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Institution

Sapienza University of Rome

EducationRome, Lazio, Italy
About: Sapienza University of Rome is a education organization based out in Rome, Lazio, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 62002 authors who have published 155468 publications receiving 4397244 citations. The organization is also known as: La Sapienza & Università La Sapienza di Roma.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2003-Allergy
TL;DR: A drug provocation test (DPT) is the controlled administration of a drug in order to diagnose drug hypersensitivity reactions under medical surveillance, whether this drug is an alternative compound, or structurally/pharmacologically related, or the suspected drug itself.
Abstract: A drug provocation test (DPT) is the controlled administration of a drug in order to diagnose drug hypersensitivity reactions. DPTs are performed under medical surveillance, whether this drug is an alternative compound, or structurally/pharmacologically related, or the suspected drug itself. DPT is sometimes termed controlled challenge or reexposure (1), drug challenge (2), graded (2) or incremental challenge (3), test dosing (2), W. Aberer, A. Bircher, A. Romano, M. Blanca, P. Campi, J. Fernandez, K. Brockow, W. J. Pichler, P. Demoly for ENDA, and the EAACI interest group on drug hypersensitivity Department of Environmental Dermatology, University of Graz, Graz, Austria; Department of Dermatology, Basle, Switzerland; Allergy Service, Catholic University of Rome, Italy; Allergy Service, University La Paz, Madrid, Spain; Clinic for Allergy and Immunology, Florence, Italy; Allergy Section, Dept. Clin. Med., UMH, Elche, Spain; Klinik und Poliklinik f1r Dermatologie und Allergologie, Muenchen, Germany; Clinic for Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology/Allergology, Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland; Maladies Respiratoires-INSERM U454, H7pital Arnaud de Villeneuve, Montpellier, France

757 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society jointly created a Task Force on “Outcomes for COPD pharmacological trials: from lung function to biomarkers” to inform the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease research community about the possible use and limitations of current outcomes and markers.
Abstract: The American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society jointly created a Task Force on "Outcomes for COPD pharmacological trials: from lung function to biomarkers" to inform the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease research community about the possible use and limitations of current outcomes and markers when evaluating the impact of a pharmacological therapy. Based on their review of the published literature, the following document has been prepared with individual sections that address specific outcomes and markers, and a final section that summarises their recommendations.

756 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2008
TL;DR: EFSUMB study group M. Claudon, D. Cosgrove, T. Tranquart, L. Thorelius, and H. Whittingham study group L. de.
Abstract: EFSUMB study group M. Claudon1, D. Cosgrove2, T. Albrecht3, L. Bolondi4, M. Bosio5, F. Calliada6, J.-M. Correas7, K. Darge8, C. Dietrich9, M. D'On ofrio10, D. H. Evans11, C. Filice12, L. Greiner13, K. Jäger14, N. de. Jong15, E. Leen16, R. Lencioni17, D. Lindsell18, A. Martegani19, S. Meairs20, C. Nolsøe21, F. Piscaglia22, P. Ricci23, G. Seidel24, B. Skjoldbye25, L. Solbiati26, L. Thorelius27, F. Tranquart28, H. P. Weskott29, T. Whittingham30

