-adjusted indirect comparison (MAIC) method was applied to balance data and potential confounding factors between the 3 groups. Included were patients from multiple centers from 2008 to 2020; data were analyzed from January to December 2023. INTERVENTIONS: LR, PRFA, or TACE. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Survival rates at 1, 3, and 5 years were calculated. Cox MAIC-weighted multivariable analysis and competing risk analysis were used to assess outcomes. RESULTS: A total of 720 patients with early multinodular HCC were included, 543 males (75.4%), 177 females (24.6%), and 350 individuals older than 70 years (48.6%). There were 296 patients in the LR group, 240 who underwent PRFA, and 184 who underwent TACE. After MAIC, LR exhibited 1-, 3-, and 5-year survival rates of 89.11%, 70.98%, and 56.44%, respectively. PRFA showed rates of 94.01%, 65.20%, and 39.93%, while TACE displayed rates of 90.88%, 48.95%, and 29.24%. Multivariable Cox survival analysis in the weighted population showed a survival benefit over alternative treatments (PRFA vs LR: hazard ratio [HR], 1.41; 95% CI, 1.07-1.86; P = .01; TACE vs LR: HR, 1.86; 95% CI, 1.29-2.68; P = .001). Competing risk analysis confirmed a lower risk of cancer-related death in LR compared with PRFA and TACE. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: For patients with early multinodular HCC who are ineligible for transplant, LR should be prioritized as the primary therapeutic option, followed by PRFA and TACE when LR is not feasible. These findings provide valuable insights for clinical decision-making in this patient population.
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- 2024
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36. Environmental effects in the interaction and merging of galaxies in zCOSMOS
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Kampczyk, P., Lilly, S. J., de Ravel, L., Fèvre, O. Le, Bolzonella, M., Carollo, C. M., Diener, C., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Maier, C., Renzini, A., Sargent, M. T., Vergani, D., Abbas, U., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Bordoloi, R., Caputi, K., Contini, T., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kneib, J. -P., Koekemoer, A. M., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Leauthaud, A., Mainieri, V., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Scodeggio, M., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Kartaltepe, J., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) We analyze the environments and galactic properties (morphologies and star-formation histories) of a sample of 153 close kinematic pairs in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 1 identified in the zCOSMOS-bright 10k spectroscopic sample of galaxies. Correcting for projection effects, the fraction of close kinematic pairs is three times higher in the top density quartile than in the lowest one. This translates to a three times higher merger rate because the merger timescales are shown, from mock catalogues based on the Millennium simulation, to be largely independent of environment once the same corrections for projection is applied. We then examine the morphologies and stellar populations of galaxies in the pairs, comparing them to control samples that are carefully matched in environment so as to remove as much as possible the well-known effects of environment on the properties of the parent population of galaxies. Once the environment is properly taken into account in this way, we find that the early-late morphology mix is the same as for the parent population, but that the fraction of irregular galaxies is boosted by 50-75%, with a disproportionate increase in the number of irregular-irregular pairs (factor of 4-8 times), due to the disturbance of disk galaxies. Future dry-mergers, involving elliptical galaxies comprise less than 5% of all close kinematic pairs. In the closest pairs, there is a boost in the specific star-formation rates of star-forming galaxies of a factor of 2-4, and there is also evidence for an increased incidence of post star-burst galaxies. Although significant for the galaxies involved, the "excess" star-formation associated with pairs represents only about 5% of the integrated star-formation activity in the parent sample. Although most pair galaxies are in dense environments, the effects of interaction appear to be largest in the lower density environments., Comment: 38 pages, 17 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2011
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37. The zCOSMOS redshift survey : Influence of luminosity, mass and environment on the galaxy merger rate
