5,745 results
Search Results
2. White paper on peanut allergy- part1: Epidemiology, burden of disease, health economic aspects
- Author
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Hans F. Merk, Christian Vogelberg, Natalija Novak, Sven Becker, Katja Nemat, Thomas Spindler, Eckard Hamelmann, Michael Gerstlauer, Adam Chaker, Randolf Brehler, Torsten Zuberbier, Norbert Mülleneisen, Thomas Fuchs, Kirsten Beyer, Holger Wrede, Wolfgang Czech, Wolfgang Wehrmann, Tobias Ankermann, Ludger Klimek, Sebastian Schmidt, Kirsten Jung, Andrea Bauer, Wolfgang Schlenter, Katharina Blumchen, Uta Rabe, Lars Lange, Johannes Ring, and Thilo Jakob
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Burden of disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Allergy ,Review ,Food allergy ,Anaphylaxis ,Oral immunotherapy ,COVID-19 ,Children ,business.industry ,Peanut allergy ,food and beverages ,Allergen avoidance ,medicine.disease ,ddc ,White paper ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,ddc:610 ,business - Abstract
Peanuts are Leguminosae, commonly known as the legume or pea family, and peanut allergy is among the most common food allergies and the most common cause of fatal food reactions and anaphylaxis.The prevalence of peanut allergy increased 3.5-fold over the past two decades reaching 1.4–2% in Europe and the United States. The reasons for this increase in prevalence are likely multifaceted. Sensitization via the skin appears to be associated with the development of peanut allergy and atopic eczema in infancy is associated with a high risk of developing peanut allergy.Until recently, the only possible management strategy for peanut allergy was strict allergen avoidance and emergency treatment including adrenaline auto-injector in cases of accidental exposure and reaction.This paper discusses the various factors that impact the risks of peanut allergy and the burden of self-management on peanut-allergic children and their caregivers.
- Published
- 2021
3. EANM position paper on the role of radiobiology in nuclear medicine
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Gerhard Glatting, Uta Eberlein, Roland Hustinx, Lidia Strigari, Mark Konijnenberg, Fijs W. B. van Leeuwen, An Aerts, Michael Lassmann, Søren Holm, and Radiology & Nuclear Medicine
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Radiobiology ,business.industry ,Normal tissue ,External irradiation ,Biodosimetry ,General Medicine ,Radionuclide therapy ,Medical physicist ,Absorbed dose ,Neoplasms ,Dosimetry ,Medicine ,Position paper ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Original Article ,ddc:610 ,Nuclear Medicine ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Executive SummaryWith an increasing variety of radiopharmaceuticals for diagnostic or therapeutic nuclear medicine as valuable diagnostic or treatment option, radiobiology plays an important role in supporting optimizations. This comprises particularly safety and efficacy of radionuclide therapies, specifically tailored to each patient. As absorbed dose rates and absorbed dose distributions in space and time are very different between external irradiation and systemic radionuclide exposure, distinct radiation-induced biological responses are expected in nuclear medicine, which need to be explored. This calls for a dedicated nuclear medicine radiobiology. Radiobiology findings and absorbed dose measurements will enable an improved estimation and prediction of efficacy and adverse effects. Moreover, a better understanding on the fundamental biological mechanisms underlying tumor and normal tissue responses will help to identify predictive and prognostic biomarkers as well as biomarkers for treatment follow-up. In addition, radiobiology can form the basis for the development of radiosensitizing strategies and radioprotectant agents. Thus, EANM believes that, beyond in vitro and preclinical evaluations, radiobiology will bring important added value to clinical studies and to clinical teams. Therefore, EANM strongly supports active collaboration between radiochemists, radiopharmacists, radiobiologists, medical physicists, and physicians to foster research toward precision nuclear medicine.
- Published
- 2021
4. Short Paper: An Update on Marked Mix-Nets: An Attack, a Fix and PQ Possibilities
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Thomas Haines, Olivier Pereira, Peter B. Rønne, and UCL - SST/ICTM - Institute of Information and Communication Technologies, Electronics and Applied Mathematics
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Scheme (programming language) ,Computer science [C05] [Engineering, computing & technology] ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Computer science ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Short paper ,Proof of security ,02 engineering and technology ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Encryption ,Sciences informatiques [C05] [Ingénierie, informatique & technologie] ,Order (exchange) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,business ,computer ,ElGamal encryption ,Quantum computer ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Marked mix-nets were introduced by Pereira and Rivest as a mechanism to allow very efficient mixing that ensures privacy but at the cost of not guaranteeing integrity. This is useful in a number of e-voting schemes such as STAR-Vote and Selene. However, the proposed marked mix-net construction comes with no proof of security and, as we show in this paper, does not provide privacy even in the presence of a single corrupt authority. Fortunately, the attack that we present is easy to prevent and we show several possible ways to address it. Finally while the original marked mix-net paper worked with ElGamal, we identify conditions that the adopted encryption scheme should satisfy in order to be appropriate for a marked mix-net. This opens the possibility of building marked mix-nets based on intractability assumptions which are believed to hold in the presence of a quantum computer.
- Published
- 2020
5. Relationships Between Paper Mills and Technological Evolution of Paper Production
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Michela Cigola, Arturo Gallozzi, Raffaele Catuogno, Silvia Gargaro, Gargaro, S., Cigola, M., Gallozzi, A., Catuogno, R., and Zhang B., Ceccarelli M.
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Engineering ,Architectural engineering ,Relation (database) ,Paper Mills ,business.industry ,Papermaking ,Industrial production ,Paper production ,Building development ,Technological evolution ,Paper Mills, Papermaking, Paper machinery, Building development, machine representation ,Documentation ,Production (economics) ,machine representation ,Paper machinery ,business ,Industrial archaeology - Abstract
The paper is about the evolution of paper mills in relation to the technological evolution of machines and mechanism for the production of paper. Industrial production techniques is a theme that involves the building and its development. The principles, technology, and even cultural aspects were analyzed in this paper to define the relationship between industrial building and paper making evolution. A Modern documentation needs identified the potential of Industrial Archeology researches in the recent years. Many architects, archaeologists, conservationists, engineers document and purpose possible solution to manage Industrial Archeology structures. The latest years, there are many developments in the Industrial Archeology field. In this review article, following a brief historic background for the papermaking, the analysis of the development factors in the territory of South Lazio focusing also on the cultural background, and of changes in the layout of industrial buildings due to the development of faster and more efficient machinery and methods to produce paper. The conclusion focuses on the future perspective to manage Industrial Archeology.
- Published
- 2019
6. Non-radiologist-performed point-of-care ultrasonography in paediatrics — European Society of Paediatric Radiology position paper
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Rick R. van Rijn, Karen Rosendahl, Samuel Stafrace, Owen J. Arthurs, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, and Other Research
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Position statement ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education ,Credentialing ,Point of care ultrasonography ,Nonspecialist ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Non-radiologist ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ultrasound ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical physics ,Children ,Paediatric care ,Neuroradiology ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,VDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Basale medisinske, odontologiske og veterinærmedisinske fag: 710 ,Espr ,VDP::Medical disciplines: 700::Basic medical, dental and veterinary science disciplines: 710 ,Bedside ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Position paper ,Paediatric radiology ,Ultrasonography ,business - Abstract
Non-radiologist point-of-care ultrasonography (US) is increasingly implemented in paediatric care because it is believed to facilitate a timely diagnosis, such as in ascites or dilated renal pelvicalyceal systems, and can be used to guide interventional procedures. To date, all policy statements have been published by non-radiologic societies. The European Society of Paediatric Radiology hereby issues a position statement on paediatric non-radiologist point-of-care US from the point of view of those leading on children’s imaging, i.e. paediatric radiologists. In this position statement, we will address the boundaries, education, credentialing, quality control, reporting and storage of images in paediatric practice.
