9,957 results on '"Pecora A"'
Search Results
2. Statistics for Differential Topological Properties between Data Sets with an Application to Reservoir Computers
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Pecora, Louis and Carroll, Thomas
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Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics ,Mathematical Physics ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability - Abstract
It is common for researchers to record long, multiple time series from experiments or calculations. But sometimes there are no good models for the systems or no applicable mathematical theorems that can tell us when there are basic relationships between subsets of the time series data such as continuity, differentiability, embeddings, etc. The data is often higher dimensional and simple plotting will not guide us. At that point fitting the data to polynomials, Fourier series, etc. becomes uncertain. Even at the simplest level, having data that shows there is a function between the data subsets is useful and a negative answer means that more particular data fitting or analysis will be suspect and probably fail. We show here statistics that test time series subsets for basic mathematical properties and relations between them that not only indicate when more specific analyses are safe to do, but whether the systems are operating correctly. We apply these statistics to examples from reservoir computing where an important property of reservoir computers is that the reservoir system establishes an embedding of the drive system in order to make any other calculations with the reservoir computer successful., Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures
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- 2024
3. Observed Fluctuation Enhancement and Departure from WKB Theory in Sub-Alfv\'enic Solar Wind
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Ruffolo, David, Thepthong, Panisara, Pongkitiwanichakul, Peera, Roy, Sohom, Pecora, Francesco, Bandyopadhyay, Riddhi, Chhiber, Rohit, Usmanov, Arcadi V., Stevens, Michael, Badman, Samuel, Romeo, Orlando, Wang, Jiaming, Goodwill, Joshua, Goldstein, Melvyn L., and Matthaeus, William H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Using Parker Solar Probe data from orbits 8 through 17, we examine fluctuation amplitudes throughout the critical region where the solar wind flow speed approaches and then exceeds the Alfv\'en wave speed, taking account of various exigencies of the plasma data. In contrast to WKB theory for non-interacting Alfv\'en waves streaming away from the Sun, the magnetic and kinetic fluctuation energies per unit volume are not monotonically decreasing. Instead, there is clear violation of conservation of standard WKB wave action, which is consistent with previous indications of strong in-situ fluctuation energy input in the solar wind near the Alfv\'en critical region. This points to strong violations of WKB theory due to nonlinearity (turbulence) and major energy input near the critical region, which we interpret as likely due to driving by large-scale coronal shear flows.
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- 2024
4. $1/f$ Noise in the Heliosphere: A Target for PUNCH Science
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Wang, Jiaming, Matthaeus, William H., Chhiber, Rohit, Roy, Sohom, Pradata, Rayta A., Pecora, Francesco, and Yang, Yan
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We present a broad review of 1/f noise observations in the heliosphere, and discuss and complement the theoretical background of generic 1/f models as relevant to NASA's Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH) mission. First observed in the voltage fluctuations of vacuum tubes, the scale-invariant 1/f spectrum has since been identified across a wide array of natural and artificial systems, including heart rate fluctuations and loudness patterns in musical compositions. In the solar wind, the interplanetary magnetic field trace spectrum exhibits 1/f scaling within the frequency range from around 2e-6 Hz to 1e-4 Hz at 1 au. One compelling mechanism for the generation of 1/f noise is the superposition principle, where a composite 1/f spectrum arises from the superposition of a collection of individual power-law spectra characterized by a scale-invariant distribution of correlation times. In the context of the solar wind, such a superposition could originate from scale-invariant reconnection processes in the corona. Further observations have detected 1/f signatures in the photosphere and corona at frequency ranges compatible with those observed at 1 au, suggesting an even lower altitude origin of 1/f spectrum in the solar dynamo itself. This hypothesis is bolstered by dynamo experiments and simulations that indicate inverse cascade activities, which can be linked to successive flux tube reconnections beneath the corona, and are known to generate 1/f noise possibly through nonlocal interactions at the largest scales. Conversely, models positing in situ generation of 1/f signals face causality issues in explaining the low-frequency portion of the 1/f spectrum. Understanding 1/f noise in the solar wind may inform central problems in heliospheric physics, such as the solar dynamo, coronal heating, the origin of the solar wind, and the nature of interplanetary turbulence., Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Solar Physics
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- 2024
5. Evaluation of scale-dependent kurtosis with HelioSwarm
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Pecora, Francesco, Pucci, Francesco, Malara, Francesco, Klein, Kristopher G., Marcucci, Maria Federica, Retinò, Alessandro, and Matthaeus, William
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Plasma turbulence involves complex, nonlinear interactions of electromagnetic fields and charged particles across multiple scales. Studying these phenomena in space plasmas, like the solar wind, is facilitated by the intrinsic scale separations and the availability of in situ spacecraft observations. However, the single-point or single-scale configurations of current spacecraft limit our understanding of many properties of the turbulent solar wind. To overcome these limitations, multipoint measurements spanning a range of characteristic scales are essential. This paper prepares for the enhanced measurement capabilities of upcoming multispacecraft missions by demonstrating that higher-order statistics, specifically kurtosis, as a baseline for intermittency can be accurately measured. Using synthetic turbulent fields with adjustable intermittency levels, we achieve scale separations analogous to those in the solar wind and apply these techniques to the planned trajectories of the HelioSwarm mission. This approach promises significant advancements in our understanding of plasma turbulence.
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- 2024
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6. Electronic Nose for Pesticides: The First Study Towards a Smart Analysis
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Leccese Fabio, Cagnetti Marco, Giarnetti Sabino, Petritoli Enrico, Orioni Barbara, Luisetto Igor, Tuti Simonetta, Leccisi Mariagrazia, Pecora Alessandro, Maiolo Luca, Spagnolo Giuseppe Schirripa, Ðurović-Pejčev Rada, Ðorđević Tijana, Tomašević Anđelka, De Francesco Eduardo, Quadarella Rosaria, Bozzi Luciano, Arenella Vittorio, Gabriele Pietro, and Formisano Ciro
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electronic nose ,pesticide ,smart analysis ,wsn ,gas sensors ,cots ,Agriculture - Abstract
Within a project co-funded by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the final aim of which is to develop a WSN for smart monitoring of pesticides on agricultural land, the Italian and Serbian researchers have developed a hardware section of an electronic nose for pesticides. Since there are no specialized sensors which can smell the presence or absence of pesticides in the air, the electronic nose has been designed starting from an array of commercial gas sensors developed for other environmental applications. These sensors have a great advantage as they are COTS components. A measurement bench for testing the performance of the system has also been developed. Experimental tests have been conducted and the results have demonstrated the appropriateness of the idea. A test for calibration has been designed, as well, and it will be performed in the near future.
