Scispace (Formerly Typeset)
  1. Home
  2. Institutions
  3. Federal Fluminense University
  4. 2013
  1. Home
  2. Institutions
  3. Federal Fluminense University
  4. 2013
Showing papers by "Federal Fluminense University published in 2013"
Journal Article•10.1038/NPHOTON.2013.112•
Integrated multimode interferometers with arbitrary designs for photonic boson sampling

[...]

Andrea Crespi1, Roberto Osellame1, Roberta Ramponi1, Daniel J. Brod2, Ernesto F. Galvão2, Nicolò Spagnolo3, Chiara Vitelli3, Chiara Vitelli4, Enrico Maiorino3, Paolo Mataloni3, Fabio Sciarrino3 •
Polytechnic University of Milan1, Federal Fluminense University2, Sapienza University of Rome3, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia4
01 Jul 2013-Nature Photonics
TL;DR: In this article, a five-mode integrated interferometer containing three-dimensional S-bent waveguides was used to sample three single photons and the probability ratios of all events were measured.
Abstract: The boson-sampling problem was demonstrated by studying three-photon interference in a five-mode integrated interferometer containing three-dimensional S-bent waveguides. Three single photons were input into the interferometer and the probability ratios of all events were measured. The results agree with quantum mechanical predictions for three-photon interference.

837 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.CMET.2013.11.002•
TNF-α Mediates PKR-Dependent Memory Impairment and Brain IRS-1 Inhibition Induced by Alzheimer’s β-Amyloid Oligomers in Mice and Monkeys

[...]

Mychael V. Lourenco1, Julia R. Clarke1, Rudimar Luiz Frozza1, Theresa R. Bomfim1, Leticia Forny-Germano1, Andre F. Batista1, Luciana B. Sathler1, Jordano Brito-Moreira1, Olavo B. Amaral1, Cesar A. Silva1, Léo Freitas-Correa1, Sheila Espírito-Santo2, Paula Campello-Costa2, Jean-Christophe Houzel1, William L. Klein3, Christian Hölscher4, José B.C. Carvalheira5, Aristóbolo M. Silva6, Aristóbolo M. Silva7, Licio A. Velloso5, Douglas P. Munoz8, Sergio T. Ferreira1, Fernanda G. De Felice1 •
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro1, Federal Fluminense University2, Northwestern University3, Lancaster University4, State University of Campinas5, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais6, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation7, Queen's University8
03 Dec 2013-Cell Metabolism
TL;DR: Results reveal pathogenic mechanisms shared by AD and diabetes and establish that proinflammatory signaling mediates oligomer-induced IRS-1 inhibition and PKR-dependent synapse and memory loss.

388 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.COR.2013.01.013•
A hybrid algorithm for a class of vehicle routing problems

[...]

Anand Subramanian1, Eduardo Uchoa2, Luiz Satoru Ochi2•
Federal University of Paraíba1, Federal Fluminense University2
01 Oct 2013-Computers & Operations Research
TL;DR: A sequence of Set Partitioning (SP) models, with columns corresponding to routes found by a metaheuristic approach, are solved, not necessarily to optimality, using a Mixed Integer Programming (MIP) solver that may interact with theMetaheuristic during its execution.

294 citations

Journal Article•10.1007/S10825-013-0458-7•
The recursive Green's function method for graphene

[...]

Caio H. Lewenkopf1, Eduardo R. Mucciolo2•
Federal Fluminense University1, University of Central Florida2
01 Jun 2013-Journal of Computational Electronics
TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply the recursive Green's function method to the computation of electronic transport properties of graphene sheets and nanoribbons in the linear response regime, allowing for an amenable inclusion of several disorder mechanisms at the microscopic level, as well as inhomogeneous gating, finite temperature, and dephasing.
Abstract: We describe how to apply the recursive Green's function method to the computation of electronic transport properties of graphene sheets and nanoribbons in the linear response regime. This method allows for an amenable inclusion of several disorder mechanisms at the microscopic level, as well as inhomogeneous gating, finite temperature, and, to some extend, dephasing. We present algorithms for computing the conductance, density of states, and current densities for armchair and zigzag atomic edge alignments. Several numerical results are presented to illustrate the usefulness of the method.

282 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.CCA.2013.02.003•
Adipokines in obesity

[...]

Viviane O. Leal1, Denise Mafra1•
Federal Fluminense University1
18 Apr 2013-Clinica Chimica Acta
TL;DR: This review focuses on obesity specific-adipokine profiles and the role of some adipokines in obesity-related metabolic disorders.

277 citations

Journal Article•10.1007/S10732-011-9186-Y•
An Iterated Local Search heuristic for the Heterogeneous Fleet Vehicle Routing Problem

[...]

