1,982 results on '"Vitti P"'
Search Results
2. Three-loop corrections to Higgs boson pair production: reducible contribution
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Davies, Joshua, Schönwald, Kay, Steinhauser, Matthias, and Vitti, Marco
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We compute three-loop corrections to the process $gg\to HH$ originating from one-particle reducible diagrams. This requires the computation of two-loop corrections to the gluon-gluon-Higgs vertex with an off-shell gluon. We describe in detail our approach to obtain semi-analytic results for the vertex form factors and present results for the two form factors contributing to Higgs boson pair production., Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
3. Virtual QCD corrections to $gg \to ZZ$: top-quark loops from a transverse-momentum expansion
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Degrassi, Giuseppe, Gröber, Ramona, and Vitti, Marco
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We present the virtual corrections due to the top-quark loops for the process $gg \to ZZ$ at next-to-leading order in QCD. The associated two-loop box diagrams are computed using a small-transverse-momentum expansion. Our results are then merged with those available in the complementary energy region, obtained via a high-energy expansion, in order to provide an analytic result that is valid in the whole phase space. The results presented allow for an efficient modelling of the signal--background interference as well as the irreducible background in off-shell Higgs production., Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, 2 appendices
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- 2024
4. Pale-breasted thrush (Turdus leucomelas) feeds nestlings of the brood parasite shiny cowbird (Molothrus bonariensis) more and faster than its own nestlings
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Ferneda, Rafaela Vitti, Batisteli, Augusto Florisvaldo, and Pizo, Marco Aurélio
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- 2024
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5. On $\gamma_5$ schemes and the interplay of SMEFT operators in the Higgs-gluon coupling
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Di Noi, Stefano, Gröber, Ramona, Heinrich, Gudrun, Lang, Jannis, and Vitti, Marco
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the four-top quark operator contributions to Higgs production via gluon fusion in the Standard Model Effective Field Theory. The four-top operators enter for the first time via two-loop diagrams. Due to their chiral structure they contain $\gamma_5$, so special care needs to be taken when using dimensional regularisation for the loop integrals. We use two different schemes for the continuation of $\gamma_5$ to $D$ space-time dimensions in our calculations and present a mapping for the parameters in the two schemes. This generically leads to an interplay of different operators, such as four-top operators, chromomagnetic operators or Yukawa-type operators at the loop level. We validate our results by examples of matching onto UV models.
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- 2023
6. Influence of using different toothpaste during bleaching with violet LED light (405 nm) on the colour and roughness of dental enamel: an in vitro study
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Leticia, Franco Sousa, Victor, Mazzalli Redondo, Laura, Ferraz Nobre, Rafael, Vitti Pino, and Scatolin, Renata Siqueira
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- 2024
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7. Biostimulation of humic acids on Lepidium sativum L. regulated by their content of stable phenolic O⋅ radicals
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Vitti, Antonella, Coviello, Leonardo, Nuzzaci, Maria, Vinci, Giovanni, Deligiannakis, Yiannis, Giannakopoulos, Evangelos, Ronga, Domenico, Piccolo, Alessandro, Scopa, Antonio, and Drosos, Marios
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- 2024
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8. Efficacy of multivitamin support following bariatric surgery in patients with obesity: a prospective observational study
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Basolo, Alessio, Bechi Genzano, Susanna, Vitti, Jacopo, Salvetti, Guido, Gilio, Donatella, Ceccarini, Giovanni, Scartabelli, Giovanna, Lippi, Chita, Bellini, Rosario, Mancini, Rudi, D’Imporzano, Simone, Moretto, Carlo, Angeli, Valentina, Troiani, Daniela, Fierabracci, Paola, Jaccheri, Roberta, Calderone, Alba, Poma, Anello M., Chiovato, Luca, Saponati, Giorgio, and Santini, Ferruccio
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- 2024
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9. Genome-wide association study identifies human genetic variants associated with fatal outcome from Lassa fever
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Kotliar, Dylan, Raju, Siddharth, Tabrizi, Shervin, Odia, Ikponmwosa, Goba, Augustine, Momoh, Mambu, Sandi, John Demby, Nair, Parvathy, Phelan, Eric, Tariyal, Ridhi, Eromon, Philomena E., Mehta, Samar, Robles-Sikisaka, Refugio, Siddle, Katherine J., Stremlau, Matt, Jalloh, Simbirie, Gire, Stephen K., Winnicki, Sarah, Chak, Bridget, Schaffner, Stephen F., Pauthner, Matthias, Karlsson, Elinor K., Chapin, Sarah R., Kennedy, Sharon G., Branco, Luis M., Kanneh, Lansana, Vitti, Joseph J., Broodie, Nisha, Gladden-Young, Adrianne, Omoniwa, Omowunmi, Jiang, Pan-Pan, Yozwiak, Nathan, Heuklom, Shannon, Moses, Lina M., Akpede, George O., Asogun, Danny A., Rubins, Kathleen, Kales, Susan, Happi, Anise N., Iruolagbe, Christopher O., Dic-Ijiewere, Mercy, Iraoyah, Kelly, Osazuwa, Omoregie O., Okonkwo, Alexander K., Kunz, Stefan, McCormick, Joseph B., Khan, S. Humarr, Honko, Anna N., Lander, Eric S., Oldstone, Michael B. A., Hensley, Lisa, Folarin, Onikepe A., Okogbenin, Sylvanus A., Günther, Stephan, Ollila, Hanna M., Tewhey, Ryan, Okokhere, Peter O., Schieffelin, John S., Andersen, Kristian G., Reilly, Steven K., Grant, Donald S., Garry, Robert F., Barnes, Kayla G., Happi, Christian T., and Sabeti, Pardis C.
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- 2024
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10. A simplicity bubble problem and zemblanity in digitally intermediated societies
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Abrahão, Felipe S., Cavassane, Ricardo P., Winter, Michael, Rodrigues, Mariana Vitti, and D'Ottaviano, Itala M. L.
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks - Abstract
In this article, we discuss the ubiquity of Big Data and machine learning in society and propose that it evinces the need of further investigation of their fundamental limitations. We extend the ``too much information tends to behave like very little information'' phenomenon to formal knowledge about lawlike universes and arbitrary collections of computably generated datasets. This gives rise to the simplicity bubble problem, which refers to a learning algorithm equipped with a formal theory that can be deceived by a dataset to find a locally optimal model which it deems to be the global one. In the context of lawlike (computable) universes and formal learning systems, we show that there is a ceiling above which formal knowledge cannot further decrease the probability of zemblanitous findings, should the randomly generated data made available to the formal learning system be sufficiently large in comparison to their joint complexity. Zemblanity, the opposite of serendipity, is defined by an undesirable but expected finding that reveals an underlying problem or negative consequence in a given model or theory, which is in principle predictable in case the formal theory contains sufficient information. We also argue that this is an epistemological limitation that may generate unpredictable problems in digitally intermediated societies.
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- 2023
11. Light-quark Yukawa couplings from off-shell Higgs production
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Balzani, Elisa, Gröber, Ramona, and Vitti, Marco
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
Yukawa couplings of the first quark generation are notoriously difficult to constrain due to their small values within the Standard Model. Here we propose Higgs off-shell production, with the Higgs boson decaying to four leptons, as a probe of the up- and down-quark Yukawa couplings. Using kinematic discriminants similar to the ones employed in the Higgs width measurements we find that the down (up) Yukawa coupling can be constrained to a factor of 156 (260) times its Standard Model value at the high-luminosity LHC assuming only experimental systematic uncertainties. Off-shell Higgs production hence provides better sensitivity to the first-generation quark Yukawa couplings with respect to other probes such as Higgs+jet or Higgs pair production., Comment: 24 pages, 12 figures; comments and clarifications added, conclusions improved; version accepted for publication in JHEP
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- 2023
12. Three-loop corrections to Higgs boson pair production: reducible contribution
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Joshua Davies, Kay Schönwald, Matthias Steinhauser, and Marco Vitti
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Higgs Production ,Higgs Properties ,Higher-Order Perturbative Calculations ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract We compute three-loop corrections to the process gg → HH originating from one-particle reducible diagrams. This requires the computation of two-loop corrections to the gluon-gluon-Higgs vertex with an off-shell gluon. We describe in detail our approach to obtain semi-analytic results for the vertex form factors and present results for the two form factors contributing to Higgs boson pair production.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Virtual QCD corrections to gg → ZZ: top-quark loops from a transverse-momentum expansion
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Giuseppe Degrassi, Ramona Gröber, and Marco Vitti
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Higher-Order Perturbative Calculations ,Higgs Production ,Higgs Properties ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract We present the virtual corrections due to the top-quark loops for the process gg → ZZ at next-to-leading order in QCD. The associated two-loop box diagrams are computed using a small-transverse-momentum expansion. Our results are then merged with those available in the complementary energy region, obtained via a high-energy expansion, in order to provide an analytic result that is valid in the whole phase space. The results presented allow for an efficient modelling of the signal-background interference as well as the irreducible background in off-shell Higgs production.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Biostimulation of humic acids on Lepidium sativum L. regulated by their content of stable phenolic O⋅ radicals
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Antonella Vitti, Leonardo Coviello, Maria Nuzzaci, Giovanni Vinci, Yiannis Deligiannakis, Evangelos Giannakopoulos, Domenico Ronga, Alessandro Piccolo, Antonio Scopa, and Marios Drosos
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Cress seed germination ,Root growth ,Supramolecular structure ,Soil humic acid ,Lignite humic acid ,HALP ,Agriculture - Abstract