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- 2019
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7. Parker Solar Probe Observations of Energetic Particles in the Flank of a Coronal Mass Ejection Close to the Sun
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Schwadron, N. A., Bale, Stuart D., Bonnell, J., Case, A., Shen, M., Christian, E. R., Cohen, C. M. S., Davis, A. J., Desai, M. I., Goetz, K., Giacalone, J., Hill, M. E., Kasper, J. C., Korreck, K., Larson, D., Livi, R., Lim, T., Leske, R. A., Malandraki, O., Malaspina, D., Matthaeus, W. H., McComas, D. J., McNutt Jr., R. L., Mewaldt, R. A., Mitchell, D. G., Niehof, J. T., Pulupa, M., Pecora, Francesco, Rankin, J. S., Smith, C., Stone, E. C., Szalay, J. R., Vourlidas, A., Wiedenbeck, M. E., and Whittlesey, P.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We present an event observed by Parker Solar Probe at $\sim$0.2 au on March 2, 2022 in which imaging and \emph{in situ} measurements coincide. During this event, PSP passed through structures on the flank of a streamer blowout CME including an isolated flux tube in front of the CME, a turbulent sheath, and the CME itself. Imaging observations and \emph{in situ} helicity and principal variance signatures consistently show the presence of flux ropes internal to the CME. In both the sheath, and the CME interval, the distributions are more isotropic, the spectra are softer, and the abundance ratios of Fe/O and He/H are lower than those in the isolated flux tube, and yet elevated relative to typical plasma and SEP abundances. These signatures in the sheath and the CME indicate that both flare populations and those from the plasma are accelerated to form the observed energetic particle enhancements. In contrast, the isolated flux tube shows large streaming, hard spectra and large Fe/O and He/H ratios, indicating flare sources. Energetic particle fluxes are most enhanced within the CME interval from suprathermal through energetic particle energies ($\sim$ keV to $>10$ MeV), indicating particle acceleration, and confinement local to the closed magnetic structure. The flux-rope morphology of the CME helps to enable local modulation and trapping of energetic particles, particularly along helicity channels and other plasma boundaries. Thus, the CME acts to build-up energetic particle populations, allowing them to be fed into subsequent higher energy particle acceleration throughout the inner heliosphere where a compression or shock forms on the CME front., Comment: 41 pages, 19 figures, In Press
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- 2024
8. The Alfv\'en Transition Zone observed by the Parker Solar Probe in Young Solar Wind -- Global Properties and Model Comparisons
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Chhiber, Rohit, Pecora, Francesco, Usmanov, Arcadi V, Matthaeus, William H, Goldstein, Melvyn L, Roy, Sohom, Wang, Jiaming, Thepthong, Panisara, and Ruffolo, David
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The transition from subAlfv\'enic to superAlfv\'enic flow in the solar atmosphere is examined by means of Parker Solar Probe (PSP) measurements during solar encounters 8 to 14. Around 220 subAlfv\'enic periods with a duration $\ge$ 10 minutes are identified. The distribution of their durations, heliocentric distances, and Alfv\'en Mach number are analyzed and compared with a global magnetohydrodynamic model of the solar corona and wind, which includes turbulence effects. The results are consistent with a patchy and fragmented morphology, and suggestive of a turbulent Alfv\'en zone within which the transition from subAlfv\'enic to superAlfv\'enic flow occurs over an extended range of helioradii. These results inform and establish context for detailed analyses of subAlfv\'enic coronal plasma that are expected to emerge from PSP's final mission phase, as well as for NASA's planned PUNCH mission.
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- 2024
9. Understanding the dynamics of the global FDI architecture: a network analysis
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Spelta, Alessandro, Pecora, Nicolò, Chen, Hung-Ju, and Huang, Bihong
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- 2024
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10. A reappraisal of fundamentalists in a cobweb model with heterogeneous agents
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Cavalli, Fausto, Naimzada, Ahmad, and Pecora, Nicolò
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- 2024
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11. Anisotropy of Density Fluctuations in the Solar Wind at 1 au
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Wang, Jiaming, Chhiber, Rohit, Roy, Sohom, Cuesta, Manuel E., Pecora, Francesco, Yang, Yan, Fu, Xiangrong, Li, Hui, and Matthaeus, William H.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
A well-known property of solar wind plasma turbulence is the observed anisotropy of the autocorrelations, or equivalently the spectra, of velocity and magnetic field fluctuations. Here we explore the related but apparently not well-studied issue of the anisotropy of plasma density fluctuations in the energy-containing and inertial ranges of solar wind turbulence. Using 10 years (1998-2008) of in situ data from the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) mission, we find that for all but the fastest wind category, the density correlation scale is slightly larger in directions quasi-parallel to the large-scale mean magnetic field as compared to quasi-perpendicular directions. The correlation scale in fast wind is consistent with isotropic. The anisotropy as a function of the level of correlation is also explored. We find at small correlation levels, i.e., at energy-containing scales and larger, the density fluctuations are close to isotropy for fast wind, and slightly favor more rapid decorrelation in perpendicular directions for slow and medium winds. At relatively smaller (inertial range) scales where the correlation values are larger, the sense of anisotropy is reversed in all speed ranges, implying a more "slab-like" structure, especially prominent in the fast wind samples. We contrast this finding with published results on velocity and magnetic field correlations., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, accepted by the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
12. Correlation of Coronal Mass Ejection Shock Temperature with Solar Energetic Particle Intensity
