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3 REASONS WHY DOAJ MATTERS 4 WAYS DOAJ MAKES AN IMPACT 5 REASONS WHY JOURNALS WANT TO BE IN DOAJ THE FACTS ABOUT DOAJ INCREASED SITE TRAFFIC GREATER VISIBILITY PROMOTION PRESTIGE OPEN ACCESS CERTIFICATION Many aggregators and databases and hundreds of library catalogues use our metadata in their products. This includes Scopus, Serial Solutions and Ebsco. We have established standards and best practice for open access journals and publishing. DOAJ is the most important community-driven, open access service in the world.* Open access publication funds often require DOAJ indexing to release funding. *http://www.knowledge-exchange.info/event/oa-dependencies helps publishers to serve authors better helps publishers to adopt best practice and make journals more attractive publishing channels Operates globally via a network of Ambassadors and volunteers Indexing in DOAJ increases traffic to journal sites and visibility of content doaj.org | poster |
RESEARCH POSTER PRESENTATION DESIGN © 2019 www.PosterPresentations.com Sustainability Issues: • Each ton of cement production-one ton of carbon-dioxide, 1 kg of sulphur dioxide (SO2), 2 kg oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and 10 kg dust into the atmosphere (Zhang et al., 2018) • Shortage of Landfill sites Optimum Solution: Geopolymer concrete (GPC)- novel form of concrete, synthesized by the alkali activation of source materials (aluminosilicate rich materials) ( Davidovits, 1991). On Site Feasibility Problems: • Highly corrosive alkaline solution-based reagents • Heat Curing Feasible Solution: Dry Mixing Technique • Powder-based reagents: required in less quantity • Source Materials: aluminosilicate rich materials • No need of heat curing Geopolymerisation (Komnitsas, 2011) IINTRODUCTION OBJECTIVE RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS • The mix combination (M1A2) achieved the highest compressive strength of 64.2 MPa at 56 days. • The mix M1A1 exhibited a comparable compressive strength of 55.45 MPa at 56 days and higher slump flow than mix M1A2. • The initial and final setting time of the mix M1A1 was determined to be as 119 minutes and 259 minutes respectively. • M1A1 was designated as the best performing mix based on slump flow and compressive strength characteristics. REFERENCES Zhang, J., Zhang, P., Zheng, Y. and Wang, K. 2018. A review on properties of fresh and hardened geopolymer mortar. Composites Part B, Volume 152. Davidovits, J. 1991. Geopolymers. Journal of Thermal Analysis, 37(8):1633–1656. Li, V. C., & Kanda, T. (1998). Engineered Cementitious Composites for structural applications. Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, 10(2), 66–69. Komnitsas, K. A. (2011) ‘Potential of geopolymer technology towards green buildings and sustainable cities’, Procedia Engineering, 21, pp. 1023–1032. doi: 10.1016/j.proeng.2011.11.2108. Standard Test Method for Compressive Strength of Hydraulic Cement Mortars (Using 2-in. or [50-mm] Cube Specimens)1’ (ASTM, 2016). doi: 10.1520/C0109_C0109M-16A. Standard Test Method for Flow of Hydraulic Cement Mortar 1’ (ASTM, 2015). doi: 10.1520/C1437 Designation: C191 − 18a Standard Test Methods for Time of Setting of Hydraulic Cement by Vicat Needle 1’ (2018). doi: 10.1520/C0191-18A. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • CRH Canada • ATCO Power • WESTLAB Canada • NSERC • Develop cement free binder for the production/development of sustainable engineered composites. • Geopolymer Technology (Si2O5.Al2O2) n + H2O + OH- →Si(OH)4 + AL(OH)4- Si(OH)4 + AL(OH)4 →(-Si-O-Al-O-)n + 4H2O Department of Civil Engineering, Ryerson University Sood, D., Krisht, J. and Hossain, K.M.A. DEVELOPING GEOPOLYMER COMPOSITES USING DRY MIXING TECHNIQUE EXPERIMENTAL WORK Binder* Mix Design ation** Activator Activator/ Binder Activator component ratio Water/Binder HRWRA*** FA(C)+ GGBS M1A1 Ca(OH)2+ Na2SiO3.5H2O 0.09 Na2SiO3.5H2O/ Ca(OH)2=2.5 0.35 0 M1A2 Ca(OH)2+ Na2SO4 0.12 Ca(OH)2/ Na2SO4=2.5 0.35 0.01 FA(F)+ GGBS M2A1 M2A2 Ca(OH)2+ Na2SiO3.5H2O Ca(OH)2+ Na2SO4 0.09 0.12 Na2SiO3.5H2O/ Ca(OH)2=2.5 Ca(OH)2/ Na2SO4=2.5 0.3 0.35 0 0 GGBS M3A1 M3A2 Ca(OH)2+ Na2SiO3.5H2O Ca(OH)2+ Na2SO4 0.09 0.12 Na2SiO3.5H2O/ Ca(OH)2=2.5 Ca(OH)2/ Na2SO4=2.5 0.35 0.35 0 0.02 Figure 3-(a) slump flow spread, (b) setting time test, (c) compressive strength test 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Compressive Strength (MPa) Days M1A1 M1A2 Linear (M1A1) Linear (M1A2) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Compressive Strength (MPa) Days M3A1 M3A2 Linear (M3A1) Linear (M3A2) Figure 4- (a) Influence of two types of activators on mix-1, (b) Influence of two types of activators on mix-3 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Compressive Strength (MPa) Days M2A1 Linear (M2A1) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Compressive Strength (MPa) Days M1A1 M2A1 M3A1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Compressive Strength (MPa) Days M1A2 M3A2 Linear (M1A2) Linear (M3A2) Figure 5- Effect of activator on different source materials (a) A1, (b) A2 0 1 2 3 M1A1 M2A1 M3A1 Re | poster |
DISCRIMINATION M: 2.5 % N: 48 EDUCATION M (sum): 20.6 %; N: 57-59 M (qt.): 9.8 %; N: 57 M (ql.): 11.0 %; N: 59 Expert Opinion on the Causes of International Differences in Intelligence - 2013 Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence David Becker Department of Psychology Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany david.becker@s2009.tu-chemnitz.de Heiner Rindermann Department of Psychology Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany heiner.rindermann@psychologie.tu-chemnitz.de Thomas R. Coyle Department of Psychology University of Texas at San Antonio, USA thomas.coyle@utsa.edu GENES M: 15.3 % N: 60 WEALTH M: 8.8 % N 59 CULTURE M: 7.2 % N: 58 POLITICS M: 5.2 % N: 51 MIGRATION M: 3.9 % N: 45 TEST BIAS M: 3.2 % N: 49 HEALTH M: 10.0 % N: 59 MODERNIZATION M: 7.6 % N 54 TEST KNOWLEDGE M: 5.7 % N: 54 SAMPLING ERROR M: 4.0 % N: 49 GEOGRAPHY M: 3.4 % N: 53 CURRENT CLIMAT M: 2.5 % N: 52 1. Mean rating of the causes of InatD in cognitive ability and intelligence. 3. Qualitative and quantitative education as causes of InatD. [Red: quant. edu.; blue: qual. edu.; figures in %] FINLAND 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 ROMA (GYPSIES) M(qt.): 13.8; N: 50 M(ql.): 14.0; N: 49 ISRAEL M(qt.): 9.1; N: 34 M(ql.): 10.9; N: 36 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 1 6 1 8 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 1 6 1 8 2. Genes as causes of InatD. [M in %] FINLAND M: 13.6 N: 48 SOUTH EUROPE M: 16.8 N: 48 LATIN AMERICA M: 17.0 N: 40 SUB-SAHARA M: 16.5 N: 49 ARAB.-MUSLIM M: 17.0 N: 42 EAST-ASIA M: 17.9 N: 49 ROMA (GYPSIES) M: 20.0 N: 40 ISRAEL M: 19.4 N: 38 JEWS (in Western world) M: 23.9 N: 44 IMMIGRANTS (from Middle East in Western world) M: 21.6 N: 37 4. Identified deviations in rating of the causes of InatD (≥ 3%). SUB-SAHARA +2.6 (minor dev.) M:13.2 17.3 N: 45 48 SOUTH EUROPE 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 M:10.7 14.6 N: 39 42 LATIN AMERCIA 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 M:12.9 14.7 N: 39 42 SUB-SAHARA 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 M:11.2 11.9 N: 47 47 ARAB.-MUSLIM 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 M:12.5 14.0 N: 41 42 EAST-ASIA 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 M:16.0 14.2 N: 50 49 JEWS (in Western world) M(qt.): 12.0; N: 39 M(ql.): 13.2; N: 41 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 1 6 1 8 IMMIGRANTS (from Middle East in Western world) M(qt.): 12.0; N: 35 M(ql.): 13.0; N: 36 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 1 6 1 8 Introduction This poster examines expert opinions on the causes of international differences (InatD) in cognitive ability and intelligence using responses from a larger survey (overview of the 2013 Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence presented in Rindermann et al. at ISIR 2013). The survey of expert opinions consisted of 62 main questions with follow-up questions and space for comments. Experts were sampled from publications (including the journals Intelligence and Cognitive Psychology) on intelligence, cognitive abilities, and student achievement. Notice of the study was emailed to ISIR members and posted to the ISSID homepage, and colleagues were asked to inform other researchers of the study. Only people who received a participation code could participate. The poster is divided into four parts. Part 1 presents expert opinions on the causes of international differences. Parts 2 and 3 present opinions on the two as most important rated factors, on influences of genes, and on qualitative (ql.) and quantitative (qt.) aspects of education, both in different regions and groups. Part 4 presents regional and group-related deviations from the general average in expert ratings. All sections report mean expert ratings in percentages (M in %), and the number of responses (N). 14th ISIR Conference, Melbourne, Australia, December 12-14, 2013 Reference: Rindermann, H., Coyle, T. R. & Becker D. (2013). 2013 survey of expert opinion on intelligence. Presented at the 14th ISIR conference, Melbourne, Australia, December 12-14, 2013. JEWS (in Western world) +8.6 +8.0 +9.0 +6.3 IMMIGRANTS (from Middle East in Western world) FINLAND ql. qt. +6.4 +3.4 EAST-ASIA +6.7 qt. +6.2 ql. +3.2 SOUTH EUROPE ql. +4.8 +4.6 +3.6 ARAB.-MUSLIM +7.0 +3.9 LATIN AMERICA +3.8 ql. +3.7 q | poster |
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Research and Development Influence of Transcriptomic Descriptors on the Generalized Read-Across (GenRA) Performance T. Tate.1, G. Patlewicz1, J. Wambaugh1, I. Shah1 1Center for Computational Toxicology and Exposure, US Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA Abstract 245 Objectives Impact/Significance Approach Key Results Read-across is a data gap filling technique utilized to predict the toxicity of a target chemical using data from similar analogues. GenRA attempts to make automated read-across predictions of toxicity outcomes for untested chemicals. Previous efforts utilizing GenRA focused on the enhancement of read-across prediction through characterization of chemical structure, physiochemical, and bioactivity similarity. In this work, the feasibility and performance of targeted High-Throughput Transcriptomic (HTTr) data in assigning in vivo toxicity read-across predictions was investigated. Tia Tate l tate.tia@epa.gov l 0000-0002-7359-1660 Binary ‘hit calls’ for targeted HTTr data on 93 transcripts for 1060 chemicals in HepaRGTM cells that measure nuclear receptor activation, xenobiotic metabolism, cell stress, cell cycle progression, and apoptosis, were derived from TCPL multiple concentration level 5 data. Newly developed python package, genra-py was utilized to evaluate the baseline chemical structure fingerprint approach versus these transcriptomic fingerprints as well as a hybrid combination of both for predicting ToxRefDB v2.0 hazard outcomes using Area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) Curve (AUC). For all endpoints, there were modest improvements in ROC AUC scores of 0.01 (2.1%) and 0.04 (7.3%) with transcriptomic and hybrid descriptors, as compared to baseline (Morgan) chemical structure fingerprints. For liver-specific toxicity endpoints, ROC AUC scores improved by 10% and 17% for transcriptomic and hybrid descriptors, respectively. Thus, significant differences appear to be either study type or target specific. Previously, the GenRA approach was shown to be effective in characterizing source analogues using binary and quantitative measures for chemical and bioactivity descriptors, as well as physiochemical property information. In this present study, we found that in specific cases, the utility of transcriptomic hit- call information in addition to chemical structure information was promising in making in vivo toxicity predictions. While the coverage of this dataset was limited, we anticipate that these and future expansions to more comprehensive transcriptomic datasets will provide stronger justification for the use of NAMs to enhance read across predictions. | non_poster |
IDENTIFICACIÓN DE LA SUSTANCIA O DEL PREPARADO Y DE LA SOCIEDAD O EMPRESA Nombre del producto Cloro Nombre comercial Cloro Cloro 2.8 Número CEE (EINECS): 231-959-5 Número CAS: 7782-50-5 Índice Nº 017-001-00-7 Fórmula química Cl2 Utilizaciones: Sustancia multipropósitos, principalmente utilizado en la desinfección de áreas médicas IDENTIFICACIÓN DE PELIGROS A. PANORAMA DE EMERGENCIA: Aspecto físico y olor: polvo sólido blanco, inoloro. Advertencias: En base a los datos disponibles actualmente, este producto no cumple con la definición regulatoria de una substancia peligrosa. Sin embargo, deben utilizarse buenas prácticas de higiene industrial durante su manipulación. POSIBLES EFECTOS EN LA SALUD: Oculares agudos: Tal vez cause irritación por cuerpo extraño únicamente, Los polvos | non_poster |
Technosignature Grading System to Optimize Detection on G-type Exoplanets Using Next-Generation Space Telescopes Advait Huggahalli, Horace Greeley High School, Chappaqua, NY, United States https://exo planets.na sa.gov/ https://ww w.sciencen ews.org/ar ticle/james -webb-tele scope-que nched-gal axy | non_poster |
Heterologous expression of CECMEL11 bactericidal peptides against Xylella fastidiosa in Nicotiana benthamiana plants Aina Baró1, Pasquale Saldarelli2, Maria Saponari2, Emili Montesinos1 and Laura Montesinos1 1 CIDSAV, Institute of Food and Agricultural Technology, University of Girona, Girona (Spain) 2 Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, National Research Council (CNR), Bari (Italy). | non_poster |
62ª Reunión Anual 13 al 16 de octubre de 2020 Chemical analysis of early-type stars with planets J. Alacoria1, P. Miquelarena12, D. Calvo2, G. Martin2, M. Flores12, M. Jaque Arancibia3, A. Collado12, F. Gunella1 & C. Saffe12 1 Instituto de Ciencias Astronómicas, de la Tierra y del Espacio (ICATE-CONICET), San Juan, Argentina 2 Universidad Nacional de San Juan, Argentina 3 Departamento de Física y Astronomía, Universidad de La Serena, La Serena, Chile To date, important metallicity trends are known for the case of late-type stars with planets, while early-type stars with planets are comparatively poorly studied. In this contribution, we present some preliminary results obtained for a sample of early-type stars with planets (mostly A-type stars) with and without planets. We want to study the possible relation between the presence of planets and the Boötis chemical pattern. The Boötis stars are a group of chemically peculiar objects on the upper main-sequence, showing underabundances (1-2 dex) of iron peak elements and near-solar abundances of C, N, O and S. We also want to search for possible trends between the stellar metallicity and planetary characteristics such as the mass and radius. | non_poster |
Open Schools Journal for Open Science Vol. 3, 2020 Nanotechnology and azo-dyes in sweets Staudinger M. BG/BRG Schloss Wagrain Punz E. BG/BRG Schloss Wagrain Joubert I.A. Dept. Biosciences, University of Salzburg Himly M. Dept. Biosciences, University of Salzburg Geppert M. Dept. Biosciences, University of Salzburg https://doi.org/10.12681/osj.22600 Copyright © 2020 M. Staudinger, E. Punz, I.A. Joubert, M. Himly, M. Geppert To cite this article: Staudinger, M., Punz, E., Joubert, I., Himly, M., & Geppert, M. (2020). Nanotechnology and azo-dyes in sweets. Open Schools Journal for Open Science, 3(2). doi:https://doi.org/10.12681/osj.22600 http://epublishing.ekt.gr | e-Publisher: EKT | Downloaded at 02/03/2021 02:43:30 | | non_poster |
Informe Layman El proyecto LIFE Biogasnet ha recibido financiación del Programa LIFE de la Comisión Europea con el número de contrato LIFE18 ENV/ES/000426 | non_poster |
How Citizen Scientists are Monitoring Global Meteor Shower Activity with ML Open Source Research 1 Siddha Ganju Nvidia, SpaceML, Frontier Development Lab 3rd Shaw-IAU Workshop https://meteorshowers.seti.org/ | non_poster |
Density Functional Theory Calculation Service Density functional theory (DFT) is a computational quantum mechanical modeling used in physics, chemistry, and materials science to evaluate the electronic structure (or nuclear structure, principally the ground state) of many-body systems, in particular atoms, molecules, and the condensed phases. A many-electron system's properties can be determined using functionals, i.e., functions of another function. In the case of DFT, these are functionals of the spatially dependent electron density. DFT is among the most popular and versatile methods available in condensed-matter physics, computational physics, and computational chemistry. Overall solutions • The essence of density functional theory is to transform the wave function into an electron density function as the basic unit of research, thereby simplifying the calculation process, and converting the multi-electron problem into a single-electron problem for solution. • Assuming that the number of electrons is N, the total number of variables in the wave function is 3N, and the solution is extremely complicated. Using density functional theory, the number of variables can be reduced to three, that is, only three spatial variables are included. Using DFT can simplify the calculation process, and ensure the calculation accuracy. | non_poster |