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de Ravel, L., Kampczyk, P., Fèvre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Lopez-Sanjuan, C., Bolzonella, M., Kovac, K., Abbas, U., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Contini, T., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., Dunlop, J. S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kneib, J. -P., Koekemoer, A. M., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Leauthaud, A., Maier, C., Mainieri, V., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Scodeggio, M., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Vergani, D., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Carollo, C. M., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., Renzini, A., Scaramella, R., and Scarlata, C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The contribution of major mergers to galaxy mass assembly along cosmic time is an important ingredient to the galaxy evolution scenario. We aim to measure the evolution of the merger rate for both luminosity/mass selected galaxy samples and investigate its dependence with the local environment. We use a sample of 10644 spectroscopically observed galaxies from the zCOSMOS redshift survey to identify pairs of galaxies destined to merge, using only pairs for which the velocity difference and projected separation of both components with a confirmed spectroscopic redshift indicate a high probability of merging. We have identified 263 spectroscopically confirmed pairs with r_p^{max} = 100 h^{-1} kpc. We find that the density of mergers depends on luminosity/mass, being higher for fainter/less massive galaxies, while the number of mergers a galaxy will experience does not depends significantly on its intrinsic luminosity but rather on its stellar mass. We find that the pair fraction and merger rate increase with local galaxy density, a property observed up to redshift z=1. We find that the dependence of the merger rate on the luminosity or mass of galaxies is already present up to redshifts z=1, and that the evolution of the volumetric merger rate of bright (massive) galaxies is relatively flat with redshift with a mean value of 3*10^{-4} (8*10^{-5} respectively) mergers h^3 Mpc^{-3} Gyr^{-1}. The dependence of the merger rate with environment indicates that dense environments favors major merger events as can be expected from the hierarchical scenario. The environment therefore has a direct impact in shapping-up the mass function and its evolution therefore plays an important role on the mass growth of galaxies along cosmic time., Comment: submitted to A&A, 17 pages, 12 figures
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- 2011
38. zCOSMOS 10k-bright spectroscopic sample: exploring mass and environment dependence in early-type galaxies
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Moresco, M., Pozzetti, L., Cimatti, A., Zamorani, G., Mignoli, M., Di Cesare, S., Bolzonella, M., Zucca, E., Lilly, S., Kovac, K., Scodeggio, M., Cassata, P., Tasca, L., Vergani, D., Halliday, C., Carollo, M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Guzzo, L., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., Scarlata, C., and Scoville, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the analysis of the U-V rest-frame color distribution and some spectral features as a function of mass and environment for two sample of early-type galaxies up to z=1 extracted from the zCOSMOS spectroscopic survey. The first sample ("red galaxies") is defined with a photometric classification, while the second ("ETGs") by combining morphological, photometric, and spectroscopic properties to obtain a more reliable sample. We find that the color distribution of red galaxies is not strongly dependent on environment for all mass bins, with galaxies in overdense regions redder than galaxies in underdense regions with a difference of 0.027\pm0.008 mag. The dependence on mass is far more significant, with average colors of massive galaxies redder by 0.093\pm0.007 mag than low-mass galaxies throughout the entire redshift range. We study the color-mass relation, finding a mean slope 0.12\pm0.005, while the color-environment relation is flatter, with a slope always smaller than 0.04. The spectral analysis that we perform on our ETGs sample is in good agreement with our photometric results: we find for D4000 a dependence on mass between high and low-mass galaxies, and a much weaker dependence on environment (respectively a difference of of 0.11\pm0.02 and of 0.05\pm0.02); for the equivalent width of H{\delta}we measure a difference of 0.28\pm0.08 {\AA}across the same mass range and no significant dependence on environment.By analyzing the lookback time of early-type galaxies, we support the possibility of a downsizing scenario, in which massive galaxies with a stronger D4000 and an almost constant equivalent width of $H\delta$ formed their mass at higher redshift than lower mass ones. We also conclude that the main driver of galaxy evolution is the galaxy mass, the environment playing a subdominant role., Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2010
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39. The bimodality of the 10k zCOSMOS-bright galaxies up to z ~ 1: a new statistical and portable classification based on the optical galaxy properties
