115 results on '"A. Bottalico"'
Search Results
2. Bilingualism and Voice Production. Differences Between Bilingual Latin-American Spanish- English Female Speakers and Monolingual Spanish Female Speakers During Spanish Productions.
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Cantor-Cutiva, Lady Catherine, Jiménez-Chala, Eliana-Alejandra, Bottalico, Pasquale, and Hunter, Eric J.
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Speaking a second language influences jitter and shimmer when comparing monolingual English speakers with bilingual English-Spanish speakers. However, there is little information about differences on voice acoustic parameters when comparing monolingual Spanish speakers with bilingual Spanish-English speakers during their productions in Spanish. Determine differences in five voice acoustic parameters commonly used in voice assessments (fundamental frequency, jitter, shimmer, Harmonics-to-Noise Ratio and Cepstral Peak Prominence Smoothed) which may be influenced by bilingualism. Exploratory cross-sectional study with two groups of female participants: monolingual Spanish speakers (n = 17), and bilingual Spanish-English speakers (n = 11). Participants filled out a questionnaire and recorded two voice samples (sustained vowel /a/ and reading). For this study, all the participants reported that their native language was Spanish. Being a female bilingual speaker had a significant effect on Shimmer (%) with a Beta = -0.7. Similar tendency was found on harmonics-to-noise ratio (B = 0.2) and cepstral peak prominence smoothed (B = 0.2). Our results indicate that being a native Spanish female speaker, speaking English as a second language, has significant small effects on voice acoustic parameters, such as shimmer, harmonics-to-noise ratio and cepstral peak prominence smoothed, during their productions in Spanish. This information is of interest for assessment and intervention plans of bilingual speakers at clinical and work-related settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Acoustic-Perceptual Correlates of Voice Among Steam Train Engineers: Effects of Noise and Hearing Protection.
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Anand, Supraja, Gutierrez, Desi, and Bottalico, Pasquale
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Occupational voice users are at a higher risk for developing voice disorders due to their vocal demands, such as prolonged periods of work-related voice use and nonideal environmental factors, such as speaking above background noise. The current study focused on the effects of background noise and hearing protection on acoustic-perceptual correlates of voice among steam train engineers. Fourteen participants phonated vowel /a/, read a phrase, and described a map under different noise and hearing protection conditions. Relative sound pressure level, relative fundamental frequency, and perceived vocal effort and disturbance decreased in the presence of hearing protection for all noise conditions. In contrast, these acoustic measures increased in the absence of hearing protection supporting Lombard effect. Overall, results of the current study provide insight into possible risks to vocal health in workers exposed to high levels of background noise and use hearing protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Innovation and labor in the port industry: A comparison between Genoa and Antwerp
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Bottalico, Andrea, Vanelslander, Thierry, and Verhoeven, Patrick
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With the advancement of innovation initiatives in the port industry, port labor has fundamentally changed in terms of new tasks, skills required, professional profiles, training, employment relations, work organization, and number of jobs. Current literature often focuses more on the assessment of investments in this particular sector rather than on the evaluation of innovative processes and the interaction with employment issues. In this article, the authors assess the relationship between innovation and employment in the port industry by comparing two distinct case studies—the ports of Antwerp and Genoa—which are characterized by partially common features and different socio‐institutional contexts. Based on qualitative research conducted between 2016 and 2019, the comparative study finds that incremental innovative solutions produce a polarized port labor market in both cases, as previous studies assess. Nevertheless, the findings show that, in the case of Antwerp, a mediated and structured bargaining system interacts positively with employment issues and incremental innovative solutions, while in the case of Genoa, a disarticulated and less structured context reflects a weaker ability to influence virtuously the intertwine between innovation and employment.
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- 2022
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5. The Effect of Unilateral Hearing Protection on Vocal Intensity With Varying Degrees of Background Noise.
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Rubin, Adam D., Codino, Juliana, Costeloe, Anya, Johns, Michael M., Collum, Austin, and Bottalico, Pasquale
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The Lombard effect (LE) is a phenomenon in which speakers adjust their vocal production by raising the volume in noisy environments. As a result, the LE can create problems of vocal strain, fatigue and potential injury. This study aims to examine the difference in vocal intensity output in subjects wearing unilateral hearing protection versus no hearing protection in the presence of background noise. Each subject was seated inside a sound booth wearing a head-mounted microphone. Subjects were asked to read an excerpt from "The Rainbow Passage" while various levels of background noise were played: 50, 60, 70, and 80 dBA (Multitalker Babble). Each noise level was played while the subject was with and without unilateral ear protection (Optime 98 Earmuff [3M]) in random order. The earmuff has a noise reduction rating of 25 dB. After each reading of the text, subjects were asked to rate communication disturbance, vocal clarity, and discomfort during talking using a 10 cm visual analogue scale. The LE is reduced from 0.38 dB/dB to 0.29 dB/dB with unilateral ear occlusion. However, self-perception of disturbance, clarity and comfort were not affected by unilateral occlusion, only by noise level. Unilateral hearing protection reduces the LE and may protect against phonotrauma when speaking in an environment with loud background noise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. COVID-19-Induced Anosmia and Ageusia Are Associated With Younger Age and Lower Blood Eosinophil Counts.
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Sehanobish, Esha, Barbi, Mali, Fong, Valerie, Kravitz, Meryl, Sanchez Tejera, Denise, Asad, Mohammad, Matsumura, Cynthia, Ferastraoaru, Denisa, O'Neill, Meaghan, Karagic, Merhunisa, Akbar, Nadeem, Bottalico, Danielle M., Patel, Viraj, Peshansky, Alexandre, Rangareddy, Mahendra, Hudes, Golda, Kim, Mimi, Eisenberg, Ruth, Nath, Avindra, and Smith, Bryan R.
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EOSINOPHILS ,COVID-19 ,ELECTRONIC health records ,SYMPTOMS ,GENDER - Abstract
Background: Anosmia and ageusia are symptoms commonly associated with COVID-19, but the relationship with disease severity, onset and recovery are unclear. Objective: To examine factors associated with anosmia and ageusia and the recovery from these symptoms in an ethnically diverse cohort. Methods: Individuals tested for SARS-CoV-2 between March and April 2020 were eligible for the study. Randomly selected participants answered a telephone questionnaire on COVID-19 symptoms with a focus on anosmia and ageusia. Additionally, relevant past medical history and data on the COVID-19 clinical course were obtained from electronic medical records. 486 patients were in the COVID-19 group and 103 were COVID-19-negative. Results: Patients who were younger were more likely to report anosmia and/or ageusia (odds ratio (OR) for anosmia per 1-year increase in age: 0·98, 95%CI:0–97-0·99, p = 0·003; for ageusia: 0·98, 95%CI:0·97-0·99, p = 0·005) as were patients with lower eosinophil counts (OR for anosmia per 0.1-K/μL increase in eosinophils: 0·02, 95%CI:0·001-0·46, p = 0·01, for ageusia 0·10, 95%CI:0·01-0·97, p = 0·047). Male gender was independently associated with a lower probability of ageusia (OR:0·56, 95%CI:0·38-0·82, p = 0·003) and earlier sense of taste recovery (HR:1·44, 95%CI:1·05-1·98, p = 0·02). Latinos showed earlier sense of taste recovery than white patients (HR:1·82, 95%CI:1·05-3·18, p = 0·03). Conclusion: Anosmia and ageusia were more common among younger patients and those with lower blood eosinophil counts. Ageusia was less commonly reported among men, and time to taste recovery was earlier among both men and Latinos. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. A sensor-based calibration system for three-dimensional digital image correlation
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Fromme, Paul, Su, Zhongqing, Bottalico, Fabio, Valente, Nicholas A., Dabetwar, Shweta, Jerath, Kshitij, Luo, Yan, Niezrecki, Christopher, and Sabato, Alessandro
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- 2022
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8. Automation Processes in the Port Industry and Union Strategies: The Case of Antwerp
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Bottalico, Andrea
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Automation represents a sensitive issue in the debate between social actors of the port-maritime industry. Automation produced a contraction of the number of dockworkers since the 1960s. However, the idea that technological innovation will produce the disappearance of work is not sustained by empirical evidence. For this reason, trade unions have been particularly watchful. Despite the discourses about robotization carried out by supply chain operators, the paradigm of the post-COVID logistics chain is still based upon the human labor cost. During the pandemic there has been a transformation in working conditions not in terms of replacing people with robots, but rather of the robotization of workers to obtain the maximum productive exploitation at the minimum wage allowed. The purpose of this article is to provide an analysis of labor relations and workers organizing in light of the automation processes in the European port of Antwerp. The article focuses on how working conditions and jobs are potentially impacted by automation in ports, and on how workers disruptive strategies are resisting to these dynamics. The following questions have been answered: How do trade unions and dockworkers respond to automation? What are the strategies implemented in the bargaining processes?
