1,145 results on '"Bonometti A"'
Search Results
2. Approaches for the diagnosis and treatment of VEXAS syndrome: the importance of clinical suspicion and the use of methotrexate
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De Santis, Maria, Tonutti, Antonio, Motta, Francesca, Todisco, Gabriele, Manes, Nicla, Milanesi, Chiara, Caselli, Rossella, Albertazzi, Serena, Bonometti, Arturo, Selmi, Carlo, and Della Porta, Matteo Giovanni
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- 2024
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3. Resource-Limited Automated Ki67 Index Estimation in Breast Cancer
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Gliozzo, J., Marinò, G., Bonometti, A., Frasca, M., and Malchiodi, D.
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
The prediction of tumor progression and chemotherapy response has been recently tackled exploiting Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes (TILs) and the nuclear protein Ki67 as prognostic factors. Recently, deep neural networks (DNNs) have been shown to achieve top results in estimating Ki67 expression and simultaneous determination of intratumoral TILs score in breast cancer cells. However, in the last ten years the extraordinary progress induced by deep models proliferated at least as much as their resource demand. The exorbitant computational costs required to query (and in some cases also to store) a deep model represent a strong limitation in resource-limited contexts, like that of IoT-based applications to support healthcare personnel. To this end, we propose a resource consumption-aware DNN for the effective estimate of the percentage of Ki67-positive cells in breast cancer screenings. Our approach reduced up to 75% and 89% the usage of memory and disk space respectively, up to 1.5x the energy consumption, and preserved or improved the overall accuracy of a benchmark state-of-the-art solution. Encouraged by such positive results, we developed and structured the adopted framework so as to allow its general purpose usage, along with a public software repository to support its usage.
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- 2023
4. Intrasinusoidal bone marrow involvement in mantle cell lymphoma: a case series with review of the main differential diagnoses
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Bonometti, Arturo, Tzankov, Alexander, Alborelli, Ilaria, Russkamp, Norman F., Dertinger, Susanne, and Dirnhofer, Stefan
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- 2024
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5. Whole-exome sequencing is feasible on a fresh-frozen skin sample of intravascular large B cell lymphoma
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Bagnoli, Filippo, Pini, Giuditta, Ziccheddu, Bachisio, Bonometti, Arturo, Alberti-Violetti, Silvia, Venegoni, Luigia, Isimbaldi, Giuseppe, Da Vià, Matteo Claudio, Ferrari, Angela, Baldini, Luca, Neri, Antonino, Onida, Francesco, Bolli, Niccolò, and Berti, Emilio
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- 2024
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6. Disruptions in antigen processing and presentation machinery on sarcoma
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Renne, Salvatore Lorenzo, Sama’, Laura, Kumar, Sonia, Mintemur, Omer, Ruspi, Laura, Santori, Ilaria, Sicoli, Federico, Bertuzzi, Alexia, Laffi, Alice, Bonometti, Arturo, Colombo, Piergiuseppe, D’amato, Vittoria, Bressan, Alessandra, Scorsetti, Marta, Terracciano, Luigi, Navarria, Pierina, D’incalci, Maurizio, Quagliuolo, Vittorio, Pasqualini, Fabio, Grizzi, Fabio, and Cananzi, Ferdinando Carlo Maria
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- 2024
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7. Genome-scale phylogeny and comparative genomics of the fungal order Sordariales
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Hensen, Noah, Bonometti, Lucas, Westerberg, Ivar, Brännström, Ioana Onut, Guillou, Sonia, Cros-Aarteil, Sandrine, Calhoun, Sara, Haridas, Sajeet, Kuo, Alan, Mondo, Stephen, Pangilinan, Jasmyn, Riley, Robert, LaButti, Kurt, Andreopoulos, Bill, Lipzen, Anna, Chen, Cindy, Yan, Mi, Daum, Chris, Ng, Vivian, Clum, Alicia, Steindorff, Andrei, Ohm, Robin A, Martin, Francis, Silar, Philippe, Natvig, Donald O, Lalanne, Christophe, Gautier, Valérie, Ament-Velásquez, Sandra Lorena, Kruys, Åsa, Hutchinson, Miriam I, Powell, Amy Jo, Barry, Kerrie, Miller, Andrew N, Grigoriev, Igor V, Debuchy, Robert, Gladieux, Pierre, Hiltunen Thorén, Markus, and Johannesson, Hanna
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Evolutionary Biology ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,Humans ,Phylogeny ,Genomics ,Genome ,Sordariales ,Base Sequence ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Whole-genome phylogeny ,Podosporaceae ,Chaetomiaceae ,Sordariaceae ,Genome evolution ,Zoology ,Evolutionary biology - Abstract
The order Sordariales is taxonomically diverse, and harbours many species with different lifestyles and large economic importance. Despite its importance, a robust genome-scale phylogeny, and associated comparative genomic analysis of the order is lacking. In this study, we examined whole-genome data from 99 Sordariales, including 52 newly sequenced genomes, and seven outgroup taxa. We inferred a comprehensive phylogeny that resolved several contentious relationships amongst families in the order, and cleared-up intrafamily relationships within the Podosporaceae. Extensive comparative genomics showed that genomes from the three largest families in the dataset (Chaetomiaceae, Podosporaceae and Sordariaceae) differ greatly in GC content, genome size, gene number, repeat percentage, evolutionary rate, and genome content affected by repeat-induced point mutations (RIP). All genomic traits showed phylogenetic signal, and ancestral state reconstruction revealed that the variation of the properties stems primarily from within-family evolution. Together, the results provide a thorough framework for understanding genome evolution in this important group of fungi.
