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G. Lo Re

Bio: G. Lo Re is an academic researcher from University of Palermo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wireless sensor network & Materials science. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 99 publications receiving 989 citations. Previous affiliations of G. Lo Re include University of Mons & National Research Council.


Papers
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TL;DR: The PE regimen has an activity similar to the one observed in pulmonary SCC, and a patient treated with surgery alone for a urinary bladder tumor showed continuous long-term survival, while 1 of 2 pts treated with radiotherapy alone obtained PR.

99 citations

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Viktor Grünwald1, Pierre I. Karakiewicz2, Sevil Bavbek3, Kurt Miller4  +264 moreInstitutions (16)
TL;DR: Everolimus is well tolerated in patients with mRCC and demonstrates a favourable risk-benefit ratio and safety findings and tumour responses were consistent with those observed in RECORD-1.

84 citations

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Emilio Bajetta, Irene Floriani1, M. Di Bartolomeo, R. Labianca  +179 moreInstitutions (14)
TL;DR: A more intensive regimen failed to show any benefit in disease-free and OS versus monotherapy, and a sequential treatment of FOLFIRI followed by docetaxel plus cisplatin improves disease- free survival in comparison with 5-FU/LV in patients with radically resected gastric cancer.

79 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2015-Micron
TL;DR: This work developed as a software able to accomplish the segmentation of images containing pores of any geometry in a semi-automatic way with the aim to measure the pore size distribution (PSD) of porosity and of pores dimension.

53 citations

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TL;DR: Testing HRQOL variables and prognostic clinical factors in a Cox model, only the serum level of lactic dehydrogenase, baseline overall quality of life and the physical symptom distress scores remained significant independent prognostic factors for survival.

52 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This ESMO guideline is recommended to be used as the basis for treatment and management decisions, delivering a clear proposal for diagnostic and treatment measures in each stage of rectal and colon cancer and the individual clinical situations.

1,299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The analysis of recent advances in genetic algorithms is discussed and the well-known algorithms and their implementation are presented with their pros and cons with the aim of facilitating new researchers.
Abstract: In this paper, the analysis of recent advances in genetic algorithms is discussed. The genetic algorithms of great interest in research community are selected for analysis. This review will help the new and demanding researchers to provide the wider vision of genetic algorithms. The well-known algorithms and their implementation are presented with their pros and cons. The genetic operators and their usages are discussed with the aim of facilitating new researchers. The different research domains involved in genetic algorithms are covered. The future research directions in the area of genetic operators, fitness function and hybrid algorithms are discussed. This structured review will be helpful for research and graduate teaching.

1,271 citations

01 Jan 2016

1,029 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: When I started out as a newly hatched PhD student, one of the first articles I read and understood was Ray Reiter’s classic article on default logic, and I became fascinated by both default logic and, more generally, non-monotonic logics.
Abstract: When I started out as a newly hatched PhD student, back in the day, one of the first articles I read and understood (or at least thought that I understood) was Ray Reiter’s classic article on default logic (Reiter, 1980).This was some years after the famous ‘non-monotonic logic’ issue of Artificial Intelligence in which that article appeared, but default logic was still one of the leading approaches, a tribute to the simplicity and power of the theory. As a result of reading the article, I became fascinated by both default logic and, more generally, non-monotonic logics. However, despite my fascination, these approaches never seemed terribly useful for the kinds of problem that I was supposed to be studying—problems like those in medical decision making—and so I eventually lost interest. In fact non-monotonic logics seemed to me, and to many people at the time I think, not to be terribly useful for anything. They were interesting, and clearly relevant to the long-term goals of Artificial Intelligence as a discipline, but not of any immediate practical importance. This verdict, delivered at the end of the 1980s, continued, I think, to be true for the next few years while researchers working in non-monotonic logics studied problems that to outsiders seemed to be ever more obscure. However, by the end of the 1990s, it was becoming clear, even to folk as short-sighted as I, that non-monotonic logics were getting to the point at which they could be used to solve practical problems. Knowledge in action shows quite how far these techniques have come. The reason that non-monotonic logics were invented was, of course, in order to use logic to reason about the world. Our knowledge of the world is typically incomplete, and so, in order to reason about it, one has to make assumptions about things one does not know. This, in turn, requires mechanisms for both making assumptions and then retracting them if and when they turn out not to be true. Non-monotonic logics are intended to handle this kind of assumption making and retracting, providing a mechanism that has the clean semantics of logic, but which has a non-monotonic set of conclusions. Much of the early work on non-monotonic logics was concerned with theoretical reasoning, that is reasoning about the beliefs of an agent—what the agent believes to be true. Theoretical reasoning is the domain of all those famous examples like ‘Typically birds fly. Tweety is a bird, so does Tweety fly?’, and the fact that so much of non-monotonic reasoning seemed to focus on theoretical reasoning was why I lost interest in it. I became much more concerned with practical reasoning—that is reasoning about what an agent should do—and non-monotonic reasoning seemed to me to have nothing interesting to say about practical reasoning. Of course I was wrong. When one tries to formulate any kind of description of the world as the basis for planning, one immediately runs into applications of non-monotonic logics, for example in keeping track of the state of a changing world. It is this use of non-monotonic logic that is at the heart of Knowledge in action. Building on the McCarthy’s situation calculus, Knowledge in action constructs a theory of action that encompasses a very large part of what an agent requires to reason about the world. As Reiter says in the final chapter,

899 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The use of adhesion promoters, additives or chemical modification of the filler can help in overcoming many of these limitations as mentioned in this paper, such as worse processability and reduction of the ductility.
Abstract: The rising concern towards environmental issues and, on the other hand, the need for more versatile polymer-based materials has led to increasing interest about polymer composites filled with natural-organic fillers, i.e. fillers coming from renewable sources and biodegradable. The composites, usually referred to as “green”, can find several industrial applications. On the other hand, some problems exist, such as worse processability and reduction of the ductility. The use of adhesion promoters, additives or chemical modification of the filler can help in overcoming many of these limitations. These composites can be further environment-friendly when the polymer matrix is biodegradable and comes from renewable sources as well. This short review briefly illustrates the main paths and results of research (both academic and industrial) on this topical subject, providing a quick overview (with no pretence of exhaustiveness over such a vast topic), as well as appropriate references for further in-depth studies.

889 citations