Institution
Marche Polytechnic University
Education•Ancona, Italy•
About: Marche Polytechnic University is a education organization based out in Ancona, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Prostate cancer. The organization has 5905 authors who have published 15769 publications receiving 382286 citations. The organization is also known as: Universitá Politecnica delle Marche & Universita Politecnica delle Marche.
Topics: Population, Prostate cancer, Cancer, Mediterranean sea, Electromagnetic reverberation chamber
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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19 Apr 2015TL;DR: This paper presents a novel unsupervised approach based on a denoising autoencoder which significantly outperforms existing methods by achieving up to 93.4% F-Measure.
Abstract: Acoustic novelty detection aims at identifying abnormal/novel acoustic signals which differ from the reference/normal data that the system was trained with. In this paper we present a novel unsupervised approach based on a denoising autoencoder. In our approach auditory spectral features are processed by a denoising autoencoder with bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory recurrent neural networks. We use the reconstruction error between the input and the output of the autoencoder as activation signal to detect novel events. The autoencoder is trained on a public database which contains recordings of typical in-home situations such as talking, watching television, playing and eating. The evaluation was performed on more than 260 different abnormal events. We compare results with state-of-theart methods and we conclude that our novel approach significantly outperforms existing methods by achieving up to 93.4% F-Measure.
210 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of manufacturing on the antioxidant properties of a single cultivar but processed differently to give a white, two black (Orthodox and CTC) and two green (low-caffeine and non-decaffeinated) teas was explored.
210 citations
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TL;DR: The biologic activity of these autoantibodies suggests a role in the development of fibrosis and argues for a common pathogenetic trait in ecGVDH and scleroderma phenotypes.
210 citations
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University of Toronto1, Toronto Western Hospital2, University of Washington3, University of Kansas4, Radboud University Nijmegen5, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland6, University of São Paulo7, All India Institute of Medical Sciences8, Marche Polytechnic University9, Tan Tock Seng Hospital10, Okayama University11, Teikyo University12, Third Military Medical University13, Ege University14
TL;DR: Surgical decompression for CSM is safe and results in improved functional status and quality of life in patients around the world, irrespective of differences in medical systems and sociocultural determinants of health.
Abstract: STUDY DESIGN: Prospective, multicenter international cohort. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate outcomes of surgical decompression for cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) at a global level. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: CSM is a degenerative spine disease and the most common cause of spinal cord dysfunction worldwide. Surgery is increasingly recommended as the preferred treatment strategy for CSM to improve neurological and functional status and quality of life. The outcomes of surgical intervention for CSM have never been evaluated at an international level. METHODS: Between October 2007 and January 2011, 479 symptomatic patients with image evidence of CSM were enrolled in the prospective, multicenter AOSpine CSM-International study from 16 global sites. Preoperative and postoperative clinical status, functional impairment, and quality of life were evaluated using the modified Japanese Orthopaedic Assessment Scale, Nurick Scale, Neck Disability Index, and Short-Form-36v2. Preoperative and 12- and 24-month postoperative outcomes were compared using mixed-model analysis of covariance for repeated measurements. RESULTS: The study cohort consisted of 310 males and 169 females, with a mean age of 56.37 +/- 11.91 years. There were significant differences in age, etiology, and surgical approaches between the regions. At 24 months postoperatively, the mean modified Japanese Orthopaedic Assessment Scale score improved from 12.50 (95% confidence interval [CI], 12.24-12.76) to 14.90 (95% CI, 14.64-15.16); the Neck Disability Index improved from 36.38 (95% CI, 34.33-38.43) to 23.20 (95% CI, 21.24-25.15); and the SF36v2 Physical Component Score and Mental Composite Score improved from 34.28 (95% CI, 33.46-35.10) to 40.76 (95% CI, 39.71-41.81) and 39.45 (95% CI, 38.25-40.64) to 46.24 (95% CI, 44.94-47.55), respectively. The rate of neurological complications was 3.13%. CONCLUSION: Surgical decompression for CSM is safe and results in improved functional status and quality of life in patients around the world, irrespective of differences in medical systems and sociocultural determinants of health. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 3.
209 citations
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TL;DR: Results have been recently proved both by characterization of oligosaccharides in breast-fed infant feces and by the study of intestinal microflora using new techniques of molecular analysis, confirming that human milk oligosACcharides represent the first prebiotics in humans.
Abstract: The development of intestinal microflora in newborns is strictly related to the kind of feeding Breast-fed infants, unlike the bottle-fed ones, have an intestinal ecosystem characterized by a strong prevalence of bifidobacteria and lactobacilli Data available so far in the literature show that, among the numerous substances present in human milk, oligosaccharides have a clear prebiotic effect They are quantitatively one of the main components of human milk and are only partially digested in the small intestine, so they reach the colon, where they stimulate selectively the development of bifidogenic flora Such results have been recently proved both by characterization of oligosaccharides in breast-fed infant feces and by the study of intestinal microflora using new techniques of molecular analysis, confirming that human milk oligosaccharides represent the first prebiotics in humans
209 citations
Authors
Showing all 6013 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Jonathan I. Epstein | 138 | 1121 | 80975 |
Antoni Ribas | 132 | 660 | 99227 |
Francesco Fiori | 128 | 1032 | 76699 |
Claudio Franceschi | 120 | 856 | 59868 |
Robert E. Coleman | 103 | 724 | 49796 |
Carmine Zoccali | 99 | 813 | 36774 |
Massimo Falconi | 94 | 667 | 41966 |
Mario Plebani | 91 | 1329 | 43055 |
Roberto Danovaro | 84 | 415 | 23735 |
Rodolfo Montironi | 83 | 958 | 30957 |
Diego Centonze | 81 | 463 | 22857 |
Saverio Cinti | 78 | 256 | 32760 |
Michele Brignole | 76 | 399 | 26758 |
Jürgen P. Rabe | 76 | 391 | 20174 |
Jean-Jacques Body | 70 | 384 | 19608 |