Abstract Background Humic acid affects plant growth. Its source and structure may play a central role to its functionality. The relationship between humic acid and plant bioactivity is still unclear. This study investigated the biostimulation effects of two natural humic acids derived from soil (SHA) and lignite (LHA) on Lepidium sativum in comparison to a synthetic humic acid model (HALP) with known structure. Results All humic acids positively affected cress seed germination and root elongation. Greater root hairs density and dry matter, compared to control, were observed using concentration of 5 mg L−1 for HALP, 50 mg L−1 for LHA, and 100 mg L−1 for SHA. The germination index was the largest (698% more effective than control) with 50 mg L−1 of SHA, while it was 528% for LHA, and 493% for HALP at 5 mg L−1. SHA contained the lowest aromatic and phenolic C content, the largest pK2 value of 9.0 (7.7 for LHA and 7.6 for HALP), the least ratio between the aromaticity index and lignin ratio (ARM/LigR) of 0.15 (0.66 for LHA and 129.92 for HALP), and at pH 6.3 the lowest amount of free radicals with a value of 0.567 × 1017 spin g−1 (1.670 × 1017 and 1.780 × 1017 spin g−1 for LHA and HALP, respectively), with the greatest g value of 2.0039 (2.0035 for LHA and 2.0037 for HALP). Conclusions The overall chemical structure of humic acids exerted a biostimulation of cress plantlets. The level of the intrinsic stable free radicals identified by EPR in the humic acids resulted well correlated to the ARM/LigR ratio calculated by NMR. Our results suggested that HA biostimulation effect is related to its applied concentration, which is limited by its free radical content. The modulation of the humic supramolecular structure by ROS and organic acids in root exudates can determine the release of bioactive humic molecules. When the content of the intrinsic humic free radicals is high, possible molecular coupling of the bioactive humic molecules may hinder their biostimulation activity. In such cases, a low humic acid concentration appears to be required to achieve the optimum biostimulation effects. Graphical Abstract
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- 2024
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15. Virtual QCD corrections to gg → ZZ: top-quark loops from a transverse-momentum expansion
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Degrassi, Giuseppe, Gröber, Ramona, and Vitti, Marco
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- 2024
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16. Teleconsultation on patients with type 2 diabetes in the Brazilian public health system: a randomised, pragmatic, open-label, phase 2, non-inferiority trial (TELECONSULTA diabetes trial)Research in context
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Daniela Laranja Gomes Rodrigues, Gisele Silvestre Belber, Frederica Valle de Queiroz Padilha, Lucas Bassolli de Oliveira Alves, Álvaro Avezum, Marcos Aurélio Maeyama, Alexsandra Vitti, Greta Barriquel Pompermaier, Tanise Balvedi Damas, Mariana Selbach Selbach Otero, Raquel Souza de Aguiar, Renata Almeida de Andrade, Ligia Fonseca Spinel, Ana Paula Neves Marques Pinho, and Haliton Alves de Oliveira Junior
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Diabetes mellitus ,Public health ,Remote consultation ,Telehealth ,Telemedicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: This study addresses the rising burden of type 2 diabetes mellitus, and explores the potential of teleconsultation, as an alternative for diabetes management. The primary objective was to test the hypothesis that teleconsultation is non-inferior to face-to-face consultation in terms of glycaemic control measured as glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) (non-inferiority margin for the upper confidence interval for the difference between groups of 0,5% in HbA1c) for type 2 diabetes mellitus patients referred from Primary Healthcare to Specialized Care within the SUS. Methods: TELECONSULTA, is a randomized, pragmatic, phase 2, single-centre, open-label, non-inferiority trial conducted in Joinville, Brazil. A total of 278 participants diagnosed with type 2 diabetes were randomized through mandatory teleconsulting services from primary care health units. The randomization was 1:1 to teleconsultation or face to face consultation. The study was registered at the Brazilian Clinical Trial Register—REBEC, under the code RBR-8gpgyd. Study status is “Completed”. Findings: This study included 278 participants in the intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis. The median age was 61 (54–68) years, 167 (60%) were women. The between-groups comparative average reduction in HbA1c was −0.6% (90% CI −1.0; −0.1) at 3-months and −0.5% (90% CI −0.9; 0.0) at 6-months in Modified Intention-to-Treat (mITT) population with imputed data, showing the non-inferiority of teleconsultation. Results with no missing data imputation and in the per protocol population were similar. The frequency of hypoglycaemia and other adverse events was well balanced between groups. Interpretation: The results underscore the transformative potential of telemedicine in addressing the complexities of diabetes management within the framework of a universal healthcare system, contributing with valuable insights for healthcare policymakers and practitioners seeking innovative solutions to tackle the growing diabetes epidemic. Funding: This study was funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health, through the Unified Health System–Institutional Development Support Program (PROADI-SUS).
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- 2024
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17. Implementation and test of an automated control hunting fault correction algorithm in a fault detection and diagnostics tool
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Lin, Guanjing, Pritoni, Marco, Chen, Yimin, Vitti, Raphael, Weyandt, Christopher, and Granderson, Jessica
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Control Engineering ,Mechatronics and Robotics ,Engineering ,Engineering Practice and Education ,Fault correction ,Fault detection and diagnostics ,Control hunting ,Field testing ,Energy management and information ,system ,Smart building ,Built Environment and Design ,Building & Construction ,Built environment and design - Abstract
Control hunting due to improper proportional–integral–derivative (PID) parameters in the building automation system (BAS) is one of the most common faults identified in commercial buildings. It can cause suboptimal performance and early failure of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) equipment. Commercial fault detection and diagnostics (FDD) software represents one of the fastest growing market segments in smart building technologies in the United States. Implementation of PID retuning procedures as an auto-correction algorithm and integration into FDD software has the potential to mitigate control hunting across a heterogeneous portfolio of buildings with different BAS in a scalable way. This paper presents the development, implementation, and field testing of an automated control hunting fault correction algorithm based on lambda tuning open-loop rules. The algorithm was developed in a commercial FDD software and successfully tested among nine variable air volume boxes in an office building in the United States. The paper shows the feasibility of using FDD tools to automatically correct control hunting faults, discusses scalability considerations, and proposes a path forward for the HVAC industry and academia to further improve this technology.
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- 2023
18. Betalains Alleviate Exercise-Induced Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, and Fatigue and Improve Sports Performance: an Update on Recent Advancement
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Nirmal, Siriwan, Olatunde, Oladipupo Odunayo, Medhe, Seema, Vitti, Steven, Khemtong, Chutimon, and Nirmal, Nilesh Prakash
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- 2023
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19. Efficacy of multivitamin support following bariatric surgery in patients with obesity: a prospective observational study
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Alessio Basolo, Susanna Bechi Genzano, Jacopo Vitti, Guido Salvetti, Donatella Gilio, Giovanni Ceccarini, Giovanna Scartabelli, Chita Lippi, Rosario Bellini, Rudi Mancini, Simone D’Imporzano, Carlo Moretto, Valentina Angeli, Daniela Troiani, Paola Fierabracci, Roberta Jaccheri, Alba Calderone, Anello M. Poma, Luca Chiovato, Giorgio Saponati, and Ferruccio Santini
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Obesity ,Bariatric surgery ,Micronutrients ,Multivitamin support ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Purpose Bariatric surgery (BS), an effective treatment for severe obesity and its comorbidities, may result in micronutrient and vitamin deficiencies. This monocentric prospective observational study aimed at evaluating the efficacy of a specifically designed vitamin/mineral formula (Bariatrifast, BIOITALIA S.r.l., Italy) for preventing and treating micronutrient deficiencies in patients submitted to BS. Methods Twenty patients with severe obesity (mean weight and BMI: 123.5 kg (range 88–174) and 43.3 kg/m2 (range 37–54) respectively) underwent BS (10 vertical sleeve gastrectomy VSG, 10 Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, RYGB). The mean age was 49.9 years (range 27–68). After a presurgical visit (V0), follow-up visits were performed at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after surgery (V1–V4). Recorded data included weight, height and BMI. A complete blood count, measurement of ferritin, folic acid, vitamin B12, ionized calcium, 25 OH vitamin D, parathyroid hormone (PTH) were obtained. Following BS, patients started the daily oral multivitamin and mineral supplement. Results All patients achieved a significant weight loss (mean − 34.7 ± 11.8 kg). No deficiencies of various vitamins/micronutrients were detected during the entire study period. The serum concentrations of vitamin B12, 25-OH Vitamin D and folic acid increased over the follow-up period compared with V0 (mean increase 243 ng/L, 23 µg /L, 8 µg/L, respectively). Compared to RYGB, patients who underwent sleeve gastrectomy showed higher levels of 25-OH vitamin D at V2, V3 and V4 (all p
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- 2024
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20. Effects of marker density on genomic prediction for yield traits in sweet corn
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Marquez, Guilherme Repeza, Zhang-Biehn, Shichen, Guo, Zhigang, and Moro, Gustavo Vitti
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- 2024
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21. The ethics of clinical research in the era of COVID-19
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Juliana N. Vitti, Robert Vitti, Karen Chu, and Scott Mellis
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clinical trial conduct ,COVID-19 therapeutics ,COVID-19 vaccines ,biospecimens ,ethics – clinical ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
There is an urgent need for increased understanding of COVID-19 and strategies for its prevention, treatment, and mitigation. All participants in the research enterprise, including institutional review boards, have an ethical duty to protect participants and ensure that the benefits gained from such research do not conflict with the core principles that guided researchers prior to the pandemic. In this review, we discuss the ethical issues surrounding initiation and conduct of clinical trials, focusing on novel COVID-19 therapeutic, vaccine, or biospecimen research, using the principles of autonomy, beneficence, and justice. We discuss strategies to manage the practical challenges associated with the conduct of clinical trials, with an emphasis on maintaining the rights and welfare of research participants.
