9,564 research outputs found
Item selection by Latent Class-based methods
The evaluation of nursing homes is usually based on the administration of
questionnaires made of a large number of polytomous items. In such a context,
the Latent Class (LC) model represents a useful tool for clustering subjects in
homogenous groups corresponding to different degrees of impairment of the
health conditions. It is known that the performance of model-based clustering
and the accuracy of the choice of the number of latent classes may be affected
by the presence of irrelevant or noise variables. In this paper, we show the
application of an item selection algorithm to real data collected within a
project, named ULISSE, on the quality-of-life of elderly patients hosted in
italian nursing homes. This algorithm, which is closely related to that
proposed by Dean and Raftery in 2010, is aimed at finding the subset of items
which provides the best clustering according to the Bayesian Information
Criterion. At the same time, it allows us to select the optimal number of
latent classes. Given the complexity of the ULISSE study, we perform a
validation of the results by means of a sensitivity analysis to different
specifications of the initial subset of items and of a resampling procedure
Frictional Collisions Off Sharp Objects
This work develops robust contact algorithms capable of dealing with multibody nonsmooth contact
geometries for which neither normals nor gap functions can be defined. Such situations arise
in the early stage of fragmentation when a number of angular fragments undergo complex collision
sequences before eventually scattering. Such situations precludes the application of most contact
algorithms proposed to date
Can Twitter be a source of information on allergy? Correlation of pollen counts with tweets reporting symptoms of allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and names of antihistamine drugs
Pollen forecasts are in use everywhere to inform therapeutic decisions for patients with allergic rhinoconjunctivitis (ARC). We exploited data derived from Twitter in order to identify tweets reporting a combination of symptoms consistent with a case definition of ARC and those reporting the name of an antihistamine drug. In order to increase the sensitivity of the system, we applied an algorithm aimed at automatically identifying jargon expressions related to medical terms. We compared weekly Twitter trends with National Allergy Bureau weekly pollen counts derived from US stations, and found a high correlation of the sum of the total pollen counts from each stations with tweets reporting ARC symptoms (Pearson's correlation coefficient: 0.95) and with tweets reporting antihistamine drug names (Pearson's correlation coefficient: 0.93). Longitude and latitude of the pollen stations affected the strength of the correlation. Twitter and other social networks may play a role in allergic disease surveillance and in signaling drug consumptions trends
No Evidence for Dark Energy Dynamics from a Global Analysis of Cosmological Data
We use a variant of principal component analysis to investigate the possible
temporal evolution of the dark energy equation of state, w(z). We constrain
w(z) in multiple redshift bins, utilizing the most recent data from Type Ia
supernovae, the cosmic microwave background, baryon acoustic oscillations, the
integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect, galaxy clustering, and weak lensing data. Unlike
other recent analyses, we find no significant evidence for evolving dark
energy; the data remains completely consistent with a cosmological constant. We
also study the extent to which the time-evolution of the equation of state
would be constrained by a combination of current- and future-generation
surveys, such as Planck and the Joint Dark Energy Mission.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Controllability of a viscoelastic plate using one boundary control in displacement or bending
In this paper we consider a viscoelastic plate (linear viscoelasticity of the
Maxwell-Boltzmann type) and we compare its controllability properties with the
(known) controllability of a purely elastic plate (the control acts on the
boundary displacement or bending). By combining operator and moment methods, we
prove that the viscoelastic plate inherits the controllability properties of
the purely elastic plate
Preferential expression of the transcription coactivator HTIF1alpha gene in acute myeloid leukemia and MDS-related AML
HTIF1α, a transcription coactivator which is able to mediate RARα activity and functionally interact with PML, is encoded by a gene on chromosome 7q32–34, which is a critical region in acute myeloid leukemias (AML). With the assumption that this gene may be related to AML, we investigated the HTIF1α DNA structure and RNA expression in leukemic cells from 36 M1–M5 AML patients (28 ‘de novo’ and eight ‘secondary’ to myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)). Abnormal HTIF1α DNA fragments were never found, whereas loss of HTIF1α DNA was observed in the patients with chromosome 7q32 deletion and translocation, and in one case without detectable chromosome 7 abnormality. HTIF1α RNA was found in acute myelocytic leukemic blasts, and was almost undetectable in normal mononuclear cells. The expression varied among the patients: higher in M1 to M3 subtypes, with the highest values in M1; low levels were constantly observed in M4 and M5 AML. In addition, HTIF1α was significantly overexpressed in MDS-related AML (MDR-AML), but not in MDS. We also found that HTIF1α expression was high in myeloid cell lines. In myeloblastic HL60 and promyelocytic NB4 cells, induced to differentiate along the monocytic–macrophage pathway by TPA or vitamin D3, HTIF1α expression decreased, whereas it was maintained at high levels on induction to granulocytic differentiation by RA or DMSO. In K562 cells, HTIF1α RNA levels did not change after hemin-induced erythroid differentiation. These results suggest that HTIF1α could play a role in myeloid differentiation, being distinctly regulated in hematopoietic lineages
Cosmological models with linearly varying deceleration parameter
We propose a new law for the deceleration parameter that varies linearly with
time and covers Berman's law where it is constant. Our law not only allows one
to generalize many exact solutions that were obtained assuming constant
deceleration parameter, but also gives a better fit with data (from SNIa, BAO
and CMB), particularly concerning the late time behavior of the universe.
According to our law only the spatially closed and flat universes are allowed;
in both cases the cosmological fluid we obtain exhibits quintom like behavior
and the universe ends with a big-rip. This is a result consistent with recent
cosmological observations.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures; some typo corrections; to appear in
International Journal of Theoretical Physic
Infants hospitalized for Bordetella pertussis infection commonly have respiratory viral coinfections
Background: Whether viral coinfections cause more severe disease than Bordetella pertussis (B. pertussis) alone remains
unclear. We compared clinical disease severity and sought clinical and demographic differences between infants with
B. pertussis infection alone and those with respiratory viral coinfections. We also analyzed how respiratory infections
were distributed during the 2 years study.
Methods: We enrolled 53 infants with pertussis younger than 180 days (median age 58 days, range 17–109 days, 64.
1% boys), hospitalized in the Pediatric Departments at “Sapienza” University Rome and Bambino Gesù Children’s
Hospital from August 2012 to November 2014. We tested in naso-pharyngeal washings B. pertussis and 14 respiratory
viruses with real-time reverse-transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Clinical data were obtained from hospital
records and demographic characteristics collected using a structured questionnaire.
Results: 28/53 infants had B. pertussis alone and 25 viral coinfection: 10 human rhinovirus (9 alone and 1 in coinfection
with parainfluenza virus), 3 human coronavirus, 2 respiratory syncytial virus. No differences were observed in clinical
disease severity between infants with B. pertussis infection alone and those with coinfections. Infants with B. pertussis
alone were younger than infants with coinfections, and less often breastfeed at admission.
Conclusions: In this descriptive study, no associations between clinical severity and pertussis with or without
co-infections were found
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