991 results on '"Boggero A"'
Search Results
2. Occupations associated with treatment seeking and biopsychosocial functioning at a tertiary orofacial pain clinic: A cross-sectional study
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Sangalli, Linda, Alessandri-Bonetti, Anna, Kapos, Flavia P., and Boggero, Ian A.
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- 2024
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3. Development and application of a second-generation multilingual tool for invasion risk screening of non-native terrestrial plants
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Vilizzi, Lorenzo, Piria, Marina, Pietraszewski, Dariusz, Giannetto, Daniela, Flory, S. Luke, Herczeg, Gábor, Sermenli, Hayrünisa Baş, Britvec, Mihaela, Jukoniene, Ilona, Petrulaitis, Lukas, Vitasović-Kosić, Ivana, Almeida, David, Al-Wazzan, Zainab, Bakiu, Rigers, Boggero, Angela, Chaichana, Ratcha, Dashinov, Dimitriy, De Zoysa, Mahanama, Gilles, Allan S., Jr, Goulletquer, Philippe, Interesova, Elena, Kopecký, Oldřich, Koutsikos, Nicholas, Koyama, Akihiko, Kristan, Petra, Li, Shan, Lukas, Juliane, Moghaddas, Seyed Daryoush, Monteiro, João G., Mumladze, Levan, Oh, Chulhong, Olsson, Karin H., Pavia, Richard T., Jr, Perdikaris, Costas, Pickholtz, Renanel, Preda, Cristina, Ristovska, Milica, Švolíková, Kristína Slovák, Števove, Barbora, Ta, Kieu Anh T., Uzunova, Eliza, Vardakas, Leonidas, Verreycken, Hugo, Wei, Hui, Yoğurtçuoğlu, Baran, Ferincz, Árpád, Kirkendall, Lawrence R., Marszał, Lidia, Paganelli, Daniele, Stojchevska, Cvetanka, Tarkan, Ali Serhan, and Yazlık, Ayşe
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- 2024
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4. Social health in young women with chronic pain
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Ian A. Boggero, Linda Sangalli, Lauryn Brasch, and Christopher D. King
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Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Abstract. Introduction:. Chronic pain may negatively affect social functioning, but no study to date has examined the specific social impact of different chronic pain conditions in young women, and whether living with multiple chronic overlapping pain conditions (COPCs) differently influences social domains. Objectives:. This study aimed to assess social functioning (social isolation, hostility, informational support satisfaction, social roles, emotional support, friendships, and family relationships) among young women with chronic pain compared with pain-free controls and to test whether the number of COPCs influenced the extent of social burden. Methods:. Participants aged 18 to 30 years with a physician-confirmed diagnoses of migraine, fibromyalgia, or temporomandibular disorder (TMD) and pain-free controls were invited to participate from across the United States. After confirming eligibility, participants completed a 1-hour REDCap online questionnaire assessing social functioning. Results:. One hundred four participants (mean age 24.54 ± 3.35 years) were included (n = 26 with TMD, n = 25 with fibromyalgia, n = 25 with migraine, and n = 28 controls). All 3 chronic pain groups combined reported worse functioning than controls on friendship (P = 0.038), social isolation (P = 0.002), and social roles (P < 0.001). There were no differences on social variables between the 3 chronic pain groups (all P's > 0.05). Compared with those with 3 COPCs, participants with 1 condition reported better family relationships (P = 0.024). Conclusions:. Experience of chronic pain—regardless of the specific pain condition—may negatively affect some areas of social functioning in young women.
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- 2024
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5. Model-Based Mission Assurance/Model-Based Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, and Safety (RAMS)
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Boggero, Luca, Fioriti, Marco, Donelli, Giuseppa, Ciampa, Pier Davide, Boehm, Barry, Section editor, Sievers, Michael W., Section editor, Madni, Azad M., editor, Augustine, Norman, editor, and Sievers, Michael, editor
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- 2023
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6. Alien and native species in Italian marine and transitional waters
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Di Muri, Cristina, Lazic, Tamara, Rosati, Ilaria, Pierri, Cataldo, Boggero, Angela, Corriero, Giuseppe, Basset, Alberto, and Pensoft Publishers
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Biodiversity ,EUNIS habitats ,introduced species ,LifeWatch ,LifeWatch ,Marine ecosystems ,non-indigenous species ,transitional ecosystems - Published
- 2023
7. A Pilot Study of a Three-Session Heart Rate Variability Biofeedback Intervention for Veterans with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
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Schuman, Donna L., Lawrence, Karen A., Boggero, Ian, Naegele, Peter, Ginsberg, J. P., Casto, Ashley, and Moser, Debra K.
