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2023
Siqueira, M, Melo T, Duarte Jr. S, Baiocco L, Ferrari CG, Lopes N.  2023.  Many hands on this study: Development of a metonymy comprehension task. DELTA. Documentação de Estudos em Lingüística Teórica e Aplicada. 39(3):1-28.2023. Siqueira, Melo, Duarte Jr., Baiocco, Ferrari, Lopes.pdfWebsite
Dagnino, R, Thalheimer L, Soletti R, Barros S, Brandão LC, Marques J.  2023.  NAU Campus Litoral. Relatório de Autoavaliação Institucional RAAI 2022. , Porto Alegre: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sulnau_ufrgs_litoral_raai-2022-volume-2-naus.pdf
Barichello, LB, da Cunha RD.  2023.  On the solution of systems of linear equations associated to the ADO method in particle transport problems. Computational and Applied Mathematics. 42:200:212.
Bello, DZ, Valk M, Cybis GB.  2023.  Towards U-statistics clustering inference for multiple groups. Journal of Statistical Computation and Simulation. :1-19.Website
Cepik, M, BRANCHER P.  2023.  Transformação Digital e Rivalidade Política: Estados Unidos e China. Tempos Difíceis: o primeiro tempo do governo Biden e as eleições de meio de mandato. , São Paulo: UNESP
Freitas, MWD, de Dagnino RS, Mangia CMF, de CANALEZ GG, de Barros EF, Carcillo JA.  2023.  Understanding Covid-19 widespread in Brazil and the Legal Amazon by social, environmental and human mobility factors. Sociedade de Riscos Sanitários. :135-148., Curitiba: CRV Abstract

The present study analyzed how the economic, social and human mobility factors were responsible for dissemination of Covid -19 in Brazil and the Legal Amazon region. Human mobility was analyzed by four dimensions according to the network's hierarchies of: migration, pendular mobility, airlift, hydro and road routes and healthcare system. Manaus, capital of Amazon, was the first diffuser pole of cases; this may be explained by absence of public lockdown policies and restriction of mobility by river routes and airport system. In the face of the worsening of the pandemic, between March to May 2020, the previous migratory pattern of the urban population was accentuated to inland Amazonian cities that spread the virus towards remote areas of the Amazon. In addition, there was a pendular migratory movement to Manaus, which is the only center in the region with highly complex hospitals; this fact led to a strong migratory movement of populations seeking medical assistance. The analysis on migration revealed a close relation of the spatiotemporal behavior of Covid-19 spread and the migration network to Manaus. There were significant correlations related to fluvial or waterway transportation axis along the Amazon River which is the dominant route of the region. These pathways have long distances to be covered from one pole to another and were additional factors for the spread of the pandemic during the period studied and have long travel times that can be an important factor for COVID-19 further dissemination. We conclude that the wide dissemination of COVID-19 cases across the Legal Amazon was the result of multifactorial causes that include social inequities, vulnerability, high rate of mobility and migration, information failure and administrative and social management of the crisis.

Muller, WA, Beales PA, Muniz AR, Jeuken LJC.  2023.  Unraveling the Phase Behavior, Mechanical Stability, and Protein Reconstitution Properties of Polymer–Lipid Hybrid Vesicles. Biomacromolecules . 24(9):4156–4169.
Allem, EL, Braga RO, Hoppen C, Oliveira ER, Sibemberg LS, Trevisan V.  2023.  Diminimal families of arbitrary diameter. Linear Algebra and its Applications. 676:318–351.: Elsevier Abstract
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Ladeia, CA, Schramm M, Fernandes JCL, Zanetti HR, Albuquerque AD.  2023.  The Influence of the Refractive Index and Absorption Coefficients in the Solution of the Radiative Conductive Transfer Equation in Cartesian Geometry. Integral Methods in Science and Engineering. (Constanda, Christian, Bardo E. J. Bodmann, Harris, Paul J., Eds.).:179–189., Cham: Springer International Publishing Abstract
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Bocalon, VLS, Coimbra JC, Bauermann SG, do Ritter MN, Pivel MAG, De Oliveira MAT, de Primam GLL.  2023.  Landscape changes in the Campos region, southernmost Brazil, since the early deglaciation based on a multi-proxy analysis of a peat bog. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 623:111631. AbstractWebsite

