47 results on '"Papini, Andrea"'
Search Results
2. Average dissipation for stochastic transport equations with L\'evy noise
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, Papini, Andrea, and Rehmeier, Marco
- Subjects
Mathematics - Probability ,60H15, 76F55, 76F25, 35Q49, 35K10, 60J76 - Abstract
We show that, in one spatial and arbitrary jump dimension, the averaged solution of a Marcustype SPDE with pure jump L\'evy transport noise satisfies a dissipative deterministic equation involving a fractional Laplace-type operator. To this end, we identify the correct associated L\'evy measure for the driving noise. We consider this a first step in the direction of a non-local version of enhanced dissipation, a phenomenon recently proven to occur for Brownian transport noise and the associated local parabolic PDE by the first author. Moreover, we present numerical simulations, supporting the fact that dissipation occurs for the averaged solution, with a behavior akin to the diffusion due to a fractional Laplacian, but not in a pathwise sense., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2024
3. Origini, forma e (dis)funzioni dell’apparato masticatorio in Homo sapiens
- Author
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Papini, Andrea
- Subjects
Dentistry ,Paleoanthropology ,Gnathology ,Evolution ,Posture - Abstract
The anatomical-functional structure with which human beings are equipped today has its roots in our evolutionary history: knowing the latter helps us understand why our body looks like this and functions in this way. Every living being, including Homo sapiens, is the result of a progressive stratification of forms that have adapted to environmental pressures which have shaped their morphology from deep time until today. Our masticatory apparatus (evolutionarily very recent) began to develop with the advent of mammals around 250 million years ago, structuring itself with a unique morphology and function, closely linked to the upright posture typical of the Homo genus and to globular encephalisation, a characterizing peculiarity Homo sapiens.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Monetary compensation schemes during the COVID-19 pandemic: implications for household incomes, liquidity constraints and consumption across the EU
- Author
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Christl, Michael, De Poli, Silvia, Figari, Francesco, Hufkens, Tine, Leventi, Chrysa, Papini, Andrea, and Tumino, Alberto
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Effect of Transport Noise on Kelvin-Helmholtz instability
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, Morlacchi, Silvia, and Papini, Andrea
- Subjects
Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Mathematics - Probability ,60K35, 76F10, 65C30 - Abstract
The effect of transport noise on a 2D fluid may depend on the space-scale of the noise. We investigate numerically the dissipation properties of very small-scale transport noise. As a test problem we consider the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability and we compare the inviscid case, the viscous one, both without noise, and the inviscid case perturbed by transport noise. We observe a partial similarity with the viscous case, namely a delay of the instability., Comment: 22 pages, 22 figures
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Increasing biases can be more efficient than increasing weights
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Metta, Carlo, Fantozzi, Marco, Papini, Andrea, Amato, Gianluca, Bergamaschi, Matteo, Galfrè, Silvia Giulia, Marchetti, Alessandro, Vegliò, Michelangelo, Parton, Maurizio, and Morandin, Francesco
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Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,I.2.6 - Abstract
We introduce a novel computational unit for neural networks that features multiple biases, challenging the traditional perceptron structure. This unit emphasizes the importance of preserving uncorrupted information as it is passed from one unit to the next, applying activation functions later in the process with specialized biases for each unit. Through both empirical and theoretical analyses, we show that by focusing on increasing biases rather than weights, there is potential for significant enhancement in a neural network model's performance. This approach offers an alternative perspective on optimizing information flow within neural networks. See source code at https://github.com/CuriosAI/dac-dev., Comment: Major rewriting. Supersedes v1 and v2. Focusing on the fact that not all parameters are born equal: biases can be more important than weights. Accordingly, new title and new abstract, and many more experiments on fully connected architectures. This is the extended version of the paper published at WACV 2024
- Published
- 2023
7. Effect of Transport Noise on Kelvin–Helmholtz Instability
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, Morlacchi, Silvia, Papini, Andrea, Crisan, Dan, Series Editor, Golden, Ken, Series Editor, Holm, Darryl D., Series Editor, Lewis, Mark, Series Editor, Nishiura, Yasumasa, Series Editor, Tribbia, Joseph, Series Editor, Zubelli, Jorge Passamani, Series Editor, Chapron, Bertrand, editor, Holm, Darryl, editor, Mémin, Etienne, editor, and Radomska, Anna, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Smoluchowski coagulation equation with velocity dependence
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, Huang, Ruojun, and Papini, Andrea
- Subjects
Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,Mathematical Physics ,35Q70, 82C22, 40K05 - Abstract
In the present article we introduce a variant of Smoluchowski's coagulation equation with both position and velocity variables taking a kinetic viewpoint arising as the scaling limit of a system of second-order (microscopic) coagulating particles. We focus on the rigorous study of the PDE system in the spatially-homogeneous case proving existence and uniqueness under different initial conditions in suitable weighted space, investigating also the regularity of such solutions., Comment: 38 pages, single column
- Published
- 2022
9. Turbulence enhancement of coagulation: the role of eddy diffusion in velocity
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, Huang, Ruojun, and Papini, Andrea
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Mathematical Physics ,Mathematics - Probability ,76F25, 82C22, 60H30 - Abstract
A Smoluchowski type model of coagulation in a turbulent fluid is given, first expressed by means of a stochastic model, then in a suitable scaling limit as a deterministic model with enhanced diffusion in the velocity component. A precise link between mean intensity of the turbulent velocity field and coagulation enhancement is obtained by numerical simulations, and a formula for the mean velocity difference, in agreement with the gas-kinetic model, is proved by a new method., Comment: 18 pages, double column, 20 figures. Added appendix, more details on presented methods. Added derived formulas on kernel, added new notations