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- 2023
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8. Performance and Reliability Evaluation of Innovative High-Lift Devices for Aircraft Using Electromechanical Actuators
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Carlos Cabaleiro de la Hoz, Marco Fioriti, and Luca Boggero
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electromechanical actuator ,EMA ,high-lift devices ,flaps ,slats ,more-electric aircraft ,Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics ,TL1-4050 - Abstract
In the last decades, electromechanical actuators started to be introduced in transport aircraft for primary and secondary flight control surfaces. Some innovative architectures have been proposed in the literature to use these actuators for high-lift devices (flaps and slats). The state-of-the-art architecture is built with a central mechanical shaft powered by a power distribution unit connected to ballscrew actuators that actuate the flap and slat surfaces. New innovative concepts have the potential to improve the state-of-the-art architectures. However, there is a lack of quantitative results for such innovative architectures. A new methodology is proposed to preliminarily estimate performance and reliability aspects of conventional and innovative architectures. This allows quantitative comparisons to finally be obtained. The methodology is applied to a new architecture that uses electromechanical actuators for flaps and slats, providing results in terms of performance and reliability and comparing them to the current state-of-the-art high-lift devices. Results show that the new architecture is lighter than the reference one and can be more reliable. This is achieved thanks to the removal of the mechanical links among components, which allows each control surface to be deployed independently from the others. This highly increases the operational reliability of the system. Two cases are analyzed, with and without actuator jamming. This provides more realistic results since this failure mode is currently the main reason why electromechanical actuators are not being used for more applications. The innovative architecture outperforms the conventional one in the case where the electromechanical actuators are not affected by the jamming failure mode.
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- 2024
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9. Emotional approach coping in older adults as predictor of physical and mental health.
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Hoyt, Michael A, Wang, Ashley Wei-Ting, Boggero, Ian A, Eisenlohr-Moul, Tory A, Stanton, Annette L, and Segerstrom, Suzanne C
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Depression ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Illness ,Aging ,Mind and Body ,Mental Health ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adaptation ,Psychological ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Emotions ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,emotional approach coping ,emotional expression ,emotional processing ,depressive symptoms ,older adults ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Emotional approach coping involves active attempts at emotional expression and processing in response to stressful circumstances. This study tested whether dispositional emotional approach coping processes predict changes in physical and mental health in community-dwelling older adults, particularly within the context of higher perceived stress. To test this, older adults (N = 150) completed assessments of emotional expression and emotional processing at study entry. They also completed measures of perceived stress, depressive symptoms, and ill-health (a composite of subjective and objective physical health indicators, which included blood draw for collection of biomarkers), every 6 months over 4.5 years. Emotional processing and emotional expression were not related significantly to ill-health at study entry. However, emotional processing (but not emotional expression) significantly predicted changes in ill-health. At higher levels of emotional processing, ill-health remained low and stable; at lower levels of emotional processing, ill-health increased over time. However, when perceived stress was high, higher emotional processing and emotional expression were related to lower depressive symptoms at study entry, but higher emotional processing was associated with increasing depressive symptoms over time. Emotional approach coping processes evidence prospective relations with health outcomes, which are partially conditioned by stress perceptions. Emotional processing appears to have a protective impact against declining physical health. Predictive relationships for depressive symptoms are more complex. Older adults with chronically high perceived stress might benefit from interventions that target emotion-regulating coping processes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
10. Alien and native species in Italian marine and transitional waters
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Cristina Di Muri, Tamara Lazic, Ilaria Rosati, Cataldo Pierri, Angela Boggero, Giuseppe Corriero, and Alberto Basset
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non-indigenous species ,introduced species ,biodiv ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Biological invasions are one of the major threats to the ecosystem structure and functioning. After the initial introduction, frequently mediated by human activities, alien species can overcome different biogeographical and ecological barriers and determine severe impacts on native biodiversity and socio-economic activities. The Italian peninsula is located at the intersection of large trade routes within the Mediterranean Sea. Such position, along with the intense commercial activity and the high population density of the Italian coast, are considered important drivers of alien species in Italian marine and transitional ecosystems. The Italian peninsula, however, is also one of the regions with the highest native species richness within the Mediterranean Sea and, therefore, it is crucial to account for both alien and native species diversity when estimating the impact of biological invasion. Yet, such comprehensive information is frequently scattered across several biodiversity information systems and databases.Here, two datasets with alien and native species records in Italian marine and transitional waters are described. These datasets, created for the LifeWatch Italy case study on alien species, are the result of a large-scale collaboration involving experts working across the whole range of taxonomic diversity. The marine dataset includes a total of 12,219 records belonging to 3,772 species gathered from 91 investigated sites and seven EUNIS habitats. The dataset on transitional waters biodiversity includes 3,838 records belonging to 2,019 species found in 23 locations and four EUNIS habitats. Alien species were recorded in both marine and transitional waters, accounting respectively for 140 and 171 biological records belonging to 59 and 97 species. These occurrence data can be used for further research studies or management purposes, including the evaluation of the invasion risk and the formulation of alien species control and management plans. Furthermore, these compiled datasets can be used as input data for the Biotope vulnerability case study of LifeWatch ERIC, which offers a number of ICT services for the calculation of the incidence and of the impact of alien species on European biotopes.
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- 2023
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11. The European Social Charter Turns 60: Introduction to the Special Section
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Lorenza Mola, Giovanni Boggero, and Francesco Costamagna
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european social charter ,economic and social rights ,council of europe ,multi-level human rights protection ,multi-sourced human rights ,european social charter system ,Law ,Law of Europe ,KJ-KKZ - Abstract
(Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2022 7(3), 1489-1494 | Article | (Abstract) Since it was opened for signature by the member States of the Council of Europe (CoE) on 18 October 1961, the European Social Charter (ESC) has developed into an advanced regional system of economic and social human rights protection, although on different modalities than the European Convention of Human Rights’ system. The ESC’s effectiveness has increased with the quasi-judicial, optional procedure of collective complaints, but further improvement of the ESC control mechanisms has been sought. Moreover, the multiple crises which have affected Europe over the past two decades have highlighted the relevance of ESC guaranteed rights, in the State parties’ legal orders, in relation to EU law, and in the CoE framework. These developments have shown room for potential use as well as a need for wider knowledge of this treaty instrument. After presenting the main features of the ESC system, this Article aims to frame further study on its impact in the multi-sourced and multi-level framework of human rights protection in Europe.