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- 2022
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9. Vocal Fatigue in Prospective Vocal Professionals.
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Anand, Supraja, Bottalico, Pasquale, and Gray, Camille
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The goals of the study were to (a) examine vocal fatigue in speech-language pathology students through subjective and objective measures following a novel 30-minute vocal loading task (VLT) and (b) evaluate the effects of psychosocial factors on vocal fatigue. Seventeen speech-language pathology students completed a 30-minute VLT using the LingWAVES software program. In addition to maintaining target intensity goals during reading a text, participants were also required to modify their pitch and voice quality. Vocal fatigue was measured subjectively using Vocal Fatigue Index and Borg vocal effort scale and objectively using variations of relative sound pressure level, fundamental frequency, pitch strength, smoothed cepstral peak prominence (CPPS), and acoustic voice quality index before, during, and after VLT. Participants provided information on their sleep quantity, stress, and depression through nonstandardized and standardized surveys. Results revealed that perceived effort and fatigue increased significantly after the 30-minute VLT. Acoustic measures of relative sound pressure level and fundamental frequency and increased systematically during and after the completion of task. All students were moderately stressed and measures related to pitch were highly related with perceived stress. The results of this study provide support for altering multiple vocal parameters to induce measurable changes in vocal fatigue following a short-duration VLT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Do Voice Acoustic Parameters Differ Between Bilingual English-Spanish Speakers and Monolingual English Speakers During English Productions?
- Author
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Cantor-Cutiva, Lady Catherine, Bottalico, Pasquale, Nudelman, Charles, Webster, Jossemia, and Hunter, Eric J.
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In addition to language differences in fundamental frequency between bilinguals and monolinguals, studies have also included other acoustic parameters to analyze differences in voice production associated with the language spoken. To identify differences in voice acoustic parameters during English productions between monolingual and bilingual English speakers. Exploratory cross-sectional study with two groups of subjects: monolingual English speakers (n = 40), and bilingual English-Spanish speakers (n = 13). Participants filled out a questionnaire and recorded one reading in English (second sentence of Rainbow passage "The rainbow is a division of white light into many beautiful colors") under a "virtual-simulated" acoustic condition of No Noise and Medium Reverberation Time (0.8 seconds). Analysis by gender shows that monolingual speakers had higher fundamental frequency mode, and lower standard deviation of fundamental frequency compared to bilingual English-Spanish speakers. Bilingual male speakers had higher jitter and harmonics-to-noise ratio than monolingual speakers. On the contrary, female bilingual speakers had lower jitter and shimmer than monolingual speakers. Speaking a second language may influence voice acoustic parameters, and therefore, should be considered when comparing acoustic speech metrics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. COVID-19-Induced Anosmia and Ageusia Are Associated With Younger Age and Lower Blood Eosinophil Counts
- Author
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Sehanobish, Esha, Barbi, Mali, Fong, Valerie, Kravitz, Meryl, Sanchez Tejera, Denise, Asad, Mohammad, Matsumura, Cynthia, Ferastraoaru, Denisa, O’Neill, Meaghan, Karagic, Merhunisa, Akbar, Nadeem, Bottalico, Danielle M., Patel, Viraj, Peshansky, Alexandre, Rangareddy, Mahendra, Hudes, Golda, Kim, Mimi, Eisenberg, Ruth, Nath, Avindra, Smith, Bryan R., Ow, Thomas J., and Jerschow, Elina
- Abstract
Background Anosmia and ageusia are symptoms commonly associated with COVID-19, but the relationship with disease severity, onset and recovery are unclear.Objective To examine factors associated with anosmia and ageusia and the recovery from these symptoms in an ethnically diverse cohort.Methods Individuals tested for SARS-CoV-2 between March and April 2020 were eligible for the study. Randomly selected participants answered a telephone questionnaire on COVID-19 symptoms with a focus on anosmia and ageusia. Additionally, relevant past medical history and data on the COVID-19 clinical course were obtained from electronic medical records. 486 patients were in the COVID-19 group and 103 were COVID-19-negative.Results Patients who were younger were more likely to report anosmia and/or ageusia (odds ratio (OR) for anosmia per 1-year increase in age: 0·98, 95%CI:0–97-0·99, p?=?0·003; for ageusia: 0·98, 95%CI:0·97-0·99, p?=?0·005) as were patients with lower eosinophil counts (OR for anosmia per 0.1-K/µL increase in eosinophils: 0·02, 95%CI:0·001-0·46, p?=?0·01, for ageusia 0·10, 95%CI:0·01-0·97, p?=?0·047). Male gender was independently associated with a lower probability of ageusia (OR:0·56, 95%CI:0·38-0·82, p?=?0·003) and earlier sense of taste recovery (HR:1·44, 95%CI:1·05-1·98, p?=?0·02). Latinos showed earlier sense of taste recovery than white patients (HR:1·82, 95%CI:1·05-3·18, p?=?0·03).Conclusion Anosmia and ageusia were more common among younger patients and those with lower blood eosinophil counts. Ageusia was less commonly reported among men, and time to taste recovery was earlier among both men and Latinos.
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- 2021
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12. A small case series about safety and effectiveness of a hypofractionated electron beam radiotherapy schedule in five fractions for facial non melanoma skin cancer among frail and elderly patients.
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Ferini, Gianluca, Molino, Laura, Bottalico, Laura, De Lucia, Paolino, and Garofalo, Francesco
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Background: The aim of the study was to evaluate local control and toxicities of strongly hypofractionated electron beam radiotherapy (RT) in elderly and fragile patients with facial nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC). Materials and methods: We enrolled patients aged ≥ 65 years with facial NMSC, Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) ≥ 40 and life expectancy ≥ 6 months, amenable neither to daily RT nor surgery. Radiotherapy consisted of 35 Gy, delivered with 6 MeV electron beam, in 5 fractions of 7 Gy/day twice a week (tw). Prescription isodoses were 100% for cT1-cT2 and 90% for cT3-cT4. Objective response was assessed clinically 4 and 8 weeks after the end of RT and then monitored every 6 months. Side effects were assessed according to the CTCAE scale. Results: 12 patients of median age 89.5 years with a total of 23 NMSC cN0 achieved a median follow-up time of 6 months (range 1-10), with total treatment compliance. 10/12 patients had a 40 ≤ KPS < 70 and 2/12 a 70 ≤ KPS < 90. 5/12 patients had synchronous lesions. 22/23 lesions were classified as T1-T2 and had complete response (CR), 1/23 as T4 with partial response (PR). Within 4 weeks after the end of treatment, G1 toxicity was reported for 12/23 lesions, G2 for 8/23, G3 for 3/23, G4 for 0/23, all disappeared 8 weeks later, with or without topical therapy. After last follow-up (1 June 2020) 1/12 patients died with PR from senile marasmus, 11/12 are alive with CR and widely tolerated toxicities. Conclusions: Extreme hypofractionation of radiotherapy dose for facial NMSC is effective, safe and suitable for elderly patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Reproducibility of Voice Parameters: The Effect of Room Acoustics and Microphones.
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Bottalico, Pasquale, Codino, Juliana, Cantor-Cutiva, Lady Catherine, Marks, Katherine, Nudelman, Charles J., Skeffington, Jean, Shrivastav, Rahul, Jackson-Menaldi, Maria Cristina, Hunter, Eric J., and Rubin, Adam D.