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Cuesta, Manuel Enrique, McComas, D. J., Khoo, L. Y., Bandyopadhyay, R., Sharma, T., Shen, M. M., Rankin, J. S., Cummings, A. T., Szalay, J. R., Cohen, C. M. S., Schwadron, N. A., Chhiber, R., Pecora, F., Matthaeus, W. H., Leske, R. A., and Stevens, M. L.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Solar energetic particle (SEP) events have been observed by the Parker Solar Probe (PSP) spacecraft since its launch in 2018. These events include sources from solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Onboard PSP is the IS\(\odot\)IS instrument suite measuring ions over energies from ~ 20 keV/nucleon to 200 MeV/nucleon and electrons from ~ 20 keV to 6 MeV. Previous studies sought to group CME characteristics based on their plasma conditions and arrived at general descriptions with large statistical errors, leaving open questions on how to properly group CMEs based solely on their plasma conditions. To help resolve these open questions, plasma properties of CMEs have been examined in relation to SEPs. Here we reexamine one plasma property, the solar wind proton temperature, and compare it to the proton SEP intensity in a region immediately downstream of a CME-driven shock for seven CMEs observed at radial distances within 1 au. We find a statistically strong correlation between proton SEP intensity and bulk proton temperature, indicating a clear relationship between SEPs and the conditions in the solar wind. Furthermore, we propose that an indirect coupling of SEP intensity to the level of turbulence and the amount of energy dissipation that results is mainly responsible for the observed correlation between SEP intensity and proton temperature. These results are key to understanding the interaction of SEPs with the bulk solar wind in CME-driven shocks and will improve our ability to model the interplay of shock evolution and particle acceleration., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, and 2 tables
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- 2024
13. Facilitating collaborative inquiry into practice around artifacts of mathematics teaching
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Ebby, Caroline B., Hess, Brittany, Pecora, Lizzy, and Valerio, Jennifer
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- 2024
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14. Assessment of the Efficacy and Durability of IncobotulinumtoxinA in the Treatment of the Upper Face in Adult Women
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de Almeida, Ada Trindade, de Sanctis Pecora, Carla, Marques, Elisa R., Contin, Leticia, de Almeida, Camila Trindade, and da Cunha, Ana Lúcia
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- 2024
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15. Impact of Extraction Methods and Transportation Conditions on Lipid Profiles of Bovine Oocytes
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de Lima, Camila Bruna, Milazzotto, Marcella Pecora, Vireque, Alessandra Aparecida, Joaquim, Daniel Carlino, Sobreira, Tiago Jose Paschoal, and Ferreira, Christina Ramires
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- 2024
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16. The role of loneliness and positivity on adolescents’ mental health and sleep quality during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Pecora, Giulia, Laghi, Fiorenzo, Baumgartner, Emma, Di Norcia, Anna, and Sette, Stefania
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- 2024
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17. Family Intensive Treatment for Child Welfare Involved Caregivers with Substance Misuse Issues: Safety, Permanency and Well-Being Outcomes
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Yampolskaya, Svetlana, Sowell, Cathy, Walker-Egea, Connie, Hanak-Coulter, Jessica, and Pecora, Peter J.
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- 2024
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18. A Closer Look at Small-Scale Magnetic Flux Ropes in the Solar Wind at 1 AU: Results from Improved Automated Detection
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Farooki, Hameedullah, Noh, Sung Jun, Lee, Jeongwoo, Wang, Haimin, Kim, Hyomin, Abduallah, Yasser, Wang, Jason T. L., Chen, Yu, Servidio, Sergio, and Pecora, Francesco
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Small-scale interplanetary magnetic flux ropes (SMFRs) are similar to ICMEs in magnetic structure, but are smaller and do not exhibit ICME plasma signatures. We present a computationally efficient and GPU-powered version of the single-spacecraft automated SMFR detection algorithm based on the Grad-Shafranov (GS) technique. Our algorithm is capable of processing higher resolution data, eliminates selection bias caused by a fixed $\avg{B}$ threshold, has improved detection criteria demonstrated to have better results on an MHD simulation, and recovers full 2.5D cross sections using GS reconstruction. We used it to detect 512,152 SMFRs from 27 years (1996 to 2022) of 3-second cadence \emph{Wind} measurements. Our novel findings are: (1) the radial density of SMFRs at 1 au (${\sim}1$ per $\si{10^6\kilo\meter}$) and filling factor (${\sim}$35\%) are independent of solar activity, distance to the heliospheric current sheet (HCS), and solar wind plasma type, although the minority of SMFRs with diameters greater than ${\sim}$0.01 au have a strong solar activity dependence; (2) SMFR diameters follow a log-normal distribution that peaks below the resolved range ($\gtrsim 10^4$ km), although the filling factor is dominated by SMFRs between $10^5$ to $10^6$ km; (3) most SMFRs at 1 au have strong field-aligned flows like those from PSP measurements; (4) in terms of diameter $d$, SMFR poloidal flux $\propto d^{1.2}$, axial flux $\propto d^{2.0}$, average twist number $\propto d^{-0.8}$, current density $\propto d^{-0.8}$, and helicity $\propto d^{3.2}$. Implications for the origin of SMFRs and switchbacks are briefly discussed. The new algorithm and SMFR dataset are made freely available.
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- 2023
19. Effective Viscosity, Resistivity, and Reynolds Number in Weakly Collisional Plasma Turbulence
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Yang, Yan, Matthaeus, William H., Oughton, Sean, Bandyopadhyay, Riddhi, Pecora, Francesco, Parashar, Tulasi N., Roytershteyn, Vadim, Chasapis, Alexandros, and Shay, Michael A.
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Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We examine dissipation and energy conversion in weakly collisional plasma turbulence, employing in situ observations from the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission and kinetic Particle-in-Cell (PIC) simulations of proton-electron plasma. A previous result indicated the presence of viscous-like and resistive-like scaling of average energy conversion rates -- analogous to scalings characteristic of collisional systems. This allows for extraction of collisional-like coefficients of effective viscosity and resistivity, and thus also determination of effective Reynolds numbers based on these coefficients. The effective Reynolds number, as a measure of the available bandwidth for turbulence to populate various scales, links macro turbulence properties with kinetic plasma properties in a novel way., Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, 5 tables
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- 2023
20. Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence Simulations as a Testing Ground for PUNCH
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Pecora, Francesco, Yang, Yan, Gibson, Sarah, Viall, Nicholeen M., Chhiber, Rohit, DeForest, Craig, and Matthaeus, William H.
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- 2024
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21. National Literature in Multinational States ed. by Albert Braz and Paul D. Morris (review)
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Pecora, Vincent P.