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- 2023
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12. Les barrières à l’accès aux soins : validation de la BACE-3 française
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Caci, H., Boggero, M., Mallet, L., Bedira, N., and Giordana, J.-Y.
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- 2023
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13. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on orofacial pain practice: Perceptions from a convenience sample of orofacial pain practitioners
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Yanez Regonesi, Fernanda, Kaspo, Ghabi A., Boggero, Ian A., and Moreno-Hay, Isabel
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- 2023
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14. Effects of water level management on lake littorals and downstream river areas
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Angela Boggero, Michela Rogora, and Silvia Quadroni
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Special Issue ,Parchi Verbano Ticino project ,Lake Maggiore ,River Ticino ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The Interreg “Parks Verbano Ticino” (PVT) project was conceived within the technical committee dedicated to the “Experimentation of the regulation of the Lake Maggiore levels” following the requests of the water manager to raise the spring-summer maximum levels of the lake compared to the levels normally held in the same period to respond to the industrial, agricultural, touristic, and environmental needs...
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- 2023
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15. Temporal evolution of lake level fluctuations under flood conditions and impacts on the littoral ecosystems
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Marzia Ciampittiello, Helmi Saidi, Lyudmila Kamburska, Silvia Zaupa, and Angela Boggero
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Floods frequency ,return period ,probability distribution ,linear quantile regression ,QGIS map ,effects on biocoenosis ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Lake levels fluctuations are conditioned by seasonal variability, water resources management and climate change. Recent studies have shown that global warming potentially affects the risk of flooding and that the decisive factor for flood events is not temperature, but precipitation characteristics and hydrological conditions. Flood events have numerous impacts on social, economic and environmental aspects depending on how humans have altered lands, natural rivers and lake dynamics. Flood protection measures can cause conflicts with conservation measures and with ecosystem services because natural capital is not considered able to control floods and to contribute control floods and that it can contribute to human health and safety. In this paper we analysed the flood events in Lake Maggiore for return time periods of 3 – 5 – 10 – 25 – 50 – 100 – 250 – 500 years, considering the flood frequency in the last ten years using 1868-2021 as a reference period. We discussed the probability distribution of flood peaks, the correlation and linear regression between the lake level fluctuations and macroinvertebrates occurrence. We also presented lake coasts flood hazard mapping. The probability distribution that better describes the annual peak level is the Gumbel function, while for spring and autumn flood events the better distribution is the Log-Pearson type III. One of the historical flood events in terms of magnitude was in 2000, characterized by a return time of about 50 years. The last flood event in 2020, was characterized by a return period of about 10 years. Considering the seasonal frequency of flood, the autumn magnitude was higher than the spring one, and the differences between seasonal flood events progressively increased. The results suggested a high probability of a flood event every three years and also a forecast of a flood of about 197 m asl (3.14 m above the average lake level) every 10 years. Raising the lake level will affect the reed bed area from 193 m asl, and it will be more effective at 194.5 m (up to a 10% reduction). During flood events, the whole reed bed area is submerged. As regard macroinvertebrates composition and abundance, the first results show significant negative relationships between all sampling stations altogether vs the abundance of Cladotanytarsus sp. (Chironominae) and nearly significant positive relationships between water levels at Magadino vs Pscectrocladius sordidellus (Orthocladiinae) abundances. These few results are perhaps due to the current limited data availability.
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- 2023
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16. Synoptic results on the potential impacts of the Lake Maggiore water management strategy on freshwater littoral ecosystems and invertebrate biocoenosis (NW, Italy)
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Angela Boggero, Lyudmila Kamburska, Silvia Zaupa, Marzia Ciampittiello, Michela Rogora, and Tiziana Di Lorenzo
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Water chemistry ,lake habitat survey ,lakeside, macro- and meio-faunal bioindicators ,morpho-functional traits ,water fluctuation control ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The first results of the application of the integrated multidisciplinary protocol to study the effects of water level management on the Lake Maggiore littoral habitats and biocoenosis are presented. The "Parchi Verbano Ticino" project (2019-2021, ID: 481668) was the driving force to fine-tune the monitoring and management system of multidisciplinary information (chemistry, hydro-morphology, macro- and meio-fauna monitoring). The study reveals that water level fluctuations in Lake Maggiore, sometimes characterized by measurable changes in water levels, have remarkable effects on littoral habitats and on the structure and function of macro- and meiofaunal assemblages living there. Overall, this study provides insights into the potential impacts of Lake Maggiore water management strategy on freshwater littoral ecosystems during late spring-early summer, and emphasizes the need for a comprehensive understanding of the lake ecosystem dynamics. Thanks to the results achieved, publicly endorsed water management rules will be stated, for the late spring-early summer period, considering frequency and amplitude of water level fluctuations as crucial factors in management plans to mitigate their impacts. The endorsed rules turn out to be a negotiated compromise between the maintenance of ecosystem services and the protection of littoral life below water.