Puca Huachi Vaz Penna1, Anand Subramanian2, Luiz Satoru Ochi1•
Federal Fluminense University1, Federal University of Paraíba2
01 Apr 2013-Journal of Heuristics
TL;DR: The proposed algorithm is based on the Iterated Local Search (ILS) metaheuristic which uses a Variable Neighborhood Descent procedure, with a random neighborhood ordering (RVND), in the local search phase, which is the first ILS approach for the HFVRP.
Abstract: This paper deals with the Heterogeneous Fleet Vehicle Routing Problem (HFVRP). The HFVRP is $\mathcal{NP}$ -hard since it is a generalization of the classical Vehicle Routing Problem (VRP), in which clients are served by a heterogeneous fleet of vehicles with distinct capacities and costs. The objective is to design a set of routes in such a way that the sum of the costs is minimized. The proposed algorithm is based on the Iterated Local Search (ILS) metaheuristic which uses a Variable Neighborhood Descent procedure, with a random neighborhood ordering (RVND), in the local search phase. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first ILS approach for the HFVRP. The developed heuristic was tested on well-known benchmark instances involving 20, 50, 75 and 100 customers. These test-problems also include dependent and/or fixed costs according to the vehicle type. The results obtained are quite competitive when compared to other algorithms found in the literature.

275 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.SIGPRO.2012.08.012•
Breast thermography from an image processing viewpoint: A survey

[...]

Tiago B. Borchartt1, Aura Conci1, Rita de Cássia Fernandes de Lima2, Roger Resmini1, Ángel Sánchez3 •
Federal Fluminense University1, Federal University of Pernambuco2, King Juan Carlos University3
01 Oct 2013-Signal Processing
TL;DR: A survey of the use of infrared imaging for breast screening in the current medical literature explores and analyses these works in the light of their applications in computer vision according to the main steps of pattern recognition systems.

215 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.BIOCHI.2013.04.012•
Nutritional strategies to modulate inflammation and oxidative stress pathways via activation of the master antioxidant switch Nrf2.

[...]

Ludmila F M F Cardozo1, Liliana Magnago Pedruzzi1, Peter Stenvinkel2, Milena B. Stockler-Pinto3, Julio Beltrame Daleprane4, Maurilo Leite3, Denise Mafra1 •
Federal Fluminense University1, Karolinska Institutet2, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro3, Rio de Janeiro State University4
01 Aug 2013-Biochimie
TL;DR: Several recent studies have shown that nutritional compounds can modulate the activation of Nrf2-Keap1 system, and some of the key nutritional compounds that promote the activated NRF2 may have impact on the human health.

193 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.JTBI.2013.02.017•
A derivation of Holling's type I, II and III functional responses in predator–prey systems

[...]

Jonathan H.P. Dawes1, Max O. Souza2•
University of Bath1, Federal Fluminense University2
21 Jun 2013-Journal of Theoretical Biology
TL;DR: A novel three variable model is derived for the simplest possible mathematical formulation of predator-prey dynamics that allows the interplay between these various processes to take place, on their different characteristic timescales.

191 citations

Journal Article•10.1080/19463138.2013.839450•
Mega-events and urban regeneration in Rio de Janeiro: planning in a state of emergency

[...]

Fernanda Sánchez1, Anne-Marie Broudehoux2•
Federal Fluminense University1, Université du Québec2
24 Oct 2013-International Journal of Urban Sustainable Development
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the role of sporting mega-events in the reconfiguration of the urban landscape, to understand some of their impacts upon social groups directly affected by large projects involved in the construction of the so-called Olympic City.
Abstract: This article examines the role of sporting mega-events in the reconfiguration of the urban landscape, to understand some of their impacts upon social groups directly affected by large projects involved in the construction of the so-called ‘Olympic City’. It studies the case of Rio de Janeiro, which will host the 2014 football World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympic Games. The article seeks to demonstrate how mega-events are being instrumentalized by local political and economic elites, especially by a coalition of ambitious civic leaders, private entrepreneurs, and local real estate interests, who exploit the event-related sense of urgency, mobilization, and consensus in order to remake the city in their own image. Through the study of a series of projects conceived with the mega-events deadline in mind, and with a special emphasis on Porto Maravilha’s port revitalization project, the article shows how such an event-led planning model fosters an exclusive vision of urban regeneration. It sustains that such ...

191 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.EJOR.2012.10.012•
Multi-start methods for combinatorial optimization

[...]

Rafael Martí1, Mauricio G. C. Resende2, Celso C. Ribeiro3•
University of Valencia1, AT&T Labs2, Federal Fluminense University3
01 Apr 2013-European Journal of Operational Research
TL;DR: This survey briefly sketches historical developments that have motivated the field, and then focuses on modern contributions that define the current state-of-the-art of multi-start methods.
Journal Article•10.1098/RSTB.2012.0166•
A social and ecological assessment of tropical land uses at multiple scales: the Sustainable Amazon Network

[...]