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- 2024
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22. The eruption of a magnetic flux rope observed by \textit{Solar Orbiter} and \textit{Parker Solar Probe}
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Long, David M., Green, Lucie M., Pecora, Francesco, Brooks, David H., Strecker, Hanna, Orozco-Suárez, David, Hayes, Laura A., Davies, Emma E., Amerstorfer, Ute V., Mierla, Marilena, Lario, David, Berghmans, David, Zhukov, Andrei N., and Rüdisser, Hannah T.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Magnetic flux ropes are a key component of coronal mass ejections, forming the core of these eruptive phenomena. However, determining whether a flux rope is present prior to eruption onset and, if so, the rope's handedness and the number of turns that any helical field lines make is difficult without magnetic field modelling or in-situ detection of the flux rope. We present two distinct observations of plasma flows along a filament channel on 4 and 5 September 2022 made using the \textit{Solar Orbiter} spacecraft. Each plasma flow exhibited helical motions in a right-handed sense as the plasma moved from the source active region across the solar disk to the quiet Sun, suggesting that the magnetic configuration of the filament channel contains a flux rope with positive chirality and at least one turn. The length and velocity of the plasma flow increased from the first to the second observation, suggesting evolution of the flux rope, with the flux rope subsequently erupting within $\sim$5~hours of the second plasma flow. The erupting flux rope then passed over the \textit{Parker Solar Probe} spacecraft during its Encounter 13, enabling \textit{in-situ} diagnostics of the structure. Although complex and consistent with the flux rope erupting from underneath the heliospheric current sheet, the \textit{in-situ} measurements support the inference of a right-handed flux rope from remote-sensing observations. These observations provide a unique insight into the eruption and evolution of a magnetic flux rope near the Sun., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2023
23. Three-dimensional energy transfer in space plasma turbulence from multipoint measurement
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Pecora, Francesco, Servidio, Sergio, Yang, Yan, Matthaeus, William H., Chasapis, Alexandros, Greco, Antonella, Gershman, Daniel J., Giles, Barbara L., and Burch, James L.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
A novel multispacecraft technique applied to Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission data collected in the Earth's magnetosheath enables evaluation of the energy cascade rate solving the full Yaglom's equation in a turbulent space plasma. The method differs from existing approaches in that (i) it is inherently three-dimensional; (ii) it provides a statistically significant number of estimates from a single data stream; and (iii) it allows for a direct visualization of energy flux in turbulent plasmas. This new technique will ultimately provide a realistic, comprehensive picture of the turbulence process in plasmas.
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- 2023
24. Compressible Turbulence in the Near-Sun Solar Wind: Parker Solar Probe's First Eight Perihelia
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Cuesta, Manuel Enrique, Chhiber, Rohit, Fu, Xiangrong, Du, Senbei, Yang, Yan, Pecora, Francesco, Matthaeus, William H., Li, Hui, Steinberg, John, Guo, Fan, Gan, Zhaoming, Conrad, Emma, and Swanson, Diana
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Many questions remain about the compressibility of solar wind turbulence with respect to its origins and properties. Low plasma beta (ratio of thermal to magnetic pressure) environments allow for the easier generation of compressible turbulence, enabling study of the relationship between density fluctuations and turbulent Mach number. Utilizing Parker Solar Probe plasma data, we examine the normalized proton density fluctuations $\langle \delta n_p^2 \rangle ^{1/2}/\langle n_p\rangle = \delta {n_p}_{rms}/\langle n_p\rangle$ as a function of turbulent Mach number $M_t$ conditioned on plasma beta and cross helicity. With consideration of statistical error in the parameters computed from in-situ data, we find a general result that $\delta {n_p}_{rms}/\langle n_p\rangle \sim M_t^{1.18 \pm 0.04}$, consistent with both linear-wave theory, and nearly-incompressible turbulence in an inhomogeneous background field. We compare observational results conditioned on plasma beta and cross helicity with 3D magnetohydrodynamic simulations, and observe rather significant similarities with respect to how those parameters affect the proportionality between density fluctuations and turbulent Mach number. This study further investigates the complexity of compressible turbulence as viewed by the density scaling relationship, and may help better understand the compressible environment of the near-Sun solar wind., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, submitted to ApJL
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- 2023
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25. Assessment of the Efficacy and Durability of IncobotulinumtoxinA in the Treatment of the Upper Face in Adult Women
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Ada Trindade de Almeida, Carla de Sanctis Pecora, Elisa R. Marques, Leticia Contin, Camila Trindade de Almeida, and Ana Lúcia da Cunha
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incobotulinumtoxinA ,Botulinum toxin ,Injection technique ,ONE21 ,Dynamic wrinkles ,Upper face ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction IncobotulinumtoxinA (Xeomin®) is used in the treatment of dynamic wrinkles and the aesthetic repositioning of facial structures. The duration of its muscular effect typically extends for around 4 months. However, the residual aesthetic benefit can be observed for a longer period. To date, the long-term aesthetic benefit of incobotulinumtoxinA in facial aesthetics has not been systematically evaluated. This study aimed to evaluate longitudinally the duration and aesthetic benefits of incobotulinumtoxinA in the treatment of the upper face in adult women. Methods A quasi-experimental, evaluator-blind, clinical trial involving 28 adult women (30–60 years old) with facial movement lines, undergoing treatment of the upper face with incobotulinumtoxinA by two injectors, following an individualized protocol (ONE21 and glabellar contraction patterns) was performed. Participants were evaluated on the day of the intervention (day 0) and days 30, 120, 180, and 240, and subjected to standardized photographs. The following outcomes were evaluated blindly at each visit: Merz Aesthetics Facial Contraction Scale (MAS), GAIS (Global Aesthetic Improvement Scale), and patient satisfaction. Adverse effects were evaluated at each visit. Results Participants ranged in age from 30 to 60 years, 93% were self-declared white, and most of their baseline MAS scores for dynamic lines were moderate and severe. All the parameters presented significative reduction from baseline until day 180. At day 240, the dynamic MAS scores were lower than baseline for forehead lines in 15.4% (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.8–30.0%) of the participants, for glabellar lines in 38.5% (95% CI 18.8–58.1%), and for crow’s feet lines in 26.9% (95% CI 9.0–44.8%). Aesthetic improvement compared to baseline was identified in 35% (CI 95% 23‒50%) of the participants at day 240, and 62% (CI 95% 42‒81%) of the sample kept reporting some satisfaction with the procedure. Conclusion The aesthetic treatment of the upper face with incobotulinumtoxinA demonstrates enduring clinical benefits, and patient satisfaction lasting up to 180 days in most participants. The length of efficacy, which exceeded those reported in the literature, may be attributed to the use of techniques based on individualized assessment such as ONE21 and glabellar patterns of contraction.
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- 2024
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26. Relaxation of the turbulent magnetosheath
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Pecora, Francesco, Yang, Yan, Chasapis, Alexandros, Servidio, Sergio, Cuesta, Manuel, Roy, Sohom, Chhiber, Rohit, Bandyopadhyay, Riddhi, Gershman, D. J., Giles, B. L., Burch, J. L., and Matthaeus, William H.
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
In turbulence, nonlinear terms drive energy transfer from large-scale eddies into small scales through the so-called energy cascade. Turbulence often relaxes toward states that minimize energy; typically these states are considered globally. However, turbulence can also relax toward local quasi-equilibrium states, creating patches or cells where the magnitude of nonlinearity is reduced and energy cascade is impaired. We show, for the first time, compelling observational evidence that this ``cellularization'' of turbulence can occur due to local relaxation in a strongly turbulent natural environment such as the Earth's magnetosheath.
