379 results on '"Sköld, Mattias"'
Search Results
2. Effects of bottom trawling and environmental factors on benthic bacteria, meiofauna and macrofauna communities and benthic ecosystem processes
- Author
-
Bradshaw, Clare, primary, Iburg, Sven, additional, Morys, Claudia, additional, Sköld, Mattias, additional, Pusceddu, Antonio, additional, Ennas, Claudia, additional, Jonsson, Patrik, additional, and Nascimento, Francisco J.A., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Nerve Tracing in Juvenile Rats : A Feasible Model for the Study of Brachial Plexus Birth Palsy and Cocontractions?
- Author
-
Jonsson, Krister, Hultgren, Tomas, Risling, Marten, Sköld, Mattias K., Jonsson, Krister, Hultgren, Tomas, Risling, Marten, and Sköld, Mattias K.
- Abstract
Brachial plexus birth injuries cause diminished motor function in the upper extremity. The most common sequel is internal rotation contracture. A number of these patients also suffer from cocontractions, preventing the use of an otherwise good passive range of motion in the shoulder. One theory behind the co-contracture problem is that injured nerve fibers grow into distal support tissue not corresponding to the proximal support tissue, resulting in reinnervation of the wrong muscle groups. To further elucidate this hypothesis, we used rat neonates to investigate a possible model for the study of cocontractions in brachial plexus birth injuries. Five-day-old rats were subjected to a crush injury to the C5-C6 roots. After a healing period of 4 weeks, the infraspinatus muscle was injected with Fluoro-Gold. A week later, the animals were perfused and spinal cords harvested and sectioned. Differences in the uptake of Fluoro-Gold and NeuN positive cells of between sides of the spinal cord were recorded. We found a larger amount of Fluoro-Gold positive cells on the uninjured side, while the injured side had positive cells dispersed over a longer area in the craniocaudal direction. Our findings indicate that the method can be used to trace Fluoro-Gold from muscle through a neuroma. Our results also indicate that a neuroma in continuity somewhat prevents the correct connection from being established between the motor neuron pool in the spinal cord and target muscle and that some neurons succumb to a crushing injury. We also present future research ideas.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Inför fler fiskefria områden för att skydda bestånd och ekosystem
- Author
-
Bergström, Ulf, Eklöf, Johan, Sköld, Mattias, Hansen, Joakim P., Wikström, Sofia, Berkström, Charlotte, Bergström, Ulf, Eklöf, Johan, Sköld, Mattias, Hansen, Joakim P., Wikström, Sofia, and Berkström, Charlotte
- Abstract
Fiskefria områden kan vara ett effektivt verktyg för att skydda både fisk- och kräftdjursbestånd och marina ekosystem. Men det är viktigt att områdena utformas på rätt sätt och är tillräckligt stora. Lektidsfredade områden kan vara enklare att driva igenom, men ger inte lika goda effekter.
- Published
- 2024
5. Effects of bottom trawling and environmental factors on benthic bacteria, meiofauna and macrofauna communities and benthic ecosystem processes
- Author
-
Bradshaw, Clare, Iburg, Sven, Morys, Claudia, Sköld, Mattias, Pusceddu, Antonio, Ennas, Claudia, Jonsson, Patrik, Nascimento, Francisco J. A., Bradshaw, Clare, Iburg, Sven, Morys, Claudia, Sköld, Mattias, Pusceddu, Antonio, Ennas, Claudia, Jonsson, Patrik, and Nascimento, Francisco J. A.
- Abstract
Soft sediment marine benthic ecosystems comprise a diverse community of bacteria, meiofauna and macrofauna, which together support a range of ecosystem processes such as biogeochemical cycling. These ecosystems are also fishing grounds for demersal species that are often caught using bottom trawling. This fishing method can have deleterious effects on benthic communities by causing injury or mortality, and through alteration of sediment properties that in turn influence community structure. Although the impacts of bottom trawling on macrofauna are relatively well studied, less is known about the responses of meiofauna and bacteria to such disturbances, or how bottom trawling impacts benthic ecosystem processes. Quantifying trawling impacts against a background of natural environmental variability is also a challenge. To address these questions, we examined effects of bottom trawling and a range of environmental variables (e. g. water chemistry and physical and biochemical surface sediment properties) on a) bacterial, meiofaunal and macrofaunal community structure and b) benthic ecosystem processes (nutrient fluxes, extracellular enzyme activities and carbon turnover and degradation rates). We also investigated the link between the benthic macrofauna community and the same ecosystem processes. While there was a significant effect of bottom trawling intensity on macrofaunal community structure, the same was not seen for bacterial or meiofaunal community composition, which were more affected by environmental factors, such as surface sediment properties. The labile component of the surface sediment carbon pool was higher at highly trawled sites. Carbon degradation rates, extracellular enzyme activities, oxygen fluxes and some nutrient fluxes were significantly affected by trawling, but ecosystem processes were also strongly linked to the abundance of key bioturbators (Macoma balthica, Halicryptus spinulosus, Scoloplos armiger and Pontoporeia femorata). Although benthic
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Nerve Tracing in Juvenile Rats: A Feasible Model for the Study of Brachial Plexus Birth Palsy and Cocontractions?
- Author
-
Jönsson, Krister, additional, Hultgren, Tomas, additional, Risling, Mårten, additional, and Sköld, Mattias K., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Technological innovations to reduce the impact of bottom gears on the seabed
- Author
-
Sala, Antonello, primary, Depestele, Jochen, additional, Gümüş, Aysun, additional, Laffargue, Pascal, additional, Nielsen, J. Rasmus, additional, Polet, Hans, additional, Smith, Chris J., additional, Zengin, Mustafa, additional, Bastardie, Francois, additional, Eigaard, Ole R., additional, Hamon, Katell G., additional, Jensen, Frank, additional, Lucchetti, Alessandro, additional, Méhault, Sonia, additional, Notti, Emilio, additional, Papadopoulou, Nadia, additional, Petetta, Andrea, additional, Sköld, Mattias, additional, Vincent, Benoit, additional, and Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. In Vitro Trauma: Description of a Cavitation-Inducing Injury Model
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias K., primary and Sondén, Anders, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Acute necrotizing encephalopathy with SARS-CoV-2 RNA confirmed in cerebrospinal fluid
- Author
-
Virhammar, Johan, Kumlien, Eva, Fällmar, David, Frithiof, Robert, Jackmann, Sven, Sköld, Mattias K., Kadir, Mohamed, Frick, Jens, Lindeberg, Jonas, Olivero-Reinius, Henrik, Ryttlefors, Mats, Cunningham, Janet L., Wikström, Johan, Grabowska, Anna, Bondeson, Kåre, Bergquist, Jonas, Zetterberg, Henrik, and Rostami, Elham
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Population genetics of the hound needlefish Tylosurus crocodilus (Belonidae) indicate high connectivity in Tanzanian coastal waters
- Author
-
Mgeleka, Said S., primary, Silas, Mathew Ogalo, additional, Mtonga, Cretus, additional, Rumisha, Cyrus, additional, Viinamäki, Elina, additional, Polte, Patrick, additional, Sköld, Mattias, additional, Winder, Monika, additional, and Gullström, Martin, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Sediment suspended by bottom trawling can reduce reproductive success in a broadcast spawning fish
- Author
-
Corell, Hanna, primary, Bradshaw, Clare, additional, and Sköld, Mattias, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Sediment suspended by bottom trawling can reduce reproductive success in a broadcast spawning fish
- Author
-
Corell, Hanna, Bradshaw, Clare, Sköld, Mattias, Corell, Hanna, Bradshaw, Clare, and Sköld, Mattias
- Abstract
Suspended sediment adheres to pelagic fish eggs, affecting their buoyancy. In the stratified southern Baltic Sea, eggs of the Eastern cod depend on neutral buoyancy in the “reproductive volume” (RV) (approx. >11 salinity and >2 ml O2/L) for successful hatching. With increased suspended sediment concentrations (SSC), eggs risk sinking out of the RV into deeper, unfavourable conditions. Bottom trawling, which increases SSC, has been intense around the Eastern cod spawning ground. We modelled the transport of sediment suspended from trawling at this spawning ground to estimate the degree to which eggs could be affected by increased SSC. SSC >1 mg/L above background levels was found 3 km away, one trawl track subjecting a water volume equivalent to 0.01% of the RV to this excess SSC for >12 h. At this excess SSC, it would take c. 6 d for an egg to sink out into unfavourable conditions; insufficient time for it to become a larva. Extrapolating to real bottom trawling intensities in the area of the RV where suspension is highest showed that a water volume equivalent to half the RV experiences excess turbidity of >1 mg/L for c. 24 h during a year. However, fishing effort is heterogeneous; spatio-temporal overlap between trawling and the RV will enhance the duration and/or frequency of turbidity in the spawning area, affecting a higher fraction of the eggs than the model predicts. We conclude that bottom trawling at this spawning ground could decrease cod's reproductive success through increased SSC. Such effects are likely in populations of other fish with pelagic eggs that spawn at trawling grounds.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Population genetics of the hound needlefish Tylosurus crocodilus (Belonidae) indicate high connectivity in Tanzanian coastal waters
- Author
-
Mgeleka, Said S., Silas, Mathew Ogalo, Mtonga, Cretus, Rumisha, Cyrus, Viinamäki, Elina, Polte, Patrick, Sköld, Mattias, Winder, Monika, Gullström, Martin, Mgeleka, Said S., Silas, Mathew Ogalo, Mtonga, Cretus, Rumisha, Cyrus, Viinamäki, Elina, Polte, Patrick, Sköld, Mattias, Winder, Monika, and Gullström, Martin