T L @FAIRsFAIR_eu www.fairsfair.eu /company/fairsfair Essential on Research Data Management MOOC Use case: collaboration among national and institution actors to support the uptake of RDM and FAIR data skills Type of initiative: Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) Organiser of the initiative: Lead by the University of Minho and commissioned by the General Secretariat for Education and Science from the Portuguese Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education uminho.pt Scope and objectives The Essentials on Research Data Management MOOC is a 30-hour online course with six modules aimed at training doctoral candidates in the fundamentals of RDM practices, including writing Data Management Plans (DMPs), applying the FAIR data principles, identifying the right tools and the legal issues involved in sharing research data. The course is made available to all Portuguese higher education institutions in the online platform “NAU”. While developed by the University of Minho, the initiative to create the RDM MOOC came from the Secretariat of State of the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education. Developing a MOOC focused on addressing RDM practices was seen as a way to feed into two different policy initiatives that the Ministry was working on at the time (2016-2018). First, the MOOC could provide support to the implementation at the institutional level of the objectives of the emerging national Open Science Strategy. Second, the MOOC could be integrated within the broader national strategy in support of the uptake of digital skills. With regards to this second aspect, respondents from the University of Minho highlighted the importance of linking the promotion of RDM and FAIR data skills and practices with other priorities in the agenda of national governments. This can be instrumental not only in finding additional financial and capacity resources for teaching those skills, but also in identifying new motivations and drivers to support their implementation. The University of Minho agreed to develop the content of the RDM MOOC, recognising the potential that this could have in addressing internal institutional priorities on promoting Open Science skills and practices and in contributing to the objectives of the national strategies. At the national level, UMinho was also actively engaged in the Working Group (WG) responsible for defining the roadmap of the National Open Science Policy and developing new opportun¬ities for training in data-related skills was among the recommendations identified by the WG. In addition, respondents underlined that a third driver for their engagement in the RDM MOOC was to be identified with the decision of Portugal’s major national funder, the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), to update its policy data sharing and management, recommending the implementation of new training activities related to research data at the institutional level. The University of Minho Documentation and Libraries Service (UMinho) developed an Open Online Course (MOOC) in Research Data Management Massive in 2019 commissioned by the General Secretariat for Education and Science from the Portuguese Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education. The course is open to doctoral candidates and other researchers from all Portuguese higher education institutions who are interested in acquiring a basic understanding and knowledge of practices related to RDM and FAIR data. The case study shows the added value and mutual benefits of national and institutional-level actors working together to promote and support the uptake of RDM and FAIR data skills. The initiative to create the MOOC came from the Ministry for Science, Technology and Higher Education, who via the General Secretariat for Education and Science collaborated with the University of Minho to develop the content and implement the course in a new online platform aimed at fostering digital skills in Portugal. From the university’s perspective, the objecti | non_poster |
The psychology of the online offender – challenge and opportunities About me Understanding how and why technology is utilised for ‘good’ and ‘bad’ behaviours has been the central component to my professional experience to date. With a background in sociology and social policy, I studied psychology as a postgraduate before teaching in primary education in the Middle East using 1-to-1 iPad technology. From there, I went on to specialise in forensic psychology (MSc) and focus on the case formulation of online sexual offending. I was a research assistant and associate lecturer within the Online- Protect research cluster at the University of Lincoln before taking up my current PhD position. ACM Classification Keywords J.4 Social and behavioural sciences Personal experience with online communities Both my personal and professional identity communicated via my Twitter (@DarraghMcCashin) has afforded me insights into online communities. For example, in acquiring research participants for sensitive topics via Twitter (such as attitudinal research on contact versus online sexual offending), it became clear that both appropriate and inappropriate communities • ACM copyright: ACM holds the copyright on the work. This is the historical approach. Darragh McCashin University College Dublin Dublin 2, Ireland darragh.mccashin@ucd.ie | non_poster |
Pau Aragó/ Procedia Environmental Sciences 00 (2015) 000–000 1 Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect Procedia Environmental Sciences 00 (2015) 000–000 www.elsevier.com/locate/pr ocedia Spatial Statistics 2015: Emerging Patterns Filtering Volunteered Geospatial information (VGI) using Spatial Point Pattern. Birds observer’s credibility Pau Aragó 1 , PabloJuan 1* , DiegoVarga 2 , Marc Saez 2 1. Universitat Jaume I, Avda Sos Baynat s/n, 12071 Castelló, Spain. *Corresponding author: juan@uji.es 2. Universitat de Girona, Plaza de Sant Domènec, 3, 17004 Girona, Spain Abstract Volunteered geographical information (VGI) [1] has become an important source of geospatial information. Nevertheless this source has a lack of credibility and quality assurance [2]. This is in fact because part of the spectrum of VGI contributors are not professionals or are casual users of VGI tools [3]. Therefore, it is difficult to trust VGI data and used it in scientific or professional environments without filtering it. The approach of this paper is to analyse point pattern data contributed by volunteers using Integrated Nested Laplace Approximation (INLA) and Stochastic Partial Differential Equation (SPDE) in order to be able to get some data classification depending on and response variable base on the data coming from the VGI source. © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. Peerreview under responsibility of Spatial Statistics 2015: Emerging Patterns committee. Keywords: Birds, INLA, SPDE, Volunteered Geographic Information; 1. Introduction There has been several approaches to check and measure data quality. Firs quality of VGI data has been checked using traditional methodologies [4, 5]. Those methodologies are coming from spatial technologies professional approach, where professionals are producing a product, therefore it has a guarantee or certified level of quality. This approach for is not useful for VGI, because spatial data is create from a variety of users, motivations or goals, and where a user is not required to get an accreditation to starts its contribution. This first approach measures lineage, positional accuracy, attribute accuracy, logical consistency, completeness, semantic accuracy, temporal quality, metaquality, variation in quality and usage purpose Second approach is to compare VGI to an “official" or professional spatial data. There are several works done with Openstreetmap such us [4, 5, 6, 7]. Nevertheless this approach requires having something to be compared. Openstreetmap is made by volunteers but building a map where traditionally governments and companies has been working on during years and there is spatial data available to be compared with. * Corresponding author. Tel.: +34 96 72 83 81 ; . Email address: juan@uji.es | non_poster |
1 CALL FOR PAPERS JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY ADMINISTRATION (RAC – REVISTA DE ADMINISTRAÇÃO CONTEMPORÂNEA) ISSN 1982-7849 (online) rac.anpad.org.br SPECIAL ISSUE: Data reuse: What new information can we learn from used data? Submission Deadline: October 10th, 2020 Review Process Ends: March 30th, 2021 Special Issue attempt of publication: July, 2021 Associate Editor: Henrique Castro Martins – PUC Rio, IAG, Brazil Guest Editor: Marcelo S. Perlin - UFRGS, EA, Brazil RATIONALE FOR CALL: One of the most critical tasks of executing empirical research in Business Administration is to collect reliable data. This is usually costly, time-consuming and, sometimes, demands legal agreements along the process to guarantee the rights of those who own the data. Thus, the open access to empirical data is of extreme value for researchers of several fields (Piwowar & Vision, 2013; Van Raaij, 2018; Wallis, Rolando, & Borgman, 2013; Wegener & Rüping, 2011; Zimmerman, 2008). In the past few years, the worldwide community (Wilkinson, Dumontier, Aalbersberg, Appleton, Axton, Baak, et al., 2016) initiated a process to make research data FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable) throughout Open Science practices. RAC supports this movement and is committed to boosting open science practices (including open data) in the local community. One of the cornerstones of Open Data is to make it accessible for reuse. To foster reuse of data, RAC is inviting the submission of articles that build upon reused data. We encourage authors to access data used in previously published works to investigate new or current issues that are of interest to the management community. We are looking for articles that, building upon open data, take a different look than the original article either by developing further the original research or providing new insights to it. Articles also may try to validate the original results using different estimation techniques or different theories. We emphasize that reused data must come from public repositories or journals with open data practices. We are looking for articles that reassess public data used in already published articles. Thus, neither non-public data from published articles nor data collected in secondary sources will be accepted. Also, submitted articles need to contribute to the literature, either theoretically or empirically. Simply having reused data does not guarantee publication. Finally, submitted articles might also be a tutorial-article guiding readers on how to estimate the methods and how to reach the published article findings. For more information about RAC’s tutorial-articles, see Martins and Mendes-da-Silva (2020). An ideal, but not mandatory, structure of a data reuse article is: 1) An introduction section motivating the topic, the research question of the original work, the research question of the submitted research, and its contribution; 2) Discussion of the theory and proposition of a research framework; 3) Statement of the hypotheses and how they differ from the original work; 4) Discussion of the data and the results of the original work; 5) Elucidation and explanation of the conducted estimations and presentation of results; 6) Main findings and concluding remarks. | non_poster |
Cancer is the leading cause of death in Grenada. Although the age- standardized mortality rate for all cancer has been decreasing since 2000, the age standardized breast cancer mortality rate has been increasing overtime from 17.9 per 100,000 in 2000 to 37.82 per 100,000 in 2017. This suggests that improvements are needed in order to reduce the breast cancer mortality rate. The objective of this study is to identify several health education strategies that can be used to improve breast cancer screening among Grenadian women Methods Conclusions Bibliography Based on previous studies and interviews, three possible strategies for improving breast cancer screening among Grenadian women were evaluated: 1) Maintaining the status quo 2) The use of effective and targeted health promotion and health education strategies to increase the public knowledge, awareness and recognition about the benefits of breast cancer screening 3) The increased use of advanced tests and technology such as mammography to improve breast cancer screening. Literature review was conducted using databases such as PubMed and interviews were conducted with several Grenadians including women who have experienced breast cancer. 1. Pan American Health Organization. (2013). Grenada Cancer Profile 2013. Retrieved from https://www.paho.org/hq/dmdocuments/2014/GRENADA-CANCER- PROFILE-2013.pdf 1. LeDuc, T. (2017). Breast Cancer in Grenada. LeDuc Media. Retrieved from https://www.worldlifeexpectancy.com/grenada-breast- cancer Affiliated with St George’s University, School of Medicine, Grenada, West Indies Upon analysis, we recommended only the second approach because it is the only strategy that fulfilled all three evaluation criteria which include the evidence-based, feasibility-based and ethics-based criteria Based on the evidence-based criteria, this strategy will most likely reduce the breast cancer mortality rate as it will result in more awareness about the benefits of breast cancer screening among Grenadian women. This strategy is also feasible and ethically justified because it can be achieved effectively through the aid of donations, volunteers, as well as forming partnerships with non- governmental organizations, schools and the media. Introduction Results The Use of Health Education and Health Promotion to Improve Breast Cancer Screening among Grenadian Women Ibraheem Alimi1, Dr. Shawn Charles2, Dr. Satesh Bidaisee1 , Dr. Emmanuel Keku1 1St. Georges University School of Medicine (SGUSOM) / Department of Public Health and Preventative Medicine (DPHPM) . 2Ministry of Health Grenada Figure 1: Age standardized breast cancer mortality rate in Grenada (2000-2017)1,2 Table 1: Summary of analysis and evaluation criteria supporting the alternatives for improving breast cancer screening among disadvantaged Grenadian women. | non_poster |
1 Investigating User Account Control Practices Abstract Non-administrator user accounts and the user account control (UAC) approach of Windows Vista are two practical solutions to limit the damage of malware infection. UAC in Windows Vista supports usage of lower privilege accounts; a UAC prompt allows users to raise their privileges when required. We conducted a user study and contextual interviews to understand the motives and challenges participants face when using different user accounts and the UAC approach. Most participants were not aware of or motivated to employ low-privileged accounts. Moreover, most did not understand or carefully consider the prompts. Keywords Usable security, Least privilege, User account control ACM Classification Keywords H.5.0 Information Interfaces and Presentation: General; D.4.6 Software: Access controls, Invasive Software General Terms Human Factors, Security Introduction In 2005, it was said that 85% of computer users log in as an administrator [2]. This is convenient for users in terms of performing their daily activities; however, it also means that malware can install and run with administrative privileges. The principle of least privilege Copyright is held by the author/owner(s). CHI 2010, April 10–15, 2010, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. ACM 978-1-60558-930-5/10/04. Sara Motiee Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering The University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada motiee@ece.ubc.ca Kirstie Hawkey Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering The University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada hawkey@ece.ubc.ca Konstantin Beznosov Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering The University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada beznosov@ece.ubc.ca | non_poster |