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- 2024
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22. On the NLO QCD Corrections to Gluon-Initiated ZH Production
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Degrassi, Giuseppe, Gröber, Ramona, Vitti, Marco, and Zhao, Xiaoran
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We compute the QCD corrections at next-to-leading order for the process $gg \rightarrow ZH$, including both the virtual two-loop terms and real-emission contributions. The two-loop box diagrams in the virtual corrections are approximated analytically over the complete phase space, combining the results of an expansion in the limit of small transverse momentum and an expansion in the regime of high energy. We obtain both inclusive and differential results for the cross section. We find that the NLO QCD corrections are of the same size as the LO contribution up to $ZH$ invariant masses close to 1 TeV, but they increase significantly when higher energies are considered, due to a class of real-emission diagrams in which the $Z$ boson is radiated from an open quark line. Finally, we estimate the uncertainty due to the renormalization scheme used for the top-quark mass both on the total and differential cross section., Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures; references added
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- 2022
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23. Perceived Stress Assessment: Factor Structure and Item Analysis of the PSS-10
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Laís Santos Vitti, Tatiana Nakano, André Faro, Makilim Nunes Baptista, and Matheus Macena Vasconcelos
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stress ,psychological assessmen ,item response theory ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Stress has proved to be an important research topic in recent decades, given its influence on physical and mental health. As a way of evaluating this construct, the 10-Item Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) has been the most used measure. The present study was conducted considering the questions that are still present concerning the facto-rial structure of the instrument and the scarcity of studies focused on item analysis with the Brazilian population. Based on the results of 4.970 Brazilians of both sexes, with an average age of 31.3 years (SD = 11.89), from the five regions of Brazil, the confirmatory factor analysis indicated good fit of the one-dimensional model. Subsequently, the item response theory indicated adequate residuals (infit and outfit) for all items and satisfactory item-theta correlation values. The scale precision was α = .89. Four items showed differential functioning for the gender variable, three in favor of men. The analysis made it possible to identify the thoughts and feelings that most dif-ferentiate individuals with a high level of perceived stress, adding evidence of validity to the instrument for use in the Brazilian population
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- 2024
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24. The Effects of Systemic Lupus–Related Cognitive Impairments on Activities of Daily Living and Life Role Participation: A Qualitative Framework Study
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Michelle Barraclough, Aaron Howe, Ana Soberanis, Mahta Kakvan, Vijay Chattu, Ali Bani‐Fatemi, Lisa Engel, Michelle Vitti, Emily Nalder, Yael Goverover, Monique Gignac, Dennisse Bonilla, Wils Nielsen, Nicole Anderson, Carmela Tartaglia, Behdin Nowrouzi‐Kia, and Zahi Touma
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Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Objective Cognitive impairment (CI) in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) negatively impacts health‐related quality of life leading to activity limitations. This qualitative study aimed to (1) explore the effect of SLE‐related CI on activities of daily living and life role participation and (2) describe factors influencing activity restriction and life role participation. Methods Semistructured, in‐depth interviews of lived experience of CI in SLE were conducted with 24 participants with SLE. Sociodemographic and clinical data, and objective and subjective cognitive function, were collected to characterize participants. A qualitative thematic content analysis was undertaken guided by a framework analytical approach. Results Participants reported problems in multiple cognitive domains, with multiple perceived causes. CI was felt to impact work, social, domestic, and family life, health, and independence. Five overarching themes were represented in the data: (1) characterization of SLE‐reported CI, (2) perceived cause of CI, (3) perceived impact of CI on activities of daily living and life role participation, (4) adaptations for managing CI, and (5) influence of CI adaptations on activities of daily living and life role participation. Conclusion This study provides a better understanding of the patient experience of CI in SLE, how it impacts their lives, and what coping strategies they employ. It highlights the long‐term challenges those with CI in SLE undergo and provides evidence for the urgent need to implement multidisciplinary treatment options. When managing CI, it may be beneficial to evaluate and understand available psychosocial support resources to help identify and reinforce relevant adaptations to improve health‐related quality of life.
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- 2024
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25. Gluon Fusion Production at NLO: Merging the Transverse Momentum and the High-Energy Expansions
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Bellafronte, Luigi, Degrassi, Giuseppe, Giardino, Pier Paolo, Gröber, Ramona, and Vitti, Marco
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The virtual corrections to $gg\to HH$ and $gg\to ZH$ are analytically evaluated combining an expansion in the small transverse momentum of the final particles with an expansion valid at high energies. The two expansion methods describe complementary regions of the phase space and we merge their results, extending the range of validity of both expansions using Pad\'e approximants. We show that this approach can reproduce the available numerical results retaining the exact top quark mass dependence with an accuracy well below the 1% level. Our results allow a fast and flexible evaluation of the virtual corrections of the considered processes. Furthermore, they are available in different renormalisation schemes of the top quark mass., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures
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- 2022
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26. SARS-CoV-2 productively infects primary human immune system cells in vitro and in COVID-19 patients
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Pontelli, Marjorie C, Castro, Ítalo A, Martins, Ronaldo B, La Serra, Leonardo, Veras, Flávio P, Nascimento, Daniele C, Silva, Camila M, Cardoso, Ricardo S, Rosales, Roberta, Gomes, Rogério, Lima, Thais M, Souza, Juliano P, Vitti, Brenda C, Caetité, Diego B, de Lima, Mikhael HF, Stumpf, Spencer D, Thompson, Cassandra E, Bloyet, Louis-Marie, Toller-Kawahisa, Juliana E, Giannini, Marcela C, Bonjorno, Letícia P, Lopes, Maria IF, Batah, Sabrina S, Siyuan, Li, Luppino-Assad, Rodrigo, Almeida, Sergio CL, Oliveira, Fabiola R, Benatti, Maíra N, Pontes, Lorena LF, Santana, Rodrigo C, Vilar, Fernando C, Auxiliadora-Martins, Maria, Shi, Pei-Yong, Cunha, Thiago M, Calado, Rodrigo T, Alves-Filho, José C, Zamboni, Dario S, Fabro, Alexandre T, Louzada-Junior, Paulo, Oliveira, Rene DR, Whelan, Sean PJ, Cunha, Fernando Q, and Arruda, Eurico
- Abstract
Abstract: The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection is associated with a hyperinflammatory state and lymphocytopenia, a hallmark that appears as both signature and prognosis of disease severity outcome. Although cytokine storm and a sustained inflammatory state are commonly associated with immune cell depletion, it is still unclear whether direct SARS-CoV-2 infection of immune cells could also play a role in this scenario by harboring viral replication. We found that monocytes, as well as both B and T lymphocytes, were susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 infection in vitro, accumulating double-stranded RNA consistent with viral RNA replication and ultimately leading to expressive T cell apoptosis. In addition, flow cytometry and immunofluorescence analysis revealed that SARS-CoV-2 was frequently detected in monocytes and B lymphocytes from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients. The rates of SARS-CoV-2-infected monocytes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from COVID-19 patients increased over time from symptom onset, with SARS-CoV-2-positive monocytes, B cells, and CD4+ T lymphocytes also detected in postmortem lung tissue. These results indicated that SARS-CoV-2 infection of blood-circulating leukocytes in COVID-19 patients might have important implications for disease pathogenesis and progression, immune dysfunction, and virus spread within the host.
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- 2022
27. Global dataset of soil organic carbon in tidal marshes
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Maxwell, Tania L., Rovai, André S., Adame, Maria Fernanda, Adams, Janine B., Álvarez-Rogel, José, Austin, William E. N., Beasy, Kim, Boscutti, Francesco, Böttcher, Michael E., Bouma, Tjeerd J., Bulmer, Richard H., Burden, Annette, Burke, Shannon A., Camacho, Saritta, Chaudhary, Doongar R., Chmura, Gail L., Copertino, Margareth, Cott, Grace M., Craft, Christopher, Day, John, de los Santos, Carmen B., Denis, Lionel, Ding, Weixin, Ellison, Joanna C., Ewers Lewis, Carolyn J., Giani, Luise, Gispert, Maria, Gontharet, Swanne, González-Pérez, José A., González-Alcaraz, M. Nazaret, Gorham, Connor, Graversen, Anna Elizabeth L., Grey, Anthony, Guerra, Roberta, He, Qiang, Holmquist, James R., Jones, Alice R., Juanes, José A., Kelleher, Brian P., Kohfeld, Karen E., Krause-Jensen, Dorte, Lafratta, Anna, Lavery, Paul S., Laws, Edward A., Leiva-Dueñas, Carmen, Loh, Pei Sun, Lovelock, Catherine E., Lundquist, Carolyn J., Macreadie, Peter I., Mazarrasa, Inés, Megonigal, J. Patrick, Neto, Joao M., Nogueira, Juliana, Osland, Michael J., Pagès, Jordi F., Perera, Nipuni, Pfeiffer, Eva-Maria, Pollmann, Thomas, Raw, Jacqueline L., Recio, María, Ruiz-Fernández, Ana Carolina, Russell, Sophie K., Rybczyk, John M., Sammul, Marek, Sanders, Christian, Santos, Rui, Serrano, Oscar, Siewert, Matthias, Smeaton, Craig, Song, Zhaoliang, Trasar-Cepeda, Carmen, Twilley, Robert R., Van de Broek, Marijn, Vitti, Stefano, Antisari, Livia Vittori, Voltz, Baptiste, Wails, Christy N., Ward, Raymond D., Ward, Melissa, Wolfe, Jaxine, Yang, Renmin, Zubrzycki, Sebastian, Landis, Emily, Smart, Lindsey, Spalding, Mark, and Worthington, Thomas A.
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- 2023
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28. The use of real time strain endometrial elastosonography plus endometrial thickness and vascularization flow index to predict endometrial receptivity in IVF treatments: a pilot study
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Stanziano, Antonio, Bianchi, Francesco Paolo, Caringella, Anna Maria, Cantatore, Clementina, D’Amato, Antonio, Vitti, Angela, Cortone, Anna, Vitagliano, Amerigo, and D’Amato, Giuseppe
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- 2023
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29. 7 - PRODUCTION OF SURGICAL BIOMODELS TO SUPPORT SURGERY BY 3D PRINTING: A SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EVALUATION FROM THE DESIGN FOR SUSTAINABILITY PERSPECTIVE
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Claudio Pereira de Sampaio, Sonia Maria Fabris Luiz, José Antonio Vicentin, Glaykon Alex Vitti Stabile, and Cecília Luiz Pereira Stabile
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Public health ,surgery ,biomodels ,3D printing ,product design ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
This article presents, describes, and evaluates, from the perspective of Design for Sustainability (DfS), the social, economic, and technological aspects of the process of developing and manufacturing anatomical biomodels to support surgery using 3D printing in a Brazilian public hospital. This process had an interdisciplinary character, involving professionals of Design, Odontology, and Physiotherapy. The assessment was carried out using DfS (Design for Sustainability) social and environmental heuristics (guidelines), and enabled the identification of relevant aspects, as well as opportunities for improvement in processes. Among the results, the importance of having a specific space dedicated to digital manufacturing in public hospitals stands out, which speeds up the development of biomodels, as well as the quantity, diversity, and quality of 3D printing equipment, which allows the exploration of multiple possibilities for processes and materials, speeding up innovation in the hospital environment.