- Abstract
The hound needlefish Tylosurus crocodilus (Belonidae) is a highly demanded fish in the local markets of Tanzania, but the growing coastal population threatens its sustainability. As belonids are highly migratory fishes utilising various parts of the seascape, increased fishing pressure may disrupt connectivity patterns on different spatiotemporal scales and disaggregate populations. Using the COI gene, this study assessed the genetic population structure, connectivity patterns, and historical demography of T. crocodilus collected in seven sites spread along Tanzanian coastal waters. Results showed fourteen haplotypes with low overall nucleotide and haplotype diversity. Pairwise FST comparisons revealed no significant differences among the sampled sites, except for the northernmost site (Tanga) and an island in the south (Songosongo). Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed a non-significant genetic structure among populations (FST = 0.01782), suggesting the fishery across Tanzanian waters exploits the same population. Moreover, there was no correlative relationship between genetic and pairwise geographic distances, rejecting the isolation by distance hypothesis. However, neutrality tests and mismatch distribution analysis revealed that recent demographic expansion might exist. Empirical evidence of panmixia suggests high genetic connectivity. In combination with low genetic diversity, management should be directed to actions that prevent genetic diversity loss and the effect of genetic drift on populations.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Spinal neurokirurgi på grund av radikulopati och myelopat : [Spinal neurosurgery radiculopathy and myelopathy]
- Author
-
Elmi Terander, Adrian, Corell, Alba, Shahidi, Saeed, Richter, Johan, Sköld, Mattias, Svensdotter, Emma, Elmi Terander, Adrian, Corell, Alba, Shahidi, Saeed, Richter, Johan, Sköld, Mattias, and Svensdotter, Emma
- Abstract
The field of spinal neurosurgery covers degenerative conditions and trauma as well as tumors, malformations and vascular disorders of spine and spinal cord. This article focuses on the Swedish spinal neurosurgical care regarding radiculopathy and myelopathy. Disc herniation, foraminal stenosis, spinal stenosis and spinal cord compression due to degenerative disorders or tumors are discussed. Treatment options such as anterior cervical decompression and fusion, posterior forami-notomy, laminectomy and approaches to spinal intradural tumors are briefly presented. The aim is to present symptoms, diagnostics and treatment options of common conditions to facilitate early detection and referral to neurosurgical centers to avoid delayed dia-gnosis and neurological impairment.
- Published
- 2023
15. Technological innovations to reduce the impact of bottom gears on the seabed
- Author
-
Sala, Antonello, Depestele, Jochen, Gümüş, Aysun, Laffargue, Pascal, Nielsen, J. Rasmus, Polet, Hans, Smith, Chris J., Zengin, Mustafa, Bastardie, Francois, Eigaard, Ole R., Hamon, Katell G., Jensen, Frank, Lucchetti, Alessandro, Méhault, Sonia, Notti, Emilio, Papadopoulou, Nadia, Petetta, Andrea, Sköld, Mattias, Vincent, Benoit, Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D., Sala, Antonello, Depestele, Jochen, Gümüş, Aysun, Laffargue, Pascal, Nielsen, J. Rasmus, Polet, Hans, Smith, Chris J., Zengin, Mustafa, Bastardie, Francois, Eigaard, Ole R., Hamon, Katell G., Jensen, Frank, Lucchetti, Alessandro, Méhault, Sonia, Notti, Emilio, Papadopoulou, Nadia, Petetta, Andrea, Sköld, Mattias, Vincent, Benoit, and Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D.
- Abstract
Impact of bottom gear fishing is primarily determined by the sensitivity of the benthic community, fishing intensity and penetration depth of the gears. Disturbance of benthic populations and physical modification of bottom substrates are “outputs” of bottom fishing, which produces a clearly defined footprint identified by the spatial extent of fishing and the width of the gear that is in contact with the sea floor. Solutions and innovations to reduce the adverse impacts of bottom fisheries on demersal ecosystems is a global priority. Three modus operandi were studied - alternative gears, alternative catch stimuli, alternative gear components, where each could contribute to a reduction in fishing footprint, benthic impact, sediment resuspension. A collaborate study was undertaken with the fishing industry into innovative technologies to reduce seabed fishing impacts in ten case studies covering the main mobile bottom-contacting gears across European waters. Strategies to reduce fuel use, greenhouse gas emissions, and bycatch are explored in the study as incentives for the fishing industry to reduce seabed impacts. Lifting otterboards or replacing mechanical- by electrical-stimulation provide promising avenues to mitigate fishing impact. Replacing towed- by static-gear has potential but is not a generic solution. The adoption of technical innovations critically depends on the economic performances. In some cases, reduced fuel consumption and costs enhanced the uptake by the fishery. In certain scenarios, limited fishing opportunities due to unacceptable environmental impacts, has prompted innovation. No single modus operandi can solve all the seabed impacts and a combination may be most effective depending on local habitat type, regulatory setting, social and economic characteristics of the fishery. As demonstrated by the current study, creative and innovative solutions can be found to minimize the effects of fishing on marine habitats while maintaining viable, long, Impact of bottom gear fishing is primarily determined by the sensitivity of the benthic community, fishing intensity and penetration depth of the gears. Disturbance of benthic populations and physical modification of bottom substrates are “outputs” of bottom fishing, which produces a clearly defined footprint identified by the spatial extent of fishing and the width of the gear that is in contact with the sea floor. Solutions and innovations to reduce the adverse impacts of bottom fisheries on demersal ecosystems is a global priority. Three modus operandi were studied - alternative gears, alternative catch stimuli, alternative gear components, where each could contribute to a reduction in fishing footprint, benthic impact, sediment resuspension. A collaborate study was undertaken with the fishing industry into innovative technologies to reduce seabed fishing impacts in ten case studies covering the main mobile bottom-contacting gears across European waters. Strategies to reduce fuel use, greenhouse gas emissions, and bycatch are explored in the study as incentives for the fishing industry to reduce seabed impacts. Lifting otterboards or replacing mechanical- by electrical-stimulation provide promising avenues to mitigate fishing impact. Replacing towed- by static-gear has potential but is not a generic solution. The adoption of technical innovations critically depends on the economic performances. In some cases, reduced fuel consumption and costs enhanced the uptake by the fishery. In certain scenarios, limited fishing opportunities due to unacceptable environmental impacts, has prompted innovation. No single modus operandi can solve all the seabed impacts and a combination may be most effective depending on local habitat type, regulatory setting, social and economic characteristics of the fishery. As demonstrated by the current study, creative and innovative solutions can be found to minimize the effects of fishing on marine habitats while maintaining viable, lo
- Published
- 2023
16. Chapter Seabed Mapping and Marine Spatial Planning: A Case Study from a Swedish Marine Protected Area
- Author
-
Jonsson, Lisbeth, Gonzalez-Mirelis, Genoveva, Lundälv, Tomas, Bergström, Per, Sköld, Mattias, and Lindegarth, Mats
- Subjects
Mathematics & science ,bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PN Chemistry::PNR Physical chemistry::PNRS Solid state chemistry - Abstract
Physical chemistry
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Notation as visual representation of sound-based music
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Visual Representation of Timbre
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, primary
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Working Group on Fisheries Benthic Impact and Trade-offs (WGFBIT)
- Author
-
Pierucci, Andrea, Nguyen Xuan, Alessandra, Di Lorenzo, Bianca, Bradshaw, Clare, Garcia, Clement, Mangano, Cristina, Vina-Herbon, Cristina, Smith, Chris, Cuyvers, Daan, van Denderen, Daniel, Clare, David, Punzo, Elisa, Di Bona, Gabriele, Van Hoey, Gert, Rava, Giada, Tsikopoulou, Irini, Geert Hiddink, Jan, Depestele, Jochen, Desmidt, Joanna, Claes, Jolien, Tiano, Justin, Soetaert, Karline, Morris, Kate, Buhl-Mortensen, Lene, Nicoletti, Luisa, Porz, Lucas, Batts, Luke, Fenton, Mairi, Sköld, Mattias, Penna, Marina, Pulcini, Marina, Rufino, Marta Mega, Sciberras, Marija, Blomqvist, Mats, Papadopoulou, Nadia, McCann, Neve, Beauchard, Olivier, Laffargue, Pascal, Coleman, Paul, Parker, Ruth, Vaz, Sandrine, Valanko, Sebastian, Vandevelde, Sebastiaan, Bolam, Stefan, Van Kooten, Tobias, Zhang, Wenyan, Geert Hiddink, Jan, van Hoe, Gert, Sciberras, Marija, and International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES)
- Subjects
Benthos ,WGFBIT ,Benthic Impact ,Human impact ,Fishery management ,Seabed ecoystem ,Fishery Benthic Impact - Abstract