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- 2023
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17. Effects of human-induced water level fluctuations on copepod assemblages of the littoral zone of Lake Maggiore
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Cifoni, Marco, Boggero, Angela, Rogora, Michela, Ciampittiello, Marzia, Martínez, Alejandro, Galassi, Diana Maria Paola, Fiasca, Barbara, and Di Lorenzo, Tiziana
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- 2022
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18. A ten-year geographic data set on the occurrence and abundance of macroinvertebrates in the River Po basin (Italy)
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Fornaroli, Riccardo, Agostini, Alessandra, Arnaud, Elena, Berselli, Alberto, Bettoni, Eugenia, Boggero, Angela, Borlandelli, Cristina, Cadrobbi, Giuseppi, Cason, Manuela, Castelli, Luciano, Cerea, Silvia, Contardi, Laura, Costa, Sara, Costaraoss, Silvia, Dallafior, Valentina, Dal Mas, Alessandro, Elvio, Francesco, Fioravanti, Marco, Fortino, Davide, Franceschini, Silvia, Fravezzi, Laura, Fuganti, Alessia, Galbiati, Matteo, Galimberti, Filippo, Genoni, Pietro, Gerbaz, Daniela, Lea, Alessia, Lucchini, Daniela, Manzieri, Anna Maria, Marchesi, Manuela, Monauni, Catia, Montanari, Paola, Morchio, Federica, Piovano, Silvia, Pizzochero, Natale, Raviola, Mara, Richieri, Filippo, Roatta, Valeria, Rocca, Daniela, Sarzilla, Attilio, Siciliano, Ornella, Testa, Paola, Tonna, Davide, Tumminelli, Marzia Enza, Turco, Franca, Vicquery, Luciana, and Laini, Alex
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Freshwater ,Insect ,Long-term ,Northern Italy ,Rivers and Streams ,Spatial distribution ,Water Framework Directive - Abstract
Rivers serve many societal functions and are one of the most intensively human influenced ecosystems worldwide, and, due to their importance, are included under the monitoring programs of the Water Framework Directive across Europe. Macroinvertebrates play an important role when monitoring running waters for the assessment of their environmental quality due to their reliability as bioindicators and utility in long-term studies. Macroinvertebrates do not constitute a systematic unit but they are formed by a set of different taxa, grouped according to taxonomic ranks, size and habitat preferences. They represent the base of the aquatic food chain, serving as a food source for amphibians, birds, reptiles, fish and humans, and contributing in the organic matter processing. Despite the large amount of data collected on Italian river macroinvertebrates and the increased interest in the study of this group, only few data are available for research scientist and managers. In this paper, we collected and homogenized knowledge on the presence, distribution and abundances of macroinvertebrates taxa inhabiting the River Po catchment (Northern Italy) in the last decade. The data set includes 130,727 records collected between 2007 and 2018 including 143 taxa of macroinvertebrates, mostly identified at family rank level. Moreover, the data set provides information on the geographic distribution of these families and their abundance by sub-catchment, altitude, meso- and micro-habitat.
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- 2020
19. Dataset of benthic copepods in the littoral zones of Lake Maggiore
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Agostina Tabilio Di Camillo, Angela Boggero, Diana Maria Paola Galassi, Lyudmila Kamburska, Barbara Fiasca, and Tiziana Di Lorenzo
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Crustacea ,meiobenthic fauna ,lentic waters ,Harpacticoida ,Cyclopoida ,GBIF ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Copepods (Crustacea: Copepoda) are widespread in aquatic ecosystems worldwide and represent an important component of the meiobenthic metazoan assemblages of lake littorals. Yet, little is currently known about the diversity of benthic copepods in lentic habitats. We gathered information on the benthic copepod assemblages of the littoral zone of Lake Maggiore as part of the Interreg Italy-Switzerland 2014-2020 Parchi Verbano Ticino project (ID: 481668), funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). Lake Maggiore is a large and deep temperate lake in north-western Italy human-managed from mid-March to mid-September. This contributes to substantial changes in water levels in relation to human activities such as hydropower, industrial and agricultural uses. We compiled a dataset listing 234 occurrences of benthic copepod species recorded from three littoral sampling sites situated in three protected areas, two of which are part of the Natura 2000 network in Italy and one is part of the Emerald Network in Switzerland. We collected the specimens during the summer-autumn period in 2019-2021. We identified the copepods at the species level and created a dataset with individual georeferenced occurrence records for each species, organized in a standardized Darwin Core Archive format. We made available, through the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), a total of 13 distinct taxonomic entities and 234 unique georeferenced occurrence records related to the benthic copepod assemblages of the littoral zone of Lake Maggiore (Tabilio Di Camillo et al., 2023). The dataset has the potential to support the authorities in charge of managing Lake Maggiore’s water levels in addressing the ecological risk relevant to the littoral zone and in developing shared implementation strategies for sustainable water management.
