88,188 research outputs found

    Il contributo di Cesare Colucci alla psicotecnica

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    Cesare Colucci è stato uno dei primi docenti di Psicologia, avendo ricoperto una delle prime tre Cattedre di Psicologia istituite in Italia. Allievo e collaboratore di Leonardo Bianchi, Colucci è vivamente interessato alla psicotecnica, con particolare riferimento all'ambito scolastico e a quello industriale

    Paesaggio lunigiano

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    Paesaggio lunigiano di Vincenzo Colucci ha preso parte all’Esposizione nazionale di Pittura contemporanea del 1953 e successivamente è stato acquisito dall’Ateneo triestino. Il dipinto, ora ospitato presso il Rettorato, si trovava precedentemente presso il Centro di Fisica Teorica di Trieste. Il quadro presenta una doppia firma, segnale che la tela risale ad un ventennio prima ed stata riutilizzata per questa esposizione. Conferma tale ipotesi la data affissa dietro la tela “1933”. Con pennellate fresche e vivaci, il paesaggista tratteggia il tratto di costa tutto giostrato tra i toni verdi, ocra, la delicatezza del rosa e sapienti colpi di bianco, gioca sulle morbidezze tonali e sulle variazioni di luce. Vincenzo Colucci è stato un eccentrico cosmopolita, un raffinato dandy napoletano disinvolto e soprattutto un instancabile girovago. Così viene descritto da Fernando Porfiri «passa indifferentemente dai marciapiedi di via del Babuino e dai cortili di via Margutta (sua caratteristica è sempre un fiore di piazza di Spagna o una foglia di malvasia dei paesi esotici all’occhiello) ai boulevards di Parigi o alle “stazze” del Tamigi. Sempre svagato e un po’ dinoccolato, arsiccio e magro con una colorazione di mattone bruciato sul volto» (F. Porfiri, Vincenzo Colucci, Roma, Edizioni Porfiri per gli artisti e scrittori del Babuino, s.d., p. 19). Nella sua villa ad Ischia, da lui ideata sfruttando i diversi livelli di una collina di tufo, si batteva bandiera (un Orsa Maggiore in campo rosso). La sua abitazione era un via vai di artisti, scrittori e uomini di cultura. La sua prima personale è stata organizzata a Napoli nel 1929. Agli inizi degli anni Trenta è stato inviato dal regime in Tripolitania insieme ad altri artisti per raffigurare quei luoghi e nel 1934 espose una quarantina di opere alla Seconda mostra internazionale d’arte coloniale a Napoli. Ha partecipato a numerose esposizioni nazionali e internazionali. Nel 1938 New York gli ha dedicato una personale alle Reinhardt Galleries, nella Fifth avenue. Il New York Times lo ricorda: “With the paintings of Vincenzo Colucci, native of Ischia and resident of Rome, the Reinhardt Galleries present the work of a highly effervescent impressionist. Colucci has a good feeling for the difficult art of keeping the whole picture of a single piece, whether he creates a light iridescent marine or an occasional solidly worked still life. He is nowhere more brilliant than in the sparkling sketches of the Piazza san Marco” (F. Porfiri, Vincenzo Colucci… cit., p. 21Olio su telaFirmato in basso a sinistra “Colucci”Edificio Centrale, Rettorat

    ONTOLOGY-BASED DATA MAPPING TO SUPPORT PLANNING IN HISTORICAL URBAN CENTRES

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    Because of the need for new sustainable future alternatives, the re-inhabitation of rural areas, hinterlands, small historical urban centres and villages has become a unique real opportunity. Therefore, it is necessary to define and adopt new sustainable urban planning and building permits to follow this path. These processes involve both various actors and disciplines and a variety of spatial and semantic data. For this reason, the present research aims at providing a methodology to build the necessary spatial documentation of historical centres and villages by adopting an ontology-based workflow. Existing ontologies and conceptualisations have been considered together with classes and rules from city historical core regulations. A case study has been selected considering its available spatial datasets and national data models. The bottom-up approach here adopted aims at validating and enriching a reference ontology previously developed in the domain of historical centre by adding new concepts and relations from selected regulation plans and other existing ontologies and data models. Finally, the obtained ontology is also populated with instances of concepts and relations

    Cancer related fatigue, levels of haematic haemoglobin and presence of anxiety and depression in hospitalised cancer patients

