1,667 research outputs found
Impact of different recommendations on adequacy rate for sleep duration in children
A huge amount of literature in the last decades showed that sleep is essential for children’s health and well-being
and that short sleep duration is associated with several negative health outcomes. Many developmental phases in
infancy and childhood are in strict relationship with an healthy sleep.
In the last years some specific recommendations made for how much sleep children need have been published.
The empirical evidences for contemporary sleep recommendations has changed and the new recommendations
are clearly different from the previous ones and reflect clearly the changes in the sleep need of the children and
adolescents in the last decades although seem still to be largely unfitting for preadolescence and adolescence.
If sleep is to be treated as a therapeutic intervention, then consensus guidelines, statements, and evidence-based
best-practice documents are needed to underpin sleep recommendations for children.
Sleep recommendations for children play an important role for public policies and interventions, and to advertise
parents and children of the negative consequences of sleep deprivation/reduction
Space-time coupling in the up-conversion of broadband down-converted light
We investigate the up-conversion process of broadband light from parametric
down-conversion (PDC), focusing on the spatio-temporal spectral properties of
the sum-frequency generated (SFG) radiation. We demonstrate that the incoherent
component of the SFG spectrum is characterized by a skewed geometry in
space-time, which originates from a compensation between the group-velocity
mismatch and the spatial walk-off of the fundamental and the SFG fields. The
results are illustrated both by a theoretical modeling of the optical system
and by experimental measurements.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1308.236
Prenatal exposure to TCDD and atopic conditions in the Seveso second generation: a prospective cohort study.
Background2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is a toxic environmental contaminant that can bioaccumulate in humans, cross the placenta, and cause immunological effects in children, including altering their risk of developing allergies. On July 10, 1976, a chemical explosion in Seveso, Italy, exposed nearby residents to a high amount of TCDD. In 1996, the Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS) was established to study the effects of TCDD on women's health. Using data from the Seveso Second Generation Health Study, we aim to examine the effect of prenatal exposure to TCDD on the risk of atopic conditions in SWHS children born after the explosion.MethodsIndividual-level TCDD was measured in maternal serum collected soon after the accident. In 2014, we initiated the Seveso Second Generation Health Study to follow-up the children of the SWHS cohort who were born after the explosion or who were exposed in utero to TCDD. We enrolled 677 children, and cases of atopic conditions, including eczema, asthma, and hay fever, were identified by self-report during personal interviews with the mothers and children. Log-binomial and Poisson regressions were used to determine the association between prenatal TCDD and atopic conditions.ResultsA 10-fold increase in 1976 maternal serum TCDD (log10TCDD) was not significantly associated with asthma (adjusted relative risk (RR) = 0.93; 95% CI: 0.61, 1.40) or hay fever (adjusted RR = 0.99; 95% CI: 0.76, 1.27), but was significantly inversely associated with eczema (adjusted RR = 0.63; 95% CI: 0.40, 0.99). Maternal TCDD estimated at pregnancy was not significantly associated with eczema, asthma, or hay fever. There was no strong evidence of effect modification by child sex.ConclusionsOur results suggest that maternal serum TCDD near the time of explosion is associated with lower risk of eczema, which supports other evidence pointing to the dysregulated immune effects of TCDD
The Italian expenditure in transport infrastructure: a survey
The aim of the paper is to analyse the most important quantitative data on Italian expenditures in transport infrastructures (investment and maintenance costs), linking the expenditure with traffic flows. The analysis concerns rail and road networks (both for national and local roads), over the last ten years, and a possible forecast for the next years, thanks to the official previsions of the “Objective Law”. The whole analysis is based on official data. The planned infrastructures will analyzed with taxonomical and cost – benefit approaches, in order to provide a ranking of priority. The results show how the planning of the investment expenditure is still based on different criteria than efficiency. So, the foreseen expenditure will not able to give relevant effects in order to improve the efficiency of the transport system and to obtain better allocative issues.transport expenditure; italy; infrastructure; investment
Temperament and Character Effects on Late Adolescents' Well-Being and Emotional-Behavioural Difficulties
Background. Research on adults points to personality as a crucial determinant of well-
being. The present study investigates the question of personality's relation to well-being
and psychosocial adjustment in adolescence.
Methods. We assessed the role of temperament and character (Temperament and
Character Inventory, TCI-125), on psychological well-being (PWB; Psychological Well-
Being scales), subjective well-being (SWB; Positive and Negative Affect, PA and NA,
respectively), and psychosocial adjustment (emotional-behavioural problems measured
by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire for Adolescents, SDQ-A), in 72 Italian
late adolescents (aged 17.5 0.75). Multiple regressions were conducted to predict
PWB, SWB, and SDQ-A scores using TCI-125 scales as predictors.
Results. Character maturity, and in particular Self-Directedness, had a widespread
protective effect on well-being and psychosocial adjustment, while different strengths
and emotional-behavioural difficulties were associated to specific temperamental
and character traits. For example, Harm-Avoidance and Novelty-Seeking positively
predicted internalized and externalized problems, respectively.
Discussion. The present results suggest the usefulness of continuing to evaluate
temperament and, in particular, character dimensions in investigations focused on
adolescents' well-being and psychosocial functioning, especially in the contexts of
potential interventions aimed at enhancing development of adolescents' character
dimensions at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and transpersonal levels
Serum dioxin concentrations and endometriosis: a cohort study in Seveso, Italy.
