Publications by authors named "Manneschi L"

Physical neuromorphic computing, exploiting the complex dynamics of physical systems, has seen rapid advancements in sophistication and performance. Physical reservoir computing, a subset of neuromorphic computing, faces limitations due to its reliance on single systems. This constrains output dimensionality and dynamic range, limiting performance to a narrow range of tasks.

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We postulate that three fundamental elements underlie a decision making process: perception of time passing, information processing in multiple timescales and reward maximisation. We build a simple reinforcement learning agent upon these principles that we train on a random dot-like task. Our results, similar to the experimental data, demonstrate three emerging signatures.

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"Sparse" neural networks, in which relatively few neurons or connections are active, are common in both machine learning and neuroscience. While, in machine learning, "sparsity" is related to a penalty term that leads to some connecting weights becoming small or zero, in biological brains, sparsity is often created when high spiking thresholds prevent neuronal activity. Here, we introduce sparsity into a reservoir computing network via neuron-specific learnable thresholds of activity, allowing neurons with low thresholds to contribute to decision-making but suppressing information from neurons with high thresholds.

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Introduction: Since February 2020, the outbreak of COVID-19 in Italy has forced the health care system to undergo profound rearrangements in its services and facilities, especially in the worst-hit areas in Northern Italy. In this setting, inpatient and outpatient services had to rethink and reorganize their activities to meet the needs of patients during the "lockdown". The Italian Association of Myology developed a survey to estimate the impact of these changes on patients affected by neuromuscular disorders and on specialized neuromuscular centers during the acute phase of COVID-19 pandemic.

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Objective: Evidence shows that peripheral nervous system (PNS) is involved in systemic sclerosis (SSc), but few morphological studies have assessed the ultrastructural pathological modifications. The aim was to study ultrastructural modifications of skin PNS fibres in SSc according to subsets [limited SSc (lSSc) and diffuse SSc (dSSc)] and phases (early and advanced) of the disease.

Methods: Skin biopsies were taken from the forearms of 23 SSc patients (11 lSSc and 12 dSSc) and 10 controls.

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Background: The multiple sclerosis functional composite (MSFC) is a multidimensional, MS-specific outcome measure for use in clinical trials, comprising three tests: timed 25-foot walk (T25FW), paced auditory serial addition (PASAT), and 9-hole peg (9HP).

Objective: To assess interrater and intrarater reliability and practice/fatigue effects in the MSFC.

Methods: The MSFC was administered by two neurologists after a formal training session to 32 MS outpatients.

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Background: Neutrophils are the predominant phagocytes in the early stages of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion response and are also implicated in the development of tissue damage. This study examined the role of recruited macrophages in the evolution of this tissue injury.

Methods: Farm pigs were subjected to 30 minutes of myocardial ischemia followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion.

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Aim: To investigate the ultrastructural features of the newly hatched larvae of Strongyloides stercoralis in human duodenal mucosa.

Methods: Duodenal biopsies from an AIDS patient were studied by transmission electron microscopy to investigate morphology, location, and host-worm relations of newly hatched larvae.

Results: Newly hatched larvae were found in the Lieberkuhn crypts within the tunnels formed by migration of parthenogenic females.

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Dietary determinants of colorectal mucosa proliferation were studied in 69 subjects previously operated for at least two sporadic colon adenomas. Information on recent dietary habits was collected by a validated food frequency questionnaire, and proliferation was measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation in colorectal biopsies by determining the labeling index (LI) and the percentage of LI in the upper part of the crypt, two parameters that are increased in subjects at high risk of colon cancer. The LI was significantly higher in women as compared with men (P = 0.

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Colorectal mucosal proliferation is supposed to predict colon cancer risk. We investigated whether a low-sucrose diet might reduce colorectal mucosal proliferation in a group of patients at higher risk of colorectal cancer after at least two colon adenoma resections. In a pilot phase, 14 patients [12 men and 2 women, 60.

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Aim: To investigate morphological changes in Enterocytozoon bieneusi and the duration of symptomatic relief after combination treatment with furazolidone and albendazole in AIDS patients.

Methods: Four severely immunocompromised AIDS patients with symptomatic E bieneusi infection of the gut received an 18 day course of combined furazolidone and albendazole (500 + 800 mg daily). All patients were monitored for parasite shedding in stool by light microscopy at the end of treatment and monthly during follow up.

