Forests are major components of the global carbon cycle, providing substantial feedback to atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. Our ability to understand and predict changes in the forest ...carbon cycle--particularly net primary productivity and carbon storage--increasingly relies on models that represent biological processes across several scales of biological organization, from tree leaves to forest stands. Yet, despite advances in our understanding of productivity at the scales of leaves and stands, no consensus exists about the nature of productivity at the scale of the individual tree, in part because we lack a broad empirical assessment of whether rates of absolute tree mass growth (and thus carbon accumulation) decrease, remain constant, or increase as trees increase in size and age. Here we present a global analysis of 403 tropical and temperate tree species, showing that for most species mass growth rate increases continuously with tree size. Thus, large, old trees do not act simply as senescent carbon reservoirs but actively fix large amounts of carbon compared to smaller trees; at the extreme, a single big tree can add the same amount of carbon to the forest within a year as is contained in an entire mid-sized tree. The apparent paradoxes of individual tree growth increasing with tree size despite declining leaf-level and stand-level productivity can be explained, respectively, by increases in a tree's total leaf area that outpace declines in productivity per unit of leaf area and, among other factors, age-related reductions in population density. Our results resolve conflicting assumptions about the nature of tree growth, inform efforts to undertand and model forest carbon dynamics, and have additional implications for theories of resource allocation and plant senescence.
The corpus callosum (CC) has been shown to be susceptible to atrophy in Alzheimer disease (AD) as a correlate of wallerian degeneration or retrogenesis. However, when and where these 2 mechanisms ...intervene is still unclear.
In 3 memory clinics, we recruited 38 patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI), 38 patients with mild AD, and 40 healthy controls (HC). Combining voxel-based morphometry and diffusion tensor imaging, we investigated CC white matter (WM) density and fractional anisotropy (FA), radial diffusivity (DR), and axial diffusivity (DA).
Compared with HC, patients with amnestic MCI showed reduced WM density in the anterior CC subregion; however, FA, DR, and DA did not differ between the 2 groups. Significant changes were found in patients with mild AD compared with HC in the anterior and posterior CC regions. These differences were evident in both voxel-based morphometry and diffusion tensor imaging analyses. Specifically, we found reduced callosal WM density in the genu, posterior body, and splenium; decreased FA and increased DR in the anterior CC subregion; and increased DA, with no difference in the FA, in the posterior CC subregion.
Callosal changes are already present in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and mild Alzheimer disease (AD). The precocious involvement of the anterior callosal subregion in amnestic MCI extends to posterior regions in mild AD. Two different mechanisms might contribute to the white matter changes in mild AD: wallerian degeneration in posterior subregions of the corpus callosum (suggested by increased axial diffusivity without fractional anisotropy modifications) and a retrogenesis process in the anterior callosal subregions (suggested by increased radial diffusivity without axial diffusivity modifications).
The aim of this study was to determine whether an egocentric topographical working memory (WM) deficit is present in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD) with respect to other forms of ...visuospatial WM. Further, we would investigate whether this deficit could be present in patients having AD without topographical disorientation (TD) signs in everyday life assessed through an informal interview to caregivers. Seven patients with AD and 20 healthy participants performed the Walking Corsi Test and the Corsi Block-Tapping Test. The former test requires memorizing a sequence of places by following a path and the latter is a well-known visuospatial memory task. Patients with AD also performed a verbal WM test to exclude the presence of general WM impairments. Preliminary results suggest that egocentric topographical WM is selectively impaired, with respect to visuospatial and verbal WM, even without TD suggesting an important role of this memory in the early stages of AD.
We report the case of an elderly patient with cobalamin deficiency who progressively developed cognitive and behavioral symptoms associated with neuropsychiatric disturbances. His neuropsychological ...profile showed many features suggestive for a frontal-dysexecutive syndrome and was related to a predominant asymmetric (right > left) frontal lobe hypoperfusion. He completely recovered after a treatment with vitamin B12 and follow-up of 7 years showed that his improvement remained stable. Along with the other cases reported in the literature, our case also proves that there are some cases of vitamin B12 deficiency that can manifest with the symptoms of frontotemporal dementia and that they are completely reversible after substitution therapy.
A (k,n)-threshold visual cryptography scheme (VCS) is a method to encode a secret image SI into n shadow images called shares such that any k or more shares enable the "visual" recovery of the secret ...image. However, by inspecting less than k shares one cannot gain any information on the secret image. The "visual" recovery consists of copying the shares onto transparencies and then stacking them. Any k shares will reveal the secret image without any cryptographic computation. In this paper we analyze the contrast of the reconstructed image for a (k,n)-threshold VCS. We define a canonical form for a (k,n)-threshold VCS and provide a characterization of a (k,,n)-threshold VCS. We completely characterize a contrast optimal (n-1,n)-threshold VCS in canonical form. Moreover, for $n\geq 4$, we provide a contrast optimal (3,n)-threshold VCS in canonical form. We first describe a family of (3,n)-threshold VCS achieving various values of contrast and pixel expansion. Then we prove an upper bound on the contrast of any (3,n)-threshold VCS and show that a scheme in the described family has optimal contrast. Finally, for k=4,5 we present two schemes with contrast asymptotically equal to 1/64 and 1/256, respectively.