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- 2022
10. Coagulation dynamics under random field: turbulence effects on rain
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Papini, Andrea
- Subjects
Mathematics - Probability ,60K35 - Abstract
Turbulence in growth of rain droplets and rain formation is studied under an approximating particle system representing aggregation at the level of individuals, depending on their volume and distance in space, of the Smoluchowski Coagulation equation. A random field is introduced to model the air flow interaction with the particles and it is proved that the empirical density of the individual converges to solutions of limiting equation under different setting for the random field of interaction. A brief numerical study for the continuous density is proposed using the particles approach, to analyze how noise can arise in such system and the effectiveness on rain formation., Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures
- Published
- 2021
11. Effect of Transport Noise on Kelvin–Helmholtz Instability
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, primary, Morlacchi, Silvia, additional, and Papini, Andrea, additional
- Published
- 2023
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12. Epidemic Models as Scaling Limits of Individual Dynamics
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Flandoli, Franco, Grotto, Francesco, Papini, Andrea, and Ricci, Cristiano
- Subjects
Mathematics - Probability ,35Q92, 60J27, 60K35, 92D30 - Abstract
Infection spread among individuals is modelled with a continuous time Markov chain, in which subject interactions depend on their distance in space. The well known SIR model and non local variants of the latter are then obtained as large scale limits of the individual based model in two different scaling regimes of the interaction., Comment: The paper contains an error that at present we are not able to amend, for the moment we prefer to withdraw it
- Published
- 2020
13. Turbulence enhancement of coagulation: The role of eddy diffusion in velocity
- Author
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Papini, Andrea, Flandoli, Franco, and Huang, Ruojun
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. SMOLUCHOWSKI COAGULATION EQUATION WITH VELOCITY DEPENDENCE.
- Author
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FLANDOLI, FRANCO, HUANG, RUOJUN, and PAPINI, ANDREA
- Subjects
INELASTIC collisions ,COAGULATION ,VELOCITY ,EQUATIONS - Abstract
We introduce a variant of the Smoluchowski coagulation equation as a kinetic equation with both position and velocity variables, which arises as the scaling limit of a system of second-order microscopic coagulating particles. We focus on the rigorous study of the PDE system in the spatially homogeneous case, proving existence and uniqueness under different initial conditions in suitable weighted spaces, investigating also the regularity of such solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Increasing biases can be more efficient than increasing weights
- Author
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Metta, Carlo, primary, Fantozzi, Marco, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, Amato, Gianluca, additional, Bergamaschi, Matteo, additional, Galfrè, Silvia Giulia, additional, Marchetti, Alessandro, additional, Vegliò, Michelangelo, additional, Parton, Maurizio, additional, and Morandin, Francesco, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Monetary compensation schemes during the COVID-19 pandemic: implications for household incomes, liquidity constraints and consumption across the EU
- Author
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Christl, Michael, primary, De Poli, Silvia, additional, Figari, Francesco, additional, Hufkens, Tine, additional, Leventi, Chrysa, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, and Tumino, Alberto, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Functional assessment of the stomatognathic system. Part 2: The role of dynamic elements of analysis.
- Author
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Saratti, Carlo Massimo, Rocca, Giovanni Tommaso, Vaucher, Paul, Awai, Lea, Papini, Andrea, Zuber, Sascha, Di Bella, Enrico, Dietschi, Didier, and Krejci, Ivo
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STOMATOGNATHIC system ,MASTICATION ,COGNITION ,HUMAN kinematics ,POSTURE - Abstract
Objectives: To review the dynamic analytical elements used in the functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, summarize the available scientific evidence, and consider interrelations with body posture and cognition. Method and materials: A thorough literature search was conducted using PubMed, the Cochrane Library database, and Google Scholar. Peer-reviewed articles and literature reviews provided up-to-date information addressing three topics: (a) the available knowledge and recent evidence on the relationship between the morphologic aspects of dental/craniofacial anatomy and oral function/dysfunction, (b) mandibular dynamics, considering mobility, functional activity, and existing methodologies of analysis, and (c) a possible correlation between the stomatognathic system, body posture, and cognition. Results: Modern dentistry may be regarded as a human adaptation strategy, helping to conserve healthy teeth for much longer without risking overall health. It is futile to treat patients using a mechanistic, sectorial approach that misrepresents patient behavior and requests, just as it is to affirm the absence of any structure-function relationships. However, it is also evident that there is a lack of general consensus on the precise functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, mostly due to the methodologic heterogeneity employed and the high risk of bias. Despite the abundant evidence produced with the aim of providing solid arguments to define dynamic models of functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, it is yet to become highly empirical, based as it is on operator experience in daily clinical practice. Conclusions: Further efforts from the scientific and clinical community, with the help of progress in technology, remain should this gap be filled and should substantial data on differences between pathologic and physiologic dynamic models of function be provided. Dentistry needs to employ - on a larger scale - objective, dynamic methods of analysis for the functional evaluation of the stomatognathic system, embracing concepts of "personalized medicine" and "interprofessional collaborations". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Exploring EUROMOD: research, policy and teaching.