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- 2023
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20. Characterizing Fatigue Subtypes in Adolescents with Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain and Pain-Free Controls
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Boggero I, Valrie C, Morgan K, Hagiwara N, Kashikar-Zuck S, and King C
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disability ,fatigue ,pediatric ,musculoskeletal pain ,widespread bodily pain ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Ian Boggero,1,2 Cecelia Valrie,3,4 Krystal Morgan,5 Nao Hagiwara,3 Susmita Kashikar-Zuck,2,6 Christopher King2,6 1Department of Oral Health Science, Division of Orofacial Pain, University of Kentucky College of Dentistry, Lexington, KY, USA; 2Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA; 3Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA; 4Institute for Inclusion, Inquiry, and Innovation, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA; 5Division of Transplant, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA; 6Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USACorrespondence: Ian Boggero, 740 S Limestone, Lexington, KY, 40536, USA, Tel +859-562-3291, Email ian.boggero@uky.eduContext: General fatigue, sleep-related fatigue, and cognitive fatigue are prevalent and disruptive in adults with chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain, but little is known about these fatigue subtypes in pediatric musculoskeletal pain.Objective: To compare fatigue and its subtypes between adolescents with chronic MSK pain and pain-free controls and to test if fatigue subtypes were associated with concurrent pain and its impact (pain intensity, number of pain sites, pain interference, and functional disability) or experimental pain (intensity and tolerance) in adolescents with chronic MSK pain. Finally, we sought to explore adolescents’ qualitative characterizations of their fatigue.Methods: Adolescents with chronic MSK pain (12– 17 y.o., n = 26) and pain-free controls (n = 26) completed validated self-report measures of fatigue, pain, and functional disability, underwent an experimental pain tolerance task (cold water immersion of the hand), and provided qualitative descriptions of their fatigue (pain group only).Results: Adolescents with chronic MSK pain reported significantly greater general, sleep-related, and cognitive fatigue than pain-free controls (all p’s < 0.001). In adolescents with chronic MSK pain, fatigue subtypes were associated with clinical pain and pain impact (r’s = 0.43– 0.84) but not experimental pain measures (p’s > 0.05). Adolescents with chronic MSK pain qualitatively described the negative implications of the different fatigue subtypes, particularly when perceived as long-lasting.Conclusion: This preliminary study suggests that fatigue subtypes are prevalent and impactful in pediatric patients with chronic MSK pain. When planning multi-disciplinary treatment for pediatric MSK pain, providers should recognize fatigue as another disabling symptom.Keywords: disability, fatigue, pediatric, musculoskeletal pain, widespread bodily pain
- Published
- 2022
21. A new misleading colour morph: is Marmorkrebs the only "marbled" crayfish?
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Kamburska, Lyudmila, Sabatino, Raffaella, Schiavetta, Denise, De Santis, Vanessa, Ferrari, Emanuele, Mor, Jordi-René, Zaupa, Silvia, Garzoli, Laura, and Boggero, Angela
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BIOLOGICAL classification ,PROCAMBARUS clarkii ,GENETIC barcoding ,PHENOTYPIC plasticity ,CRAYFISH ,SWAMPS - Abstract
We describe the occurrence of two unusually coloured crayfish individuals in two different locations in northwestern Italy (lakes Orta and Comabbio). They represent the first record in Italy of a marbled colour morph of Procambarus clarkii. Species assignment through morphological analyses was confirmed by molecular identification. Different body parts from the adult marbled coloured male and female, together with eggs and juveniles were analysed and blasted in GeneBank. All the sequences were identified as P. clarkii, with a query coverage ≥ 99.0% and a percentage identity ≥ 99.7%. Based solely on external appearance, this new morphotype may lead to misinterpretation of taxonomic identification, being this colour morph very similar to the Marmorkrebs P. virginalis. A marbled female of P. clarkii could be wrongly attributed to Marmorkrebs when identification keys and molecular taxonomy are not considered to complement each other. The marbled morph of P. clarkii not only illustrates how varicoloured are the members of the family Cambaridae, but it also suggests that marbled colour alone is inadequate to identify a species. Therefore, it is recommended to consider this new colour in the morphological identification of the adult red swamp crayfish P. clarkii. The approach that integrates both molecular and morphological information improves promptly species taxonomy towards timely and appropriate management measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Concurrent Value-Driven Decision-Making Process for the Aircraft, Supply Chain and Manufacturing Systems Design
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Giuseppa Donelli, Luca Boggero, and Björn Nagel
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decision-making ,value engineering ,supply-chain management ,aircraft design ,manufacturing ,system of interest ,Systems engineering ,TA168 ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
The integration of product design and supply-chain management can lead to an increase in the profitability and efficiency of companies. However, considering manufacturing, supply chain, and aircraft criteria in the early design phase increases the size of the solutions’ trade space and, thus, the complexity of performing the decision-making process. This paper demonstrates how to leverage value-model theory to simplify the decision-making process when multiple criteria related to multiple systems are considered at the same time. The proposed concurrent approach is formalized from a systems-engineering perspective, considering the interactions between the lifecycle stages of the System of Interest, i.e., the aircraft, and Enabling Systems like the supply chain and manufacturing. A value-based interactive dashboard, called VALORISE, is developed to automatize the process, support decision-makers in modeling their expectations, analyze real-time strategic scenarios, and easily explore the value-driven trade space for best-solution identification. An aeronautical application case highlights the advantages of leveraging the proposed concurrent approach to overcome the limits of traditional approaches, in which decisions about supply chain and manufacturing are addressed once the aircraft configuration is decided.