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Coppa, G., Mignoli, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Lilly, S. J., Bolzonella, M., Scodeggio, M., Vergani, D., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., Cimatti, A., Zucca, E., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Fèvre, O. Le, Renzini, A., Mainieri, V., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Memeo, P., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Kneib, J. -P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. le, Brun, V. le, Maier, C., Pellò, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Scarlata, C., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Capak, P., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., and Scoville, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Our goal is to develop a new and reliable statistical method to classify galaxies from large surveys. We probe the reliability of the method by comparing it with a three-dimensional classification cube, using the same set of spectral, photometric and morphological parameters.We applied two different methods of classification to a sample of galaxies extracted from the zCOSMOS redshift survey, in the redshift range 0.5 < z < 1.3. The first method is the combination of three independent classification schemes, while the second method exploits an entirely new approach based on statistical analyses like Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Unsupervised Fuzzy Partition (UFP) clustering method. The PCA+UFP method has been applied also to a lower redshift sample (z < 0.5), exploiting the same set of data but the spectral ones, replaced by the equivalent width of H$\alpha$. The comparison between the two methods shows fairly good agreement on the definition on the two main clusters, the early-type and the late-type galaxies ones. Our PCA-UFP method of classification is robust, flexible and capable of identifying the two main populations of galaxies as well as the intermediate population. The intermediate galaxy population shows many of the properties of the green valley galaxies, and constitutes a more coherent and homogeneous population. The fairly large redshift range of the studied sample allows us to behold the downsizing effect: galaxies with masses of the order of $3\cdot 10^{10}$ Msun mainly are found in transition from the late type to the early type group at $z>0.5$, while galaxies with lower masses - of the order of $10^{10}$ Msun - are in transition at later epochs; galaxies with $M <10^{10}$ Msun did not begin their transition yet, while galaxies with very large masses ($M > 5\cdot 10^{10}$ Msun) mostly completed their transition before $z\sim 1$., Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2010
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40. The zCOSMOS 10k-sample: the role of galaxy stellar mass in the colour-density relation up to z=1
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Cucciati, O., Iovino, A., Kovac, K., Scodeggio, M., Lilly, S. J., Bolzonella, M., Bardelli, S., Vergani, D., Tasca, L. A. M., Zucca, E., Zamorani, G., Pozzetti, L., Knobel, C., Oesch, P., Lamareille, F., Caputi, K., Kampczyk, P., Tresse, L., Maier, C., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fèvre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bongiorno, A., Coppa, G., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Pellò, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Koekemoer, A. M., Scoville, N., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Porciani, C., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] With the first 10000 spectra of the flux limited zCOSMOS sample (I<=22.5) we study the evolution of environmental effects on galaxy properties since z=1.0, and disentangle the dependence among galaxy colour, stellar mass and local density (3D local density contrast `delta', computed with the 5th nearest neighbour approach). We confirm that within a luminosity-limited sample (M_B<=-20.5-z) the fraction of red (U-B>=1) galaxies 'f_red' depends on delta at least up to z=1, with red galaxies residing mainly in high densities. This trend weakens for increasing z, and it is mirrored by the behaviour of the fraction of galaxies with D4000A break >=1.4. We also find that up to z=1 the fraction of galaxies with log(EW[OII]) >=1.15 is higher for lower delta, and also this dependence weakens for increasing z. Given the triple dependence among galaxy colours, stellar mass and delta, the colour-delta relation found in the luminosity-selected sample can be due to the broad range of stellar masses. Thus, we fix the stellar mass and we find that in this case the colour-delta relation is flat up to z=1 for galaxies with log(M/M_sun)>=10.7. This means that for these masses the colour-delta relation found in a luminosity-selected sample is the result of the combined colour-mass and mass-delta relations. In contrast, we find that for 0.1<=z<=0.5 and log(M/M_sun)<=10.7 'f_red' depends on delta even at fixed mass. In these mass and z ranges, environment affects directly also galaxy colours. We suggest a scenario in which the colour depends primarily on stellar mass, but for relatively low mass galaxies the local density modulates this dependence. These galaxies formed more recently, in an epoch when evolved structures were already in place, and their longer SFH allowed environment-driven physical processes to operate during longer periods of time., Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, submitted to A&A, revised version after referee comments
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- 2010
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41. Understanding the shape of the galaxy two-point correlation function at z~1 in the COSMOS field