- Author
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Dreoni, Ilda, Leventi, Chrysa, Papini, Andrea, Picos, Fidel, and Serruys, Hannes
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- 2024
19. The future of taxation in changing labour markets.
- Author
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CHRISTL, MICHAEL, LIVANOS, ILIAS, PAPINI, ANDREA, and TUMINO, ALBERTO
- Subjects
LABOR market ,TAXATION ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,MICROSIMULATION modeling (Statistics) ,BUDGET - Abstract
This paper provides a first assessment of the fiscal and distributional consequences of the ongoing structural changes in the labour markets of EU member states, mostly driven by technological progress and ageing. The Cedefop 2020 Skills forecast (including the effects of COVID-19), population projections and the forecast on pension expenditures depict a scenario of an ageing population, an inverted U-shaped unemployment trend and potentially polarising labour markets in the EU till 2030, the latter mostly driven by a surge in high-skill occupations. We make use of the microsimulation model EUROMOD and reweighting techniques to analyse the fiscal and distributional impacts of these trends under a no-policy-change assumption. The results suggest that the macro trends will increase pressure on government budgets, however, we also show that the current tax-benefit systems have the capacity to counterbalance the increases in income inequality and poverty risks triggered by the expected future labour markets developments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Functional assessment of the stomatognathic system. Part 1: The role of static elements of analysis.
- Author
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Saratti, Carlo Massimo, Rocca, Giovanni Tommaso, Vaucher, Paul, Awai, Lea, Papini, Andrea, Zuber, Sascha, Di Bella, Enrico, Dietschi, Didier, and Krejci, Ivo
- Subjects
FUNCTIONAL assessment ,STOMATOGNATHIC system ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DENTAL occlusion ,PHYSICAL anthropology ,TEMPOROMANDIBULAR disorders - Abstract
Objectives: To review the elements of static analysis in the functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, as promoted for more than a century by gnathologists, and summarize the available scientific evidence, including anthropologic observations. Method and materials: A thorough search was conducted using PubMed, the Cochrane Library database, and Google Scholar. From peer-reviewed articles and other scientific literature, up-to-date information addressing three topics was identified: (a) the anthropologic perspective with particular consideration for the role of progressive dental wear over time, (b) descriptions of gnathologic principles and evidence on their scientific validity, and (c) the methodologic inaccuracies introduced by seeking to correlate variables directly rather than allowing for causal inference. Results: For decades gnathology attempted to describe a structure-function correlation within the stomatognathic system by means of a model whose principles were static and mechanistic references. No scientific validation was ever achieved, placing clinical and research consensus out of reach. Conclusions: A historical perspective helps to place the fundamentals of gnathology into context: They were conceived to solve technical difficulties but were then assumed to be physiologic stereotypes. This misconception led to a decades-long promotion of mechanistic theories to describe oral function, but the evidence available today supports a more flexible and adaptable approach. Gnathologic arguments have been relegated to become exclusively of technical relevance in oral rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Tax Progressivity and Self-Employment Dynamics
- Author
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Arulampalam, Wiji, primary and Papini, Andrea, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Origini, forma e (dis)funzioni dell’apparato masticatorio in Homo sapiens
- Author
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Papini, Andrea, primary
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- 2023
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23. Airborne Wind Energy Systems: A review of the technologies
- Author
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Cherubini, Antonello, Papini, Andrea, Vertechy, Rocco, and Fontana, Marco
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- 2015
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24. Improving Performance in Neural Networks by Dendrites-Activated Connections
- Author
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Metta, Carlo, Fantozzi, Marco, Papini, Andrea, Amato, Gianluca, Bergamaschi, Matteo, Galfrè, Silvia Giulia, Marchetti, Alessandro, Vegliò, Michelangelo, Parton, Maurizio, and Morandin, Francesco
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,I.2.6 ,Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing ,Neural and Evolutionary Computing (cs.NE) ,Machine Learning (cs.LG) - Abstract
Computational units in artificial neural networks compute a linear combination of their inputs, and then apply a nonlinear filter, often a ReLU shifted by some bias, and if the inputs come themselves from other units, they were already filtered with their own biases. In a layer, multiple units share the same inputs, and each input was filtered with a unique bias, resulting in output values being based on shared input biases rather than individual optimal ones. To mitigate this issue, we introduce DAC, a new computational unit based on preactivation and multiple biases, where input signals undergo independent nonlinear filtering before the linear combination. We provide a Keras implementation and report its computational efficiency. We test DAC convolutions in ResNet architectures on CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, Imagenette, and Imagewoof, and achieve performance improvements of up to 1.73%. We exhibit examples where DAC is more efficient than its standard counterpart as a function approximator, and we prove a universal representation theorem., Major rewriting. Superseeds v1
- Published
- 2023
25. Assessment of Atlanto-Axial and Mandibular Rotation by Cone Beam Computed Tomography
- Author
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Galli, Massimo, Papini, Andrea, Buffoli, Barbara, Ferrari, Marco, Labanca, Mauro, Rezzani, Rita, Migliario, Mario, Lucchina, Alberta Greco, and Rodella, Luigi F.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Monetary compensation schemes during the COVID-19 pandemic: Implications for household incomes, liquidity constraints and consumption across the EU
- Author
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Christl, Michael, De Poli, Silvia, Figari, Francesco, Hufkens, Tine, Leventi, Chrysa, Papini, Andrea, and Tumino, Alberto
- Subjects
Inequality ,ddc:330 ,COVID-19 ,EUROMOD ,Microsimulation - Abstract
This paper analyses the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on household disposable income and household demand in the European Union (EU), making use of the EU microsimulation model EUROMOD and nowcasting techniques. We show evidence of heterogeneity in the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the labour markets in EU Member States, with some countries hit substantially harder than others. Most EU Member States experience a large drop in market incomes in 2020, with poorer households hit the hardest. Tax-benefit systems cushioned significantly the transmission of the shock to the disposable income and the household demand, with monetary compensation schemes playing a major role. Additionally, we show that monetary compensation schemes prevent a significant share of households from becoming liquidity constrained during the pandemic.