The Working Group on Fisheries Benthic Impact and Trade-offs (WGFBIT) develops methods and performs assessments to evaluate benthic impact from fisheries at regional scale, while con- sidering fisheries and seabed impact trade-offs. In this report, new fishery benthic impact assessments (ToR A) are shown out for several sub- regions in (French Mediterranean, Celtic Seas). For other regions, updates of the whole assess- ment or specific steps only were presented. To further standardise the different components of the WGFBIT approach across all (sub-)re- gional assessments, a more detail overview of those components was compiled. These compo- nents were slightly different among those regions, related to variation in data availability, envi- ronmental characteristics and implementation possibilities among the (sub-)regions. In WGFBIT, assessments are sometimes based on trawl or grab data, which are sampling differ- ent components of the seafloor ecosystem and can have consequences on the created sensitivity layer. Therefore, there is looked in more detail how the sensitivity outcome (and layers) can dif- fer due to the use of benthic data gathered with different gears (grab/core, trawl or video). The preliminary comparability analyses are performed on different levels: (1) based on co-located sampling; (2) comparing sensitivity maps of the (sub-) area, based on different gears. There were differences observed in longevity distribution at locations sampled with different gears and dif- ferences in data and models lead also to differences in the sensitivity layers. The WGFBIT seafloor assessment framework is not the only way to assess benthic impacts from physical disturbance. A discussion session was held on how the future workflow on advice that ICES WGFBIT assessment contribute to, will be organized. Marine sediments harbour significant levels of biodiversity that play a key role in ecosystem functions and services such as biogeochemical cycling, carbon storage and the regulation of cli- mate. Through the removal of fauna, changes in physico-chemical nature and resuspension of sediment, bottom trawling may result in significant changes in the ecosystem functioning of shelf seas. An assumption of the current PD model is that high community biomass implies higher ecosystem functioning. However, total community biomass does not necessarily reflect changes in species and functional trait composition which play a key role in regulating ecosystem func- tions. ToR D is working on an improved understanding of the link between species functional effect traits and proxies and processes for specific ecosystem functions to improve our ability to predict the impact of fishing disturbance on benthic ecosystem functioning more accurately. Links between species traits and biogeochemical parameters and the impact of trawling on these links are being explored using multivariate ordination analyses using different fauna and bioge- ochemical datasets collected in the North Sea, Celtic Sea, Kattegat, Baltic Sea and the eastern Mediterranean. Changes due to trawling in the trajectories of species densities over time and the concurrent changes in the bioturbation and bioirrigation potential of communities are being modelled using a combination of data-driven mechanistic model and a biogeochemical model. We report on the different data analysis methods that ToR D members have developed over the last year. ICES Published Refereed
- Published
- 2023
20. A no-take zone and partially protected areas are not enough to save the Kattegat cod, but enhance biomass and abundance of the local fish assemblage
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, primary, Börjesson, Patrik, additional, Wennhage, Håkan, additional, Hjelm, Joakim, additional, Lövgren, Johan, additional, and Ringdahl, Katja, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dura Management Strategies in the Surgical Treatment of Adult Chiari Type I Malformation: A Retrospective, Multicenter, Population-Based Parallel Cohort Case Series
- Author
-
Kristiansson, Helena, primary, Fletcher-Sandersjöö, Alexander, additional, Cesarini, Kristina, additional, Fransson, Marcus, additional, Vlachogiannis, Pavlos, additional, Burström, Gustav, additional, Hessington, Amel, additional, Bartek, Jiri, additional, Edström, Erik, additional, Holmgren, Rafael T., additional, Sköld, Mattias K., additional, and Elmi-Terander, Adrian, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Dura Management Strategies in the Surgical Treatment of Adult Chiari Type I Malformation : A Retrospective, Multicenter, Population-Based Parallel Cohort Case Series
- Author
-
Kristiansson, Helena, Fletcher-Sandersjöö, Alexander, Cesarini, Kristina G, Fransson, Marcus, Vlachogiannis, Pavlos, Burström, Gustav, Hessington, Amel, Bartek, Jiri, Edström, Erik, Holmgren, Rafael T., Sköld, Mattias K., Elmi-Terander, Adrian, Kristiansson, Helena, Fletcher-Sandersjöö, Alexander, Cesarini, Kristina G, Fransson, Marcus, Vlachogiannis, Pavlos, Burström, Gustav, Hessington, Amel, Bartek, Jiri, Edström, Erik, Holmgren, Rafael T., Sköld, Mattias K., and Elmi-Terander, Adrian
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Symptomatic Chiari I malformation is treated with suboccipital decompression and C1 laminectomy. However, whether the dura should be opened (durotomy) or enlarged with a graft (duraplasty) remains unclear. OBJECTIVE: To compare outcomes in adult Chiari I malformation patients treated with duraplasty, durotomy, or without dural opening ("mini-decompression"). METHODS: A retrospective, multicenter, population-based cohort study was performed of all adult patients surgically treated for a Chiari I malformation at 3 regional neurosurgical centers between 2005 and 2017. Three different dura management strategies were favored by the participating hospitals, with data stratified accordingly. The primary outcome was measured using the Chicago Chiari Outcome Scale (CCOS), dichotomized into favorable (CCOS >= 13) or unfavorable (CCOS <= 12). Propensity score matching was used to adjust for potential confounders in outcome comparisons. RESULTS: In total, 318 patients were included, of whom 52% were treated with duraplasty, 37% with durotomy, and 11% with mini-decompression. In total, 285 (90%) showed a favorable surgical outcome (CCOS >= 13). Duraplasty was associated with more favorable CCOS and shorter hospital stay compared with durotomy, both in unadjusted (93% vs 84%. P = .018 and 6.0 vs 8.0 days, P < .001) and adjusted analyses (92% vs 84%, P = .044 and 6.0 vs 8.0 days, P < .001). Mini-decompression was excluded from the adjusted analyses because of its small sample size. CONCLUSION: In this study of adult Chiari I malformation, posterior fossa decompression with duraplasty was associated with more favorable postoperative outcome, as determined by the CCOS, compared with posterior fossa decompression with durotomy alone.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Hippocampal Expression of Cytochrome P450 1B1 in Penetrating Traumatic Brain Injury
- Author
-
Lidin, Erik, Sköld, Mattias K., Angeria, Maria, Davidsson, Johan, Risling, Marten, Lidin, Erik, Sköld, Mattias K., Angeria, Maria, Davidsson, Johan, and Risling, Marten
- Abstract
Hippocampal dysfunction contributes to multiple traumatic brain injury sequala. Female rodents' outcome is superior to male which has been ascribed the neuroprotective sex hormones 17 beta-estradiol and progesterone. Cytochrome P450 1B1 (CYP1B1) is an oxidative enzyme influencing the neuroinflammatory response by creating inflammatory mediators and metabolizing neuroprotective 17 beta-estradiol and progesterone. In this study, we aimed to describe hippocampal CYP1B1 mRNA expression, protein presence of CYP1B1 and its key redox partner Cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) in both sexes, as well as the effect of penetrating traumatic brain injury (pTBI). A total 64 adult Sprague Dawley rats divided by sex received pTBI or sham-surgery and were assigned survival times of 1-, 3-, 5- or 7 days. CYP1B1 mRNA was quantified using in-situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry performed to verify protein colocalization. CYP1B1 mRNA expression was present in all subregions but greatest in CA2 irrespective of sex, survival time or intervention. At 3-, 5- and 7 days post-injury, expression in CA2 was reduced in male rats subjected to pTBI compared to sham-surgery. Females subjected to pTBI instead exhibited increased expression in all CA subregions 3 days post-injury, the only time point expression in CA2 was greater in females than in males. Immunohistochemical analysis confirmed neuronal CYP1B1 protein in all hippocampal subregions, while CPR was limited to CA1 and CA2. CYP1B1 mRNA is constitutively expressed in both sexes. In response to pTBI, females displayed a more urgent but brief regulatory response than males. This indicates there may be sex-dependent differences in CYP1B1 activity, possibly influencing inflammation and neuroprotection in pTBI.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Sonification of Complex Spectral Structures
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, Bresin, Roberto, Sköld, Mattias, and Bresin, Roberto
- Abstract
In this article, we present our work on the sonification of notated complex spectral structures. It is part of a larger research project about the design of a new notation system for representing sound-based musical structures. Complex spectral structures are notated with special symbols in the scores, which can be digitally rendered so that the user can hear key aspects of what has been notated. This hearing of the notated data is significantly different from reading the same data, and reveals the complexity hidden in its simplified notation. The digitally played score is not the music itself but can provide essential information about the music in ways that can only be obtained in sounding form. The playback needs to be designed so that the user can make relevant sonic readings of the sonified data. The sound notation system used here is an adaptation of Thoresen and Hedman’s spectromorphological analysis notation. Symbols originally developed by Lasse Thoresen from Pierre Schaeffer’s typo-morphology have in this system been adapted to display measurable spectral features of timbrel structure for the composition and transcription of sound-based musical structures. Spectrum category symbols are placed over a spectral grand-staff that combines indications of pitch and frequency values for the combined display of music related to pitch-based and spectral values. Spectral features of a musical structure such as spectral width and density are represented as graphical symbols and sonically rendered. In perceptual experiments we have verified that users can identify spectral notation parameters based on their sonification. This confirms the main principle of sonification that is that the data/dimensions relations in one domain, in our case notated representation of spectral features, are transformed in perceived relations in the audio domain, and back., QC 20230207, The harmony of noise