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- 2023
8. Flow past a sphere translating along the axis of a rotating fluid: Revisiting numerically Maxworthy's experiments
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Aurégan, Tristan, Bonometti, Thomas, and Magnaudet, Jacques
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
We compute the flow induced by the steady translation of a rigid sphere along the axis of a large cylindrical container filled with a low-viscosity fluid set in rigid-body rotation, the sphere being constrained to spin at the same rate as the undisturbed fluid. The parameter range covered by the simulations is similar to that explored experimentally by Maxworthy [\textit{J. Fluid Mech.}, vol. 40, pp. 453-479 (1970)]. We describe the salient features of the flow, especially the internal characteristics of the Taylor columns that form ahead of and behind the body and the inertial wave pattern, and determine the drag and torque acting on the sphere. Torque variations are found to obey two markedly different laws under rapid- and slow-rotation conditions, respectively. The corresponding scaling laws are predicted by examining the dominant balances governing the axial vorticity distribution in the body vicinity. Results for the drag agree well with the semi-empirical law proposed for inertialess regimes by Tanzosh \& Stone [\textit{J. Fluid Mech.}, vol. 275, pp. 225-256 (1994)]. This law is found to apply even in regimes where inertial effects are large, provided rotation effects are also large enough. Influence of axial confinement is shown to increase dramatically the drag in rapidly rotating configurations, and the container length has to be approximately a thousand times larger than the sphere for this influence to become negligibly small. The reported simulations establish that this confinement effect is at the origin of the long-standing discrepancy existing between Maxworthy's results and theoretical predictions., Comment: 39 pages, 20 figures
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- 2023
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9. Myelodysplastic/Myeloproliferative Neoplasms with Features Intermediate between Primary Myelofibrosis and Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia: Case Series and Review of the Entity
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Arturo Bonometti, Simone Zanella, Daoud Rahal, Chiara Milanesi, Rossella Caselli, Matteo Giovanni Della Porta, Silvia Uccella, and Sara Fraticelli
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MPN ,MDS/MPN ,PMF ,CMML ,JAK2 ,dysplasia ,Medicine - Abstract
Diagnosis of myeloid neoplasm is currently performed according to the presence of a predetermined set of clinical, morphological, and molecular diagnostic criteria agreed upon by a consensus of experts. Even strictly adhering to these criteria, it is possible to encounter patients who present features that are not easily ascribable to a single disease category. This is the case, e.g., of patients with de novo myeloid neoplasms with features intermediate between primary myelofibrosis (PMF) and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). In this study, we retrospectively searched the pathological database of IRCCS Humanitas Research Hospital to identify cases of chronic myeloid neoplasm with monocytosis with a driver mutation of classic myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) and showing morphological MPN features. For each case, we assessed all epidemiological, clinical, histopathological, and molecular data. Then, we carried out a literature review, searching for cases with features similar to those of our patients. We retrieved a total of 13 cases presenting such criteria (9 from the literature review and 4 from our institution); in all of them, there was a coexistence of clinical, histopathological, and molecular myelodysplastic and myeloproliferative features. To date, according to current classifications (World Health Organization and International Consensus Classification), given the presence/absence of essential features for PMF or CMML, these patients should be formally diagnosed as myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasm unclassified/not otherwise specified (U/NOS). This review aims to summarize the features of these difficult cases and discuss their differential diagnosis and their classification according to the novel classifications and the existing literature on overlapping myeloid neoplasms.
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- 2024
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10. A methodology for approximating motivation-related latent states in large scale scenarios, and its role in engagement prediction within a video game setting
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Bonometti, Valerio, Wade, Alex, and Drachen, Anders
- Abstract
Motivation is a fundamental psychological process guiding our everyday behaviour. For doing so, it heavily relies on the ability to attribute relevance to potentially rewarding objects and actions (i.e., incentives). However, despite its importance, quantifying the saliency that an individual might attribute to an object or an action is not an easy task, especially if done in naturalistic contexts. In this view, this thesis aims to outline a methodology for approximating the amount of attributed incentive salience in situations where large volumes of behavioural data are available but no experimental control is possible. Leveraging knowledge derived from theoretical and computational accounts of incentive salience attribution, we designed an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) tasked to infer a latent representation able to predict duration and intensity of future interactions between individuals and a series of video games. We found video games to be the ideal context for developing such methodology due to their reliance on reward mechanics and their ability to provide ecologically robust behavioural measures at scale. We developed and tested our methodology on a series of large-scale (N > 10⁶) longitudinal datasets evaluating the ability of the generated latent representation to approximate some functional properties of attributed incentive salience. The present work opens with an overview of the concept of motivation and its interconnection with engagement in a video-game setting. It proceeds by formulating the theoretical and computation foundations on which our methodology is built upon. It then describes the iterative process of model building, evaluation and expansion underlying the implementation of our methodology. It continues by analysing the latent representation generated by the ANN and comparing its functional characteristics with those of attributed incentive salience. The manuscript ends with a general overview of the potential applications of our methodology with a particular focus on the area of automated engagement prediction and quantification in videogames settings.
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- 2023
11. AI-driven identification of a novel malate structure from recycled lithium-ion batteries
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Zanoletti, Alessandra, Cornelio, Antonella, Galli, Elisa, Scaglia, Matteo, Bonometti, Alessandro, Zacco, Annalisa, Depero, Laura Eleonora, Gianoncelli, Alessandra, and Bontempi, Elza
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- 2025
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12. Intrinsic-dimension analysis for guiding dimensionality reduction and data fusion in multi-omics data processing
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Gliozzo, Jessica, Soto-Gomez, Mauricio, Guarino, Valentina, Bonometti, Arturo, Cabri, Alberto, Cavalleri, Emanuele, Reese, Justin, Robinson, Peter N., Mesiti, Marco, Valentini, Giorgio, and Casiraghi, Elena
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- 2025
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13. Geopolitics of the Energy Transformation in the MENA Region
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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14. Low-Carbon Energy Strategies in MENA Countries
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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15. Conclusions on the Transformation of the Energy Sector and the Energy Geopolitics
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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16. National Energy Sectors: Historical Evolution and Current Situation
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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17. Domestic and International Drivers and Challenges for the Energy Transformation in the MENA Region
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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18. The MENA Region: An Economic, Energy, and Historical Context
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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19. Geopolitics of Oil and Gas in the MENA Region
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, Bonometti, Benedetta, Heshmati, Almas, Series Editor, Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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- 2023
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20. Analysis of different hypotheses for modeling air–water exchange and temperature evolution in a tropical reservoir
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Juliana-Andrea Alzate-Gómez, Hélène Roux, Ludovic Cassan, Thomas Bonometti, Jorge Alberto Escobar Vargas, and Luis-Javier Montoya Jaramillo
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3d numerical model ,heat exchange ,thermal processes ,tropical reservoir ,water quality ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The present analysis shows that the most crucial parameter for a correct representation of the observed temperature behavior are the heat exchange coefficient and the wind. The different approaches tested all have limitations, but they can reproduce reservoir temperature trends at different depths with a maximum standard deviation ranging from 3 °C to 8 °C. HIGHLIGHTS Tropical reservoir's water temperature is strongly influenced by air–water heat exchanges, but the fast exchanges of temperature in tropical zones made traditional formulations of exchange coefficients to be insufficient.; The parameter that mainly affects the heat transfer and thermal stratification process is the transfer coefficient A and can be used as an approximation for estimating the exchange rate of the reservoir.;
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- 2024
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21. Recovery of NMC-lithium battery black mass by microwave heating processes
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Cornelio, Antonella, Galli, Elisa, Scaglia, Matteo, Zanoletti, Alessandra, Zacco, Annalisa, Bonometti, Alessandro, Magugliani, Gabriele, Mossini, Eros, Macerata, Elena, Federici, Stefania, and Bontempi, Elza
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- 2024
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22. Approximating the Manifold Structure of Attributed Incentive Salience from Large Scale Behavioural Data. A Representation Learning Approach Based on Artificial Neural Networks
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Bonometti, Valerio, Ruiz, Mathieu J., Drachen, Anders, and Wade, Alex
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Statistics - Machine Learning ,97R30 ,J.4 ,I.2.6 ,I.5.1 - Abstract
Incentive salience attribution can be understood as a psychobiological mechanism ascribing relevance to potentially rewarding objects and actions. Despite being an important component of the motivational process guiding our everyday behaviour its study in naturalistic contexts is not straightforward. Here we propose a methodology based on artificial neural networks (ANNs) for approximating latent states produced by this process in situations where large volumes of behavioural data are available but no experimental control is possible. Leveraging knowledge derived from theoretical and computational accounts of incentive salience attribution we designed an ANN for estimating duration and intensity of future interactions between individuals and a series of video games in a large-scale ($N> 3 \times 10^6$) longitudinal dataset. We found video games to be the ideal context for developing such methodology due to their reliance on reward mechanics and their ability to provide ecologically robust behavioural measures at scale. When compared to competing approaches our methodology produces representations that are better suited for predicting the intensity future behaviour and approximating some functional properties of attributed incentive salience. We discuss our findings with reference to the adopted theoretical and computational frameworks and suggest how our methodology could be an initial step for estimating attributed incentive salience in large scale behavioural studies.