- Published
- 2022
27. Turbulence Enhancement of Coagulation: The Role of Eddy Diffusion in Velocity
- Author
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Flandoli, Franco, primary, Papini, Andrea, additional, and Huang, Ruojun, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Functional assessment of the stomatognathic system. Part 2: The role of dynamic elements of analysis
- Author
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Saratti, Carlo Massimo, Rocca, Giovanni Tommaso, Vaucher, Paul, Awai, Lea, Papini, Andrea, Zuber, Sascha, Di Bella, Enrico, Dietschi, Didier, and Krejci, Ivo
- Subjects
cognition ,mastication ,neuroplasticity ,Posture ,kinesiography ,Kinesiography ,Oral function ,oral function ,ddc:617.6 ,Cognition ,posture ,ddc:618.97 ,Mastication ,Humans ,Neuroplasticity ,Stomatognathic System - Abstract
To review the dynamic analytical elements used in the functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, summarize the available scientific evidence, and consider interrelations with body posture and cognition. A thorough literature search was conducted using PubMed, the Cochrane Library database, and Google Scholar. Peer-reviewed articles and literature reviews provided up-to-date information addressing three topics: (a) the available knowledge and recent evidence on the relationship between the morphologic aspects of dental/craniofacial anatomy and oral function/dysfunction, (b) mandibular dynamics, considering mobility, functional activity, and existing methodologies of analysis, and (c) a possible correlation between the stomatognathic system, body posture, and cognition. Modern dentistry may be regarded as a human adaptation strategy, helping to conserve healthy teeth for much longer without risking overall health. It is futile to treat patients using a mechanistic, sectorial approach that misrepresents patient behavior and requests, just as it is to affirm the absence of any structure-function relationships. However, it is also evident that there is a lack of general consensus on the precise functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, mostly due to the methodologic heterogeneity employed and the high risk of bias. Despite the abundant evidence produced with the aim of providing solid arguments to define dynamic models of functional assessment of the stomatognathic system, it is yet to become highly empirical, based as it is on operator experience in daily clinical practice. Further efforts from the scientific and clinical community, with the help of progress in technology, remain should this gap be filled and should substantial data on differences between pathologic and physiologic dynamic models of function be provided. Dentistry needs to employ - on a larger scale - objective, dynamic methods of analysis for the functional evaluation of the stomatognathic system, embracing concepts of "personalized medicine" and "interprofessional collaborations."
- Published
- 2021
29. Early Alpine occupation backdates westward human migration in Late Glacial Europe
- Author
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Bortolini, Eugenio, primary, Pagani, Luca, additional, Oxilia, Gregorio, additional, Posth, Cosimo, additional, Fontana, Federica, additional, Badino, Federica, additional, Saupe, Tina, additional, Montinaro, Francesco, additional, Margaritora, Davide, additional, Romandini, Matteo, additional, Lugli, Federico, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, Boggioni, Marco, additional, Perrini, Nicola, additional, Oxilia, Antonio, additional, Cigliano, Riccardo Aiese, additional, Barcelona, Rosa, additional, Visentin, Davide, additional, Fasser, Nicolò, additional, Arrighi, Simona, additional, Figus, Carla, additional, Marciani, Giulia, additional, Silvestrini, Sara, additional, Bernardini, Federico, additional, Menghi Sartorio, Jessica C., additional, Fiorenza, Luca, additional, Cecchi, Jacopo Moggi, additional, Tuniz, Claudio, additional, Kivisild, Toomas, additional, Gianfrancesco, Fernando, additional, Peresani, Marco, additional, Scheib, Christiana L., additional, Talamo, Sahra, additional, D’Esposito, Maurizio, additional, and Benazzi, Stefano, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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30. Tax Progressivity and Self-Employment Dynamics
- Author
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Arulampalam, Wiji and Papini, Andrea
- Subjects
C41 ,H24 ,H25 ,ddc:330 ,J24 ,income tax ,duration analysis ,tax progressivity ,self-employment - Abstract
Analysis of the relationship between taxes and self-employment should account for the interplay between responses in self-employment and wage employment. To this end, we estimate a two-state multi-spell duration model which accounts for both observed and unobserved heterogeneity using a large longitudinal administrative dataset for Norway for 1993 to 2011. Our findings confirm theoretical predictions, and are robust to various changes to definitions and sample selections. A policy experiment simulating a flatter tax schedule in the year 2000 is found to encourage self-employment, delivering a net increase of predicted inflow into self-employment from 2.8% to 5.3%.