The paleoecological evolution of a peat bog in the Campos region, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, was determined based on an integrated study of stratigraphy, palynology, and geochronology. The peat bog is constituted of silty-clay material, with high levels of ash (residue on ignition) and organic matter content that was deposited on a sandy substrate. Palynological analysis show that grassland taxa dominated from the base of the core at the early deglacial (∼17.4 cal kyr B.P.) to the Present. Four pollen zones were identified: CCQ I Zone (3.20 m to 2.50 m), covering the deglaciation (Upper Pleistocene), corresponding to dry climate conditions; CCQ II Zone (2.50 m to 1.60 m, latest deglaciation and Early Holocene), associated with a slightly humid climate; CCQ III Zone (1.60 m to 0.50 m, mid to late Holocene), established under very humid climatic conditions; and CCQ IV Zone (0.50 m to 0.00 m, last ∼500 years), representative of a low-humidity period. The floristic composition of grassland communities observed throughout the drill core is very similar to that found in the region where the municipality of Cacequi is located, in which Poaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Rubiaceae were identified as the most abundant families. Consequently, although in the last ∼17.4 cal kyr B.P. the humidity oscillated, the grassland vegetation remained predominant, although not being represented by the same families, as indicated by changes in the floristic composition among the four pollen zones. Palynological and geochronological data, when compared with other sectors of the Río de la Plata Grasslands, show a predominance of dry conditions over the studied interval. From the early deglacial until the Present, climatic fluctuations shaped the diversity of plant communities and affected the particularities of each sector of the Río de la Plata Grasslands, including the Campos region. High ash content was detected along the core, similar to what occurs with other peatlands already studied in Brazil. In the peat bog analyzed, Poaceae is the predominant family, being known as a major producer of biomineralized structures, which would explain the high ash content recorded.

Brito, C, Forero DV, Hallberg K, Palma G, Alvear JS, Tancredi G, Tavera W.  2023.  Physics in Latin America. Nature Reviews Physics. 5:502–504., Number 9 AbstractWebsite

The southern skies and tall mountains of Latin America have cultivated a long history of astronomy on the continent. Today, the continent hosts over 80 observatories that are collaborative research centres for the region and the world. But what about other areas of physics? These have benefited from a culture of collaboration, but there are still challenges in fully developing the potential of research on the continent, such as insufficient researchers or resources. In this Viewpoint, seven physicists discuss the varying research landscapes of different areas of physics across the continent.

Rasera, F, Thill AS, Matte LP, Girotto GZ, Casara HV, Mea GDB, Balzaretti NM, Poletto F, Brito C, Bernardi F.  2023.  Slowing Sintering to Increase the Lifetime of Cu Nanoparticles on Metal Oxide Supports. ACS Applied Nano Materials. 6:6435–6443., Number 7: American Chemical Society AbstractWebsite
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Cubillos-Arcila, DM, Martins VF, Zanardi APJ, Machado GD, Burguêz D, Gomeñuka NA, Peyré-Tartaruga LA, SAUTE JAM.  2023.  Static Balance in Hereditary Spastic Paraplegias: a Cross-sectional Study. Cerebellum. AbstractWebsite
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2022
Bergue, CT, Lopes RP, Caron F, do Ritter MN, Rodrigues FL.  2022.  Paleoecological characterization of ostracods in beachrocks from the Northern sector of the Rio Grande do Sul Coastal Plain, Brazil, Dec.. Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia. 25:292–302., Number 4 AbstractWebsite
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Villegas-Martín, J, Rojas-Consuegra R, Verde M, Belaústegui Z, Ritter M, Horodyski RS.  2022.  Bioerosion on rudist shells from the Upper Cretaceous of Cuba: Paleobiological, paleoecological and taphonomic implications, 2021. :103665. AbstractWebsite

The fossil record of bioerosion on rudists is commonly restricted to brief mentions that mainly use general terms and do not constitute detailed ichnological studies. This contribution comprises a detailed study of the bioerosion structures present on the shells of different species of rudists from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of Cuba. In addition, paleobiological, paleoecological and taphonomic implications of these boring are inferred. Among the studied material, seventeen rudist shells exhibits bioerosion structures. Based on their morphological features the borings have been ascribed to Gastrochaenolites isp. and Entobia isp. Gastrochaenid bivalves and clionaid sponges, respectively, have been proposed as their more likely producers. The modes of occurrence, density, and position of such bioerosion structures rule out a syn-vivo relationship between rudists and boring bivalves and sponges, demonstrating that colonization mainly was postmortem. Furthermore, the combination of these data together with previous paleoecological interpretations and the fact that the most parts of the rudist shells are filled by sediment, provides enough evidence to propose a subsequent process of reworking and reburial of these shells in shallow marine settings.