Page | 1 Quick Mapping of historical urbanization in France, case study of Scan Histo 1950 using spatial pixel based approach Walid Rabehi*1, Rémi Lemoy†1, Marion Le Texier‡2 1UMR IDEES 6266/CNRS, University of Rouen 2University of Montpellier 3 GISRUK 2023 Summary Automatic detection of human settlement and cities forms on historical maps remains a challenging topic regarding the complexity of the maps semiology, but also because of the general conditions of maps (ink degradation, color change…). The aim of this contribution is to establish an urban layer of France based on historical maps of 1950 using pixel-based approach and multitemporal landcover map. This work will use the produced layers to test whether large cities are more or less parsimonious in terms of land use than smaller cities, at different periods. KEYWORDS: Pixel based analysis, Remote sensing, Historical maps, Urban areas, France 1. Introduction Spatial analysis of city size and urban forms is a very popular topic, widely addressed due to the availability of open-access databases such as GHSL (Global Human Settlement Layer), Urban atlas, Copernicus. etc., produced from satellite imagery, available for the last five decades. In this context, the challenge is to produce urban layers older/prior to 1975, using historical maps (starting with Scan histo 1950 data (IGN, 2014)), in order to obtain a deeper spatiotemporal view for the 19th and even 18th centuries, and especially on national scale in France. The complexity of automatic detection on these maps, is related to several factors, such as color degradation (effect of maps’ bad conservation or just old age causing ink degradation), or certain technical hazards such as discrepancies between maps (”the band completeness linked to projections issues on a national scale” (Lenc et al., 2022)). In France, very few studies have focused on detection of urban areas using historical support (Drapeau et al., 2017), in particular because of the difficulty of automatic classifications on this type of data, where traditional remote sensing algorithms are quite inefficient (Ignjatić et al., 2018). (Combes, Gobillon and Zylberberg, 2022) use machine learning techniques combined with a “Random Forest” algorithm/classifier to classify urban areas. They also point out some limits of this method: a tedious time of manual sampling (model learning and validating), and regarding the results a confusion with the text (nomenclature inside the map and linear networks lie roads or railways). The aim of this work is to provide a cartography of urban forms at medium resolution (20m) covering the French territory based on a “Scan histo 1950” mosaic, using a combination of classic remote-sensing classifiers and morphological filters, as well as an automatic cleaning method to detect confusion based on recent land cover map (Corine Land Cover 2012). This is the first attempt, to our knowledge, to detect urban areas automatically on this national 1950 map. This quick mapping approach is indeed a correct quality/time compromise, yielding cartographic support comparable in quality with GHSL urban layers (Florczyk et al., 2019). Indeed, we obtain a confusion rate of 75%, which is very acceptable on a national scale, sparing time-consuming approaches like manual vectorization or machine learning manual sampling processes. The produced urban layers will be analysed as part of the project using a combination of radial analysis * walid.rabehi@univ-rouen.fr † remi.lemoy@univ-rouen.fr ‡ marion.le-texier@univ-montp3.fr | non_poster |
Avenida Circunvalación del Club El Golf Los Incas 202 - Surco Lima Perú Telefax 3587002 Celular 992793067 E-mail: dcordova@dcr.com.pe DCR Ingenieros S.R.Ltda. Geomecánica en Minería y Obras Civiles La Importancia de la Capacidad de Deformación del Shotcrete AGOSTO, 2020 Antecedentes Problemática El deterioro progresivo del shotcrete debido a las deformaciones de las excavaciones que exceden sus capacidades, incrementa el costo operativo por mantenimiento de labores. El incremento por mantenimiento del refuerzo puede llegar en algunos casos a ser el 50% del costo de sostenimiento. Además, de la sensación de inseguridad que el shotcrete agrietado provoca y los posibles problemas de seguridad y demoras operativas que esto significa. Deformación del túnel Simulación numérica de deformaciones en la intersección de labores: En minería subterránea es común lidiar con deformaciones de 1% hasta 5% en los casos más críticos. La simulación numérica presentada en la figura superior muestra desplazamientos de hasta 3 cm en la corona y piso, ó 1.2% de deformación para una excavación de 5 m altura, tanto en los hastiales como en la corona o techo de la excavación. Ruptura shotcrete Deformaciones en una excavación vs el esfuerzo aplicado: Hoek (2007), mediante múltiples simulaciones demuestra los límites de deformación que una excavación presenta, variando las propiedades mecánicas del macizo rocoso, el campo de esfuerzos y las secciones de los túneles evaluados. Este gráfico sirve como referencia de las deformaciones aproximadas que las excavaciones subterráneas sufren hasta mantener condiciones límites de estabilidad. El shotcrete ha proliferado en los últimos 30 años debido a los avances tecnológicos. Para el diseño y aplicación, los parámetros más usados son, la resistencia a la compresión simple y la absorción de energía del shotcrete, también es monitoreada la evolución de la resistencia con el tiempo (resistencia compresiva y de tracción). Sin embargo, el módulo de deformación rara vez es considerado en la operación. El módulo de deformación (módulo de Young en el pre pico), define la capacidad de deformación antes de perder capacidad de carga. Ruptura shotcrete Modelo numérico de intersección de excavaciones subterráneas DCR, 2019. Desplazamientos en el modelo de intersecciones de excavaciones subterráneas. DCR, 2019. | non_poster |
Poster: Privacy-Preserving Heat Map Generation through Spatial and Temporal Local Perturbation Toon Dehaene, Michiel Willocx, Bert Lagaisse, Vincent Naessens DistriNet, KU Leuven Belgium firstname.lastname@kuleuven.be Abstract—Businesses and governments increasingly apply ma- chine learning and AI techniques for various strategic opti- mization purposes. Many applications, however, require location data over time of many individuals to train models. Currently, location streams are collected – often without the end-user’s consent or even knowledge – by means of seemingly innocent smartphone applications that continuously report location data in a background process, raising serious privacy concerns. In this poster, we propose a transparent and privacy-friendly approach that perturbs sensitive location data in two dimensions, namely spatially and temporally. The mechanism can be deployed on mobile devices such that all obfuscation is executed locally, thereby protecting the user even in the presence of an untrust- worthy data collector. The viability of the proposed mechanism is demonstrated by generating heat maps and predicting hot spots based on privacy-preserving location streams of many users. Index Terms—Location, Privacy, Obfuscation, Perturbation I. INTRODUCTION Nowadays, many companies and governmental institutions rely on AI and ML models to optimize business goals and soci- etal challenges. These models offer, amongst others, insights in busy areas and crowd movements and aim at optimizing emerging challenges based on the findings. Examples are traffic optimization based on historic data streams, optimizing visitor flows in touristic hot spots, selecting feasible locations to open new shops, bars or restaurants and deliberately assign- ing first aid personnel during events. Currently, location streams are collected and aggregated by data brokers, and subsequently sold to data analysts. Data collection often occurs by means of smartphone applications. Dedicated data collection processes typically run in the back- ground, continuously logging user locations, and subsequently send the data to a remote server. Users are often completely unaware of these practises. Although privacy legislation and technology providers are cracking down on these practices, industry practises show that this type of data is still sold on a massive scale today at various platforms. While collecting personal location data over time is contro- versial and impedes the user privacy, the practical applications of location data are often of a legitimate nature and provide immeasurable value to governments and commercial organi- zations. To improve the privacy/utility balance, this poster proposes a privacy-friendly alternative for collecting location data over time. The mechanism demonstrates that – while a feasible privacy level is reached – crowd insights can still be learned from the obfuscated data. The mechanism performs all obfuscation locally on the user’s device, thereby distrusting data collectors. Contributions. This poster proposes a hybrid mechanism that supports the privacy-preserving collection of location streams. We introduce the concept of automatically generated privacy blobs, which vastly limit the amount of information an individual leaks towards data collectors, even when reporting location data over time. While the location data of each individual separately is meaningless up to a certain privacy level, we demonstrate that aggregating the privacy-enhanced location data still allows the creation of accurate heat maps on a population-level. II. RELATED WORK Many research already focused on location obfuscation. Early work [4], [6] was mostly concerned with obfuscating location datasets of known size. Later works [8] have raised concerns about the continuous release of locations, and provide privacy guarantees for location streams. Our approach benefits from these research results. For location obfuscation, our work builds further | non_poster |
Preservation Planning at the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB) Preferred, Obsolete or In-Between? Developing a Criteria Catalogue for AV-Material // ABSTRACT The born-digital audio-visual (AV) holdings of the German National Library of Science and Technology are analyzed regarding the present file formats. The most frequent AV file formats are examined in terms of suitability as preservation format based on a catalogue of criteria. Furthermore their risk of obsolescence is evaluated using view paths. The examined file formats are not preferred as preservation formats, but they are not obsolete either. // RESULTS // REFERENCES Merle Friedrich merle.friedrich@tib.eu Orcid: 0000-0001-7158-8583 Preservation Planning for Digital Audio-Visual Material at the (TIB): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3386323 [1] J. Houpert, P. Melas, W. Bailer, and P. Walland, “Recommendations and techniques for content in a 'born robust' form,” 2015. Accessed on: Jun. 25 2018. // INTRODUCTION // FUTURE WORK • evaluate if view paths add a crucial value in order to determine the right time for migration • get a deep insight of the equipment and requirements of the designated community • schedule a regular check if the view paths still apply to the designated community • establish automated evaluation of (digital to digital) migration of AV content • evaluate if tentatively migrating into a preferred file format can replace validation // CONCLUSION • files need to be valid • lack of (open source) AV validation software • testing render ability cannot replace validation [1]. Are the file formats preferred as preservation formats? Are the file formats obsolete? 57% 8% 8% 27% AV formats Container Video Codec Audio Codec MPEG-4 AVC AAC Vs 4 WebM VP8 Vorbis MPEG-PS MPEG Video Vs 2 MPEG Audio Vs 1 divers (42 formats) preferred accepted critical obsolete established MPEG-4, AVC, AAC Vs 4 WebM, VP8, Vorbis MPEG-PS, MPEG Video Vs 2, MPEG Audio Vs 1 MKV, ffv1 Vs 3, PCM | non_poster |
ALSB NEWSLETTER A Publication of the American Business Law Association, Inc. d/b/a Academy of Legal Studies in Business ___________________________________________ Winter 2021 Office of the ALSB Executive Secretary Western Carolina University 434 Flat Gap Trail, Cullowhee NC 28723 www.alsb.org herron3652@gmail.com 2021 CONFERENCE DETAILS IN FLUX DUE TO COVID ONLINE OR HYBRID SEEMS TO BE THE ONLY OPTIONS Membership Being Asked to Weigh in Via Online Survey Dear Colleagues, We know we don’t need to tell you all the ways that the COVID-19 global pandemic continues to take its toll. Yet, we are reflecting on it anew as 2021 begins. We are daunted by the dreadful loss of life, long-term health consequences, and economic devastation the pandemic has wrought all over the world—and, sadly, with particularity for many among us. We have all also felt the impacts in less dramatic, but no less real, ways both personally and professionally during the past ten months, which have intertwined those two realms like few of us have experienced before. For many of us, home has become simultaneously office, classroom (ours and our children’s), refuge, and (to hyperbolize a bit) prison. Activities that were thoughtlessly routine a year ago—air travel, going to the movie theater and eating in a restaurant, or even having a few friends over for cocktails and a drink—are now either off the table or fraught with new risk. Indeed, the last time either of us set foot on an airplane was last March as we returned from the ALSB Executive Committee’s mid-year meeting at the SALSB conference in San Antonio. That same weekend also marked the last time one of us sat down in a restaurant to eat. Nearly a year later, we are still in uncharted territory. That brings us to the 2021 ALSB annual conference. Given the ongoing uncertainty, but mindful of the hope that the vaccine rollout brings, the Executive Committee has the daunting task of weighing the variables and making a decision on the format of the conference. Even the most optimistic predictions do not seem to suggest that society will be “back to normal” by August. And many of our institutions will still be reeling from the pandemic’s budgetary impacts. Thus, a return to our typical 100% in-person conference is very likely out of the question, even as we hold out hope that some in- person programming is possible. In order to plan the conference, we need data; namely, we need input from you, our members, on your thoughts, plans, and predictions regarding your likelihood of attendance, either in person or online. Beyond that, we need to know the factors that impact those continued on next page | non_poster |
CNSVRE: A Query Reformulated Search System with Explainable Summarization for Virtual Research Environment Na Li Informatics Institute, University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, Netherlands n.li@uva.nl Yangjun Zhang Informatics Institute, University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, Netherlands y.zhang6@uva.nl Zhiming Zhao Informatics Institute, University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, Netherlands z.zhao@uva.nl ABSTRACT Computational notebook environments have drawn broad attention in data-centric research applications, e.g., virtual research environ- ment, for exploratory data analysis and algorithm prototyping. Vanilla computational notebook search solutions have been pro- posed but they do not pay much attention to the information needs of scientific researchers. Previous studies either treat computational notebook search as a code search problem or focus on content-based computational notebook search. The queries being considered are neither research-concerning nor diversified whereas researchers’ information needs are highly specialized and complex. Moreover, relevance evaluation for computational notebooks is tricky and unreliable since computational notebooks contain fragments of text and code and are usually poorly organized. To solve the above chal- lenges, we propose a computational notebook search system for virtual research environment (VRE), i.e., CNSVRE, with scientific query reformulation and computational notebook summarization. We conduct a user study to demonstrate the effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction with the system. CCS CONCEPTS • Information systems →Personalization; Query reformula- tion; Summarization. KEYWORDS computational notebook search, virtual research environment, sci- entific query reformulation, code summarization ACM Reference Format: Na Li, Yangjun Zhang, and Zhiming Zhao. 2023. CNSVRE: A Query Reformu- lated Search System with Explainable Summarization for Virtual Research Environment. In Companion Proceedings of the ACM Web Conference 2023 (WWW ’23 Companion), April 30-May 4, 2023, Austin, TX, USA. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 4 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3543873.3587360 1 INTRODUCTION The virtual research environment, a collaborative platform designed to support research activities, has been widely used for supporting the research community with access to tools, resources, and ser- vices [Barker et al. 2019]. Computational notebook environments, Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the owner/author(s). WWW ’23 Companion, April 30-May 4, 2023, Austin, TX, USA © 2023 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). ACM ISBN 978-1-4503-9419-2/23/04. https://doi.org/10.1145/3543873.3587360 e.g., Jupyter notebook, are promising solutions for hosting VRE ser- vices. Users can carry out frequent data manipulation, investigate various data analytic approaches, and demonstrate the access and usage of datasets, models, libraries, or APIs with computational notebooks [Perkel 2018; Rule et al. 2018]. Collecting computational notebooks and building a search system for VREs help scientists discover research resources published through computational note- books and reduce repetitive work [Zhao et al. 2022]. There are several studies on computational notebook search [Ho- riuchi et al. 2022; Li et al. 2021]. One branch of work emphasizes code fragments of computational notebooks and returns code snip- pets given natural language queries [Li et al. 2021]. They essentially treat computational notebook search as a code search problem and aim to bridge the gap between programming language and natural language. Nevertheless, the queries being considered are rather programming-oriented than research-or | non_poster |
Rozha: Supporting and Simplifying Multilingual Natural Language Processing Ian Goodale, UT-Austin | non_poster |
A Recommendation System for an Open Archive Gulce Bal Bozkurt - Gozde Boztepe Karatas Middle East Technical University gulce@metu.edu.tr | non_poster |