Toby A. Gardner1, Toby A. Gardner2, Joice Ferreira3, Jos Barlow1, Alexander C. Lees4, Luke Parry1, Ima Célia Guimarães Vieira4, Erika Berenguer1, Ricardo Abramovay5, Alexandre Aleixo4, Christian B. Andretti6, Luiz E. O. C. Aragão7, Ivanei S. Araujo4, Williams Souza de Ávila, Richard D. Bardgett1, Mateus Batistella3, Rodrigo Anzolin Begotti8, Troy Patrick Beldini9, Driss Ezzine de Blas10, Rodrigo Fagundes Braga11, Danielle L. Braga11, Janaina Gomes de Brito6, Plínio Barbosa de Camargo5, Fabiane Campos dos Santos9, Vívian Campos de Oliveira6, Amanda Cardoso Nunes Cordeiro, Thiago Moreira Cardoso3, Déborah Reis de Carvalho11, Sergio Castelani5, Júlio C M Chaul12, Carlos Eduardo Pellegrino Cerri8, Francisco de Assis Costa13, Carla Daniele Furtado da Costa, Emilie Coudel10, Emilie Coudel3, Alexandre Camargo Coutinho3, Dênis Antônio da Cunha12, Álvaro de Oliveira D'Antona14, Joelma Dezincourt4, Karina Dias-Silva15, Mariana Regina Durigan8, Júlio César Dalla Mora Esquerdo3, José Gustavo Féres16, Silvio Frosini de Barros Ferraz8, Amanda Estefânia de Melo Ferreira4, Ana Carolina Fiorini17, Lenise Vargas Flores da Silva9, Fábio S. Frazão11, Rachel Garrett18, Alessandra dos Santos Gomes4, Karoline da Silva Gonçalves4, José Benito Guerrero19, Neusa Hamada6, Robert M. Hughes20, Danilo Carmago Igliori5, Ederson da Conceição Jesus3, Leandro Juen13, Miércio Júnior9, José Max Barbosa de Oliveira Junior21, Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira Junior3, Carlos Souza Junior, Phil Kaufmann22, Vanesca Korasaki11, Cecília Gontijo Leal11, Rafael P. Leitão6, Natália Lima, Maria de Fátima Lopes Almeida, Reinaldo Lourival, Julio Louzada11, Ralph Charles Mac Nally23, Sébastien Marchand12, Márcia Motta Maués3, Fatima Maria de Souza Moreira11, Carla Morsello5, Nárgila G. Moura4, Jorge Luiz Nessimian17, Sâmia Nunes, Victor H. F. Oliveira11, Renata Pardini5, Heloisa Correia Pereira14, Paulo Santos Pompeu11, Carla R. Ribas11, Felipe Rossetti8, Fernando A. Schmidt11, Rodrigo Ferreira da Silva9, Regina Célia Viana Martins da Silva3, Thiago Fonseca Morello Ramalho da Silva5, Juliana M. Silveira11, João V. Siqueira, Teotonio Soares de Carvalho11, Ricardo R. C. Solar13, Ricardo R. C. Solar1, Nicola Savério Holanda Tancredi13, James Robertson Thomson23, Patricia Carignano Torres5, Fernando Z. Vaz-de-Mello, Ruan Carlo Stulpen Veiga24, Adriano Venturieri3, Cecilia Fadigas Viana4, Diana Weinhold25, Ronald Zanetti11, Jansen Zuanon6 •
Lancaster University1, University of Cambridge2, Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária3, Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi4, University of São Paulo5, National Institute of Amazonian Research6, University of Exeter7, Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz8, Federal University of Western Pará9, Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement10, Universidade Federal de Lavras11, Universidade Federal de Viçosa12, Federal University of Pará13, State University of Campinas14, Universidade Federal de Goiás15, Institute of Applied Economic Research16, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro17, Stanford University18, The Nature Conservancy19, Oregon State University20, Universidade do Estado de Mato Grosso21, United States Environmental Protection Agency22, Monash University23, Federal Fluminense University24, London School of Economics and Political Science25
05 Jun 2013-Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
TL;DR: The Sustainable Amazon Network (Rede Amazônia Sustentável, RAS), a multidisciplinary research initiative involving more than 30 partner organizations working to assess both social and ecological dimensions of land-use sustainability in eastern Brazilian Amazonia, is presented.
Abstract: Science has a critical role to play in guiding more sustainable development trajectories. Here, we present the Sustainable Amazon Network (Rede Amazonia Sustentavel, RAS): a multidisciplinary research initiative involving more than 30 partner organizations working to assess both social and ecological dimensions of land-use sustainability in eastern Brazilian Amazonia. The research approach adopted by RAS offers three advantages for addressing land-use sustainability problems: (i) the collection of synchronized and co-located ecological and socioeconomic data across broad gradients of past and present human use; (ii) a nested sampling design to aid comparison of ecological and socioeconomic conditions associated with different land uses across local, landscape and regional scales; and (iii) a strong engagement with a wide variety of actors and non-research institutions. Here, we elaborate on these key features, and identify the ways in which RAS can help in highlighting those problems in most urgent need of attention, and in guiding improvements in land-use sustainability in Amazonia and elsewhere in the tropics. We also discuss some of the practical lessons, limitations and realities faced during the development of the RAS initiative so far.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.FOODRES.2013.07.056•
Consumer perception of probiotic yogurt: Performance of check all that apply (CATA), projective mapping, sorting and intensity scale

[...]