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- 2021
23. Are Extracorporeal Shock Waves Just a Therapeutic Tool?
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Bernardo Gialanella, Laura Comini, Gian Pietro Bonometti, Fabio Vanoglio, Andrea Bettinsoli, Raffaele Santoro, Adriana Olivares, and Alberto Luisa
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ESWT ,evaluation ,pain threshold ,site of pain ,musculoskeletal diseases ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background: Focused extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) has been successfully used to treat musculoskeletal conditions, but ESWT stimulates nociceptors, causing pain deep in the tissue during treatment. The occurrence of pain during ESWT is a side effect, but it can help identify painful sites and assess minimum (MiTI) and maximum (MaTI) pain thresholds to ESWT pressure stimuli. This topic has received limited attention in literature. Methods: This observational study describes a specific approach to using ESWT to study pain in 71 patients. The approach proposes moving the ESWT transducer head of the device over the entire joint surface, progressively increasing the energy level until the patient experiences pain. Results: In the study, MiTI and MaTI were 0.218 ± 0.090 and 0.416 ± 0.165 mJ/mm2 in the affected joint and 0.282 ± 0.128 and 0.501 ± 0.174 mJ/mm2 in the contralateral homologous healthy joint, being significantly lower in the affected joint (MiTI: p < 0.001 and MaTI: p = 0.003, respectively). ESWT induced pain in 94.37% of the sites with the highest subjective pain and in a greater number of sites (204) than digital pressure (123) (p < 0.001). All sites with digital pressure pain also had ESWT pain. Conclusions: These results suggest that the ESWT device may be useful in investigating pain in musculoskeletal conditions and tailoring therapy.
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- 2024
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24. Adding immersive virtual reality laboratory simulations to traditional teaching methods enhances biotechnology learning outcomes
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Peter Beatrice, Annalisa Grimaldi, Stefano Bonometti, Enrico Caruso, Marcella Bracale, and Antonio Montagnoli
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theoretical knowledge ,engagement ,questionnaire ,VR headset ,hands-on laboratory ,science laboratory ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Immersive virtual reality (VR) simulations are increasingly being used in diverse educational and training contexts to supplement traditional learning methods. The high versatility of virtual laboratories allows students to take advantage of many benefits, like experiencing dangerous reactions, time-consuming protocols, or expensive equipment without the necessity of a real science laboratory. However, little research is currently available to support the efficacy and efficiency of this new learning tool. In this context, the main objective of this study was to assess the influence of biotechnology training by using immersive VR technologies on the student’s motivational and learning outcomes as compared with learning with conventional methods only. To this aim we tested two diverse strategies, respectively VR simulations were used in place of or in addition to the teacher’s introductory lesson of a hands-on laboratory experience. Aligned questionaries were administered before and after the proposed activities to assess theoretical knowledge, self-efficacy, interest in biotechnology, and engagement of the participants. We found that when the introductory lesson to a biotechnology hands-on laboratory is replaced with an equivalent immersive VR simulation, the student’s learning outcomes are lower with respect to the traditional approach. On the contrary, when VR simulations are integrated as an additional tool to the existing learning methods, higher learning outcomes were observed demonstrating a deeper understanding of the learning contents. Furthermore, our study showed that learning with immersive VR simulations motivates students more than the traditional methods, thus, using this new technology in addition to the existing educational methods in biotechnology could be considered as a win-win strategy to raise the attention of the students while increasing the learning outcomes.
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- 2024
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25. The University as a catalyst in the processes of Adult Continuing Education (ACE)
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Stefano Bonometti and Letizia Ferri
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action research ,cooperation ,innovation in education ,social learning methodologies ,ricerca-azione ,cooperazione ,Education - Abstract
The article analyzes the cooperation between university researchers and local stakeholders in promoting adult continuing education (ACE) through action research. It outlines four projects conducted at the Chair of Pedagogy at the University of Insubria, through which innovative solutions have been developed in various sectors using research and social learning methodologies. The RE-START project involved establishing community tables at the local level, the Adolescent Tables of the Municipality of Varese were structured according to the Change Laboratory logic, the Morselli Project implemented a Service Learning approach in collaboration with local schools, and vertical Communities of Practice were developed for the co-construction of school guidance modules with secondary schools. In all these projects, the University positioned itself as a catalyst and activator of the agency of the adults with whom it collaborated and co-designed. Il ruolo dell’Università come catalizzatore nei processi di Educazione Continua per Adulti (ECA). L’articolo analizza la cooperazione tra ricercatori universitari e operatori territoriali nel promuovere l’educazione continua per adulti (ECA) attraverso la ricerca-azione. Si delineano quattro progetti condotti presso la cattedra di Pedagogia dell’Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, attraverso i quali sono state costruite soluzioni innovative in diversi settori tramite metodologie di ricerca e apprendimento sociale. Il progetto RE-START ha visto l’istituzione di tavoli di comunità a livello locale, i Tavoli Adolescenti del Comune di Varese sono stati articolati secondo la logica del Change Laboratory, il Progetto Morselli ha implementato un approccio di Service Learning in collaborazione con le istituzioni e le scuole locali, sono state sviluppate Comunità di Pratica verticali per la co-costruzione di moduli di orientamento scolastico con le scuole secondarie. In tutti questi progetti l’Università si è posta come lievito ed attivatore dell’agency degli adulti con cui ha collaborato e co-progettato.
