5 resultados para Flat panel displays
em Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad del País Vasco
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Published as an article in: Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 2009, vol. 71, issue 4, pages 491-518.
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Background: Malignancies arising in the large bowel cause the second largest number of deaths from cancer in the Western World. Despite progresses made during the last decades, colorectal cancer remains one of the most frequent and deadly neoplasias in the western countries. Methods: A genomic study of human colorectal cancer has been carried out on a total of 31 tumoral samples, corresponding to different stages of the disease, and 33 non-tumoral samples. The study was carried out by hybridisation of the tumour samples against a reference pool of non-tumoral samples using Agilent Human 1A 60- mer oligo microarrays. The results obtained were validated by qRT-PCR. In the subsequent bioinformatics analysis, gene networks by means of Bayesian classifiers, variable selection and bootstrap resampling were built. The consensus among all the induced models produced a hierarchy of dependences and, thus, of variables. Results: After an exhaustive process of pre-processing to ensure data quality–lost values imputation, probes quality, data smoothing and intraclass variability filtering–the final dataset comprised a total of 8, 104 probes. Next, a supervised classification approach and data analysis was carried out to obtain the most relevant genes. Two of them are directly involved in cancer progression and in particular in colorectal cancer. Finally, a supervised classifier was induced to classify new unseen samples. Conclusions: We have developed a tentative model for the diagnosis of colorectal cancer based on a biomarker panel. Our results indicate that the gene profile described herein can discriminate between non-cancerous and cancerous samples with 94.45% accuracy using different supervised classifiers (AUC values in the range of 0.997 and 0.955).
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Ponencia presentada en el 10th World Congress on Computational Mechanics (WCCM 2012), Sao Paulo (Brazil).Publicados los abstracts en documento con ISBN: 978-85-86686-69-6.
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Panel de Administración que ofrece una solución completa a la hora de realizar visores para mapas y que permite al cliente configurar un visor en base a sus necesidades, mediante diferentes módulos. Dicho panel, se ha realizado utilizando un desarrollo basado en el prototipado. En el caso de este proyecto, se especifica el desarrollo de los dos primeros prototipos. Los módulos desarrollados son los siguientes: Panel de login: Este panel permite el acceso a la aplicación. Módulo de usuarios/grupos: Este componente permite gestionar grupos y usuarios, tanto la creación, edición de los mismos como la visualización de estos. Módulo de datos: Este componente permite gestionar las fuentes de datos del cliente. Crear plantillas a partir de datos procedentes de BBDD propias, así como la edición de dichas plantillas. Módulo GeoAsset: Este componente permite configurar aplicaciones web o visores. Un visor tendrá asociado un mapa, una lista de control de accesos, etc. Siguiendo la estructura de módulos, también es objeto del proyecto la realización de un segundo prototipo que contiene la mejora de uno de los módulos ya creados: Mejora de módulo de datos: Este componente implementa además de las funcionalidades creadas en la anterior versión, una funcionalidad para permitir la subida de datos a la aplicación.
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This paper investigates whether the effect of political institutions on sectoral economic performance is determined by the level of technological development of industries. Building on previous studies on the linkages among political institutions, technology and economic growth, we employ the dynamic panel Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimator for a sample of 4,134 country-industries from 61 industries and 89 countries over the 1990-2010 period. Our main findings suggest that changes of political institutions towards higher levels of democracy, political rights and civil liberties enhance economic growth in technologically developed industries. On the contrary, the same institutional changes might retard economic growth of those industries that are below a technological development threshold. Overall, these results give evidence of a technologically conditioned nature of political institutions to be growth-promoting.