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"Baraldi, Luca"
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From Sports Collectibles to the Digital Humanities: the Evolution of Technology and the Transformation of Consciousness
by
Luca Baraldi
2024
For several decades now, we have been living through rapidly accelerating technological change, at a moment in history in which digitization is remaking the relationship between knowledge and humanity. Until recently, the act of passing down our history from generation to generation was entrusted to the voluntary or involuntary production of material witnesses. But in today’s growing digital ecosystem, historical memory has turned into data, computer architectures, and algorithmic interpretations. It is important not to approach this in purely technological terms, but instead as a real epistemological revolution. This not only changes the way we do things; it is also changing the ways we perceive them, know them, interpret them, and rework them. History, culture, and knowledge are all part of an evolving information ecosystem, which today, more than ever, is based on the possibility of direct interaction, immediate accessibility, and dynamic modularity. All of this requires new skills and new methodologies, born from an encounter between humanistic knowledge and technology.
Journal Article
Dairy Wastewaters to Promote Mixotrophic Metabolism in Limnospira (Spirulina) platensis: Effect on Biomass Composition, Phycocyanin Content, and Fatty Acid Methyl Ester Profile
2025
This study explores the mixotrophic cultivation of Limnospira platensis using dairy byproducts, specifically scotta whey (SW), buttermilk wastewater (BMW), and dairy wastewater (DWW), to promote biomass production and enhance the composition of bioactive compounds. By assessing various concentrations (1%, 2%, and 4% v v−1) of these byproducts in a modified growth medium, this study aims to evaluate their effect on L. platensis growth, phycocyanin (C-PC) content, and fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) profiles. The results show that the optimal biomass production was achieved with 2% scotta and dairy wastewater, reaching maximum concentrations of 3.30 g L−1 and 3.19 g L−1, respectively. Mixotrophic cultivation led to increased C-PC yields, especially in buttermilk and dairy wastewater treatments, highlighting the potential for producing valuable pigments. Additionally, the FAME profiles indicated minimal changes compared to the control, with oleic and γ-linolenic acids being dominant in mixotrophic conditions. These findings support the viability of utilizing dairy byproducts for sustainable L. platensis cultivation, contributing to a circular bioeconomy while producing bioactive compounds of nutritional and commercial interest.
Journal Article
From Sports Collectibles to the Digital Humanities: the Evolution of Technology and the Transformation of Consciousness
by
Luca Baraldi
2024
For several decades now, we have been living through rapidly accelerating technological change, at a moment in history in which digitization is remaking the relationship between knowledge and humanity. Until recently, the act of passing down our history from generation to generation was entrusted to the voluntary or involuntary production of material witnesses. But in today’s growing digital ecosystem, historical memory has turned into data, computer architectures, and algorithmic interpretations. It is important not to approach this in purely technological terms, but instead as a real epistemological revolution. This not only changes the way we do things; it is also changing the ways we perceive them, know them, interpret them, and rework them. History, culture, and knowledge are all part of an evolving information ecosystem, which today, more than ever, is based on the possibility of direct interaction, immediate accessibility, and dynamic modularity. All of this requires new skills and new methodologies, born from an encounter between humanistic knowledge and technology.
Journal Article
From Sport s Collectibles to the Digital Humanities: the Evolution of Technology and the Transformation of Consciousness
2024
For several decades now, we have been living through rapidly accelerating technological change, at a moment in history in which digitization is remaking the relationship between knowledge and humanity. Until recently, the act of passing down our history from generation to generation was entrusted to the voluntary or involuntary production of material witnesses. But in today’s growing digital ecosystem, historical memory has turned into data, computer architectures, and algorithmic interpretations. It is important not to approach this in purely technological terms, but instead as a real epistemological revolution. This not only changes the way we do things; it is also changing the ways we perceive them, know them, interpret them, and rework them. History, culture, and knowledge are all part of an evolving information ecosystem, which today, more than ever, is based on the possibility of direct interaction, immediate accessibility, and dynamic modularity. All of this requires new skills and new methodologies, born from an encounter between humanistic knowledge and technology.