Adriano G. Cruz1, Adriano G. Cruz2, Rafael Silva Cadena2, W.F. Castro3, Erick A. Esmerino2, Juliana Burger Rodrigues2, L. Gaze4, José de Assis Fonseca Faria2, Mônica Q. Freitas4, Rosires Deliza5, Helena Maria André Bolini2 •
Rio de Janeiro Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology1, State University of Campinas2, São Paulo Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology3, Federal Fluminense University4, Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária5
01 Nov 2013-Food Research International
TL;DR: The performance of check-all-that-apply (CATA), projective mapping, sorting and intensity scales was assessed for determining consumer perception of probiotic yogurts, two prototypes added with glucose oxidase, a potential oxygen scavenger and commercial brands available in the Brazilian market.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.JDENT.2012.11.020•
Color stability, conversion, water sorption and solubility of dental composites formulated with different photoinitiator systems.

[...]

Pedro Paulo A.C. Albuquerque1, Allana Dutra Labruna Moreira1, Rafael R. Moraes2, Larissa Maria Cavalcante1, Luis Felipe Jochims Schneider1 •
Federal Fluminense University1, Universidade Federal de Pelotas2
01 Aug 2013-Journal of Dentistry
TL;DR: The use of a photoinitiator system containing TPO might improve the color stability of resin composites compared with the traditional CQ/amine system while attaining similar physico-chemical properties for the composite.
Journal Article•10.1007/S00397-013-0699-1•
A unified approach to model elasto-viscoplastic thixotropic yield-stress materials and apparent yield-stress fluids

[...]

Paulo R. de Souza Mendes, Roney L. Thompson1•
Federal Fluminense University1
23 Apr 2013-Rheologica Acta
TL;DR: In this article, a constitutive model for elasto-viscoplastic thixotropic materials is proposed, consisting of two differential equations, one for the stress and the other for the structure parameter, a scalar quantity that indicates the structuring level of the microstructure.
Abstract: A constitutive model for elasto-viscoplastic thixotropic materials is proposed. It consists of two differential equations, one for the stress and the other for the structure parameter, a scalar quantity that indicates the structuring level of the microstructure. In contrast to previous models of this kind, the structure parameter varies from zero to a positive and typically large number. The lower limit corresponds to a fully unstructured material, whereas the upper limit corresponds to a fully structured material. When the upper limit is finite, the model represents a highly shear-thinning, thixotropic, and viscoelastic liquid that possesses an apparent yield stress. When it tends to infinity, the behavior of a true yield-stress material is achieved. Predictions for rheometric flows such as constant shear rate tests, creep tests, SAOS, and large-amplitude oscillatory shear (LAOS) are presented, and it is shown that, in all cases, the trends observed experimentally are faithfully reproduced by the model. Within the framework of the model, simple explanations are given for the avalanche effect and the shear banding phenomenon. The LAOS results obtained are of particular importance because they provide a piece of information that so far is absent in the literature, namely a quantitative link between the Lissajous–Bowditch curve shapes and rheological effects such as elasticity, thixotropy, and yielding.
Journal Article•10.4319/LO.2013.58.1.0343•
Disentangling the origins of branched tetraether lipids and crenarchaeol in the lower Amazon River: Implications for GDGT-based proxies

[...]

Claudia Zell, Jung-Hyun Kim, Patricia Moreira-Turcq1, Gwenaël Abril2, Ellen C. Hopmans, Marie-Paule Bonnet1, Rodrigo Lima Sobrinho3, Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté •
Institut de recherche pour le développement1, Centre national de la recherche scientifique2, Federal Fluminense University3
01 Jan 2013-Limnology and Oceanography
TL;DR: In this article, the methylation and cyclization index of brGDGTs (MBT-CBT) was used to trace the origin of branched glycerol dialkyl glyceroline tetraethers (brGDGT) and their distribution in soils and suspended particulate matter (SPM) of Amazonian rivers and floodplain lakes.
Abstract: To trace the origin of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs), their distribution in soils and suspended particulate matter (SPM) of Amazonian rivers and floodplain lakes (varzeas) was studied. Differences in distribution between river SPM and surrounding (lowland) soils suggests an additional brGDGT source to eroded soils in the lowland drainage basin. Erosion of high Andean soils (above 2500 m in altitude) has no major influence because its brGDGT distribution differs substantially from that in river SPM. Furthermore, SPM in the Tapajos River, a tributary that does not derive from the Andes, has a virtually identical brGDGT distribution to that of the Amazon main stem. The higher proportion of phospholipid-derived brGDGTs in river SPM compared to soils indicates that in situ production in the Amazon is an additional source for riverine brGDGTs. This affects the methylation and cyclization index of brGDGTs (MBT-CBT), resulting in slightly lower MBT-CBT-derived temperatures and slightly higher CBT-derived pH values, i.e., between the pH of the basin soil and that of the river. Since the difference between MBT-CBT-derived temperatures of Amazon River SPM and the surrounding soils is relatively small (2uC) compared to other aquatic systems (for lakes a difference of , 10uC has been observed), it might still be possible to trace large climate changes in the Amazon basin with the MBT-CBT using river fan cores. However, variations in in situ production of brGDGTs in the Amazon River over time and space have to be evaluated in the future. Likewise, in situ production may affect the application of the MBT-CBT paleothermometer in other river systems. Our results also show that crenarchaeol is primarily produced in the Amazon River and that its varying production influences the branched vs. isoprenoid tetraether (BIT) index. This indicates that the BIT index not only represents the input of soil organic carbon to the river but is also affected by in situ production of brGDGTs and crenarchaeol.
Journal Article•10.1111/BJH.12323•
The effect of hydroxcarbamide therapy on survival of children with sickle cell disease

[...]