- Published
- 2020
7. Adsorption of pharmaceuticals from biologically treated municipal wastewater using paper mill sludge-based activated carbon
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Valdemar I. Esteves, Carla Patrícia Silva, Vânia Calisto, Guilaine Jaria, and Marta Otero
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Langmuir ,Sulfamethoxazole ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,010501 environmental sciences ,Wastewater ,01 natural sciences ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Water Purification ,Matrix (chemical analysis) ,Adsorption ,Emerging pollutants ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Sewage ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Waste-based carbons ,Paper mill ,General Medicine ,Pulp and paper industry ,Pollution ,Waste valorization ,Carbon ,Kinetics ,Carbamazepine ,Water quality ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Charcoal ,Ultrapure water ,Sewage treatment ,business ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A waste-based alternative activated carbon (AAC) was produced from paper mill sludge under optimized conditions. Aiming its application in tertiary wastewater treatment, AAC was used for the removal of carbamazepine, sulfamethoxazole, and paroxetine from biologically treated municipal wastewater. Kinetic and equilibrium adsorption experiments were run under batch operation conditions. For comparison purposes, they were also performed in ultrapure water and using a high-performance commercial AC (CAC). Adsorption kinetics was fast for the three pharmaceuticals and similar onto AAC and CAC in either wastewater or ultrapure water. However, matrix effects were observed in the equilibrium results, being more remarkable for AAC. These effects were evidenced by Langmuir maximum adsorption capacities (qm, mg g-1): for AAC, the lowest and highest qm were 194 ± 10 (SMX) and 287 ± 9 (PAR), in ultrapure water, and 47 ± 1 (SMX) and 407 ± 14 (PAR), in wastewater, while for CAC, the lowest and highest qm were 118 ± 7 (SMX) and 190 ± 16 (PAR) in ultrapure water and 123 ± 5 (SMX) and 160 ± 7 (CBZ) in wastewater. It was found that the matrix pH played a key role in these differences by controlling the surface electrostatic interactions between pharmaceutical and AC. Overall, it was evidenced the need of adsorption results in real matrices and demonstrated that AAC is a promising option to be implemented in tertiary wastewater treatments for pharmaceuticals' removal. Graphical abstract Production of an alternative activated carbon (AC) comparing favourably with a commercial AC in the removal of neutral and positive pharmaceuticals from wastewater. published
- Published
- 2019
8. Research and Development in the Finnish Wood Processing and Paper Industry, c. 1850-1990
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Panu Nykänen, Särkkä, Timo, Gutiérrez-Poch, Miquel, and Kuhlberg, Mark
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Higher education ,business.industry ,Subject (philosophy) ,History of technology ,teknologinen kehitys ,historia ,Pulp and paper industry ,history of technology ,research and development ,Politics ,Globalization ,Work (electrical) ,Wood processing ,tutkimus- ja kehittämistoiminta ,Political science ,Suomi ,teknologia ,business ,Period (music) ,Finland - Abstract
This chapter describes the general history of research and development work in the Finnish pulp and paper industry from the mid-nineteenth century until roughly 1990, a period that witnessed it undergo drastic changes because of the altered political environment in Europe and general globalization. In addressing its subject, this chapter is mainly concerned with the operation of paper mills, but it also addresses the related subjects of technical research, formal higher education and work-related, practical learning. In addition, it briefly discusses the challenges inherent in researching the development of technology because of its research traditions. peerReviewed
- Published
- 2018
9. Care Robots and Bioethics: A Discussion Paper on Moral Standing of New Training Opportunities
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Maurizio Balistreri and Francesco Casile
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Computer science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Internet privacy ,Bioethics ,Work (electrical) ,Relevance (law) ,Robot ,Care work ,Everyday life ,business ,Autonomy ,media_common - Abstract
Our life depends more and more on intelligent machines that help us carry out our work or have completely taken our place in tasks which used to be wholly human. This also applies to the field of care and assistance for the sick and fragile: indeed, carebots are increasingly present by the patient’s bed and can collaborate in care work. However carebots are not objects like others that we use in our everyday life: unlike the tools through which we do things, robots have (and will more and more have) some level of autonomy. We intend to consider the type of relationship it is right to build with these devices and ask whether intelligent robots deserve some moral and legal relevance. The robot may be seen as a slave or an entity with which we can form friendships or loving relationships: we will maintain that it is our responsibility to prepare for future scenarios in which increasingly intelligent, autonomous machines will be not mere tools, but significant life companions.
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- 2022
10. Consensus Paper: Novel Directions and Next Steps of Non-invasive Brain Stimulation of the Cerebellum in Health and Disease
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Mario Manto, Yoshikazu Ugawa, Louise A. Corben, Anna Sadnicka, Roberta Ferrucci, Matteo Guidetti, John C. Rothwell, Georgios P. D. Argyropoulos, Danny Spampinato, Pablo Celnik, Tommaso Bocci, Giacomo Koch, Maximilian J. Wessel, and Alberto Priori
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Cerebellum ,Consensus ,cerebellum ,medicine.medical_treatment ,non-invasive ,electrical-stimulation ,Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation ,phantom limb ,tms ,Cortex (anatomy) ,transcranial magnetic stimulation ,medicine ,Animals ,cortical connectivity ,essential tremor ,posterior cerebellum ,Dystonia ,tdcs ,primary motor cortex ,Transcranial direct-current stimulation ,business.industry ,Neuromodulation ,Non-invasive ,tDCS ,TMS ,Parkinson Disease ,medicine.disease ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,degenerative ataxias ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,nervous system ,Brain stimulation ,neuromodulation ,theta-burst stimulation ,Neurology (clinical) ,double-blind ,Motor learning ,business ,Neuroscience ,Motor cortex - Abstract
The cerebellum is involved in multiple closed-loops circuitry which connect the cerebellar modules with the motor cortex, prefrontal, temporal, and parietal cortical areas, and contribute to motor control, cognitive processes, emotional processing, and behavior. Among them, the cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathway represents the anatomical substratum of cerebellum-motor cortex inhibition (CBI). However, the cerebellum is also connected with basal ganglia by disynaptic pathways, and cerebellar involvement in disorders commonly associated with basal ganglia dysfunction (e.g., Parkinson’s disease and dystonia) has been suggested. Lately, cerebellar activity has been targeted by non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques including transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to indirectly affect and tune dysfunctional circuitry in the brain. Although the results are promising, several questions remain still unsolved. Here, a panel of experts from different specialties (neurophysiology, neurology, neurosurgery, neuropsychology) reviews the current results on cerebellar NIBS with the aim to derive the future steps and directions needed. We discuss the effects of TMS in the field of cerebellar neurophysiology, the potentials of cerebellar tDCS, the role of animal models in cerebellar NIBS applications, and the possible application of cerebellar NIBS in motor learning, stroke recovery, speech and language functions, neuropsychiatric and movement disorders.
- Published
- 2021
11. Perspectives on environmental barrier coatings (EBCs) manufactured via air plasma spray (APS) on ceramic matrix composites (CMCs): a tutorial paper
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Dongming Zhu, Rogerio S. Lima, and Kang N. Lee
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Materials science ,02 engineering and technology ,Surface engineering ,Ceramic matrix composite ,Combustion ,01 natural sciences ,Turbine ,environmental barrier coatings (EBCs) ,0203 mechanical engineering ,0103 physical sciences ,SiC/SiC CMC ,Materials Chemistry ,Aerospace ,Thermal spraying ,010302 applied physics ,business.industry ,air plasma spray (APS ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Engineering physics ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,ceramic matrix composites (CMCs) ,Fuel efficiency ,gas turbine engines ,Combustion chamber ,business ,oxide-oxide CMC - Abstract
There are many sets of information in the literature (e.g., papers, books and websites) about the great achievements that are expected for aerospace gas turbine engines by the employment of ceramic matrix composites (CMCs) and thermally sprayed environmental barrier coatings (EBCs) in their hot zones (e.g., combustion chambers, vanes, shrouds, blades and afterburners). Among these achievements, it is typically highlighted (i) turbine weight reduction, (ii) reduced fuel consumption, (iii) higher operation temperatures, (iv) superior thrust-to-weight ratio and (v) lower emission of toxic gases to the atmosphere. Although these achievements are true, they are generally not well-explained to the reader on how together they come to be. In addition, according to “conventional wisdom”, some of these engineering feats are in fact opposing each other (e.g., higher operation temperatures versus lower emissions). The objective of this tutorial paper is to present the reader how these feats are achieved by the concomitant combination of imaginative engineering. It will explain the non-stop driving force for increasing combustion temperatures; show the basic concepts of CMCs, the paramount need of EBCs, and the complexity of creating EBC architectures via air plasma spray (APS). Finally, highlights on how EBCs/CMCs are tested at high temperature will be provided. The content of this paper shall be understood by anyone with basic knowledge in materials processing and surface engineering.
- Published
- 2021
12. Normative industrial symbiotic networks: a position paper
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Vahid Yazdanpanah, W. Henk M. Zijm, Devrim Murat Yazan, Carrascosa, Carlos, Julian Inglada, Vicente, Criado Pacheco, Natalia, and Osman, Nardine
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Engineering ,Process management ,business.industry ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,ComputingMethodologies_ARTIFICIALINTELLIGENCE ,0502 economics and business ,Industrial symbiosis ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Key (cryptography) ,Position paper ,Normative ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Operations management ,business ,050203 business & management - Abstract
In this paper, we introduce a normative, multi-agent perspective on the field of industrial symbiosis research and propose normative institutions as a key technology for operating Industrial Symbiotic Networks (ISNs), both as a framework to represent and reason about dynamic behaviour of ISNs and as a platform for design and maintenance of such networks. We discuss the requirements of normative agent-based frameworks for ISNs with respect to agent interactions, joint commitments, and the organisation to monitor interactions in ISNs.
- Published
- 2017
13. Calculating the excellence shift: How efficiently do institutions produce highly cited papers?
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Klaus Wohlrabe, Félix de Moya-Anegón, Lutz Bornmann, Moya Anegón, Félix de, and Moya Anegón, Félix de [0000-0002-0255-8628]
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Engineering ,Management science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Efficiency ,Library and Information Sciences ,050905 science studies ,High-impact papers ,Computer Science Applications ,Engineering management ,Excellence ,Research efficiency ,0509 other social sciences ,Excellence shift ,050904 information & library sciences ,business ,media_common - Abstract
The excellence shift is proposed, which shows universities’ ability to produce highly cited papers as measured against their basic academic research efficiency. To demonstrate our approach, we use data from 50 US universities.