, Potencial y campo eléctrico generados por una Carga Puntual entre dos planos conductores aterrizados F. E. Bueno-Pascual1, M. A. López-Mariño1, N. Aquino-Aquino2 1Tecnológico de Monterrey, Campus Central de Veracruz División de Profesional, Depto. de Ciencias Básicas Av. E. Garza Sada #1, Córdoba, Veracruz, México, 94500 2Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Iztapalapa División de Ciencias Básicas, Depto. de Física. Av. Michoacán y Purísima S/N, Apartado Postal 55-536 México, D.F., 09340, México RESUMEN En este trabajo ilustramos la utilización del método de las imágenes solución de tres problemas sencillos de electrostática, obtenemos las expresiones analíticas para los potenciales y campos eléctricos y los representamos gráficamente mediante el paquete Maple 1. INTRODUCCIÓN En los cursos de Teoría Electromagnética, desde los elementales hasta avanzados, se analizan problemas de electrostática donde es necesario encontrar las funciones que describen el potencial y el campo eléctrico en la región cercana a distribuciones de carga, sujetas a algunas condiciones de frontera impuestas por la geometría del problema. Este tipo de problemas suelen modelarse con las ecuaciones de Poisson = V 2 y de Laplace 0 2 = V . En la mayoría de de estos problemas que involucran aplicaciones practicas, es necesario que los alumnos posean conocimientos de cómo resolver ecuaciones diferenciales en derivadas parciales. Sin embargo, en los cursos elementales de electricidad y magnetismo, los estudiantes no cuentan con este conocimiento, ni alguno otro alternativo como podría ser el análisis numérico. Un procedimiento sencillo, que ayuda a superar este obstáculo lo constituye el llamado método de las imágenes. Este método se emplea comúnmente en problemas que poseen cierta simetría espacial, pero en los casos más difíciles puede ser tan complicado que pierde su sencillez y resulta poco práctico. En este método se determina primero el potencial eléctrico, a partir del cual se obtiene el campo eléctrico en la forma usual V − = E . Este método resulta ser una ayuda muy valiosa, pues no requiere conocimientos avanzados de matemáticas ni de algoritmos complejos, solo se necesita conocer la expresión para algunos potenciales eléctricos elementales, así como del principio de superposición. (1) (2) | non_poster |
PoS(10th EVN Symposium)092 VLBI2010 - The TWIN radio telescope project at Wettzell, Germany G. Kronschnabl, T. Klügel, H. Hase Bundesamt für Kartographie und Geodäsie, Geodätisches Observatorium Wettzell Sackenrieder Str. 25, D-93444 Bad Kötzting, Germany A. Neidhardt∗ Forschungseinrichtung Satellitengeodäsie, Technische Universität München, Geodätisches Observatorium Wettzell Sackenrieder Str. 25, D-93444 Bad Kötzting, Germany K. Pausch Vertex Antennentechnik GmbH Baumstr. 46-50, D-47198 Duisburg, Germany W. Göldi Mirad Microwave AG Hofstetstr. 6, CH-9300 Wittenbach, Switzerland The Twin Telescope Wettzell (TTW) Project is funded to be executed during the period of 2008- 2011. The design of the TTW was based on the VLBI2010 vision of the corresponding IVS Working Group. In the first two project years the design passed the simulations with respect to its specifications and was approved for production. At the Geodetic Observatory Wettzell a thorough soil analysis was made in order to define the sites for the towers of the new radio telescopes. Meanwhile the construction work has begun and acceptance tests of several telescope parts, e.g. azimuth bearings, took place. The full assembly of the radio telescopes is scheduled for the next two years. In parallel to the construction work at the Wettzell site, the design work for the different feed options progressed. The 10th European VLBI Network Symposium and EVN Users Meeting: VLBI and the new generation of radio arrays September 20th - 24th, 2010 Manchester, UK ∗Speaker. c ⃝Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike Licence. http://pos.sissa.it/ | non_poster |
Commissioning of the 30-50 GHz Receiver at Nobeyama 45-m Radio Telescope- 2 years after installation Chau-Ching Chiong, Fumitaka Nakamura and the eQ Team Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Academia Sinica, Taiwan National Astronomical Observatory of Japan The Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) design study: Results, science, and next steps 21-24. May 2024, Mainz, Germany | non_poster |
Vehicular Visible Light Communications with A Solar Panel Receiver Daniel K. Tettey Research and Development, Ford Otosan Istanbul, Turkey dtettey@ford.com.tr Roozbeh Bonakdar Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Özyegˇin University Istanbul, Turkey roozbeh.bonakdar@ozu.edu.tr ABSTRACT The wide availability of light-emitting diode (LED)-based light sources makes possible the use of visible light commu- nication (VLC) for both indoor and vehicular wireless con- nectivity. Earlier works on VLC have predominantly used photodetectors as receivers. It is also possible to utilize solar panels as receivers. In this paper, we present an experimental performance evaluation of a vehicular VLC system with a truck headlight as the transmitter and a solar panel as the receiver. First, we characterize the frequency response of two different solar panels and measure their bandwidth. Then, we present the performance of the vehicular VLC system in terms of data rate, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and eye diagrams. KEYWORDS Vehicular visible light communications, Solar panel, LED headlight. ACKNOWLEDGMENT This work was funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska Curie grant agreement ENLIGHTEM No. 814215. Khadijeh Ali Mahmoodi Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Özyegˇin University Istanbul, Turkey khadijeh.ali@ozu.edu.tr Murat Uysal Engineering Division, New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD) Abu Dhabi, UAE murat.uysal@nyu.edu 1 INTRODUCTION Visible Light Communication (VLC) utilizes visible optical bands for high-speed data transmission and provides an al- ternative solution to radio frequency counterparts [1]. The wide availability of light emitting diode (LED)-based light sources makes possible the use of VLC for both indoor and vehicular connectivity. Earlier works on VLC have predomi- nantly used photodetectors as receivers. It is also possible to utilize solar panels as receivers, which brings the advan- tage of combining communication and energy harvesting functionalities [2]. For indoor applications, the use of solar panels as VLC receivers is well-investigated in the literature. For instance, in [3], and [4] the authors experimentally investigated the performance of indoor VLC systems with multi-crystalline silicon solar panels used as receivers. They implemented the dual functionality of data transmission and energy harvest- ing and reported data rates up to 17.5 Mbps. In [5], the authors conducted outdoor experiments with silicon solar panels and reported transmission distances up to 6.75 m while achieving a data rate of 50 kbps. The work in [6] reported a system performance enhancement mechanism using a pair of focusing lenses positioned after the LED and before the silicon solar panel receiver and reported a data rate of 15 Mbps. The current literature reveals a research gap regarding the utilization of solar panels as receivers in vehicular VLC systems. Particularly, there is a lack of studies exploring the use of vehicular headlights as transmitters in such systems. In our setup, we utilize an LED-based truck headlight as the | non_poster |
Menzbier Ornithological Society al-Farabi Kazakh National University Institute of Zoology of the Committee of Sciences MES RoK XIV INTERNATIONAL ORNITHOLOGICAL CONFERENCE OF NORTHERN EURASIA (Almaty, 18-24 August 2015) I. Abstracts Almaty 2015 | non_poster |
Poster: FedCM for Research and Education Erwin Kupris Munich University of Applied Sciences Munich, Germany erwin.kupris@hm.edu Tobias Hilbig Munich University of Applied Sciences Munich, Germany tobias.hilbig@hm.edu Thomas Schreck Munich University of Applied Sciences Munich, Germany thomas.schreck@hm.edu Abstract—The misuse of web technologies for tracking users on the Internet poses a threat to user privacy. Such technologies include third-party cookies and bounce tracking servers. Browser vendors and other stakeholders agreed to phase out some of these technologies in the near future. This impacts not only trackers and advertisers, but also legitimate usages such as authentication flows in identity federations. The industry aims to solve these issues via an emerging API called “Federated Credential Manage- ment“ (FedCM), transforming the login process into a browser- mediated flow. Our research focuses on how to improve the user experience of FedCM within multilateral federations, which are frequently used in the Research and Education (R&E) sector. Specifically, we suggest ways to filter the large number of Identity Providers (IdPs) commonly found in the R&E context and display them, while automating the IdP discovery process. We provided our suggestions to the working group, also considering user privacy aspects. Incorporating these changes into the FedCM API accordingly could pave the way for a privacy-preserving and user-friendly sign-in experience in R&E federations. Index Terms—FedCM, federation, security, privacy, academia I. INTRODUCTION The ongoing exploitation of certain web technologies for tracking poses a threat to user privacy and data protection. To mitigate these infringements, browser vendors have agreed to phase out some of these technologies. The most prominent example is third-party cookies, which are expected to be deprecated later this year. Bounce tracking, i.e., a specific chain of redirects invisible to the user, serves similar purposes. However, legitimate usages for these technologies do exist, which will be affected by this discontinuation. Federated authentication mechanisms fall into this category. SAML2 and OAuth are the most commonly used protocols for this purpose. Both employ redirect-based login flows that are nearly indistinguishable from malicious usage. Moreover, fed- erated applications often use services such as SeamlessAccess for discovering a user’s Identity Provider (IdP) [1]. To offer a comfortable user experience, third-party cookies are required. To prevent the breakage of these technologies, the Federated Credential Management API (FedCM) was proposed. It en- ables a secure, privacy-preserving, and dynamic authentication process mediated by the browser. FedCM is being developed by the W3C and has the status of a draft community group report. A working group with the goal of standardizing this API was recently established. The latest draft of the FedCM API is already implemented in the Chrome browser and experimental features can be tested in the Canary version. In FedCM, the browser acts as a mediator between Relying Parties (RPs) and IdPs [2]. When a user visits an RP, it can call the FedCM API by providing one or more IdP URLs. The browser then issues requests to the IdP to obtain information about user accounts that have an active session with that IdP. Afterwards, the browser asks the user to select an account and consent to the federated authentication in a mediated dialog. Upon selection, the browser issues a final request to the IdP that includes the session cookie of the chosen account. The IdP returns an opaque identity assertion to the browser, which is relayed to the RP, thereby concluding the FedCM flow. The current version of the FedCM API covers use-cases of social, bilateral federations, e.g., “Login with Google” or “Login with Facebook”. However, multilateral federations, common in Research and Education (R&E), typically have different requirements. Although Fe | non_poster |
BÜROKRATISCHES MONSTER ODER PRAKTISCHES HILFSMITTEL? Datenmanagementpläne in der Diskussion der Research Cloud Digital Humanities des Exzellenzclusters "Religion und Politik" Dr. Sascha Hinkel | non_poster |
Cheaper Hyperloop -Krishna Niraj Thakur Page 1 of 6 | non_poster |
Web Element Identification by Combining NLP and Heuristic Search for Web Testing Hiroyuki Kirinuki, Shinsuke Matsumoto, Yoshiki Higo, and Shinji Kusumoto Osaka University 29th IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution and Reengineering (SANER2022) | non_poster |
3D Object Rotation Using Virtual Trackball with Fixed Reference Axis Daniel González-Toledo María Cuevas-Rodríguez Luis Molina-Tanco Arcadio Reyes-Lecuona Universidad de Málaga, Spain Universidad de Málaga, Spain Universidad de Málaga, Spain Universidad de Málaga, Spain dgonzalezt@uma.es mariacuevas@uma.es lmtanco@uma.es areyes@uma.es Keywords: Virtual Trackball, Two Axis Valuator, 3D rotation, 3D interaction. 1. Introduction Among the 3D interaction techniques designed in the last decades to examine virtual objects using the mouse, virtual trackballs are especially suitable for overall examination of 3D objects. This experimental study focuses on a specific type among the various virtual trackball techniques: Two-Axis Valuator (TAV) with fixed axis. The classical TAV considers rotations around global X- and Y-axis, but for many applications, like 3D modelling, and many web-based 3D viewers, a special variation of the TAV is implemented, where horizontal displacements of the mouse are mapped to rotation around the fixed vertical axis. This technique is known as TAV with fixed up-vector (Bade, 2005) or just fixed trackball (Rybicki, 2016), and achieves transitive rotations. However, for some objects, there can be another intrinsic axis. For instance, objects like the rotor of a turbine have an intrinsic rotation axis, often horizontal (González-Toledo, 2017). In order to work with these objects, we propose to use a TAV with a generic fixed axis, which is not necessarily vertical. The hypothesis of this study is that the consistency between the object's intrinsic axis and the fixed axis in a TAV interaction will make interaction more natural, as the user's mental model will be a better fit to the interaction technique or, in other words, the level of stimulus-response compatibility will be higher. 2. Method 16 people, 12 male and 4 female, participated in the experiment. A TAV technique with fixed axis was im- plemented, being the fixed axis configurable as vertical or horizontal. The rotation controller is operated by holding down the right mouse button and tracking mouse movement. The left mouse button is reserved for selection. The 3D object used for the experiment is a sphere with twenty small protrusions distributed over its surface, referred to as targets. This sphere is covered by a texture indicating meridians and parallels. In this way we are suggesting an intrinsic axis by texture, on a geometry (a sphere) without any intrinsic axis. Each participant had to perform an inspection tasks in four conditions (four trials), presented in a random order, counterbalanced using Latin squares: (1) consistent-vertical, defined as vertical fixed axis in TAV and vertical intrinsic axis in the object; (2) inconsistent-vertical, defined as vertical fixed axis in TAV and horizontal intrinsic axis in the object; (3) consistent-horizontal, defined as horizontal fixed axis in TAV and horizontal intrinsic axis in the object; (4) inconsistent-horizontal, defined as horizontal fixed axis in TAV and vertical intrinsic axis in the object. | non_poster |
Hyperspectral imaging for high-resolution mapping of soil profile organic carbon distribution in an Austrian Alpine landscape Yaser Ostovari1, Baptist Köppendörfer1, Julien Guigue1, Jan Willem Van Groenigen2, Rachel Creamer2, Thomas Guggenberger3, Florian Grassauer4, Eleanor Hobley1, Laura Ferron2, Henk Martens2, Ingrid Kögel-Knabner1, Alix Vidal1 1Lehrstuhl für Bodenkunde, TU München, Freising, Germany, 2Soil Biology Group, Wageningen University, Netherlands, 3Höhere Bundeslehr- und Forschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft Raumberg-Gumpenstein, Irdning, Austria, 4HBLFA Raumberg-Gumpenstein, Institut für Pflanzenbau und Kulturlandschaft Abteilung Umweltökologie, Austria Introduction Alpine mountainous regions are characterized by high soil organic carbon (SOC) content (Prietzel et al., 2016). Subsoils store 30 to 63% of the SOC stocks (Rumpel and Kögel-Knabner, 2011). Topography affects spatial variability of SOC content, not only in topsoils but also in subsoils (Chen et al., 2016 ; Zhu et al., 2019). Hyperspectral imaging (Vis-NIR spectroscopy) can reveal the SOC hotspots at micro-scale (Hobley at l., 2018; Nawar and Mouazen, 2019). Random forests (RF) as a combination of tree predictors have been successfully used for modelling soil profile OC from spectral information of intact soil cores (Jia et al., 2017; Hobley at l., 2018; Sorenson et al., 2020). Objectives Test the use of hyperspectral imaging coupled with the RF machine learning for mapping of the soil profile OC distribution in an alpine mountainous landscape. Investigate the effects of topographical factors on SOC distribution in soil profiles. Circular Agronomics receives funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Grant Agreement no. 773649 1 (C) Ostovari et al. all right reserved | non_poster |