Dioxin, a ubiquitous contaminant of industrial combustion processes including medical waste incineration, has been implicated in the etiology of endometriosis in animals. We sought to determine whether dioxin exposure is associated with endometriosis in humans. We conducted a population-based historical cohort study 20 years after the 1976 factory explosion in Seveso, Italy, which resulted in the highest known population exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-(italic)p(/italic)-dioxin (TCDD). Participants were 601 female residents of the Seveso area who were (3/4) 30 years old in 1976 and had adequate stored sera. Endometriosis disease status was defined by pelvic surgery, current transvaginal ultrasound, pelvic examination, and interview (for history of infertility and pelvic pain). "Cases" were women who had surgically confirmed disease or an ultrasound consistent with endometriosis. "Nondiseased" women had surgery with no evidence of endometriosis or no signs or symptoms. Other women had uncertain status. To assess TCDD exposure, individual levels of TCDD were measured in stored sera collected soon after the accident. We identified 19 women with endometriosis and 277 nondiseased women. The relative risk ratios (RRRs) for women with serum TCDD levels of 20.1-100 ppt and >100 ppt were 1.2 [90% confidence interval (CI) = 0.3-4.5] and 2.1 (90% CI = 0.5-8.0), respectively, relative to women with TCDD levels (3/4) 20 ppt. Tests for trend using the above exposure categories and continuous log TCDD were nonsignificant. In conclusion, we report a doubled, nonsignificant risk for endometriosis among women with serum TCDD levels of 100 ppt or higher, but no clear dose response. Unavoidable disease misclassification in a population-based study may have led to an underestimate of the true risk of endometriosis
Digital Curation in the Italian context: new roles and professions for Digital Librarians
Joint Master Degree in Digital Library Learning (DILL)The aim of this research is to analyse the activity of digital curation in the Italian context,
focusing the attention on the IT skills and competencies of the digital curator.
The main hypothesis comes from a reflection on the creation of new roles in the practice of data
curation. The first objective is to demonstrate that data curation can be the basis for the
development of different professions, such as data librarians, data journalists, data analysts etc.
Another objective is to individuate a common core of technical and IT skills that can help them
to find a specific specialization. Last, within a specific theoretical framework that concerns the
data curation lifecycle, these new roles in data management allow digital librarians to add value
to the whole data lifecycle, since curators contribute to find different patterns of knowledge
within data and datasets.
A qualitative approach has been adopted, using collective and instrumental case studies as
research method. Five semi-structured interviews have been conducted among people that deal
with digital curation in Italy, such as librarians, digital humanists, data experts.
The results of the study show a varied context in which, although it is possible to individuate
some basic IT skills, the specialization of the curricula calls for a more in-depth analysis.
Additionally, a certain level of homogeneity among participants has been found in the perception
and evaluation of the context
Attempts at memory control induce dysfunctional brain activation profiles in Generalized Anxiety Disorder: An exploratory fMRI study
Suppression of aversive memories through memory control has historically been proposed as a central psychological defense mechanism. Inability to suppress memories is considered a central psychological trait in several psychiatric disorders, including Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD). Yet, few studies have attempted the focused identification of dysfunctional brain activation profiles when patients with Generalized Anxiety Disorders attempt memory control. Using a well-characterized behavioral paradigm we studied brain activation profiles in a group of adult GAD patients and well-matched healthy controls (HC). Participants learned word-association pairs before imaging. During fMRI when presented with one word of the pair, they were instructed to either suppress memory of, or retrieve the paired word. Subsequent behavioral testing indicated both GAD and HC were able to engage in the task, but attempts at memory control (suppression or retrieval) during fMRI revealed vastly different activation profiles. GAD were characterized by substantive hypo-activation signatures during both types of memory control, with effects particularly strong during suppression in brain regions including the dorsal anterior cingulate and the ventral prefrontal cortex. Attempts at memory control in GAD fail to engage brain regions to the same extent HC, providing a putative neuronal signature for a well-established psychological characteristic of the illness
Behind and beyond the pediatric metabolic syndrome
The growing use of the Metabolic Syndrome in pediatric age need a critical approach, on the basis of recent concerns on definition and usefulness for individual management in clinical practice. We reviewed these aspects from a pediatric point of view, providing a set of questions about what the Metabolic Syndrome means in a clinical setting. The new proposed pediatric definition by IDF was discussed, by outlying how it does not fully consider the peculiarities of children and adolescents. The comparison between two cases of obese children was used in order to show how this diagnosis could be confusing for a correct management. We stressed the need for health-related limits for each component of the Metabolic Syndrome instead of percentile-derived cut-points, as well as the opportunity to extend the estimation to other family or individual risk factors by means of a multiple-items screening form. In conclusion, Metabolic Syndrome use in pediatric age suffers at present from important limitations (i.e., adult derived definition, possibility to rule-in but not to rule-out the individual metabolic risk, instability of MetS during adolescence, poor usefulness of the diagnosis for specific treatment). Consequently, a prudent use of Metabolic Syndrome for children and adolescents seems to be the best and honest position for paediatricians, waiting for long term, longitudinal follow-up studies that could clarify the entire question
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