- Published
- 2017
14. Management of perforated diverticulitis with generalized peritonitis. a multidisciplinary review and position paper
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G. A. Binda, Guglielmo Tellan, Mauro Zago, Andrea Laghi, A. Amato, A. Serventi, Riccardo Nascimbeni, Carmelo Scarpignato, Massimo Bellini, and Roberto Cirocchi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute diverticulitis ,Diffuse peritonitis ,Diverticular disease ,Septic shock ,Perforation (oil well) ,diverticular disease ,Peritonitis ,Review ,Diverticulitis, Colonic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,acute diverticulitis ,diffuse peritonitis ,septic shock ,Colostomy ,medicine ,Humans ,Laparoscopy ,Diverticulitis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease ,Colorectal surgery ,Italy ,Damage control surgery ,Intestinal Perforation ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Surgery ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
Perforated diverticulitis is an emergent clinical condition and its management is challenging and still debated. The aim of this position paper was to critically review the available evidence on the management of perforated diverticulitis and generalized peritonitis in order to provide evidence-based suggestions for a management strategy. Four Italian scientific societies (SICCR, SICUT, SIRM, AIGO), selected experts who identified 5 clinically relevant topics in the management of perforated diverticulitis with generalized peritonitis that would benefit from a multidisciplinary review. The following 5 issues were tackled: 1) Criteria to decide between conservative and surgical treatment in case of perforated diverticulitis with peritonitis; 2) Criteria or scoring system to choose the most appropriate surgical option when diffuse peritonitis is confirmed 3); The appropriate surgical procedure in hemodynamically stable or stabilized patients with diffuse peritonitis; 4) The appropriate surgical procedure for patients with generalized peritonitis and septic shock and 5) Optimal medical therapy in patients with generalized peritonitis from diverticular perforation before and after surgery. In perforated diverticulitis surgery is indicated in case of diffuse peritonitis or failure of conservative management and the decision to operate is not based on the presence of extraluminal air. If diffuse peritonitis is confirmed the choice of surgical technique is based on intraoperative findings and the presence or risk of severe septic shock. Further prognostic factors to consider are physiological derangement, age, comorbidities, and immune status. In hemodynamically stable patients, emergency laparoscopy has benefits over open surgery. Options include resection and anastomosis, Hartmann’s procedure or laparoscopic lavage. In generalized peritonitis with septic shock, an open surgical approach is preferred. Non-restorative resection and/or damage control surgery appear to be the only viable options, depending on the severity of hemodynamic instability. Multidisciplinary medical management should be applied with the main aims of controlling infection, relieving postoperative pain and preventing and/or treating postoperative ileus. In conclusion, the complexity and diversity of patients with diverticular perforation and diffuse peritonitis requires a personalized strategy, involving a thorough classification of physiological derangement, staging of intra-abdominal infection and choice of the most appropriate surgical procedure.
- Published
- 2021
15. Exploiting pivot words to classify and summarize discourse facets of scientific papers
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Luca Cagliero, Moreno La Quatra, and Elena Baralis
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business.industry ,Computer science ,General Social Sciences ,Library and Information Sciences ,computer.software_genre ,Automatic summarization ,Deep natural language processing ,Computer Science Applications ,Task (project management) ,Domain (software engineering) ,Classification and regression ,Set (abstract data type) ,Selection (linguistics) ,Discourse facet classification ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,Artificial intelligence ,Computational linguistics ,Faceted summarization ,Citation ,business ,computer ,Natural language processing - Abstract
The ever-increasing number of published scientific articles has prompted the need for automated, data-driven approaches to summarizing the content of scientific articles. The Computational Linguistics Scientific Document Summarization Shared Task (CL-SciSumm 2019) has recently fostered the study and development of new text mining and machine learning solutions to the summarization problem customized to the academic domain. In CL-SciSumm, a Reference Paper (RP) is associated with a set of Citing Papers (CPs), all containing citations to the RP. In each CP, the text spans (i.e., citances) have been identified that pertain to a particular citation to the RP. The task of identifying the spans of text in the RP that most accurately reflect the citance is addressed using supervised approaches. This paper proposes a new, more effective solution to the CL-SciSumm discourse facet classification task, which entails identifying for each cited text span what facet of the paper it belongs to from a predefined set of facets. It proposes also to extend the set of traditional CL-SciSumm tasks with a new one, namely the discourse facet summarization task. The idea behind is to extract facet-specific descriptions of each RP consisting of a fixed-length collection of RP’s text spans. To tackle both the standard and the new tasks, we propose machine learning supported solutions based on the extraction of a selection of discriminating words, called pivot words. Predictive features based on pivot words are shown to be of great importance to rate the pertinence and relevance of a text span to a given facet. The newly proposed facet classification method performs significantly better than the best performing CL-SciSumm 2019 participant (i.e., the classification accuracy has increased by + 8%), whereas regression methods achieved promising results for the newly proposed summarization task.
- Published
- 2020
16. Perspectives in nursing education: From paper standardized taxonomies to electronic records applied in nursing practice
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Federica Sabato, Luca Bertocchi, Giuliana Morsiani, Annamaria Ferraresi, Gianfranco Sanson, Loreto Lancia, Luisa Anna Rigon, and Vianella Agostinelli
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NANDA-I taxonomy ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Standardized Nursing Terminology ,Medical record ,Nursing process ,Standardized nursing terminology ,Nursing diagnosis ,Nursing ,Health care ,Electronic health records ,Nursing education ,Quality (business) ,Observational study ,Nurse education ,business ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Nursing process has a relevant impact on overall quality of healthcare services and patient outcomes, however nursing contribution appears to be almost ‘invisible’. Use of an international Standardized Nursing Language (SNL), as NANDA-I NOC NIC (NNN) taxonomy, allows making nursing visible in education, practice and research with final better outcomes on patients. Electronic Health Record (EHR) could facilitate learning of standardized languages in nursing undergraduate students, but only few studies analyzed it. This paper aims to report the experience of the ‘Caring project’ utilizing a SNL in an Italian healthcare setting and to discuss potentialities of EHR in improving nursing education and practice. ‘Caring project’ was an Italian pilot observational study, conducted on 231 patients of 8 Units retrospectively (January 2018–March 2019), using a ‘paper’ assessment form with Gordon’s Functional Health Patterns (FHPs) and an Individual Care Plan (ICP), an ‘Excel® based health record prototype’. In the study a total of 484 Nursing Diagnosis (NDs) has been identified, corresponding to a mean of 2.0 ± 1.5 NDs/patient. Integration of SNL with EHRs could help nurses to use a holistic approach and, in nursing education, it could improve undergraduate students clinical reasoning skills. Further researches are necessary in this subject, in particular regarding the nursing diagnostic accuracy.
- Published
- 2020
17. European Laryngological Society position paper on laryngeal dysplasia part I: aetiology and pathological classification
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Odell, Edward, Eckel, Hans Edmund, Simo, Ricard, Quer, Miquel, Paleri, Vinidh, Klussmann, Jens Peter, Remacle, Marc, Sjögren, Elisabeth, Piazza, Cesare, and Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
- Subjects
Carcinoma in situ ,Dysplasia ,Laryngeal carcinoma ,Laryngeal intraepithelial neoplasia ,Humans ,Hyperplasia ,Leukoplakia ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Laryngeal Neoplasms ,Larynx ,Precancerous Conditions ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Review Article ,Malignant transformation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Grading (tumors) ,Pathological ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,030104 developmental biology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Etiology ,business - Abstract
Purpose of review To give an overview of the current knowledge regarding the aetiology, epidemiology, and classification of laryngeal dysplasia (LD) and to highlight the contributions of recent literature. As most cases of dysplasia occur at the glottic level and data on diagnosis and management are almost exclusively from this location, laryngeal dysplasia in this position paper is taken to be synonymous with dysplasia of the vocal folds. Summary LD has long been recognized as a precursor lesion to laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Tobacco and alcohol consumption are the two single most important etiological factors for the development of LD. There is currently insufficient evidence to support a role of reflux. Although varying levels of human papillomavirus have been identified in LD, its causal role is still uncertain, and there are data suggesting that it may be limited. Dysplasia has a varying presentation including leukoplakia, erythroleukoplakia, mucosal reddening or thickening with exophytic, “tumor-like” alterations. About 50% of leukoplakic lesions will contain some form of dysplasia. It has become clear that the traditionally accepted molecular pathways to cancer, involving accumulated mutations in a specific order, do not apply to LD. Although the molecular nature of the progression of LD to SCC is still unclear, it can be concluded that the risk of malignant transformation does rise with increasing grade of dysplasia, but not predictably so. Consequently, grading systems are inherently troubled by the weak correlation between the degree of the dysplasia and the risk of malignant transformation. The best data on LD grading and outcomes come from the Ljubljana group, forming the basis for the World Health Organization classification published in 2017.
- Published
- 2020
18. Refractory organic pollutants and toxicity in pulp and paper mill wastewaters
- Author
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Petra C. Lindholm-Lehto, Juha Knuutinen, Sirpa Herve, and Heidi Ahkola
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Paper ,Biocide ,organic pollutants ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,rasvahapot ,Industrial Waste ,Biological Oxygen Demand Analysis ,Wastewater ,engineering.material ,myrkyllisyys ,Lignin ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Hazardous Substances ,extractives ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic Chemicals ,Pollutant ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Pulp (paper) ,ligniini ,Paper mill ,General Medicine ,Pollution ,engineering ,biosidit ,Sewage treatment ,business ,resin acids ,Disinfectants ,Waste disposal ,wastewaters - Abstract
This review describes medium and high molecular weight organic material found in wastewaters from pulp and paper industry. The aim is to review the versatile pollutants and the analysis methods for their determination. Among other pollutants, biocides, extractives, and lignin-derived compounds are major contributors to harmful effects, such as toxicity, of industrial wastewaters. Toxicity of wastewaters from pulp and paper mills is briefly evaluated including the methods for toxicity analyses. Traditionally, wastewater purification includes mechanical treatment followed by chemical and/or biological treatment processes. A variety of methods are available for the purification of industrial wastewaters, including aerobic and anaerobic processes. However, some fractions of organic material, such as lignin and its derivatives, are difficult to degrade. Therefore, novel chemical methods, including electrochemical and oxidation processes, have been developed for separate use or in combination with biological treatment processes. peerReviewed
- Published
- 2015
19. Logic-Independent Proof Search in Logical Frameworks: (Short Paper)
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Michael Kohlhase, Jan Frederik Schaefer, Claudio Sacerdoti Coen, Florian Rabe, Kohlhase M., Rabe F., Sacerdoti Coen C., and Schaefer J.F.