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Working Group on Fisheries Benthic Impact and Trade-offs (WGFBIT; outputs from 2021 meeting)
- Author
-
Pierucci, Andrea, Xuan, Alessandra Nguyen, Kraan, Casper, Bradshaw, Clare, Garcia, Clement, Mangano, Maria Cristina, Smith, Chris, van Denderen, Daniël, Connor, David, Punzo, Elisa, de Borger, Emil, Beukhof, Esther D., Di Bona, Gabriele, Van Hoey, Gert, Rava, Giada, Onay, Hatice, Tsikopoulou, Irini, Maina, Irida, Hiddink, Jan Geert, Gruduls, Janis, Depestele, Jochen, Egekvist, Josefine, González Irusta , José Manuel, Burgos, Julian, Tiano, Justin, van der Reyden, Karin, Soetaert, Karline, Sköld, Mattias, Penna, Marina, Pulcini, Marina, Delgado, Marina, Sciberras, Marija, Blomqvist, Mats, Artigas, Miquel Canals, Papadopoulou, Nadia, Laffargue, Pascal, Coleman, Paul, Martinez, Roi, Vaz, Sandrine, Raicevich, Saša, Valanko, Sebastian, Vandevelde, Sebastiaan, van Kooten, Tobias, Braeckman, Ulrike, Mobilia, Valera, Zupa, Walter, Pierucci, Andrea, Xuan, Alessandra Nguyen, Kraan, Casper, Bradshaw, Clare, Garcia, Clement, Mangano, Maria Cristina, Smith, Chris, van Denderen, Daniël, Connor, David, Punzo, Elisa, de Borger, Emil, Beukhof, Esther D., Di Bona, Gabriele, Van Hoey, Gert, Rava, Giada, Onay, Hatice, Tsikopoulou, Irini, Maina, Irida, Hiddink, Jan Geert, Gruduls, Janis, Depestele, Jochen, Egekvist, Josefine, González Irusta , José Manuel, Burgos, Julian, Tiano, Justin, van der Reyden, Karin, Soetaert, Karline, Sköld, Mattias, Penna, Marina, Pulcini, Marina, Delgado, Marina, Sciberras, Marija, Blomqvist, Mats, Artigas, Miquel Canals, Papadopoulou, Nadia, Laffargue, Pascal, Coleman, Paul, Martinez, Roi, Vaz, Sandrine, Raicevich, Saša, Valanko, Sebastian, Vandevelde, Sebastiaan, van Kooten, Tobias, Braeckman, Ulrike, Mobilia, Valera, and Zupa, Walter
- Abstract
The Working Group on Fisheries Benthic Impact and Trade-offs (WGFBIT) develops methods and performs assessments to evaluate benthic impact from fisheries at regional scale, while considering fisheries and seabed impact trade-offs. In this report, new fishery benthic impact assessments are carried out for several sub-regions in the Mediterranean (Greek waters, South Adriatic Sea, Sicily waters). For other regions, updates of the whole assessment or specific steps only were presented. A standard advice sheet for the regional benthic assessments, intended as input to the next generation of the ICES Ecosystem and Fisheries Overviews, was finalised and compiled for some regions as example (Greek waters, Baltic Sea). A validation of the longevity relationships using new data was executed for the Kattegat area and the Southern North Sea. In relation to the methodology, some recommendations were formulated concerning the update on depletion rates, the use of epifauna- or infauna-based data, guidance on which set of epibenthic species to include and the time scale for setting the average swept-area-ratio (SAR) used in model fitting and assessment. A benchmarking process comparing available benthic impact assessment approaches for MSFD descriptor 6 “Seafloor integrity” is needed, as the WGFBIT approach (relative benthic state) is not the only way to assess benthic impacts from physical disturbances. A start was made to explore how to incorporate more explicitly ecosystem functioning in to the WGFBIT seafloor assessment methodology. An improved understanding of the relationships between total community biomass and ecosystem functioning may assist in setting acceptable thresholds for ecosystem impacts from trawling. Furthermore, an improved understanding of the link between species functional effect traits and proxies and processes for specific ecosystem functions could help increase our ability to predict the impact of fishing disturbance on benthic ecosystem function
- Published
- 2022
26. Working Group on Nephrops Surveys (WGNEPS outputs from 2021)
- Author
-
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Doyle, Jennifer, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Aristegui-Ezquibela, Miquel, Burgos, Candelaria, Fifas, Spyros, Firmin, Christopher J., Jónasson, Jónas, Jonsson, Patrik, Lundy, Mathieu, Martinelli, Michela, Medvešek, Damir, Naseer, Atif, O'Connor, Joey, Pereira, Bárbara, Silva, Cristina, Sköld, Mattias, Vacherot, Jean-Philippe, Vila, Yolanda, Weetman, Adrian, Wieland, Kai, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Doyle, Jennifer, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Aristegui-Ezquibela, Miquel, Burgos, Candelaria, Fifas, Spyros, Firmin, Christopher J., Jónasson, Jónas, Jonsson, Patrik, Lundy, Mathieu, Martinelli, Michela, Medvešek, Damir, Naseer, Atif, O'Connor, Joey, Pereira, Bárbara, Silva, Cristina, Sköld, Mattias, Vacherot, Jean-Philippe, Vila, Yolanda, Weetman, Adrian, and Wieland, Kai
- Abstract
The Working Group on Nephrops Surveys (WGNEPS) is the international coordination group for Nephrops underwater television and trawl surveys within ICES. This report summarizes the national contributions on the results of the surveys conducted in 2021 together with time series covering all survey years, problems encountered, data quality checks and technological improvements as well as the planning for survey activities for 2022. In total, 19 surveys covering 25 functional units (FU’s) in the ICES area and 1 geographical sub- area (GSA) in the Adriatic Sea were discussed and further improvements in respect to survey design and data analysis standardization and the use of recent technologies were reviewed. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic there were minimal disruptions to survey operations where one survey was not completed (GSA 17). A trial trawl Nephrops survey offshore Portugal was carried out on the new research vessel. Preliminary work on how to measure burrow system size was presented using high definition (HD) and standard definition (SD) image data. Further work on comparison of SD and HD indi- cates the change to HD system mounted with a different camera angle was not significantly different for two survey areas (FU 16 and FU 20-21). Automatic burrow detection based on deep learning methods continues to show promising re- sults where datasets from multiple institutes were used. The working group members have agreed to draft a roadmap for automatic system technology requirements with links to the Work- ing Group on Machine Learning in Marine Science (WGMLEARN) and current researchers. The working group is progressing plans for an international Nephrops Underwater television (UWTW) database to be established at the ICES Data Centre. End-users of UWTV datasets for epifauna reporting presented their work and showed the potential for adding value to the survey data, where many of the institutes are involved in providing data for similar research purposes
- Published
- 2022
27. Working Group on Nephrops Surveys (WGNEPS; outputs from 2021)
- Author
-
Aguzzi, Jacopo, Aristegui-Ezquibela, Mikel, Burgos, Candelaria, Doyle, Jennifer, Fifas, Spyros, Firmin, Chris, Jónasson, Jónas, Jonsson, Patrik, Lundy, Mathieu, Martinelli, Michela, Medvešek, Damir, Naseer, Atif, O'Connor, Joey, Pereira, Barbara, Silva, Cristina, Sköld, Mattias, Vacherot, Jean-Philippe, Vila, Yolanda, Weetman, Adrian, Wieland, Kai, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Aristegui-Ezquibela, Mikel, Burgos, Candelaria, Doyle, Jennifer, Fifas, Spyros, Firmin, Chris, Jónasson, Jónas, Jonsson, Patrik, Lundy, Mathieu, Martinelli, Michela, Medvešek, Damir, Naseer, Atif, O'Connor, Joey, Pereira, Barbara, Silva, Cristina, Sköld, Mattias, Vacherot, Jean-Philippe, Vila, Yolanda, Weetman, Adrian, and Wieland, Kai
- Abstract
The Working Group on Nephrops Surveys (WGNEPS) is the international coordination group for Nephrops underwater television and trawl surveys within ICES. This report summarizes the national contributions on the results of the surveys conducted in 2021 together with time series covering all survey years, problems encountered, data quality checks and technological improvements as well as the planning for survey activities for 2022. In total, 19 surveys covering 25 functional units (FU’s) in the ICES area and 1 geographical subarea (GSA) in the Adriatic Sea were discussed and further improvements in respect to survey design and data analysis standardization and the use of recent technologies were reviewed. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic there were minimal disruptions to survey operations where one survey was not completed (GSA 17). A trial trawl Nephrops survey offshore Portugal was carried out on the new research vessel. Preliminary work on how to measure burrow system size was presented using high definition (HD) and standard definition (SD) image data. Further work on comparison of SD and HD indicates the change to HD system mounted with a different camera angle was not significantly different for two survey areas (FU 16 and FU 20-21). Automatic burrow detection based on deep learning methods continues to show promising results where datasets from multiple institutes were used. The working group members have agreed to draft a roadmap for automatic system technology requirements with links to the Working Group on Machine Learning in Marine Science (WGMLEARN) and current researchers. The working group is progressing plans for an international Nephrops Underwater television (UWTW) database to be established at the ICES Data Centre. End-users of UWTV datasets for epifauna reporting presented their work and showed the potential for adding value to the survey data, where many of the institutes are involved in providin