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- 2024
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26. From Theory to Behaviour: Towards a General Model of Engagement
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Bonometti, Valerio, Ringer, Charles, Ruiz, Mathieu, Wade, Alex, and Drachen, Anders
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
Engagement is a fuzzy concept. In the present work we operationalize engagement mechanistically by linking it directly to human behaviour and show that the construct of engagement can be used for shaping and interpreting data-driven methods. First we outline a formal framework for engagement modelling. Second we expanded on our previous work on theory-inspired data-driven approaches to better model the engagement process by proposing a new modelling technique, the Melchoir Model. Third, we illustrate how, through model comparison and inspection, we can link machine-learned models and underlying theoretical frameworks. Finally we discuss our results in light of a theory-driven hypothesis and highlight potential application of our work in industry., Comment: In review for being included in the proceedings of "Conference on Games"
- Published
- 2020
27. Resource-Limited Automated Ki67 Index Estimation in Breast Cancer.
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Jessica Gliozzo, Giosuè Cataldo Marinò, Arturo Bonometti, Marco Frasca 0001, and Dario Malchiodi
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- 2023
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28. Rock Slope Instabilities Affecting the AlUla Archaeological Sites (KSA)
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Gallego, José Ignacio, Margottini, Claudio, Perissé Valero, Ingrid, Spizzichino, Daniele, Beni, Tommaso, Boldini, Daniela, Bonometti, Francesca, Casagli, Nicola, Castellanza, Riccardo, Crosta, Giovanni Battista, Frattini, Paolo, Frodella, William, Gigli, Giovanni, Lusini, Edoardo, Rigamonti, Serena, Rusconi, Giulia, Vitrano, Lorenzo, Sassa, Kyoji, Series Editor, Konagai, Kazuo, Series Editor, Sassa, Shinji, Series Editor, Alcántara-Ayala, Irasema, editor, Arbanas, Željko, editor, Huntley, David, editor, Mihalić Arbanas, Snježana, editor, Mikoš, Matjaž, editor, V. Ramesh, Maneesha, editor, Tang, Huiming, editor, and Tiwari, Binod, editor
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- 2023
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29. Resource-Limited Automated Ki67 Index Estimation in Breast Cancer.
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Jessica Gliozzo, Giosuè Cataldo Marinò, Arturo Bonometti, Marco Frasca 0001, and Dario Malchiodi
- Published
- 2024
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30. Approximating the Manifold Structure of Attributed Incentive Salience from Large-scale Behavioural Data: A Representation Learning Approach Based on Artificial Neural Networks
- Author
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Bonometti, Valerio, Ruiz, Mathieu J., Drachen, Anders, and Wade, Alex
- Published
- 2023
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31. The Energy Sector and Energy Geopolitics in the MENA Region at a Crossroad
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Hafner, Manfred, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, and Bonometti, Benedetta
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Open Access book ,Energy sector of the Middle East and North Africa ,Energy geopolitics ,Energy economics ,Energy system ,Socioeconomic development in MENA countries ,Sustainable energy transition ,Geoeconomics of oil and gas ,Decarbonization ,Energy Access ,Environmental economics ,International relations ,Energy technology and engineering - Abstract
This open access book offers a holistic and interdisciplinary analysis of the energy sector in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region and its ongoing transformation. Taking into account global decarbonization policies, it offers a comprehensive overview of the transition’s effects in the region highlighting socioeconomic, geopolitical and cultural aspects. The book is divided into four parts, the first of which illustrates the historical, cultural and socioeconomic heterogeneity of the MENA region. The second part assesses the region's energy sector, with a special focus on the energy mix and consumption evolution at the national level. The third part addresses the geopolitics and geoeconomics of the energy sector in MENA countries, including foreign interference, conflicts, investments and partnerships both related to hydrocarbons and energy transition. Lastly, the fourth part provides overall conclusions and key takeaways on all major aspects addressed by the book, highlighting various paths and strategies for decarbonization in the region.
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- 2023
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32. Snapshot of Fall Prevention in Patients Referred to a Neurorehabilitation Unit: A Feasibility Study on the Use of an Airbag Device
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Laura Comini, Adriana Olivares, Lucia Marchina, Adrian Suruniuc, Fabio Vanoglio, Gian Pietro Bonometti, Alberto Luisa, and Giacomo Corica
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smart belt ,airbag ,falls ,prevention ,in-hospital rehabilitation ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
Active wearable devices such as protective smart belts have been proposed to reduce hip impact in the event of a fall. This study primarily evaluated the feasibility and acceptance of a specific protective belt among selected patients identified as being at risk of falling who were admitted to an ICS Maugeri Neurorehabilitation Unit from September 2022 to April 2023. According to previous institutional observations, the device was worn between the 6th and 21st days of recovery. Out of 435 admitted patients, 118 were considered eligible, but 101 declined to participate (about 50% refused to wear the belt without first trying it on; the other 50% found it too heavy or difficult to manage). Among the 17 patients who accepted (users), 9 used the belt correctly. The remaining eight patients refused to wear it after 24 h, due to discomfort. Out of 435 patients admitted, we observed at least one fall in 49 patients, of whom 5 were eligible patients; 1 was a user who had quickly refused to use the belt and fell with mild damage. Two non-eligible patients and one eligible non-user patient experienced falls resulting in hip fractures; only in the latter case could the use of the belt have limited the damage to the hip. Difficulties in recruiting patients and low acceptance of the proposed intervention present further challenges.
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- 2024
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33. Gluing silting objects along recollements of well generated triangulated categories
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Bonometti, Fabiano
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Mathematics - Representation Theory ,16G30, 18E15, 18E30 - Abstract
We provide an explicit procedure to glue (not necessarily compact) silting objects along recollements of triangulated categories with coproducts having a 'nice' set of generators, namely, well generated triangulated categories. This procedure is compatible with gluing co-t-structures and it generalizes a result by Liu, Vit\'{o}ria and Yang. We provide conditions for our procedure to restrict to tilting objects and to silting and tilting modules. As applications, we retrieve the classification of silting modules over the Kronecker algebra and the classification of non-compact tilting sheaves over a weighted noncommutative regular projective curve of genus 0.