Journal Article
Biotechnological Approaches: Gene Overexpression, Gene Silencing, and Genome Editing to Control Fungal and Oomycete Diseases in Grapevine
by
Capriotti, Luca
,
Sabbadini, Silvia
,
Limera, Cecilia
in
Apoptosis
,
Biotechnology - methods
,
Cultivars
2020
Downy mildew, powdery mildew, and grey mold are some of the phytopathological diseases causing economic losses in agricultural crops, including grapevine, worldwide. In the current scenario of increasing global warming, in which the massive use of agrochemicals should be limited, the management of fungal disease has become a challenge. The knowledge acquired on candidate resistant (R) genes having an active role in plant defense mechanisms has allowed numerous breeding programs to integrate these traits into selected cultivars, even though with some limits in the conservation of the proper qualitative characteristics of the original clones. Given their gene-specific mode of action, biotechnological techniques come to the aid of breeders, allowing them to generate simple and fast modifications in the host, without introducing other undesired genes. The availability of efficient gene transfer procedures in grapevine genotypes provide valid tools that support the application of new breeding techniques (NBTs). The expertise built up over the years has allowed the optimization of these techniques to overexpress genes that directly or indirectly limit fungal and oomycetes pathogens growth or silence plant susceptibility genes. Furthermore, the downregulation of pathogen genes which act as virulence effectors by exploiting the RNA interference mechanism, represents another biotechnological tool that increases plant defense. In this review, we summarize the most recent biotechnological strategies optimized and applied on Vitis species, aimed at reducing their susceptibility to the most harmful fungal and oomycetes diseases. The best strategy for combating pathogenic organisms is to exploit a holistic approach that fully integrates all these available tools.
Journal Article
Deep Reinforcement Learning Based on Proximal Policy Optimization for the Maintenance of a Wind Farm with Multiple Crews
by
Pinciroli, Luca
,
Ballabio, Guido
,
Baraldi, Piero
in
Algorithms
,
Decision making
,
Deep learning
2021
The life cycle of wind turbines depends on the operation and maintenance policies adopted. With the critical components of wind turbines being equipped with condition monitoring and Prognostics and Health Management (PHM) capabilities, it is feasible to significantly optimize operation and maintenance (O&M) by combining the (uncertain) information provided by PHM with the other factors influencing O&M activities, including the limited availability of maintenance crews, the variability of energy demand and corresponding production requests, and the long-time horizons of energy systems operation. In this work, we consider the operation and maintenance optimization of wind turbines in wind farms woth multiple crews. A new formulation of the problem as a sequential decision problem over a long-time horizon is proposed and solved by deep reinforcement learning based on proximal policy optimization. The proposed method is applied to a wind farm of 50 turbines, considering the availability of multiple maintenance crews. The optimal O&M policy found outperforms other state-of-the-art strategies, regardless of the number of available maintenance crews.
Journal Article
Present and Future of Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia
2020
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is the most common respiratory disorder among infants born extremely preterm. The pathogenesis of BPD involves multiple prenatal and postnatal mechanisms affecting the development of a very immature lung. Their combined effects alter the lung’s morphogenesis, disrupt capillary gas exchange in the alveoli, and lead to the pathological and clinical features of BPD. The disorder is ultimately the result of an aberrant repair response to antenatal and postnatal injuries to the developing lungs. Neonatology has made huge advances in dealing with conditions related to prematurity, but efforts to prevent and treat BPD have so far been only partially effective. Seeing that BPD appears to have a role in the early origin of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, its prevention is pivotal also in long-term respiratory outcome of these patients. There is currently some evidence to support the use of antenatal glucocorticoids, surfactant therapy, protective noninvasive ventilation, targeted saturations, early caffeine treatment, vitamin A, and fluid restriction, but none of the existing strategies have had any significant impact in reducing the burden of BPD. New areas of research are raising novel therapeutic prospects, however. For instance, early topical (intratracheal or nebulized) steroids seem promising: they might help to limit BPD development without the side effects of systemic steroids. Evidence in favor of stem cell therapy has emerged from several preclinical trials, and from a couple of studies in humans. Mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) have revealed a reparatory capability, preventing the progression of BPD in animal models. Administering MSC-conditioned media containing extracellular vesicles (EVs) have also demonstrated a preventive action, without the potential risks associated with unwanted engraftment or the adverse effects of administering cells. In this paper, we explore these emerging treatments and take a look at the revolutionary changes in BPD and neonatology on the horizon.