- Published
- 2022
28. Which factors can affect the productivity and dynamics of cod stocks in the Baltic Sea, Kattegat and Skagerrak?
- Author
-
Bryhn, Andreas C., primary, Bergek, Sara, additional, Bergström, Ulf, additional, Casini, Michele, additional, Dahlgren, Elin, additional, Ek, Caroline, additional, Hjelm, Joakim, additional, Königson, Sara, additional, Ljungberg, Peter, additional, Lundström, Karl, additional, Lunneryd, Sven Gunnar, additional, Ovegård, Maria, additional, Sköld, Mattias, additional, Valentinsson, Daniel, additional, Vitale, Francesca, additional, and Wennhage, Håkan, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Sonification of Complex Spectral Structures
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, primary and Bresin, Roberto, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Working Group on Nephrops Surveys (WGNEPS outputs from 2021)
- Author
-
Doyle, Jennifer, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Aristegui-Ezquibela, Miquel, Burgos, Candelaria, Fifas, Spyros, Firmin, Christopher J., Jónasson, Jónas, Jonsson, Patrik, Lundy, Mathieu, Martinelli, Michela, Medvešek, Damir, Naseer, Atif, O'Connor, Joey, Pereira, Bárbara, Silva, Cristina, Sköld, Mattias, Vacherot, Jean-Philippe, Vila, Yolanda, Weetman, Adrian, and Wieland, Kai
- Abstract
183 pages, figures, 6 annexes, The Working Group on Nephrops Surveys (WGNEPS) is the international coordination group for Nephrops underwater television and trawl surveys within ICES. This report summarizes the national contributions on the results of the surveys conducted in 2021 together with time series covering all survey years, problems encountered, data quality checks and technological improvements as well as the planning for survey activities for 2022. In total, 19 surveys covering 25 functional units (FU’s) in the ICES area and 1 geographical sub- area (GSA) in the Adriatic Sea were discussed and further improvements in respect to survey design and data analysis standardization and the use of recent technologies were reviewed. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic there were minimal disruptions to survey operations where one survey was not completed (GSA 17). A trial trawl Nephrops survey offshore Portugal was carried out on the new research vessel. Preliminary work on how to measure burrow system size was presented using high definition (HD) and standard definition (SD) image data. Further work on comparison of SD and HD indi- cates the change to HD system mounted with a different camera angle was not significantly different for two survey areas (FU 16 and FU 20-21). Automatic burrow detection based on deep learning methods continues to show promising re- sults where datasets from multiple institutes were used. The working group members have agreed to draft a roadmap for automatic system technology requirements with links to the Work- ing Group on Machine Learning in Marine Science (WGMLEARN) and current researchers. The working group is progressing plans for an international Nephrops Underwater television (UWTW) database to be established at the ICES Data Centre. End-users of UWTV datasets for epifauna reporting presented their work and showed the potential for adding value to the survey data, where many of the institutes are involved in providing data for similar research purposes
- Published
- 2022
31. Long-term effects of no-take zones in Swedish waters
- Author
-
Bergström, Ulf, Berkström, Charlotte, Sköld, Mattias, Börjesson, Patrik, Eggertsen, Maria, Fetterplace, Lachlan, Florin, Ann-Britt, Fredriksson, Ronny, Fredriksson, Susanna, Kraufvelin, Patrik, Lundström, Karl, Nilsson, Jonas, Ovegård, Maria, Hammar Perry, Diana, Edmond, Sacre, Sundelöf, Andreas, Wikström, Andreas, and Wennhage, Håkan
- Subjects
Fish and Wildlife Management ,Ecology - Abstract
Marine protected areas (MPAs) are increasingly established worldwide to protect and restore degraded ecosystems. However, the level of protection varies among MPAs and has been found to affect the outcome of the closure. In no-take zones (NTZs), no fishing or extraction of marine organisms is allowed. The EU Commission recently committed to protect 30% of European waters by 2030 through the updated Biodiversity Strategy. Importantly, one third of these 30% should be of strict protection. Exactly what is meant by strict protection is not entirely clear, but fishing would likely have to be fully or largely prohibited in these areas. This new target for strictly protected areas highlights the need to evaluate the ecological effects of NTZs, particularly in regions like northern Europe where such evaluations are scarce. The Swedish NTZs made up approximately two thirds of the total areal extent of NTZs in Europe a decade ago. Given that these areas have been closed for at least 10 years and can provide insights into long-term effects of NTZs on fish and ecosystems, they are of broad interest in light of the new 10% strict protection by 2030 commitment by EU member states.In total, eight NTZs in Swedish coastal and offshore waters were evaluated in the current report, with respect to primarily the responses of focal species for the conservation measure, but in some of the areas also ecosystem responses. Five of the NTZs were established in 2009-2011, as part of a government commission, while the other three had been established earlier. The results of the evaluations are presented in a synthesis and also in separate, more detailed chapters for each of the eight NTZs. Overall, the results suggest that NTZs can increase abundances and biomasses of fish and decapod crustaceans, given that the closed areas are strategically placed and of an appropriate size in relation to the life cycle of the focal species. A meta-regression of the effects on focal species of the NTZs showed that CPUE was on average 2.6 times higher after three years of protection, and 3.8 times higher than in the fished reference areas after six years of protection. The proportion of old and large individuals increased in most NTZs, and thereby also the reproductive potential of populations. The increase in abundance of large predatory fish also likely contributed to restoring ecosystem functions, such as top-down control. These effects appeared after a 5-year period and in many cases remained and continued to increase in the longer term (>10 years). In the two areas where cod was the focal species of the NTZs, positive responses were weak, likely as an effect of long-term past, and in the Kattegat still present, recruitment overfishing. In the Baltic Sea, predation by grey seal and cormorant was in some cases so high that it likely counteracted the positive effects of removing fisheries and led to stock declines in the NTZs. In most cases, the introduction of the NTZs has likely decreased the total fishing effort rather than displacing it to adjacent areas. In the Kattegat NTZ, however, the purpose was explicitly to displace an unselective coastal mixed bottom-trawl fishery targeting Norway lobster and flatfish to areas where the bycatches of mature cod were smaller. In two areas that were reopened to fishing after 5 years, the positive effects of the NTZs on fish stocks eroded quickly to pre-closure levels despite that the areas remained closed during the spawning period, highlighting that permanent closures may be necessary to maintain positive effects.We conclude from the Swedish case studies that NTZs may well function as a complement to other fisheries management measures, such as catch, effort and gear regulations. The experiences from the current evaluation show that NTZs can be an important tool for fisheries management especially for local coastal fish populations and areas with mixed fisheries, as well as in cases where there is a need to counteract adverse ecosystem effects of fishing. NTZs are also needed as reference for marine environmental management, and for understanding the effects of fishing on fish populations and other ecosystem components in relation to other pressures. MPAs where the protection of both fish and their habitats is combined may be an important instrument for ecosystembased management, where the recovery of large predatory fish may lead to a restoration of important ecosystem functions and contribute to improving decayed habitats.With the new Biodiversity Strategy, EUs level of ambition for marine conservation increases significantly, with the goal of 30% of coastal and marine waters protected by 2030, and, importantly, one third of these areas being strictly protected. From a conservation perspective, rare, sensitive and/or charismatic species or habitats are often in focus when designating MPAs, and displacement of fisheries is then considered an unwanted side effect. However, if the establishment of strictly protected areas also aims to rebuild fish stocks, these MPAs should be placed in heavily fished areas and designed to protect depleted populations by accounting for their home ranges to generate positive outcomes. Thus, extensive displacement of fisheries is required to reach benefits for depleted populations, and need to be accounted for e.g. by specific regulations outside the strictly protected areas. These new extensive EU goals for MPA establishment pose a challenge for management, but at the same time offer an opportunity to bridge the current gap between conservation and fisheries management.