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- 2023
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23. An updated list of chironomid species from Italy with biogeographic considerations (Diptera, Chironomidae)
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Rossaro, Bruno, Pirola, Niccolò, Marziali, Laura, Magoga, Giulia, Boggero, Angela, and Montagna, Matteo
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Italy ,Chironomidae ,species list ,biodiversity ,faunistics - Abstract
In a first list of chironomid species from Italy from 1988, 359 species were recognized. The subfamilies represented were Tanypodinae, Diamesinae, Prodiamesinae, Orthocladiinae and Chironominae. Most of the species were cited as widely distributed in the Palearctic region with few Mediterranean (6), Afrotropical (19) or Panpaleotropical (3) species. The list also included five species previously considered Nearctic. An updated list was thereafter prepared and the number of species raised to 391. Species new to science were added in the following years further raising the number of known species. The list of species known to occur in Italy is now updated to 580, and supported by voucher specimens. Most species have a Palearctic distribution, but many species are distributed in other biogeographical regions; 366 species are in common with the East Palaearctic region, 281 with the Near East, 248 with North Africa, 213 with the Nearctic, 104 with the Oriental, 23 species with the Neotropical, 23 with the Afrotropical, 16 with the Australian region, and 46 species at present are known to occur only in Italy. On the basis of new findings in Italy and in nearby areas it is stated that the knowledge of chironomid fauna is still incomplete.
- Published
- 2019
24. Geotargeting spatial and temporal data of Italian freshwater high-altitude macroinvertebrates
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Angela Boggero, Elzbieta Dumnicka, Riccardo Fornaroli, Daniele Paganelli, and Silvia Zaupa
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aquatic habitat ,zoobenthos ,occurrence ,mountain area ,geographic distribution ,long-term data ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
A data set including information on macroinvertebrates identified to genus/species group/species level was created within the monitoring activities of several European and national projects. The data set includes 2111 macroinvertebrate records on temporal fragmentary data from lakes Paione (upper, middle, and lower lakes Paione), and 530 records on spatial data relative to eight other high-altitude lakes from the Ossola Valley (North-western Italy, Piedmont, Central Alps). The study area is included within the Lake Maggiore watershed. All records are georeferenced because, since the beginning of the studies, temporal data were taken in the same sampling sites over years. The temporal data span over the period 1989-2020, the spatial data refer to the 2019-2020 sampling activity. The dataset is available for download as csv format at the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) data infrastructure.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Biological survey of lakes and reservoirs from Sardinia and Piedmont (Italy), a georeferenced dataset from the project LIFE INHABIT
- Author
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Martina Austoni, Angela Boggero, Lyudmila Kamburska, Antonella Lugliè, Aldo Marchetto, Alessandro Oggioni, Bachisio M. Padedda, Pietro Volta, and Silvia Zaupa
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GBIF ,Italy ,phytoplankton ,macrophytes ,fish fauna ,benthic macroinvertebrates ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
We report a georeferenced dataset of a biological survey carried out in lakes and reservoirs in Piedmont and Sardinia regions (Italy), that includes fish fauna, macroinvertebrates, macrophytes, and phytoplankton. This survey was carried out to test the standardised protocols adopted with the National Decree 260/210 by the Italian Ministry of the Environment, Land and Sea for the assessment of the ecological status of lakes and the ecological potential of reservoirs for satisfying the requirements of the European Water Framework Directive (WFD) 2000/60/EC. Occurrence data have been uploaded to the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Between Cynicism and Idealism: Is the Italian Constitutional Court Passing the Buck to the Italian Judiciary?
- Author
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Boggero, Giovanni, Oellers-Frahm, Karin, Bruns, Viktor, Founding Editor, von Bogdandy, Armin, Series Editor, Peters, Anne, Series Editor, Volpe, Valentina, editor, and Battini, Stefano, editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Performance and Reliability Evaluation of Innovative High-Lift Devices for Aircraft Using Electromechanical Actuators
- Author
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Cabaleiro de la Hoz, Carlos, primary, Fioriti, Marco, additional, and Boggero, Luca, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Littoral chironomids and oligochaetes in the subalpine Lake Maggiore: a first dataset
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Silvia Zaupa, Angela Boggero, and Lyudmila Kamburska
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Darwin Core ,freshwaters ,GBIF ,occurrence ,non-biting midges and microdriles ,Lake Verbano ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
A dataset of 227 oligochaetes and 373 chironomids occurrence records from the subalpine Lake Maggiore, a large and deep temperate lake in Northern-Western Italy and Switzerland was developed within the Interreg Italy-Switzerland 2014-2020 Parchi Verbano Ticino Project (ID:481668) funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). The lake belongs to the national (LTER-Italy), European (LTER-Europe) and International (ILTER) long-term ecological research networks. Data were collected during the summer-autumn period in 2019-2021. Chironomids (Insecta, Diptera) and oligochaetes (Annelida, Clitellata) were identified to genus/species gr./species level by the authors. All 600 occurrence records are georeferenced and organised in a standardised Darwin Core Archive format. These data gathered along the littoral areas of Lake Maggiore will contribute to the development of common implementation strategies for shared and sustainable water management level of the lake, with particular reference to the protected natural areas (sites belonging to Natura 2000 network in Italy and to the Emerald Network in Switzerland). The authors strongly believe in the great potential of open access occurrence records in biogeographical studies and ecological research in the context of global environmental changes. For that reason, the dataset has been uploaded to the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), an intergovernmental free and open access biodiversity data infrastructure.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Building a local reference library for metabarcoding survey of lake macrobenthos: oligochaetes and chironomids from Lake Maggiore
- Author
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Silvia Zaupa, Diego Fontaneto, Raffaella Sabatino, and Angela Boggero
- Subjects
DNA barcode ,macroinvertebrates ,lentic waters ,midges ,freshwater annelids ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