- Abstract
Computer analysis of voice recordings is an integral part of the evaluation and management of voice disorders. In many practices, voice samples are taken in rooms that are not sound attenuated and/or sound-proofed; further, the technology used is rarely consistent. This will likely affect the recordings, and therefore, their analyses. The objective of this study is to compare various acoustic outcome measures taken from samples recorded in a sound-proofed booth to those recorded in more common clinic environments. Further, the effects from six different commonly used microphones will be compared. Thirty-six speakers were recorded while reading a text and producing sustained vowels in a controlled acoustic environment. The collected samples were reproduced by a Head and Torso Simulator and recorded in three clinical rooms and in a sound booth using six different microphones. Newer measures (eg, Pitch Strength, cepstral peak prominence, Acoustic Voice Quality Index), as well as more traditional measures (eg Jitter, Shimmer, harmonics-to-noise ratio and Spectrum Tilt), were calculated from the samples collected with each microphone and within each room. The measures which are more robust to room acoustic differences, background noise, and microphone quality include Jitter and smooth cepstral peak prominence, followed by Shimmer, Acoustic Voice Quality Index, harmonics-to-noise ratio, Pitch Strength, and Spectrum Tilt. The effect of room acoustics and background noise on voice parameters appears to be stronger than the type of microphone used for the recording. Consequently, an appropriate acoustical clinical space may be more important than the quality of the microphone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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14. The Cannabis Spread throughout the Continents and its Therapeutic Use in History
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Charitos, Ioannis A., Gagliano-Candela, Roberto, Santacroce, Luigi, and Bottalico, Lucrezia
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Background: Cannabis sativa L. (C. sativa) is a plant whose use as a therapeutic agent shares its origins with the first Far East’s human societies. Cannabis has been used not only for recreational purposes but as food to obtain textile fibers, to produce hemp paper, to treat many physical and mental disorders. Aim: This review aims to provide a complete assessment of the deep knowledge of the cannabis psychoactive effects and medicinal properties in the course of history covering i.) The empirical use of the seeds and the inflorescences to treat many physical ailments by the ancient Oriental physicians’ ii.) The current use of cannabis as a therapeutic agent after the discovery of its key psychoactive constituent and the human endogenous endocannabinoid system. Methods: This study was performed through a detailed analysis of the studies on the historical significance and medical applications of Cannabis sativa by using international scientific databases, historical and medical books, ancient Greek and Chinese manuscripts translations, library and statistical data from government reports and texts from the National Library of Greece (Stavros Niarchos Foundation), from the School of Health Sciences of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (Greece). We selected papers and texts focusing on a historical point of view about the medical importance of the plant and its applications for a therapeutic purpose in the past. Results and Conclusion: Through a detailed analysis of the available resources about the origins of C. sativa, we found that its use by ancient civilizations as a source of food and textile fibers dates back over 10,000 years, while its therapeutic applications have been improved over the centuries, from the ancient East medicine of the 2nd and 1st millennium B.C. to the more recent introduction in the Western world after the 1st century A.D. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Cannabis and its derivatives have been considered as a menace and banned throughout the world, but nowadays, they are still the most widely consumed illicit drugs all over the world. Its legalization in some jurisdictions has been accompanied by new lines of research to investigate its possible applications for medical and therapeutic purposes.
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- 2021
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15. Towards a common trajectory of port labour systems in Europe? The case of the port of Antwerp
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Bottalico, Andrea
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•The literature on port studies lacks a homogeneous framework for analysing the dynamics of port labour systems.•The variety of port labour systems in Europe is commonly influenced by the strategies of the players along the maritime-logistics chain and the institutional actors at supranational and national level.•The aim of the European institutions has been to liberalize port services according to the principles of the Treaty, whereas national port labour systems, very often go in the opposite direction.•The case of Antwerp shows a common process: the efforts of the chain actors to tighten their grip on the maritime-logistics chain are affecting port labour systems.•The institutional transition seems to boost such dynamics.
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- 2020
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16. Infrared-based point cloud reconstruction for heat loss detection in a virtual reality environment
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Niezrecki, Christopher, Farhangdoust, Saman, Meyendorf, Norbert G., Kulkarni, Nitin Nagesh, Peretto, Lorenzo, Bottalico, Fabio, Niezrecki, Christopher, and Sabato, Alessandro
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- 2024
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17. Natural pattern tracking for 3D-digital image correlation measurements
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Su, Zhongqing, Peters, Kara J., Ricci, Fabrizio, Rizzo, Piervincenzo, Bottalico, Fabio, and Sabato, Alessandro
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- 2024
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18. The Effects of Reading Speed on Acoustic Voice Parameters and Self-reported Vocal Fatigue in Students.
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Nudelman, Charles, Webster, JosseMia, and Bottalico, Pasquale
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Vocal loading tasks (VLTs) help researchers gather acoustic measurements and understand how a healthy speaker adjusts their voice in response to challenges. There is a dearth of evidence measuring the impact of speaking rate in VLTs on acoustic voice parameters and vocal fatigue. In the present study, the relationships between acoustic voice parameters and self-reported vocal fatigue were examined through an experimental VLT. 38 students completed a 45-minute VLT which involved the recording of three randomized reading tasks. The tasks varied by the speed in which the words were presented (slow, medium, fast) on a computer monitor. Vocal fatigue ratings were measured subjectively using a Borg scale and negative adaptations to vocal loading were measured objectively using Sound Pressure Level (SPL, in dBA), fundamental frequency (f o , in semitones), and phonation time (Dt %). Analysis indicated that vocal fatigue increases with time, and the slope of this relationship is affected by the speaking rate. SPL and f o increased with speaking rate and the standard deviation of SPL and f o decreased with speaking rate. On average, the male participants' phonation time values were 7.8% lower than the female participants. The rate of increase of vocal fatigue with time during the experiment was higher in the fast speaking style compared to the slow and medium ones. The results provide support that the novel VLT altered multiple vocal parameters to induce measurable changes in vocal fatigue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Exploiting the capabilities of the Sentinel-2 multi spectral instrument for predicting growing stock volume in forest ecosystems.
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Mura, Matteo, Bottalico, Francesca, Giannetti, Francesca, Bertani, Remo, Giannini, Raffaello, Mancini, Marco, Orlandini, Simone, Travaglini, Davide, and Chirici, Gherardo
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FOREST ecology ,SUSTAINABLE forestry ,SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,RANDOM forest algorithms - Abstract
The spatial prediction of growing stock volume is one of the most frequent application of remote sensing for supporting the sustainable management of forest ecosystems. For such a purpose data from active or passive sensors are used as predictor variables in combination with measures taken in the field in sampling plots. The Sentinel-2 (S2) satellites are equipped with a Multi Spectral Instrument (MSI) capable of acquiring 13 bands in the visible and infrared domains with a spatial resolution varying between 10 and 60 m. The present study aimed at evaluating the performance of the S2-MSI imagery for estimating the growing stock volume of forest ecosystems. To do so we used 240 plots measured in two study areas in Italy. The imputation was carried out with eight k-Nearest Neighbours (k-NN) methods available in the open source YaImpute R package. In order to evaluate the S2-MSI performance we repeated the experimental protocol also with two other sets of images acquired by two well-known satellites equipped with multi spectral instruments: Landsat 8 OLI and RapidEye scanner. We found that S2 worked better than Landsat in 37.5% of the cases and in 62.5% of the cases better than RapidEye. In one study area the best performance was obtained with Landsat OLI (RMSD = 6.84%) and in the other with S2 (RMSD = 22.94%), both with the k-NN system based on a distance matrix calculated with the Random Forest algorithm. The results confirmed that S2 images are suitable for predicting growing stock volume obtaining good performances (average RMSD for both the test areas of less than 19%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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20. Gelidium adriaticum sp. nov. and Gelidium carolinianum sp. nov. (Gelidiales, Rhodophyta) from the Mediterranean Sea
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Perrone, C., Bottalico, A., Boo, G.H., Boo, S.M., Miller, K.A., and Freshwater, D.W.
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ABSTRACTIdentification of small Gelidiumspecies based on morphology is difficult; as a consequence, the name Gelidium pusillumhas been used for many small gelidiacean taxa throughout the world. Molecular-assisted identifications, however, are demonstrating that G. pusillumhas a more restricted distribution than previously recognised. We used detailed morphological analyses combined with rbcL and cox1 sequence analyses to identify and assess the phylogenetic relationships of small Mediterranean Gelidiumspecies. These analyses revealed the presence of two new species, G. adriaticum sp. nov. and G. carolinianum sp. nov. Gelidium adriaticumis a closely related sister species to G. pusillum, which was not found amongst our Mediterranean specimens. Gelidium carolinianumhas been previously collected outside the Mediterranean, but it was misidentified as G. americanum. Morphological observations and sequence data generated from G. americanumtypes and other historical specimens clarified the status and distribution of this species. Phylogenetic analyses resolved G. carolinianumas a species in the Mediterranean and warm-temperate northwest Atlantic; whereas, G. americanumoccurs in the Caribbean and tropical western Atlantic, and is sister to G. calidumfrom Brazil and closely related to G. crinale.
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- 2019
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21. The Effect of Bilingualism on Production and Perception of Vocal Fry.
