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Institution

University of Palermo

EducationPalermo, Italy
About: University of Palermo is a education organization based out in Palermo, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 15621 authors who have published 40250 publications receiving 964384 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli Studi di Palermo & Universita degli Studi di Palermo.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It has been proposed that polyfunctional T cells, are associated with protective immunity toward Mtb, and it has been highlighted that the number of Mtb-specific T cells producing a combination of IFN-γ, IL-2, and/or TNF-α may be correlated with the mycobacterial load, while other studies have associated the presence of this particular functional profile as marker of TB disease activity.
Abstract: With 1.4 million deaths and 8.7 million new cases in 2011, tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health care problem and together with HIV and Malaria represents the one of the three infectious diseases world-wild. Control of the global TB epidemic has been impaired by the lack of an effective vaccine, by the emergence of drug-resistant forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and by the lack of sensitive and rapid diagnostics. It is estimated, by epidemiological reports, that one third of the world’s population is latently infected with Mtb, but the majority of infected individuals develops long-lived protective immunity, which controls and contains Mtb in a T cell-dependent manner. Development of TB disease results from interactions among the environment, the host, and the pathogen, and known risk factors include HIV coinfection, immunodeficiency, diabetes mellitus, overcrowding, malnutrition, and general poverty; therefore an effective T cell response determines whether the infection resolves or develops into clinically evident disease. Consequently, there is great interest in determining which T cells subsets mediate anti-mycobacterial immunity, delineating their effector functions. On the other hand, many aspects remain unsolved in understanding why some individuals are protected from Mtb infection while others go on to develop disease.Several studies have demonstrated that CD4+ T cells are involved in protection against Mtb, as supported by the evidence that CD4+ T cell depletion is responsible for Mtb reactivation in HIV-infected individuals. There are many subsets of CD4+ T cells, such as T-helper 1 (Th1), Th2, Th17, and regulatory T cells (Tregs), and all these subsets cooperate or interfere with each other to control infection; the dominant subset may differ between active and latent Mtb infection cases. Mtb-specific CD4+ Th1 cell response is considered to have a protective role for the ability to produce cytokines such as IFN- or TNF- that contribute to

212 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that serotonin reuptake inhibitors may produce antidepressant effects through increasing serotonergic neurotrophism in serotonin nerve cells and their targets by transactivation of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), involving direct or indirect receptor/RTK interactions.

212 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the ranking of mobility matrices in a simple Markov model of social mobility and derived partial ordering, motivated by welfare considerations, is shown to be equivalent to same intuitive mobility concepts, and is used to screen some immobility indices.

212 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the procedure to evaluate the parameters of a one-diode equivalent circuit able to accurately represent the electrical behavior of a PV panel by means of the minimum set of technical data that are usually provided by all manufacturers.

211 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the daily correlation present among market indices of stock exchanges located all over the world in the time period January 1996 to July 2009, and found that the correlation between market indices presents both a fast and a slow dynamics.
Abstract: We investigate the daily correlation present among market indices of stock exchanges located all over the world in the time period January 1996 to July 2009. We discover that the correlation among market indices presents both a fast and a slow dynamics. The slow dynamics reflects the development and consolidation of globalization. The fast dynamics is associated with critical events that originate in a specific country or region of the world and rapidly affect the global system. We provide evidence that the short term time scale of correlation among market indices is less than 3 trading months (about 60 trading days). The average values of the nondiagonal elements of the correlation matrix, correlation-based graphs, and the spectral properties of the largest eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the correlation matrix are carrying information about the fast and slow dynamics of the correlation of market indices. We introduce a measure of mutual information based on link co-occurrence in networks in order to detect the fast dynamics of successive changes of correlation-based graphs in a quantitative way.

211 citations


Authors

Showing all 15895 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robin M. Murray1711539116362
Frede Blaabjerg1472161112017
Jean Bousquet145128896769
Zhanhu Guo12888653378
Jean Ballet11526346301
Antonio Facchetti11160251885
Michele Pagano9730642211
Frank Z. Stanczyk9362030244
Eleonora Troja9127130873
Francesco Sciortino9053628956
Zev Rosenwaks8977232039
Antonio Russo8893434563
Carlo Salvarani8873031699
Giuseppe Basso8764333320
Antonio Craxì8665939463
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023147
2022384
20212,977
20202,753
20192,412
20182,250