- Published
- 2021
31. Exploring directional and fluctuating asymmetry in the human palate during growth
- Author
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Oxilia, Gregorio, Menghi Sartorio, Jessica C., Bortolini, Eugenio, Zampirolo, Giulia, Papini, Andrea, Boggioni, Marco, Martini, Sergio, Marciani, Filippo, Arrighi, Simona, Figus, Carla, Marciani, Giulia, Romandini, Matteo, Silvestrini, Sara, Pedrosi, Maria Elena, Mori, Tommaso, Riga, Alessandro, Kullmer, Ottmar, Sarig, Rachel, Fiorenza, Luca, Giganti, Melchiore, Sorrentino, Rita, Belcastro, Maria Giovanna, Cecchi, Jacopo Moggi, Benazzi, Stefano, Oxilia, Gregorio, Menghi Sartorio, Jessica C., Bortolini, Eugenio, Zampirolo, Giulia, Papini, Andrea, Boggioni, Marco, Martini, Sergio, Marciani, Filippo, Arrighi, Simona, Figus, Carla, Marciani, Giulia, Romandini, Matteo, Silvestrini, Sara, Pedrosi, Maria Elena, Mori, Tommaso, Riga, Alessandro, Kullmer, Ottmar, Sarig, Rachel, Fiorenza, Luca, Giganti, Melchiore, Sorrentino, Rita, Belcastro, Maria Giovanna, Cecchi, Jacopo Moggi, and Benazzi, Stefano
- Abstract
Objectives Palate morphology is constantly changing throughout an individual's lifespan, yet its asymmetry during growth is still little understood. In this research, we focus on the study of palate morphology by using 3D geometric morphometric approaches to observe changes at different stages of life, and to quantify the impact of directional and fluctuating asymmetry on different areas at different growth stages.Materials and Methods The sample consists of 183 individuals (1-72 years) from two identified human skeletal collections of 19th and early 20th Century Italian contexts. A 3D-template of 41 (semi)landmarks was applied on digital palate models to observe morphological variation during growth.Results Asymmetrical components of the morphological structure appears multidirectional on the entire palate surface in individualsDiscussion Morphological structure appears instable during the first year of life and acquires an opposite asymmetric bilateral direction between 2 and 6 years of age. This condition has been also documented in adults; when paired with vertical alteration, anterior/posterior asymmetry seems to characterize palate morphology, which is probably due to mechanical factors during the lifespan. Fluctuating asymmetry is predominant in the first period of life due to a plausible relationship with the strength of morphological instability of the masticatory system. Directional asymmetry, on the other hand, shows that the patterning of group-level morphological change might be explained as a functional response to differential inputs (physiological forces, nutritive and non-nutritive habits, para-masticatory activity as well as the development of speech) in different growth stages. This research has implications with respect to medical and evolutionary fields. In medicine, palate morphology should be considered when planning orthodontic and surgical procedures as it could affect the outcome. As far as an evolutionary perspectiv
- Published
- 2021
32. Exploring directional and fluctuating asymmetry in the human palate during growth
- Author
-
Oxilia, Gregorio, primary, Menghi Sartorio, Jessica C., additional, Bortolini, Eugenio, additional, Zampirolo, Giulia, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, Boggioni, Marco, additional, Martini, Sergio, additional, Marciani, Filippo, additional, Arrighi, Simona, additional, Figus, Carla, additional, Marciani, Giulia, additional, Romandini, Matteo, additional, Silvestrini, Sara, additional, Pedrosi, Maria Elena, additional, Mori, Tommaso, additional, Riga, Alessandro, additional, Kullmer, Ottmar, additional, Sarig, Rachel, additional, Fiorenza, Luca, additional, Giganti, Melchiore, additional, Sorrentino, Rita, additional, Belcastro, Maria Giovanna, additional, Cecchi, Jacopo Moggi, additional, and Benazzi, Stefano, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Heterogeneity in effective VAT rates across native and migrant households in France, Germany and Spain
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Christl, Michael, Papini, Andrea, and Tumino, Alberto
- Subjects
VAT ,ddc:330 ,migration ,redistribution - Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on the distributional properties of VAT analysing who bears higher VAT payments between native and migrant household in France, Germany and Spain. The question is of interest both from a distributional and fiscal perspective, fitting the ongoing debate of the net fiscal impact of immigration. Using data from the 2010 EU HBS and a simple VAT calculator we show the existence of gaps in effective VAT rates between native and migrant households in France and in Spain, while no significant gap is observed in Germany. Our results also confirm the existing evidence on the regressivity of VAT with respect to income. These findings suggest that the fairness consequences of VAT reforms should be carefully assessed and advocate for the importance of considering indirect taxation when assessing the fiscal cost of migration.