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    G17 CANCER RELATED FATIGUE, LEVELS OF HAEMATIC HAEMOGLOBIN AND PRESENCE OF ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION IN HOSPITALISED CANCER PATIENTS F. Romito, F. Giuliani, D. Galetta, M. Di Bisceglie, R. Mallamaci, M. Longo, G. Colucci U.O. Oncologia Medica e Sperimentale, IRCCS Ospedale Oncologico, Bari, Italy Background: Cancer related fatigue is a very common problem among cancer patients, which is not directly connected to illness stage and kind of treatment. It is a multidimensional syndrome, involving both physical and psychological aspects of the patient, which are interrelated and mutually influencing. Fatigue is one of the most common complaints of patients, who are impaired in the pleasant activities of their lives, such as social relationships, hobbies and interests, sex. Anaemia is present in approximately 70% of fatigued patients. Aim: To evaluate levels of cancer related fatigue, in relation with haematic haemoglobin level and the presence of anxiety and depression inhospitalised patients, collecting data regarding kind and stage of treatment. Methods: FACT Scale (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy), subscale Anemia, and HAD (Hospital Anxiety and Depression) Questionnaire were administered consecutively to all patients referring to the unit in one week time. Haematic data were collected with routine blood test at the same time of administration of questionnaires. Results: The preliminary sample constituted 23 patients, the majority (15; 65%) were men aged 51(71 years old. Fifty-six percent of patients were receiving the first two chemotherapy treatment cycles. Seven (30%) of these patients show some level of depression (cut-off: 11), whereas nine (39%) are anxious (cut-off: 8). Anxiety and depression co-occur in five patients (22%), depression alone in 17%, only anxiety in 9%. The last data could be interpreted in the light of our experience with clinicians who are more likely to detect the presence of anxiety in cancer patients. Fatigue is present in 30% of patients, one with no anxiety nor depression, the remaining equally divided in half with co-occurring depression and anxiety, and half who are only depressed. Patients who are only anxious show low level of fatigue in this sample. Haematic data are still not available

    Checking compliance of semantic web applications with RDFS‐semantics

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    This is the preprint of the following paper: Simona Colucci, Donini F, Eugenio Di Sciascio (2019). Checking compliance of semantic web applications with RDFS‐semantics. INTERNET TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, vol. 2, 16254847, ISSN: 2476-1508, doi: 10.1002/itl2.87 Abstract: Web applications calling themselves “Semantic” count in the hundreds, yet there is no clear definition about what this qualification should stand for. Semantic web applications may range from those just using Resource Description Framework (RDF) as a data interchange format, to those taking all RDF-S consequences into account. Moreover, even with the simplest semantics, RDF data may contain blank nodes, which should be treated appropriately as existential variables—but might not. In this paper, we propose a general framework of yes/no experiments whose result tell, in a black-box fashion, how “Semantic” can be considered a given Web application. Our experiments measure the sensitivity of the application to syntactic variations of data which are equivalent under RDF-S-semantics. We show how our experiments can be run on a real application, namely, RapidMiner with LODExtension. We show how RapidMiner passes most of the tests (but for blank nodes), but highlight a weakness of the workflow repository-retrieval-exploitation that may make the application fail in some cases

    High-level-of-detail semantic 3D GIS for risk and damage representation of architectural heritage

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    The need to share information about architectural heritage effectively after a disaster event, in order to foster its preservation, requires the use of a common language between the involved actors and stakeholders. A database able to connect the architectural heritage representation with the data useful for hazard and risk analysis can thus be a powerful instrument. This paper outlines a methodology to represent 3D models of the architectural heritage, according to some existing standards data models, and relate their geometric features to the damage mechanisms that could occur after an earthquake. Among all the existing standard to represent cartographic, cultural heritage and hazard/risk information, respectively INSPIRE, CityGML, UNESCO, CIDOC-CRM, its extension MONDIS and the Getty Institute vocabularies, compliant to the CIDOC-CRM, have been taken into account. An INSPIRE extension has been proposed for increasing the level of detail (LoD) of the representation and improving the description of heritage buildings, adding some macro-elements and elements “feature types” connected with the damage mechanisms, identified in structural studies. The suggested method allows to archive, in a multi-scale database, 3D information with a very high level of detail about architectural heritage and can help structural engineers and conservator-restorers in preventing further damages through individuating useful targeted actions.Urban Data Scienc

    13 - Modeling the post-LGM deglaciation of the Scandinavian-Barents Sea Ice Sheet: a model intercomparison approachM. Petrini, N. Kirchner, F. Colleoni, A. Camerlenghi, M. Rebesco, R.G. Lucchi, R. Noormets, E. Forte, R.R. Colucci

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    ARCA Project - Final Conference, 11 October 2016 Rome - Poster Session - Marine Geology - Extended abstract(M. Petrini, N. Kirchner, F. Colleoni, A. Camerlenghi, M. Rebesco, R.G. Lucchi, R. Noormets, E. Forte, R.R. Colucci)</div
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