This study represents a first reference database of genetic diversity of macroinvertebrates for a barcoding marker for Lake Maggiore, focusing on the two dominant groups of the littoral benthic fauna (chironomids and oligochaetes), commonly used for biological monitoring of freshwater lakes. Sediment samples were sorted at the stereomicroscope and single animals were cut in two pieces, one piece to be used for morphological identification and one piece for DNA extraction. This study allowed us to collect and identify 427 organisms: 309 oligochaetes belonging to 27 identifiable taxa and 118 chironomid larvae belonging to 26 identifiable taxa. Four families of oligochaetes: Naididae, Lumbricidae, Lumbriculidae, and Enchytraeidae and five subfamilies of Chironomidae: Chironominae, Tanypodinae, Orthocladiinae, Diamesinae, and Prodiamesinae were found. The extraction and amplification of the DNA covered a total of 10 oligochaete taxa. For 7 of them (Ophidonais serpentina, Uncinais uncinata, Vejdovskyella intermedia, Psammoryctides barbatus, Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri, Tubifex tubifex, and Bothrioneurum vejdovskyanum), we found other sequences in GenBank to compare genetic similarities with available data. For the other taxa (Lumbriculidae, and Enchytraeidae, and Nais sp.) no best hits were found in GenBank. The extraction and amplification of the DNA covered a total of 21 chironomid taxa. For ten species (Cladotanytarsus mancus, Cladotanytarsus atridorsum, Polypedilum scalaenum, Polypedilum nubeculosum, Benthalia carbonaria, Phaenopsectra flavipes, Clinotanypus nervosus, Paracladopelma laminatum, Cryptochironomus rostratus and Parakiefferiella finnmarkica) sequences were available in GenBank to compare genetic similarities. For the other taxa (Cryptochironomus sp., Demicryptochironomus vulneratus, Chironomus sp., Stictochironomus sp., Orthocladius sp., Cricotopus sp., Eukiefferiella sp., Procladius sp., Diamesa sp., Potthastia sp., and Monodiamesa bathyphila) no best hits were found in GenBank. For chironomids, DNA taxonomy revealed the existence of several species complexes. Covering more populations and more genetic markers for those taxa within a rationale of integrative taxonomy could solve the taxonomic problems and provide a reliable description of diversity.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Psychosocial functioning and the cortisol awakening response: Meta-analysis, P-curve analysis, and evaluation of the evidential value in existing studies.
- Author
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Boggero, Ian, Hostinar, Camelia, Haak, Eric, Murphy, Michael, and Segerstrom, Suzanne
- Subjects
Depression ,Endocrinology ,HPA axis ,Physiology ,Stress ,Circadian Rhythm ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Saliva ,Social Adjustment ,Stress ,Psychological ,Wakefulness - Abstract
Cortisol levels rise immediately after awakening and peak approximately 30-45min thereafter. Psychosocial functioning influences this cortisol awakening response (CAR), but there is considerable heterogeneity in the literature. The current study used p-curve and meta-analysis on 709 findings from 212 studies to test the evidential value and estimate effect sizes of four sets of findings: those associating worse psychosocial functioning with higher or lower cortisol increase relative to the waking period (CARi) and to the output of the waking period (AUCw). All four sets of findings demonstrated evidential value. Psychosocial predictors explained 1%-3.6% of variance in CARi and AUCw responses. Based on these effect sizes, cross-sectional studies assessing CAR would need a minimum sample size of 617-783 to detect true effects with 80% power. Depression was linked to higher AUCw and posttraumatic stress to lower AUCw, whereas inconclusive results were obtained for predictor-specific effects on CARi. Suggestions for future CAR research are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
31. Sampling and laboratory protocols to study the effects of water-level management on the littoral invertebrate fauna in deep and large temperate lakes
- Author
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Angela Boggero, Lyudmila Kamburska, Silvia Zaupa, Marzia Ciampittiello, Daniele Paganelli, Marco Cifoni, Michela Rogora, and Tiziana Di Lorenzo
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Lake habitat survey ,macroinvertebrates ,meiofauna ,morpho-functional traits ,integrated planning procedure ,Lake Maggiore ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
An integrated multidisciplinary protocol on monitoring, sampling, and laboratory procedures was developed and proposed as part of the Project "Parks Verbano Ticino" in the framework of the INTERREG V-A Italy-Switzerland 2014-2020 Cooperation Program. The project's overall goal is to evaluate the effects of water-level management (hydro-morphological stress) on both macro- and meio-fauna along the shores of Lake Maggiore, a large and deep temperate lake in northwest Italy. Because of their importance in the aquatic food web, determining how this stress affects macro- and meio-faunal assemblages is difficult. The protocol developed thus includes the evaluation of hydro-morphological impacts via the Lake Habitat Survey method, which entails monitoring of human-induced impacts and related infrastructures, followed by an in-depth evaluation of the ecological health of lake habitats via chemical analyses. The protocol then describes the sampling methods for shallow lake waters (i.e.,
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Model-Based Mission Assurance/Model-Based Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, and Safety (RAMS)
- Author
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Boggero, Luca, primary, Fioriti, Marco, additional, Donelli, Giuseppa, additional, and Ciampa, Pier Davide, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Human psychoneuroimmunology
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Gloger, E.M., primary, Boggero, I.A., additional, and Segerstrom, S.C., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. 'Kicking the Can Down the Road' Deferring Fiscal Adjustment as a Premise for Italian Budgetary Populism
- Author
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Boggero, Giovanni, Kriesi, Hanspeter, Series Editor, Delledonne, Giacomo, editor, Martinico, Giuseppe, editor, Monti, Matteo, editor, and Pacini, Fabio, editor
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. An historical and geographic data set on the distribution of macroinvertebrates in Italian mountain lakes
- Author
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Boggero, Angela, Garzoli, Laura, and Varini, Gianfranco
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natural lakes ,reservoirs ,artificially extended ,macroinvertebrates ,high altitude ,distribution - Abstract
Macroinvertebrates play a key role in freshwater food webs, acting as major links between organic matter resources, primary consumers (such as bacteria), and secondary consumers (e.g.fish, amphibians, birds, and reptiles). In this paper we present a data set encompassing all geographic and historical data available on macroinvertebrates of the Italian mountain lakes from 1902 to 2016. The data set, divided per Italian mountain range (Alps and Apennines) and administrative region, covers more than a century of studies of many foreign and Italian scientists. The data set includes 2372 records and shows macroinvertebrate occurrence data in 176 Alpine and in 13 Apennine lakes, of which 178 of natural origin, 5 reservoirs, and 6 artificially extended. The data set lists 605 taxa, updated on the basis of their current taxonomic position. Only 353 taxa are identified at species level, highlighting the still poorly investigated biodiversity of Italian mountain lake macroinvertebrates. Since they function as key elements to characterize lake ecological status, our data set emphasizes the huge taxonomic effort that still has to be undertaken to fully characterize these ecosystems. The data set is available in csv (comma-separated values) format.