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- 2023
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27. Multipoint Turbulence Analysis with Helioswarm
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Pecora, Francesco, Servidio, Sergio, Primavera, Leonardo, Greco, Antonella, Yang, Yan, and Matthaeus, William H
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Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Exploration of plasma dynamics in space, including turbulence, is entering a new era of multi-satellite constellation measurements that will determine fundamental properties with unprecedented precision. Familiar but imprecise approximations will need to be abandoned and replaced with more advanced approaches. We present a preparatory study of the evaluation of second- and third-order statistics, using simultaneous measurements at many points. Here, for specificity, the orbital configuration of the NASA Helioswarm mission is employed in conjunction with three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamics numerical simulations of turbulence. The Helioswarm 9-spacecraft constellation flies virtually through the turbulence to compare results with the exact numerical statistics. We demonstrate novel increment-based techniques for the computation of (1) the multidimensional spectra and (2) the turbulent energy flux. This latter increment-space estimate of the cascade rate, based on the third-order Yaglom-Politano-Pouquet theory, uses numerous increment-space tetrahedra. Our investigation reveals that Helioswarm will provide crucial information on the nature of astrophysical turbulence.
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- 2023
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28. Sewage-and fertilizer-derived nutrients alter the intensity, diversity, and toxicity of harmful cyanobacterial blooms in eutrophic lakes
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Christopher J. Gobler, Ruth W. Drinkwater, Alexander Anthony, Jennifer A. Goleski, Ann Marie E. Famularo-Pecora, Marcella Kretz Wallace, Nora R. W. Straquadine, and Ronojoy Hem
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Microcystis ,microcystin ,harmful algal bloom ,harmful algae ,fertilizer ,sewage ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (CHABs) are promoted by excessive nutrient loading and, while fertilizers and sewage are the most prevalent external nutrient sources in most watersheds, the differential effects of these nutrient sources on CHABs are unknown. Here, we tracked CHABs and performed experiments in five distinct lakes across the Northern US including Lake Erie. Fertilizers with ammonium and orthophosphate, membrane (0.2 μm)-filtered sewage (dominated by reduced forms of nitrogen) sand-and membrane-filtered sewage (dominated by nitrate), and an inorganic nutrient solution of ammonium and orthophosphate were used as experimental nutrient sources for CHABs at N-equivalent, environmentally realistic concentrations. Phytoplankton communities were evaluated fluorometrically, microscopically, and via high throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, and levels of microcystin and the δ15N content of particulate organic nitrogen (δPO15N) were quantified. Fertilizer and both sources of wastewater increased the abundance of cyanobacteria in all experiments across all five lakes (p
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- 2024
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29. New record of leucistic Eira barbara Lineu, 1758 (Mammalia: Carnivora) for southeastern Brazil
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Henri Pecora, Felipe Santana Machado, Rosangela Borém, and Renato Augusto Junqueira Gaiga
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Camera trap ,conservation ,mustelid ,natural history ,white coat ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Records of leucism in tayras (Eira barbara) are considered common in the literature, but occur sporadically. Were found 18 records in Brazil and we present the most recent record in Southeastern Brazil, the last one occurred more than six years ago (2015). We demonstrate that records of leucistic tayras are punctual for the north of the Amazon and the south-central of the Atlantic Forest; and also found that the number of records has increased in the last 10 years. Given this scenario, we suggest further research on the species to better understand the conservation status of the species and reasons for the increase in the number of ocurrences of leucistic tayras.
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- 2024
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30. The use of Transitional Wearable Companion toys to promote children's emotional intelligence: the Emotion-Lab program.
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Clara Sardella, Claudia Di Marco, Martina Porcelli, Jasmine Miozzi, Valerio Sperati, Beste özcan, Massimiliano De Luca, Alessandro Pecora, Massimiliano Schembri, Gianluca Baldassarre, and Riccardo Santilli
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- 2024
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31. Semantic 3D Models and Virtual Environments for Narrating and Learning the Heritage’s Cultural Contents
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Pecora, Anna Lisa, Ribeiro, Diogo, Series Editor, Naser, M. Z., Series Editor, Stouffs, Rudi, Series Editor, Bolpagni, Marzia, Series Editor, Giordano, Andrea, editor, Russo, Michele, editor, and Spallone, Roberta, editor
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- 2024
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32. The essential role of multi-point measurements in investigations of turbulence, three-dimensional structure, and dynamics: the solar wind beyond single scale and the Taylor Hypothesis
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Matthaeus, W. H., Adhikari, S., Bandyopadhyay, R., Brown, M. R., Bruno, R., Borovsky, J., Carbone, V., Caprioli, D., Chasapis, A., Chhiber, R., Dasso, S., Dmitruk, P., Del Zanna, L., Dmitruk, P. A., Franci, Luca, Gary, S. P., Goldstein, M. L., Gomez, D., Greco, A., Horbury, T. S., Ji, Hantao, Kasper, J. C., Klein, K. G., Landi, S., Li, Hui, Malara, F., Maruca, B. A., Mininni, P., Oughton, Sean, Papini, E., Parashar, T. N., Pecora, F., Petrosyan, Arakel, Pouquet, Annick, Retino, A., Roberts, Owen, Ruffolo, David, Servidio, Sergio, Spence, Harlan, Smith, C. W., Stawarz, J. E., TenBarge, Jason, Vasquez, B. J., Vaivads, Andris, Valentini, F., Velli, Marco, Verdini, A., Verscharen, Daniel, Whittlesey, Phyllis, Wicks, Robert, Yang, Y., and Zimbardo, G.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Space plasmas are three-dimensional dynamic entities. Except under very special circumstances, their structure in space and their behavior in time are not related in any simple way. Therefore, single spacecraft in situ measurements cannot unambiguously unravel the full space-time structure of the heliospheric plasmas of interest in the inner heliosphere, in the Geospace environment, or the outer heliosphere. This shortcoming leaves numerous central questions incompletely answered. Deficiencies remain in at least two important subjects, Space Weather and fundamental plasma turbulence theory, due to a lack of a more complete understanding of the space-time structure of dynamic plasmas. Only with multispacecraft measurements over suitable spans of spatial separation and temporal duration can these ambiguities be resolved. We note that these characterizations apply to turbulence across a wide range of scales, and also equally well to shocks, flux ropes, magnetic clouds, current sheets, stream interactions, etc. In the following, we will describe the basic requirements for resolving space-time structure in general, using turbulence' as both an example and a principal target or study. Several types of missions are suggested to resolve space-time structure throughout the Heliosphere., Comment: White Paper submitted to: Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1903.06890
- Published
- 2022
33. Patient report outcomes in cryoballoon ablation of atrial fibrillation during the COVID Era: Insights from the 1STOP project
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Molon, Giulio, Arena, Giuseppe, Tondo, Claudio, Ricciardi, Danilo, Rossi, Pietro, Pieragnoli, Paolo, Verlato, Roberto, Manfrin, Massimiliano, Girardengo, Giulia, Campisi, Giuseppe, Pecora, Domenico, Luzi, Mario, and Iacopino, Saverio
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- 2024
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34. An Evaluation of Education-Based Interventions for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders without Intellectual Disability: A Systematic Review
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Caitlin M. Macmillan, Laura A. Pecora, Kathryn Ridgway, Merrilyn Hooley, Mary Thomson, Sarah Dymond, Emma Donaldson, Gary B. Mesibov, and Mark A. Stokes
- Abstract
Many interventions designed to improve educational outcomes for students with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have been published, yet there has not been an adequate review of interventions in school settings assessed against student outcomes. We reviewed empirical literature published 2000 to June 2019 that evaluated school-based interventions applied to students formally diagnosed, with an IQ > 70, and who were attending kindergarten/pre-school, primary, or secondary school. Interventions most commonly targeted skills in six areas: academic skills, on-task behaviour, play behaviour, social cognition, social interaction, and verbal skills. Results indicated significant improvement in each area. Generalization and maintenance were not consistently evaluated. Few studies included female participants and few reported on participant race; of those that did, the majority were Caucasian. Further research, utilizing larger samples and more stringent statistical approaches, is needed to identify the most efficient and effective interventions to improve educational outcomes for this population.
