5 resultados para Wolff, Corinna

em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain


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"Vegeu el resum a l'inici del document del fitxer adjunt."

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Este libro, en dos volúmenes, es un merecido homenaje al profesor Yann LE BOHEC (professeur émérite, Paris IV-La Sorbonne), jubilado forzosamente de la docencia universitaria en septiembre de 2011. La carrera investigadora del profesor Le Bohec que naturalmente continua en la actualidad ha tratado multitud de temas relacionados con el Imperio Romano, aunque deben ser destacadas en especial dos temáticas: el norte de África y el ejército romano. Y obviamente estos asuntos se ven también muy reflejados en los artículos de todos aquellos colegas y amigos que colaboran en el homenaje.

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Este libro, en dos volúmenes, es un merecido homenaje al profesor Yann LE BOHEC (professeur émérite, Paris IV-La Sorbonne), jubilado forzosamente de la docencia universitaria en septiembre de 2011. La carrera investigadora del profesor Le Bohec que naturalmente continua en la actualidad ha tratado multitud de temas relacionados con el Imperio Romano, aunque deben ser destacadas en especial dos temáticas: el norte de África y el ejército romano. Y obviamente estos asuntos se ven también muy reflejados en los artículos de todos aquellos colegas y amigos que colaboran en el homenaje.

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Background: To enhance our understanding of complex biological systems like diseases we need to put all of the available data into context and use this to detect relations, pattern and rules which allow predictive hypotheses to be defined. Life science has become a data rich science with information about the behaviour of millions of entities like genes, chemical compounds, diseases, cell types and organs, which are organised in many different databases and/or spread throughout the literature. Existing knowledge such as genotype - phenotype relations or signal transduction pathways must be semantically integrated and dynamically organised into structured networks that are connected with clinical and experimental data. Different approaches to this challenge exist but so far none has proven entirely satisfactory. Results: To address this challenge we previously developed a generic knowledge management framework, BioXM™, which allows the dynamic, graphic generation of domain specific knowledge representation models based on specific objects and their relations supporting annotations and ontologies. Here we demonstrate the utility of BioXM for knowledge management in systems biology as part of the EU FP6 BioBridge project on translational approaches to chronic diseases. From clinical and experimental data, text-mining results and public databases we generate a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) knowledge base and demonstrate its use by mining specific molecular networks together with integrated clinical and experimental data. Conclusions: We generate the first semantically integrated COPD specific public knowledge base and find that for the integration of clinical and experimental data with pre-existing knowledge the configuration based set-up enabled by BioXM reduced implementation time and effort for the knowledge base compared to similar systems implemented as classical software development projects. The knowledgebase enables the retrieval of sub-networks including protein-protein interaction, pathway, gene - disease and gene - compound data which are used for subsequent data analysis, modelling and simulation. Pre-structured queries and reports enhance usability; establishing their use in everyday clinical settings requires further simplification with a browser based interface which is currently under development.

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Background: The objective of the present study was to compare three different sampling and questionnaire administration methods used in the international KIDSCREEN study in terms of participation, response rates, and external validity. Methods: Children and adolescents aged 8–18 years were surveyed in 13 European countries using either telephone sampling and mail administration, random sampling of school listings followed by classroom or mail administration, or multistage random sampling of communities and households with self-administration of the survey materials at home. Cooperation, completion, and response rates were compared across countries and survey methods. Data on non-respondents was collected in 8 countries. The population fraction (PF, respondents in each sex-age, or educational level category, divided by the population in the same category from Eurostat census data) and population fraction ratio (PFR, ratio of PF) and their corresponding 95% confidence intervals were used to analyze differences by country between the KIDSCREEN samples and a reference Eurostat population. Results: Response rates by country ranged from 18.9% to 91.2%. Response rates were highest in the school-based surveys (69.0%–91.2%). Sample proportions by age and gender were similar to the reference Eurostat population in most countries, although boys and adolescents were slightly underrepresented (PFR <1). Parents in lower educational categories were less likely to participate (PFR <1 in 5 countries). Parents in higher educational categories were overrepresented when the school and household sampling strategies were used (PFR = 1.78–2.97). Conclusion: School-based sampling achieved the highest overall response rates but also produced slightly more biased samples than the other methods. The results suggest that the samples were sufficiently representative to provide reference population values for the KIDSCREEN instrument.