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de la Torre, S., Guzzo, L., Kovac, K., Porciani, C., Abbas, U., Meneux, B., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Sanders, D., Scodeggio, M., Scoville, N., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Welikala, N., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Ilbert, O., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Pozzetti, L., Presotto, V., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate how the shape of the galaxy two-point correlation function as measured in the zCOSMOS survey depends on local environment, quantified in terms of the density contrast on scales of 5 Mpc/h. We show that the flat shape previously observed at redshifts between z=0.6 and z=1 can be explained by this volume being simply 10% over-abundant in high-density environments, with respect to a Universal density probability distribution function. When galaxies corresponding to the top 10% tail of the distribution are excluded, the measured w_p(r_p) steepens and becomes indistinguishable from LCDM predictions on all scales. This is the same effect recognised by Abbas & Sheth in the SDSS data at z~0 and explained as a natural consequence of halo-environment correlations in a hierarchical scenario. Galaxies living in high-density regions trace dark matter halos with typically higher masses, which are more correlated. If the density probability distribution function of the sample is particularly rich in high-density regions because of the variance introduced by its finite size, this produces a distorted two-point correlation function. We argue that this is the dominant effect responsible for the observed "peculiar" clustering in the COSMOS field., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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42. Mass and environment as drivers of galaxy evolution in SDSS and zCOSMOS and the origin of the Schechter function
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Peng, Y., Lilly, S. J., Kovac, K., Bolzonella, M., Pozzetti, L., Renzini, A., Zamorani, G., Ilbert, O., Knobel, C., Iovino, A., Maier, C., Cucciati, O., Tasca, L., Carollo, C. M., Silverman, J., Kampczyk, P., de Ravel, L., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., Contini, T., Mainieri, V., Scodeggio, M., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., de la Torre, S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Montero, E. Perez, Pello, R., Ricciardelli, E., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Welikala, N., Zucca, E., Oesch, P., Abbas, U., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Hasinger, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Nair, P., Porciani, C., Presotto, V., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the inter-relationships between mass, star-formation rate and environment in the SDSS, zCOSMOS and other surveys. The differential effects of mass and environment are completely separable to z ~ 1, indicating that two distinct processes are operating, "mass-quenching" and "environment-quenching". Environment-quenching, at fixed over-density, evidently does not change with epoch to z ~ 1, suggesting that it occurs as large-scale structure develops in the Universe. The observed constancy of the mass-function shape for star-forming galaxies, demands that the mass-quenching of galaxies around and above M*, must be proportional to their star-formation rates at all z < 2. We postulate that this simple mass-quenching law also holds over a much broader range of stellar mass and epoch. These two simple quenching processes, plus some additional quenching due to merging, then naturally produce (a) a quasi-static Schechter mass function for star-forming galaxies with a value of M* that is set by the proportionality between the star-formation and mass-quenching rates, (b) a double Schechter function for passive galaxies with two components: the dominant one is produced by mass-quenching and has exactly the same M* as the star-forming galaxies but an alpha shallower by +1, while the other is produced by environment effects and has the same M* and alpha as the star-forming galaxies, and is larger in high density environments. Subsequent merging of quenched galaxies modifies these predictions somewhat in the denser environments, slightly increasing M* and making alpha more negative. All of these detailed quantitative relationships between the Schechter parameters are indeed seen in the SDSS, lending strong support to our simple empirically-based model. The model naturally produces for passive galaxies the "anti-hierarchical" run of mean ages and alpha-element abundances with mass., Comment: 66 pages, 19 figures, 1 movie, accepted for publication in ApJ. The movie is also available at http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/zCOSMOS/MF_simulation_d1_d4.mov
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- 2010
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43. The [OIII] emission line luminosity function of optically selected type-2 AGN from zCOSMOS