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Natural deduction ,Syntax (programming languages) ,Programming language ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Inference ,0102 computer and information sciences ,Gas meter prover ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,Automation ,Prolog ,Feature (linguistics) ,TheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGES ,proof search logical framework lambda-prolog logic programming ,010201 computation theory & mathematics ,TheoryofComputation_LOGICSANDMEANINGSOFPROGRAMS ,Rule of inference ,business ,computer ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Logical frameworks like LF allow to specify the syntax and (natural deduction) inference rules for syntax/proof-checking a wide variety of logical systems. A crucial feature that is missing for prototyping logics is a way to specify basic proof automation. We try to alleviate this problem by generating \(\lambda \)Prolog (ELPI) inference predicates from logic specifications and controlling them by logic-independent helper predicates that encapsulate the prover characteristics. We show the feasibility of the approach with three experiments: We directly automate ND calculi, we generate tableau theorem provers and model generators.
- Published
- 2020
20. Usability of virtual reality for basic design education: a comparative study with paper-based design
- Author
-
Elif Surer, Yasemin Afacan, Dilay Seda Özgen, Özgen, Dilay Seda, and Afacan, Yasemin
- Subjects
Basic design education ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Usability ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,General Engineering ,Educational technology ,050301 education ,02 engineering and technology ,Virtual reality ,Technology acceptance model ,Science education ,Interior architecture ,Education ,Design education ,Human–computer interaction ,business ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Curriculum ,021106 design practice & management - Abstract
Virtual reality (VR) is an emerging technology that is being used in a wide range of fields such as medicine, gaming, psychology and sociology. The use of VR is promising in the field of education and requires investigation, but research on the use of VR in education is still limited. This enables the exploration of new territories, and design education is one of them. Design education, an important part of the curriculum of architecture students who aim to conceptualize problem-solving, is still taught using traditional methodologies with touches of digital technologies. Thus, there is limited research into the implementation of VR. This study proposes using VR in basic design education and focuses on the usability of VR, especially for problem-solving activities. It presents the literature on basic design education of digital approaches, VR technologies, usability criteria and the technology acceptance model. In order to analyse the usability of VR, we conducted an experimental study with 20 first-year interior architecture and architecture students. We found that, statistically, there is a significant difference in terms of ‘the intention to use’ and ‘the perceived enjoyment’ between the VR group and the paper-based group. Moreover, there is, statistically, a difference in effectiveness within the paper-based group and the VR-based group when one compares the success of two types of design problems in the same group. Thus, one can summarize that using VR can strongly enhance problem-solving activities in interior architecture and for architecture students and that one can consider it to be a promising and complementary tool in basic design education.
- Published
- 2019
21. Tech United Eindhoven @Home 2019 champions paper
- Author
-
van der Burgh, M.F.B., Lunenburg, J.J.M., Appeldoorn, R.P.W., van Beek, L.L.A.M., Geijsberts, J., Janssen, L.G.L., van Dooren, P., van Rooy, H.W.A.M., Aggarwal, A., Aleksandrov, S., Dang, K., Hofkamp, A. T., van Dinther, D., van de Molengraft, M.J.G., Chalup, Stephan, Niemueller, Tim, Suthakorn, Jackrit, Williams, Mary-Anne, Mechanical Engineering, Control Systems Technology, and Electromechanics and Power Electronics
- Subjects
business.industry ,Interface (Java) ,Computer science ,Deep learning ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Object (computer science) ,Object detection ,Human–computer interaction ,Conversation ,Artificial intelligence ,State (computer science) ,business ,Natural language ,media_common - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the main developments of the Tech United Eindhoven RoboCup @Home team. Tech United uses an advanced world modeling system called the Environment Descriptor. It allows straightforward implementation of localization, navigation, exploration, object detection & recognition, object manipulation and robot-robot cooperation skills based on the most recent state of the world. Other important features include object and people detection via deep learning methods, a GUI, speech recognition, natural language interpretation and a chat interface combined with a conversation engine. Recent developments that aided with obtaining the victory during RoboCup 2019 include pointing detection, usage of HSR’s display, a people detector and the addition of a custom keyboard in the chat interface.
- Published
- 2019
22. The challenges of the expanded availability of genomic information : an agenda-setting paper
- Author
-
Matthias Wjst, Álvaro Mendes, Danya F. Vears, Heike Felzmann, Heather Skirton, Brígida Riso, Heidi Carmen Howard, Heidi Beate Bentzen, Masha Shabani, Sigrid Sterckx, Borut Peterlin, Martina C. Cornel, Isabelle Budin-Ljøsne, Pascal Borry, Deborah Mascalzoni, Oliver Feeney, Leigh Jackson, APH - Quality of Care, APH - Personalized Medicine, Human genetics, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D), and Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,relatives ,generation sequencing technologies ,Knowledge management ,DISCLOSURE ,Epidemiology ,research participants ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Return of results ,Direct-to-consumer genetic testing ,GENETIC INFORMATION ,Health care ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Informed consent ,Genetics (clinical) ,UNITED-KINGDOM ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Ciências Médicas::Medicina Clínica [Domínio/Área Científica] ,Environmental resource management ,Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology ,Genomics ,3. Good health ,Original Article ,disclosure ,medicine.medical_specialty ,health-care ,united-kingdom ,Ciências Médicas::Ciências da Saúde [Domínio/Área Científica] ,RELATIVES ,ETHICAL-ISSUES ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Law and Political Science ,Genetic testing ,Clinical and research genomic data ,Government ,genetic information ,business.industry ,Public health ,RESEARCH PARTICIPANTS ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Bioethics ,GENERATION SEQUENCING TECHNOLOGIES ,REPORTING PRACTICES ,Data sharing ,Folkhälsovetenskap, global hälsa, socialmedicin och epidemiologi ,030104 developmental biology ,reporting practices ,HEALTH-CARE ,DYNAMIC CONSENT ,dynamic consent ,business ,Clinical And Research Genomic Data ,Data Sharing ,Direct-to-consumer Genetic Testing ,Informed Consent ,Return Of Results ,ethical-issues - Abstract
Rapid advances in microarray and sequencing technologies are making genotyping and genome sequencing more affordable and readily available. There is an expectation that genomic sequencing technologies improve personalized diagnosis and personalized drug therapy. Concurrently, provision of direct-to-consumer genetic testing by commercial providers has enabled individuals’ direct access to their genomic data. The expanded availability of genomic data is perceived as influencing the relationship between the various parties involved including healthcare professionals, researchers, patients, individuals, families, industry, and government. This results in a need to revisit their roles and responsibilities. In a 1-day agenda-setting meeting organized by the COST Action IS1303 “Citizen’s Health through public-private Initiatives: Public health, Market and Ethical perspectives,” participants discussed the main challenges associated with the expanded availability of genomic information, with a specific focus on public-private partnerships, and provided an outline from which to discuss in detail the identified challenges. This paper summarizes the points raised at this meeting in five main parts and highlights the key cross-cutting themes. In light of the increasing availability of genomic information, it is expected that this paper will provide timely direction for future research and policy making in this area. Funding Deborah Mascalzoni is supported under Grant Agreement number 305444. Álvaro Mendes is supported by the FCT—The Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology under postdoctoral grant SFRH/BPD/88647/2012. Isabelle Budin-Ljøsne receives support from the National Research and Innovation Platform for Personalized Cancer Medicine funded by The Research Council of Norway (NFR BIOTEK2021/ES495029) and Biobank Norway funded by The Research Council of Norway—grant number 245464. Heidi Carmen Howard is partly supported by supported by the Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Science under grant M13-0260:1), the Biobanking and Molecular Resource Infrastructure of Sweden (BBMRI.se) and the BBMRI-ERIC. Brígida Riso is supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under the PhD grant SFRH/BD/100779/2014. Heidi Beate Bentzen receives support from the project Legal Regulation of Information Processing relating to Personalized Cancer Medicine funded by The Research Council of Norway BIOTEK2021/238999.
- Published
- 2018
23. Service Level Management for executable papers
- Author
-
Cushing, R., Koulouzis, S., Strijkers, R., Belloum, A.S.Z., Bubak, M., Alexander, M., D' Ambra, P., Belloum, A., Bosilca, G., Cannataro, M., Danelutto, M., Di Martino, B., Gerndt, M., Jeannot, E., Namyst, R., Roman, J., Scott, S.L., Larsson Traff, J., Vallée, G., Weidendorfer, J., Computational Science Lab (IVI, FNWI), and System and Network Engineering (IVI, FNWI)
- Subjects
Focus (computing) ,Service (systems architecture) ,Communication & Information ,TS - Technical Sciences ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Context (language use) ,computer.file_format ,Information Society ,BIS - Business Information Services ,computer.software_genre ,Computer security ,Reproducibility ,Executable papers ,Vital ICT Infrastructure ,Virtual machine ,Service level ,Executable ,Data storage ,Software engineering ,business ,computer ,Scientific Publications - Abstract
Reproducibility of Science is considered as one of the main principles of the scientific method, and refers to the ability of an experiment to be accurately reproduced, by third person, in complex experiment every detail matters to ensure the correct reproducibility. In the context of the ICCS 2011, Elsevier organized the executable paper grand challenge a contest to improve the way scientific information is communicated and used. While during this contest the focus was on developing methods and technique to realize the idea of executable papers, in this paper we focus on the operational issues related to the creation a viable service with a predefined QoS.