- Published
- 2020
34. Modelling Early User-Game Interactions for Joint Estimation of Survival Time and Churn Probability
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Bonometti, Valerio, Ringer, Charles, Hall, Mark, Wade, Alex R., and Drachen, Anders
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
Data-driven approaches which aim to identify and predict player engagement are becoming increasingly popular in games industry contexts. This is due to the growing practice of tracking and storing large volumes of in-game telemetries coupled with a desire to tailor the gaming experience to the end-user's needs. These approaches are particularly useful not just for companies adopting Game-as-a-Service (GaaS) models (e.g. for re-engagement strategies) but also for those working under persistent content-delivery regimes (e.g. for better audience targeting). A major challenge for the latter is to build engagement models of the user which are data-efficient, holistic and can generalize across multiple game titles and genres with minimal adjustments. This work leverages a theoretical framework rooted in engagement and behavioural science research for building a model able to estimate engagement-related behaviours employing only a minimal set of game-agnostic metrics. Through a series of experiments we show how, by modelling early user-game interactions, this approach can make joint estimates of long-term survival time and churn probability across several single-player games in a range of genres. The model proposed is very suitable for industry applications since it relies on a minimal set of metrics and observations, scales well with the number of users and is explicitly designed to work across a diverse range of titles., Comment: Submitted to IEEE Conference on Games 2019
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- 2019
35. Arginase‐1+ bone marrow myeloid cells are reduced in myeloproliferative neoplasms and correlate with clinical phenotype, fibrosis, and molecular driver
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Arturo Bonometti, Oscar Borsani, Elisa Rumi, Virginia Valeria Ferretti, Claudia Dioli, Elena Lucato, Marco Paulli, and Emanuela Boveri
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CALR ,immune microenvironment ,MDSC ,myelofibrosis ,myeloproliferative neoplasms ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Philadelphia‐negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) are clonal myeloid proliferative disorders characterized by sustained systemic inflammation. Despite its renowned importance, the knowledge concerning the inflammatory pathophysiology of these conditions is currently limited to studies on serum cytokines, while cellular immunity has rarely been investigated. Methods In the present study, we targeted Arginase‐1 immunosuppressive myeloid cells in the bone marrow of MPN patients and healthy controls and investigated their clinical and prognostic significance. We demonstrated that MPN are characterized by a significant reduction of bone marrow immunosuppressive cells and that the number of these cells significantly correlates with several clinical and histopathological features of diagnostic and prognostic importance. Moreover, we identified an unreported correlation between a reduction of Arginase‐1+ bone marrow cells and the presence of CALR mutations, linking tumor‐promoting immunity and molecular drivers. Finally, we postulate that the reduction of bone marrow Arginase‐1+ immunosuppressive cells may be due to the migration of these cells to the spleen, where they may exert systemic immunomodulatory function. Conclusion Altogether, this study preliminary investigated the contribution of cellular immunity in the pathogenesis of myeloproliferative neoplasms and identified a possible interesting therapeutic target as well as a set of new links that may contribute to unraveling the biological mechanisms behind these interesting hematological neoplasms.
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- 2023
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36. A Sensor-Based Upper Limb Treatment in Hemiplegic Patients: Results from a Randomized Pilot Study
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Fabio Vanoglio, Laura Comini, Marta Gaiani, Gian Pietro Bonometti, Alberto Luisa, and Palmira Bernocchi
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hand function ,sub-acute stroke ,sensor-based device ,upper extremity ,rehabilitation ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
In post-stroke patients, the disabling motor deficit mainly affects the upper limb. The focus of rehabilitation is improving upper limb function and reducing long-term disability. This study aims to evaluate the feasibility of using the Gloreha Aria (R-Lead), a sensor-based upper limb in-hospital rehabilitation, compared with conventional physiotherapist-led training in subacute hemiplegic patients. Twenty-one patients were recruited and randomised 1:1 to a sensor-based group (treatment group TG) or a conventional group (control group, CG). All patients performed 30 sessions of 30 min each of dedicated upper limb rehabilitation. The Fugl–Meyer Assessment for Upper Extremity (FMA-UE) was the primary evaluation., both as a motor score and as individual items. Secondary evaluations were Functional Independence Measure; global disability assessed with the Modified Barthel Index; Motor Evaluation Scale for UE in stroke; power grip; and arm, shoulder, and hand disability. All the enrolled patients, 10 in the TG and 11 in the CG, completed all hand rehabilitation sessions during their hospital stay without experiencing any adverse events. FMA-UE scores in upper limb motor function improved in both groups [delta change CG (11.8 ± 9.2) vs. TG (12.7 ± 8.6)]. The score at T1 for FMA joint pain (21.8 vs. 24 best score) suggests the use of the Gloreha Aria (R-Lead) as feasible in improving arm function abilities in post-stroke patients.
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- 2024
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37. Low-Carbon Energy Strategies in MENA Countries
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Hafner, Manfred, primary, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, additional, and Bonometti, Benedetta, additional
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- 2023
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38. Geopolitics of the Energy Transformation in the MENA Region
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Hafner, Manfred, primary, Raimondi, Pier Paolo, additional, and Bonometti, Benedetta, additional
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- 2023
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39. Usability of a continuous oxygen saturation device for home telemonitoring
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Francesco Bonometti, Palmira Bernocchi, Andrea Vitali, Anna Savoldelli, Caterina Rizzi, and Simonetta Scalvini
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Background The emergency for the COVID-19 pandemic has led to greater use of home telemonitoring devices. The aim of this study was to assess the usability of continuous home-monitoring care with an oxygen saturation device on post-COVID-19 patients. Method The system consists of a digital continuous pulse oximeter and a smartphone with an App, which were provided to patients. A survey composed of a standard Post-Study System Usability Questionnaire, and a satisfaction questionnaire was exploited to conduct a usability and feasibility analysis of the service. Results A total of 29 patients (17.2% female) with a mean age of 65 ± 11.5 years were enrolled: 20 patients were smartphone users (69%) with a mean age of 60.2 ± 9.5 years, and 9 patients (31%) did not own a smartphone (mean age 76.8 ± 5.9). The monitoring period was 1 month: a total of 444 recordings were conducted, 15 recordings per patient averagely. In total, 82% of the recordings performed did not require any intervention, while 18% led to the production of a report and subsequent intervention by a nurse who verified, together with the specialist, the need to intervene (i.e. the patient accessed the clinic for medical control and/or modification of oxygen therapy). A total of 17 patients compiled a usability questionnaire. The service was perceived as useful and well-structured, although it often required caregiver support. Conclusions Using continuous home-monitoring care with an oxygen saturation device seems feasible and useful for patients who could be followed at home avoiding going back to the hospital every time a trend oximetry is needed. Further improvements in connections, data flow processes, and simplifications, based on patients’ feedback, are needed to scale up the service.