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Bongiorno, A., Mignoli, M., Zamorani, G., Lamareille, F., Lanzuisi, G., Miyaji, T., Bolzonella, M., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Brusa, M., Caputi, K., Civano, F., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Halliday, C., Hasinger, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Merloni, A., Nair, P., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Salvato, M., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalog of 213 type-2 AGN selected from the zCOSMOS survey. The selected sample covers a wide redshift range (0.15
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- 2009
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44. The zCOSMOS-Bright survey: the clustering of early and late galaxy morphological types since z~1
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de la Torre, S., Fèvre, O. Le, Porciani, C., Guzzo, L., Meneux, B., Abbas, U., Tasca, L., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Halliday, C., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pelló, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Oesch, P., Pozzetti, L., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the spatial clustering of galaxies as a function of their morphological type at z~0.8, for the first time in a deep redshift survey with full morphological information. This is obtained by combining high-resolution HST imaging and VLT spectroscopy for about 8,500 galaxies to I_AB=22.5 with accurate spectroscopic redshifts from the zCOSMOS-Bright redshift survey. At this epoch, early-type galaxies already show a significantly stronger clustering than late-type galaxies on all probed scales. A comparison to the SDSS at z~0.1, shows that the relative clustering strength between early and late morphological classes tends to increase with cosmic time at small separations, while on large scales it shows no significant evolution since z~0.8. This suggests that most early-type galaxies had already formed in intermediate and dense environments at this epoch. Our results are consistent with a picture in which the relative clustering of different morphological types between z~1 and z~0, reflects the evolving role of environment in the morphological transformation of galaxies, on top of the global mass-driven evolution., Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2009
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45. Properties and environment of Radio Emitting Galaxies in the VLA-zCOSMOS survey
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Bardelli, S., Schinnerer, E., Smolcic, V., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Mignoli, M., Halliday, C., Kovac, K., Ciliegi, P., Caputi, K., Koekemoer, A. M., Bongiorno, A., Bondi, M., Bolzonella, M., Vergani, D., Pozzetti, L., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., LeFevre, O., Lilly, S., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., delaTorre, S., deRavel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., LeBorgne, J. -F., LeBrun, V., Maier, C., Pello`, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., Capak, P., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and Jahnke, K.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the properties and the environment of radio sources with optical counterpart from the combined VLA-COSMOS and zCOSMOS samples. The advantage of this sample is the availability of optical spectroscopic information, high quality redshifts, and accurate density determination. By comparing the star formation rates estimated from the optical spectral energy distribution with those based on the radio luminosity, we divide the radio sources in three families, passive AGN, non-passive AGN and star forming galaxies. These families occupy specific regions of the 8.0-4.5 $\mu$m infrared color--specific star formation plane, from which we extract the corresponding control samples. Only the passive AGN have a significantly different environment distribution from their control sample. The fraction of radio-loud passive AGN increases from ~2% in underdense regions to ~15% for overdensities (1+delta) greater than 10. This trend is also present as a function of richness of the groups hosting the radio sources. Passive AGN in overdensities tend to have higher radio luminosities than those in lower density environments. Since the black hole mass distribution is similar in both environments, we speculate that, for low radio luminosities, the radio emission is controlled (through fuel disponibility or confinement of radio jet by local gas pressure) by the interstellar medium of the host galaxy, while in other cases it is determined by the structure (group or cluster) in which the galaxy resides., Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures, A&A in press
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- 2009
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46. The optical spectra of Spitzer 24 micron galaxies in the COSMOS field: II. Faint infrared sources in the zCOSMOS-bright 10k catalogue
