Search results for "Physical Barrier"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Evaluation of the Safety Performance of Turbo Roundabouts by Means of a Potential Accident Rate Mode

2015

Turbo roundabouts are a particular road intersection layout, designed to increase the safety of double-lane roundabouts, while maintaining their excellent capacity. The main feature of this new concept of roundabout is the impossibility to move from one lane to another, provided by physical barriers marking the lanes. The paper shows an application to turbo roundabouts of a potential accident rate model, aiming to evaluate their safety improvement. Themodel is based on the concept of potential conflict: each vehicle involved in a general intersection performs a series of maneuvers which potentially imply a crash, according to the actual traffic. The number of accidents related to each criti…

Engineeringbiologylcsh:TE1-450business.industryTurboCrashBuilding and Constructionbiology.organism_classificationPotential conflictTransport engineeringturbo roundaboutspotential conflictslcsh:TG1-470lcsh:Bridge engineeringPhysical BarrierTraffic volumeTurbo roundabouts; Double-lane roundabout; Potential conflicts; Potential accident rate modelRoundaboutPotential accidentpotential accident rate modelbusinesslcsh:Highway engineering. Roads and pavementsIntersection (aeronautics)double-lane roundaboutCivil and Structural EngineeringThe Baltic Journal of Road and Bridge Engineering
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Ultrastructural aspects of naturally occurring wound in the tunic of two ascidians: Ciona intestinalis and Styela plicata (Tunicata).

2015

Efficient wound healing is essential for all animals from insects to mammals. Ciona intestinalis and Styela plicata are solitary ascidians belonging to urochordates, a subphylum that occupies a key phylogenetic position as it includes the closest relative to vertebrates. Urochordate first physical barrier against invaders is the tunic, an extracellular matrix that is constantly exposed to all kinds of insults. Thus, when damage occurs, an innate immune response is triggered to eliminate impaired tissue and potentially pathogenic microbes, and restore tissue functionality. Ultrastructural aspects of the tunic in the wound healing process of two ascidians are described. In the injured areas, …

AscidianPopulationGeneral Physics and AstronomyZoologyWound healingExtracellular matrixStructural BiologyBotanyAscidians; Invertebrates; Wound healing; UltrastructureAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceCiona intestinalisInvertebrateUrochordataeducationeducation.field_of_studyPhagocytesInnate immune systembiologyfungiCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationCiona intestinalisStyela plicataPhysical BarrierUltrastructureUltrastructureWound healingMicron (Oxford, England : 1993)
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Tissue response to five commercially available peritoneal adhesion barriers-A systematic histological evaluation

2017

Separating wounded serosa by physical barriers is the only clinically approved adjunct for postoperative adhesion prevention. Since the optimal adhesion barrier has not been found, it is essential to improve our pathogenic understanding of adhesion formation and to compare the effects of different barrier materials on tissue and cells. Wistar rats underwent standardized peritoneal damage and were treated either with Seprafilm, Adept, Intercoat, Spraygel, SupraSeal or remained untreated as a control. 14 days postoperatively, the lesions were explanted and histomorphologically analyzed using the European ISO score to evaluate material implants. Striking differences between the material groups…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMaterials scienceBiomedical EngineeringAdhesion (medicine)InflammationPostoperative adhesionAdhesion barrierAnatomy030230 surgerymedicine.diseaseBiomaterials03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysical BarrierFibrosis030220 oncology & carcinogenesismedicinePeritoneal adhesionAdhesion preventionmedicine.symptomJournal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B: Applied Biomaterials
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Dealing with physical barriers in bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) distribution

2019

Abstract Worldwide, cetacean species have started to be protected, but they are still very vulnerable to accidental damage from an expanding range of human activities at sea. To properly manage these potential threats we need a detailed understanding of the seasonal distributions of these highly mobile populations. To achieve this goal, a growing effort has been underway to develop species distribution models (SDMs) that correctly describe and predict preferred species areas. However, accuracy is not always easy to achieve when physical barriers, such as islands, are present. Indeed, SDMs assume, if only implicitly, that the spatial effect is stationary, and that correlation is only depende…

0106 biological sciencesRange (biology)Bayesian probabilitySpecies distributionDistribution (economics)Sede Central IEO010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesINLAPesqueríasArchipelago de La MaddalenaSPDEgeographyCetaceansgeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologybusiness.industry010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcological ModelingEnvironmental resource managementBottlenose dolphinbiology.organism_classificationPhysical BarrierHabitatArchipelagoHierarchical Bayesian spatial modelsbusinessEcological Modelling
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