- Published
- 2020
34. Tax Progressivity and Self-Employment Dynamics
- Author
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Arulampalam, Wiji, primary and Papini, Andrea, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. In situ observations on the dentition and oral cavity of the Neanderthal skeleton from Altamura (Italy)
- Author
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Riga, Alessandro, primary, Boggioni, Marco, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, Buzi, Costantino, additional, Profico, Antonio, additional, Di Vincenzo, Fabio, additional, Marchi, Damiano, additional, Moggi-Cecchi, Jacopo, additional, and Manzi, Giorgio, additional
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
36. Early Alpine occupation backdates westward human migration in Late Glacial Europe
- Author
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Bortolini, Eugenio, primary, Pagani, Luca, additional, Oxilia, Gregorio, additional, Posth, Cosimo, additional, Fontana, Federica, additional, Badino, Federica, additional, Saupe, Tina, additional, Montinaro, Francesco, additional, Margaritora, Davide, additional, Romandini, Matteo, additional, Lugli, Federico, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, Boggioni, Marco, additional, Perrini, Nicola, additional, Oxilia, Antonio, additional, Cigliano, Riccardo Aiese, additional, Barcelona, Rosa, additional, Visentin, Davide, additional, Fasser, Nicolò, additional, Arrighi, Simona, additional, Figus, Carla, additional, Marciani, Giulia, additional, Silvestrini, Sara, additional, Bernardini, Federico, additional, Sartorio, Jessica C. Menghi, additional, Fiorenza, Luca, additional, Moggi Cecchi, Jacopo, additional, Tuniz, Claudio, additional, Kivisild, Toomas, additional, Gianfrancesco, Fernando, additional, Peresani, Marco, additional, Scheib, Christiana L., additional, Talamo, Sahra, additional, D’Esposito, Maurizio, additional, and Benazzi, Stefano, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Who Pays More? Heterogeneity in Effective VAT Rates Across Native and Migrant Households.
- Author
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Christl, Michael, Papini, Andrea, and Tumino, Alberto
- Published
- 2022
38. Tax incentives and the choice of organisational form of small businesses: Identification through a differentiated payroll tax schedule
- Author
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Papini, Andrea
- Subjects
H25 ,ddc:330 ,L22 ,Small businesses ,Organisational form ,Business taxation - Abstract
The Norwegian dual income tax system gave incentives for business owners to incorporate and take advantage of the lower tax on capital income. The tax reform of 2006, which was designed to eliminate these incentives, is used to discuss effects of taxation on the choice of organisational form. The interplay between the tax reform and the pre-existing system of geographically differentiated payroll tax rates generates heterogeneity in the tax treatment, which is exploited in a difference-in-differences empirical strategy. Estimation results based on a large administrative dataset suggest that organisational choice is influenced by taxes: a 1 percentage point reduction in the payroll tax results in 1 percent increase in incorporation rate.
- Published
- 2018
39. The Y-shaped trabecular bone structure in the odontoid process of the axis: a CT scan study in 54 healthy subjects and biomechanical considerations
- Author
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Montemurro, Nicola, primary, Perrini, Paolo, additional, Mangini, Vittoriano, additional, Galli, Massimo, additional, and Papini, Andrea, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Tax progressivity and self-employment dynamics
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Arulampalam, Wiji, Papini, Andrea, Arulampalam, Wiji, and Papini, Andrea
- Abstract
Analysis of the relationship between taxes and self-employment should acccount for the interplay between responses in self-employment and wage employment. To this end, we estimate a two-state multi-spell duration model which accounts for both observed and unobserved heterogeneity using a large longitudinal administrative dataset for Norway for 1993-2011. Our findings confirm theoretical predictions, and are robust to various changes to denitions and sample selections. A policy experiment simulating a flatter tax schedule in the year 2000, is found to encourage both entry into and exit from self-employment, with an increase of about 11.5 percent in net in ow into self-employment.
- Published
- 2018
41. The physiological linkage between molar inclination and dental macrowear pattern
- Author
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Oxilia, Gregorio, primary, Bortolini, Eugenio, additional, Martini, Sergio, additional, Papini, Andrea, additional, Boggioni, Marco, additional, Buti, Laura, additional, Figus, Carla, additional, Sorrentino, Rita, additional, Townsend, Grant, additional, Kaidonis, John, additional, Fiorenza, Luca, additional, Cristiani, Emanuela, additional, Kullmer, Ottmar, additional, Moggi‐Cecchi, Jacopo, additional, and Benazzi, Stefano, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Estimation of “Unfair” Inequality in the US
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Papini, Andrea and Papini, Andrea
- Published
- 2013
43. Turbulence enhancement of coagulation: the role of eddy diffusion in velocity
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Andrea Papini, Franco Flandoli, Ruojun Huang, Papini, Andrea, Flandoli, Franco, and Huang, Ruojun