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Caputi, K. I., Lilly, S. J., Aussel, H., Floc'h, E. Le, Sanders, D., Maier, C., Frayer, D., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Scoville, N., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Ilbert, O., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Kartaltepe, J., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Salvato, M., Silverman, J., Surace, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Capak, P., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Elvis, M., Hasinger, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Pello, R., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., Scaramella, R., Scarlata, C., Schiminovich, D., Taniguchi, Y., and Zamojski, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used the zCOSMOS-bright 10k sample to identify 3244 Spitzer/MIPS 24-micron-selected galaxies with 0.06< S(24um)< 0.50 mJy and I(AB)<22.5, over 1.5 deg^2 of the COSMOS field, and studied different spectral properties, depending on redshift. At 0.2
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- 2009
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47. The nonlinear biasing of the 10k zCOSMOS galaxies up to z~1
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Kovac, K., Porciani, C., Lilly, S. J., Marinoni, C., Guzzo, L., Cucciati, O., Zamorani, G., Iovino, A., Oesch, P., Bolzonella, M., Peng, Y., Meneux, B., Zucca, E., Bardelli, S., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Finoguenov, A., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Montero, E. Perez, Pozzetti, L., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Scaramella, R., and Scoville, N. Z.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the overdensity field reconstructed in the volume of the COSMOS area to study the nonlinear biasing of the zCOSMOS galaxies. The galaxy overdensity field is reconstructed using the current sample of ~8500 accurate zCOSMOS redshifts at I(AB)<22.5 out to z~1 on scales R from 8 to 12 Mpc/h. By comparing the probability distribution function (PDF) of galaxy density contrast delta_g to the lognormal approximation of the PDF of the mass density contrast delta, we obtain the mean biasing function b(delta,z,R) between the galaxy and matter overdensity field and its second moments b(hat) and b(tilde) up to z~1. Over the redshift interval 0.4
= b(delta,z,R) delta is of the following characteristic shape. The function vanishes in the most underdense regions and then sharply rises in a nonlinear way towards the mean densities. is almost a linear tracer of the matter in the overdense regions, up to the most overdense regions in which it is nonlinear again and the local effective slope of vs. delta is smaller than unity. The function is evolving only slightly over the redshift interval 0.4 - Published
- 2009
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48. The zCOSMOS survey: the role of the environment in the evolution of the luminosity function of different galaxy types
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Zucca, E., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Zamorani, G., Ilbert, O., Pozzetti, L., Mignoli, M., Kovac, K., Lilly, S., Tresse, L., Tasca, L., Cassata, P., Halliday, C., Vergani, D., Caputi, K., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., LeFevre, O., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bongiorno, A., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., delaTorre, S., deRavel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., LeBorgne, J. F., LeBrun, V., Maier, C., Pello`, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Moresco, M., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., Arnouts, S., Aussel, H., Capak, P., Kartaltepe, J., Salvato, M., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and Thompson, D.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) We studied the evolution in the B band luminosity function to z~1 in the zCOSMOS 10k sample, for which both accurate galaxy classifications and a detailed description of the local density field are available. The global LF exhibits a brightening of ~0.7 mag in M* from z~0.2 to z~0.9. At low z, late types dominate at faint magnitudes, while the bright end is populated mainly by early types. At higher z, late-type galaxies evolve significantly and, at z~1, the contribution from the various types to the bright end of the LF is comparable. The evolution for early types is in both luminosity and normalization. A similar behaviour is exhibited by late types, but with an opposite trend for the normalization. Studying the role of the environment, we find that the global LF of galaxies in overdense regions has always a brighter M* and a flatter slope. In low density environments, the main contribution to the LF is from blue galaxies, while for high density environments there is an important contribution from red galaxies to the bright end. The differences between the global LF in the two environments are not due to only a difference in the relative numbers of red and blue galaxies, but also to their relative luminosity distributions: the value of M* for both types in underdense regions is always fainter than in overdense environments. The "specular" evolution of late- and early-type galaxies is consistent with a scenario where a part of blue galaxies is transformed in red galaxies with increasing cosmic time, without significant changes in the fraction of intermediate-type galaxies. The bulk of this tranformation in overdense regions probably happened before z~1, while it is still ongoing at lower z in underdense environments., Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, A&A in press