1 Tunnelling the Internet Habiba Akter School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science Queen Mary, University of London, London, United Kingdom h.akter@qmul.ac.uk Chris Phillips School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science Queen Mary, University of London, London, United Kingdom chris.i.phillips@qmul.ac.uk Abstract: Despite a considerable increase in the capacity of the Internet, regional congestion is still an issue at certain times of day. Dimensioning the system to provide minimal delay under these transient conditions would be uneconomical, particularly as various forms of application data are more or less sensitive to these delays, as are different end-users. We therefore investigate a scheme that allows end-users to selectively exploit a sequence of mini tunnels along a path from their origin to a chosen destination. We assume the availability of such tunnels is advertised centrally through a broker, with the cooperation of the Autonomous System (AS) domain operators, allowing end-users to use them if so desired. The closest analogy this scheme is that of a driver choosing to use one or more toll roads along a route to avoid potential congestion or less desirable geographic locations. It thus takes the form of a type of loose source routing. Furthermore, the approach avoids the need for inter-operator cooperation, although such cooperation would provide a means of extending tunnels across AS peers. In this paper we explore the benefit in terms of delay reduction for a given concentration of tunnel presence within a portion of the Internet. We show that a relatively small number of tunnels may be sufficient to provide worthwhile improvements in performance for some users at least. We consider both the case when tunnels are randomly distributed, and when they are provided close to an AS domain of interest, where traffic congestion is more likely. In this latter case, even a relatively small number of tunnels can provide a notable benefit to a reasonable number of users spread across a large region. Keywords: Internet, Autonomous System, loose source routing, tunnelling, broker, traffic congestion. Introduction Although the Internet has proved to be robust and flexible, the delivery of time critical data traversing multiple Autonomous System (AS) domains remains sub-optimal due to the | non_poster |
CONFERENCE REPORT The 2019 Annual Conference of the Asian Association for Public Administration (AAPA) “Public Administration and the Future: Challenges and Opportunities in Realizing the Sustainable Development Goals and Directions for Reform and Capacity Building” Hotel Benilde Maison De La Salle, 22-24 May 2019 | non_poster |
A Machine Learning Agent for eXtended Reality Presenter name ENTITY E-mail Date | non_poster |
Book of Abstracts Edited by: Baca A., Wessner B., Diketmüller R., Tschan H., Hofmann M., Kornfeind P., Tsolakidis E. EUROPEAN COLLEGE OF SPORT SCIENCE CROSSING BORDERS THROUGH SPORT SCIENCE 21 st Αnnual Congress of the 6th - 9th July 2016, Vienna - Austria Hosted by the Centre for Sport Science and University Sports, University of Vienna | non_poster |
Presented at the 30th International Symposium on Lepton Photon Interactions at High Energies, hosted by the University of Manchester, 10-14 January 2022. Development of GEM detectors and their applications to Imaging Asar Ahmed1, Ashok Kumar and Md. Naimuddin Department of Physics & Astrophysics, University of Delhi, New Delhi, 110007, India E-mail: 1 asar0786@gmail.com Abstract. The Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) Detector is being used extensively to handle a reasonably large flux environment in high energy and other related experiments. Due to the ease of operation with environment friendly gases, this detector can be deployed for a wider range of experiments as well as in applications to developing the instruments for humanitarian aid purposes. In this talk, we will present results from one such effort. We collaborated with the industry to produce the GEM foils of various specifications and then made an effort to use GEMs as an imaging detector for medical as well as security purposes. The key component of a GEM detector is the GEM foil which has very dense go-through holes on a 50 µm highly insulating foil (Kapton/Apical) coated on both sides with 5 µm layers of copper. Before these GEM foils can be used for assembling the GEM detector, the foil’s electrical and optical properties have to be tested to find defects and correct them. We report on the development of techniques used to study the GEM foils electrically and optically. The polarisation and charging up effects of these foils will also be discussed, along with the ways to better handle these effects. A feasibility study to utilize GEM detectors for imaging objects with varying densities with x-rays was carried out. The reconstructed images show a good distinction between materials of different densities, which opens the possibility to further explore the applications of GEM detectors to medical imaging or cargo imaging. 1. Introduction F. Sauli presented a new concept in gaseous detectors with micro pattern foil called Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) in 1997 [1]. GEM foils are made of a 50 µm thin polyimide (Kapton/PI) foil that is coated on both sides with a thin layer (5 µm) of copper. Bi-conical holes with inner diameters of 50 – 60 µm and outside diameters of 70 – 80 µm are chemically etched in the foil at a pitch of around 140 µm using either a double mask or a single mask process. Photolithographic methods (used in PCB manufacture) are used to transfer hole patterns to the copper-clad polyamide substrate utilizing thin masks positioned on the top and bottom of the substrate. UV-light exposure and other chemical etching techniques are used to carve holes on the foil [2]. These tiny geometries of the holes build up a very high electric field under comparative low voltage than traditional gaseous detectors for the charge multiplication and particle identification. 2. GEM foil inspection The stable and uniform performance of GEM foil is highly influenced by the polyamide quality, copper coating, hole geometry, and their pattern [3]. Any imperfection or flaw in the foil can have a significant impact on their performance. As a consequence, we extensively examined the foils both visually and electrically and found consistent findings, as shown in Figure 2. Because foils are manufactured utilizing single mask technology, we discovered asymmetry in | non_poster |
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Towards the reproducibility in soil erosion modeling: a new Pan-European soil erosion map Claudio Bosco 1, Daniele de Rigo 1,2, Olivier Dewitte 1, Luca Montanarella 1 1 European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Institute for Environment and Sustainability, Via E. Fermi 2749, I-21027 Ispra (VA), Italy 2 Politecnico di Milano, Dipartimento di Elettronica e Informazione, Via Ponzio 34/5, I-20133 Milano, Italy This is the authors’ version of the work. It is based on a poster presented at the Wageningen Conference on Applied Soil Science, http://www.wageningensoilmeeting.wur.nl/UK/ Cite as: Bosco, C., de Rigo, D., Dewitte, O., Montanarella, L., 2011. Towards the reproducibility in soil erosion modeling: a new Pan-European soil erosion map. Wageningen Conference on Ap- plied Soil Science “Soil Science in a Changing World”, 18 - 22 September 2011, Wageningen, The Netherlands. Author’s version DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.936872, arXiv:1402.3847 Abstract Soil erosion by water is a widespread phenomenon throughout Europe and has the potentiality, with his on-site and off-site effects, to affect water quality, food security and floods. Despite the implementation of numerous and different models for estimating soil erosion by water in Europe, there is still a lack of harmonization of assessment methodologies. Often, different approaches result in soil erosion rates significantly different. Even when the same model is applied to the same region the results may differ. This can be due to the way the model is implemented (i.e. with the selection of different algorithms when available) and/or to the use of datasets having different resolution or accuracy. Scientific computation is emerg- ing as one of the central topic of the scientific method, for overcoming these problems there is thus the necessity to develop reproducible computational method where codes and data are available. The present study illustrates this approach. Using only public available datasets, we applied the Revised Universal Soil loss Equation (RUSLE) to locate the most sensitive areas to soil erosion by water in Europe. A significant effort was made for selecting the better simplified equations to be used when a strict application of the RUSLE model is not possible. In particular for the computation of the Rainfall Erosivity factor (R) the reproducible research paradigm was applied. The calculation of the R factor was implemented using public datasets and the GNU R language. An easily repro- ducible validation procedure based on measured precipitation time series was applied using MATLAB language. Designing the computational modelling architecture with the aim to ease as much as possible the future reuse of the model in analysing climate change scenarios is also a challenging goal of the research. 1 | non_poster |
Developing a list of per- and polyfluoroalkyl (PFAS) chemicals from public domain databases Antony J. Williams1, Charles Lowe1, Chris Grulke1, Grace Patlewicz1 and Ann Richard1 1Center for Computational Toxicology & Exposure, ORD, U.S. EPA OBJECTIVES • To build and maintain a list of PFAS chemical substances and associated structures, iterating and versioned over time • The list of PFAS chemicals to include those chemicals represented as structures and also UVCB chemicals (Unknown or Variable Composition, Complex Reaction Products and Biological Materials) • Associate the PFAS with experimental and predicted data sourced from literature articles and public databases APPROACH • Use a set of selected substructures to search all chemical structures on the CompTox Chemicals Dashboard [1] (https://comptox.epa.gov/dashboard) and combine with text substrings to identify “UVCB chemicals and polymers” • Deliver lists of PFAS chemicals via the Dashboard that represent different foci – e.g. PFAS in water, PFAS in various international reports, PFAS in food contact materials etc https://comptox.epa.gov/dashboard/chemical_lists/?search=PFAS MAIN RESULTS • A list of 9252 PFAS substances (version 2) is available https://comptox.epa.gov/dashboard/chemical_lists/PFASMASTER • The list is subsetted into both structures and UVCB chemicals. This includes delivery of a set of PFAS chemical category representations, represented as “Markush structures”, that expand to sets of chemical structures IMPACT • The PFAS lists represent highly curated aggregations [2] of chemical structures and associated information that can be easily accessed by the community • Lists continue to expand and are updated with each release of the Dashboard • For more information, contact: Antony Williams, Abstract #243 ORCID: 0000-0002-2668-4821 | non_poster |
Calibrating the Scintillation Timing in SNO+ using In-Situ Backgrounds Rafael Hunt-Stokes On Behalf of the SNO+ Collaboration nuPhys 2023 | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 Perspectiva de la EC.1.11.1.14. Lignina Peroxidasa (LiP) Oscar Díaz-Cuaya* iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: oscar.diazcua@alumno.buap.mx 26 de Noviembre de 2022 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7367383 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Alma Rosa Netzahuatl Muñoz (PTC del programa académico de Ingeniería en Biotecnología, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala, Colonia San Pedro Xalcaltzinco, Tepeyanco, Tlaxcala, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen La lignina peroxidasa (EC 1.11.1.14), LiP, es una metaloenzima extracelular producida principalmente por basidiomicetos del género Phanerochaete que degrada la lignina oxidando el enlace C α-C β en las cadenas laterales de sus unidades fenilpropilo, así como otros compuestos aromáticos de alto potencial redox, mediante radicales catiónicos aromáticos [1–7]. Esta | non_poster |
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BUTTON - BOULBY UNDERGROUND TECHNOLOGY TESTBED OBSERVING NEUTRINOS Dr James Gooding University of Liverpool j.gooding@liverpool.ac.uk | non_poster |
Comprehensive Revision Policy: Ensuring Satisfaction with Every Assignment A key component of providing high-quality academic support is having a comprehensive revision policy. At Essay Goat, the commitment to client satisfaction extends beyond the initial delivery of the assignment. The comprehensive revision policy is designed to ensure that every essay meets the highest standards and aligns with the student’s expectations. Here’s an in-depth look at how Essay Goat’s revision policy works and why it is a crucial part of their service: Clear Revision Guidelines Essay Goat’s revision policy is built on clear guidelines that outline how revisions are handled. When you receive your completed essay, you have the opportunity to request changes if the work does not fully meet your expectations or if there are any issues that need to be addressed. The guidelines specify the types of revisions that are covered, ensuring that students understand what can be requested and how to provide effective feedback. Free Revisions One of the standout features of Essay Goat’s revision policy is that revisions are offered free of charge. This means that if you need changes or adjustments to your essay, you can request them without incurring additional costs. This policy ensures that students have the flexibility to refine their work and achieve the desired outcome without worrying about extra expenses. Detailed Feedback Mechanism | non_poster |
Transmission Based Characterisation of Superconducting Metamaterial Samuel Kern, Pavol Neilinger, Daniel Manca, Evgeni Il'ichev, Matthias Schmelz, Jürgen Kunert, Gregor Oelsner, Ronny Stolz and Miroslav Grajcar Superconducting Hybrids @ Extreme (June 28-July 2, 2021, Hotel Patria, Štrbské Pleso, Slovakia) | non_poster |
CSSI Framework: An open source software ecosystem for plasma physics N. A. Murphy1 (PI), D. Sta´nczak,2 (Collaborator), E. T. Everson3 (Project Personnel), S. T. Vincena3 (Co-I), D. Schaffner4 (Co-I), T. N. Parashar5,6 (Co-I emeritus), B. Maruca5 (Co-I elect), A. J. Leonard7 (Collaborator), & T. Carter3 (Collaborator) on behalf of the PlasmaPy Community 1Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, 2University of Warsaw, 3UCLA, 4Bryn Mawr College, 5University of Delaware, 6University of Wellington, 7Aperio Software 2020 NSF CSSI Principal Investigator Meeting | non_poster |
Programa Científico www.ciiis.es PRESENCIAL - ONLINE | non_poster |
Synthesis and characterization of novel vanillin-based polyesters Alexandra ZAMBOULIS,a Eleftheria XANTHOPOULOU,b Evangelia MPALLA,a Lazaros PAPADOPOULOS,a Zoi TERZOPOULOU,a George Z. PAPAGEORGIOU,b Dimitrios N. BIKIARISa* [a] Department of Chemistry, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, GR-541 24, Thessaloniki, Greece [b] Chemistry Department, University of Ioannina, P.O. Box 1186, GR-45110, Ioannina, Greece https://bikiarislab.wixsite.com | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Antibióticos, probióticos y prebióticos Estephanie Elizabeth Luna Pérez iD Estudiante de Maestría en Ciencias (Microbiología), Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias Microbiológicas, Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: fannyluunnaa@gmail.com 20 de mayo de 2024 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11222702 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Revisado por: Verónica Quintero-Hernández (Cátedra CONAHCyT, Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Apoyo en la maquetación: Luz del Carmen Cortés Reyes (Estudiante de Bioquímica Clínica, Universidad de las Américas Puebla, Puebla, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Algunas palabras con prefijos o sufijos iguales pueden llegar a confundirse, tal es el caso de las palabras antibiótico, probiótico y prebiótico, que, aunque son muy similares hay gran diferencia en el | non_poster |
© ESO Dispersal of protoplanetary disks: Effects of photoevaporation with stellar evolution and MHD winds Cool stars 20.5@online Masanobu Kunitomo (Kurume Univ.) Takeru K. Suzuki (U. Tokyo), Shu-ichiro Inutsuka (Nagoya U), Shigeru Ida, Taku Takeuchi (Tokyo Tech), Olja Panić, James M. Miley (U. Leeds) Can disks with weak turbulence disperse within ~ Myr? — Yes, if both photoevaporative and MHD winds are considered Does stellar evolution affect disk evolution? — Yes, especially around intermediate-mass stars Kunitomo, Suzuki & Inutsuka (2020), MNRAS https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa087 Kunitomo, Ida, Takeuchi, Panić, Miley & Suzuki (2021), ApJ, accepted https://kunitomomasanobu.wixsite.com/home/publications kunitomo.masanobu@gmail.com Take-home messages | non_poster |
Maximizing Research Output from the ADS Carolyn Grant and the ADS Team (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) | non_poster |