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Smoluchowski coagulation equation ,Probability (math.PR) ,Fluid–particles interaction ,Fluid Dynamics (physics.flu-dyn) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Mathematical Physics (math-ph) ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Stochastic modeling ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Turbulence enhancement ,Settore MAT/06 - Probabilita' e Statistica Matematica ,76F25, 82C22, 60H30 ,Kinetic Model ,FOS: Mathematics ,Business and International Management ,Settore MAT/07 - Fisica Matematica ,Mathematical Physics ,Mathematics - Probability - Abstract
A Smoluchowski type model of coagulation in a turbulent fluid is given, first expressed by means of a stochastic model, then in a suitable scaling limit as a deterministic model with enhanced diffusion in the velocity component. A precise link between mean intensity of the turbulent velocity field and coagulation enhancement is obtained by numerical simulations, and a formula for the mean velocity difference, in agreement with the gas-kinetic model, is proved by a new method., Comment: 18 pages, double column, 20 figures. Added appendix, more details on presented methods. Added derived formulas on kernel, added new notations
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Early Alpine occupation backdates westward human migration in Late Glacial Europe
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Marco Boggioni, Federico Bernardini, Carla Figus, Nicolò Fasser, Giulia Marciani, Andrea Papini, Tina Saupe, Maurizio D'Esposito, Riccardo Aiese Cigliano, Francesco Montinaro, Stefano Benazzi, Matteo Romandini, Simona Arrighi, Davide Margaritora, Jacopo Moggi Cecchi, Fernando Gianfrancesco, Jessica C. Menghi Sartorio, Nicola Perrini, Gregorio Oxilia, Federico Lugli, Davide Visentin, Luca Pagani, Eugenio Bortolini, Christiana L. Scheib, Rosa Barcelona, Sahra Talamo, Federica Fontana, Marco Peresani, Cosimo Posth, Toomas Kivisild, Sara Silvestrini, Federica Badino, Antonio Oxilia, Luca Fiorenza, Claudio Tuniz, Bortolini, Eugenio, Pagani, Luca, Oxilia, Gregorio, Posth, Cosimo, Fontana, Federica, Badino, Federica, Saupe, Tina, Montinaro, Francesco, Margaritora, Davide, Romandini, Matteo, Lugli, Federico, Papini, Andrea, Boggioni, Marco, Perrini, Nicola, Oxilia, Antonio, Cigliano, Riccardo Aiese, Barcelona, Rosa, Visentin, Davide, Fasser, Nicolò, Arrighi, Simona, Figus, Carla, Marciani, Giulia, Silvestrini, Sara, Bernardini, Federico, Menghi Sartorio, Jessica C., Fiorenza, Luca, Cecchi, Jacopo Moggi, Tuniz, Claudio, Kivisild, Tooma, Gianfrancesco, Fernando, Peresani, Marco, Scheib, Christiana L., Talamo, Sahra, D’Esposito, Maurizio, and Benazzi, Stefano
- Subjects
Settore L-ANT/01 - Preistoria e Protostoria ,0301 basic medicine ,Southern Europe ,Climate ,WHG ,law.invention ,Paleogenomics, Population turnover, WHG, Upper Palaeolithic, Epigravettian, Late Glacial, Southern Europe ,0302 clinical medicine ,Demic diffusion ,law ,Ice Cover ,Radiocarbon dating ,Glacial period ,education.field_of_study ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Human migration ,Last Glacial Maximum ,Upper Palaeolithic ,SH6_2 ,Europe ,Genetic replacement, radiocarbon, diffusion in Southern Europe, DNA ,Population turnover ,Epigravettian ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Late Glacial ,paleogenomics ,population turnover ,Human Migration ,Population ,Socio-culturale ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Allerød oscillation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Lithic technology ,Deglaciation ,Humans ,Occupations ,education ,geography ,business.industry ,Glacier ,Archaeology ,030104 developmental biology ,Paleogenomics ,Settore L-ANT/10 - Metodologie della Ricerca Archeologica ,Physical geography ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Chronology - Abstract
Before the end of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ∼16.5 ka ago) set in motion major shifts in human culture and population structure, a consistent change in lithic technology, material culture, settlement pattern, and adaptive strategies is recorded in Southern Europe at ∼18–17 ka ago. In this time frame, the landscape of Northeastern Italy changed considerably, and the retreat of glaciers allowed hunter-gatherers to gradually recolonize the Alps. Change within this renewed cultural frame (i.e., during the Late Epigravettian phase) is currently associated with migrations favored by warmer climate linked to the Bølling-Allerød onset (14.7 ka ago), which replaced earlier genetic lineages with ancestry found in an individual who lived ∼14 ka ago at Riparo Villabruna, Italy, and shared among different contexts (Villabruna Cluster). Nevertheless, these dynamics and their chronology are still far from being disentangled due to fragmentary evidence for long-distance interactions across Europe. Here, we generate new genomic data from a human mandible uncovered at Riparo Tagliente (Veneto, Italy), which we directly dated to 16,980–16,510 cal BP (2σ). This individual, affected by focal osseous dysplasia, is genetically affine to the Villabruna Cluster. Our results therefore backdate by at least 3 ka the diffusion in Southern Europe of a genetic component linked to Balkan/Anatolian refugia, previously believed to have spread during the later Bølling/Allerød event. In light of the new genetic evidence, this population replacement chronologically coincides with the very emergence of major cultural transitions in Southern and Western Europe., The research was supported by the European Union through the European Research Council under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (grant agreement no. 724046 – Success awarded to S.B., http://www.erc-success.eu; grant agreement no. 803147 Resolution awarded to S.T., https://site.unibo.it/resolution-erc/en) as well as through the European Regional Development Fund (project no. 2014–2020.4.01.16–0030 to C.L.S. and T.S.) and projects no. 2014-2020.4.01.16-0024 and MOBTT53 (L.P.), by the Estonian Research Council personal research grant (PRG243; C.L.S.), and by UniPd PRID 2019 (L.P.).