- Published
- 2017
36. Water Resources Management under Climate Change: A Review
- Author
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Ciampittiello, Marzia, primary, Marchetto, Aldo, additional, and Boggero, Angela, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Automated generation of aircraft on-board system architectures and filtering through certification specification requirements
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Cabaleiro, Carlos, primary, Fioriti, Marco, additional, and Boggero, Luca, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Briefly Assessing Repetitive Thought Dimensions
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Segerstrom, Suzanne C, Hardy, Jaime K, Evans, Daniel R, Boggero, Ian A, Alden, Lynn E, and Stanton, Annette L
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Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Depression ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Pain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Thinking ,Visual Analog Scale ,repetitive thought ,multidimensional ,assessment ,short form ,diary ,Clinical Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Discrete forms of repetitive thought (RT), such as worry and reflection, can be characterized along basic dimensions of valence (positive vs. negative) and purpose (searching vs. solving). In addition, people can be characterized as high or low in their tendency to engage in RT. This dimensional model has been demanding to assess, and a smaller number of items that could stand in for a large battery would make measurement more accessible. Using four samples (N = 1,588), eight items that assess RT valence, purpose, and total in a circumplex model were identified. Across these and other samples, the dimensions were adequately reliable and valid with regard to assessment via large RT battery, other measures of RT, and depressive symptoms. The accessibility of dimensional assessment of RT using this smaller number of items should facilitate work on questions about the qualities of RT that predict mental and physical health.
- Published
- 2016
39. Nigeria’s Engagement
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sierra Leone: Continuity and Change
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. State and Non-State Choices in Liberia
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Contestation or Accommodation
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Ideas and Interests in Africa
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Conclusions
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Designing Institutions: The Role of the State in Voluntary Regulation
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Testing PMSC Norms
- Author
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The United Nations as Actor of Governance
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Swiss Initiative
- Author
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Introduction
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Boggero, Marco and Boggero, Marco
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A geographic distribution data set of biodiversity in Italian freshwaters
- Author
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Boggero, Angela, Pierri, Cataldo, Alber, Renate, Austoni, Martina, Barbone, Enrico, Bartolozzi, Luca, Bertani, Isabella, Campanaro, Alessandro, Cattaneo, Antonella, Cianferoni, Fabio, Colangelo, Paolo, Corriero, Giuseppe, Dorr, Ambrosius Martin, Elia, A. Concetta, Ficetola, G. Francesco, Fontaneto, Diego, Gaino, Elda, Goretti, Enzo, Kamburska, Lyudmila, La Porta, Gianandrea, Lauceri, Rosaria, Lorenzoni, Massimo, Ludovisi, Alessandro, Manca, Marina, Morabito, Giuseppe, Nonnis Marzano, Francesco, Oggioni, Alessandro, Riccardi, Nicoletta, Rossetti, Giampaolo, Tagliolato, Paolo, Thaler, Bertha, Ungaro, Nicola, Volta, Pietro, Zaupa, Silvia, Rosati, Ilaria, Fiore, Nicola, Basset, Alberto, and Marchetto, Aldo
- Subjects
artificial habitats ,freshwater biota ,lentic waters ,LifeWatch ,lotic waters ,natural habitats ,reference collection - Abstract
We present a data set on the biodiversity of Italian freshwaters, including lakeshores and riverbanks of natural (N=379: springs, streams and lakes) and artificial (N=11: fountains) sites. The data set belongs partly to the Italian Long Term Ecological Research network (LTER-Italy) and partly to LifeWatch, the European e-Science infrastructure for biodiversity and ecosystem research. The data included cover a time period corresponding to the last fifty years (1962-2014). They span a large number of taxa from prokaryotes and unicellular eukaryotes to vertebrates and plants, including taxa linked to the aquatic habitat in at least part of their life cycles (like immature stages of insects, amphibians, birds and vascular plants). The data set consists of 6463 occurrence data and distribution records for 1738 species. The complete data set is available in csv file format via the LifeWatch Service Centre.
- Published
- 2016
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