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Cantor-Cutiva, Lady Catherine, Bottalico, Pasquale, Webster, Jossemia, Nudelman, Charles, and Hunter, Eric
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(1) Determine the difference in vocal fry phonation in English and Spanish productions among bilingual young adults, (2) Characterize the effect of spoken language and native language on vocal fry production among English-Spanish bilingual speakers, (3) Identify the effect of first and second language knowledge of the listener in the voice perceptual assessment, and (4) Define the effect of the environment of the assessment (in situ vs. online), in the voice perceptual assessment. Exploratory cross-sectional study of 34 bilingual (Spanish-English) speakers and six inexperienced listeners. Participating speakers produced two speech samples (one in English and one in Spanish). Six inexperienced monolingual and bilingual listeners performed the voice perceptual assessment of vocal fry, General grade of hoarseness, and Roughness using a 4-point rating scale. Bilingual speakers used vocal fry more often when they were speaking in English (around 3%) compared with their production in Spanish (around 2%). Bilingual native English speakers used vocal fry more often during their productions in both languages compared with bilingual native Spanish speakers. Bilingual listeners had the highest agreement when identifying vocal fry in both languages. Differences in production of vocal fry between native speakers of American English and native speakers of Spanish may be evidence of transferring of vocal behavior (such as vocal fry) from one language to the second one. In addition, being a bilingual listener may have an important effect on the perceptual identification of voice quality in English and Spanish, as well as vocal fry in English. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. A spatially-explicit method to assess the dry deposition of air pollution by urban forests in the city of Florence, Italy.
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Bottalico, Francesca, Travaglini, Davide, Chirici, Gherardo, Garfì, Vittorio, Giannetti, Francesca, De Marco, Alessandra, Fares, Silvano, Marchetti, Marco, Nocentini, Susanna, Paoletti, Elena, Salbitano, Fabio, and Sanesi, Giovanni
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URBAN pollution ,AIR pollution ,ATMOSPHERIC deposition ,MANAGEMENT ,URBAN forestry - Abstract
Urban forests (UF) provide a range of important ecosystem services (ES) for human well-being. Relevant ES delivered by UF include urban temperature regulation, runoff mitigation, noise reduction, recreation, and air purification. In this study the potential of air pollution removal by UF in the city of Florence (Italy) was investigated. Two main air pollutants were considered – particulate matter (PM 10 ) and tropospheric ozone (O 3 ) – with the aim of providing a methodological framework for mapping air pollutant removal by UF and assessing the percent removal of air pollutant. The distribution of UF was mapped by high spatial resolution remote sensing data and classified into seven forest categories. The Leaf Area Index (LAI) was estimated spatially using a regression model between in-field LAI survey and Airborne Laser Scanning data and it was found to be in good linear agreement with estimates from ground-based measurements (R 2 = 0.88 and RMSE% = 11%). We applied pollution deposition equations by using pollution concentrations measured at urban monitoring stations and then estimated the pollutant removal potential of the UF: annual O 3 and PM 10 removal accounted for 77.9 t and 171.3 t, respectively. O 3 and PM 10 removal rates by evergreen broadleaves (16.1 and 27.3 g/m 2 ), conifers (10.9 and 28.5 g/m 2 ), and mixed evergreen species (15.8 and 31.7 g/m 2 ) were higher than by deciduous broadleaf stands (4.1 and 10 g/m 2 ). However, deciduous forests exhibited the largest total removal due to the high percentage of tree cover within the city. The present study confirms that UF play an important role in air purification in Mediterranean cities as they can remove monthly up to 5% of O 3 and 13% of PM 10 . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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23. Modeling Mediterranean forest structure using airborne laser scanning data.
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Bottalico, Francesca, Chirici, Gherardo, Giannini, Raffaello, Mele, Salvatore, Mura, Matteo, Puxeddu, Michele, McRoberts, Ronald E., Valbuena, Ruben, and Travaglini, Davide
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AIRBORNE lasers ,OPTICAL scanners ,BIODIVERSITY ,SUSTAINABLE development ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
The conservation of biological diversity is recognized as a fundamental component of sustainable development, and forests contribute greatly to its preservation. Structural complexity increases the potential biological diversity of a forest by creating multiple niches that can host a wide variety of species. To facilitate greater understanding of the contributions of forest structure to forest biological diversity, we modeled relationships between 14 forest structure variables and airborne laser scanning (ALS) data for two Italian study areas representing two common Mediterranean forests, conifer plantations and coppice oaks subjected to irregular intervals of unplanned and non-standard silvicultural interventions. The objectives were twofold: (i) to compare model prediction accuracies when using two types of ALS metrics, echo-based metrics and canopy height model (CHM)-based metrics, and (ii) to construct inferences in the form of confidence intervals for large area structural complexity parameters. Our results showed that the effects of the two study areas on accuracies were greater than the effects of the two types of ALS metrics. In particular, accuracies were less for the more complex study area in terms of species composition and forest structure. However, accuracies achieved using the echo-based metrics were only slightly greater than when using the CHM-based metrics, thus demonstrating that both options yield reliable and comparable results. Accuracies were greatest for dominant height (Hd) (R 2 = 0.91; RMSE% = 8.2%) and mean height weighted by basal area (R 2 = 0.83; RMSE% = 10.5%) when using the echo-based metrics, 99th percentile of the echo height distribution and interquantile distance. For the forested area, the generalized regression (GREG) estimate of mean Hd was similar to the simple random sampling (SRS) estimate, 15.5 m for GREG and 16.2 m SRS. Further, the GREG estimator with standard error of 0.10 m was considerable more precise than the SRS estimator with standard error of 0.69 m. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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24. Reducing Noise in Restaurants: Feasibility and Recommendations
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Nudelman, Charles J., D’Orazio, Dario, and Bottalico, Pasquale
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- 2023
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25. A revised classification of the Gelidiellaceae (Rhodophyta) with descriptions of three new genera: Huismaniella, Millerella and Perronella.
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Ga Hun Boo, Tu Van Nguyen, Jung Yeon Kim, Line Le Gall, Rico, Jose Manuel, Bottalico, Antonella, and Sung Min Boo
- Subjects
RED algae ,MITOCHONDRIA ,GELIDIALES - Abstract
The agarophyte family Gelidiellaceae currently includes 26 species in two genera, Gelidiella and Parviphycus, but the generic status and species boundaries have not been fully explored. In order to resolve taxonomic issues in the family, we analyzed mitochondria-encoded coxl and plastid-encoded rbcL and psaA genes from types and fresh collections including topotype material. The Gelidiellaceae was resolved with five distinct groups, interpreted here as representing five genera: (1) Gelidiella, including the type, (2) Huismaniella gen. nov., (3) Millerella gen. nov., (4) Parviphycus s.str. including the type, and (5) Perronella gen. nov. Gelidiella was recognized as including a new species, G.flabella, that is described for specimens from Madagascar. A new genus, Huismaniella, is described for the species previously known as Gelidiella ramellosa, characterized by lateral tetrasporangial branchlets inserted at right angles on erect axes and irregularly arranged tetrasporangia. Parviphycus includes P. adnatus which is characterized by simple thalli with tetrasporangial branchlets formed directly on prostate axes and holdfasts forming continuous fringes along the entire length of prostrate axes. The new genus Millerella is described to accommodate five species previously known as Gelidiella or Parviphycus, characterized by tetrasporangial sori formed on erect axes or branches and unicellular rhizoids forming irregular clumps along prostrate axes. Perronella gracilis gen. et sp. nov. is described for plants with terete axes, multifarious branching, and monosporangia formed on erect axes and branches. The implications for nomenclature, taxonomic revisions, and biogeography in the Gelidiellaceae are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Effect of Training and Level of External Auditory Feedback on the Singing Voice: Volume and Quality.
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Bottalico, Pasquale, Graetzer, Simone, and Hunter, Eric J.
- Abstract
Summary Background Previous research suggests that classically trained professional singers rely not only on external auditory feedback but also on proprioceptive feedback associated with internal voice sensitivities. Objectives The Lombard effect and the relationship between sound pressure level (SPL) and external auditory feedback were evaluated for professional and nonprofessional singers. Additionally, the relationship between voice quality, evaluated in terms of singing power ratio (SPR), and external auditory feedback, level of accompaniment, voice register, and singer gender was analyzed. Methods The subjects were 10 amateur or beginner singers and 10 classically trained professional or semiprofessional singers (10 men and 10 women). Subjects sang an excerpt from the Star-Spangled Banner with three different levels of the accompaniment, 70, 80, and 90 dBA and with three different levels of external auditory feedback. SPL and SPR were analyzed. Results The Lombard effect was stronger for nonprofessional singers than professional singers. Higher levels of external auditory feedback were associated with a reduction in SPL. As predicted, the mean SPR was higher for professional singers than nonprofessional singers. Better voice quality was detected in the presence of higher levels of external auditory feedback. Conclusions With an increase in training, the singer's reliance on external auditory feedback decreases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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27. IL LAVORO PORTUALE EUROPEO NEL CONTESTO DELLE GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS. EVIDENZE EMPIRICHE DAL PORTO DI GENOVA.