Lopes, RP, do Ritter MN, Barboza EG, da Câmara Rosa MLC, Dillenburg SR, Caron F.  2022.  The influence of coastal evolution on the paleobiogeography of the bivalve Anomalocardia flexuosa (Linné, 1767) along the southwestern Atlantic Ocean, 2021. :103662. AbstractWebsite

Anomalocardia flexuosa is a bivalve that inhabits shallow, low hydrodynamics coastal environments of normal to brackish salinity, currently distributed from the Caribbean up to the state of Santa Catarina (∼28°S) in southern Brazil, but its fossil record extends along the southwestern Atlantic up to ∼40°S, in Argentina. Its absence in southern coasts today is attributed to ocean water cooling as a result of Middle-Late Holocene changes in relative influence of the warm waters of the Brazil Current and the cold waters of the Malvinas/Falklands Current, but geomorphologic and stratigraphic data suggest that coastal evolution controlled mainly by glacioeustatic-driven oscillations may have also played a role on the shifts of its distribution. Here we review the past and present distribution of A. flexuosa along southern Brazil, establishing a correlation with the Holocene geological history of this area. The Holocene post glacial marine transgression (PMT) produced a large complex of interconnected coastal lagoons landward of sandy barriers stretching from southern Brazil (state of Rio Grande do Sul) to Argentina, creating a corridor that allowed for the southward dispersion of A. flexuosa. The few available numerical ages indicate that A. flexuosa was established in the northern coastal plain of Rio Grande do Sul around ∼7.1 ka BP, and by ∼5.8 ka BP it had reached the southern plain, facilitated by warmer ocean waters than today and the sea-level highstand of 6–5 ka BP. The combination of cooling, sea-level fall that reduced marine influence, and fluvial inputs of freshwater and sediments, converted most of the lagoon complex into smaller isolated freshwater lakes after ∼4 ka BP, leading to the regional extinction of that species. The fossils of A. flexuosa and other tropical mollusks in middle and late Pleistocene interglacial barrier-lagoon coastal deposits along the southwestern Atlantic suggest that their latitudinal distribution shifted cyclically, driven by glacial-interglacial oscillations of sea-level and temperatures. The understanding of the coastal processes that affected the distribution of A. flexuosa may help assessing how mollusks and other marine species respond to environmental forcings related to sea-level oscillations and climate, thus contributing from a paleobiological perspective for conservation and management efforts under present and future scenarios of changes in coastal ecosystems.

Fraga, AZ, Hauschild L, Campos PHRF, Valk M, Bello DZ, Kipper M, Andretta I.  2022.  Genetic selection modulates feeding behavior of group-housed pigs exposed to daily cyclic high ambient temperatures. Plos One. OnlineWebsite
Zanette, R, Barichello LB, Petersen CZ.  2022.  A Nodal-iterative Technique for Criticality Calculations in Multigroup Neutron Diffusion Models.. Trends in Computational and Applied Mathematics. 23:315-334.
da Cunha, RD, Barichello LB, Neto AJ, Zanette R.  2022.  On Computing the Effective Multiplication Factor Using the ADO Method. Annals of Nuclear Energy. 167:108743.
Barichello, LB, Rui K, da Cunha RD.  2022.  On the application of the ADO method to the solution of two-dimensional radiative transfer problems in anisotropic scattering media.. International Journal of Thermal Sciences. 179:107685.
Moraes, LRC, Barichello LB, Barros, R. C, Vasques R.  2022.  On the Application of the Analytical Discrete Ordinates Method to the Solution of Nonclassical Transport Problems in Slab Geometry. Journal of Computational Physics. 455:110982.
Miliante, CM, Christmann AM, Soares RP, Bocca JR, Alves CS, Carvalho AMG, Muniz AR.  2022.  On the colossal barocaloric effect in higher n-alkanes. Journal of Materials Chemistry A. 10:8344-8355.
Blank, D.  2022.  Puericultura: do nascimento à adolescência. Medicina ambulatorial: condutas em atenção primária. , Porto Alegre: Artmedblank_puericultura-do-nascimento-a-adolescencia_medicina-ambulatorial_2022_raw.pdf
Matte, LP, Thill AS, Lobato FO, Novôa MT, Muniz AR, Poletto F, Bernardi F.  2022.  Reduction‐Driven 3D to 2D Transformation of Cu Nanoparticles. Small. 18:2106583.