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Mancini, T.; Massini, A.; Tronci, E. |
Title |
Parallelization of Cycle-Based Logic Simulation |
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Journal Article |
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2017 |
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Parallel Processing Letters |
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27 |
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02 |
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MCLab @ davi @ |
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166 |
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Maggioli, F.; Mancini, T.; Tronci, E. |
Title |
SBML2Modelica: Integrating biochemical models within open-standard simulation ecosystems |
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Journal Article |
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2019 |
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Bioinformatics |
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36 |
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7 |
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2165–2172 |
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SBML is the most widespread language for the definition of biochemical models. Although dozens of SBML simulators are available, there is a general lack of support to the integration of SBML models within open-standard general-purpose simulation ecosystems. This hinders co-simulation and integration of SBML models within larger model networks, in order to, e.g., enable in-silico clinical trials of drugs, pharmacological protocols, or engineering artefacts such as biomedical devices against Virtual Physiological Human models.Modelica is one of the most popular existing open-standard general-purpose simulation languages, supported by many simulators. Modelica models are especially suited for the definition of complex networks of heterogeneous models from virtually all application domains. Models written in Modelica (and in 100+ other languages) can be readily exported into black-box Functional Mock-Up Units (FMUs), and seamlessly co-simulated and integrated into larger model networks within open-standard language-independent simulation ecosystems.In order to enable SBML model integration within heterogeneous model networks, we present SBML2Modelica, a software system translating SBML models into well-structured, user-intelligible, easily modifiable Modelica models. SBML2Modelica is SBML Level 3 Version 2 -compliant and succeeds on 96.47% of the SBML Test Suite Core (with a few rare, intricate, and easily avoidable combinations of constructs unsupported and cleanly signalled to the user). Our experimental campaign on 613 models from the BioModels database (with up to 5438 variables) shows that the major open-source (general-purpose) Modelica and FMU simulators achieve performance comparable to state-of-the-art specialised SBML simulators.SBML2Modelica is written in Java and is freely available for non-commercial use at https://bitbucket.org/mclab/sbml2modelica |
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MCLab @ davi @ ref10.1093/bioinformatics/btz860 |
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179 |
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Hayes, B. P. ; Melatti, I.; Mancini, T.; Prodanovic, M.; Tronci, E. |
Title |
Residential Demand Management using Individualised Demand Aware Price Policies |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2017 |
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IEEE Transactions On Smart Grid |
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8 |
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3 |
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1284-1294 |
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MCLab @ davi @ |
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157 |
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Mancini, T. |
Title |
Now or Never: Negotiating Efficiently with Unknown or Untrusted Counterparts |
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Journal Article |
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2016 |
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Fundamenta Informaticae |
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149 |
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1-2 |
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61-100 |
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MCLab @ davi @ DBLP:journals/fuin/Mancini16 |
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161 |
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Mancini, T.; Mari, F.; Massini, A.; Melatti, I.; Tronci, E. |
Title |
SyLVaaS: System Level Formal Verification as a Service |
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Journal Article |
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2016 |
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Fundamenta Informaticae |
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149 |
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1-2 |
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101-132 |
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MCLab @ davi @ DBLP:journals/fuin/ManciniMMMT16 |
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160 |
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Leeners, B.; Krueger, T.H.C.; Geraedts, K.; Tronci, E.; Mancini, T.; Egli, M.; Roeblitz, S.; Saleh, L.; Spanaus, K.; Schippert, C.; Zhang, Y.; Ille, F. |
Title |
Associations Between Natural Physiological and Supraphysiological Estradiol Levels and Stress Perception |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2019 |
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Frontiers in Psychology |
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10 |
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1296 |
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Stress is a risk factor for impaired general, mental and reproductive health. The role of physiological and supraphysiological estradiol concentrations in stress perception and stress processing is less well understood. We therefore, conducted a prospective observational study to investigate the association between estradiol, stress perception and stress-related cognitive performance within serial measurements either during the natural menstrual cycle or during fertility treatment, where estradiol levels are strongly above the physiological level of a natural cycle and consequently, represent a good model to study dose-dependent effects of estradiol. Data from 44 women receiving in vitro fertilization at the Department of Reproductive Endocrinology in Zurich, Switzerland was compared to data from 88 women with measurements during their natural menstrual cycle. The german version of the Perceived Stress Questionnaire (PSQ) and the Cognitive Bias Test (CBT), in which cognitive performance is tested under time stress were used to evaluate subjective and functional aspects of stress. Estradiol levels were investigated at four different time points during the menstrual cycle and at two different time points during a fertility treatment. Cycle phase were associated with PSQ worry and cognitive bias in normally cycling women, but different phases of fertility treatment were not associated with subjectively perceived stress and stress-related cognitive bias. PSQ lack of joy and PSQ demands related to CBT in women receiving fertility treatment but not in women with a normal menstrual cycle. Only strong changes of the estradiol level during fertility treatment were weakly associated with CBT, but not with subjectively experienced stress. Our research emphasises the multidimensional character of stress and the necessity to adjust stress research to the complex nature of stress perception and processing. Infertility is associated with an increased psychological burden in patients. However, not all phases of the process to overcome infertility do significantly increase patient stress levels. Also, research on the psychological burden of infertility should consider that stress may vary during the different phases of fertility treatment. |
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1664-1078 |