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BOTTALICO, ANDREA
- Published
- 2016
28. Effects of noise generated by construction sites on wild birds.
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Bottalico, Pasquale, Bertetti, Carlo A., and Falossi, Marco
- Subjects
BUILDING sites ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of noise ,BIRD behavior ,ARCHITECTURAL acoustics ,ACOUSTIC signal processing - Abstract
Noise generated from human activities (in particular by infrastructure and construction sites) can have a strong impact on the physiology and behavior of birds. In this work, a quantitative method for evaluating the impact of noise on wild birds is proposed. The method combines the results of previous studies that considered the effect of noise on birds and involved noise mapping evaluations. A forecast noise simulation was used to generate maps of (1) signal masking areas and (2) potential density variation. These results allow the determination of the highest risk areas for wild birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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29. Assessing the Acoustic Characteristics of Rooms: A Tutorial With Examples
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Rakerd, Brad, Hunter, Eric J., Berardi, Mark, and Bottalico, Pasquale
- Abstract
In both audiology and speech-language pathology, as well as in speech and hearing science research, the space where the work is done is an integral part of the function. Hence, for all of these endeavors, it can be important to measure the acoustics of a room. This article provides a tutorial regarding the measurement of room reverberation and background noise, both of which are important when evaluating a space's strengths and limitations for speech communication. As the privacy of patients and research participants is a primary concern, the tutorial also describes a method for measuring the amount of acoustical insulation provided by a room's barriers. Several room measurement data sets—all obtained from the assessment of clinical and research spaces within our own department—are presented here as examples.
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- 2018
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30. Assessment of Soil Disturbance Caused by Forest Operations by Means of Portable Laser Scanner and Soil Physical Parameters
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Giannetti, Francesca, Chirici, Gherardo, Travaglini, Davide, Bottalico, Francesca, Marchi, Enrico, and Cambi, Martina
- Abstract
Core IdeasForest operations may cause severe soil disturbances.Soil impacts are usually assessed by time consuming methods.Our study investigated the use of a portable laser scanner to assess forest soil disturbance. Forest operations can cause compaction and rutting, resulting in soil degradation processes. Soil damage is usually assessed through costly and time‐consuming manual field measurements. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of logging operations on soil using traditional ground surveys integrated with laser scanning data acquired by a terrestrial portable laser scanner (PLS). This approach provides an alternative to soil rut manual measurements. Two skid trails, that differed by the numbers of machine passes and slope were sampled. Data collection was performed before and after forest operations. The specific objectives were to: (i) assess soil compaction, and (ii) determine rutting by way of multi‐temporal high‐resolution digital terrain models (DTM) generated by PLS data. This is the first study to assess changes in soil volume via the PLS. Significant logging impacts were detected using both investigation methods (i.e., physical parameters from traditional surveys and rutting from multi‐temporal spatial analysis based on DTM). The PLS method provides a very high sampling density of the soil surface, permitting detailed spatial analysis of terrain changes. Moreover, the pre‐processing cost for PLS‐generated DTM is low in comparison to the time needed for traditional survey based on manual field measurements. PLS may be a useful instrument for soil sampling in forest monitoring applications.
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- 2017
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31. Effects on the incidence of cardiovascular events of the addition of pioglitazone versus sulfonylureas in patients with type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled with metformin (TOSCA.IT): a randomised, multicentre trial
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Vaccaro, Olga, Masulli, Maria, Nicolucci, Antonio, Bonora, Enzo, Del Prato, Stefano, Maggioni, Aldo P, Rivellese, Angela A, Squatrito, Sebastiano, Giorda, Carlo B, Sesti, Giorgio, Mocarelli, Paolo, Lucisano, Giuseppe, Sacco, Michele, Signorini, Stefano, Cappellini, Fabrizio, Perriello, Gabriele, Babini, Anna Carla, Lapolla, Annunziata, Gregori, Giovanna, Giordano, Carla, Corsi, Laura, Buzzetti, Raffaella, Clemente, Gennaro, Di Cianni, Graziano, Iannarelli, Rossella, Cordera, Renzo, La Macchia, Olga, Zamboni, Chiara, Scaranna, Cristiana, Boemi, Massimo, Iovine, Ciro, Lauro, Davide, Leotta, Sergio, Dall'Aglio, Elisabetta, Cannarsa, Emanuela, Tonutti, Laura, Pugliese, Giuseppe, Bossi, Antonio C, Anichini, Roberto, Dotta, Francesco, Di Benedetto, Antonino, Citro, Giuseppe, Antenucci, Daniela, Ricci, Lucia, Giorgino, Francesco, Santini, Costanza, Gnasso, Agostino, De Cosmo, Salvatore, Zavaroni, Donatella, Vedovato, Monica, Consoli, Agostino, Calabrese, Maria, di Bartolo, Paolo, Fornengo, Paolo, Riccardi, Gabriele, Vaccaro, Olga, Masulli, Maria, Nicolucci, Antonio, Maggioni, Aldo Pietro, Sesti, Giorgio, Mocarelli, Paolo, Lucisano, Giuseppe, Sacco, Michele, Signorini, Stefano, Cappellini, Fabrizio, Riccardi, Gabriele, Boemi, Massimo, D'Angelo, Federica, Giansanti, Roberto, Tanase, Laura, Lanari, Luigi, Testa, Ivano, Ricci, Lucia, Pancani, Francesca, Ranchelli, Anna, Vagheggi, Paolo, Scatona, Alessia, Fontana, Lucia, Giorgino, Francesco, Laviola, Luigi, Tarantino, Lucia, Ippolito, Claudia, Gigantelli, Vittoria, Manicone, Mariangela, Conte, Eleonora, Trevisan, Roberto, Scaranna, Cristiana, Rota, Rossella, Corsi, Anna, Dodesini, Alessandro R., Reggiani, Giulio Marchesini, Montesi, Luca, Mazzella, Natalia, Forlani, Gabriele, Caselli, Chiara, Di Luzio, Raffaella, Mazzotti, Arianna, Aiello, Antimo, Barrea, Angelina, Musto, Antonio, D'Amico, Fiorentina, Squatrito, Sebastiano, Sinagra, Tiziana, Longhitano, Sara, Trowpea, Vanessa, Sparti, Maria, Italia, Salvatore, Lisi, Enrico, Grasso, Giuseppe, Pezzino, Vincenzo, Insalaco, Federica, Gnasso, Agostino, Carallo, Claudio, Scicchitano, Caterina, De Franceschi, Maria Serena, Santini, Costanza, Mazzotti, Arianna, Caselli, Chiara, Calbucci, Giovanni, Ripani, Raffaella, Corsi, Laura, Cuneo, Giacomo, Corsi, Simona, Giorda, Carlo B., Romeo, Francesco, Lesina, Annalisa, Comoglio, Marco, Bonetto, Caterina, Robusto, Anna, Nada, Elisa, Asprino, Vincenzo, Cetraro, Rosa, Impieri, Michelina, Lucchese, Giuseppe, Donnarumma, Giovanna, Tizio, Biagio, Clemente, Gennaro, Lenza, Lazzaro, Paraggio, Pia, Tomasi, Franco, Zamboni, Chiara, Dozio, Nicoletta, Scalambra, Egle, Mannucci, Edoardo, Lamanna, Caterina, Cignarelli, Mauro, Macchia, Olga La, Fariello, Stefania, Sorrentino, Maria Rosaria, Franzetti, Ivano, Radin, Raffaella, Cordera, Renzo, Annunziata, Francesca, Bonabello, Laura Affinito, Durante, Arianna, Dolcino, Mara, Gallo, Fiorenza, Mazzucchelli, Chiara, Aleo, Anna, Melga, Pierluigi, Briatore, Lucia, Maggi, Davide, Storace, Daniela, Cecoli, Francesca, Antenucci, Daniela, D'Ugo, Ercole, Pupillo, Mario, Baldassarre, Maria