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- 2023
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35. How Food Choices Impact on Male Fertility
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Pecora, Giulia, Sciarra, Francesca, Gangitano, Elena, and Venneri, Mary Anna
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- 2023
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36. The Anatomical Layering Assessment: The Construction of Beauty
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de Sanctis Pecora C
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layers ,assessment ,anatomy ,aging process ,combined treatment. ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Carla de Sanctis Pecora Dermatologie Private Practice, São Paulo, BrazilCorrespondence: Carla de Sanctis Pecora, Dermatologie Private Practice, Avenida Dr. Cardoso de Melo, 1308, conj 121, São Paulo, 04548-004, Brazil, Tel +5511 99621-9162, Email carla@dermatologie.com.brAbstract: Restructuring an aging face from bone structure to the surface of the skin can be metaphorically compared to building and renovating a house. While each anatomical layer of the face undergoes an aging process of its own, there is also an interdependency of superficial structures on deeper layers, so that a change in one layer may lead to changes to the adjacent layers. This interaction among the structures deep into the skin, along with the skin’s ability to envelope them is what determine the aspect of the aging face. Thus, a careful assessment of all the layers is imperative and we describe herein a step-by-step facial layering assessment and facial restructuring approach from bone structure to the surface of the skin to implement a treatment plan able to deliver a harmonious rejuvenating outcome.Keywords: layers, assessment, anatomy, aging process, combined treatment
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- 2024
37. Combination Dabrafenib and Trametinib Versus Combination Nivolumab and Ipilimumab for Patients With Advanced BRAF-Mutant Melanoma: The DREAMseq Trial—ECOG-ACRIN EA6134
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Atkins, Michael B, Lee, Sandra J, Chmielowski, Bartosz, Tarhini, Ahmad A, Cohen, Gary I, Truong, Thach-Giao, Moon, Helen H, Davar, Diwakar, O'Rourke, Mark, Stephenson, Joseph J, Curti, Brendan D, Urba, Walter J, Brell, Joanna M, Funchain, Pauline, Kendra, Kari L, Ikeguchi, Alexandra P, Jaslowski, Anthony, Bane, Charles L, Taylor, Mark A, Bajaj, Madhuri, Conry, Robert M, Ellis, Robert J, Logan, Theodore F, Laudi, Noel, Sosman, Jeffrey A, Crockett, David G, Pecora, Andrew L, Okazaki, Ian J, Reganti, Sowjanya, Chandra, Sunandana, Guild, Samantha, Chen, Helen X, Streicher, Howard Z, Wolchok, Jedd D, Ribas, Antoni, and Kirkwood, John M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Health Disparities ,Clinical Research ,Precision Medicine ,Cancer ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,6.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Humans ,Ipilimumab ,Nivolumab ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Prospective Studies ,Melanoma ,Pyridones ,Oximes ,Disease Progression ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Skin Neoplasms ,Mutation ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
PurposeCombination programmed cell death protein 1/cytotoxic T-cell lymphocyte-4-blockade and dual BRAF/MEK inhibition have each shown significant clinical benefit in patients with BRAFV600-mutant metastatic melanoma, leading to broad regulatory approval. Little prospective data exist to guide the choice of either initial therapy or treatment sequence in this population. This study was conducted to determine which initial treatment or treatment sequence produced the best efficacy.Patients and methodsIn a phase III trial, patients with treatment-naive BRAFV600-mutant metastatic melanoma were randomly assigned to receive either combination nivolumab/ipilimumab (arm A) or dabrafenib/trametinib (arm B) in step 1, and at disease progression were enrolled in step 2 to receive the alternate therapy, dabrafenib/trametinib (arm C) or nivolumab/ipilimumab (arm D). The primary end point was 2-year overall survival (OS). Secondary end points were 3-year OS, objective response rate, response duration, progression-free survival, crossover feasibility, and safety.ResultsA total of 265 patients were enrolled, with 73 going onto step 2 (27 in arm C and 46 in arm D). The study was stopped early by the independent Data Safety Monitoring Committee because of a clinically significant end point being achieved. The 2-year OS for those starting on arm A was 71.8% (95% CI, 62.5 to 79.1) and arm B 51.5% (95% CI, 41.7 to 60.4; log-rank P = .010). Step 1 progression-free survival favored arm A (P = .054). Objective response rates were arm A: 46.0%; arm B: 43.0%; arm C: 47.8%; and arm D: 29.6%. Median duration of response was not reached for arm A and 12.7 months for arm B (P < .001). Crossover occurred in 52% of patients with documented disease progression. Grade ≥ 3 toxicities occurred with similar frequency between arms, and regimen toxicity profiles were as anticipated.ConclusionCombination nivolumab/ipilimumab followed by BRAF and MEK inhibitor therapy, if necessary, should be the preferred treatment sequence for a large majority of patients.