- Published
- 2012
24. Technology Assessment of Socio-Technical Futures: A Discussion Paper
- Author
-
Loesch, Andreas, Boehle, Knud, Coenen, Christopher, Dobroc, Paulina, Heil, Reinhard, Grunwald, Armin, Scheer, Dirk, Schneider, Christoph, Ferrari, Ariana, Hommrich, Dirk, Sand, Martin, Aykut, Stefan, Dickel, Sascha, Fuchs, Daniela, Kastenhofer, Karen, Torgersen, Helge, Gransche, Bruno, Hausstein, Alexandra, Konrad, Kornelia, Nordmann, Alfred, Schaper-Rinkel, Petra, Schulz-Schaeffer, Ingo, Wentland, Alexander, Meister, Martin, and Science, Technology & Policy Studies
- Subjects
Functional role ,Technological research ,Vision ,Civil society ,Politics ,Sociotechnical system ,business.industry ,Political science ,Technology assessment ,Public relations ,business ,Futures contract ,ddc - Abstract
Problem: Visions of technology, future scenarios, guiding visions (Leitbilder) represent imaginations of future states of affairs that play a functional role in processes of technological research, development and innovation—e.g. as a means to create attention, communication, coordination, or for the strategic exertion of influence. Since a couple of years there is a growing attention for such imaginations of futures in politics, the economy, research and the civil society. This trend concerns technology assessment (TA) as an observer of these processes and a consultant on the implications of technology and innovation. TA faces increasing demands to assess imaginations of futures that circulate in the present and to participate in shaping these through scenarios or foresights. More than ever, this raises the question, which propositions can be made based on these imaginations by TA and how this can be used in advisory practices. Imaginations of futures are relevant for TA not as predictions but in their significance and effectiveness in the present, which need to be understood and assessed.
- Published
- 2019
25. Smart Papers: Dynamic publications on the Blockchain
- Author
-
Huw Fryer, Elena Simperl, Michał R. Hoffman, and Luis-Daniel Ibáñez
- Subjects
Distrust ,business.industry ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Cornerstone ,02 engineering and technology ,Bibliometrics ,Data science ,Workflow ,Trustworthiness ,Publishing ,020204 information systems ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,business ,Cost implications ,media_common - Abstract
Distributed Ledgers (DLs), also known as blockchains, provide decentralised, tamper-free registries of transactions among partners that distrust each other. For the scientific community, DLs have been proposed to decentralise and make more transparent each step of the scientific workflow. For the particular case of dissemination and peer-reviewing, DLs can provide the cornerstone to realise open decentralised publishing systems where social interactions between peers are tamper-free, enabling trustworthy computation of bibliometrics. In this paper, we propose the use of DL-backed smart contracts to track a subset of social interactions for scholarly publications in a decentralised and reliable way, yielding Smart Papers. We show how our Smart Papers approach complements current models for decentralised publishing, and analyse cost implications.
- Published
- 2018
26. Expert opinion paper on atrial fibrillation detection after ischemic stroke
- Author
-
Michael Böhm, Roland Veltkamp, Joachim Röther, Hans-Christoph Diener, Manfred Kaps, Christian H. Nolte, Waltraud Pfeilschifter, Stefan D. Anker, Christian Gerloff, Wolfram Doehner, Martin Köhrmann, Johannes Brachmann, Paulus Kirchhof, Matthias Endres, D. G. Nabavi, Thorsten Steiner, Burkert Pieske, Ulrich Laufs, Renate B. Schnabel, Götz Thomalla, Klaus Gröschel, Hagen B. Huttner, Sven Poli, Rolf Wachter, Karl Georg Haeusler, and Wolf Rüdiger Schäbitz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,complications [Atrial Fibrillation] ,Medizin ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Brain Ischemia ,Brain ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,Secondary Prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,ddc:610 ,Intensive care medicine ,Stroke ,Expert Testimony ,business.industry ,diagnosis [Atrial Fibrillation] ,Atrial fibrillation ,General Medicine ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,etiology [Brain Ischemia] ,Ecg monitoring ,Expert opinion ,methods [Secondary Prevention] ,Ischemic stroke ,Cardiology ,Electrocardiography, Ambulatory ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This expert opinion paper on atrial fibrillation detection after ischemic stroke includes a statement of the "Heart and Brain" consortium of the German Cardiac Society and the German Stroke Society. This paper was endorsed by the Stroke Unit-Commission of the German Stroke Society and the German Atrial Fibrillation NETwork. In patients with ischemic stroke, detection of atrial fibrillation should usually lead to a change in secondary stroke prevention, since oral anticoagulation is superior to antiplatelet drugs. The detection of previously undiagnosed atrial fibrillation can be improved in patients with ischemic stroke to optimize stroke prevention. This paper summarizes the present knowledge on atrial fibrillation detection after ischemic stroke. We propose an interdisciplinary standard for a "structured analysis of ECG monitoring" on the stroke unit as well as a staged diagnostic scheme for the detection of atrial fibrillation. Since the optimal duration and mode of ECG monitoring has not yet been finally established, this paper is intended to give advice to physicians who are involved in stroke care. In line with the nature of an expert opinion paper, labeling of classes of recommendations is not provided, since many statements are based on the expert opinion, reported case series and clinical experience. Therefore, this paper is not intended as a guideline.
- Published
- 2018
27. Waves of Technological Innovation:The Evolution of the US Pulp and Paper Industry, 1860-2000
- Author
-
Hannes Toivanen, Lamberg, Juha-Antti, Ojala, Jari, Peltoniemi, Mirva, and Särkkä, Timo
- Subjects
Engineering ,Forge ,Depression (economics) ,business.industry ,Competitor analysis ,Shipping container ,business ,Pulp and paper industry ,Vertical integration - Abstract
Technological innovation, big and small, has played a critical role in the evolution of the modern United States pulp and paper industry since its origins in the early nineteenth century. New technological knowledge and its implementation, more than anything else, gave entrepreneurs, firms, industries, and whole regions, the ability to create or capture new markets, or erect new production hubs, and to forge ahead competitors.
- Published
- 2012
28. Interactive Paper as a Reading Medium in Digital Libraries
- Author
-
Moira C. Norrie, Beat Signer, Nadir Weibel, Informatics and Applied Informatics, and Web and Information System Engineering
- Subjects
Paper document ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Process (computing) ,Hyperlink ,Digital library ,computer.software_genre ,Digital media ,World Wide Web ,Reading (process) ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,business ,computer ,Portable document format ,media_common - Abstract
In digital libraries, much of the reading activity is still done on printed copies of documents. We show how digital pen and paper technologies can be used to support readers by automatically creating interactive paper versions of digital documents during the printing process that enable users to activate embedded hyperlinks to other documents and services from printed versions. The approach uses a special printer driver that allows information about hyperlinks to be extracted and stored at print time. Users can then activate hyperlinks in the printed document with a digital pen.
- Published
- 2008
29. Quantity versus impact of software engineering papers: a quantitative study
- Author
-
Vahid Garousi, João M. Fernandes, and Universidade do Minho
- Subjects
Research impact ,Computer science ,Exploratory research ,Scopus ,Library and Information Sciences ,Bibliometrics ,050905 science studies ,Publication ,Exploratory study ,Software engineering ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Engenharia Eletrotécnica, Eletrónica e Informática [Engenharia e Tecnologia] ,Countries ,Computer Science Applications ,Research questions ,Metric (unit) ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,business ,Citation ,Authors ,Engenharia e Tecnologia::Engenharia Eletrotécnica, Eletrónica e Informática - Abstract
According to the data from the Scopus publication database, as analyzed in several recent studies, more than 70,000 papers have been published in the area of Software Engineering (SE) since late 1960’s. According to our recent work, 43% of those papers have received no citations at all. Since citations are the most commonly used metric for measuring research (academic) impact, these figures raise questions (doubts) about the (non-existing) impact of such a large set of papers. It is a reality that typical academic reward systems encourage researchers to publish more papers and do not place a major emphasis on research impact. To shed light on the issue of volume (quantity) versus citation-based impact of SE research papers, we conduct and report in this paper a quantitative bibliometrics assessment in four aspects: (1) quantity versus impact of different paper types (e.g., conference versus journal papers), (2) ratios of uncited (non-impactful) papers, (3) quantity versus impact of papers originating from different countries, and (4) quantity versus impact of papers by each of the top-10 authors (in terms of number of papers). To achieve the above objective, we conducted a quantitative exploratory bibliometrics assessment, comprised of four research questions, to assess quantity versus impact of SE papers with respect to the aspects discussed above. We extracted the data through a systematic, automated and repeatable process from the Scopus paper database, which we also used in two previous papers. Our results show that the distribution of SE publications has a major inequality in terms of impact overall, and also when categorized in terms of the above four aspects. The situation in the SE literature is similar to the other areas of science as studied by previous bibliometrics studies. Also, among our results is the fact that journal articles and conference papers have been cited 12.6 and 3.6 times on average, confirming the expectation that journal articles have more impact, in general, than conference papers. Also, papers originated from English-speaking countries have in general more visibility and impact (and consequently citations) when compared to papers originated from non-English-speaking countries. Our results have implications for improvement of academic reward systems, which nowadays mainly encourage researchers to publish more papers and usually neglect research impact. Also, our results can help researchers in non-English-speaking countries to consider improvements to increase their research impact of their upcoming papers., Vahid Garousi was partially supported by several internal grants provided by the Hacettepe University and the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK). Joao M. Fernandes was supported by FCT - Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia within the Project Scope UID/CEC/00319/2013.