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- 2024
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30. Analysis of the costs of teleconsultation for the treatment of diabetes mellitus in the SUS
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Frederica Valle de Queiroz Padilha, Daniela Laranja Gomes Rodrigues, Gisele Silvestre Belber, Marcos Aurélio Maeyama, Lígia Spinel, Ana Paula Neves Marques Pinho, Alessandra Vitti, Mariana Selbach Otero, Greta Barriquel Pompermaier, Tanise Balvedi Damas, and Haliton Oliveira Junior
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Costs and Cost Analysis ,Remote Consultation ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Unified Health System ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
ABSTRACT OBJECTIVE To present the results of a cost analysis of remote consultations (teleconsultations) compared to in-person consultations for patients with type 2 diabetes, in the Brazilian public healthcare system (SUS) in the city of Joinville, Santa Catarina (SC). In addition to the costs from the local manager’s perspective, the article also presents estimates from the patient’s perspective, based on the transportation costs associated with each type of consultation. METHOD Data were collected from 246 consultations, both remote and in-person, between 2021 and 2023, in the context of a randomized clinical trial on the impact of teleconsultation carried out in the city of Joinville, SC. Teleconsultations were carried out at Primary Health Units (PHU) and in-person consultations at the Specialized Health Center. The consultation costs were calculate by the method time and activity-based costing (TDABC), and for the estimate of transportation costs data was collected directly from the research participants . The mean costs and time required to carry out each type of consultation in different scenarios and perspectives were analyzed and compared descriptively. RESULTS Considering only the local SUS manager’s perspective, the costs for carrying out a teleconsultation were 4.5% higher than for an in-person consultation. However, when considering the transportation costs associated with each patient, the estimated value of the in-person consultation becomes 7.7% higher and, in the case of consultations in other municipalities, 15% higher than the teleconsultation. CONCLUSION The results demonstrate that the incorporation of teleconsultation within the SUS can bring economic advantages depending on the perspective and scenario considered, in addition to being a strategy with the potential to increase access to specialized care in the public network.
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- 2024
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31. Growth performance and intestinal histology of juvenile pirarucu fed with increasing levels of soybean meal
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Giovanni Vitti Moro, Ana Paula Oeda Rodrigues, Caniggia Lacerda Andrade, Fernanda Gomes de Paula, and Marcos Barcelos Café
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nutrition ,vegetable protein ,fish meal ,enteritis ,histomorphometry. ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the inclusion of different levels of soybean meal in pirarucu’s diet. 200 pirarucu juveniles (152.15 ± 0.8 g) were distributed in 20 polyethylene tanks with a continuous water flow system. A completely randomized experimental design was used, with five treatments (n = 4) containing 0, 10, 20, 30 and 40% of soybean meal inclusion levels. Growth performance was measured as specific growth rate, feed conversion, weight gain and survival. Body composition, protein retention rate and histopathological changes in the intestine were analyzed. The different treatments did not affect weight gain, specific growth rate and survival. The body composition of the fish was affected by treatments for ash and ether extract and the IHS was also affected. The diet with 40% soybean meal compromised feed conversion rate. Additionally, the distal intestine of fish fed with the same diet showed a reduction in the height of mucosal folds and a loss of supranuclear vacuolation in enterocytes. Based on these results, the inclusion of up to 30% of soybean meal in the diet of juvenile pirarucu is possible without negative effects on performance and enteric morphology.
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- 2024
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32. From fault-detection to automated fault correction: A field study
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Pritoni, Marco, Lin, Guanjin, Chen, Yimin, Vitti, Raphael, Weyandt, Christopher, and Granderson, Jessica
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Engineering ,Control Engineering ,Mechatronics and Robotics ,Built Environment and Design ,Fault correction ,Fault detection and diagnostics ,Energy efficiency ,Field testing ,Building HVAC system ,Smart building ,Environmental Science and Management ,Architecture ,Building ,Building & Construction ,Built environment and design - Abstract
A fault detection and diagnostics (FDD) tool, as addressed by this study, is a tool that continuously identifies the presence of faults and efficiency improvement opportunities through a one-way interface to the building automation system and the application of automated analytics. Although FDD tools can inform operators of building operational faults, currently an action is always required to correct the faults to generate energy savings. Fault auto-correction integrating with commercial FDD technology offerings can close the loop between the passive diagnostics and active control, increase the savings generated by FDD tools, and reduce the reliance on human intervention. This paper presents the field study of seven fault auto-correction algorithms implemented in commercial FDD platforms. Implementation includes software changes in the FDD tools and additional controls hardware or software changes in the BAS that were required to enable the execution of different types of auto-correction algorithms in real buildings. The routines successfully and automatically correct faults and improve the operation of large built-up Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) systems, common in most commercial buildings. The auto-correction algorithms are tested across four buildings and three different building automation systems, following a rigorous procedure to make sure they work properly and do not negatively impact the system and building occupants. Technology benefits, market drivers, and scalability changes are drawn from the implementation effort and test results, to drive future research and industry engagement.
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- 2022
33. Global dataset of soil organic carbon in tidal marshes
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Tania L. Maxwell, André S. Rovai, Maria Fernanda Adame, Janine B. Adams, José Álvarez-Rogel, William E. N. Austin, Kim Beasy, Francesco Boscutti, Michael E. Böttcher, Tjeerd J. Bouma, Richard H. Bulmer, Annette Burden, Shannon A. Burke, Saritta Camacho, Doongar R. Chaudhary, Gail L. Chmura, Margareth Copertino, Grace M. Cott, Christopher Craft, John Day, Carmen B. de los Santos, Lionel Denis, Weixin Ding, Joanna C. Ellison, Carolyn J. Ewers Lewis, Luise Giani, Maria Gispert, Swanne Gontharet, José A. González-Pérez, M. Nazaret González-Alcaraz, Connor Gorham, Anna Elizabeth L. Graversen, Anthony Grey, Roberta Guerra, Qiang He, James R. Holmquist, Alice R. Jones, José A. Juanes, Brian P. Kelleher, Karen E. Kohfeld, Dorte Krause-Jensen, Anna Lafratta, Paul S. Lavery, Edward A. Laws, Carmen Leiva-Dueñas, Pei Sun Loh, Catherine E. Lovelock, Carolyn J. Lundquist, Peter I. Macreadie, Inés Mazarrasa, J. Patrick Megonigal, Joao M. Neto, Juliana Nogueira, Michael J. Osland, Jordi F. Pagès, Nipuni Perera, Eva-Maria Pfeiffer, Thomas Pollmann, Jacqueline L. Raw, María Recio, Ana Carolina Ruiz-Fernández, Sophie K. Russell, John M. Rybczyk, Marek Sammul, Christian Sanders, Rui Santos, Oscar Serrano, Matthias Siewert, Craig Smeaton, Zhaoliang Song, Carmen Trasar-Cepeda, Robert R. Twilley, Marijn Van de Broek, Stefano Vitti, Livia Vittori Antisari, Baptiste Voltz, Christy N. Wails, Raymond D. Ward, Melissa Ward, Jaxine Wolfe, Renmin Yang, Sebastian Zubrzycki, Emily Landis, Lindsey Smart, Mark Spalding, and Thomas A. Worthington
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Tidal marshes store large amounts of organic carbon in their soils. Field data quantifying soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks provide an important resource for researchers, natural resource managers, and policy-makers working towards the protection, restoration, and valuation of these ecosystems. We collated a global dataset of tidal marsh soil organic carbon (MarSOC) from 99 studies that includes location, soil depth, site name, dry bulk density, SOC, and/or soil organic matter (SOM). The MarSOC dataset includes 17,454 data points from 2,329 unique locations, and 29 countries. We generated a general transfer function for the conversion of SOM to SOC. Using this data we estimated a median (± median absolute deviation) value of 79.2 ± 38.1 Mg SOC ha−1 in the top 30 cm and 231 ± 134 Mg SOC ha−1 in the top 1 m of tidal marsh soils globally. This data can serve as a basis for future work, and may contribute to incorporation of tidal marsh ecosystems into climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies and policies.
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- 2023
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34. Light-quark Yukawa couplings from off-shell Higgs production
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Elisa Balzani, Ramona Gröber, and Marco Vitti
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Anomalous Higgs Couplings ,Higgs Properties ,SMEFT ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract Yukawa couplings of the first quark generation are notoriously difficult to constrain due to their small values within the Standard Model. Here we propose Higgs off-shell production, with the Higgs boson decaying to four leptons, as a probe of the up- and down-quark Yukawa couplings. Using kinematic discriminants similar to the ones employed in the Higgs width measurements we find that the down (up) Yukawa coupling can be constrained to a factor of 156 (260) times its Standard Model value at the high-luminosity LHC assuming only experimental systematic uncertainties. Off-shell Higgs production hence provides better sensitivity to the first-generation quark Yukawa couplings with respect to other probes such as Higgs+jet or Higgs pair production.
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- 2023
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35. The use of real time strain endometrial elastosonography plus endometrial thickness and vascularization flow index to predict endometrial receptivity in IVF treatments: a pilot study
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Antonio Stanziano, Francesco Paolo Bianchi, Anna Maria Caringella, Clementina Cantatore, Antonio D’Amato, Angela Vitti, Anna Cortone, Amerigo Vitagliano, and Giuseppe D’Amato
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Endometrial thickness ,Strain elastosonography ,Endometrial vascularity ,Endometrial receptivity ,IVF cycles ,Pregnancy rate. ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background The usefulness of endometrium strain elastosonography (SE) for the evaluation of endometrial receptivity in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) remains controversial. The objective of this prospective, observational study was to evaluate the correlation between endometrial thickness (EMT) and its related strain (ESR) on the day of ovulation triggering (hCG-d) and in vitro fertilization outcomes. Additionally, 3D Power Doppler vascular indices (3DPDVI) were also analysed. Methods We included all the patients undergoing fresh IVF-single blastocyst transfer cycle from January 2021 to August 2021 at our center. On hCG-d, after B-mode scanning was completed to measure the EMT, the mode was changed to elastosonography to evaluate the ESR (ratio between endometrial tissue and the myometrium below). At the end of examination, the Endometrial Volume (EV) and 3DPDVI (vascularization index [VI], flow index [FI] and vascularization flow index [VFI]), were assessed. Statistical analysis was completed using STATA MP16 software. Results A total number of 57 women were included. Based on the EMT on hCG-d, women were divided into two groups, Group 1:
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- 2023
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36. Functional outcomes of sustained improvement on Diabetic Retinopathy Severity Scale with intravitreal aflibercept in the VISTA and VIVID trials
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Dhoot, Dilsher S., Moini, Hadi, Reed, Kimberly, Du, Weiming, Vitti, Robert, Berliner, Alyson J., and Singh, Rishi P.
