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Institution

ARPA-E

GovernmentWashington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
About: ARPA-E is a government organization based out in Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Climate change. The organization has 1161 authors who have published 1267 publications receiving 30049 citations. The organization is also known as: Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2012-Allergy
TL;DR: Chronic rhinosinusitis is an inflammation of the nose and of the paranasal sinuses and the involvement of the respiratory epithelium in the mechanisms is poorly understood.
Abstract: Background : Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is an inflammation of the nose and of the paranasal sinuses. The involvement of the respiratory epithelium in the mechanisms of CRS is poorly understood. Aims : Among proteins expressed by nasal epithelial cells in CRS, IL-19 may have key functions. We here aimed to determine the expression and regulation of IL-19. Methods : Nasal biopsies from normal subjects (n = 12), subjects with CRS but without nasal polyps (NP) (CRSsNP, n = 12) and with CRS with NP (CRSwNP, n = 15) were collected. Human Asthma Gene Array and real-time PCR were used to evaluate gene expression, western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry for protein expression. Results for IL-19 were confirmed by real-time PCR. The constitutive and stimulated (LPS, TGF beta) expression of IL-19 and cell proliferation were evaluated in a nasal epithelial cell line (RPMI 2650). Results : Human Asthma Gene Array showed an increased IL-19 gene expression in NP from patients with CRS in comparison with normal subjects. Real-time PCR confirmed the IL-19 mRNA up-regulation in patients with CRSwNP and showed an up-regulation of IL-19, at lower extent, in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis without nasal polyps (CRSsNP) in comparison with normal subjects. Western blot analysis confirmed that IL-19 is increased also at protein level in patients with CRSwNP in comparison with normal subjects. In NP, IL-19 is highly expressed in the metaplastic nasal epithelium when compared to normal or hyperplastic epithelium. LPS stimulation increased IL-19 expression, and recombinant IL-19 increased cell proliferation in nasal epithelial cells. Conclusions : IL-19 is overexpressed in the epithelium in CRSwNP and increases epithelial cell proliferation.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A land classification in zones featured by different criticality levels of atmospheric pollution, considering pollutant time series as functional data is presented, and an analysis strategy is suggested to obtain an easily interpretable outcome at a very reasonable computational cost.
Abstract: Environmental local agencies have to enforce European directives that impose a land classification, according to air quality status, to distinguish zones needing further actions from those needing only maintenance. This paper presents a land classification in zones featured by different criticality levels of atmospheric pollution, considering pollutant time series as functional data: we call this proposal “Functional Zoning”. Our proposal is articulated in order to also meet two specific requirements: upscaling pollutant concentration data to the municipality scale, since municipalities are the reference territorial administrative units for undertaking actions; aggregating different pollutants in order to provide a multi-pollutant zoning outcome reflecting the air quality status. Specifically, we present three different alternatives to upscale data from a regular grid to the municipality scale. Then, to aggregate by pollutant, we evaluate two strategies summarizing time series: the assessment of an air quality index and the use of the Multivariate Functional Principal Component Analysis (MFPCA). The partition of municipalities is obtained by clustering air quality time series and MFPCA scores. In particular, the proposed functional zoning is carried out for Piemonte (Northern Italy), considering the hourly concentration fields of the main pollutants. We obtain six classifications of the same land and we propose a comparison study of the different strategies’ results, by mapping and analyzing the differences between clusters’ labels. By taking into account the comparison study’s findings, we finally suggest an analysis strategy to environmental agencies and policy makers to obtain an easily interpretable outcome at a very reasonable computational cost.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An online solid phase extraction HPLC-MS/MS method was developed for the analysis of 12 perfluoroalkyl acids (PFASs) in surface and underground water samples.
Abstract: In this research paper, we report a method able to detect perfluorinated compound at pg·L−1 levels in superficial and underground water samples. An online solid phase extraction HPLC-MS/MS method was developed for the analysis of 12 perfluoroalkyl acids (PFASs). The method is based on injection of 5000 µL of water sample in SPE online WAX column followed by chromatography separation and mass spectrometry determination. SPE online elution was performed by water + 0.05% NH4OH and methanol + 0.05% NH4OH, while separation of target compounds was achieved within 10 min by Gemini chromatographic column operating from 1 to 12 pH range and using a mixture of water-methanol + 0.05% NH4OH. Sub ng·L−1 method detection limits (from 0.2 to 5 ng·L−1), linearity (from 0.2 to 250 ng·L−1), accuracy (from 80 to 120%), and precision (RSD less than 15% at LOQs levels) were achieved. The method is capable of measuring PFAS at trace levels, but above all it can reach the limit of 200 pg·L−1 required by European regulation for PFOS determination in surface and underground waters. The method was validated for quantitative analysis of PFASs in real water samples.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A spatial consistency test is applied to temperature observations of a high-resolution meteorological network composed of automatic surface weather stations, based on Bayesian concepts and exploits the existing objective analysis scheme by comparing each observed value with the corresponding cross-validation analysis value.
Abstract: A spatial consistency test (SCT) is applied to temperature observations of a high-resolution meteorological network composed of automatic surface weather stations. The SCT's purpose is twofold: preventing gross errors (GEs) from entering automatic numerical elaborations and returning a spatial consistency flag to an external quality-control system. The algorithm is based on Bayesian concepts and exploits the existing objective analysis scheme by comparing each observed value with the corresponding cross-validation (CV) analysis value. Local data density is automatically taken into account to allow a less restrictive test for isolated stations that provide precious information on poorly observed areas. Thresholds and parameters are estimated statistically for large datasets, thus eliminating any subjective and ad hoc tuning. Misjudgment rates are estimated for both missed and false rejections. Special attention is devoted to the problem of large representativity errors which, being dependent on a prescribed scale, do require multiple cross-checks to avoid confusion with proper GEs. Copyright © 2010 Royal Meteorological Society