- Published
- 2017
30. Computer Games: 5th Workshop on Computer Games, CGW 2016, and 5th Workshop on General Intelligence in Game-Playing Agents, GIGA 2016, held in conjunction with the 25th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IJCAI 2016, New York, USA, July 9-10, 2016, Revised selected papers
- Author
-
Tristan Cazenave, Stephan Schiffel, Stefan Edelkamp, Michael Thielscher, Julian Togelius, Mark H. M. Winands, DKE Scientific staff, and RS: FSE DACS NSO
- Subjects
Artificial intelligence ,Computational creativity ,Knowledge representation and reasoning ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Computer games ,Perfect information ,Combinatorial game theory ,ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING ,Computer game ,Giga ,Conjunction (grammar) ,Game design ,business - Abstract
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 5th Computer Games Workshop, CGW 2016, and the 5th Workshop on General Intelligence in Game-Playing Agents, GIGA 2016, held in conjunction with the 25th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IJCAI 2016, in New York, USA, in July 2016.The 12 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 25 submissions. The papers address all aspects of artificial intelligence and computer game playing. They discuss topics such as Monte-Carlo methods; heuristic search; board games; card games; video games; perfect and imperfect information games; puzzles and single player games; multi-player games; combinatorial game theory; applications; computational creativity; computational game theory; evaluation and analysis; game design; knowledge representation; machine learning; multi-agent systems; opponent modeling; planning.
- Published
- 2017
31. Service-Oriented Computing - ICSOC 2016 Workshops - ASOCA, ISyCC, BSCI, and Satellite Events, Banff, AB, Canada, October 10-13, 2016. Revised Selected Papers
- Author
-
Hongbing Wang, Mohamed Mohamed, Qi Yu, Yan Wang, François Charoy, Sami Bhiri, Jan Mendling, Zhongjie Wang, Yuhong Yan, and Khalil Drira
- Subjects
502050 Wirtschaftsinformatik ,Computer science ,computer.internet_protocol ,business.industry ,Service-oriented architecture ,Software engineering ,business ,502050 Business informatics ,computer - Published
- 2017
32. Regulation and registration as drivers of continuous professional competence for Irish pre-hospital practitioners: a discussion paper
- Author
-
Colum P. Dunne, M. Hughes, S. Cheeseman, Suzanne S. Dunne, and Shane Knox
- Subjects
Reflective practice ,Ambulances ,education ,competence ,Allied Health Personnel ,CINAHL ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,continuous professional development ,Nursing ,Irish ,Online search ,Health care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Competence (human resources) ,advanced paramedic ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,General Medicine ,Professional competence ,professionalism ,paramedic ,emergency medical technician ,humanities ,language.human_language ,Hospitals ,Emergency Medical Technicians ,Continuing professional development ,language ,Clinical Competence ,business ,Ireland - Abstract
peer-reviewed Background The Regulatory Body responsible for the registration of Irish pre-hospital practitioners, the Pre-Hospital Emergency Care Council (PHECC), identified the need to implement a continuing professional competence (CPC) framework. The first cycle of CPC (focused on Emergency Medical Technicians) commenced in November 2013 creating for the first time a formal relationship between continuing competence and registration to practice. Aims To review current literature and to describe benefits and challenges relevant to CPC, regulation, registration and their respective contributions to professionalism of pre-hospital practitioners: advanced paramedics, paramedics and emergency medical technicians. Methods Online search of Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL Plus with Full Text), Allied and Complementary Medicine (AMED) and ‘Pubmed’ databases using: ‘Continuous Professional Development’; ‘Continuous Professional Development’; ‘emergency medical technician’; ‘paramedic’; ‘registration’; ‘regulation’; and “profession’ for relevant articles published since 2004. Additional policy documents, discussion papers, and guidance documents were identified from bibliographies of papers found. Results Reports, governmental policies for other healthcare professions, and professional developments internationally for allied professions (e.g., nursing, physiotherapy and medicine) link maintenance of competence with requirements for registration to practice. Conclusion We suggest that evolving professionalisation of Irish paramedics should be affirmed through behaviours and competencies that incorporate adherence to professional codes of conduct, reflective practice, and commitment to continuing professional development. While the need for ambulance practitioner CPD was identified in Ireland almost a decade ago, PHECC now has the opportunity to introduce a model of CPD for paramedics linking competence and professionalism to annual registration ACCEPTED peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2016
33. Paper 'work' and electronic files: Defending professional practice
- Author
-
Lee Komito
- Subjects
Information sharing ,Knowledge management ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Electronic documents ,Strategy and Management ,Internet privacy ,Electronic document ,Information technology ,Information security ,Library and Information Sciences ,Paper documents ,Information science ,Management information systems ,Information system ,Information systems ,Strategic information system ,business ,Information Systems - Abstract
Paper documents are often described as ‘information rich’, in contrast with electronic documents. This ethnographic study examines Lotus NOTES in a sub-section of the Irish civil service, with particular reference to the concurrent use of electronic and paper documents. The sub-section examines disagreements with regard to claims by Irish citizens for particular government benefits. The study describes how meta-information contained in paper case files is perceived as necessary for the work of the organization, thus restricting the use of electronic case files in NOTES as a shared information system. However, this reliance on paper files derives not only from the information rich properties of paper documents, but also from the desire of some workers to protect their occupational status by defining, as necessary for their job, information which is only available in paper documents and which only they can interpret. This dependence on paper documents also reduces the amount of information that can be shared within the organization. This paper suggests that, only if the perceived threat posed by the information system were reduced in some way would user innovations in work practices and greater sharing of information within the organization become possible.
- Published
- 1998
34. Type-based useless-code elimination for functional programs - Position paper
- Author
-
Paola Giannini, Ferruccio Damiani, Stefano Berardi, and Mario Coppo
- Subjects
Functional programming ,Program analysis ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Formal specification ,Optimizing compiler ,Position paper ,Type inference ,Program optimization ,Software engineering ,business ,Algorithm ,Type constructor - Abstract
In this paper we present a survey of the work on type-based useless-code elimination for higher-order functional programs. After some historical remarks on the motivations and early approaches we give an informal but complete account of the techniques and results developed at the Computer Science Department of the University of Torino. In particular, we focus on the fact that, for each of the type-based techniques developed, there is an optimal program simplification.
- Published
- 2000
35. Optimization in the Natural Sciences: 30th Euro Mini-Conference, EmC-ONS 2014, Aveiro, Portugal, February 5-9, 2014: revised selected papers
- Author
-
Adelaide Freitas, Tatiana Tchemisova, and Alexander Plakhov
- Subjects
Engineering ,business.industry ,Natural science ,Library science ,business - Abstract
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 30th Euro Mini-Conference, EmC-ONS 2014, held in Aveiro, Portugal, in February 2014. The 13 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 70 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on dynamical systems; optimization and applications; modeling and statistical techniques for data analysis.
- Published
- 2015
36. Adaptive Multimedia Retrieval: Semantics, Context, and Adaptation:10th International Workshop, AMR 2012, Copenhagen, Denmark, October 24-25, 2012, Revised Selected Papers
- Author
-
Marcin Detyniecki, Andreas Nürnberger, Birger Larsen, Sebastian Storber, Nürnberger, Andreas, Storber, Sebastian, Larsen, Birger, and Detyniecki, Marcin
- Subjects
Multimedia search ,InformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.,HCI) ,Computer science ,Decision Support ,Context (language use) ,Automatic Speech Recognition ,Image Retrieval ,computer.software_genre ,Semantics ,Feature Extraction ,Question Answering ,Audio Transcription ,Machine Learning ,Semantic-based Indexing ,Question answering ,Visual Word ,Adaptation (computer science) ,Image retrieval ,Information retrieval ,Multimedia ,Multimedia Search ,business.industry ,Semantic-based Multimedia Retrieval ,Video Retrieval ,Music Similarity ,Hybrid Recommender Systems ,Human–computer information retrieval ,Signal Processing ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Natural language processing - Abstract
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Adaptive Multimedia Retrieval, AMR 2012, held in Copenhagen, Denmark, in October 2012.The 17 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from numerous submissions. The papers cover topics of state of the art contributions, features and classification, location context, language and semantics, music retrieval, and adaption and HCI.
- Published
- 2014
37. Computer Games: Workshop on Computer Games, CGW 2013, Held in Conjunction with the 23rd International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IJCAI 2013, Beijing, China, August 3, 2013, Revised selected papers
- Author
-
Tristan Cazenave, Hiroyuki Iida, Mark H. M. Winands, DKE Scientific staff, RS: FSE DACS NSO, Laboratoire d'analyse et modélisation de systèmes pour l'aide à la décision (LAMSADE), Université Paris Dauphine-PSL, and Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
Game playing ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Domineering ,Music and artificial intelligence ,Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) ,Computer games ,ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING ,Monte-Carlo methods ,game tree search ,Theory of Computation ,computer.software_genre ,artificial intelligence ,Conjunction (grammar) ,General game playing ,Game tree search ,Beijing ,Computer Science ,[INFO]Computer Science [cs] ,Personal Computing ,Artificial intelligence ,game playing ,China ,business ,computer - Abstract
International audience; This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Computer Games Workshop, CGW 2013, held in Beijing, China, in August 2013, in conjunction with the Twenty-third International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IJCAI 2013. The 9 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 15 submissions. The papers cover a wide range of topics related to computer games. They discuss six games that are played by humans in practice: Chess, Domineering, Chinese Checkers, Go, Goofspiel, and Tzaar. Moreover, there are papers about the Sliding Tile Puzzle, an application, namely, Cooperative Path-Finding Problems, and on general game playing.