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- 2023
38. Microencapsulation of sunscreen reduces toxicity of its components to A. salina: Biochemical, behavioral and morphological studies
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Caio Alexandre de Freitas Schatzer, Marcella Pecora Milazzotto, Arnaldo Rodrigues dos Santos Júnior, Giselle Cerchiaro, Maria Martha Bernardi, and Elizabeth Teodorov
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Artemia salina ,Marine environment ,Microencapsulation ,Pollution ,Sunscreen ,Environmental pollution ,TD172-193.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Sunscreens contain several substances that cause damage to species where they are disposed. New formulations have been created to prevent such marine environmental damages. One promising formulation is the microencapsulated sunscreen. The objective of this study was to evaluate the possible safety to marine environment of one microencapsulated sunscreen formulation. The animal model Artemia salina (cists and nauplii) was tested with two sunscreen formulations (microencapsulated and non-microencapsulated) and toxicological, behavioral, morphological parameters as well as biochemical assays (lipoperoxidation and carbonylation tests) were analyzed. Results showed that microencapsulated sunscreen impeded some toxic effects caused by the release of the substances within the microcapsule in the highest concentration, reestablishing the mortality and hatching rates to control levels, while removing the sunscreen microcapsule by adding 1 % DMSO reduced the cyst hatching rate, increasing the nauplii mortality rate and decreased locomotor activity in higher concentrations. Finally, nauplii with 24 hours of life and exposed to sunscreen without the microcapsule showed an increase in mitochondrial activity (assessed at 48 hours after exposure) and presented malformations when exposed to the highest concentration non-microencapsulated concentration (assessed by SEM at 72 hours after exposure), when compared to the control group. These results together allow us to conclude that the microencapsulation process of a sunscreen helps protecting A. salina from the harmful effects of higher concentrations of said sunscreens. However, long-term studies must be carried out as it is not known how long a microencapsulated sunscreen can remain in the environment without causing harmful effects to the marine ecosystem and becoming an ecologically relevant pollutant.
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- 2024
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39. The use of transcriptomic data in developing biomarkers in breast cancer
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Maher Albitar, Andre Goy, Andrew Pecora, Deena Graham, Donna McNamara, Ahmad Charifa, Andrew IP, Wanlong Ma, and Stanley Waintraub
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androgen receptor ,breast cancer ,ERBB2 ,estrogen receptor ,HER2 ,next generation sequencing ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract HER2 and hormone receptors are biomarkers for selecting breast cancer therapy and predicting outcomes. In the era of antibody‐drug conjugates (ADC), a relatively low HER2 expression level is adequate for targeting tumor cells. We explored the potential of RNA profiling, determined by next generation sequencing (NGS), to provide more flexible clinical biomarkers as compared with immunohistochemistry (IHC) or fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Data from 57 breast cancers was used to study biomarker levels as detected by routine clinical transcriptomic tests. HER2 (ERBB2), estrogen receptor alpha (ESR1), and androgen receptor (AR) mRNA levels were compared with IHC and FISH results. There was a significant overlap in the levels of ERBB2 mRNA between cases scored by IHC as zero, 1+, and 2+. This variation correlated with progression‐free survival (PFS). Similarly, the ESR1 RNA accurately reflected estrogen receptor (ER) status. Patients with high AR mRNA had better PFS (p = 0.05). Patients expressing high ER and AR levels had better PFS than those expressing low ESR1 and AR (p = 0.03). These findings suggest that RNA analysis can be an alternative to IHC and FISH and provides continuous data that can better determine cut‐off points for predicting response to ADC.
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- 2024
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40. Isotropization and Evolution of Energy-Containing Eddies in Solar Wind Turbulence: Parker Solar Probe, Helios 1, ACE, WIND, and Voyager 1
- Author
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Cuesta, Manuel Enrique, Chhiber, Rohit, Roy, Sohom, Goodwill, Joshua, Pecora, Francesco, Jarosik, Jake, Matthaeus, William H., Parashar, Tulasi N., and Bandyopadhyay, Riddhi
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We examine the radial evolution of correlation lengths perpendicular (\(\lambda_C^{\perp}\)) and parallel (\(\lambda_C^{\parallel}\)) to the magnetic-field direction, computed from solar wind magnetic-field data measured by Parker Solar Probe (PSP) during its first eight orbits, Helios 1, Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE), WIND, and Voyager 1 spacecraft. Correlation lengths are grouped by an interval's alignment angle; the angle between the magnetic-field and solar wind velocity vectors (\(\Theta_{\rm BV}\)). Parallel and perpendicular angular channels correspond to angles \(0^{\circ}~<~\Theta_{\rm BV}~<~40^{\circ}\) and \(50^{\circ}~<~\Theta_{\rm BV}~<~90^{\circ}\), respectively. We observe an anisotropy in the inner heliosphere within 0.40~au, with \(\lambda_C^{\parallel} / \lambda_C^{\perp} \approx 0.75\) at 0.10~au. This anisotropy reduces with increasing heliocentric distance and the correlation lengths roughly isotropize within 1~au. Results from ACE and WIND support a reversal of the anisotropy, such that \(\lambda_C^{\parallel} /\lambda_C^{\perp} \approx 1.29\) at 1~au. The ratio does not appear to change significantly beyond 1~au, although the small number of parallel intervals in the Voyager dataset precludes unambiguous conclusions from being drawn. This study provides insights regarding the radial evolution of the large, most energetic interacting turbulent fluctuations in the heliosphere. We also emphasize the importance of tracking the changes in sampling direction in PSP measurements as the spacecraft approaches the Sun, when using these data to study the radial evolution of turbulence. This can prove to be vital in understanding the more complex dynamics of the solar wind in the inner heliosphere and can assist in improving related simulations., Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables
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- 2022
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41. A pilot study of chlorambucil in pre-treated metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma patients bearing germline BRCA or other DNA damage repair system variants
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Carconi, Catia, Bosi, Carlo, Scartozzi, Mario, Cergnul, Massimiliano, Cinausero, Marika, Faloppi, Luca, Garajova, Ingrid, Lonardi, Sara, Pecora, Irene, Pisanu, Laura, Spadi, Rosella, Spallanzani, Andrea, Peretti, Umberto, Macchini, Marina, Orsi, Giulia, and Reni, Michele
- Published
- 2024
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42. A chemical modification of a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor pan agonist produced a shift to a new dual alpha/gamma partial agonist endowed with mitochondrial pyruvate carrier inhibition and antidiabetic properties
- Author