- Published
- 2021
45. The physiological linkage between molar inclination and dental macrowear pattern
- Author
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Marco Boggioni, Ottmar Kullmer, John A. Kaidonis, Eugenio Bortolini, Grant Townsend, Gregorio Oxilia, Stefano Benazzi, Luca Fiorenza, Emanuela Cristiani, Laura Buti, Carla Figus, Sergio Martini, Jacopo Moggi-Cecchi, Andrea Papini, Rita Sorrentino, Oxilia, Gregorio, Bortolini, Eugenio, Martini, Sergio, Papini, Andrea, Boggioni, Marco, Buti, Laura, Figus, Carla, Sorrentino, Rita, Townsend, Grant, Kaidonis, John, Fiorenza, Luca, Cristiani, Emanuela, Kullmer, Ottmar, Moggi-Cecchi, Jacopo, and Benazzi, Stefano
- Subjects
Molar ,Adult ,Male ,Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,anatomy ,Adolescent ,Morphological variation ,Wear pattern ,3d model ,Biology ,dental function ,swallowing ,tooth wear ,asymmetry ,palatal arch ,Brief Communication ,Anthropology, Physical ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Occlusal contact ,Dental Arch ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,anthropology ,Child ,Balance (ability) ,Orthodontics ,060101 anthropology ,Anthropometry ,Asymmetry ,Dental function ,Palatal arch ,Swallowing ,Tooth wear ,Anatomy ,Anthropology ,030206 dentistry ,06 humanities and the arts ,Masticatory force ,Deglutition ,Skull ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Brief Communications - Abstract
Objectives Exact symmetry and perfect balance between opposite jaw halves, as well as between antagonistic teeth, is not frequently observed in natural masticatory systems. Research results show that asymmetry in our body, skull, and jaws is often related to genetic, epigenetic, environmental and individual ontogenetic factors. Our study aims to provide evidence for a significant link between masticatory asymmetry and occlusal contact between antagonist teeth by testing the hypothesis that tooth inclination is one of the mechanisms driving distribution of wear in masticatory phases in addition to dietary and cultural habits. Materials and Methods The present work investigates the relationship between dental macrowear patterns and tooth inclinations on a sample of complete maxillary and mandibular 3D models of dental arches from 19 young and adult Yuendumu Aboriginal individuals. The analysis was carried out on first molars (M1) from all quadrants. Occlusal Fingerprint Analysis was used for the quantification of macrowear patterns, and 2D cross‐sectional geometric analysis was carried out to investigate asymmetry in dental arches. Results The asymmetry is highly variable on both arches, and it is associated with differences in the inclination of upper M1 crowns. Each molar has variable inclination (buccal/lingual) which influence tooth to tooth contact, producing greater or lesser variation in wear pattern. Interindividual variability of morphological variation of the occlusal relationship has to be considered in macrowear analysis. Discussion Our results suggest that overall asymmetry in the masticatory apparatus in modern humans affects occlusal contact areas between antagonist teeth influencing macrowear and chewing efficiency during ontogeny.
- Published
- 2018
46. Airborne Wind Energy Systems: A review of the technologies
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Marco Fontana, Andrea Papini, Rocco Vertechy, Antonello Cherubini, Cherubini, Antonello, Papini, Andrea, Vertechy, Rocco, and Fontana, Marco
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Hardware architecture ,Renewable energy ,Engineering ,AWE ,Atmosphere (unit) ,Wind power ,AWES ,Review ,Kite power ,Glider ,High altitude wind ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Electrical engineering ,Converters ,Systems engineering ,Electricity ,Architecture ,business - Abstract
Among novel technologies for producing electricity from renewable resources, a new class of wind energy converters has been conceived under the name of Airborne Wind Energy Systems (AWESs). This new generation of systems employs flying tethered wings or aircraft in order to reach winds blowing at atmosphere layers that are inaccessible by traditional wind turbines. Research on AWESs started in the mid seventies, with a rapid acceleration in the last decade. A number of systems based on radically different concepts have been analyzed and tested. Several prototypes have been developed all over the world and the results from early experiments are becoming available. This paper provides a review of the different technologies that have been conceived to harvest the energy of high-altitude winds, specifically including prototypes developed by universities and companies. A classification of such systems is proposed on the basis of their general layout and architecture. The focus is set on the hardware architecture of systems that have been demonstrated and tested in real scenarios. Promising solutions that are likely to be implemented in the close future are also considered.
- Published
- 2015
47. Survival to amputation in pre-antibiotic era: a case study from a Longobard necropolis (6th-8th centuries AD).
- Author
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Micarelli I, Paine R, Giostra C, Tafuri MA, Profico A, Boggioni M, Di Vincenzo F, Massani D, Papini A, and Manzi G
- Subjects
- Animals, Anthropology, Physical, Forearm pathology, History, Medieval, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Radius pathology, Tooth pathology, Ulna pathology, Amputation, Surgical history, Artificial Limbs history, Burial history, Forearm Injuries pathology
- Abstract
The Longobard necropolis of Povegliano Veronese dates from the 6th to the 8th centuries AD. Among the 164 tombs excavated, the skeleton of an older male shows a well-healed amputated right forearm. The orientation of the forearm fracture suggests an angled cut by a single blow. Reasons why a forearm might be amputated include combat, medical intervention, and judicial punishment. As with other amputation cases reported in literature, this one exhibits both healing and osteoblastic response. We argue that the forelimb stump morphology suggests the use of a prosthesis. Moreover, dental modification of RI2 shows considerable wear and smoothing of the occlusal surface, which points to dental use in attaching the prosthesis to the limb. Other indications of how this individual adjusted to his amputated condition includes a slight change in the orientation of the right glenoid fossa surface, and thinning of right humeral cortical bone. This is a remarkable example in which an older male survived the loss of a forelimb in pre-antibiotic era. We link archaeological remains found in the tomb (buckle and knife) with the biological evidence to show how a combined bioarchaeological approach can provide a clearer interpretation of the life history of an individual.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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