- Published
- 2014
38. Brain-Inspired Computing: International Workshop, BrainComp 2013, Cetraro, Italy, July 8-11, 2013, Revised Selected Papers
- Author
-
Nicolai Petkov, Thomas A. Lippert, Lucio Grandinetti, and Intelligent Systems
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Computer science ,business.industry ,brain models - brain-inspired computing - cognitive arcitectures - computational models - computational neuroscience - high performance computing - human brain simulations - machine learning - neural networks - robotics - saliency map - simulation theory of cognition - spiking neural network - visualization ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,02 engineering and technology ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,030304 developmental biology - Published
- 2014
39. Interfacing visual and verbal narrative art in paper and digital media: Recontextualising literature and literacies
- Author
-
Len Unsworth
- Subjects
Literature ,Interpretative possibilities ,Narrative art ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Animation ,Art ,Aesthetic and interpretative literacies ,Variety (linguistics) ,The arts ,Literacy ,Digital media ,Multimodality ,Visual arts ,Narrative ,Children’s picture books ,ComputerApplications_MISCELLANEOUS ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Appreciating the aesthetics of visual and verbal art in picture books, illustrated stories and movie adaptations is a crucial aspect of literacy in the arts, as traditional and new cultural narratives are created and re-created in a variety of artistic forms. This chapter discusses three well-known illustrated literary narratives and animated adaptations, showing how subtle variation in the visual art of different versions of ostensibly the same story can effect significant shifts in interpretive possibilities. The significance of developing aesthetic, interpretive literacies for cultural engagement with such stories, and implications for teaching and researching new forms of multimodal literacies in schooling are addressed.
- Published
- 2014
40. Alcohol screening and brief intervention among drug users in primary care : a discussion paper
- Author
-
Jan Klimas, Gerard Bury, Joseph Barry, Catherine Anne Field, Walter Cullen, Bobby P Smyth, Suzi Lyons, and Eamon Keenan
- Subjects
Drug ,Problem drug use ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Medical screening ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Alternative medicine ,MEDLINE ,Directive Counseling ,Alcohol ,Primary care ,Drug Users ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Psychiatry ,Mass screening ,Primary care (Medicine) ,media_common ,Drug abusers--Alcohol use ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Alcoholism ,chemistry ,Screening and brief intervention ,Brief intervention ,business ,Alcohol-Related Disorders ,Problem alcohol use - Abstract
Background problem alcohol use is common among problem drug users (PDU) and associated with adverse health outcomes. Primary care has an important role in the overall stepped approach to alcohol treatment, especially screening and brief intervention (SBI). Aim To discuss three themes that emerged from an exploration of the literature on SBI for problem alcohol use in drug users attending primary care. Methods material for this discussion paper was gathered from three biomedical databases (PubMed, PsycINFO and Cochrane library), conference proceedings and online resources of professional organisations or national health agencies. Themes discussed in this paper are: (a) the potential of primary care for delivery of alcohol SBIs to PDUs, (b) screening methods and (c) application of brief interventions to PDUs. Although SBI improves health outcomes associated with problem alcohol use in the general population, further research is needed among high-risk patient groups, especially PDUs. Health Research Board 12M embargo - release after 24/08/2012 - AV 21/10/2011 au, ke, ab - kpw10/11/11 Embargo update in line with published version - OR 22/02/2013
- Published
- 2012
41. Deconstructing doctoral dissertations : how many papers does it take to make a PhD?
- Author
-
Nils Thorstein Hagen
- Subjects
Bibliometric counting ,De facto ,Actuarial science ,Post hoc ,Operations research ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Bibliometry ,General Social Sciences ,Social Sciences(all) ,Successful completion ,Library and Information Sciences ,Benchmark ,Article ,Scientific productivity ,Computer Science Applications ,Bias ,Baseline ,Norm (social) ,Baseline (configuration management) ,business ,Quality assurance ,Law ,Social science: 200::Library and information science: 320::Bibliometrics: 324 [VDP] - Abstract
A collection of coauthored papers is the new norm for doctoral dissertations in the natural and biomedical sciences, yet there is no consensus on how to partition authorship credit between PhD candidates and their coauthors. Guidelines for PhD programs vary but tend to specify only a suggested range for the number of papers to be submitted for evaluation, sometimes supplemented with a requirement for the PhD candidate to be the principal author on the majority of submitted papers. Here I use harmonic counting to quantify the actual amount of authorship credit attributable to individual PhD graduates from two Scandinavian universities in 2008. Harmonic counting corrects for the inherent inflationary and equalizing biases of routine counting methods, thereby allowing the bibliometrically identifiable amount of authorship credit in approved dissertations to be analyzed with unprecedented accuracy. Unbiased partitioning of authorship credit between graduates and their coauthors provides a post hoc bibliometric measure of current PhD requirements, and sets a de facto baseline for the requisite scientific productivity of these contemporary PhD’s at a median value of approximately 1.6 undivided papers per dissertation. Comparison with previous census data suggests that the baseline has shifted over the past two decades as a result of a decrease in the number of submitted papers per candidate and an increase in the number of coauthors per paper. A simple solution to this shifting baseline syndrome would be to benchmark the amount of unbiased authorship credit deemed necessary for successful completion of a specific PhD program, and then monitor for departures from this level over time. Harmonic partitioning of authorship credit also facilitates cross-disciplinary and inter-institutional analysis of the scientific output from different PhD programs. Juxtaposing bibliometric benchmarks with current baselines may thus assist the development of harmonized guidelines and transparent transnational quality assurance procedures for doctoral programs by providing a robust and meaningful standard for further exploration of the causes of intra- and inter-institutional variation in the amount of unbiased authorship credit per dissertation. Paid Open Access
- Published
- 2010
42. A Social Software-Based Coordination Platform. Tool Paper
- Author
-
Davide Rossi, MARJAN SIRJANI, and D. Rossi
- Subjects
Process modeling ,Knowledge management ,business.industry ,Microblogging ,Computer science ,Best practice ,Social software ,020207 software engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,WEB TECHNOLOGIES ,computer.software_genre ,Business process management ,020204 information systems ,COORDINATION MODELS AND LAGUAGES ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Social media ,Explicit knowledge ,BUSINESS PROCESS MANAGEMENT ,Representation (mathematics) ,business ,Set (psychology) ,SOCIAL SOFTWARE ,computer - Abstract
Organizational best practices are unstructured, emergent processes that freely coordinate actors engaged in reaching organizations' goals. In recent years we are witnessing the wide adoption of social software (blogs, microblogs, wiki, forums, shared calendars, etc.) as primary technological tools to support organizational best practices, fostering their creation, evolution and sharing, allowing their continuous refinement and alignment with the organization's mission and evolving know-how. While organizational best practices and social software tools are good candidates to support specific processes within the organization (and among organizations) they also present several issues, when compared to classic BPM tools - those based on structured coordination and well-defined process models: since they have no explicit representation it is hard to analyze them (by analytic techniques or by simulation), to monitor their evolution and to support their execution; moreover it is hard to extract explicit knowledge from them. In this paper we present a set of tools that complement social software in creating a real coordination platform, mitigating some of the aforementioned issues.
- Published
- 2012
43. Mobile Lightweight Wireless Systems:Third International ICST Conference, MOBILIGHT 2011, Bilbao, Spain, May 9-10, 2011, Revised Selected Papers
- Author
-
Sancho Salcedo Sanz, Daniel P. Palomar, Joaquín Míguez, Sergio Gil-Lopez, Eduard A. Jorswieck, Marja Matinmikko, Javier Del Ser, Del Ser, Javier, Jorswieck, Eduard Axel, Miguez, Joaquin, Matinmikko, Marja, Palomar, Daniel P., Salcedo-Sanz, Sancho, and Gil-Lopez, Sergio
- Subjects
Engineering ,business.industry ,Wireless systems ,business ,Telecommunications - Abstract
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the Third International ICST Conference Mobile Lightweight Wireless Systems (MOBILIGHT 2011) held in Bilbao, Spain on May 9-10. 2011.
- Published
- 2012
44. Step towards paper free hospital through electronic health record
- Author
-
Filipe Portela, António Abelha, Rui Pereira, Maria Salazar, Júlio Duarte, Manuel Filipe Santos, José Machado, and Universidade do Minho
- Subjects
Hospital information system ,030213 general clinical medicine ,Service (systems architecture) ,EHR ,020205 medical informatics ,Computer science ,Vital signs ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Health informatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,health services administration ,Health care ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,health care economics and organizations ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,HIMSS ,Information technology ,medicine.disease ,Digital health ,3. Good health ,EMRAM ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Information technology has great potential for transforming the health care system, improving quality of care. With the increasing expansion of health information systems, the Electronic Health Record (EHR) has become one of the finest sources for clinical information aggregators in the context of digital health. The EHR is a core part of a hospital information system, as well as a service on duty of the patient to improve the treatment of patients. It can be considered as a longitudinal electronic record of patient heath information, for example vital signs, medical history or laboratory data, generated by one or more encounters in any care delivery setting. As the EHR offers many potential opportunities for healthcare systems, it is important to take steps to improve the system. With this in mind, a study of the features present on a Portuguese EHR was made. The basis of this study was an adoption model that evaluates the EHR system accordingly to its current features. After this study, the EHR will be ranked into one of the existing eight stages.
- Published
- 2013
45. Memetic Differential Evolution Frameworks in Filter Design for Defect Detection in Paper Production
- Author
-
Ville Tirronen and Ferrante Neri
- Subjects
Engineering ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,Particle swarm optimization ,Image processing ,computer.software_genre ,Filter design ,Differential evolution ,Memetic algorithm ,Data mining ,Artificial intelligence ,Adaptation (computer science) ,business ,computer ,Contraposition (traditional logic) - Abstract
This chapter studies and analyzes Memetic Differential Evolution (MDE) Frameworks for designing digital filters, which aim at detecting paper defects produced during an industrial process. MDE Frameworks employ the Differential Evolution (DE) as an evolutionary framework and a list of local searchers adaptively coordinated by a control scheme. Here, three different variants of MDE are taken into account and their features and performance are compared. The binomial explorative features of the DE framework in contraposition to the exploitative features of the local searcher are analyzed in detail in light of the stagnation prevention problem, typical for the DE. Much emphasis in this chapter is given to the various adaptation systems and to their applicability this image processing problem.