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The species assemblage found in the siliceous Alpine rivers with good water quality make them suitable reference sites for a benthic diatom community, and there were strong correlations between diatoms and environmental factors, especially chlorides, nitrate concentration and conductivity.
Abstract: Following the European Water Framework Directive, this study aims to be the first step to (i) identify diatom type assemblages in unpolluted streams in NW Italy, and (ii) find which ecological factors explain most of the variation. To achieve this, we collected physical, chemical and benthic community data from four streams in NW Italy from 2001 to 2004, for a total of 72 samples. All sampling sites were between 200 m a.s.l. and 800 m a.s.l., but differed in the dominant lithological substrate, i.e. alluvial or siliceous. Relationships between diatom communities and environmental factors were examined using canonical correspondence analysis (CCA), while Indicator Species Analysis was used to define characterizing species and accompanying species of three environmental groups identified by CCA: (1) high water quality and medium saline content, (2) high water quality and low saline content, (3) poor water quality. The diatom assemblages of the three groups of sites differed significantly, as shown by the Multi-Response Permutation Procedure. There were strong correlations between diatoms and environmental factors, especially chlorides (also highly correlated with sulphates and carbonate hardness), nitrate concentration and conductivity. The group 1 assemblage was typical of the alluvial Alpine streams with medium saline content and was characterized by mostly oligosaprobic/β-mesosaprobic taxa such as Cymbella affinis, Diatoma ehrenbergii and Staurosira pinnata. The species assemblage found in the siliceous Alpine rivers with good water quality make them suitable reference sites for a benthic diatom community.

34 citations


Authors

Showing all 1165 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Antonio Russo8893434563
John V. Guttag6225417679
Mauro Rossi5640713056
Gianpaolo Balsamo5413131691
David Evans5213013455
Barbara Stenni4414810859
Luigi Bisanti421048560
Marco Fontana423847526
Andrea Ranzi421018090
Dario Mirabelli371273842
Marco Turco32782709
Stefania La Grutta311412691
Maurizio Forte281352962
Gianluigi de Gennaro28862853
Giovanni Martinelli271042439
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20237
20228
202165
202066
201950
201867