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- 2023
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40. COVID-19 teleassistance and teleconsultation: a matched case-control study (MIRATO project, Lombardy, Italy)
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Palmira Bernocchi, Giacomo Crotti, Elvira Beato, Francesco Bonometti, Vittorio Giudici, Patrizia Bertolaia, Elisa Perger, Andrea Remuzzi, Tiziana Bachetti, Maria Teresa La Rovere, Laura Adelaide Dalla Vecchia, Fabio Angeli, Gianfranco Parati, Gabriella Borghi, Michele Vitacca, and Simonetta Scalvini
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teleassistance ,telemonitoring ,teleconsultation ,telemedicine ,chronic disease ,rehabilitation ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, telemedicine has been recognised as a powerful modality to shorten the length of hospital stay and to free up beds for the sicker patients. Lombardy, and in particular the areas of Bergamo, Brescia, and Milan, was one of the regions in Europe most hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. The primary aim of the MIRATO project was to compare the incidence of severe events (hospital readmissions and mortality) in the first three months after discharge between COVID-19 patients followed by a Home-Based Teleassistance and Teleconsultation (HBTT group) program and those discharged home without Telemedicine support (non-HBTT group).MethodsThe study was designed as a matched case-control study. The non-HBTT patients were matched with the HBTT patients for sex, age, presence of COVID-19 pneumonia and number of comorbidities. After discharge, the HBTT group underwent a telecare nursing and specialist teleconsultation program at home for three months, including monitoring of vital signs and symptoms. Further, in this group we analysed clinical data, patients' satisfaction with the program, and quality of life.ResultsFour hundred twenty-two patients per group were identified for comparison. The median age in both groups was 70 ± 11 years (62% males). One or more comorbidities were present in 86% of the HBTT patients and 89% in the non-HBTT group (p = ns). The total number of severe events was 17 (14 hospitalizations and 3 deaths) in the HBTT group and 40 (26 hospitalizations and 16 deaths) in the non-HBTT group (p = 0.0007). The risk of hospital readmission or death after hospital discharge was significantly lower in HBTT patients (Log-rank Test p = 0.0002). In the HBTT group, during the 3-month follow-up, 5,355 teleassistance contacts (13 ± 4 per patient) were performed. The number of patients with one or more symptoms declined significantly: from 338 (78%) to 183 (45%) (p
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- 2023
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41. PB2199: GEOGRAPHIC CLUSTERING OF ERDHEIM-CHESTER DISEASE IN ITALY AND FRANCE
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Francesco Peyronel, Julien Haroche, Martina Mazzariol, Francesco Pegoraro, Giuseppe Benigno, Paride Fenaroli, Corrado Campochiaro, Giulio Cavalli, Alessandro Tomelleri, Chrysanthos Grigoratos, Maria Mengoli, Arturo Bonometti, Emilio Berti, Gustavo Savino, Mauro Cives, Iria Neri, Gaetano Pacinella, Antonino Tuttolomondo, Massimo Marano, Francesco Muratore, Alessandro Broccoli, Pier Luigi Zinzani, Biagio Didona, Lorenzo Dagna, Augusto Vaglio, and Fleur Cohen-Aubart
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
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42. CD1a + histiocytoses in primary myelofibrosis patients: just a casual association? A case report and systematic review of the literature.
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Bonometti, Arturo, Tzankov, Alexandar, Alborelli, Ilaria, Went, Philip, and Dirnhofer, Stefan
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- *
LANGERHANS-cell histiocytosis , *HEMATOPOIETIC stem cells , *STAT proteins , *EXTRAMEDULLARY hematopoiesis , *SPLENIC rupture , *MEDICAL literature - Abstract
The document explores the association between CD1a + histiocytoses and primary myelofibrosis (PMF) in patients, focusing on a case report and systematic review of the literature. It discusses the rarity of histiocytoses, their clinical phenotypes, and their association with hematological neoplasms. The study investigates the pathogenetic mechanisms underlying the association between CD1a + histiocytoses and PMF, proposing a model involving gene mutations, chronic inflammation, and suppression of STAT5 signaling. The document highlights the clinical, pathological, molecular, and prognostic features of patients with PMF and CD1a + histiocytoses, emphasizing the need for further research to understand the underlying mechanisms and optimize patient therapy. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2025
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43. Formation of the Naxos nested domes and crustal differentiation by convection and diapirism
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Louis-Napoléon Aurélie, Vanderhaeghe Olivier, Gerbault Muriel, Martin Roland, and Bonometti Thomas
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geology of naxos ,aegean domain ,nested domes ,gravitational instabilities ,crustal convection ,diapirism ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The Naxos dome, in the middle of the Aegean domain, exposes the former root of the Alpine orogenic belt and represents a key natural example to investigate the development of gravitational instabilities during orogenic evolution and their impact on crustal differentiation. The Naxos dome is cored by migmatites with structures depicting second order domes with a diameter of 1–2 km nested in the first order deca-kilometer scale dome that formed at the onset of orogenic collapse. Zircon grains from the migmatites record a succession of crystallization-dissolution cycles with a period of 1–2 Myr. These features have been attributed to the development of convective and diapiric gravitational instabilities, related to thermally induced and compositional buoyancy. In this paper, we test the pertinence of this model with a thermal-mechanical numerical experiment performed with a volume of fluid method (VOF) known to preserve material phase interfaces during large deformation of viscous layers. Partial melting of the crust is modeled by strain-rate and temperature dependent viscosity and temperature dependent density. Moreover, horizontal layers with density, viscosity and heat production variations mimic more felsic or more mafic lithologies in a crust of intermediate composition. With basal heating, gravitational instabilities initiate with local segregation of the buoyant versus heavier layers, followed by diapiric upwelling of buoyant pockets of aggregated less dense material. Convection starts after 5 Myr, approximately when half of the crust has a viscosity lower than 1019 Pa s. The size of the convection cells increases as the temperature rises in the crust and reaches ∼25 km in diameter after ca. 20 Myr, which defines the size of first order domes. Some of the heterogeneous material is entrained in the convection cells with a revolution period of 1 to 3 Myr. However, most of the denser material accumulates in the lower crust, while the buoyant material segregates at the top of the convection cells and forms diapirs that correspond to second order domes, of several kilometers in diameter and nested within the first order domes. This model, which reproduces the first order characteristic dimensions of the Naxos nested domes and the periodicity of their zircon geochronological record, demonstrates the efficiency of gravitational instabilities in the formation of migmatite domes and, more generally, in the multi-scale dynamics of crustal differentiation leading to a felsic upper crust, an intermediate middle crust and a mafic lower crust.