World Awareness for Children in Trauma Programme (WACIT) Recent Publications List This list of research publication is not exclusive to our trauma-informed research, but rather indicative of WACIT activities in recent years. Vostanis, P., Haffejee, S., Yazici, H., Hussein, S., Tosun, C. & Maltby, J. (2020) Youth conceptualization of resilience strategies in four low- and middle-income countries. International Journal of Child, Youth and Family Studies, 11, 91-110. Getanda, E.M. & Vostanis, P. (2020) Feasibility evaluation of psychosocial evaluation for internally displaced youth in Kenya. psychosocial evaluation for internally displaced youth in Kenya. Journal of Mental Health, in press. Tamburrino, I., Getanda, E., O’Reilly, M. & Vostanis, P. (2020) “Everybody’s responsibility”: Conceptualisation of youth mental health in Kenya. Journal of Child Health Care, 24, 5-18. Eruyar, S., Maltby, J. & Vostanis, P. (2020) How do Syrian refugee children in Turkey perceive relational factors in the context of their mental health? Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 25, 260-272. Ali, S., Yildirim, M., Hussain, S. & Vostanis, P. (2020) Self-reported mental health problems and post traumatic stress growth among children in Pakistan care homes. Asia Pacific Journal of Social Work and Development, 30, 62-76. Vostanis, P. & Bell, C. (2020) Counselling and psychotherapy post COVID-19. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research https://doi.org/10.1002/capr.12325 Samara, M., Hammuda, S., Vostanis, P., El-Khodary, B. & Al-Dewik, N. (2020) Children’s prolonged exposure to the toxic stress of war trauma in the Middle East. British Medical Journal, in press. Vostanis, P., O’Reilly, M., Duncan, C., Maltby, J. & Anderson, E. (2019) Interprofessional training for resilience-building for children who experience trauma: Stakeholders’ views from six low- and middle-income countries. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 33, 143-152. Vostanis, P. (2019) World Awareness for Children in Trauma: Capacity-building activities of a psychosocial program. International Journal of Mental Health, 48, 323-329. Vostanis, P., Eruyar, S., Smit, E. & O’Reilly, M. (2019) Development of child psychosocial framework in Kenya, Turkey and Brazil. Journal of Children’s Services 14, 303-316. Jalal, E., O'Reilly, M., Bhakta, T., & Vostanis, P. (2019) Barriers to implementing learning from child protection training in Saudi Arabia. International Social Work, 62, 1493-1506. Hodes, M. & Vostanis, P. (2019) Mental health problems of refugee children and adolescents and their management. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 60, 716-731. | non_poster |
Flare forecasting developments at the Met Office Murray, S. A., Pugh, C, Bocquet, F., Jackson, D, et al 1/5 sophie.murray@metoffice.gov.uk | non_poster |
12/4/23, 11:19 AM OHBM https://ww6.aievolution.com/hbm2401/index.cfm?do=abs.viewAbs&subView=1&abs=1223 1/6 Characterizing the Relationship Between Cortical Gradients and Cognitive Traits in Children Poster No: 1223 Submission Type: Abstract Submission Authors: Mia Zwally , Dustin Moraczewski , Ka Chun Lam , Adam Thomas Institutions: National Institute of Mental Health, Data Science and Sharing Team, Bethesda, MD, National Institute of Mental Health, Machine Learning Team, Bethesda, MD First Author: Mia Zwally National Institute of Mental Health, Data Science and Sharing Team Bethesda, MD Co-Author(s): Dustin Moraczewski National Institute of Mental Health, Data Science and Sharing Team Bethesda, MD Ka Chun Lam National Institute of Mental Health, Machine Learning Team Bethesda, MD Adam Thomas National Institute of Mental Health, Data Science and Sharing Team Bethesda, MD Introduction: Cortical gradients, or axes of variance in cortical structure, provide a novel perspective on understanding brain functional connectivity, and while previous work has reached a consensus that the primary gradient in adults displays a unimodal to transmodal axis (Margulies et al., 2016), comparatively less work has investigated the development of functional gradients and their associations with behavioral and cognitive measures. In a developmental sample, Dong et al. found that the primary and secondary gradients of children before the age of 12 were flipped compared to their adult counterparts, with the unimodal to transmodal gradient being the secondary contributor in children while ranking as primary in adults (Dong et al., 2021). This study aims to replicate the findings of the flipped primary-secondary gradient within the larger (11,000 subjects) and more heterogeneous Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development dataset (ABCD) which was collected 1 1 2 1 1 2 | non_poster |
EDITORIAL BOARD Katherine Abbott, PhD* Miami University Kathleen Abrahamson, RN, PhD* Purdue University Tamara A. Baker, PhD University of Kansas Scott R. Beach, PhD* University of Pittsburgh Sara J. Czaja, PhD* University of Miami Adam Davey, PhD* University of Delaware, Newark Nancy R. Gee, PhD SUNY, Fredonia Megan Gilligan, PhD Iowa State University Mary Ann Johnson, PhD The University of Georgia Yoshinori Kamo, PhD Louisiana State University Giyeon Kim, PhD University of Alabama Min-Ah Lee, PhD Chung-Ang University David A. Nace, MD, MPH University of Pittsburgh Marcia Ory, PhD* Texas A&M Karen A. Roberto, PhD* Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Noah J. Webster, PhD University of Michigan Richard Winett, PhD Virginia Tech Jeremy B. Yorgasson, PhD Brigham Young University Anna Zajacova, PhD* Western University *Fellow of The Gerontological Society of America INNOVATION IN AGING An Open Access Journal of The Gerontological Society of America Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/innovateage/article/1/suppl_1/1/3957641 by guest on 10 March 2023 | non_poster |
Marketing, internet y redes sociales: repensando nociones de calidad de la información durante su proceso de gestión Revista Capital Científico – Eletrônica (RCCe) – ISSN 2177-4153 – Vol. 12 n.4 – Outubro/Dezembro 2014. Recebido em 22/05/2014 – Aprovado em 08/08/2014 – Publicado em 30/12/2014. Marketing, internet y redes sociales: repensando nociones de calidad de la información durante su proceso de gestión Marketing, internet and social networks: rethinking information quality notions during its management process Carlos Luis González-Valiente 1 Resumen Se enuncia la manera en que internet y las redes sociales han redimensionado la actividad de mercadotecnia. Son destacadas las cualidades de la información en este tipo de contextos que inciden sobre la forma en la que ésta es gestionada. Son declarados algunos indicadores asociados a la medición de la calidad de la información digital para la efectiva ejecución de un proyecto de mercadotecnia. Puntualmente, el artículo, basado en un análisis documental cásico, tributa a repensar las prácticas de gestión de información que ejecutan los gestores de mercadotecnia a la hora de desarrollar el ejercicio de su profesión. Palabras clave: Marketing, Información, Internet, Gestión de la información, Calidad de la información Abstract: The study sets out the way in which the Internet and social networks have redimensioned marketing activity. It is highlighted some particularities of information in such contexts. It is also described the way that information qualities affect the manner in which it can be managed. Similarly, there are exposed a few indicators associated to measurement of digital information quality as a key factor for a marketing project execution. The article, based on a classic documental analysis, entails to rethink the informational practices of marketing managers in their professional activities. Key words: Marketing, Information, Internet, Management of information, Information quality 1 Especialista em información Del Grupo Empresarial de La Indústria Sidero – GESIME em El departamiento de informática y Gestión de La Información, Cuba. Contato: carlos.valiente@fcon.uh.cu | non_poster |
Boletim 002 Warming Foto: GW Fernandes Uma Newsletter do PELD – CRSC Outubro, 2020 https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14099318.v2 | non_poster |
STI 2022 | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6951616 0 / 13 Poster STI 2022 Conference Proceedings Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators All papers published in this conference proceedings have been peer reviewed through a peer review process administered by the proceedings Editors. Reviews were conducted by expert referees to the professional and scientific standards expected of a conference proceedings. Proceeding Editors Nicolas Robinson-Garcia Daniel Torres-Salinas Wenceslao Arroyo-Machado Citation: Lahatte, A., & de Turckheim, E. (2022). Revising WoS categories to improve a hierarchical disciplinary nomenclature. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22113). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6951616 Copyright: © 2022 the authors, © 2022 Faculty of Communication and Documentation, University of Granada, Spain. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Collection: https://zenodo.org/communities/sti2022grx/ | non_poster |
ﺑﻬﺒﻮد ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ و ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﺑﺬر ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ ) Zea mays var. saccharata (رﻗﻢ ﺑﯿﺴﯿﻦ ﺑﺎ اﺳﺘﻔﺎده از ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر اﺳﯿﺪ ،اﻻژﯾﮏ ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ و ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ ﮐﺎﻣﺮان ﻗﺮه ﺑﯿﮕﯽ ﺗﻮاﺑﻊ1، ﺣﻤﯿﺪرﺿﺎ ﺑﻠﻮﭼﯽ2 *، ﻣﺤﺴﻦ ﻣﻮﺣﺪي دﻫﻨﻮي2، ﻋﻠﯽ ﻣﺮادي3، ﻓﺎﻃﻤﻪ اﺑﺮاﻫﯿﻤﯽ4 1 - داﻧﺸﺠﻮي ﮐﺎرﺷﻨﺎﺳﯽ ارﺷﺪ ﻋﻠﻮم و ﺗﮑﻨﻮﻟﻮژي ﺑﺬر ، ﮔﺮوه زراﻋﺖ و اﺻﻼح ﻧﺒﺎﺗﺎت ، داﻧﺸﮑﺪه ﮐﺸﺎورزي ، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﯾﺎﺳﻮج / 2 - اﺳﺘﺎد، ﮔﺮوه زراﻋﺖ و اﺻﻼح ﻧﺒﺎﺗﺎت ، داﻧﺸﮑﺪه ﮐﺸﺎورزي ، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﯾﺎﺳﻮج / 3 - داﻧﺸﯿﺎر ﮔﺮوه زراﻋﺖ و اﺻﻼح ﻧﺒﺎﺗﺎت ، داﻧﺸﮑﺪه ﮐﺸﺎورزي ، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﯾﺎﺳﻮج / 4 - داﻧﺸﺠﻮي دﮐﺘﺮي ﻓﯿﺰﯾﻮﻟﻮژي ﮔﯿﺎﻫﺎن زراﻋﯽ ، ﮔﺮوه زراﻋﺖ و اﺻﻼح ﻧﺒﺎﺗﺎت ، داﻧﺸﮑﺪه ﮐﺸﺎورزي ، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﯾﺎﺳﻮج * - ﻧﻮﯾﺴﻨﺪه ﻣﺴﺌﻮل : balouchi@yu.ac.ir Email: اراﺋﻪ دﻫﻨﺪه :ﺣﻤﯿﺪرﺿﺎ ﺑﻠﻮﭼﯽ ﻗﺮه ﺑﯿﮕﯽ ﺗﻮاﺑﻊ، ك.، ﺑﻠﻮﭼﯽ، ح.، ﻣﻮﺣﺪي دﻫﻨﻮي، م.، ﻣﺮادي، ع.، اﺑﺮاﻫﯿﻤﯽ، ف) . 1403 .(ﺑﻬﺒﻮد ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ و ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﺑﺬر ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ ) Zea mays var. saccharata ( رﻗﻢ ﺑﯿﺴﯿﻦ ﺑﺎ اﺳﺘﻔﺎده از ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر اﺳﯿﺪ ،آﻻژﯾﮏ ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ و ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ . ﻫﺠﺪﻫﻤﯿﻦ ﮐﻨﮕﺮه ﻣﻠﯽ و ﭼﻬﺎرﻣﯿﻦ ﮐﻨﮕﺮه ﺑﯿﻦ اﻟﻤﻠﻠﯽ ﻋﻠﻮم زراﻋﺖ و اﺻﻼح ﻧﺒﺎﺗﺎت اﯾﺮان . 22 - 20 ﺷﻬﺮﯾﻮر1403، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﻓﺮدوﺳﯽ ﻣﺸﻬﺪ. ﭼﮑﯿﺪه ﻓﺎرﺳﯽ : ﯾﮑﯽ از ﻣﺸﮑﻼت ﮐﺸﺎورزان ذرت ﮐﺎر ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ﭘﺎﯾﯿﻦ ﺑﺬرﻫﺎي ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ وارداﺗﯽ اﺳﺖ . ﭘﺮاﯾﻤﯿﻨﮓ ﯾﮑﯽ از روش ﯽﯾﻫﺎ اﺳﺖ ﮐﻪ ﻣﯽ ﺗﻮاﻧﺪ ﺑﺎﻋﺚ اﻓﺰاﯾﺶ درﺻﺪ و ﺳﺮﻋﺖ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ و ﺳﺒﺰ ﺷﺪن ﺑﺬرﻫﺎ ﺷﻮد. ﺑﻪ ﻣﻨﻈﻮر ﺑﻬﺒﻮد ﺷﺎﺧﺺ ﻫﺎي ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ﺑﺬر ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ رﻗﻢ ﺑﯿﺴﯿﻦ ، ﺳﻪ آزﻣﺎﯾﺶ ﺟﺪاﮔﺎﻧﻪ در آزﻣﺎﯾﺸﮕﺎه ﺗﮑﻨﻮﻟﻮژي ﺑﺬر ﮔﺮوه زراﻋﺖ و اﺻ ﻼ ح ﻧﺒﺎﺗﺎت داﻧﺸﮑﺪه ﮐﺸﺎورزي داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﯾﺎﺳﻮج در ﺳﺎل 1403 ﺑﻪ ﺻﻮرت ﻃﺮح ﭘﺎﯾﻪ ﮐﺎﻣﻼً ﺗﺼﺎدﻓﯽ در ﺳﻪ ﺗﮑﺮار ﺑﺎ ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎرﻫﺎي ﻣﺨﺘﻠﻒ ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ، ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ و اﺳﯿﺪ آ ﻻژﯾﮏ اﻧﺠﺎم ﺷﺪ .ﭘﺮاﯾﻤﯿﻨﮓ ﺑﺎ ﻫﻮرﻣﻮن ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ در ﭼﻬﺎر ﺳﻄﺢ)ﺻﻔﺮ ، 50 ، 100 و150 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ( ، ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ در ﭘﻨﺞ ﺳﻄﺢ)ﺻﻔﺮ ، 15 ، 30 ، 45 و60 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم در ﻟﯿﺘﺮ ( و اﺳﯿﺪ آ ﻻژﯾﮏ در ﭘﻨﺞ ﺳﻄﺢ) ،ﺻﻔﺮ25 ، 50 ، 75 و100 ﻠﯽﻣﯿ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ (اﻧﺠﺎم ﮔﺮدﯾﺪ . ﻣﻘﺎﯾﺴﺎت ﻣﯿﺎﻧﮕﯿﻦ ﻧﺸﺎن داد ﺣﺪاﮐﺜﺮ درﺻﺪ و ﺳﺮﻋﺖ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ و ﺷﺎﺧﺺ ﻃﻮﻟﯽ و وزﻧﯽ ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﮔﯿﺎﻫﭽﻪ در آزﻣﺎﯾﺶ ﭘﺮاﯾﻤﯿﻨﮓ ﺑﺎ اﺳﯿﺪ آ ﻻژﯾﮏ در ﻏﻠﻈﺖ25 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ ﺣﺎﺻﻞ ﺷﺪ . در آزﻣﺎﯾﺶ ﭘﺮاﯾﻤﯿﻨﮓ ﺑﺎ ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ، ﻏﻠﻈﺖ 150 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ ﺑﯿﺸﺘﺮﯾ ﻦ درﺻﺪ و ﺳﺮﻋﺖ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ و ﺷﺎﺧﺺ ﻃﻮﻟﯽ و وزﻧﯽ ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﮔﯿﺎﻫﭽﻪ را اﯾﺠﺎد ﮐﺮد .ﺞﯾﻧﺘﺎ ﺴﻪﯾﻣﻘﺎ ﻦﯿﺎﻧﮕﯿﻣ اﺛﺮ ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ ﻧﯿﺰ ﻧﺸﺎن داد ﺑﯿﺸﺘﺮﯾﻦ درﺻﺪ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ، ﺳﺮﻋﺖ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ، ﺷﺎﺧﺺ ﻃﻮﻟﯽ و وزﻧﯽ ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﮔﯿﺎﻫﭽﻪ ﺑﺎ ﮐﺎرﺑﺮد ﻏﻠﻈﺖ15 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ ﺣﺎﺻﻞ ﺷﺪ . ﺑﺮ اﯾﻦ اﺳﺎس ﺑﻬﺘﺮﯾﻦ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر ﭘﺮاﯾﻤﯿﻨﮓ ﺑﺮاي ﺑﻬﺒﻮد ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ و ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﺑﺬر ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ رﻗﻢ ﺑﯿﺴﯿﻦ ﺑﻪ ﺗﺮﺗﯿﺐ ﺑﺎ اﻋﻤﺎل ﻏﻠﻈﺖ15 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ و ﺑﻌﺪ از آن25 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم ﺑﺮ ﻟﯿﺘﺮ اﺳﯿﺪﻻژﯾﮏ ﺑﻮد. ﻣﻘﺪﻣﻪ و ﺑﯿﺎن ﻣﺴﺌﻠﻪ: ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ) Zea mays L. var saccharata ( از ﻏ ﻼ ت ﻣﻬﻢ ﻣﻨﺎﻃﻖ ﮔﺮﻣﺴﯿﺮ ي و ﻣﻌﺘﺪل ﺟﻬﺎن ﻣﯽ ﺑﺎﺷﺪ. اﺳﺘﻘﺮار ﻣﻄﻠﻮب ﺑﺬر ﺗﺤﺖ اﺛﺮ ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﺑﺬر، ﻗﻮه ﻧﺎﻣﯿﻪ و ﻇﺮﻓﯿﺖ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ اﺳﺖ .ﺑﺎ وﺟﻮد ﺻﻔﺎت ﻣﻄﻠﻮب ﮐﯿﻔﯽ ذرت ﺷﯿﺮﯾﻦ، ﮐﺸﺖ ﺑﺮﺧﯽ از ارﻗﺎم اﯾﻦ ﮔﯿﺎه ﻣﺎﻧﻨﺪ رﻗﻢ ﺑﯿﺴﯿﻦ ﺑﻪ دﻟﯿﻞ وﯾﮋﮔﯽ ﻫﺎي ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ﻧﺎﻣﻄﻠﻮب ، ﺑﻨﯿﻪ ﭘﺎﯾﯿﻦ ، ﭼﺮوﮐﯿﺪﮔﯽ ﺑﺬر و اﺳﺘ ﻘﺮار ﺿﻌﯿﻒ ﮔﯿﺎﻫﭽﻪ در ﺧﺎك ﻣﺤﺪود ﻣﯽ ﺑﺎﺷﺪ ) Revilla et al., 2021 .( ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر در ﺣﻘﯿﻘﺖ روﺷﯽ اﺳﺖ ﮐﻪ ﻗﺒﻞ از ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ﺑﺬر اﻋﻤﺎل ﻣﯽ ﺷﻮد و در آن ﺳﻄﺢ ﺟﺬب آب در ﺑﺬر ﮐﻨﺘﺮل ﺷﺪه و ﺗﺎ ﺳﻄﺤﯽ اداﻣﻪ ﻣﯽ ﯾﺎﺑﺪ ﮐﻪ ﻓﻌﺎﻟﯿﺖ ﻫﺎي اوﻟﯿﻪ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ﻣﺜﻞ ﻓﻌﺎل ﺷﺪن ﻫﻮرﻣﻮن ﻫﺎ، آﻧﺰﯾﻢ ﻫﺎ و ﺷﮑﺴﺘﻦ ﺑﺎﻓﺖ ﻫﺎي ذﺧﯿﺮه ﺷﺪه در ﺑﺬر ﺷﺮوع ﺷﺪه اﻣﺎ از ﺧﺮوج رﯾﺸﻪ ﭼﻪ ﺟﻠﻮﮔﯿﺮي ﻣﯽ ﺷﻮد ) Ocvirk et al., 2021 ( . از ﺟﻤﻠﻪ ﻣﻮادي ﮐﻪ ﻣﯽ ﺗﻮاﻧﺪ در اﻓﺰاﯾﺶ ﻗﺪرت ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ﺑﺬر اﯾﻔﺎي ﻧﻘﺶ ﮐﻨﺪ، اﺳﯿﺪ آ ﻻژﯾﮏ ﻣﯽ ﺑﺎﺷﺪ .اﯾﻦ ﻣﺎده، ﯾﮏ ﭘﻠﯽ ﻓﻨﻮﻟﯽ ﻃﺒﯿﻌﯽ اﺳﺖ ﮐﻪ داراي ﺧﻮاص آﻧﺘﯽ اﮐﺴﯿﺪاﻧﺖ ﻣﯽ ﺑﺎﺷﺪ. Arab et al. (2022) ﺑﺬرﻫﺎي ﺳﻮﯾﺎ را ﺑﺎ ﻏﻠﻈﺖ ﻫﺎي25 ، 50 ، 75 ، 100 و125 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم در ﻟﯿﺘﺮ اﺳﯿﺪ اﻻژﯾﮏ ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر ﻧﻤﻮدﻧﺪ و ﻣﺸﺎﻫﺪه ﮐﺮدﻧﺪ اﺳﯿﺪ اﻻژﯾﮏ ﺑﺎ اﻓﺰاﯾﺶ ﻓﻌﺎﻟﯿﺖ آﻧﺰﯾﻢ آﻟﻔﺎ آﻣﯿﻼز ﻣﻮﺟﺐ اﻓﺰاﯾﺶ درﺻﺪ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ در ﺑﺬور ﺑﺪون ﻓﺮﺳﻮدﮔﯽ و ﻓﺮﺳﻮده ﮔﺮدﯾﺪ . Ghanbari & Saeed Saeedipour (2022) ﺑﯿﺎن ﮐﺮدﻧﺪ ﺑﺎﻻﺗﺮﯾﻦ درﺻﺪ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ ذرت از ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر ﺑﺎ20 ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﮔﺮم در ﻟﯿﺘﺮ ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ ﺣﺎﺻﻞ ﺷﺪ ﮐﻪ24 درﺻﺪ ﺑﯿﺸﺘﺮ از ﺗﯿﻤﺎر ﺷﺎﻫﺪ ﺑﻮد . Rezai Sokht Abdani & Ramezani (2013) ﻃﯽ ﻣﻄﺎﻟﻌﻪ اي روي ذرت ﻧﺘﯿﺠﻪ ﮔﺮﻓﺘﻨﺪ ﺑﯿﺸﺘﺮﯾﻦ درﺻﺪ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ ،زﻧﯽ ﺳﺮﻋﺖ ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ زﻧﯽ، ﻃﻮل رﯾﺸﻪ ﭼﻪ و ﻃﻮل ﺳﺎﻗﻪ ﭼﻪ از ﻏﻠﻈﺖ5 درﺻﺪ ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ ﺣﺎﺻﻞ ﺷﺪ .ﺑﻪ ﺑﯿﺎن آن ﻫﺎ ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ در ﻓﺮاﯾﻨﺪﻫﺎي ﻣﺘﺎﺑﻮﻟﯿﮑﯽ ﺑﺬر ﻣﻔﯿﺪ اﺳﺖ و ﺑﺎﻋﺚ ﺑﯿﻮﺳﻨﺘﺰ اﮐﺴﯿﻦ و ﺷﺮوع رﺷﺪ ﺟﻨﯿﻦ ﻣﯽ ﺷﻮد . ﻫﺪف از اﺟﺮاي اﯾﻦ ﭘﮋوﻫﺶ ﺗﻌﯿﯿﻦ اﺛﺮ ﺑﻬﺒﻮد دﻫﻨﺪه ﭘﯿﺶ ﺗﯿﻤﺎر ﺑﺬر ﺑﺎ اﺳﯿﺪ اﻻژﯾﮏ، ﺟﯿﺒﺮﻟﯿﻦ و ﻧﯿﺘﺮات ﭘﺘﺎﺳﯿﻢ ﺑﺮ ﺑﺮﺧﯽ وﯾﮋﮔﯽ ﻫﺎي ﺟﻮاﻧﻪ ز | non_poster |
1 GROUNDED ENERGY MODELLING FOR EQUITABLE URBAN DEVELOPMENT IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH Can all dimensions of energy use patterns be represented? Harshavardhan Jatkar Project: Grounded Energy Models for Equitable Urban Development in the Global South Link: http://gemdev.net Energy use patterns in human settlements around the world are complex. Growing evidence on how people use and consume energy shows that energy use patterns cut across the public/private, work/home, past/future, needs/aspirational boundaries. In increasingly uncertain times, people’s energy use is contingent on social, political, technological, environmental and economic changes around them. Based on our ongoing research in Ahmedabad (India) and Lima (Peru), we have identified the following five dimensions of energy use patterns that we consider as difficult to represent. The challenge of representing these social dimensions of energy patterns in technologically driven planning tools, such as UBEMs, remains open for further exploration. 1. Work-home hybrids In many informal settlements worldwide, residents run small industries and businesses from their homes (1–3). For instance, people sell grocery from their households for additional income. Others sew cloths, prepare food for large industrial food processing companies, run pottery workshops from their houses, among other things. On the one hand, segregating the energy use for household and work purpose is methodologically challenging. On the other hand, work-home hybrid patterns are difficult to represent in planning tools due to the lack of clarity between where the home ends and work begins. 2. Social and economic use of communal spaces People often use communal spaces for various collective activities, be they for social or economic needs. For example, many residents in Lima use communal kitchens to provide sustenance to their families, particularly in the times of crises such as the COVID pandemic. Likewise, people share communal spaces for study, community meetings, community festivals etc. In settlements such as Dharavi, residents also run industrial and commercial activities, such as communal laundry or waste segregation industry in open spaces. All these communal spaces require sharing energy throughout the year in varying quantities as per the need of the activity. The contingency and ephemerality of these communal activities pose a challenge to representing them in planning tools that are often static representations of the cities. 3. Gendered energy practices Energy consumption is highly influenced by people’s identity markers – such as gender. Research has shown that energy is differently used by men and women in many human settlements in the global South (2,4,5). Men, for instance, are often away from home during the day for work in many societies. If the work is in the house, men would not necessarily engage in activities such as cooking. Alternatively, women often engage in cooking as well as carry out some work to support household incomes. Such gendered patterns of household economy and the associated energy use and consumption patterns remain hidden from household and building level energy plans. | non_poster |