Journal Article
The association between onabotulinumtoxinA and anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies: a reliable option for the optimal treatment of chronic migraine
by
Baraldi, Carlo
,
Guerzoni, Simona
,
Pani, Luca
in
Botulinum toxin type A
,
Calcitonin
,
Calcitonin gene-related peptide
2022
Abstract Chronic migraine (CM) is a great challenge for physicians dealing with headaches. Despite the introduction of the monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) acting against the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) that has revolutionized the treatment of CM, some patients still experience an incomplete relief. So, the association of two preventive treatments may be a reliable option for these patients. So, onabotulinumtoxinA (BT-A) and anti-CGRP mAbs may be used together, and some pre-clinical and clinical evidence of an additive action of the 2 drugs is emerging. In particular, since BT-A acts mainly on C-fibers and anti-CGRP mAbs on Aδ ones, their association may prevent the wearing-off phenomenon of BT-A, thus giving an additional benefit in those patients experiencing an incomplete response to BT-A alone. Despite this, the clinical studies available in the literature have a small sample size, often a retrospective design, and are heterogeneous in terms of the outcomes chosen. Considering this, the evidence of a favorable effect of the association between BT-A and anti-CGRP mAbs is still scarce. Furthermore, this association is explicitly forbidden by many National regulatory agencies, due to the high costs of both treatments. Anyway, their association could help in reducing the burden associated with the most severe cases of CM, thus relieving the direct and indirect costs of this condition. More well-designed studies with big samples are needed to unveil the real therapeutic gain of this association. Moreover, pharmacoeconomics studies should be performed, to assess the economic suitability of this association.
Journal Article
Prematurity and BPD: what general pediatricians should know
by
Priante, Elena
,
Baraldi, Eugenio
,
Cavicchiolo, Maria Elena
in
Birth weight
,
Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia - diagnosis
,
Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia - etiology
2023
More and more very low birth weight (VLBW) infants around the world survive nowadays, with consequently larger numbers of children developing prematurity-related morbidities, especially bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). BPD is a multifactorial disease and its rising incidence in recent years means that general pediatricians are much more likely to encounter a child born extremely preterm, possibly with BPD, in their clinical practice. Short- and long-term sequelae in VLBW patients may affect not only pulmonary function (principally characterized by an obstructive pattern), but also other aspect including the neurological (neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders), the sensorial (earing and visual impairment), the cardiological (systemic and pulmonary hypertension, reduced exercise tolerance and ischemic heart disease in adult age), nutritional (feeding difficulties and nutritional deficits), and auxological (extrauterine growth restriction). For the most premature infants at least, a multidisciplinary follow-up is warranted after discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit in order to optimize their respiratory and neurocognitive potential, and prevent respiratory infections, nutritional deficiencies or cardiovascular impairments.
Conclusion
: The aim of this review is to summarize the main characteristics of preterm and BPD infants, providing the general pediatrician with practical information regarding these patients’ multidisciplinary complex follow-up. We explore the current evidence on respiratory outcomes and their management that actually does not have a definitive available option. We also discuss the available investigations, treatments, and strategies for prevention and prophylaxis to improve the non-respiratory outcomes and the quality of life for these children and their families, a critical aspect not always considered. This comprehensive approach, added to the increased needs of a VLBW subjects, is obviously related to very high health-related costs that should be beared in mind.
What is Known:
• Every day, a general pediatrician is more likely to encounter a former very low birth weight infant.
• Very low birth weight and prematurity are frequently related not only with worse respiratory outcomes, but also with neurological, sensorial, cardiovascular, renal, and nutritional issues.
What is New:
• This review provides to the general pediatrician a comprehensive approach for the follow-up of former premature very low birth weight children, with information to improve the quality of life of this special population.
Journal Article