- Published
- 2022
32. Hippocampal Expression of Cytochrome P450 1B1 in Penetrating Traumatic Brain Injury
- Author
-
Lidin, Erik, primary, Sköld, Mattias K., additional, Angéria, Maria, additional, Davidsson, Johan, additional, and Risling, Mårten, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Low-altitude UAVs for significantly increased data rate in tactical ad hoc networks
- Author
-
Grönkvist, Jimmi, primary, Hansson, Anders, additional, Hägglund, Kristoffer, additional, Komulainen, Arwid, additional, and Sköld, Mattias, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Accounting for overfishing in life cycle assessment: new impact categories for biotic resource use
- Author
-
Emanuelsson, Andreas, Ziegler, Friederike, Pihl, Leif, Sköld, Mattias, and Sonesson, Ulf
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Using Vessel Monitoring System Data to Improve Systematic Conservation Planning of a Multiple-Use Marine Protected Area, the Kosterhavet National Park (Sweden)
- Author
-
Gonzalez-Mirelis, Genoveva, Lindegarth, Mats, and Sköld, Mattias
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Artificial spider silk supports and guides neurite extension in vitro
- Author
-
Hansson, Magnus L., primary, Chatterjee, Urmimala, additional, Francis, Juanita, additional, Arndt, Tina, additional, Broman, Christian, additional, Johansson, Jan, additional, Sköld, Mattias K., additional, and Rising, Anna, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. no-take zone and partially protected areas are not enough to save the Kattegat cod, but enhance biomass and abundance of the local fish assemblage.
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, Börjesson, Patrik, Wennhage, Håkan, Hjelm, Joakim, Lövgren, Johan, and Ringdahl, Katja
- Subjects
- *
PROTECTED areas , *PSETTA maxima , *ATLANTIC cod , *BIOMASS , *DREDGING (Fisheries) , *CODFISH , *BYCATCHES , *FISH spawning - Abstract
To supplement catch and effort regulations with the purpose to rebuild the cod (Gadus morhua) stock in Kattegat, Sweden and Denmark established a large (426 km2) year-round no-take zone (NTZ) surrounded by partially protected areas (PPAs) in 2009. The purpose of these spatial regulations was to prohibit cod fishing on the spawning grounds and to displace fisheries bycatch of cod from areas where mature cod aggregate in the Kattegat. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of the established NTZ and PPAs on the local fish assemblage, including cod. Based on a spatially high-resolution bottom trawl survey in the Kattegat (covering 2008–2021), multivariate analyses revealed significant shifts in the fish assemblage. A closer analysis indicated that six to seven fish species, including cod increased in the NTZ relative to control areas depending on if abundance or biomass was used as dependent variable. Univariate analysis showed that two flatfish species dab (Limanda limanda) and lemon sole (Microstomus kitt), and Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus) significantly increased in biomass in the NTZ, and turbot (Scophthalmus maximus) in the PPA relative to the control areas. These results suggest that the NTZ protected even relatively mobile species in an open sea system, such as the Kattegat. However, neither cod abundance nor biomass showed a significant increase as an effect of the NTZ and PPA despite two relatively strong year classes in 2012 and 2013, which possibly would have helped the recovery of the cod stock. As assessed by the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea in 2022, Kattegat cod continuously suffer from being severely overfished with low recruitment, and high discard rates in the mixed N. norvegicus fishery, is considered the major driver behind the reinforced depletion of the stock. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Computer-Aided Composition Using a Sound-Based Notation.
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias
- Subjects
- *
SOUND systems - Abstract
This article describes the music data format of the recently introduced Sound Notation system, and how it makes possible computer-aided composition of scores representing sound-based music. The Sound Notation system is an adaptation of Lasse Thoresen's spectromorphological analysis notation, developed for composition and analysis. A detailed description of the data format is followed by two examples of its application in a computer-aided composition process resulting in the sounding interpretation of two score excerpts of an electroacoustic composition. Generating sound structures as symbolic notation data in this way provided possibilities for the creation of sound-based music otherwise limited to works of traditional notation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Physical Disturbance by Bottom Trawling Suspends Particulate Matter and Alters Biogeochemical Processes on and Near the Seafloor
- Author
-
Bradshaw, Clare, primary, Jakobsson, Martin, additional, Brüchert, Volker, additional, Bonaglia, Stefano, additional, Mörth, Carl-Magnus, additional, Muchowski, Julia, additional, Stranne, Christian, additional, and Sköld, Mattias, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Tätheten av av sjöpennor i skyddade och bottentrålade områden i Skagerrak och Kattegatt : förslag till övervakningsprogram för epifaunans status
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, Ren, Emil, Jonsson, Patrik, Wernbo, Anders, Wikström, Andreas, and Wennhage, Håkan
- Subjects
Ecology - Abstract
Livsmiljöer med mjuka bottnar med sand, silt och lera har ett rikt liv både på ytan och nere i sedimentet. I djupare miljöer där ljuset inte räcker till för fotosyntes dominerar olika djurgrupper. De organismer som lever på bottnarna brukar kallas epifauna (epi = på). På lite större djup på svenska västkusten domineras större arter av epifaunan på mjukbottenmiljöerna av kräft- och koralldjur. En del arter är relativt storväxta och kan både vara rörliga som olika arter av kräftdjur eller förankrade i sedimentet som vissa koralldjur som sjöpennor och cylinderrosor. Dessa livsmiljöer exploateras av yrkesfisket efter skaldjur och bottenlevande fiskarter med olika redskap. Särskilt mobila redskap som bottentrålar dominerar i utsjöområden och då dessa dras fram över och i kontakt med botten kan arter påverkas på olika sätt. Antingen direkt genom fysisk skada eller att de fångas, eller indirekt genom att arternas livsmiljö påverkas, sedimentet rörs upp och grumling sker eller att näringsväven och konkurrensförhållanden mellan arter förändras av bottentrålningen. Syftet med denna studie har varit att i ett antal fallstudier jämföra epifaunans artsammansättning, täthet av sjöpennor och totala abundansen av epifauna som tänkbara indikatorer för status av epifaunan på mjukbottnar i Kattegatt och Skagerrak. Sjöpennor lever förankrade i sedimentet, är relativt stora och bedöms generellt som känsliga för fysisk störning. OSPAR