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- 2023
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37. Virtual corrections to $gg\to ZH$ via a transverse momentum expansion
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Alasfar, Lina, Degrassi, Giuseppe, Giardino, Pier Paolo, Gröber, Ramona, and Vitti, Marco
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We compute the next-to-leading virtual QCD corrections to the partonic cross section of the production of a Higgs boson in association with a $Z$ boson in gluon fusion. The calculation is based on the recently introduced method of evaluating the amplitude via an expansion in terms of a small transverse momentum. We generalize the method to the case of different masses in the final state and of a process not symmetric in the forward-backward direction exchange. Our analytic approach gives a very good approximation (better than percent) of the partonic cross section in the center of mass energy region up to $\sim 750 \,\textrm{GeV}$, where at the LHC $\sim 98\%$ of the total hadronic cross section is concentrated., Comment: 21 pages, 3 Figures and 1 Table
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- 2021
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38. Carbon and Water Balances in a Watermelon Crop Mulched with Biodegradable Films in Mediterranean Conditions at Extended Growth Season Scale
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Rossana M. Ferrara, Alessandro Azzolini, Alessandro Ciurlia, Gabriele De Carolis, Marcello Mastrangelo, Valerio Minorenti, Alessandro Montaghi, Mariagrazia Piarulli, Sergio Ruggieri, Carolina Vitti, Nicola Martinelli, and Gianfranco Rana
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flux variance similarity ,net biome exchange ,water use efficiency ,semi-arid climate ,drip irrigation ,green manure ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
The carbon source/sink nature and the water balance of a drip-irrigated and mulched watermelon cultivated under a semi-arid climate were investigated. Biodegradable films, plants and some fruits were left on the soil as green manure. The study spanned from watermelon planting to the subsequent crop (June–November 2023). The eddy covariance technique was employed to monitor water vapor (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes, which were partitioned into transpiration, evaporation, photosynthesis and respiration, respectively, using the flux variance similarity method.This method utilizesthe Monin–Obukhov similarity theory to separate stomatal (photosynthesis and transpiration) from non-stomatal (respiration and evaporation) processes. The results indicate that mulching films contribute to carbon sequestration in the soil (+19.3 g C m−2). However, the mulched watermelon crop presented in this study functions as a net carbon source, with a net biome exchange, representing the net rate of C accumulation in or loss from ecosystems, equal to +230 g C m−2. This is primarily due to the substantial amount of carbon exported through marketable fruits. Fixed water scheduling led to water waste through deep percolation (approximately 1/6 of the water supplied), which also contributed to the loss of organic carbon via leaching (−4.3 g C m−2). These findings recommend further research to enhance the sustainability of this crop in terms of both water and carbon balances.
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- 2024
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39. Sulfonic-functionalized poly (dimethylsiloxane) network electrode for simultaneous determination of ascorbic acid, dopamine, and uric acid
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de Castro, Ana Cristina Honorato, Ferrarezi, Lucas, Gomes, Alberth Wagner, de Lima, Rafaela Vitti, Lucho, Alzira Maria Serpa, and Pisseti, Fabio Luiz
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- 2023
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40. Translation and validation of Cerebral Palsy Quality of Life Questionnaire-Teen in Hong Kong Chinese population [CP QoL-Teen (HK)]
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Ngai, Shirley P. C., Wong, L. Y., Poon, Vitti W. K., Poon, Candice Y. C., Yiu, Beverley P. H., Wong, Teresa P. S., and Chow, C. P.
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- 2023
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41. Predicting bird diversity through acoustic indices within the Atlantic Forest biodiversity hotspot
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Lucas P. Gaspar, Marina D. A. Scarpelli, Eliziane G. Oliveira, Rafael Souza-Cruz Alves, Arthur Monteiro Gomes, Rafaela Wolf, Rafaela Vitti Ferneda, Silvia Harumi Kamazuka, Carlos O. A. Gussoni, and Milton Cezar Ribeiro
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passive acoustic monitoring ,ecoacoustics ,acoustic surveys ,long-term monitoring ,long-term ecological research ,acoustic remote sensing ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
The increasing conversion of natural areas for anthropic land use has been a major cause of habitat loss, destabilizing ecosystems and leading to a biodiversity crisis. Passive acoustic sensors open the possibility of remotely sensing fauna on large spatial and temporal scales, improving our understanding of the current state of biodiversity and the effects of human influences. Acoustic indices have been widely used and tested in recent years, with an aim towards understanding the relationship between indices and the acoustic activity of several taxa in different types of environments. However, studies have shown divergent relationships between acoustic indices and the vocal activity of most soniferous taxa. A combination of indices has, in turn, been reported as a promising tool for representing biodiversity in different contexts. We used uni- and bivariate models to test different combinations of 8 common indices in relation to bird assemblage metrics. We recorded twenty-two study sites in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest and three different types of environments in each site (forest, pasture, and swamp). Our results showed that 1) the best acoustic indices for explaining bird richness, abundance, and diversity were Bioacoustic and Acoustic Complexity; 2) the type of environment (forest, pasture, and swamp) influenced the performance of acoustic indices in explaining bird biodiversity, with the highest score model (biggest R2 value) being a combination between Acoustic Diversity and Bioacoustic indices. Our results do support the use of acoustic indices in monitoring the acoustic activity of birds, but combining indices is encouraged since it provided the best results. However, given the divergence we found across environments, we recommend that sets of indices are tested to determine which of them best describe the biodiversity pattern models for a specific habitat. Based on our results, we propose that biodiversity patterns can be predicted through acoustic patterns. However, the level of confidence will depend on the acoustic index used and on focal taxa of interest (i.e., birds, amphibians, insects, and mammals).
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- 2023
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42. Hermetia illucens, an innovative and sustainable source of chitosan-based coating for postharvest preservation of strawberries
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Micaela Triunfo, Anna Guarnieri, Dolores Ianniciello, Leonardo Coviello, Antonella Vitti, Maria Nuzzaci, Rosanna Salvia, Carmen Scieuzo, and Patrizia Falabella
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Microbiology ,Applied microbiology ,Biotechnology ,Food technology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: The ability of chitosan produced from pupal exuviae of Hermetia illucens to retard the decay of the local strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) cultivar Melissa was investigated for the first time in this paper. The results demonstrated the effectiveness of insect chitosan compared to the commercial polymer in preserving and enhancing, at the same time, some physicochemical parameters (weight loss, pH and soluble solids content) and nutraceutical properties (total polyphenol content, total flavonoid content and total antioxidant activity) of strawberries stored at RT, 4°C and at mixed storage conditions (4°C + RT). Moreover, chitosan from H. illucens was also effective in reducing fungal decay and improving fruit shelf life. The obtained results confirm that insect chitosan, particularly deriving from H. illucens pupal exuviae, can be a viable alternative to crustacean one in safeguarding postharvest fruits.
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- 2023
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43. The effect of an anomalous Higgs trilinear self-coupling on the h to gamma Z decay
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Degrassi, G. and Vitti, M.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We compute the two-loop effects induced by an anomalous Higgs trilinear self-coupling in the partial decay width h to gamma Z. The computation is performed using the anomalous coupling approach working in the unitary gauge and in a theory in which the anomalous coupling is generated via the addition to the scalar potential part of the Standard Model Lagrangian of an (in)finite tower of (Phi^dagger Phi)^n terms. The former computation is automatically finite while the latter requires the renormalization of the lowest order contribution. We discuss the renormalization conditions that should be employed in order to obtain the same result in the two approaches. We find that the h to gamma Z process is one of the most sensitive mode to an anomalous trilinear Higgs self-coupling. As a by-product of this work we confirm one of two different results present in the literature concerning the contribution of an anomalous Higgs trilinear coupling in the h to gamma gamma decay., Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures
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- 2019
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44. COLMAP-SLAM: A FRAMEWORK FOR VISUAL ODOMETRY
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L. Morelli, F. Ioli, R. Beber, F. Menna, F. Remondino, and A. Vitti
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Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 - Abstract
SLAM technology is more and more integrated with other sensors for indoor and outdoor seamless navigation. This research topic is very active in particular on image matching with deep learning local features, keyframe selection approaches, or tests on new IMU and GNSS solutions. Integrating and testing new methodologies on other widely used SLAM implementations, such as ORB-SLAM, can be not a trivial task. Therefore, we propose an extension of COLMAP to be used in real-time as a feature-based Visual-SLAM that can be also coupled with other sensors. COLMAP has been chosen due to its modularity and the large community that assures the continuity of the repository. The paper presents a pipeline mainly thought for real-time evaluation of learning-based tie points and new SLAM features, that works with both monocular, stereo and multi-camera systems. It is also shown an example of keyframe selection algorithm based on deep learning local features, and a simple example of IMU integration. The code is available on the GitHub repository https://github.com/3DOM-FBK/COLMAP_SLAM.
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- 2023
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45. The obesity and inflammatory marker haptoglobin attracts monocytes via interaction with chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 2 (CCR2)
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Lisi Simonetta, Costa Mario, Gamucci Olimpia, Vottari Teresa, Funicello Marcella, Maffei Margherita, Viegi Alessandro, Ciampi Osele, Bardi Giuseppe, Vitti Paolo, Pinchera Aldo, and Santini Ferruccio
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Obesity is a chronic low inflammatory state. In the obesity condition the white adipose tissue (WAT) is massively infiltrated with monocytes/macrophages, and the nature of the signals recruiting these inflammatory cells has yet to be fully elucidated. Haptoglobin (Hp) is an inflammatory marker and its expression is induced in the WAT of obese subjects. In an effort to elucidate the biological significance of Hp presence in the WAT and of its upregulation in obesity we formulated the hypothesis that Hp may serve as a macrophage chemoattractant. Results We demonstrated by chemotaxis assay that Hp is able to attract chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 2 (CCR2)-transfected pre-B lymphocytes and monocytes in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, Hp-mediated migration of monocytes is impaired by CCR2-specific inhibition or previous cell exposure to monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP1) (also known as CCR2 ligand or chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2)). Downstream effects of Hp/CCR2 interaction were also investigated: flow cytometry proved that monocytes treated with Hp show reduced CCR2 expression on their surface; Hp interaction induces calcium release that is reduced upon pretreatment with CCR2 antagonist; extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2, a signal transducer activated by CCR2, is phosphorylated following Hp treatment and this phosphorylation is reduced when cells are pretreated with a specific CCR2 inhibitor. Consistently, blocking the ERK1/2 pathway with U0126, the selective inhibitor of the ERK upstream mitogen-activated protein (MAP)-ERK kinase (MEK), results in a dramatic reduction (by almost 100%) of the capability of Hp to induce monocyte migration. Conclusions Our data show that Hp is a novel monocyte chemoattractant and that its chemotactic potential is mediated, at least in part. by its interaction with CCR2.