Clarisse Lopes de Castro Lobo, Jorge Francisco da Cunha Pinto1, Emilia Matos do Nascimento2, Patrícia Moura, Gilberto Perez Cardoso3, Jane S. Hankins4 •
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro1, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro2, Federal Fluminense University3, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital4
01 Jun 2013-British Journal of Haematology
TL;DR: Significantly fewer hospitalizations and emergency room visits, and shorter admissions were observed among hydroxycarbamide‐treated subjects, when compared to the 12‐month period prior to treatment initiation, suggesting hydroxy carbamide therapy reduces disease severity and is probably associated with decreased mortality among children with SCD.
Abstract: Summary Although evidence is accumulating that hydroxycarbamide decreases mortality among adults with sickle cell disease (SCD), there are no published data regarding the effect of hydroxycarbamide on mortality among children. The Paediatric Hydroxycarbamide Program was established to treat children with SCD aged 3–18 years if they met disease severity criteria. Mortality data and clinical/laboratorial effects of hydroxycarbamide were retrospectively collected for the first 9 years of the Program. Mortality among those who received hydroxycarbamide was compared to that of untreated children. Among 1760 subjects, 267 received hydroxycarbamide at a median dose of 20·8 mg/kg/d (range 10–32) for a median of 2 years (range 0·1–6·5). Survival among hydroxycarbamide-treated children was significantly greater than that among untreated ones (99·5% vs. 94·5%, P = 0·01), due primarily to fewer deaths from acute chest syndrome and infection. Hydroxycarbamide therapy was significantly associated with increases in haemoglobin concentration, fetal haemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, and reduction in platelet counts, reticulocytes and neutrophils. Toxicity was minimal and predominantly mild reversible neutropenia. Significantly fewer hospitalizations and emergency room visits, and shorter admissions were observed among hydroxycarbamide-treated subjects, when compared to the 12-month period prior to treatment initiation. Hydroxycarbamide therapy reduces disease severity and is probably associated with decreased mortality among children with SCD.
Journal Article•10.1038/NCOMMS2940•
Crocodylian diversity peak and extinction in the late Cenozoic of the northern Neotropics

[...]

Torsten M. Scheyer1, Orangel Aguilera2, Massimo Delfino3, Massimo Delfino4, D. C. Fortier5, Alfredo Armando Carlini, Rodolfo Sánchez6, Jorge D. Carrillo-Briceño, Luis Quiroz7, Marcelo R. Sánchez-Villagra1 •
University of Zurich1, Federal Fluminense University2, Autonomous University of Barcelona3, University of Turin4, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul5, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute6, University of Saskatchewan7
21 May 2013-Nature Communications
TL;DR: A diversity peak in sympatric occurrence of at least seven species is shown, based on detailed stratigraphic sequence sampling and correlation, involving four geological formations from the middle Miocene to the Pliocene, and on the discovery of two new species and a new occurrence.
Abstract: Northern South America and South East Asia are today’s hotspots of crocodylian diversity with up to six (mainly alligatorid) and four (mainly crocodylid) living species respectively, of which usually no more than two or three occur sympatrically. In contrast, during the late Miocene, 14 species existed in South America. Here we show a diversity peak in sympatric occurrence of at least seven species, based on detailed stratigraphic sequence sampling and correlation, involving four geological formations from the middle Miocene to the Pliocene, and on the discovery of two new species and a new occurrence. This degree of crocodylian sympatry is unique in the world and shows that at least several members of Alligatoroidea and Gavialoidea coexisted. By the Pliocene, all these species became extinct, and their extinction was probably related to hydrographic changes linked to the Andean uplift. The extant fauna is first recorded with the oldest Crocodylus species from South America.
Journal Article•10.3168/JDS.2013-6814•
Color Doppler flow imaging for the early detection of nonpregnant cattle at 20 days after timed artificial insemination.

[...]

Luiz Gustavo Bruno Siqueira1, V. S. Areas2, A. M. Ghetti3, J. F. Fonseca1, M. P. Palhão, Carlos Antônio de Carvalho Fernandes, J. H. M. Viana1 •
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária1, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo2, Federal Fluminense University3
01 Oct 2013-Journal of Dairy Science
TL;DR: In conclusion, visual evaluation of CLBF-d20 represents a quick, reliable, and consistent diagnostic test that enables the early detection of nonpregnant cattle.
Journal Article•10.1590/S1415-790X2013000400009•
Brazilian normative data for the Short Form 36 questionnaire, version 2

[...]

