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Institution

Jean Moulin University Lyon 3

EducationLyon, Rhône-Alpes, France
About: Jean Moulin University Lyon 3 is a education organization based out in Lyon, Rhône-Alpes, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Computer science & Geology. The organization has 343 authors who have published 572 publications receiving 3175 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The 3M’Air project is presented, which aims to explore the potential of participatory citizen measures using low-cost sensors in order to improve the local knowledge of air quality and temperature and then bridge the gap between individual exposure and regional measurements.
Abstract: The widespread use of low-cost environmental monitoring systems, together with recent developments in the design of Internet of Things architectures and protocols, has given new impetus to smart city applications. Such progress should, in particular, considerably improve the fine characterization of a wide range of physical quantities within our cities. Indeed, the cost-effectiveness of these emerging sensors combined with their reduced size allows for high-density deployments resulting in higher spatial granularity. In this article, we briefly present the 3M’Air project that aims to explore the potential of participatory citizen measures using low-cost sensors in order to improve the local knowledge of air quality and temperature and then bridge the gap between individual exposure and regional measurements. We then present the design, implementation, and evaluation of our low-cost, small-size wireless sensor network (WSN)-based participatory monitoring system. This system is composed of mobile sensing nodes measuring temperature, humidity, and a number of pollutants (NO2, PM1, PM2.5, and PM10). The collected data are sent to a server for analysis and building temperature and air quality maps. To validate our platform, we have carried out multiple tests to compare our sensor nodes to reference stations and to each other. We have also evaluated the energy consumption of our nodes under different configurations. The results are satisfactory and show that our nodes can be used in environmental participatory monitoring.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proved that every Helly graph and every connected bridged graph are constructible, and also that any connected bridging graph is ‘moorable’, a property which implies various fixed-point properties.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This essay demonstrates how TCE can be applied to the ACO organization form issue, explains TCE, considers ACO activity from the TCE perspective, and reflects on research directions that may inform TCE and facilitate ACO development.
Abstract: Using a Transaction Cost Economics (TCE) approach, this paper explores which organizational forms Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) may take. A critical question about form is the amount of vertical integration that an ACO may have, a topic central to TCE. We posit that contextual factors outside and inside an ACO will produce variable transaction costs (the non-production costs of care) such that the decision to integrate vertically will derive from a comparison of these external versus internal costs, assuming reasonably rational management abilities. External costs include those arising from environmental uncertainty and complexity, small numbers bargaining, asset specificity, frequency of exchanges, and information "impactedness." Internal costs include those arising from human resource activities including hiring and staffing, training, evaluating (i.e., disciplining, appraising, or promoting), and otherwise administering programs. At the extreme, these different costs may produce either total vertical integration or little to no vertical integration with most ACOs falling in between. This essay demonstrates how TCE can be applied to the ACO organization form issue, explains TCE, considers ACO activity from the TCE perspective, and reflects on research directions that may inform TCE and facilitate ACO development.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To assess the role of the cardiac autonomic nervous system (ANS), as measured according to spontaneous cardiac baroreflex sensitivity (BRS), in the type and degree of cognitive performance in healthy young‐elderly individuals, taking into account the presence of other vascular risk factors.
Abstract: Objectives: To assess the role of the cardiac autonomic nervous system (ANS), as measured according to spontaneous cardiac baroreflex sensitivity (BRS), in the type and degree of cognitive performance in healthy young-elderly individuals, taking into account the presence of other vascular risk factors. Design: Community-based cross-sectional study. Setting: In-home and clinical settings. Participants: A subset of participants, aged 66.9 ± 0.9, from a prospective study that aimed to assess the influence of ANS activity on cardiovascular and cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality (N = 916). Measurements: All subjects underwent a clinical interview, neuropsychological testing, and autonomic and vascular measurements. Three cognitive domains were defined: attentional (Trail-Making Test Part A, Stroop code and parts I & II), executive (Trail-Making Test Part B, Stroop part III, verbal fluency and similarity tests), and memory (Benton visual retention test, Grober and Buschke procedure). Subjects were stratified according to their scores into normal, low, and impaired performers. Results: After adjustments to demographic and vascular data, participants with moderate autonomic dysregulation (3 6). Conclusion: In older individuals without dementia, autonomic dysregulation seems to have a direct, gradual, and independent effect on memory. Future studies are needed to evaluate the long-term effects of BRS and other markers of the ANS on cognitive decline.

25 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20242
202324
2022248
202131
202032
201932