- Published
- 2009
46. Formal Aspects of Security and Trust : 8th International Workshop, FAST 2011, Leuven, Belgium, September 12-14, 2011. Revised Selected Papers
- Author
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Anupam Datta, Gilles Barthe, Sandro Etalle, Mathematics and Computer Science, and Security
- Subjects
Cloud computing security ,Certified Information Security Manager ,business.industry ,Computer science ,IR-83362 ,Data_MISCELLANEOUS ,Internet privacy ,Computer security model ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,EWI-22359 ,Trust ,Security information and event management ,Security service ,Formal Aspects ,Security convergence ,Security ,Trust management (information system) ,Computational trust ,business ,computer - Abstract
Security and trust policy models.- security protocol design and analysis.- formal models of trust and reputation.- logics for security and trust.- distributed trust management systems.- trust-based reasoning.- digital assets protection.- data protection.- privacy and ID issues.- information flow analysis.- language-based security.- security and trust aspects of ubiquitous computing.- validation/analysis tools.- web service security/trust/privacy.- grid security.- security risk assessment.- case studies.
- Published
- 2012
47. Response by the Authors to S. Sakurai’s Discussion of the Paper 'On a Paradox of Elasto-Plastic Tunnel Analysis'
- Author
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Georg Anagnostou and Linard Cantieni
- Subjects
business.industry ,Elasto plastic ,Geology ,Structural engineering ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,business ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
Rock Mechanics and Rock Engineering, 44 (6), ISSN:1434-453X, ISSN:0723-2632
- Published
- 2011
48. Persuasive technology : second international conference on persuasive technology, PERSUASIVE 2007, Palo Alto, CA, USA, April 26-27, 2007 : revised selected papers
- Author
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Cees Midden, Y.A.W. de Kort, WA Wijnand IJsselsteijn, Josephus Hubertus Eggen, B. J. Fogg, Human Technology Interaction, and Industrial Design
- Subjects
Persuasion ,Online participation ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING ,Word of mouth ,Health technology ,Advertising ,Persuasive technology ,Online community ,Social marketing ,The Internet ,InformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUS ,Psychology ,business ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Technology That Motivates Health Behavior.- Persuasion, Task Interruption and Health Regimen Adherence.- Promoting Physical Activity Through Internet: A Persuasive Technology View.- Digital Therapy: The Coming Together of Psychology and Technology Can Create a New Generation of Programs for More Sustainable Behavioral Change.- Designing Persuasion: Health Technology for Low-Income African American Communities.- Persuading People with Video Games.- Fine Tuning the Persuasion in Persuasive Games.- Captivating Patterns - A First Validation.- New Form Factors for Persuasive Technology.- Promoting New Patterns in Household Energy Consumption with Pervasive Learning Games.- iParrot: Towards Designing a Persuasive Agent for Energy Conservation.- The Pet Plant: Developing an Inanimate Emotionally Interactive Tool for the Elderly.- Surrounded by High-Tech Persuasion.- Distributed User Experience in Persuasive Technology Environments.- The PerCues Framework and Its Application for Sustainable Mobility.- Persuasive Technologies Should Be Boring.- Controlling People by Using Digital Punishment.- Electronic Monitoring of Offenders: Can a Wayward Technology Be Redeemed?.- Logical Modeling of Deceptive Negative Persuasion.- Surveillance, Persuasion, and Panopticon.- Technology That Motivates Groups to Unify.- Support Services: Persuading Employees and Customers to Do what Is in the Community's Best Interest.- Improving Cross-Cultural Communication Through Collaborative Technologies.- Group Reactions to Visual Feedback Tools.- Can Brotherhood Be Sold Like Soap...Online? An Online Social Marketing and Advocacy Pilot Study Synopsis.- How Peers Influence You Online.- Social Comparisons to Motivate Contributions to an Online Community.- Can Companies Initiate Positive Word of Mouth? A Field Experiment Examining the Effects of Incentive Magnitude and Equity, and eReferral Mechanisms.- Source Salience and the Persuasiveness of Peer Recommendations: The Mediating Role of Social Trust.- New Insights Into Web Persuasion.- An Examination of the Influence of Involvement Level of Web Site Users on the Perceived Credibility of Web Sites.- Embedded Persuasive Strategies to Obtain Visitors' Data: Comparing Reward and Reciprocity in an Amateur, Knowledge-Based Website.- The Behavior Chain for Online Participation: How Successful Web Services Structure Persuasion.- Persuasive Agents on the Screen.- Exploring Persuasive Potential of Embodied Conversational Agents Utilizing Synthetic Embodied Conversational Agents.- The Importance of Interface Agent Visual Presence: Voice Alone Is Less Effective in Impacting Young Women's Attitudes Toward Engineering.- Embodied Agents on a Website: Modelling an Attitudinal Route of Influence.- Using Digital Images to Persuade.- Is it Me or Is it what I say? Source Image and Persuasion.- Digital Television as Persuasive Technology.- Persuasion Via Mobile Phones.- The Use of Mobile Phones to Support Children's Literacy Learning.- Toward a Systematic Understanding of Suggestion Tactics in Persuasive Technologies.- Insights Into Persuasion Principles.- Modelling a Receiver's Position to Persuasive Arguments.- Persuasive Recommendation: Serial Position Effects in Knowledge-Based Recommender Systems.- Perspectives on Persuasive Technology.- Persuade Into What? Why Human-Computer Interaction Needs a Philosophy of Technology.- Classical Rhetoric and a Limit to Persuasion.- Persuasion Theories and IT Design.
- Published
- 2007
49. Roboethics principles and policies in Europe and North America
- Author
-
Kourosh Zareinia, Sofya Langman, Nicole Capicotto, and Yaser Maddahi
- Subjects
Artificial intelligence ,Technology ,Emerging technologies ,General Chemical Engineering ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,02 engineering and technology ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,GeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUS ,Political science ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,General Materials Science ,General Environmental Science ,Ethics ,Government ,Review Paper ,Governance ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,General Engineering ,Intelligent decision support system ,06 humanities and the arts ,Roboethics ,Robotics ,Graphic design ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Robot ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Engineering ethics ,060301 applied ethics ,business ,Agile software development - Abstract
Robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) are revolutionizing all spheres of human life. From industrial processes to graphic design, the implementation of automated intelligent systems is changing how industries work. The spread of robots and AI systems has triggered academic institutions to closely examine how these technologies may affect the humanity—this is how the fields of roboethics and AI ethics have been born. The identification of ethical issues for robotics and AI and creation of ethical frameworks were the first steps to creating a regulatory environment for these technologies. In this paper, we focus on regulatory efforts in Europe and North America to create enforceable regulation for AI and robotics. We describe and compare ethical principles, policies, and regulations that have been proposed by government organizations for the design and use of robots and AI. We also discuss proposed international regulation for robotics and AI. This paper tries to highlight the need for a comprehensive, enforceable, and agile policy to ethically regulate technology today and in the future. Through reviewing existing policies, we conclude that the European Unition currently leads the way in defining roboethics and AI ethical principles and implementing them into policy. Our findings suggest that governments in Europe and North America are aware of the ethical risks that robotics and AI pose, and are engaged in policymaking to create regulatory policies for these new technologies.
- Published
- 2021
50. Introduction of advanced laparoscopy for peritoneal dialysis catheter placement and the outcome in a University Hospital
- Author
-
Maarten G. J. Snoeijs, Elisabeth J R Litjens, J. H. H. van Laanen, M.M. van Loon, A.G. Peppelenbosch, MUMC+: *HVC European Venous Centre (9), Vascular Surgery, MUMC+: MA Nefrologie (9), RS: Carim - V03 Regenerative and reconstructive medicine vascular disease, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Vaatchirurgie (9), and MUMC+: MA Med Staf Artsass Vaatchirurgie (9)
- Subjects
Nephrology ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Catheters ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Peritoneal dialysis ,Omentopexy ,law.invention ,Catheterization ,Hospitals, University ,Catheters, Indwelling ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Nephrology - Original Paper ,Humans ,Laparoscopy ,Advanced laparoscopy ,Fixation (histology) ,COMPLICATIONS ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,SURGICAL PLACEMENT ,OMENTOPEXY ,Surgical technique ,Functional outcome ,University hospital ,Surgery ,Catheter ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,business ,Catheter fixation - Abstract
Background Peritoneal dialysis (PD) catheters can be obstructed by omental wrapping or migration, leading to catheter malfunction. Multiple catheter placement techniques have been described. Advanced laparoscopy with fixation of the catheter and omentum has been reported to improve functional outcome compared to basic laparoscopy without fixation. This feasibility study describes surgical technique, complications, and comparison of the functional outcome of advanced versus basic laparoscopic catheter placement. Methods Between July 2016 and April 2019, the advanced laparoscopy technique was applied in all eligible patients. Two experienced surgeons placed the catheters in a standardized procedure. Peri-operative complications and functional outcome of the catheter were scored. Results were compared to a historical cohort retrieved from our RCT performed earlier using basic laparoscopy. Findings The basic laparoscopic group (BLG) consisted of 46 patients and the advanced laparoscopic group (ALG) of 32. Complication rate in both groups was similar and low with 7% in the BLG and 6% in the ALG (p = 1.0). There was a trend toward better functional catheter outcome in the ALG (88%) compared to the BLG (70%) (p = 0.1). Part of the catheter failures in the ALG could be related to the learning curve. After revision surgery, 94% of patients in the ALG had a functional catheter. These findings lead to the set-up of a multi-center randomized-controlled trial, currently running, comparing basic to advanced laparoscopic techniques.
- Published
- 2022
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