Josué Laguardia1, Mônica Rodrigues Campos1, Claudia Travassos1, Alberto Lopes Najar1, Luiz Antonio dos Anjos2, Miguel Murat Vasconcellos1 •
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation1, Federal Fluminense University2
01 Dec 2013-Revista Brasileira De Epidemiologia
TL;DR: The differences in the SF-36 scores between age groups, genders and countries confirm that these Brazilian norms are necessary for comparative purposes.
Abstract: METHODS: The study Pesquisa Dimensoes Sociais das Desigualdades (PDSD) (Social Dimensions of Inequalities) involves 12,423 randomly selected Brazilian men and women aged 18 years old or more from urban and rural areas of the five Brazilian regions, and the information collected included the SF-36 as a measure of health-related quality of life. This provided a unique opportunity to develop age and gender-adjusted normative data for the Brazilian population. RESULTS: Brazilian men scored substantially higher than women on all eight domains and the two summary component scales of the SF-36. Brazilians scored less than their international counterparts on almost all of SF-36 domains and both summary component scales, except on general health status (US), pain (UK) and vitality (Australia, US and Canada). CONCLUSION: The differences in the SF-36 scores between age groups, genders and countries confirm that these Brazilian norms are necessary for comparative purposes. The data will be useful for assessing the health status of the general population and of patient populations, and the effect of interventions on health-related quality of life.
Journal Article•10.3390/SU5093926•
Between Discourse and Reality: The Un-Sustainability of Mega-Event Planning

[...]

Christopher Gaffney1•
Federal Fluminense University1
16 Sep 2013-Sustainability
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the Olympic Golf project being implemented in Rio de Janeiro and argue that unless mega-event rights holders change their candidacy and selection processes, these events will inevitably be detrimental to their hosts.
Abstract: The zero-sum nature of mega-event hosting encourages cities to escalate investment with an eye towards convincing event rights holders that a positive outcome will result. The discursive frameworks of “legacy” and “sustainability”, the global competition to attract events and the compressed event horizon make for mega-event preparation regimes that may seriously compromise long-term urban planning agendas in mega-event hosts. By examining the sustainable urban planning literature, the discursive frameworks of sustainability in the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the discursive framing of the Rio 2016 bid, this paper will examine the Olympic Golf project being implemented in Rio de Janeiro. Through this case study the paper argues that unless mega-event rights holders change their candidacy and selection processes, these events will inevitably be detrimental to their hosts.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.FOODRES.2013.01.028•
Stability of probiotic yogurt added with glucose oxidase in plastic materials with different permeability oxygen rates during the refrigerated storage

[...]

Adriano G. Cruz1, Adriano G. Cruz2, W.F. Castro1, José de Assis Fonseca Faria1, Helena Maria André Bolini1, Renata Maria dos Santos Celeghini1, Renata S.L. Raices2, Carlos Augusto Fernandes de Oliveira3, Mônica Q. Freitas4, C. A. Conte Junior4, Eliane Teixeira Mársico4 •
State University of Campinas1, Rio de Janeiro Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology2, University of São Paulo3, Federal Fluminense University4
01 May 2013-Food Research International
TL;DR: The stability of probiotic yogurts added with glucose oxidase and packaged in different plastic packaging systems that present different oxygen permeability transfer rates was evaluated during 28 days of refrigerated storage.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.CANLET.2012.12.003•
Human osteopontin splicing isoforms: Known roles, potential clinical applications and activated signaling pathways

[...]

Etel Rodrigues Pereira Gimba1, Tatiana Martins Tilli•
Federal Fluminense University1
30 Apr 2013-Cancer Letters
TL;DR: An overview of current knowledge of the expression profile of human OPN splicing isoforms (OPN-SIs), their tissue-specific roles, and the pathways mediating their functional properties in different pathophysiological conditions is presented.
Journal Article•10.1017/S1368980012005101•
The Brazilian school feeding programme: an example of an integrated programme in support of food and nutrition security

[...]

Emilie Sidaner1, Daniel Balaban, Luciene Burlandy2•
World Food Programme1, Federal Fluminense University2
01 Jun 2013-Public Health Nutrition
TL;DR: The advances and challenges of the school feeding programme in Brazil are analyzed, as part of the Brazilian experience building up an integrated food and nutrition security national system, to explore the role of policy and regulatory frameworks in constructing quality service delivery and intersectoral integration.
Abstract: ObjectiveThe present paper analyses the advances and challenges of the school feeding programme in Brazil (PNAE), as part of the Brazilian experience building up an integrated food and nutrition security national system. It explores the role of policy and regulatory frameworks in constructing quality service delivery and intersectoral integration.DesignReview of PNAE and federal government technical documents and studies, legislation, minutes of meetings and official documents of the National Council of Food and Nutrition Security from 2003 to 2011.SettingFood insecurity has decreased significantly in Brazil in the last decade, indicating that appropriate choices were made in terms of public policies and institutional arrangements, which other countries can learn from.SubjectsBrazil food and nutrition security system; school feeding; school food.ResultsBrazil's integrated food and nutrition security policy approach promoted intersectorality in the food system, articulating actions to guarantee access to healthy food and to strengthen family farming. The quality of school meals has progressively improved; in particular, the availability of fruits and vegetables increased. However, national standards regarding menu composition have not yet been met. Regulations were an important factor, along with the policy approach linking food production, nutrition, health and education. Challenges are related to conflict of interests and to farmers’ insufficient capacity to meet supply requirements and comply with technical procedures.ConclusionsLocal food production, school meals and nutrition education can be linked through integrated programmes and policies, improving access to healthier foods. Government leadership, strong legislation, civil society participation and intersectoral decision making are determinant.
Journal Article•10.3109/0142159X.2013.769673•
Burnout and career choice motivation in medical students