755 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Sergio Molinari1, B. Swinyard, John Bally2, M. J. Barlow3, J.-P. Bernard4, Paul Martin5, Toby J. T. Moore6, Alberto Noriega-Crespo7, Rene Plume8, Leonardo Testi1, Leonardo Testi9, Annie Zavagno10, Alain Abergel11, Babar Ali7, L. D. Anderson10, Ph. André12, J.-P. Baluteau10, Cara Battersby2, M. T. Beltrán1, M. Benedettini1, N. Billot7, J. A. D. L. Blommaert13, Sylvain Bontemps14, Sylvain Bontemps12, F. Boulanger11, Jan Brand1, Christopher M. Brunt15, Michael G. Burton16, Luca Calzoletti, Sean Carey7, Paola Caselli17, Riccardo Cesaroni1, José Cernicharo18, Sukanya Chakrabarti, Antonio Chrysostomou, Martin Cohen, Mathieu Compiegne5, P. de Bernardis19, G. de Gasperis20, A. M. di Giorgio1, Davide Elia1, F. Faustini, Nicolas Flagey7, Yasuo Fukui21, Gary A. Fuller22, K. Ganga23, Pedro García-Lario, Jason Glenn2, Paul F. Goldsmith24, Matthew Joseph Griffin25, Melvin Hoare17, Maohai Huang26, D. Ikhenaode19, C. Joblin4, G. Joncas27, Mika Juvela28, Jason M. Kirk25, Guilaine Lagache11, Jin-Zeng Li26, T. L. Lim, S. D. Lord7, Massimo Marengo29, Douglas J. Marshall4, Silvia Masi19, Fabrizio Massi1, Mikako Matsuura3, Vincent Minier12, Marc-Antoine Miville-Deschenes11, L. Montier4, L. K. Morgan6, Frédérique Motte12, Joseph C. Mottram15, T. G. Müller30, Paolo Natoli20, J. Neves31, Luca Olmi1, Roberta Paladini7, Deborah Paradis7, Harriet Parsons31, Nicolas Peretto12, Nicolas Peretto22, M. R. Pestalozzi1, Stefano Pezzuto1, F. Piacentini19, Lorenzo Piazzo19, D. Polychroni1, M. Pomarès10, Cristina Popescu30, William T. Reach7, Isabelle Ristorcelli4, Jean-François Robitaille27, Thomas P. Robitaille29, J. A. Rodón10, A. Roy5, Pierre Royer13, D. Russeil10, Paolo Saraceno1, Marc Sauvage12, Peter Schilke32, Eugenio Schisano1, Nicola Schneider12, Frederic Schuller, Benjamin L. Schulz7, B. Sibthorpe25, Hazel Smith29, Michael D. Smith33, L. Spinoglio1, Dimitrios Stamatellos25, Francesco Strafella, Guy S. Stringfellow2, E. Sturm30, R. Taylor8, Mark Thompson31, Alessio Traficante20, Richard J. Tuffs30, Grazia Umana1, Luca Valenziano1, R. Vavrek, M. Veneziani19, Serena Viti3, C. Waelkens13, Derek Ward-Thompson25, Glenn J. White34, L. A. Wilcock25, Friedrich Wyrowski, Harold W. Yorke24, Qizhou Zhang29 
TL;DR: In this paper, the first results from the science demonstration phase for the Hi-GAL survey, the Herschel key program that will map the inner Galactic plane of the Milky Way in 5 bands, were presented.
Abstract: We present the first results from the science demonstration phase for the Hi-GAL survey, the Herschel key program that will map the inner Galactic plane of the Milky Way in 5 bands. We outline our data reduction strategy and present some science highlights on the two observed 2° × 2° tiles approximately centered at l = 30° and l = 59°. The two regions are extremely rich in intense and highly structured extended emission which shows a widespread organization in filaments. Source SEDs can be built for hundreds of objects in the two fields, and physical parameters can be extracted, for a good fraction of them where the distance could be estimated. The compact sources (which we will call cores' in the following) are found for the most part to be associated with the filaments, and the relationship to the local beam-averaged column density of the filament itself shows that a core seems to appear when a threshold around AV ~ 1 is exceeded for the regions in the l = 59° field; a AV value between 5 and 10 is found for the l = 30° field, likely due to the relatively higher distances of the sources. This outlines an exciting scenario where diffuse clouds first collapse into filaments, which later fragment to cores where the column density has reached a critical level. In spite of core L/M ratios being well in excess of a few for many sources, we find core surface densities between 0.03 and 0.5 g cm-2. Our results are in good agreement with recent MHD numerical simulations of filaments forming from large-scale converging flows.

752 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
S. Chatrchyan, Vardan Khachatryan, Albert M. Sirunyan, A. Tumasyan  +2268 moreInstitutions (158)
TL;DR: In this article, the transverse momentum balance in dijet and γ/Z+jets events is used to measure the jet energy response in the CMS detector, as well as the transversal momentum resolution.
Abstract: Measurements of the jet energy calibration and transverse momentum resolution in CMS are presented, performed with a data sample collected in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7TeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 36pb−1. The transverse momentum balance in dijet and γ/Z+jets events is used to measure the jet energy response in the CMS detector, as well as the transverse momentum resolution. The results are presented for three different methods to reconstruct jets: a calorimeter-based approach, the ``Jet-Plus-Track'' approach, which improves the measurement of calorimeter jets by exploiting the associated tracks, and the ``Particle Flow'' approach, which attempts to reconstruct individually each particle in the event, prior to the jet clustering, based on information from all relevant subdetectors

750 citations


Authors

Showing all 62745 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Charles A. Dinarello1901058139668
Gregory Y.H. Lip1693159171742
Peter A. R. Ade1621387138051
H. Eugene Stanley1541190122321
Suvadeep Bose154960129071
P. de Bernardis152680117804
Bart Staels15282486638
Alessandro Melchiorri151674116384
Andrew H. Jaffe149518110033
F. Piacentini149531108493
Subir Sarkar1491542144614
Albert Bandura148255276143
Carlo Rovelli1461502103550
Robert C. Gallo14582568212
R. Kowalewski1431815135517
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023405
20221,106
20219,797
20209,755
20198,332
20187,615