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MCLab @ davi @ ref10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01296 |
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178 |
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Tortora, L.; Meynen, G.; Bijlsma, J.; Tronci, E.; Ferracuti, S. |
Title |
Neuroprediction and A.I. in Forensic Psychiatry and Criminal Justice: A Neurolaw Perspective |
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Journal Article |
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2020 |
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Frontiers in Psychology |
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11 |
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220 |
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Advances in the use of neuroimaging in combination with A.I., and specifically the use of machine learning techniques, have led to the development of brain-reading technologies which, in the nearby future, could have many applications, such as lie detection, neuromarketing or brain-computer interfaces. Some of these could, in principle, also be used in forensic psychiatry. The application of these methods in forensic psychiatry could, for instance, be helpful to increase the accuracy of risk assessment and to identify possible interventions. This technique could be referred to as ‘A.I. neuroprediction,’ and involves identifying potential neurocognitive markers for the prediction of recidivism. However, the future implications of this technique and the role of neuroscience and A.I. in violence risk assessment remain to be established. In this paper, we review and analyze the literature concerning the use of brain-reading A.I. for neuroprediction of violence and rearrest to identify possibilities and challenges in the future use of these techniques in the fields of forensic psychiatry and criminal justice, considering legal implications and ethical issues. The analysis suggests that additional research is required on A.I. neuroprediction techniques, and there is still a great need to understand how they can be implemented in risk assessment in the field of forensic psychiatry. Besides the alluring potential of A.I. neuroprediction, we argue that its use in criminal justice and forensic psychiatry should be subjected to thorough harms/benefits analyses not only when these technologies will be fully available, but also while they are being researched and developed. |
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MCLab @ davi @ Neuroprediction-2020 |
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180 |
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Pappagallo, A.; Massini, A.; Tronci, E. |
Title |
Monte Carlo Based Statistical Model Checking of Cyber-Physical Systems: A Review |
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2020 |
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Information |
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11 |
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558 |
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MCLab @ davi @ |
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181 |
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Sinisi, S.; Alimguzhin, V.; Mancini, T.; Tronci, E.; Leeners, B. |
Title |
Complete populations of virtual patients for in silico clinical trials |
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Journal Article |
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2021 |
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Bioinformatics |
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1-8 |
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Model-based approaches to safety and efficacy assessment of pharmacological drugs, treatment strategies, or medical devices (In Silico Clinical Trial, ISCT) aim to decrease time and cost for the needed experimentations, reduce animal and human testing, and enable precision medicine. Unfortunately, in presence of non-identifiable models (e.g., reaction networks), parameter estimation is not enough to generate complete populations of Virtual Patient (VPs), i.e., populations guaranteed to show the entire spectrum of model behaviours (phenotypes), thus ensuring representativeness of the trial.We present methods and software based on global search driven by statistical model checking that, starting from a (non-identifiable) quantitative model of the human physiology (plus drugs PK/PD) and suitable biological and medical knowledge elicited from experts, compute a population of VPs whose behaviours are representative of the whole spectrum of phenotypes entailed by the model (completeness) and pairwise distinguishable according to user-provided criteria. This enables full granularity control on the size of the population to employ in an ISCT, guaranteeing representativeness while avoiding over-representation of behaviours.We proved the effectiveness of our algorithm on a non-identifiable ODE-based model of the female Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Gonadal axis, by generating a population of 4 830 264 VPs stratified into 7 levels (at different granularity of behaviours), and assessed its representativeness against 86 retrospective health records from Pfizer, Hannover Medical School and University Hospital of Lausanne. The datasets are respectively covered by our VPs within Average Normalised Mean Absolute Error of 15%, 20%, and 35% (90% of the latter dataset is covered within 20% error). |
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MCLab @ davi @ ref10.1093/bioinformatics/btaa1026 |
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182 |
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Mancini, T.; Mari, F.; Massini, A.; Melatti, I.; Tronci, E. |
Title |
On Checking Equivalence of Simulation Scripts |
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Journal Article |
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2021 |
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Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming |
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100640 |
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Formal verification, Simulation based formal verification, Formal Verification of cyber-physical systems, System-level formal verification |
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To support Model Based Design of Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs) many simulation based approaches to System Level Formal Verification (SLFV) have been devised. Basically, these are Bounded Model Checking approaches (since simulation horizon is of course bounded) relying on simulators to compute the system dynamics and thereby verify the given system properties. The main obstacle to simulation based SLFV is the large number of simulation scenarios to be considered and thus the huge amount of simulation time needed to complete the verification task. To save on computation time, simulation based SLFV approaches exploit the capability of simulators to save and restore simulation states. Essentially, such a time saving is obtained by optimising the simulation script defining the simulation activity needed to carry out the verification task. Although such approaches aim to (bounded) formal verification, as a matter of fact, the proof of correctness of the methods to optimise simulation scripts basically relies on an intuitive semantics for simulation scripting languages. This hampers the possibility of formally showing that the optimisations introduced to speed up the simulation activity do not actually omit checking of relevant behaviours for the system under verification. The aim of this paper is to fill the above gap by presenting an operational semantics for simulation scripting languages and by proving soundness and completeness properties for it. This, in turn, enables formal proofs of equivalence between unoptimised and optimised simulation scripts. |
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2352-2208 |
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MCLab @ davi @ Mancini2021100640 |
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183 |
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