[...]

Daniel Pagnin1, Valéria de Queiroz1, Márcio Amaral De Oliveira Filho1, Naira Vanessa Anomal Gonzalez1, Ana Emília Teófilo Salgado1, Bernardo Cordeiro e Oliveira1, Caio Silva Lodi1, Raquel Muniz Da Silva Melo1 •
Federal Fluminense University1
26 Apr 2013-Medical Teacher
TL;DR: It is suggested that students who are at risk for emotional exhaustion can be identified at the admission of medical school and primary prevention strategies for burnout should consider this risk group.
Abstract: Background: Burnout is a stress-induced syndrome, which affects medical students. Some environmental and personal factors can favor burnout onset and its serious consequences as dropping out, sleep disorders, depression, and suicide. The motivation for choosing medicine is a personal aspect that can modulate the distress with academic demands. Methods: We applied self-administered questionnaires in 277 medical students to investigate the predictive role of career choice motivations on burnout dimensions. Specifically, we studied the influence of the main reasons for choosing medicine on emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and academic efficacy. Results: Intellectual curiosity, professional autonomy, altruism, and interest in human relationships were the most common reasons for choosing medicine. However, the medical students motivated by personal illness or family member’s illness or death revealed a significant greater emotional exhaustion when compared with the students with other motivations. Conclusion: The students who apply for medical school motivated by illness/death experiences are at a great risk for burnout. We suggest that students who are at risk for emotional exhaustion can be identified at the admission of medical school. Primary prevention strategies for burnout should consider this risk group.
Journal Article•10.1002/GBC.20022•
Seasonal variability in concentration, composition, age, and fluxes of particulate organic carbon exchanged between the floodplain and Amazon River

[...]

Patricia Moreira-Turcq1, Marie-Paule Bonnet2, Marcelo Amorim3, Marcelo Bernardes3, Christelle Lagane2, Laurence Maurice2, Marcela A.P. Pérez3, Patrick Seyler2 •
Institut de recherche pour le développement1, Paul Sabatier University2, Federal Fluminense University3
01 Mar 2013-Global Biogeochemical Cycles
TL;DR: In this article, the composition, sources, and age of particulate organic matter were determined in an Amazonian river-floodplain system during rising, high, falling, and low water periods over 7 yr (1999-2006).
Abstract: [1] The composition, sources, and age of particulate organic matter were determined in an Amazonian river-floodplain system during rising, high, falling, and low water periods over 7 yr (1999–2006), and a mass balance for total organic carbon (dissolved and particulate) was estimated. The Curuai floodplain, composed of several temporally interconnected lakes, is permanently connected to the Amazon River via channels. Organic matter (OM) is imported to the floodplain from the Amazon River mainly during the rising water period and produced in the floodplain and exported to the river during high and falling water periods. No significant exchanges occurred during low water periods. The OM produced in the floodplain is characterized by low C/N ratios and by high chlorophyll a concentrations (Chl-a). The δ13C signature has a seasonal trend, with more negative δ13C values during the high water period than other periods. Δ14C results indicate that the bulk OM present in floodplain lakes is predominantly post-bomb (i.e., post-1950). Particulate organic carbon (POC) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) fluxes exported by the Curuai floodplain represent 1.3% and 0.1%, respectively, of the POC and DOC annual fluxes in the mainstem Amazon River at Obidos but may reach up to 3.3% and 0.8% during falling water. Based on Δ14C, δ13C, Chl-a, and elemental analysis of the particulate organic matter, we demonstrate that floodplain lakes have intense phytoplankton and macrophyte primary production, which is partly exported to the main river channel. Floodplains are thus a significant source of modern and labile organic carbon to the river mainstem, where it can be rapidly degraded and recycled back to the atmosphere.
Journal Article•10.5935/0103-5053.20130023•
Synthesis of novel isatin-type 5'-(4-Alkyl/Aryl-1H-1,2,3-triazoles) via 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions

[...]