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Laghezza, Antonio, Cerchia, Carmen, Genovese, Massimo, Montanari, Roberta, Capelli, Davide, Wackerlig, Judith, Simic, Stefan, Falbo, Emanuele, Pecora, Lucia, Leuci, Rosalba, Brunetti, Leonardo, Piemontese, Luca, Tortorella, Paolo, Biswas, Abanish, Singh, Ravi Pratap, Tambe, Suhas, Sudeep, C.A., Pattnaik, Ashok Kumar, Jayaprakash, Venkatesan, Paoli, Paolo, Lavecchia, Antonio, and Loiodice, Fulvio
- Published
- 2024
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43. Clinical-Hematological Changes and Predictors of Severity in Acute Food Protein–Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome Reactions at Oral Food Challenge: A Multicenter Observational Study
- Author
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Argiz, L., Valsami-Fokianos, M., Arasi, S., Barni, S., Boscia, S., Bracaglia, G., Bracamonte, T., Carballeira, I., Dinardo, G., Echeverria, L., Garcia, E., Garcia-Magan, C., Gomez-Rial, J., Gonzalez-Delgado, P., Fiocchi, A., Garriga, T., Ibrahim, T., Infante, S., Machinena, A., Mangone, G., Mori, F., Moure, J.D., O’Valle, V., Pascal, M., Pecora, V., Prieto, A., Quevedo, S., Salas, A., Vazquez-Cortes, S., Vila, L., Martinon-Torres, F., Gomez-Carballa, A., Boyle, R.J., and Vazquez-Ortiz, Marta
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- 2024
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44. On the transmission of turbulent structures across the Earth's Bow Shock
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Trotta, Domenico, Pecora, Francesco, Settino, Adriana, Perrone, Denise, Hietala, Heli, Horbury, Timothy, Matthaeus, William, Burgess, David, Servidio, Sergio, and Valentini, Francesco
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Collisionless shocks and plasma turbulence are crucial ingredients for a broad range of astrophysical systems. The shock-turbulence interaction, and in particular the transmission of fully developed turbulence across the quasi-perpendicular Earth's bow shock, is here addressed using a combination of spacecraft observations and local numerical simulations. An alignment between the Wind (upstream) and MMS (downstream) spacecraft is used to study the transmission of turbulent structures across the shock, revealing an increase of their magnetic helicity content in its downstream. Local kinetic simulations, in which the dynamics of turbulent structures is followed through their transmission across a perpendicular shock, confirm this scenario, revealing that the observed magnetic helicity increase is associated with the compression of turbulent structures at the shock front., Comment: 9 Pages, 4 Figures
- Published
- 2022
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45. Magnetic Switchback Occurrence Rates in the Inner Heliosphere: Parker Solar Probe and 1 au
- Author
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Pecora, Francesco, Matthaeus, William H., Primavera, Leonardo, Greco, Antonella, Chhiber, Rohit, Bandyopadhyay, Riddhi, and Servidio, Sergio
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The subject of switchbacks, defined either as large angular deflections or polarity reversals of the magnetic field, has generated substantial interest in the space physics community since the launch of Parker Solar Probe (PSP) in 2018. Previous studies have characterized switchbacks in several different ways, and have been restricted to data available from the first few orbits. Here, we analyze the frequency of occurrence of switchbacks per unit distance for the first full eight orbits of PSP. In this work, are considered switchback only the events that reverse the sign of magnetic field relative to a regional average. A significant finding is that the rate of occurrence falls off sharply approaching the sun near 0.2 au (40 $R_\odot$), and rises gently from 0.2 au outward. The analysis is varied for different magnetic field cadences and for different local averages of the ambient field, confirming the robustness of the results. We discuss implications for the mechanisms of switchback generation. A publicly available database has been created with the identified reversals.
- Published
- 2022
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46. The impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on financial markets: a seismologic approach
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Spelta, Alessandro, Pecora, Nicolò, Flori, Andrea, and Giudici, Paolo
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- 2023
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47. Structural Analysis and Experimental Tests of a Morphing-Flap Scaled Model
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Mürüvvet Sinem Sicim Demirci, Rosario Pecora, Luca Chianese, Massimo Viscardi, and Metin Orhan Kaya
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morphing structures ,smart aircraft ,morphing flap ,adaptive systems ,intelligent systems ,finger-like ribs ,Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics ,TL1-4050 - Abstract
The implementation of morphing wing mechanisms shows significant potential for improving aircraft performance, as highlighted in the recent literature. The Clean Sky 2 AirGreen 2 European project team is currently performing ground and wind tunnel tests to validate improvements in morphing wing structures. The project aims to demonstrate the effectiveness of these morphing designs on a full-scale flying prototype. This article describes the design methodology and structural testing of a scaled morphing-flap structure, which can adapt to three different morphing modes for various flight conditions: low-speed (take-off and landing) and high-speed (cruise). A scale factor of 1:3 was selected for the wind tunnel test campaign. Due to challenges in scaling the embedded mechanisms and actuators necessary for shape-changing, a full geometrical scale of the real flap prototype was not feasible. Static analyses were performed using the finite element method to address critical load conditions determined through three-dimensional computational fluid dynamic (CFD) analysis. The finite element (FE) analysis was conducted and the results were compared with the empirical data from the structural test. Good correlations were found between the structural testing results and numerical predictions, including static deflections and elastic deformations under applied loads. This indicates that the modeling approaches used during the design and testing phases were highly successful. Based on simulations for the ultimate load conditions tested during the wind tunnel tests, the scaled flap prototype has been deemed suitable for further testing.
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- 2024
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48. Expanding the clinical utility of liquid biopsy by using liquid transcriptome and artificial intelligence
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Albitar, Maher, Charifa, Ahmad, Agersborg, Sally, Pecora, Andrew, Ip, Andrew, and Goy, Andre
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- 2024
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49. Monitoring JUICE deployment operations with high-accuracy accelerometer data
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De Filippis, Umberto, Di Benedetto, Mauro, Iess, Luciano, Cappuccio, Paolo, Pecora, Massimiliano, Grappasonni, Chiara, and Olivieri, Angelo
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- 2024
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50. MRI strain analysis as a novel modality for the assessment of myocardial function following stem cell therapy-results from Amorcyte trial
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Hor Kan, Kereiakes Dean, Pecora Andrew L, Oshinski John, Quyyumi Arshed A, Chung Eugene, Taylor Michael, Hakeem Abdul, Bhatti Sabha, and Mazur Wojciech
- Subjects
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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