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- 2009
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46. Residual Effect of Compost and Biochar Amendment on Soil Chemical, Biological, and Physical Properties and Durum Wheat Response
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Rita Leogrande, Carolina Vitti, Mirko Castellini, Pasquale Garofalo, Ignazio Samarelli, Giovanni Lacolla, Francesco Fabiano Montesano, Matteo Spagnuolo, Marcello Mastrangelo, and Anna Maria Stellacci
- Subjects
amendment application ,labile fraction of organic carbon ,soil respiration rate ,bulk density ,water retention curve ,grain yield ,Agriculture - Abstract
The residual effect of compost and biochar amendment on soil properties and durum wheat response was evaluated under field conditions in a Mediterranean environment. The treatments compared in a randomized complete block experimental design with three replications were: mineral fertilizer (100 kg N ha−1), compost applied at the rate of 25 Mg ha−1, biochar applied at the rates of 10 and 30 Mg ha−1, unfertilized control. Wheat was the second crop included in a sorghum–wheat cropping system and did not receive fertilizer supply. A hierarchical statistical analysis was carried out to investigate how different treatments could impact the cropping system performance. The findings highlight the significant influence of soil properties, particularly total N, WEOC, and TOC, on wheat and protein yield. One year after the amendment and fertilizer application, compost and biochar significantly increased soil total organic carbon content. The highest soil water extractable organic carbon was found with the compost application (76.9 mg kg−1), whereas the lowest value (50 mg kg−1) was with the highest rate of biochar. Soil respiration rates and hydraulic properties were not affected by the investigated treatments. This behavior is probably related to the short experimental duration and to the silty clayey soil texture. Significant correlations were observed between bulk density and water content at pressure heads in the −20 and −100 cm range; this range accounts for the effect of soil macro and mesopores. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed strong predictive power for grain (R2_adj = 0.78; p < 0.001) and protein yield (R2_adj = 0.77; p < 0.001). The highest grain yield (3.36 Mg ha−1) was observed with compost, and the lowest (2.18 Mg ha−1) with biochar at a rate of 30 Mg ha−1. These findings lay the basis for understanding how different soil amendment management may impact soil quality and wheat performance, even in consideration of climate change.
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- 2024
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47. Identification and functional characterization of the sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) AMT2-type ammonium transporter ScAMT3;3 revealed a presumed role in shoot ammonium remobilization
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Rodolfo A. Maniero, Alessandra Koltun, Marielle Vitti, Bruna G. Factor, Nathalia de Setta, Amanda S. Câmara, Joni E. Lima, and Antonio Figueira
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Arabidopsis thaliana, heterologous expression ,low-affinity transport system ,nitrogen ,nitrogen use efficiency ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) is an important crop for sugar and bioethanol production worldwide. To maintain and increase sugarcane yields in marginal areas, the use of nitrogen (N) fertilizers is essential, but N overuse may result in the leaching of reactive N to the natural environment. Despite the importance of N in sugarcane production, little is known about the molecular mechanisms involved in N homeostasis in this crop, particularly regarding ammonium (NH4+), the sugarcane’s preferred source of N. Here, using a sugarcane bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library and a series of in silico analyses, we identified an AMMONIUM TRANSPORTER (AMT) from the AMT2 subfamily, sugarcane AMMONIUM TRANSPORTER 3;3 (ScAMT3;3), which is constitutively and highly expressed in young and mature leaves. To characterize its biochemical function, we ectopically expressed ScAMT3;3 in heterologous systems (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Arabidopsis thaliana). The complementation of triple mep mutant yeast demonstrated that ScAMT3;3 is functional for NH3/H+ cotransport at high availability of NH4+ and under physiological pH conditions. The ectopic expression of ScAMT3;3 in the Arabidopsis quadruple AMT knockout mutant restored the transport capacity of 15N–NH4+ in roots and plant growth under specific N availability conditions, confirming the role of ScAMT3;3 in NH4+ transport in planta. Our results indicate that ScAMT3;3 belongs to the low-affinity transport system (Km 270.9 µM; Vmax 209.3 µmol g−1 root DW h−1). We were able to infer that ScAMT3;3 plays a presumed role in NH4+ source–sink remobilization in the shoots via phloem loading. These findings help to shed light on the functionality of a novel AMT2-type protein and provide bases for future research focusing on the improvement of sugarcane yield and N use efficiency.
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- 2023
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48. CICLO DE MELHORIA E DESAFIOS DA REDUÇÃO DA DENSIDADE DE PNEUMONIA ASSOCIADA A VENTILAÇÃO MECÂNICA EM UMA UNIDADE DE TERAPIA INTENSIVA ADULTA
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Graziela Vitti, Lana Rubia Canete, Gisleine Forti Campeão, Cinthya Rodini, Marisa Severino, Ariovaldo Marques, Hamilton Bonilha, and Jane Queiroz
- Subjects
Pneumonia associada a ventilação mecânica ,Prevenção ,Infecção ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Introdução/Objetivo: A pneumonia associada à ventilação, também conhecida como PAV, é uma complicação grave que afeta pacientes hospitalizados que necessitam de suporte ventilatório. É uma infecção pulmonar adquirida durante a assistência médica, e está entre as principais causas de morbidade e mortalidade em Unidades de Terapia Intensiva (UTIs) ao redor do mundo. Diante da maior prevalência desta infecção na Unidade de terapia intensiva adulta do Hospital Unimed Piracicaba, o objetivo deste estudo foi diminuir as taxas de pneumonia associada a ventilação mecânica, através de um ciclo de melhorias. Métodos: Estudo Retrospectivo observacional com uso da base de dados da Epimed, com a inalidade de analisar o impacto das ações de prevenção de PAV. Neste sentido, se fez necessário um levantamento das principais causas de sua ocorrência, o perfil de pacientes que desenvolve esta infecção, os principais germes presentes no resultado das culturas, verificação das práticas aplicadas no manuseio e cuidado com estes pacientes e estudo aprofundado. Foi utilizado como base de cuidado e medida de prevenção a aplicação dos itens do Bundle para prevenção de infecção. Resultados: Foi observado durante o ano de 2022 um aumento significativo de PAV mesmo após a contenção da pandemia de COVID-19, onde foi medido a densidade de incidência de PAV com início no mês de março/2022 com 45,8 abril 25 maio 47,5 junho 37,73 julho 12,19 agosto 4,06 setembro 0 outubro 47,05 novembro 31,25 dezembro 24,39 Após o início dos treinamentos e ações com a equipe percebemos uma redução significativa sendo em janeiro/2023 17 fevereiro 11.11 março 0 abril 0 maio 0 junho 0. Foram realizados treinamentos e capacitações para a equipe de saúde, abordando as melhores práticas para prevenção da PAV e enfatizando a importância da adesão aos protocolos estabelecidos. Sendo eles: Manter cabeceira do leito elevada maior que 30° continuamente; em casos estritamente necessários, antes de baixar a cabeceira, realizar higiene brônquica com aspiração e oral com clorexidina e após solicitar fisioterapeuta para avaliação e calibração de pressão de cuff. Previamente a procedimentos, onde existia a necessidade de que a cabeceira do leito do permaneça reta por um tempo prolongado, como por exemplo banho no leito, punção de cateter central, realização de traqueostomia, entre outros o colaborador passou a realizar maior cuidado com a aspiração antes do procedimento. Conclusão: Instituir prevenção e treinamento contínuo.