Pompea Antonia, Salvati, Filippo, Minnucci, Anita, De Luca, Angelo, Zugaro, Antonella, Santarelli, Livia, Bosco, Angela, Petrella, Vittorio, La Verghetta, Grazia Giovanna, Iannarelli, Rossella, De Gregorio, Antonella, D'Andrea, Settimio, Giuliani, Anna Elisa, Polidoro, w Lorella, Sperandio, Alessandra, Sciarretta, Filomena, Pezzella, Alfonso, Buzzetti, Raffaella, Carlone, Angela, Potenziani, Stella, Venditti, Chiara, Foffi, Chiara, Carbone, Salvatore, Cipolloni, Laura, Moretti, Chiara, Leto, Gaetano, Serra, Rosalia, Petrachi, Francesca, Romano, Isabella, Di Cianni, Graziano, Lacaria, Emilia, Russo, Laura, Goretti, Chiara, Sannino, Claudia, Gregori, Giovanna, Dolci, Maria, Bruselli, Laura, Mori, Mary L., Baccetti, Fabio, Del Freo, Maria, Fontana, Lucia, Di Benedetto, Antonino, Cucinotta, Domenico, Giunta, Loretta, Ruffo, Maria Concetta, Cannizzaro, Desiree, Pintaudi, Basilio, Perrone, Giovanni, Pata, Pietro, Ragonese, Francesco, Lettina, Gabriele, Mancuso, Teresa, Coppolino, Aldo, Piatti, Pier Marco, Monti, Lucilla, Stuccillo, Michela, Lucotti, Pietro, Setola, Manuela, Crippa, Giulia Valentina, Loi, Cinzia, Oldani, Matteo, Bottalico, Maria Luisa, Pellegata, Beatrice, Bonomo, Matteo, Menicatti, Laura Silvia Maria, Resi, Veronica, Bertuzzi, Federico, Disoteo, Eugenia Olga, Pizzi, Gianluigi, Rivellese, Angela Albarosa, Annuzzi, Giovanni, Capaldo, Brunella, Nappo, Rossella, Auciello, Stefania Michela, Turco, Anna Amelia, Costagliola, Lucia, Iovine, Ciro, Corte, Giuseppina Della, Vallefuoco, Pasquale, Nappi, Francesca, Vitale, Marilena, Cocozza, Sara, Ciano, Ornella, Massimino, Elena, Garofalo, Nadia, Avogaro, Angelo, Vedovato, Monica, Guarneri, Gabriella, Lapolla, Annunziata, Fedele, Domenico, Sartore, Giovanni, Chilelli, Nino Cristiano, Burlina, Silvia, Bonsembiante, Barbara, Giordano, Carla, Galluzzo, Aldo, Torregrossa, Vittoria, Dall'Aglio, Elisabetta, Mancastroppa, Giovanni, Arsenio, Leone, Cioni, Federico, Caronna, Silvana, Papi, Matteo, Babini, Massimiliano, Perriello, Gabriele, Santeusanio, Fausto, Calagreti, Gioia, Timi, Alessia, Tantucci, Alice, Marino, Cecilia, Consoli, Agostino, Ginestra, Federica, Di Biagio, Rosamaria, Taraborelli, Merilda, Del Prato, Stefano, Miccoli, Roberto, Bianchi, Cristina, Garofolo, Monia, Politi, Konstantina Savina, Penno, Giuseppe, Zavaroni, Donatella, Livraga, Stefania, Calzoni, Fabio, Mancastroppa, Giovanni Luigi Francesco, Anichini, Roberto, Corsini, Elisa, Tedeschi, Anna, Gaglianò, Maria Sole, Ippolito, Giulio, Salutini, Elisabetta, Citro, Giuseppe, Cervellino, Francesco, Natale, Maria, Salvatore, Vita, Zampino, Armando, Sinisi, Rosa, Calabrese, Maria, Arcangeli, Adolfo, Zogheri, Alessia, Guizzotti, Sandra, Longo, Rossella, Di Bartolo, Paolo, Caselli, Chiara, Pellicano, Francesca, Scolozzi, Patrizia, Termine, Simona, Luberto, Alessandra, Ballardini, Giorgio, Babini, Anna Carla, Ripani, Raffaella, Trojani, Cristina, Mazzuca, Paolo, Bruglia, Matteo, Ciamei, Monica, Genghini, Silvia, Zannoni, Chiara, Pugliese, Giuseppe, Vitale, Martina, Rangel, Graziela, Salvi, Laura, Zappaterreno, Alessandra, Cordone, Samantha, Simonelli, Paola, Meggiorini, Marilla, Frasheri, Aurora, Di Pippo, Clelia, Maglio, Cristina, Mazzitelli, Giulia, Lauro, Davide, Rinaldi, Maria Elena, Galli, Angelica, Romano, Maria, D'Angelo, Paola, Leotta, Sergio, Suraci, Concetta, De Cosmo, Salvatore, Bacci, Simonetta, Palena, Antonio Pio, Genovese, Stefano, Mancino, Monica, Rondinelli, Maurizio, Capone, Filippo, Calabretto, Elisabetta, Bulgheroni, Monica, Bucciarelli, Loredana, Dotta, Francesco, Ceccarelli, Elena, Fondelli, Cecilia, Santacroce, Clorinda, Guarino, Elisa, Nigi, Laura, Lalli, Carlo, Di Vizia, Giovanni, Scarponi, Maura, Montani, Valeria, Di Bernardino, Paolo, Romagni, Paola, Dolcetti, Katia, Cannarsa, Emanuela, Forte, Elisa, Potenziani, Stella, Tamburo, Lucilla, Fornengo, Paolo, Perin, Paolo Cavallo, Prinzis, Tania, Gruden, Gabriella, Bruno, Graziella, Zucco, Chiara, Perotta, Massimo, Marena, Saverio, Monsignore, Simona, Panero, Francesco, Ponzi, Fulvia, Bossi, Antonio Carlo, Carpinteri, Rita, Casagrande, Maria Linda, Coletti, Maria Francesca, Menicatti, Laura Silvia Maria, Balini, Annalisa, Filopanti, Marcello, Madaschi, Sara, Pulcina, Anna, Grimaldi, Franco, Tonutti, Laura, Venturini, Giorgio, Agus, Sandra, Pagnutti, Stefania, Guidotti, Francesca, Cavarape, Alessandro, Casagrande, Maria Linda, Bonora, Enzo, Cigolini, Massimo, Pichiri, Isabella, Brangani, Corinna, Fainelli, Giulia, Tomasetto, Elena, Zoppini, Giacomo, Galletti, Anna, Perrone, Dominica, Capra, Claudio, Bianchini, Francesca, Ceseri, Martina, Di Nardo, Barbara, Sasso, Elisa, Bartolomei, Barbara, Suliman, Irina, Fabbri, Gianna, Romano, Geremia, Maturo, Nicola, Nunziata, Giuseppe, Capobianco, Giuseppe, De Simone, Giuseppina, Villa, Valeria, Rota, Giuseppe, Pentangelo, Carmine, Carbonara, Ornella, Caiazzo, Gennaro, Cutolo, Michele, Sorrentino, Tommasina, Mastrilli, Valeria, Amelia, Umberto, Masi, Stefano, Corigliano, Gerardo, Gaeta, Iole, Armentano, Vincenzo, Calatola, Pasqualino, Capuano, Gelsomina, Angiulli, Bruno, Auletta, Pasquale, Petraroli, Ettore, Iodice, Cinzia E., and Agrusta, Mariano
- Abstract
The best treatment option for patients with type 2 diabetes in whom treatment with metformin alone fails to achieve adequate glycaemic control is debated. We aimed to compare the long-term effects of pioglitazone versus sulfonylureas, given in addition to metformin, on cardiovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes.
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- 2017
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32. Sensor-aided camera calibration for three dimensional digital image correlation measurements
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Fromme, Paul, Su, Zhongqing, Bottalico, Fabio, Valente, Nicholas A., Niezrecki, Christopher, Jerath, Kshitij, Luo, Yan, and Sabato, Alessandro
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- 2023
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33. Reducing Noise in Restaurants: Feasibility and Recommendations.
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Nudelman, Charles J., D'Orazio, Dario, and Bottalico, Pasquale
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- 2023
- Full Text
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34. Air Pollution Removal by Green Infrastructures and Urban Forests in the City of Florence.
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Bottalico, Francesca, Chirici, Gherardo, Giannetti, Francesca, De Marco, Alessandra, Nocentini, Susanna, Paoletti, Elena, Salbitano, Fabio, Sanesi, Giovanni, Serenelli, Chiara, and Travaglini, Davide
- Abstract
We investigated the potential performance of air pollution removal by the green infrastructures and urban forests in the city of Florence, central Italy, with a focus on the two most detrimental pollutants for human health: particulate (PM 10 ) and ozone (O 3 ). The spatial distribution of green infrastructures was mapped using remote sensing data. A spatial modeling approach using vegetation indices, Leaf Area Index, and local pollution concentration data was applied to estimate PM 10 and O 3 removal. The results are discussed to highlight the role and potential of green infrastructures and urban forests in improving air quality in Southern European cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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35. Multicentre treatment planning inter-comparison in a national context: The liver stereotactic ablative radiotherapy case.