Las Yungas subtropicales se extienden por el noroeste de Argentina y sur de Bolivia, ocupando aproximadamente 56 000 km2. Se caracterizan por su amplia distribución altitudinal (400-2300 msnm), donde ...el recambio de especies de árboles determina la ocurrencia de tres pisos altitudinales (selva pedemontana, selva montana y bosque montano) con cambios consistentes en la fenología foliar y los síndromes de dispersión de las especies arbóreas. Dominan las especies caducifolias en los extremos del gradiente, y las especies semicaducifolias y siempreverdes en las elevaciones intermedias. Por su parte, las especies dispersadas por el viento o la gravedad caracterizan la parte baja del gradiente, mientras que las dispersadas por animales caracterizan los pisos superiores de vegetación. Los cambios físicos y biológicos en el gradiente altitudinal condicionan los usos y las estrategias de conservación de las Yungas subtropicales. La desforestación alcanzaba 18% de la superficie original de este ambiente en Argentina en la década de los 70 y 31% en el año 2010, principalmente (>90%) en las zonas bajas y planas. Las Yungas de Argentina presentan protección formal estatal (nacional, provincial y municipal) en 22% de su extensión actual, sin considerar las categorías internacionales, que pueden ser instrumentos valiosos, si se logra una implementación efectiva de los criterios de uso sustentable de los recursos naturales. Adicionalmente, los planes de ordenamiento territorial en marcha vinculados a compensaciones económicas podrían jugar un papel importante en el marco de estrategias regionales de uso y conservación.
On Self-Healing Key Distribution Schemes Blundo, C.; D'Arco, P.; De Santis, A.
IEEE transactions on information theory,
12/2006, Letnik:
52, Številka:
12
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Self-healing key distribution schemes allow group managers to broadcast session keys to large and dynamic groups of users over unreliable channels. Roughly speaking, even if during a certain session ...some broadcast messages are lost due to network faults, the self-healing property of the scheme enables each group member to recover the key from the broadcast messages he has received before and after that session. Such schemes are quite suitable in supporting secure communication in wireless networks and mobile wireless ad-hoc networks. Recent papers have focused on self-healing key distribution, and have provided definitions, stated in terms of the entropy function, and some constructions. The contribution of this paper is the following: We analyze current definitions of self-healing key distribution and, for two of them, we show that no protocol can achieve the definition. We show that a lower bound on the size of the broadcast message, previously derived, does not hold. We propose a new definition of self-healing key distribution, and we show that it can be achieved by concrete schemes. We give some lower bounds on the resources required for implementing such schemes, i.e., user memory storage and communication complexity. We prove that the bounds are tight
The aim of this study was to assess concordance between the indocyanine green (ICG) method and 99mTc-radiotracer method to identify the sentinel node (SN) in breast cancer. Evidence supports the ...feasibility and efficacy of the ICG to identify the SN, however this method has not been prospectively compared with the gold-standard radiotracer method in terms of SN detection rate.
Between June 2011 and January 2013, 134 women with clinically node-negative early breast cancer received subdermal/peritumoral injection of 99mTc-labeled tracer for lymphoscintigraphy, followed by intraoperative injection of ICG for fluorescence detection of SNs using an exciting light source combined with a camera. In all patients, SNs were first identified by the fluorescence method (ICG-positive) and removed. A gamma ray-detecting probe was then used to determine whether ICG-positive SNs were hot (99mTc-positive) and to identify and remove any 99mTc-positive (ICG-negative) SNs remaining in the axilla. The study was powered to perform an equivalence analysis.
The 134 patients provided 246 SNs, detected by one or both methods. 1, 2 and 3 SNs, respectively, were detected, removed and examined in 70 (52.2%), 39 (29.1%) and 17 (12.7%) patients; 4–10 SNs were detected and examined in the remaining 8 patients. The two methods were concordant for 230/246 (93.5%) SNs and discordant for 16 (6.5%) SNs. The ICG method detected 99.6% of all SNs.
Fluorescent lymphangiography with ICG allows easy identification of axillary SNs, at a frequency not inferior to that of radiotracer, and can be used alone to reliably identify SNs.
Los Andes tropicales constituyen una región única con una alta diversidad de hábitats, producto de complejos gradientes espaciales y ambientales. Los bosques montanos de esta región son considerados ...como una prioridad global de conservación, debido principalmente a su elevada riqueza biológica y de endemismos. Sin embargo su biodiversidad es de las menos conocidas de toda la región tropical, aunque se reconoce la amplia gama de servicios ambientales que prestan, incluyendo la regulación del clima regional y la captura y almacenamiento de carbono. Este artículo ofrece una perspectiva general del estado de conservación de los bosques montanos tropicales andinos y de los retos que esta implica. Asimismo, proporciona información sobre sus amenazas, identificando aquéllas que con mayor probabilidad sean responsables de aumentar el riesgo de extinción de especies. Se resalta la necesidad de disponer de más información sobre el estado de conservación de las especies para identificar las futuras prioridades de conservación en la región. La reciente iniciativa de la "Lista Roja y planeación para la conservación de especies de árboles montanos de los Andes Tropicales", formada por delegados de varios países de la región, constituirá una sólida base para el desarrollo y enfoque de políticas y respuestas de manejo dirigidas a la reducción de la deforestación y pérdida de especies en estos bosques, incluyendo acciones para promover la creación de áreas protegidas, restauración forestal y manejo forestal sostenible.