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- 2023
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49. Amplitude analysis of the $B^+ \rightarrow \pi^+\pi^+\pi^-$ decay
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LHCb collaboration, Aaij, R., Beteta, C. Abellán, Adeva, B., Adinolfi, M., Aidala, C. A., Ajaltouni, Z., Akar, S., Albicocco, P., Albrecht, J., Alessio, F., Alexander, M., Albero, A. Alfonso, Alkhazov, G., Cartelle, P. Alvarez, Alves Jr, A. A., Amato, S., Amhis, Y., An, L., Anderlini, L., Andreassi, G., Andreotti, M., Andrews, J. E., Archilli, F., Romeu, J. Arnau, Artamonov, A., Artuso, M., Arzymatov, K., Aslanides, E., Atzeni, M., Audurier, B., Bachmann, S., Back, J. J., Baker, S., Balagura, V., Baldini, W., Baranov, A., Barlow, R. J., Barsuk, S., Barter, W., Bartolini, M., Baryshnikov, F., Batozskaya, V., Batsukh, B., Battig, A., Battista, V., Bay, A., Bedeschi, F., Bediaga, I., Beiter, A., Bel, L. J., Belavin, V., Belin, S., Beliy, N., Bellee, V., Belous, K., Belyaev, I., Bencivenni, G., Ben-Haim, E., Benson, S., Beranek, S., Berezhnoy, A., Bernet, R., Berninghoff, D., Bertholet, E., Bertolin, A., Betancourt, C., Betti, F., Bettler, M. O., Bezshyiko, Ia., Bhasin, S., Bhom, J., Bieker, M. S., Bifani, S., Billoir, P., Birnkraut, A., Bizzeti, A., Bjørn, M., Blago, M. P., Blake, T., Blanc, F., Blusk, S., Bobulska, D., Bocci, V., Garcia, O. Boente, Boettcher, T., Boldyrev, A., Bondar, A., Bondar, N., Borghi, S., Borisyak, M., Borsato, M., Boubdir, M., Bowcock, T. J. V., Bozzi, C., Braun, S., Rodriguez, A. Brea, Brodski, M., Brodzicka, J., Gonzalo, A. Brossa, Brundu, D., Buchanan, E., Buonaura, A., Burr, C., Bursche, A., Butter, J. S., Buytaert, J., Byczynski, W., Cadeddu, S., Cai, H., Calabrese, R., Cali, S., Calladine, R., Calvi, M., Gomez, M. Calvo, Magalhaes, P. Camargo, Camboni, A., Campana, P., Perez, D. H. Campora, Capriotti, L., Carbone, A., Carboni, G., Cardinale, R., Cardini, A., Carniti, P., Akiba, K. Carvalho, Vidal, A. Casais, Casse, G., Cattaneo, M., Cavallero, G., Cenci, R., Chapman, M. G., Charles, M., Charpentier, Ph., Chatzikonstantinidis, G., Chefdeville, M., Chekalina, V., Chen, C., Chen, S., Chitic, S. -G., Chobanova, V., Chrzaszcz, M., Chubykin, A., Ciambrone, P., Vidal, X. Cid, Ciezarek, G., Cindolo, F., Clarke, P. E. L., Clemencic, M., Cliff, H. V., Closier, J., Cobbledick, J. L., Coco, V., Coelho, J. A. B., Cogan, J., Cogneras, E., Cojocariu, L., Collins, P., Colombo, T., Comerma-Montells, A., Contu, A., Coombs, G., Coquereau, S., Corti, G., Sobral, C. M. Costa, Couturier, B., Cowan, G. A., Craik, D. C., Crocombe, A., Torres, M. Cruz, Currie, R., Da Silva, C. L., Dall'Occo, E., Dalseno, J., D'Ambrosio, C., Danilina, A., d'Argent, P., Davis, A., Francisco, O. De Aguiar, De Bruyn, K., De Capua, S., De Cian, M., De Miranda, J. M., De Paula, L., De Serio, M., De Simone, P., de Vries, J. A., Dean, C. T., Dean, W., Decamp, D., Del Buono, L., Delaney, B., Dembinski, H. -P., Demmer, M., Dendek, A., Derkach, D., Deschamps, O., Desse, F., Dettori, F., Dey, B., Di Canto, A., Di Nezza, P., Didenko, S., Dijkstra, H., Dordei, F., Dorigo, M., Reis, A. C. dos, Suárez, A. Dosil, Douglas, L., Dovbnya, A., Dreimanis, K., Dufour, L., Dujany, G., Durante, P., Durham, J. M., Dutta, D., Dzhelyadin, R., Dziewiecki, M., Dziurda, A., Dzyuba, A., Easo, S., Egede, U., Egorychev, V., Eidelman, S., Eisenhardt, S., Eitschberger, U., Ekelhof, R., Ek-In, S., Eklund, L., Ely, S., Ene, A., Escher, S., Esen, S., Evans, T., Falabella, A., Färber, C., Farley, N., Farry, S., Fazzini, D., Féo, M., Declara, P. Fernandez, Prieto, A. Fernandez, Ferrari, F., Lopes, L. Ferreira, Rodrigues, F. Ferreira, Sole, S. Ferreres, Ferro-Luzzi, M., Filippov, S., Fini, R. A., Fiorini, M., Firlej, M., Fitzpatrick, C., Fiutowski, T., Fleuret, F., Fontana, M., Fontanelli, F., Forty, R., Lima, V. Franco, Sevilla, M. Franco, Frank, M., Frei, C., Fu, J., Funk, W., Gabriel, E., Torreira, A. Gallas, Galli, D., Gallorini, S., Gambetta, S., Gan, Y., Gandelman, M., Gandini, P., Gao, Y., Martin, L. M. Garcia, Pardiñas, J. García, Plana, B. Garcia, Tico, J. Garra, Garrido, L., Gascon, D., Gaspar, C., Gazzoni, G., Gerick, D., Gersabeck, E., Gersabeck, M., Gershon, T., Gerstel, D., Ghez, Ph., Gibson, V., Gioventù, A., Girard, O. G., Gironell, P. Gironella, Giubega, L., Gizdov, K., Gligorov, V. V., Göbel, C., Golubkov, D., Golutvin, A., Gomes, A., Gorelov, I. V., Gotti, C., Govorkova, E., Grabowski, J. P., Diaz, R. Graciani, Cardoso, L. A. Granado, Graugés, E., Graverini, E., Graziani, G., Grecu, A., Greim, R., Griffith, P., Grillo, L., Gruber, L., Cazon, B. R. Gruberg, Gu, C., Gushchin, E., Guth, A., Guz, Yu., Gys, T., Hadavizadeh, T., Hadjivasiliou, C., Haefeli, G., Haen, C., Haines, S. C., Hamilton, P. M., Han, Q., Han, X., Hancock, T. H., Hansmann-Menzemer, S., Harnew, N., Harrison, T., Hasse, C., Hatch, M., He, J., Hecker, M., Heijhoff, K., Heinicke, K., Heister, A., Hennessy, K., Henry, L., Heß, M., Heuel, J., Hicheur, A., Charman, R. Hidalgo, Hill, D., Hilton, M., Hopchev, P. H., Hu, J., Hu, W., Huang, W., Huard, Z. C., Hulsbergen, W., Humair, T., Hushchyn, M., Hutchcroft, D., Hynds, D., Ibis, P., Idzik, M., Ilten, P., Inglessi, A., Inyakin, A., Ivshin, K., Jacobsson, R., Jakobsen, S., Jalocha, J., Jans, E., Jashal, B. K., Jawahery, A., Jiang, F., John, M., Johnson, D., Jones, C. R., Joram, C., Jost, B., Jurik, N., Kandybei, S., Karacson, M., Kariuki, J. M., Karodia, S., Kazeev, N., Kecke, M., Keizer, F., Kelsey, M., Kenzie, M., Ketel, T., Khanji, B., Kharisova, A., Khurewathanakul, C., Kim, K. E., Kirn, T., Kirsebom, V. S., Klaver, S., Klimaszewski, K., Koliiev, S., Kolpin, M., Kondybayeva, A., Konoplyannikov, A., Kopciewicz, P., Kopecna, R., Koppenburg, P., Kostiuk, I., Kot, O., Kotriakhova, S., Kozeiha, M., Kravchuk, L., Kreps, M., Kress, F., Kretzschmar, S., Krokovny, P., Krupa, W., Krzemien, W., Kucewicz, W., Kucharczyk, M., Kudryavtsev, V., Kunde, G. J., Kuonen, A. K., Kvaratskheliya, T., Lacarrere, D., Lafferty, G., Lai, A., Lancierini, D., Lanfranchi, G., Langenbruch, C., Latham, T., Lazzeroni, C., Gac, R. Le, Lefèvre, R., Leflat, A., Lemaitre, F., Leroy, O., Lesiak, T., Leverington, B., Li, H., Li, P. -R., Li, X., Li, Y., Li, Z., Liang, X., Likhomanenko, T., Lindner, R., Lionetto, F., Lisovskyi, V., Liu, G., Liu, X., Loh, D., Loi, A., Castro, J. Lomba, Longstaff, I., Lopes, J. H., Loustau, G., Lovell, G. H., Lucchesi, D., Martinez, M. Lucio, Luo, Y., Lupato, A., Luppi, E., Lupton, O., Lusiani, A., Lyu, X., Machefert, F., Maciuc, F., Macko, V., Mackowiak, P., Maddrell-Mander, S., Maev, O., Maevskiy, A., Maguire, K., Maisuzenko, D., Majewski, M. W., Malde, S., Malecki, B., Malinin, A., Maltsev, T., Malygina, H., Manca, G., Mancinelli, G., Marangotto, D., Maratas, J., Marchand, J. F., Marconi, U., Benito, C. Marin, Marinangeli, M., Marino, P., Marks, J., Marshall, P. J., Martellotti, G., Martinazzoli, L., Martinelli, M., Santos, D. Martinez, Vidal, F. Martinez, Massafferri, A., Materok, M., Matev, R., Mathad, A., Mathe, Z., Matiunin, V., Matteuzzi, C., Mattioli, K. R., Mauri, A., Maurice, E., Maurin, B., McCann, M., McNab, A., McNulty, R., Mead, J. V., Meadows, B., Meaux, C., Meinert, N., Melnychuk, D., Merk, M., Merli, A., Michielin, E., Milanes, D. A., Millard, E., Minard, M. -N., Mineev, O., Minzoni, L., Mitzel, D. S., Mödden, A., Mogini, A., Moise, R. D., Mombächer, T., Monroy, I. A., Monteil, S., Morandin, M., Morello, G., Morello, M. J., Moron, J., Morris, A. B., Mountain, R., Mu, H., Muheim, F., Mukherjee, M., Mulder, M., Müller, D., Müller, J., Müller, K., Müller, V., Murphy, C. H., Murray, D., Naik, P., Nakada, T., Nandakumar, R., Nandi, A., Nanut, T., Nasteva, I., Needham, M., Neri, N., Neubert, S., Neufeld, N., Newcombe, R., Nguyen, T. D., Nguyen-Mau, C., Nieswand, S., Niet, R., Nikitin, N., Nolte, N. S., Oblakowska-Mucha, A., Obraztsov, V., Ogilvy, S., O'Hanlon, D. P., Oldeman, R., Onderwater, C. J. G., Osborn, J. D., Ossowska, A., Goicochea, J. M. Otalora, Ovsiannikova, T., Owen, P., Oyanguren, A., Pais, P. R., Pajero, T., Palano, A., Palutan, M., Panshin, G., Papanestis, A., Pappagallo, M., Pappalardo, L. L., Parker, W., Parkes, C., Passaleva, G., Pastore, A., Patel, M., Patrignani, C., Pearce, A., Pellegrino, A., Penso, G., Altarelli, M. Pepe, Perazzini, S., Pereima, D., Perret, P., Pescatore, L., Petridis