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Esposito, Marco, Maggi, Giulia, Marino, Carmelo, Bottalico, Laura, Cagni, Elisabetta, Carbonini, Claudia, Casale, Michelina, Clemente, Stefania, D'Alesio, Valentina, Fedele, David, Giglioli, Francesca Romana, Landoni, Valeria, Martinotti, Anna, Nigro, Roberta, Strigari, Lidia, Villaggi, Elena, and Mancosu, Pietro
- Abstract
Purpose To compare five liver metastasis stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) plans optimised in fourteen centres with 3D-Conformal-RT, IMRT, VMAT, CyberKnife and Tomotherapy and identify possible dosimetric differences. Methods Dose prescription was 75 Gy in 3 fractions, normalised at 67%–95% isodose. Results Excluding few cases, all institutions achieved the planning objectives. Differences up to 40% and 25% in mean dose to liver and PTV were found. No significant correlations between technological factors and DVH for target and OARs were observed; the optimisation strategies selected by the planners played a key role in the planning procedure. Conclusions The human factor and the constraints imposed to the target volume have a greater dosimetric impact than treatment planning and radiation delivery technology in stereotactic treatment of liver metastases. Significant differences found both in terms of dosimetric target coverage and OAR sparing should be taken into consideration before starting a multi-institutional SARB clinical trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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36. Teachers and Teaching: Speech Production Accommodations Due to Changes in the Acoustic Environment.
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Hunter, Eric J., Bottalico, Pasquale, Graetzer, Simone, Leishman, Timothy W., Berardi, Mark L., Eyring, Nathan G., Jensen, Zachary R., Rolins, Michael K., and Whiting, Jennifer K.
- Abstract
School teachers have an elevated risk of voice problems. The results of three studies investigating this elevated risk in terms of speaking environments teachers’ encounter at work are presented. In the first study, 57 teachers were observed for 2 weeks (waking hours), comparing voice use in the school environment and in non-school environments. In a second study, 45 participants performed a short vocal task multiple times in two different rooms: a variable acoustic room and an anechoic chamber. Each time they entered the variable acoustics room, the reverberation time and/or the background noise condition had been modified. Besides being having their speech recorded, subjects responded to questions about their vocal comfort and their perception of changes in the acoustic environment. In a third study, 20 untrained vocalists performed a simple vocal task in the following conditions: with and without background babble and with and without transparent plexiglass shields to increase the first reflection. Relationships were examined between [1] the results for the room acoustic parameters; [2] the subjects’ perception of the room; and [3] the recorded speech acoustic. From these three studies several gender differences were found; some of those differences held for each room condition (reverberation, noise level, and early reflection). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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37. A revised classification of the Gelidiellaceae (Rhodophyta) with descriptions of three new genera: Huismaniella, Millerellaand Perronella
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Boo, Ga Hun, Van Nguyen, Tu, Kim, Jung Yeon, Gall, Line Le, Rico, Jose Manuel, Bottalico, Antonella, and Boo, Sung Min
- Abstract
The agarophyte family Gelidiellaceae currently includes 26 species in two genera, Gelidiellaand Parviphycus, but the generic status and species boundaries have not been fully explored. In order to resolve taxonomic issues in the family, we analyzed mitochondria-encoded cox1and plastid-encoded rbcLand psaAgenes from types and fresh collections including topotype material. The Gelidiellaceae was resolved with five distinct groups, interpreted here as representing five genera: (1) Gelidiella, including the type, (2) Huismaniellagen. nov., (3) Millerellagen. nov., (4) Parviphycuss.str. including the type, and (5) Perronellagen. nov. Gelidiellawas recognized as including a new species, G. flabella, that is described for specimens from Madagascar. A new genus, Huismaniella, is described for the species previously known as Gelidiella ramellosa, characterized by lateral tetrasporangial branchlets inserted at right angles on erect axes and irregularly arranged tetrasporangia. Parviphycusincludes P. adnatuswhich is characterized by simple thalli with tetrasporangial branchlets formed directly on prostate axes and holdfasts forming continuous fringes along the entire length of prostrate axes. The new genus Millerellais described to accommodate five species previously known as Gelidiellaor Parviphycus, characterized by tetrasporangial sori formed on erect axes or branches and unicellular rhizoids forming irregular clumps along prostrate axes. Perronella gracilisgen. et sp. nov. is described for plants with terete axes, multifarious branching, and monosporangia formed on erect axes and branches. The implications for nomenclature, taxonomic revisions, and biogeography in the Gelidiellaceae are discussed.
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- 2016
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38. Maternal anemia associated with walkable distance to healthy food sources in Bronx, New York.
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Bottalico, Danielle M., Johnson, Glen D., Chazotte, Cynthia, and Karkowsky, Chavi Eve
- Abstract
The relationship between walkable access to healthy food sources and risk of anemia in pregnancy was evaluated for a cohort of 4678 women who initiated prenatal care in the year 2010 at an academic medical center in Bronx, New York. After geocoding patient residences, street network distances were obtained for the closest healthy food sources, which were identified from multiple databases. For lower-income patients, as indicated by Medicaid or lack of health insurance, those who lived less than 0.25 miles from a healthy food source were less likely to be anemic when compared to those who lived farther (adjusted OR = 0.65, 95% CI 0.48, 0.88). Patients with commercial insurance showed no effect. These results help to understand how a nutritionally-mediated condition such as anemia during pregnancy can be affected by one’s built environment, while also highlighting the importance of conditioning on socioeconomic status for these types of studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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39. Occluded Superficial Femoral and Popliteal Artery Stents Can Have a Negative Impact on Bypass Target
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Conway, Allan M., Qato, Khalil, Bottalico, Danielle, Lugo, Joanelle, Giangola, Gary, and Carroccio, Alfio
- Abstract
Purpose:To identify whether occluded femoropopliteal stents influence previously available lower extremity bypass (LEB) targets. Methods:Among 621 consecutive patients who had undergone stenting of a superficial femoral artery or popliteal artery lesion from January 2009 to December 2013, 30 patients (mean age 69.9±10.2 years; 16 women) were found to have occluded stents. Angiograms before stent placement were analyzed to determine what would have been the optimal distal bypass site, which was compared with the angiogram following stent occlusion. Results:Seven (22%) limbs lost the bypass target. In one limb, the target changed from above-knee to below-knee popliteal, in 2 limbs from above-knee popliteal to tibial, and in 4 limbs from below-knee popliteal to tibial artery. Eleven (34%) limbs required LEB during follow-up. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (p=0.007), chronic renal insufficiency (p=0.026), a popliteal artery stent (p=0.001), and the below-knee popliteal artery as an optimal bypass target (p=0.026) were associated with loss of bypass target following stent occlusion. Conclusion:Superficial femoral artery and popliteal artery stent occlusion can affect target vessels in patients who may require subsequent LEB. This should be considered when performing stenting.
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- 2015
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40. Oral human papillomavirus detection in older adults who have human immunodeficiency virus infection.
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Fatahzadeh, Mahnaz, Schlecht, Nicolas F., Chen, Zigui, Bottalico, Danielle, McKinney, Sharod, Ostoloza, Janae, Dunne, Anne, and Burk, Robert D.
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate reproducibility of oral rinse self-collection for human papillomavirus (HPV) detection and investigate associations between oral HPV, oral lesions, immune and sociodemographic factors, we performed a cross-sectional study of older adults with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Study Design: We collected oral rinse samples from 52 subjects at 2 different times of day, followed by an oral examination and interview. We identified HPV with the use of polymerase chain reaction platforms optimized for detection of mucosal and cutaneous types. Results: Eighty-seven percent of individuals had oral HPV, of which 23% had oncogenic alpha, 40% had nononcogenic alpha, and 46% had beta or gamma HPV. Paired oral specimens were concordant in all parameters tested. Significant associations observed for oral HPV with increased HIV viral load, hepatitis C seropositivity, history of sexually transmitted diseases, and lifetime number of sexual partners. Conclusions: Oral cavity may be a reservoir of subclinical HPV in older adults who have HIV infection. Understanding natural history, transmission, and potential implications of oral HPV warrants further investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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41. Effetto del rumore e della riverberazione sullo sforzo vocale degli insegnanti di scuola primaria.
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Nadalin, J., Astofi, A., Bottalico, P., Riva, G., Garzaro, M., Raimondo, L., and Giordano, C.