kommissionen inkluderar också habitatet ”Seapens and burrowing megafauna communities” i sin lista över hotade arter och habitat. Metoden vi har använt för att kvantifiera epifaunan är en kameraförsedd släde som dras fram över en sträcka på havsbotten och filmar en definierad bredd; metoden kallas UWTV (UnderWater TeleVision). I båda havsområdena är olika arter av sjöpennor bland de dominerande arterna som kan anlyseras med denna metod, men fördelningen av arter av sjöpennor skiljer sig åt mellan havsområden och djup. I samtliga fallstudier är också den totala abundansen av epifaunan (alla taxa inräknade) högre i skyddade områden jämfört med närliggande jämförbara områden som bottentrålas. Resultaten antyder också att olika arter av epifauna har olika känslighet för påverkan från bottentrålning och störst skillnad fanns för den stora piprensaren Funiculina quadrangularis som återfanns i cirka 8 gånger högre täthet i de skyddade områdena i det djupa området Bratten jämfört med närliggande trålade områden i Bratten. I Kattegatt och kustnära i Skagerrak dominerade sjöpennorna mindre piprensare Virgularia spp. och sjöfjäder Pennatula phosphorea med endast enstaka observationer av andra arter av sjöpennor. I dessa grundare områden förekom P. phosphorea, men inte Virgularia spp., med lägre abundans i trålade jämfört med skyddade områden i Kattegatt. Motsvarande trend kunde ses, men inte lika tydligt i Skagerraks kustområden. Jämförelserna mellan skyddade och bottentrålade områden bekräftar tidigare beskrivna mönster om att känsligheten för fysisk störning från bottentrålning är störst för de storväxta arterna av sjöpennor medan de mindre arterna är mindre känsliga. Resultaten från studierna av epifaunan visar sammanfattningsvis att fysisk störning från bottentrålning har effekter på denna grupp av organismer och att effekterna kan övervakas kvantitativt med metodiken videofilmning med en kamerautrustad släde. En bra miljöövervakning i större skala som Skagerrak, Kattegatt eller Nordsjön i enlighet med Havsmiljödirektivets avgränsning, förutsätter också en god rumslig täckning. En miljöövervakning av status av bevarandevärden i marina skyddsområden förutsätter å andra sidan högre upplösning på provtagningar i avgränsade områden. Vi visar i denna rapport att det för epifaunan finns goda möjligheter att kombinera information som fås från övervakningen som primärt görs för bohålor av havskräfta med undersökningar som görs i marina skyddsområden primärt för biologisk mångfald med avseende på epifaunan. Provtagningarna i de marina skyddsområdena bidrar särskilt till övervakning i det storskaliga perspektivet genom att tillföra information från områden som är opåverkade av bottentrålning. Baserat på ovanstående resonemang föreslår vi ett långsiktigt övervakningsprogram enligt följande: • Metodik och indelning i taxa som övervakas följer beskrivningar för UWTV med transekter med en yta av cirka150 m2. • En databas upprättas med standardisering och kvalitetssäkringsrutiner med utgångpunkt i resultaten från denna rapport. • Havsområdesövervakning i Skagerrak och Kattegatt utförs årligen med epifaunaanalyser av insamlat material från den så kallade UWTV survey som genomförs samordnat av ICES och inom EU:s Data Collection Framework (DCF). • Uppföljning av fiskeregleringar i marina skyddsområden med fokus på epifauna genomförs med motsvarande metodik. Dessa omfattar kontrasterande studier med fasta stationer som redovisas för Natura 2000-området Bratten i denna rapport men, omfattar också Natura 2000-områdena Lilla Middelgrund, Stora Middelgrund och Röde bank samt Koster-Väderöfjordens Natura 2000 område med Kosterhavets nationalpark. • Utvärderingar av epifaunans status bygger på båda programmen, dvs. både på havsområdesskalan och på den lokala skalan av enskilda skyddsområden.
- Published
- 2021
41. Påverkansanalys fisk – till åtgärdsprogram för havsmiljön
- Author
-
Wennhage, Håkan, Naddafi, Rahmat, Mustamäki, Noora, Orio, Alessandro, Bergström, Lena, Sköld, Mattias, Bergenius, Mikaela, Valentinsson, Daniel, and Olsson, Jens
- Subjects
Ecology - Abstract
Syftet med denna rapport är att beskriva kunskapsläget om och betydelsen av de viktigaste påverkansfaktorerna för fisk i svenska marina vatten för att stödja uppdateringen av åtgärdsprogrammet inom havsmiljödirektivet 2021. Havsmiljödirektivets mål är att uppnå eller upprätthålla god miljöstatus i havsmiljöerna. För ekosystemkomponenter som fisk där status är otillfredsställande krävs åtgärder för att nå målen och en påverkansanalys kan bidra med kunskap till förvaltningens arbete med att rikta och prioritera åtgärder. Sammanställningen som presenteras i denna rapport är uppdelad på de två övergripande svenska bedömningsområdena inom havsmiljödirektivet, Nordsjön och Östersjön, samt gör en uppdelning på kust och utsjö vad gäller påverkansfaktorer och deras koppling till fiskfaunan. I rapporten presenteras vilket stöd för påverkan på fisk det fanns i litteraturen fram till hösten 2019 (där inget annat anges) uppdelat på faktorerna fiske, klimat, övergödning, habitatpåverkan och födovävsinteraktioner. Dessutom redovisas översiktligt betydelsen av andra påverkansfaktorer som miljögifter, läkemedelsrester, mikroplaster och marint skräp, undervattensbuller, vitaminbrist, samt parasiter och sjukdomar, områden där kunskapen är mer begränsad. En kvalitativ syntes av resultaten visar att flera faktorer sannolikt har stor påverkan på fisk i kust och utsjö-ekosystemen såväl i Östersjön som i Nordsjön. Dessa faktorer utgör en kombination av förändrade födovävsinteraktioner, samt direkt och indirekt mänsklig påverkan. Direkt påverkan från fiske på målarter och bifångstarter är av betydelse i alla förvaltningsområden och habitat. Möjligen är antalet betydelsefulla påverkansfaktorer något lägre i Nordsjön (framförallt i utsjön), jämfört med Östersjön. Samtidigt verkar det råda en större kunskapsbrist kring annan påverkan i Nordsjön där fiske varit den dominerande påverkan. Betydelsen av klimat, övergödning och habitatförlust är påtaglig i båda förvaltningsområdena. Det råder dock kunskapsbrist om betydelsen av klimat på beståndens status i Nordsjöns utsjö, samt betydelsen av födovävsinteraktioner i alla områden och habitat. Det finns även en kunskapsbrist om hur födovävsinteraktioner kopplade till ökande populationer av säl och skarv påverkar fisken. Rapporten konstaterar att en kvantitativ skattning av olika påverkansfaktorers relativa betydelse för fisken vore önskvärd, inkluderande studier av kumulativa effekter (samverkan och/eller förstärkning) av flera påverkansvariabler som agerar samtidigt. Kumulativa effekter är idag dåligt kända och studerade, men sannolikt betydande för utvecklingen av fiskpopulationerna och fisksamhällena i våra marina vatten. Givet mångfalden av olika påverkansfaktorer, förordas en ekosystembaserad försiktighetsansats vid förvaltning av fiskbestånd, arter och samhällen i våra marina miljöer.