, K., Petrolini, A., Petrov, A., Petrucci, S., Petruzzo, M., Pietrzyk, B., Pietrzyk, G., Pikies, M., Pili, M., Pinci, D., Pinzino, J., Pisani, F., Piucci, A., Placinta, V., Playfer, S., Plews, J., Casasus, M. Plo, Polci, F., Lener, M. Poli, Poliakova, M., Poluektov, A., Polukhina, N., Polyakov, I., Polycarpo, E., Pomery, G. J., Ponce, S., Popov, A., Popov, D., Poslavskii, S., Prasanth, K., Price, E., Prouve, C., Pugatch, V., Navarro, A. Puig, Pullen, H., Punzi, G., Qian, W., Qin, J., Quagliani, R., Quintana, B., Raab, N. V., Rachwal, B., Rademacker, J. H., Rama, M., Pernas, M. Ramos, Rangel, M. S., Ratnikov, F., Raven, G., Salzgeber, M. Ravonel, Reboud, M., Redi, F., Reichert, S., Reiss, F., Alepuz, C. Remon, Ren, Z., Renaudin, V., Ricciardi, S., Richards, S., Rinnert, K., Robbe, P., Robert, A., Rodrigues, A. B., Rodrigues, E., Lopez, J. A. Rodriguez, Roehrken, M., Roiser, S., Rollings, A., Romanovskiy, V., Vidal, A. Romero, Roth, J. D., Rotondo, M., Rudolph, M. S., Ruf, T., Vidal, J. Ruiz, Silva, J. J. Saborido, Sagidova, N., Saitta, B., Guimaraes, V. Salustino, Gras, C. Sanchez, Mayordomo, C. Sanchez, Sedes, B. Sanmartin, Santacesaria, R., Rios, C. Santamarina, Santimaria, M., Santovetti, E., Sarpis, G., Sarti, A., Satriano, C., Satta, A., Saur, M., Savrina, D., Schael, S., Schellenberg, M., Schiller, M., Schindler, H., Schmelling, M., Schmelzer, T., Schmidt, B., Schneider, O., Schopper, A., Schreiner, H. F., Schubiger, M., Schulte, S., Schune, M. H., Schwemmer, R., Sciascia, B., Sciubba, A., Semennikov, A., Sepulveda, E. S., Sergi, A., Serra, N., Serrano, J., Sestini, L., Seuthe, A., Seyfert, P., Shapkin, M., Shears, T., Shekhtman, L., Shevchenko, V., Shmanin, E., Siddi, B. G., Coutinho, R. Silva, de Oliveira, L. Silva, Simi, G., Simone, S., Skiba, I., Skidmore, N., Skwarnicki, T., Slater, M. W., Smeaton, J. G., Smith, E., Smith, I. T., Smith, M., Soares, M., Lavra, L. Soares, Sokoloff, M. D., Soler, F. J. P., De Paula, B. Souza, Spaan, B., Norella, E. Spadaro, Spradlin, P., Stagni, F., Stahl, M., Stahl, S., Stefko, P., Stefkova, S., Steinkamp, O., Stemmle, S., Stenyakin, O., Stepanova, M., Stevens, H., Stocchi, A., Stone, S., Stracka, S., Stramaglia, M. E., Straticiuc, M., Straumann, U., Strokov, S., Sun, J., Sun, L., Sun, Y., Swientek, K., Szabelski, A., Szumlak, T., Szymanski, M., Tang, Z., Tekampe, T., Tellarini, G., Teubert, F., Thomas, E., Tilley, M. J., Tisserand, V., T'Jampens, S., Tobin, M., Tolk, S., Tomassetti, L., Tonelli, D., Tou, D. Y., Tournefier, E., Traill, M., Tran, M. T., Trisovic, A., Tsaregorodtsev, A., Tuci, G., Tully, A., Tuning, N., Ukleja, A., Usachov, A., Ustyuzhanin, A., Uwer, U., Vagner, A., Vagnoni, V., Valassi, A., Valat, S., Valenti, G., van Beuzekom, M., Van Hecke, H., van Herwijnen, E., Van Hulse, C. B., van Tilburg, J., van Veghel, M., Gomez, R. Vazquez, Regueiro, P. Vazquez, Sierra, C. Vázquez, Vecchi, S., Velthuis, J. J., Veltri, M., Venkateswaran, A., Vernet, M., Veronesi, M., Vesterinen, M., Barbosa, J. V. Viana, Vieira, D., Diaz, M. Vieites, Viemann, H., Vilasis-Cardona, X., Vitkovskiy, A., Vitti, M., Volkov, V., Vollhardt, A., Bruch, D. Vom, Voneki, B., Vorobyev, A., Vorobyev, V., Voropaev, N., Waldi, R., Walsh, J., Wang, J., Wang, M., Wang, Y., Wang, Z., Ward, D. R., Wark, H. M., Watson, N. K., Websdale, D., Weiden, A., Weisser, C., Whitehead, M., Wilkinson, G., Wilkinson, M., Williams, I., Williams, M., Williams, M. R. J., Williams, T., Wilson, F. F., Winn, M., Wislicki, W., Witek, M., Wormser, G., Wotton, S. A., Wyllie, K., Xiang, Z., Xiao, D., Xie, Y., Xing, H., Xu, A., Xu, L., Xu, M., Xu, Q., Xu, Z., Yang, Z., Yao, Y., Yeomans, L. E., Yin, H., Yu, J., Yuan, X., Yushchenko, O., Zarebski, K. A., Zavertyaev, M., Zeng, M., Zhang, D., Zhang, L., Zhang, S., Zhang, W. C., Zhang, Y., Zhelezov, A., Zheng, Y., Zhou, Y., Zhu, X., Zhukov, V., Zonneveld, J. B., and Zucchelli, S.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The results of an amplitude analysis of the charmless three-body decay $B^+ \rightarrow \pi^+\pi^+\pi^-$, in which $C\!P$-violation effects are taken into account, are reported. The analysis is based on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of $3 \text{fb}^{-1}$ of $pp$ collisions recorded with the LHCb detector. The most challenging aspect of the analysis is the description of the behaviour of the $\pi^+ \pi^-$ S-wave contribution, which is achieved by using three complementary approaches based on the isobar model, the K-matrix formalism, and a quasi-model-independent procedure. Additional resonant contributions for all three methods are described using a common isobar model, and include the $\rho(770)^0$, $\omega(782)$ and $\rho(1450)^0$ resonances in the $\pi^+\pi^-$ P-wave, the $f_2(1270)$ resonance in the $\pi^+\pi^-$ D-wave, and the $\rho_3(1690)^0$ resonance in the $\pi^+\pi^-$ F-wave. Significant $C\!P$-violation effects are observed in both S- and D-waves, as well as in the interference between the S- and P-waves. The results from all three approaches agree and provide new insight into the dynamics and the origin of $C\!P$-violation effects in $B^+ \rightarrow \pi^+\pi^+\pi^-$ decays., Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2019-017.html (LHCb public pages)
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Observation of several sources of $CP$ violation in $B^+ \to \pi^+ \pi^+ \pi^-$ decays
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LHCb collaboration, Aaij, R., Beteta, C. Abellán, Adeva, B., Adinolfi, M., Aidala, C. A., Ajaltouni, Z., Akar, S., Albicocco, P., Albrecht, J., Alessio, F., Alexander, M., Albero, A. Alfonso, Alkhazov, G., Cartelle, P. Alvarez, Alves Jr, A. A., Amato, S., Amhis, Y., An, L., Anderlini, L., Andreassi, G., Andreotti, M., Andrews, J. E., Archilli, F., Romeu, J. Arnau, Artamonov, A., Artuso, M., Arzymatov, K., Aslanides, E., Atzeni, M., Audurier, B., Bachmann, S., Back, J. J., Baker, S., Balagura, V., Baldini, W., Baranov, A., Barlow, R. J., Barsuk, S., Barter, W., Bartolini, M., Baryshnikov, F., Batozskaya, V., Batsukh, B., Battig, A., Battista, V., Bay, A., Bedeschi, F., Bediaga, I., Beiter, A., Bel, L. J., Belavin, V., Belin, S., Beliy, N., Bellee, V., Belous, K., Belyaev, I., Bencivenni, G., Ben-Haim, E., Benson, S., Beranek, S., Berezhnoy, A., Bernet, R., Berninghoff, D., Bertholet, E., Bertolin, A., Betancourt, C., Betti, F., Bettler, M. O., Bezshyiko, Ia., Bhasin, S., Bhom, J., Bieker, M. S., Bifani, S., Billoir, P., Birnkraut, A., Bizzeti, A., Bjørn, M., Blago, M. P., Blake, T., Blanc, F., Blusk, S., Bobulska, D., Bocci, V., Garcia, O. Boente, Boettcher, T., Boldyrev, A., Bondar, A., Bondar, N., Borghi, S., Borisyak, M., Borsato, M., Boubdir, M., Bowcock, T. J. V., Bozzi, C., Braun, S., Rodriguez, A. Brea, Brodski, M., Brodzicka, J., Gonzalo, A. Brossa, Brundu, D., Buchanan, E., Buonaura, A., Burr, C., Bursche, A., Butter, J. S., Buytaert, J., Byczynski, W., Cadeddu, S., Cai, H., Calabrese, R., Cali, S., Calladine, R., Calvi, M., Gomez, M. Calvo, Magalhaes, P. Camargo, Camboni, A., Campana, P., Perez, D. H. Campora, Capriotti, L., Carbone, A., Carboni, G., Cardinale, R., Cardini, A., Carniti, P., Akiba, K. Carvalho, Vidal, A. Casais, Casse, G., Cattaneo, M., Cavallero, G., Cenci, R., Chapman, M. 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- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Observations are reported of different sources of $CP$ violation from an amplitude analysis of $B^+ \to \pi^+ \pi^+ \pi^-$ decays, based on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of $3 \; {\rm fb}^{-1}$ of $pp$ collisions recorded with the LHCb detector. A large $CP$ asymmetry is observed in the decay amplitude involving the tensor $f_2(1270)$ resonance, and in addition significant $CP$ violation is found in the $\pi^+ \pi^-$ S-wave at low invariant mass. The presence of $CP$ violation related to interference between the $\pi^+ \pi^-$ S-wave and the P-wave $B^+ \to \rho(770)^0 \pi^+$ amplitude is also established; this causes large local asymmetries but cancels when integrated over the phase space of the decay. The results provide both qualitative and quantitative new insights into $CP$-violation effects in hadronic $B$ decays., Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2019-018.html
- Published
- 2019
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