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- 2009
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49. The 10k zCOSMOS: morphological transformation of galaxies in the group environment since z~1
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Kovac, K., Lilly, S. J., Knobel, C., Bolzonella, M., Iovino, A., Carollo, C. M., Scarlata, C., Sargent, M., Cucciati, O., Zamorani, G., Pozzetti, L., Tasca, L. A. M., Scodeggio, M., Kampczyk, P., Peng, Y., Oesch, P., Zucca, E., Finoguenov, A., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., and Scoville, N. Z.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the evolution of galaxies inside and outside of the group environment since z=1 using a large well defined set of groups and galaxies from the zCOSMOS-bright redshift survey in the COSMOS field. The fraction of galaxies with early-type morphologies increases monotonically with M_B luminosity and stellar mass and with cosmic epoch. It is higher in the groups than elsewhere, especially at later epochs. The emerging environmental effect is superposed on a strong global mass-driven evolution, and at z~0.5 and log(M*/Msol)~10.2, the "effect" of group environment is equivalent to (only) about 0.2 dex in stellar mass or 2 Gyr in time. The stellar mass function of galaxies in groups is enriched in massive galaxies. We directly determine the transformation rates from late to early morphologies, and for transformations involving colour and star formation indicators. The transformation rates are systematically about twice as high in the groups as outside, or up to 3-4 times higher correcting for infall and the appearance of new groups. The rates reach values, for masses around the crossing mass 10^10.5 Msol, as high as (0.3-0.7)/Gyr in the groups, implying transformation timescales of 1.4-3 Gyr, compared with less than 0.2/Gyr, i.e. timescales >5 Gyr, outside of groups. All three transformation rates decrease at higher stellar masses, and must decrease also at the lower masses below 10^10 Msol which we cannot well probe. The rates involving colour and star formation are consistently higher than those for morphology, by a factor of about 50%. Our conclusion is that the transformations which drive the evolution of the overall galaxy population since z~1 must occur at a rate 2-4 times higher in groups than outside of them., Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2009
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50. K+a galaxies in the zCOSMOS Survey: Physical properties of systems in their post-starburst phase
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Vergani, D., Zamorani, G., Lilly, S. J., Lamareille, F., Halliday, C., Scodeggio, M., Vignali, C., Ciliegi, P., Bolzonella, M., Bondi, M., Kovac, K., Knobel, C., Zucca, E., Caputi, K., Pozzetti, L., Bardelli, S., Mignoli, M., Iovino, A., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bongiorno, A., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Kampczyk, P., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Koekemoer, A. M., Maccagni, A. Leauthaud D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., Capak, P., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The identities of the main processes triggering and quenching star-formation in galaxies remain unclear. A key stage in evolution, however, appears to be represented by post-starburst galaxies. To investigate their impact on galaxy evolution, we initiated a multiwavelength study of galaxies with k+a spectral features in the COSMOS field. We examine a mass-selected sample of k+a galaxies at z=0.48-1.2 using the spectroscopic zCOSMOS sample. K+a galaxies occupy the brightest tail of the luminosity distribution. They are as massive as quiescent galaxies and populate the green valley in the colour versus luminosity (or stellar mass) distribution. A small percentage (<8%) of these galaxies have radio and/or X-ray counterparts (implying an upper limit to the SFR of ~8Msun/yr). Over the entire redshift range explored, the class of k+a galaxies is morphologically a heterogeneous population with a similar incidence of bulge-dominated and disky galaxies. This distribution does not vary with the strength of the Hdelta absorption line but instead with stellar mass in a way reminiscent of the well-known mass-morphology relation. Although k+a galaxies are also found in underdense regions, they appear to reside typically in a similarly rich environment as quiescent galaxies on a physical scale of ~2-8Mpc, and in groups they show a morphological early-to-late type ratio similar to the quiescent galaxy class. With the current data set, we do not find evidence of statistical significant evolution in either the number/mass density of k+a galaxies at intermediate redshift with respect to the local values, or the spectral properties. Those galaxies, which are affected by a sudden quenching of their star-formation activity, may increase the stellar mass of the red-sequence by up to a non-negligible level of ~10%., Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics on 09/09/2009 (no changes wrt v1)
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- 2009
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