- Published
- 2021
42. Artificial spider silk supports and guides neurite extension in vitro
- Author
-
Hansson, Magnus L., Chatterjee, Urmimala, Francis, Juanita, Arndt, Tina, Broman, Christian, Johansson, Jan, Sköld, Mattias K., Rising, Anna, Hansson, Magnus L., Chatterjee, Urmimala, Francis, Juanita, Arndt, Tina, Broman, Christian, Johansson, Jan, Sköld, Mattias K., and Rising, Anna
- Abstract
Surgical intervention with the use of autografts is considered the gold standard to treat peripheral nerve injuries. However, a biomaterial that supports and guides nerve growth would be an attractive alternative to overcome problems with limited availability, morbidity at the site of harvest, and nerve mismatches related to autografts. Native spider silk is a promising material for construction of nerve guidance conduit (NGC), as it enables regeneration of cm-long nerve injuries in sheep, but regulatory requirements for medical devices demand synthetic materials. Here, we use a recombinant spider silk protein (NT2RepCT) and a functionalized variant carrying a peptide derived from vitronectin (VN-NT2RepCT) as substrates for nerve growth support and neurite extension, using a dorsal root ganglion cell line, ND7/23. Two-dimensional coatings were benchmarked against poly-d-lysine and recombinant laminins. Both spider silk coatings performed as the control substrates with regards to proliferation, survival, and neurite growth. Furthermore, NT2RepCT and VN-NT2RepCT spun into continuous fibers in a biomimetic spinning set-up support cell survival, neurite growth, and guidance to an even larger extent than native spider silk. Thus, artificial spider silk is a promising biomaterial for development of NGCs.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Physical Disturbance by Bottom Trawling Suspends Particulate Matter and Alters Biogeochemical Processes on and Near the Seafloor
- Author
-
Bradshaw, Clare, Jakobsson, Martin, Brüchert, Volker, Bonaglia, Stefano, Mörth, Carl-Magnus, Muchowski, Julia, Stranne, Christian, Sköld, Mattias, Bradshaw, Clare, Jakobsson, Martin, Brüchert, Volker, Bonaglia, Stefano, Mörth, Carl-Magnus, Muchowski, Julia, Stranne, Christian, and Sköld, Mattias
- Abstract
Bottom trawling is known to affect benthic faunal communities but its effects on sediment suspension and seabed biogeochemistry are less well described. In addition, few studies have been carried out in the Baltic Sea, despite decades of trawling in this unique brackish environment and the frequent occurrence of trawling in areas where hypoxia and low and variable salinity already act as ecosystem stressors. We measured the physical and biogeochemical impacts of an otter trawl on a muddy Baltic seabed. Multibeam bathymetry revealed a 36 m-wide trawl track, comprising parallel furrows and sediment piles caused by the trawl doors and shallower grooves from the groundgear, that displaced 1,000 m3 (500 t) sediment and suspended 9.5 t sediment per km of track. The trawl doors had less effect than the rest of the gear in terms of total sediment mass but per m2 the doors had 5× the displacement and 2× the suspension effect, due to their greater penetration and hydrodynamic drag. The suspended sediment spread >1 km away over the following 3–4 days, creating a 5–10 m thick layer of turbid bottom water. Turbidity reached 4.3 NTU (7 mgDW L–1), 550 m from the track, 20 h post-trawling. Particulate Al, Ti, Fe, P, and Mn were correlated with the spatio-temporal pattern of suspension. There was a pulse of dissolved N, P, and Mn to a height of 10 m above the seabed within a few hundred meters of the track, 2 h post-trawling. Dissolved methane concentrations were elevated in the water for at least 20 h. Sediment biogeochemistry in the door track was still perturbed after 48 h, with a decreased oxygen penetration depth and nutrient and oxygen fluxes across the sediment-water interface. These results clearly show the physical effects of bottom trawling, both on seabed topography (on the scale of km and years) and on sediment and particle suspension (on the scale of km and days-weeks). Alterations to biogeochemical processes suggest that, where bottom trawling is frequent, sediment
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Mapping and Evaluating Marine Protected Areas and Ecosystem Services : A Transdisciplinary Delphi Forecasting Process Framework
- Author
-
Belgrano, Andrea, Novaglio, Camilla, Svedäng, Henrik, Villasante, Sebastián, Melián, Carlos J., Blenckner, Thorsten, Bergström, Ulf, Bryhn, Andreas, Bergström, Lena, Bartolino, Valerio, Sköld, Mattias, Tomczak, Maciej, Wikström, Sofia A., Skriver Hansen, Andreas, Linke, Sebastian, Emmerson, Richard, Morf, Andrea, Tönnesson, Kajsa, Belgrano, Andrea, Novaglio, Camilla, Svedäng, Henrik, Villasante, Sebastián, Melián, Carlos J., Blenckner, Thorsten, Bergström, Ulf, Bryhn, Andreas, Bergström, Lena, Bartolino, Valerio, Sköld, Mattias, Tomczak, Maciej, Wikström, Sofia A., Skriver Hansen, Andreas, Linke, Sebastian, Emmerson, Richard, Morf, Andrea, and Tönnesson, Kajsa
- Abstract
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are an important tool for management and conservation and play an increasingly recognised role in societal and human well-being. However, the assessment of MPAs often lacks a simultaneous consideration of ecological and socio-economic outcomes, and this can lead to misconceptions on the effectiveness of MPAs. In this perspective, we present a transdisciplinary approach based on the Delphi method for mapping and evaluating Marine Protected Areas for their ability to protect biodiversity while providing Ecosystem Services (ES) and related human well-being benefits - i.e., the ecosystem outputs from which people benefit. We highlight the need to include the human dimensions of marine protection in such assessments, given that the effectiveness of MPAs over time is conditional on the social, cultural and institutional contexts in which MPAs evolve. Our approach supports Ecosystem-Based Management and highlights the importance of MPAs in achieving restoration, conservation, and sustainable development objectives in relation to EU Directives such as the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD), the Maritime Spatial Planning Directive (MSPD), and the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP).
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Mapping and Evaluating Marine Protected Areas and Ecosystem Services: A Transdisciplinary Delphi Forecasting Process Framework
- Author
-
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Departamento de Economía Aplicada, Belgrano, Andrea, Novaglio, Camilla, Svedäng, Henrik, Villasante Larramendi, Carlos Sebastián, Melián, Carlos J., Blenckner, Thorsten, Bergström, Ulf, Bryhn, Andreas, Bergström, Lena, Bartolino, Valerio, Sköld, Mattias, Tomczak, Maciej Tomasz, Wikström, Sofia A., Hansen, Andreas Skriver, Linke, Sebastian, Emmerson, Richard, Morf, Andrea, Tönnesson, Kajsa, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Departamento de Economía Aplicada, Belgrano, Andrea, Novaglio, Camilla, Svedäng, Henrik, Villasante Larramendi, Carlos Sebastián, Melián, Carlos J., Blenckner, Thorsten, Bergström, Ulf, Bryhn, Andreas, Bergström, Lena, Bartolino, Valerio, Sköld, Mattias, Tomczak, Maciej Tomasz, Wikström, Sofia A., Hansen, Andreas Skriver, Linke, Sebastian, Emmerson, Richard, Morf, Andrea, and Tönnesson, Kajsa
- Abstract
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are an important tool for management and conservation and play an increasingly recognised role in societal and human well-being. However, the assessment of MPAs often lacks a simultaneous consideration of ecological and socio-economic outcomes, and this can lead to misconceptions on the effectiveness of MPAs. In this perspective, we present a transdisciplinary approach based on the Delphi method for mapping and evaluating Marine Protected Areas for their ability to protect biodiversity while providing Ecosystem Services (ES) and related human well-being benefits – i.e., the ecosystem outputs from which people benefit. We highlight the need to include the human dimensions of marine protection in such assessments, given that the effectiveness of MPAs over time is conditional on the social, cultural and institutional contexts in which MPAs evolve. Our approach supports Ecosystem-Based Management and highlights the importance of MPAs in achieving restoration, conservation, and sustainable development objectives in relation to EU Directives such as the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD), the Maritime Spatial Planning Directive (MSPD), and the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP)
- Published
- 2021
46. An evaluation of three measures of intracranial compliance in traumatic brain injury patients
- Author
-
Howells, Tim, Lewén, Anders, Sköld, Mattias K., Ronne-Engström, Elisabeth, and Enblad, Per
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Mapping and Evaluating Marine Protected Areas and Ecosystem Services: A Transdisciplinary Delphi Forecasting Process Framework
- Author
-
Belgrano, Andrea, primary, Novaglio, Camilla, additional, Svedäng, Henrik, additional, Villasante, Sebastián, additional, Melián, Carlos J., additional, Blenckner, Thorsten, additional, Bergström, Ulf, additional, Bryhn, Andreas, additional, Bergström, Lena, additional, Bartolino, Valerio, additional, Sköld, Mattias, additional, Tomczak, Maciej, additional, Wikström, Sofia A., additional, Hansen, Andreas Skriver, additional, Linke, Sebastian, additional, Emmerson, Richard, additional, Morf, Andrea, additional, and Tönnesson, Kajsa, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The notation of sound for composition and transcription: An adaptation of Lasse Thoresen's spectromorphological analysis
- Author
-
Sköld, Mattias, Rama, Gottfried, Georg, Hajdu, Jacob, Sello, Alessandro, Anatrini, and John, MacCallum
- Abstract
This paper details my adaptation of Lasse Thoresen's spectromorphological analysis notation for the sake of composition and transcription, re-imagining the analysis symbols for use over a spectrum staff system over which pitch and spectra can be indicated with great detail, and possibly interpreted by musicians and computers for performance. A sound object is notated with regard to its spectral width, density, centroid frequency, significant sound components, modulation and amplitude envelope. It can also have a spectrum reference. The symbols are placed over a spectrum grand-staff with a frequency scale to show each parameter both from a frequency and pitch perspective. Also included are suggestions for the visual representation of spatialisation where positions and movements are displayed in two or three dimensions above the sound notation while constant rotations are notated as modulations.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. STUDENT INVOLVEMENT IN SOUND AND MUSIC COMPUTING RESEARCH: CURRENT PRACTICES AT KTH AND KMH
- Author
-
Hansen, Kjetil Falkenberg, Bresin, Roberto, Holzapfel, Andre, Pauletto, Sandra, Gulz, Torbjörn, Lindetorp, Hans, Misgeld, Olof, and Sköld, Mattias
- Subjects
ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION - Abstract
To engage students in and beyond course activities has been a working practice both at KTH Sound and Music Computing group and at KMH Royal College of Music since many years.This paper collects experiences of involving students in research conducted within the two institutions. We describe how students attending our courses are given the possibility to be involved in our research activities, and we argue that their involvement both contributes to develop new research and benefits the students in the short and long term. Among the assignments, activities, and tasks we offer in our education programs are pilot experiments, prototype development, public exhibitions, performing, composing, data collection, analysis challenges, and bachelor and master thesis projects that lead to academic publications.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and environmental risk factors in a military context
- Author
-
Taube, Fabian, Waleij, Annica, Sköld, Mattias, and Risling, Mårten
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.