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Autosomal dominant chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (AdPEO) is a muscle mitochondrial disorder due to multiple large scale rearrangements of the mitochondrial DNA. This disorder is probably due to a nuclear defect which causes genetic instability or an impairment in the replication of mitochondrial DNA. X-linked ichthyosis (XLI) is a skin disorder caused by a deletion in the steroid-sulphatase gene.

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Neuron density and distribution of the NADPH-diaphorase positive neurons were studied in the fundus, corpus and antrum of adult human stomach using cresyl violet staining and NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry. The submucous plexus contained significantly less neurons than the myenteric plexus. Submucous NADPH-d positive neurons were mostly located in ganglia close to the circular muscle layer.

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Perineurial cell ensheathment of muscle fibers has been reported only in one patient. Here we describe a new case with identical morphologic features and a similar, but milder clinical course characterized by progressive muscle weakness and bilateral palpebral ptosis. EMG examination (including repetitive stimulation) and antibodies against acetylcholine receptors were normal.

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Myasthenia gravis and mitochondrial myopathy may present with similar clinical symptoms as inconstant palpebral ptosis, ophthalmoparesis, and muscle weakness. A few case initially diagnosed as myasthenia gravis by a positive decremental response on EMG and successful anticholinesterase therapy revealed to be affected by mitochondrial disease. We report a new case initially found to be affected by myasthenia gravis in whom muscle biopsy, performed because of symptom worsening, disclosed a mitochondrial myopathy.

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Aims: To investigate changes in morphology of the developmental stages of Enterocytozoon bieneusi and symptomatic relief observed in AIDS patients after treatment with furazolidone.

Methods: Six AIDS patients with symptomatic E bieneusi infection of the small intestine were treated with a course of furazolidone. All patients had a weekly monitoring of parasite shedding in stool by light microscopy during and after treatment.

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Purpose: The biochemical and morphological alterations induced in lower limb skeletal muscle by ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) during aortic surgery and the effect of vitamin E pretreatment were investigated.

Methods: Two groups of patients undergoing aortic aneurysm resection, one untreated and one treated with vitamin E, were examined. Quadricep muscle biopsies were taken after induction of anesthesia, at the end of ischemia, and after reperfusion.

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A case of chronic intestinal infection due to adenovirus type 40 lasting for 13 months in a patient with AIDS is described. Adenovirus particles were detected by electron microscopy in biopsy samples taken from the duodenum 3 months after the onset of diarrhoea. The virus was identified as adenovirus type 40 in stool samples by ELISA monoclonal antibodies to adenovirus group antigen (MAd-g2) and types 40 and 41 (MA 40-1 and MA 41-1).

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The lung buds of 15 human fetuses from the 9th to the 14th week of i.u. life were examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM).

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Objective: To verify the phenotype to genotype correlations of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) related disorders in an atypical maternally inherited encephalomyopathy.

Methods: Neuroradiological, morphological, biochemical, and molecular genetic analyses were performed on the affected members of a pedigree harbouring the heteroplasmic A to G transition at nucleotide 3243 of the mitochondrial tRNALeu(UUR), which is usually associated with the syndrome of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS).

Results: The proband was affected by a fullblown syndrome of myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres (MERRF), severe brain atrophy, and basal ganglia calcifications, without the MRI T2 hyperintense focal lesions which are pathognomonic of MELAS.

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Dose-dependent water exchange times and intracellular water contents were measured by NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) in erythrocytes and mitochondria interacted with the anti-anginal and anti-arrhytmic agent, amiodarone. Addition of the drug up to 26 microM yielded 80% enhancement of the water exchange rate in erythrocytes at 37 degrees C and 41% enhancement at 22 degrees C with 40% and 9%, respectively, increases in the intracellular water content. Similar enhancements were obtained in mitochondria at 22 degrees C.

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Sphincteric anatomy and function are present at the caecocolonic junction in several mammals. In humans, radiologists and endoscopists have respectively reported a circumferential contraction and a prominent ileocaecal fold at the border area between the caecum and the ascending colon. Anatomical findings on necropsy material failed to confirm its presence.

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