- Abstract
Copyright of Giornale Italiano di Medicina del Lavoro ed Ergonomia is the property of Giornale Italiano di Medicina del Lavoro ed Ergonomia Editorial Board and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
42. Work-Related Communicative Profile of Voice Teachers: Effects of Classroom Noise on Voice and Hearing Abilities.
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Redman, Yvonne, Vercelli, Chiara, Cantor-Cutiva, Lady Catherine, and Bottalico, Pasquale
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Vocal instructors during their normal workday are exposed to high noise levels that can affect their voice and hearing health. The goal of this study was to evaluate the voice and hearing status of voice instructors before and after lessons and relate these evaluations with voice and noise dosimetry taken during lessons. Eight voice instructors volunteered to participate in the study. The protocol included (1) questionnaires, (2) pre/post assessment of voice quality and hearing status, and (3) voice and noise dosimetry during lessons. Acoustic measurements were taken of the unoccupied classrooms. In six of eight classrooms, the measured noise level was higher than the safety recommendations set by National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The background noise level and the reverberation time in the classrooms were in compliance with the national standard recommendations. We did not find a clear pattern comparing pre- and post-measurements of voice quality consistent among genders. In all subjects, the Sound Pressure Levels mean increased, and the standard deviation of fundamental frequency decreased indicating association to vocal fatigue. Previous studies link these changes to increasing vocal fatigue. The audiometric results revealed seven out of eight instructors have sensorineural hearing loss. The interaction of the acoustic space and noise levels can contribute to the development of hearing and voice disorders for voice instructors. If supported by larger sample size, the results of this pilot study could justify the need for a hearing and voice conservation program for music faculty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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43. Secondary pathologic fractures in osteosarcoma: prognosis and evolution.
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VERMESAN, D., VERMESAN, H., DRAGULESCU, S. I., BERA, I., DI GIOVANNI, A., SABATINI, R., SANTACROCE, L., BOTTALICO, L., FLACE, P., and CAGIANO, R.
- Abstract
Secondary or pathologic fractures, associated with osteosarcoma, have been considered for a long time a negative prognosis regarding its evolution in the patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic importance of such pathologic fractures in osteosarcoma patients receiving new therapies as well as the best conditions for surgery aiming at "limbs salvage". On a total of 22 patients affected by osteosarcoma, we performed a retrospective study with 12 patients showing pathologic fractures caused by osteosarcoma and 10 patients without any pathologic fracture. The patients enrolled into Timisoara University Hospital have been followed up along 5 years or until a reappearance of either the disease or metastases, distant or local. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
44. Effects on rat sexual behaviour of acute MDMA (ecstasy) alone or in combination with loud music.
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CAGIANO, R., BERA, I., SABATINI, R., FLACE, P., VERMESAN, D., VERMESAN, H., DRAGULESCU, S. I., BOTTALICO, L., and SANTACROCE, L.
- Abstract
The effects on sexual behaviour of acute low doses of methylendioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) (0.3, 1, 3 mg/kg/i.p.), alone or in combination with exposure to loud music (1 h stimulation), were investigated in Wistar rats. Results indicate that acute MDMA, at dose of 3 mg/kg, notably impaired copulatory behavior of sexually experienced male rats. In particular, MDMA-exposed animals exhibited a significant increase in intromission and ejaculation latencies as well as a significant decrease in percentage of rats displaying copulatory activity (one intromission at least). Surprisingly, one hour exposure to loud music, which per se resulted ineffective, antagonized the suppressive effect of MDMA by increasing the percent of animals displaying sexual activity. However, combined treatment of MDMA and music stimulation did not fully restore normal sexual behavior as the animals reaching ejaculation still showed a marked reduction of copulatory efficiency. These findings demonstrate that the systemic administration of a single low dose of MDMA, alone or in combination with loud music, which is commonly present in certain environments such as rave parties, notably impairs copulatory activity of male rats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
45. Recurrent Gestational Diabetes: Risk Factors, Diagnosis, Management, and Implications.
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Bottalico, Joseph N.
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Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) should be regarded as a sentinel event in a woman’s life that presents challenges and disease prevention opportunities to all providers of health care for women of reproductive age. Prediabetic risk factors are rising in prevalence and include dietary and lifestyle habits, which when superimposed on genetic predisposition contribute to the rising prevalence of type 2 diabetes and GDM. There is growing evidence that treatment of GDM matters, with a continuum of adverse pregnancy outcome risks proportional to degrees of maternal glucose intolerance. GDM in an index pregnancy increases the risk of recurrent GDM in subsequent pregnancies, and recurrence rates of up to 70% have been reported. GDM recurrence rates are influenced by maternal health characteristics and past pregnancy history. The risk of later metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes is increased in women with a history of GDM and women should be screened for postpartum glucose intolerance. Opportunities to prevent recurrent GDM and later type 2 diabetes require attention to risk factors and plasma glucose status with identification of impaired fasting glucose or impaired glucose tolerance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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46. Reproducing a Roman maritime structure with Vitruvian pozzolanic concrete.
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Oleson, J. P., Bottalico, L., Brandon, C., Cucitore, R., Gotti, E., and Hohlfelder, R. L.
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This article explores the employment of the physical and mechanical nature of Roman hydraulic concrete in the maritime infrastructure of the Roman Mediterranean world. It examines the sourcing of the various components of the building material during the period. It discusses the results of an experiment carried out with carefully-duplicated Roman materials and construction technology. It suggests that builders during the period used wicker baskets to carry mortar from the mixing area to its place of deposition.
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- 2006
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47. Parviphycus albertanoae sp. nov. (Gelidiales, Rhodophyta) from the Mediterranean Sea
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Bottalico, Antonella, Boo, Ga Hun, Russo, Christian, Boo, Sung Min, and Perrone, Cesira
- Abstract
Abstract:Parviphycus albertanoae sp. nov. was described from the southern Adriatic Sea, Italy on the basis of morphological and molecular data. The new species formed dense tufts at the upper intertidal level on rocky substrata, exposed to intense wave action. Distinctive morphological characters were compressed upright axes closely arising from short stolons, numerous first-order branches and clavate tetrasporangial sori at main and lateral apices. Phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial cox1 and plastid rbcL sequence data revealed that P. albertanoaewas clearly separated from the congeners of the genus, corroborating the morphological distinctness.
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- 2014
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48. From myth to philosophy, the cradle of evolving medical thought and ethics in the classical antiquity
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Charitos, I.A., Topi, S., Santacroce, L., and Bottalico, L.
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•Early archaic medicine and therapy were related to the hieratic/supernatural conception.•.The pre-socratics put in this the genesis and causes of everything, and this is reflected in all the known sciences of the time and in medicine•With Plato, in essence, we are witnessing the penetration of medicine into rhetoric, but turning our attention to the Hippocratic corpus we cannot ignore the opposite.•Aristotle lays the foundations for a scientific (epistème) methodology approach.•In the classical world, doctors integrate with the philosophical currents and create the various schools, and so Hippocrates was the first to lay the foundations of rational medicine combined with ethical values.
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- 2022
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49. Service Life of Cementitious Photocatalytic Paints Newly Formulated
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Enea, Daniele, Alaimo, Giuseppe, Bottalico, L., and de Marco, T.
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The use of photocatalytic products for surface coating of buildings contributes to the sustainability of building interventions, due to the reduction of some atmospheric pollutants and self-cleaning attitude. The world market produces a wide range of coatings, applied in limited thickness, transparent and opaque, high initial performance, although data on their durability are still missing. The knowledge of the performance over time of such innovative products is necessary according to the new EU Regulation No. 305/2011, which introduced for construction works, the seventh requirement on their sustainability and particularly their durability. The study concerns the evaluation of the durability of white photocatalytic paint, TX Active® cement-based. The methodology is based on ISO 15686 and consists in monitoring the most significant selected parameters, during laboratory accelerated aging tests and natural environment exposure. Measured performance were the morphological appearance of the surface, the photocatalytic activity and the color. The results obtained demonstrate the efficiency in time and the maintenance of performance of the photocatalytic paint, above limits defined by standards and conservation of color.
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- 2013
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50. Experimental evaluation of the durability of innovative cementitious coatings: photocatalytic activity and colour
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Alaimo, G., Enea, D., Guerrini, G. L., and Bottalico, L.
- Abstract
Today, in a world context characterized by high pollution levels and increasingly limited natural resources, even in the building sector, focusing on environmental issues, through energy saving and a more rational use of these resources, both during construction and management, is fundamental. An important contribution in this direction is given by the knowledge of the durability of products and building components, especially when innovative products are applied and no information are available on the reliability and service life. The research concerns the evaluation of the durability of cement-based photocatalytic coatings ("rasanti" in the Italian diction), containing different types of pigments, used for the external finishing of the buildings envelope and applied in low thicknesses on different supports. These products were prepared using photocatalytic cements by Italcementi (TX ActiveR) The investigated aspects are: the photocatalytic properties, conferring self-cleaning attitude and reduced maintenance to the treated surfaces, and the colorimetric ones, meaning the conservation of colour and giving aesthetic quality to the building envelope. The paper presents some results carried out on TX ActiveRcement-based coatings, performed according to the ISO 15686 methodology, aimed at defining the Reference Service Life, through accelerated ageing tests in climatic chamber and the corresponding monitoring of photocatalytic and colorimetric properties. The photocatalytic tests were carried out according to the UNI 11247-2010, in terms of NOx abatement capability, and the colour measurements were taken on the CIELAB colour space.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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