Bianca N. M. Silva1, Bárbara V. Silva1, Fernando de C. da Silva2, Daniel T. G. Gonzaga2, Vitor F. Ferreira2, Angelo C. Pinto1 •
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro1, Federal Fluminense University2
01 Feb 2013-Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society
TL;DR: The synthesis of novel 5'-(4-alquil/aril-1H-1,2,3-triazole)-isatin via reaction of 1, 3-dipolar cycloaddition catalyzed by acetic acid is reported.
Abstract: Isatin and 1H-1,2,3-triazoles are two classes of compounds with great prominence in organic synthesis and medicinal chemistry as they are heterocycle nuclei with a high reactivity allowing to obtain several compounds with important biological properties. Herein, the synthesis of novel 5'-(4-alquil/aril-1H-1,2,3-triazole)-isatin via reaction of 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition catalyzed by acetic acid is reported.
Journal Article•10.1103/PHYSREVLETT.111.127204•
Interatomic Exchange Interactions for Finite-Temperature Magnetism and Nonequilibrium Spin Dynamics

[...]

Attila Szilva1, Marcio Costa1, Marcio Costa2, Marcio Costa3, Anders Bergman1, László Szunyogh4, Lars Nordström1, Olle Eriksson1 •
Uppsala University1, Federal Fluminense University2, University of California, Irvine3, Budapest University of Technology and Economics4
18 Sep 2013-Physical Review Letters
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that keeping this term leads to what one should consider a biquadratic effective spin Hamiltonian even in the case of collinear arrangement, and results in new tensor elements that are important for exchange interactions at finite temperatures, but they have less importance at low temperature.
Abstract: We derive ab inito exchange parameters for general noncollinear magnetic configurations, in terms of a multiple scattering formalism. We show that the general exchange formula has an anisotropiclike term even in the absence of spin-orbit coupling, and that this term is large, for instance, for collinear configuration in bcc Fe, whereas for fcc Ni it is quite small. We demonstrate that keeping this term leads to what one should consider a biquadratic effective spin Hamiltonian even in the case of collinear arrangement. In noncollinear systems this term results in new tensor elements that are important for exchange interactions at finite temperatures, but they have less importance at low temperature. To illustrate our results in practice, we calculate for bcc Fe magnon spectra obtained from configuration-dependent exchange parameters, where the configurations are determined by finite-temperature effects. Our theory results in the same quantitative results as the finite-temperature neutron scattering experiments.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.SAB.2013.05.016•
One-point calibration for calibration-free laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy quantitative analysis

[...]

G. H. Cavalcanti1, D.V. Teixeira1, Stefano Legnaioli2, Giulia Lorenzetti2, L. Pardini2, Vincenzo Palleschi2 •
Federal Fluminense University1, National Research Council2
01 Sep 2013-Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy
TL;DR: In this paper, a new method for improving the reliability of quantitative analysis by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) is presented, which can be considered as a variation of the calibration-free LIBS approach; although not completely standardless, only one standard of known composition and similar matrix to the one to be analyzed is needed.
Journal Article•10.1590/0004-282X20130146•
Leprosy neuropathy: clinical presentations.

[...]

Osvaldo J. M. Nascimento1•
Federal Fluminense University1
01 Sep 2013-Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria
TL;DR: Leprous late-onset neuropathy (LLON) clinical presentation should be considered facing a patient who develop an inflammatory neuropathy many years after a previous skin leprosy treatment, and attention should be given to autonomic dysfunctions in leproSy.
Abstract: Leprosy is a chronic infectious peripheral neuropathy caused by Mycobacterium leprae. The different clinical presentations of the disease are determined by the quality of the host immune response. Early detection of leprosy and treatment by multidrug therapy are the most important steps in preventing deformity and disability. Thus the early recognition of the clinical leprosy presentation is essential. Mononeuritis, mononeuritis multiplex (MM), polyneuritis (MM summation) are the most frequent. The frequent anesthetic skin lesions are absent in the pure neuritic leprosy presentation form. Isolated peripheral nerve involvement is common, including the cranial ones. Arthritic presentation is occasionally seen, usually misdiagnosed as rheumatoid arthritis. Attention should be given to autonomic dysfunctions in leprosy. There are clinical presentations with severe neuropathic pain - painful small-fiber neuropathy. Leprous late-onset neuropathy (LLON) clinical presentation should be considered facing a patient who develop an inflammatory neuropathy many years after a previous skin leprosy treatment.
...

Tools

SciSpace AgentBiomedical AgentSciSpace RecruitSciSpace for EnterpriseAgent GalleryChat with PDFLiterature ReviewAI WriterFind TopicsParaphraserCitation GeneratorExtract DataAI DetectorCitation Booster

Learn

ResourcesLive Workshops

SciSpace

CareersSupportBrowse PapersPricingSciSpace Affiliate ProgramCancellation & Refund PolicyTermsPrivacyData Sources

Directories

PapersTopicsJournalsAuthorsConferencesInstitutionsCitation StylesWriting templates

Extension & Apps

SciSpace Chrome ExtensionSciSpace Mobile App

Contact

support@scispace.com
SciSpace

© 2026 | PubGenius Inc. | Suite # 217 691 S Milpitas Blvd Milpitas CA 95035, USA

soc2
Secured by Delve