[Jour. Iudiari Chcm. Soc.; Vol. 28, No. u, 1951] CllMPOSITION OF PRl!SSlAN DL\.Jh (FERRIC FERROCYANIDE) BY THERMOMETRIC :METHOD Bv RAlll SAHAI SAXHXA A~D ABA!'I K. BHATTACHARYA 'l'bc •:om position of Prussian blue has been ir1vestigated by the method of thermometric titrations betwee11 fenic chloride and ·potassium ferrocyanide a~ 64:\'e~al concentrations of these reactants. From the break~ \n the dired titration cun·e~, the composition of ferrit> ferrocyapidr corres.pon~s to KFell'e(CN)&l, whit>h "·ith ex~ess ,,f FeCh change$ to Fet(I'elCN 1la. whereas the reverse titrations SDR&est the formation of only one c_ompound, KI'e[Fe(l'N)sl. In continuat:ou of our pre\<ious publications on the composition of Prussian blue (this ]ou rna/, 1951, 28. {41, 22 1) h)· physico-chemical methods, such as conductometric and poh:ntimtJetric, its composition has been determined by the method of thermometric titrations, and ~he results. have been incorporated in this paper. HxPERI~IENTAI. 1'he arrangement for the thermometric titr;.tions was similar to that adopted by HalGar {this ]ounal, 1946, 23, 157l. The reagents used were of 'Analar' B. D. H. quality. Potassium ferrocyanide was estimatecf by titrating against standardised potassimn permanganate solution (l'readwell and Hall, '• Analytical Chemistr~', Part H, p. 536) anJ f~rric chloride sohttion \'as standardised against dichromate using diphenyl- amine as an indicator. Using different concentrations of the two salts in sohttion,• the titrations were followed tly the direct and the rever;;e methods, i. e., when ferric chloride solution from the burftte ~o~~:as added to potassium ferrocyanide solution in the Dewar flask and vice -versa. 'fitrations were also carded out in the presence of alcohol up to the_ total con- centrQtion of 2o% by volume. 'fhe total rise in temperature was then vlotted against tl1e titre in c.c. Vi,-ecl Tl!ermomclric Tilralions Co11c. of Fe~la soln.= o.1M. taken = 20 c.c. Cone. of K.Fe(CN) 0 soln-=o.5M. Alcohol = nil. (Fig. 1, curve x'. 11eCla 1'otal ri~e FeC13 'l'otal riae FeCI3 Total rise added. in temp. added. in ten1p. added. in temp. 0.0 c.c. o.ooo J.O C.C. 0.200 6.oc.c. O.J20 1.0 o.o8o 4·0 o.:zss 7·0 O.JJ5 l.!J 0.110 s.o 0.295 8.0 0.350 :z·.o O.t40 K.Fe(CNJ, FeCJ3 Total rise added in temp. 9 c.c. 0 370" 10.0 0.385 n.o 0.400 | non_poster |
Lessons from COVID-19: Reflections, Resilience and Recovery UCL-Penn Global COVID Study Summer Webinar Report Dr Keri Wong Department of Psychology and Human Development UCL Institute of Education 2 June to 28 July 2021 | non_poster |
MCAA ANNUAL CONFERENCE, 5-7 MARCH 2021 MARIE CURIE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION EDITED BY THE MCAA 2021 CONFERENCE COMMITTEE BOOK OF ABSTRACTS: POSTER SESSIONS SPONSORS MCAA | non_poster |
Hunting for the Cosmic Neutrino Background Jack D. Shergold & Martin Bauer; 2207.12413 JCAP 01 (2023), 003 | non_poster |
Products Enzymes for Research, Diagnostic and Industrial Use Home / Enzymes Products Online Inquiry Enzymes Applications Biological Functions Catalytic Mechanism Featured Products Extracts Probiotics Zymogens Coenzymes Enzyme Protectant & Stabilizer Others Nanozymes Custom Blends Bacteriophages Name Name Email * Email * Phone * Phone * Company/Institution Creative Enzymes is at the forefront of providing high-quality enzyme products tailored to meet the needs of various industries and research fields. Our extensive range of enzyme solutions is designed to enhance efficiency, sustainability, and innovation. We invite you to explore our comprehensive enzyme offerings categorized by application, biological function, catalytic mechanism, and featured products. 1 Enzymes by Applications 1.1 Enzymes for Industrial Use Enzymes inquiry Product Overview Products List Browse Products by Applications Browse Products by Biological Functions Browse Products by Catalytic Mechanism Browse Products by Featured Products Enzymes for Agriculture, Biomass, and Biofuels In the agricultural sector, enzymes such as cellulases and amylases are crucial for improving crop yield and soil health. Biomass conversion and biofuel production also benefit from our advanced enzyme solutions, enhancing the efficiency of converting raw materials into renewable energy. Enzymes for Chemical Processing Enzymes like esterases and transaminases serve as biocatalysts in chemical processing, offering eco-friendly alternatives to traditional chemical reactions. These enzymes facilitate the synthesis of fine chemicals and pharmaceuticals, reducing environmental impact and operational costs. Enzymes for Environment and Waste Management Creative Enzymes provides specialized enzymes such as lipases and proteases to enhance waste degradation and treatment. Our enzyme solutions support efficient waste management practices, promoting environmental sustainability and compliance with regulatory standards. Enzymes for Food and Beverage Applications Our food-grade enzymes, including amylases, proteases, and lipases, play a vital role in improving the quality, consistency, and nutritional value of food and beverage products. These enzymes are essential in processes such as baking, brewing, dairy production, and juice clarification. Enzymes for Health, Diet, and Nutrition Enzymes are responsible for digestion, absorption, metabolism, energy. Vitality of every cell in our body is dependent on enzymes, which help us consume 45 foundational nutrients. Creative Enzymes provides the highest- quality enzymes for health and nutrition. Enzymes for Detergents and Cleaning Agents We offer a range of enzymes designed for household products, such as detergents and cleaning agents. Enzymes like proteases and cellulases improve cleaning efficacy while reducing the need for harsh chemicals, promoting a safer and more sustainable home environment. Enzymes for Animal Feed & Pet Food Our enzyme solutions for animal feed and pet food enhance nutrient absorption and digestive health in animals. Enzymes such as phytases and proteases improve the nutritional value of feed, supporting the growth and well-being of livestock and pets. Enzymes for Textiles Enzymes like cellulases and pectinases are integral to the textile industry, providing environmentally friendly alternatives to traditional chemical treatments. Our enzyme solutions improve fabric quality, reduce water and energy consumption, and minimize the use of harmful chemicals. Privacy - Terms cat#, product name, and keywords Website Search HOME PRODUCTS SERVICES RESOURCE COMPANY INQUIRY ORDER | non_poster |
The Urgency and Contribution of the Planetarium in the Development of Astronomy in Rural Areas Muchammad Toyib Surabaya Astronomy Club, East Java Amateur Astronomer Communication Forum | non_poster |
2 0 2 0 Service Commun de Documentation Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France Rapport d'activité annuel | non_poster |
Usability of a Mood Assessment Smartphone Prototype Based on Humor Appreciation Pegah Hafiz Copenhagen Center for Health Technology Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark pegh@dtu.dk Raju Maharjan Copenhagen Center for Health Technology Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark rajm@dtu.dk Devender Kumar Copenhagen Center for Health Technology Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark deku@dtu.dk Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author. MobileHCI ’18 Adjunct, September 3–6, 2018, Barcelona, Spain ©2018 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). ACM ISBN 978-1-4503-5941-2/18/09. https://doi.org/10.1145/3236112.3236134 Abstract Humor appreciation is one of the determinants of individual’s mood and can be assessed through jokes. We have developed a functional prototype called Humoris which asks users to select the funniest punchline and register their affective response to the jokes. Based on users’ responses, the application predicts and displays their short-term mood using emoticons. Our smartphone prototype is evaluated using the ‘think-aloud’ method with 9 participants. Usability of Humoris was examined by System Usability Scale questionnaire which gave an average score of 79.44 (SD=8.08). Based on our findings, participants liked the application interface as well as the mood prediction but some of them found some jokes difficult to understand. Author Keywords smartphone prototype; mobile; usability; mood assessment; humor; affective response ACM Classification Keywords H.5.2 [Information interfaces and presentation (e.g., HCI)]: User Interfaces. Introduction Sense of humor is a human ability to process humor and appreciate the mental perspectives. A study [20] shows that decreased social interactions of individuals are related to POSTERS MobileHCI'18, September 3-6, Barcelona, Spain 151 | non_poster |
Astronomy for All Age Groups B S Shylaja Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium Bengaluru, India | non_poster |
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/344450043 Tailored aerobic exercise as a method of therapy for asthma patients Article in Medicina Dello Sport; Rivista di Fisiopatologia Dello Sport · September 2019 CITATIONS 0 READS 6 2 authors, including: Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: New Methodological Approach to Metabolic Thresholds Detection; Examining Fat Oxidation Points and Metabolic Thresholds Correlation Strength View project Clinical Study to Evaluate Mavacamten (MYK-461) in Adults With Symptomatic Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (EXPLORER-HCM) View project Ratko Peric OrthoSport Banja Luka 28 PUBLICATIONS 24 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Ratko Peric on 02 October 2020. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. | non_poster |
12.11. 2021– 16.01. 2022 12.11. 2021– 16.01. 2022 Artists: Shaila Resia Agha & Aneta Grzeszykowska, Sheila Okanga & Iza Plucińska, Fauzia Aly Khan & Anna Molska, Faith Kwamboka & Marta Ziółek, Ciro G. & Justyna Machnicka, Linda Shuma & Natalia Szostak, Shangazi Masika & Alicja Pilarczyk, Ciru Karimi & Irena Zieniewicz, Jan Smaga The National Museum in Szczecin – Museum of Contemporary Art WOMEN POWER WOMEN POWER Curators: Marlena Chybowska-Butler, Łukasz Jastrubczak, Zorka Wollny Cooperation: Ewa Prądzyńska Text: Marlena Chybowska-Butler, Łukasz Jastrubczak Proofreading: Rick Butler Graphic design: Noviki The National Museum in Szczecin – Museum of Contemporary Art 1 Staromłyńska Street This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 872718. www.tpaae.eu COMPANION EVENTS FOR THE DUOS FESTIVAL WOMEN POWER EXHIBITION: NOVEMBER 4 AT 13.00 MEETING WITH JOYCE KINYANJUI, CHIEF CURATOR OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF KENYA IN NAIROBI, NMS – MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, WAŁY CHROBREGO (THE MEETING WILL BE TRANSLATED FROM ENGLISH INTO POLISH) NOVEMBER 4 AT 19.00 POETRY AND MUSIC PERFORMANCE BY SHANGAZI MASIKA AND ALICJA PILARCZYK WITH THE ZESPÓŁ MUZYKI WSPÓŁCZESNEJ AKADEMII SZTUKI W SZCZECINIE, NMS – MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, 1 STAROMŁYŃSKA STREET NOVEMBER 13 AT 17.00 –18.00 MEETING WITH ARTISTS AND CURATORS, GUIDED TOUR OF THE EXHIBITION, NMS – MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, STAROMŁYŃSKA 1 NOVEMBER 14 AT 17.00 –18.00 MEETING WITH ARTISTS AND CURATORS, GUIDED TOUR OF THE EXHIBITION, NMS – MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, 1 STAROMŁYŃSKA STREET | non_poster |
Home / Archive / Volume 39, Issue 9 Article Text Article menu Poster presentations PP21 Factors affecting community first responders’ role in rural emergencies: a qualitative interview study Abstract Background Community first responders (CFRs) are volunteers delivering emergency medical assistance and maintaining a patient’s condition until an ambulance arrives. Previous research has highlighted the CFR role and relationships, motivations, practice and perceptions, and need for mental health support. However, factors influencing CFR practise in the field are a relatively underexplored area. We aimed to explore the factors embedded in CFR implementation processes that either facilitated or hindered CFRs’ activities and practice in the UK. Method In a qualitative study, we conducted interviews with CFRs and CFR leads, paramedics and ambulance clinicians, commissioners, patients and relatives across six English ambulance service regions. Thematic analysis, supported by NVivo, enabled the identification codes and themes. Result Overall, 47 participants were interviewed including CFR leads (15), CFRs (21), ambulance staff (4), and commissioners (2) from six ambulance services with patients and relatives (5) from the same regions. The findings revealed multi-layered factors influencing effective CFR functioning at three levels, namely individual, institutional, and societal. CFRs’ local expertise helped them to navigate operational challenges. Use of a personal vehicle and navigation software aided CFRs’ ability to respond promptly. Continuing training improved CFRs’ skills. CFR functioning was facilitated by positive relationships with ambulance crews. Identification and recognition by patients were important and aided by wearing uniforms. Community support was a facilitator for CFR activities in rural areas. In contrast, limited communication in remote regions, long waits for an ambulance, and reliance on community donations impeded CFRs’ care function. Volunteer shortages and lack of access to a blue light while using trusts’ car hindered CFRs’ ability to respond quickly. Negative relationships with ambulance crews also hampered CFRs’ involvement. Gupteswar Patel 1 , Viet-Hai Phung 1 , J Julie Pattinson 1 , Ian Trueman 1 , Roderick Ørner 1 , Vanessa Botan 1 , Zahid Asghar 1 , Murray D Smith 1 , Colin Ridyard 1 , Elise Rowan 1 , Amanda Brewster 1 , Pauline Mountain 1 , Jason Evans 2 , Robert Spaight 3 , Aloysius Niroshan Siriwardena 1 PDF PDF Help 30/10/2024, 10:18 PP21 Factors affecting community first responders’ role in rural emergencies: a qualitative interview study | Emergency Medic… https://emj.bmj.com/content/39/9/e5.14 1/3 | non_poster |
8 mẹo seeding Shopee an toàn và dễ dàng “ra đơn” Seeding là một trong những thủ thuật, mẹo bán hàng hiệu quả, tăng uy tín cho shop và tăng khả năng ra đơn. Nhưng bạn đã biết cách seeding Shopee sao cho hiệu quả? Đặc biệt khi Bot Shopee ngày càng thông minh và quét cực gắt, có thể xóa sản phẩm hoặc shop ngay lập tức nếu thấy tình trạng bất thường thì seeding cũng cần phải đảm bảo an toàn. Đọc chi tiết: https://www.thietkeshopee.net/2022/05/seeding-shopee-an-toan.html | non_poster |
Una oportunidad infravalorada para la visibilidad de las Publicaciones científicas Caso de Estudio: Revistas colombianas DOAJ Juan Sebastián González Sanabria |DiegoAndrés Burgos |Alicia Aparicio | Fabián Güiza-Pinzón | non_poster |
Small-Scale Testing on Generative AI and Post-OCR Correction in Historical Datasets Florentina Armaselu, University of Luxembourg florentina.armaselu@uni.lu Introduction Recent developments in large language models (LLMs) and generative AI (GenAI) chatbots such as Chat- GPT, Google Bard (now, Gemini) and YouChat (Brown et al., 2020; Manyika and Hsiao, 2023; Chaka, 2023) have fostered new types of interactions that can lower the barrier in human-machine communication through conversation in natural languages. We assume that such chatbots may be able to act as conversational assistants in tasks that otherwise require more complex processing, to improve the results produced by simpler or earlier, less performant techniques. This article proposes a set of small-scale tests with GenAI chatbots on post-OCR correction in historical datasets. It illustrates, through examples of responses obtained from GenAI agents integrated into post-OCR correction and assessment tasks, what types of challenges have to be addressed in this context when working with historical datasets. Previous studies have shown that OCR errors in input data can have non-negligible impact on downstream language processing, such as sentence segmentation, named entity recognition (NER), topic modelling and word embedding (Strien et al., 2020). Therefore, various methods for tackling this problem have been envisaged. For instance, machine learning techniques for automatically estimating text quality and selecting candidates for OCR rerun have been examined within cultural institutions that deal with historical data of lower quality (Schneider and Maurer, 2022). On the other hand, studies on post-OCR correction have investigated the use of pretrained language models, such as GPT-2 family, in combining different OCR views with the goal of producing fewer errors (Gupta et al., 2021). Our set of tests explore the potential of using GenAI agents in post-OCR correction. This type of enquiry is part of a larger project that uses word embedding results (neighbour lists) and citations extracted from a selection of historical French monographs (1690-1918)1 intended to be converted and integrated into a multilingual diachronic collection of interconnected terms expressed in RDF-XML to be published in the linguistic linked open data (LLOD) cloud (Armaselu et al., 2024). In this context, the need for OCR corrections of neighbour lists and citations has been identified. Methodology and results The example presented below has been produced using three chatbots, ChatGPT-4, Google Bard and YouChat that were selected based on availability via subscription and free accounts and on reports considering them among the top AI chatbots (Davis, 2023). The conversations were intended to identify potential problems in the lists of neighbours of the word révolution, such as OCR errors (Table 1). More complex prompting included several exchanges with the GenAI agent (ChatGPT-4) when asking for error identification in citations extracted from the corpus corresponding to a given sense of the word révolution 1 The MONOGRAPH TEXT PACK from the BnL Open Data Collection. https://data.bnl.lu/data/historical-newspapers/. | non_poster |