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- 2024
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44. An atypical presentation of tuberculous gumma heralding a diagnosis of lymph node tuberculosis: Hindsight is 20/20
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Eugenio Isoletta, MD, Christian Ciolfi, MD, Arturo Bonometti, MD, Michele Sachs, MD, and Valeria Brazzelli, MD
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cutaneous tuberculosis ,lymph node tuberculosis ,tuberculosis ,tuberculous gumma ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Published
- 2022
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45. Raman Activities of Cyano-Ester Quinoidal Oligothiophenes Reveal Their Diradical Character and the Proximity of the Low-Lying Double Exciton State
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Yasi Dai, Laura Bonometti, José Luis Zafra, Kazuo Takimiya, Juan Casado, and Fabrizia Negri
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conjugated diradicals ,organic semiconductors ,DFT ,DFT-MRCI ,Raman spectroscopy ,resonance Raman enhancement ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Quinoidal oligothiophenes have received considerable attention as interesting platforms with remarkable amphoteric redox behavior associated with their diradical character increasing with the conjugation lengths. In this work, we considered a family of quinoidal oligothiophenes bearing cyano-ester terminal groups and characterized them by UV-Vis-NIR absorption and Raman spectroscopy measurements at different excitation wavelengths. The experimental investigation is complemented by quantum-chemical studies to assess the quality of computed density functional theory (DFT) ground state structures and their influence on predicted Raman intensities. In addition, resonance conditions with the optically active HOMO→LUMO transition as well as with the more elusive state dominated by the doubly excited HOMO,HOMO→LUMO,LUMO configuration, are determined with DFT-MRCI calculations and their contributions to Raman activity enhancement are discussed in terms of computed vibrational Huang–Rhys (HR) factors.
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- 2022
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46. Bone marrow CD34+ molecular chimerism as an early predictor of relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation in patients with acute myeloid leukemia
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Michele Malagola, Nicola Polverelli, Alessandra Beghin, Federica Bolda, Marta Comini, Mirko Farina, Enrico Morello, Vera Radici, Eugenia Accorsi Buttini, Simona Bernardi, Federica Re, Alessandro Leoni, Davide Bonometti, Duilio Brugnoni, Arnalda Lanfranchi, and Domenico Russo
- Subjects
WT1 ,allogeneic stem cell transplantation ,minimal residual disease (MRD) ,lineage specific molecular chimerism ,pre-emptive therapy ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundMinimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring is an important tool to optimally address post-transplant management of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed the impact of bone marrow CD34+ molecular chimerism and WT1 on the outcome of a consecutive series of 168 AML patients submitted to allogeneic stem cell transplantation.ResultsThe cumulative incidence of relapse (CIR) was significantly lower in patients with donor chimerism on CD34+ cells ≥ 97.5% and WT1 < 213 copies/ABL x 10^4 both at 1st month (p=0.008 and p 213 showed intermediate prognosis. 12 of these patients fell in this category because of molecular chimerism < 97.5% at a time-point in which WT1 was < 213.ConclusionsOur results confirm that lineage-specific molecular chimerism and WT1 after allo-SCT (1st and 3rd month) are useful MRD markers. When considered together at 3rd month, CD34+ molecular chimerism could represent an earlier predictor of relapse compared to WT1. Further studies are necessary to confirm this preliminary observation.
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- 2023
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47. Visual and Hearing Impairment Are Associated With Delirium in Hospitalized Patients: Results of a Multisite Prevalence Study
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Tarasconi, A., Sella, M., Auriemma, S., Paternò, G., Faggian, G., Lucarelli, C., De Grazia, N., Alberto, C., Margola, A., Porcella, L., Nardiello, I., Chimenti, E., Zeni, M., Giani, A., Famularo, S., Romairone, E., Minaglia, C., Ceccotti, C., Guerra, G., Mantovani, G., Monacelli, F., Candiani, T., Ballestrero, A., Santolini, F., Rosso, M., Bono, V., Sibilla, S., Dal Santo, P., Ceci, M., Barone, P., Schirinzi, T., Formenti, A., Nastasi, G., Isaia, G., Gonella, D., Battuello, A., Casson, S., Calvani, D., Boni, F., Ciaccio, A., Rosa, R., Sanna, G., Manfredini, S., Cortese, L., Rizzo, M., Prestano, R., Greco, A., Lauriola, M., Gelosa, G., Piras, V., Arena, M., Cosenza, D., Bellomo, A., LaMontagna, M., Gabbani, L., Lambertucci, L., Perego, S., Parati, G., Basile, G., Gallina, V., Pilone, G., Giudice, C., De, F., Pietrogrande, L., De, B., Mosca, M., Corazzin, I., Rossi, P., Nunziata, V., D'Amico, F., Grippa, A., Giardini, S., Barucci, R., Cossu, A., Fiorin, L., Distefano, M., Lunardelli, M., Brunori, M., Ruffini, I., Abraham, E., Varutti, A., Fabbro, E., Catalano, A., Martino, G., Leotta, D., Marchet, A., Dell'Aquila, G., Scrimieri, A., Davoli, M., Casella, M., Cartei, A., Polidori, G., Brischetto, D., Motta, S., Saponara, R., Perrone, P., Russo, G., Del, D., Car, C., Pirina, T., Franzoni, S., Cotroneo, A., Ghiggia, F., Volpi, G., Menichetti, C., Bo, M., Panico, A., Calogero, P., Corvalli, G., Mauri, M., Lupia, E., Manfredini, R., Fabbian, F., March, A., Pedrotti, M., Veronesi, M., Strocchi, E., Borghi, C., Bianchetti, A., Crucitti, A., DiFrancesco, V., Fontana, G., Bonanni, L., Barbone, F., Serrati, C., Ballardini, G., Simoncelli, M., Ceschia, G., Scarpa, C., Brugiolo, R., Fusco, S., Ciarambino, T., Biagini, C., Tonon, E., Porta, M., Venuti, D., DelSette, M., Poeta, M., Barbagallo, G., Trovato, G., Delitala, A., Arosio, P., Reggiani, F., Zuliani, G., Ortolani, B., Mussio, E., Girardi, A., Coin, A., Ruotolo, G., Castagna, A., Masina, M., Cimino, R., Pinciaroli, A., Tripodi, G., Cannistrà, U., Cassadonte, F., Vatrano, M., Scaglione, L., Fogliacco, P., Muzzuilini, C., Romano, F., Padovani, A., Rozzini, L., Cagnin, A., Fragiacomo, F., Desideri, G., Liberatore, E., Bruni, A., Orsitto, G., Franco, M., Bonfrate, L., Bonetto, M., Pizio, N., Magnani, G., Cecchetti, G., Longo, A., Bubba, V., Marinan, L., Cotelli, M., Turla, M., Sessa, M., Abruzzi, L., Castoldi, G., LoVetere, D., Musacchio, C., Novello, M., Cavarape, A., Bini, A., Leonardi, A., Seneci, F., Grimaldi, W., Fimognari, F., Bambara, V., Saitta, A., Corica, F., Braga, M., Ettorre, E., Camellini, C., Bellelli, G., Annoni, G., Marengoni, A., Crescenzo, A., Noro, G., Turco, R., Ponzetto, M., Giuseppe, L., Mazzei, B., Maiuri, G., Costaggiu, D., Damato, R., Formilan, M., Patrizia, G., Gallucci, M., Paragona, M., Bini, P., Modica, D., Abati, C., Clerici, M., Barbera, I., NigroImperiale, F., Manni, A., Votino, C., Castiglioni, C., Di, M., Degl'Innocenti, M., Moscatelli, G., Guerini, S., Casini, C., Dini, D., D'Imporzano, E., DeNotariis, S., Bonometti, F., Paolillo, C., Riccardi, A., Tiozzo, A., DiBari, M., Vanni, S., Scarpa, A., Zara, D., Ranieri, P., Alessandro, M., Di, F., Pezzoni, D., Platto, C., D'Ambrosio, V., Ivaldi, C., Milia, P., DeSalvo, F., Solaro, C., Strazzacappa, M., Cazzadori, M., Confente, S., Grasso, M., Troisi, E., Guerini, V., Bernardini, B., Corsini, C., Boffelli, S., Filippi, A., Delpin, K., Faraci, B., Bertoletti, E., Vannucci, M., Tesi, F., Crippa, P., Malighetti, A., Bettini, D., Maltese, F., Abruzzese, G., Cosimo, D., Azzini, M., Colombo, M., Procino, G., Fascendini, S., Barocco, F., Del, P., Mazzone, A., Riva, E., Dell'Acqua, D., Cottino, M., Vezzadini, G., Avanzi, S., Brambilla, C., Orini, S., Sgrilli, F., Mello, A., Lombardi, L., Muti, E., Dijk, B., Fenu, S., Pes, C., Gareri, P., Passamonte, M., Rigo, R., Locusta, L., Caser, L., Rosso, G., Cesarini, S., Cozzi, R., Santini, C., Carbone, P., Cazzaniga, I., Lovati, R., Cantoni, A., Ranzani, P., Barra, D., Pompilio, G., Dimori, S., Cernesi, S., Riccò, C., Piazzolla, F., Capittini, E., Rota, C., Gottardi, F., Merla, L., Barelli, A., Millul, A., De, G., Morrone, G., Bigolari, M., Macchi, M., Zambon, F., Pizzorni, C., DiCasaleto, G., Menculini, G., Marcacci, M., Catanese, G., Sprini, D., DiCasalet, T., Bocci, M., Borga, S., Caironi, P., Cat, C., Cingolani, E., Avalli, L., Greco, G., Citerio, G., Gandini, L., Cornara, G., Lerda, R., Brazzi, L., Simeone, F., Caciorgna, M., Alampi, D., Francesconi, S., Beck, E., Antonini, B., Vettoretto, K., Meggiolaro, M., Garofalo, E., Notaro, S., Varutti, R., Bassi, F., Mistraletti, G., Marino, A., Rona, R., Rondelli, E., Riva, I., Scapigliati, A., Cortegiani, A., Vitale, F., Pistidda, L., D'Andrea, R., Querci, L., Gnesin, P., Todeschini, M., Lugano, M., Castelli, G., Ortolani, M., Cotoia, A., Maggiore, S., DiTizio, L., Graziani, R., Testa, I., Ferretti, E., Castioni, C., Lombardi, F., Caserta, R., Pasqua, M., Simoncini, S., Baccarini, F., Rispoli, M., Grossi, F., Cancelliere, L., Carnelli, M., Puccini, F., Biancofiore, G., Siniscalchi, A., Laici, C., Mossello, E., Torrini, M., Pasetti, G., Palmese, S., Oggioni, R., Mangani, V., Pini, S., Martelli, M., Rigo, E., Zuccalà, F., Cherri, A., Spina, R., Calamai, I., Petrucci, N., Caicedo, A., Ferri, F., Gritti, P., Brienza, N., Fonnesu, R., Dessena, M., Fullin, G., Saggioro, D., Morandi, Alessandro, Inzitari, Marco, Udina, Cristina, Gual, Neus, Mota, Miriam, Tassistro, Elena, Andreano, Anita, Cherubini, Antonio, Gentile, Simona, Mossello, Enrico, Marengoni, Alessandra, Olivé, Anna, Riba, Francesc, Ruiz, Domingo, de Jaime, Elisabet, and Bellelli, Giuseppe
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- 2021
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48. Double expressor and double/triple hit status among primary cutaneous diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: a comparison between leg type and not otherwise specified subtypes
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Lucioni, Marco, Pescia, Carlo, Bonometti, Arturo, Fraticelli, Sara, Moltrasio, Chiara, Ramponi, Antonio, Riboni, Roberta, Roccio, Stefano, Ferrario, Giuseppina, Arcaini, Luca, Goteri, Gaia, Berti, Emilio, and Paulli, Marco
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- 2021
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49. Reticular chemistry applied on coordination polymers of Copper(I) cyanide with tridentate ligands: effect of the ligand flexibility and donor properties on topology, dimensionality and reaction behavior in solvothermal conditions
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Giordana, Alessia, Priola, Emanuele, Gariglio, Giacomo, Bonometti, Elisabetta, Operti, Lorenza, and Diana, Eliano
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- 2021
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50. ABrainVis: an android brain image visualization tool
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Ignacio Osorio, Miguel Guevara, Danilo Bonometti, Diego Carrasco, Maxime Descoteaux, Cyril Poupon, Jean-François Mangin, Cecilia Hernández, and Pamela Guevara
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Mobile visualization ,3D rendering ,Brain imaging ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background The visualization and analysis of brain data such as white matter diffusion tractography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) volumes is commonly used by neuro-specialist and researchers to help the understanding of brain structure, functionality and connectivity. As mobile devices are widely used among users and their technology shows a continuous improvement in performance, different types of applications have been designed to help users in different work areas. Results We present, ABrainVis, an Android mobile tool that allows users to visualize different types of brain images, such as white matter diffusion tractographies, represented as fibers in 3D, segmented fiber bundles, MRI 3D images as rendered volumes and slices, and meshes. The tool enables users to choose and combine different types of brain imaging data to provide visual anatomical context for specific visualization needs. ABrainVis provides high performance over a wide range of Android devices, including tablets and cell phones using medium and large tractography datasets. Interesting visualizations including brain tumors and arteries, along with fiber, are given as examples of case studies using ABrainVis. Conclusions The functionality, flexibility and performance of ABrainVis tool introduce an improvement in user experience enabling neurophysicians and neuroscientists fast visualization of large tractography datasets, as well as the ability to incorporate other brain imaging data such as MRI volumes and meshes, adding anatomical contextual information.
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- 2021
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