Neutrino 2020 Atomic Shannon entropy in astrophysical nonthermal plasmas Myoung-Jae Lee1 and Young-Dae Jung2 1Department of Physics, Hanyang University, Seoul 04763, South Korea 2Department of Applied Physics and Department of Bionanotechnology, Hanyang University, Ansan, Kyunggi-Do 15588, South Korea June 22 – July 2, 2020 | non_poster |
Capturing efficacy assessment of antibodies against Xylella fastidiosa through Surface Plasmon Resonance Lucia Sarcina,1 Eleonora Macchia,2 Giuliana Loconsole,3 Giusy D’Attoma,3 Pasquale Saldarelli,3 Vito Elicio4 and Luisa Torsi1,2,5 1 Dipartimento di Chimica, Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro, 70125 Bari, Italy 2 The Faculty of Science and Engineering, Åbo Akademi University, FI-20500 Turku, Finland 3 Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection CNR, Bari, Italy 4 Agritest Srl, Tecnopolis Casamassima (BA) Italy 5 CSGI (Centre for Colloid and Surface Science), 70125 Bari, Italy | non_poster |
The puzzling role of immature-stage morphology in the taxonomy of Merodon (Diptera: Syrphidae) Andrijana Andrić1, Andrea Aracil2, Celeste Pérez-Bañón2, Snežana Radenković3, Grigory Popov4, Ruslan Mishustin5 & Ante Vujić3 RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Merodon aureus (Fig.1:1,2) and M. aff. cinereus (Fig.1:3,4) (aureus lineage): Nearly barrel-shaped prp in dorsal view, with annular grooves at the base and below the spiracular plate (the network resembling ornamentation much more pronounced in M. aureus); the outline of the spiracular plate with indentations at the locations of inter-spiracular setae and with the curving outward edges just beneath. The surface of M. aff. cinereus pupal spiracle with a polygonal pattern around tubercles, smoother at the base and more granular at the apex, the letter also characteristic of M. aureus, but with unornamented surface between tubercles (Fig.2:1,2). INTRODUCTION: The immature stages of the phytophagous genus Merodon Meigen are understudied, with the descriptions of larvae and/or puparia published for roughly just 5% of species (Heiss 1938; Stuckenberg 1956; Ricarte et al. 2008, 2017; Andrić et al. 2014; Preradović et al. 2018), and the identification key to Merodon early stages published only recently (Ricarte et al. 2017). The main reason for this information gap is difficulty of finding specimens in the field, since larval food-plants and the breeding and oviposition sites are not recorded for most Merodon species (Speight 2018). Known larvae feed on underground storage organs of geophytes (i.e. Asparagaceae, Amaryllidaceae and Iridaceae). The associations with host-plants are proven in several cases only (Ricarte et al. 2017; Speight 2018), such as a recent study confirming monophagy within M. constans species group in relation to Galanthus L. bulbs (Popov & Mishustin 2019, in press). Another problem is the determination, since rearing could be time-consuming, and the identification using sequencing analysis (DNA COI barcode libraries) could not be possible in the cases of rotten or parasitoidised specimens (Preradović et al. 2018). The aim here is to review some diagnostic morphological characters of Merodon preimaginal stages and to assess the importance of these traits as taxonomic tools for delimitation within the genus. Certain characters previously considered as taxonomically important, e.g. presence of accessory teeth on mandibular hooks or spiracular setae on posterior respiratory process, turned out to be rather ambiguous (Preradović et al. 2018). For other differentiating traits, e.g. related to cephalopharyngeal skeleton or spiracular openings of the anterior respiratory process, there is a lack of available data for some species. The sclerotized structures of the respiratory organs, i.e. the posterior respiratory process (prp) and pupal spiracles, are mostly addressed in the available descriptions of Merodon early stages. Eleven species are analysed here (5 previously described with published photographs of these structures, and 6 for which descriptions are in preparation), with representatives from all 4 well-supported lineages (putative subgenera) within the genus Merodon (aureus, avidus-nigritarsis, natans and albifrons+desuturinus) defined by adult morphological and molecular characters. Figure 1. Posterior respiratory process in Merodon preimaginal stages: 1, 2 M. aureus Fabricius figs 3A,B in Preradović et al. 2018; 3, 4 M. aff. cinereus (Fabricius) (in prep.); 5 M. aff. serrulatus Wiedemann in Meigen (in prep.); 6, 7 M. avidus (Rossi) fig3D in Preradović et al. 2018, fig4A in Andrić et al. 2014; 8, 9 M. aff. pulveris Vujić & Radenković (in prep.) (500μm); 10 M. pulveris (500μm); 11 M. dzhalitae Paramonov sensu Vujic et al. (in prep.); 12 M. luteihumerus Marcos- García, Vujić & Mengual fig8b in Ricarte et al. 2008: 136; 13 M. geniculatus Strobl fig6D (250μm) in Ricarte et al. 2017: 10/22; 14, 15; M. rufus Meigen figs 3E,F in Preradović et al. 2018; 16, 17 M. aff. planifac | non_poster |
9/13/23, 11:56 AM Start file:///G:/Start.html 1/1 ОСМИ КОНГРЕС ПО ФАРМАЦИЯ С МЕЖДУНАРОДНО УЧАСТИЕ Български език English language ISBN 978-954-8137-16-4 | non_poster |
Heat and Noise (Renao): Media Ecologies and Urban Futures Jonathan Bratt Synthesis Center, Center for Philosophical Technologies Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA jdbratt@asu.edu Garrett Laroy Johnson Synthesis Center, Center for Philosophical Technologies Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA gljohns6@asu.edu Brandon Mechtley Synthesis Center Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA bmechtley@asu.edu Sha Xin Wei Synthesis Center Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA xinwei.sha@asu.edu Todd Ingalls Synthesis Center Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA todd.ingalls@asu.edu Adam Nocek Center for Philosophical Technologies Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA adam.nocek@asu.edu ABSTRACT In this paper we report on an ongoing collaborative research-creation project focused around urban socioaesthetic ambiences. This custom media system sonifies group movement. We propose a speculative application of real-time gestural computation of group activity and poetically composed media which scopes movement and computing to a realm of concerns endemic to public life. What’s at stake is the role of media, sensing, and computation in the composition of urban futures, social experience and public life (the commons). The computation intends to catalyze and intensify renao poiesis, while attuning to possibilities for improvised public life to create novel and ethical public futures. Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the owner/author(s). MOCO 2019, October 2019, Tempe, AZ, USA © 2019 ACM This is the authors’ version of the work. It is posted here for your personal use. Not for redistribution. | non_poster |
1 The effect of subdivision by line segments on affect Hyosun Kim * Wonmi Ahn ** Kwanghee Han** * Program of Cognitive Science, Yonsei University Seoul, Republic of Korea, hyosunkim@yonsei.ac.kr ** Department of Psychology, Yonsei University Seoul, Republic of Korea, 1meahn@gmail.com / khan@yonsei.ac.kr Abstract: The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of internal features on affect, especially subdivision by line segments including the golden section. The effects of horizontal and vertical segments were conducted separately in experiment 1, and the interaction effect of a combination between horizontal and vertical segments in experiment 2. As a result, the affective impressions were altered according to the changes of segments regardless of the sort of segments (horizontal and vertical). In particular, various affective impressions were influenced by the ratio of segments rather than the position of segments. As for the golden section, it was unable to score high on the ‘stability’ scales. Considering the overall result of various impressions, however, it is consistent with the previous study’s result that the golden section was preferred. Key words: subdivision, line segments, golden section, affect, impression. 1. Introduction There is little research concerning the geometric figure itself among design factors. The affective impressions of geometric figures are variable according to various external features like shape. For example, a round shape with curved lines aroused positive impressions[1]. Kwon[2] also showed that various figures gave participants different affective impressions, and Takahashi[3] revealed the aesthetic property of a shape evoked a variety of emotions such as anger, happiness, displeasure and so on. Based on earlier studies, Jung[4] showed that shapes(triangle, rectangle, circle) and their external features such as orientation and proportion affected one’s two dimensional emotional scale(pleasure, arousal). These studies dealt with only the external features of figures and aesthetic impressions. However, impressions on the same figure varied according to changes of internal features. Subdivision by line segments could be one such internal feature[5] that affects affective impression. For example, the impressions of a square with a 1:2 subdivision would be different from one with 1:0.62 subdivision. Therefore, this study will focus on subdivisions by line segments among various internal features. To study subdivision by line segments, we should consider the golden section. Though the golden section is dealt with in visual design and mathematics, it is also an interesting subject to psychologists. The result of one psychological study revealed that the golden section brought about an unconscious feeling of pleasure in participants[6]. Therefore, the current study aimed for a deeper investigation of the affective effects of subdivision by line segments, including the golden section. | non_poster |
Smart and local reneWable Energy District heating and cooling solutions for sustainable living € 22 Partners 9 Countries 4 Demosites 10 Technologies developed 14.973k EU funding Start: Oct. 2019 End: March 2023 | non_poster |
1 Quantifying the CV: Adapting an Impact Assessment Model to Astronomy – Supplemental Table and Figures Kayleigh Ayn Bohémier Yale University Library This document is meant to accompany the poster paper “Quantifying the CV,” which will appear in the Library and Information Services in Astronomy (LISA) VII conference proceedings. Once citation information is available, the document will be linked to from here. You may also view the poster, available on Zenodo. Category Notable Subcategories Connections to Astronomy Research output & advancement of knowledge Grey literature materials; collaborations; measurement instruments; conference/ lecture outputs; journal articles; new research methodologies; social media and alternative metrics; data and instrument citation; new and renewed grant awards; web site statistics; software and program downloads/ citation High-level overview: (Harley, Acord, Earl-Novell, Lawrence, & King, 2010) Traditional metrics: (Bornmann & Daniel, 2009; Garfield, 1979; Havemann & Larsen, 2014; Lozano, Lariviere, & Gingras, 2012; Pepe & Kurtz, 2012; Seglen, 1997) arXiv: (Jamali & Nicholas, 2009; Larivière et al., 2014) Altmetrics: (Priem, Piwowar, & Hemminger, 2012) Data citation: (Hourclé, 2012; Lawrence, Jones, Matthews, Pepler, & Callaghan, 2011; Socha, 2013; Tenopir et al., 2011) Clinical implementation Enhancement of resources and expertise; new laboratory methods or procedures; disease prevention, management, and clinical practice; life expectancy/ quality of life improvements Other areas may be applicable in the case of collaborations such as the Astronomical Medicine Project at Harvard University or supplemental research in support of the human space program. Legislation and policy Committee participation; creation of guidelines, legislation, & regulation; standards input; testimony or witness to legislative bodies Participation in National Academies and government agency studies or committees; testimony given to Congress; consulted on providing new input for grant standards at NASA, NSF, and other funding agencies. Economic benefits New and renewed grants resulting in economic growth (jobs); startup companies; industry buy-in “astrophysics is a small field with little to no commercial potential …” (Harley et al., 2010, p. 139) Community benefits Public awareness outreach; community partnerships; tools developed by the research study adopted by community Outreach via lectures, summer schools, &c.; participation in health advocacy groups such as the National Dark Sky Association; and creating crowd-sourced astronomy projects such as Galaxy Zoo (Fortson et al., 2012) or Planet Hunters to foster community engagement. Table 1: Papers about scholarly communication grouped by the piece of the Becker Model (Sarli, Dubinsky, & Holmes, 2010; Sarli & Holmes, n.d.) addressed by papers within the literature. | non_poster |
Course AI-100T01-A: Designing and Implementing an Azure AI Solution Prerequisites Before attending this course, students must have: • Azure Fundamentals • Understanding of Azure storage technologies • C# Knowledge Course outline Module 1: Introducing Azure Cognitive Services The student will learn about the available Cognitive Services on Microsoft Azure and their role in architecting AI solutions. Lessons • Overview of Azure Cognitive Services • Creating a Cognitive Service on the Azure Portal • Access and Test a Cognitive Service Module 2: Creating Bots The student will learn about the Microsoft Bot Framework and Bot Services. Lessons • Introducing the Bot Service • Creating a Basic Chat Bot • Testing with the Bot Emulator Module 3: Enhancing Bots with QnA Maker | non_poster |
Towards emotion analysis for Alsatian theater Qinyue Liu1, Pablo Ruiz Fabo2 and Delphine Bernhard2 1Université Grenoble-Alpes, France 2Université de Strasbourg, LiLPa UR 1339 Abstract The poster presents the first emotion analysis system for theater in Alsatian language varieties. It is a lexicon-based system, relying on an emotion lexicon which handles Alsatian’s huge orthographic variability. We describe the system’s functionality, regarding configurable term-weighting schemes, score aggregation based on plays’ metadata (e.g. genre) and character related variables (gender, socio- professional group), and visualizations output by the tool, presenting some initial results. The system, still at an early stage, intends to contribute to computational literary studies of a tradition scarcely studied using computational methods. Keywords emotion analysis, Alsatian, theater 1. Introduction Emotion analysis (EA) has a long tradition, as clear from the survey in [1], focused on Com- putational Literary Studies (CLS). Its complexity has often been remarked, e.g. in [2, 3, 4]. An important application of EA, sometimes related to subgenre characterization, is the computation of emotion-arcs as the plot progresses [5, 6, 7, 8, 9]. EA has been approached with rule-based methods (applying emotion lexica to the texts) or machine-learning and deep learning. Rule-based EA has a specific limitation: it is problematic to infer emotional content based on the occurrence of lexicon items in a span of text, without being able to systematically consider context. Indeed, studies by [10] comparing lexicon-based and transfer learning via fine-tuning BERT for emotion detection in literary texts in German (the closest language to our corpus) found better performance with transfer learning. In [5] good results were also achieved on BERT-based emotion classification in German plays diachronically and across genres. On the other hand, one desirable characteristic of lexicon-based approaches is their interpretability: results can be traced back to lexicon coverage. For emotion arc creation specifically, [11] found that lexicon-based methods achieve high-quality results. More generally, in a scenario where we do not have emotion annotations to train or fine-tune models, it is a reasonable choice to attempt a rule-based approach relying on lexica. Poster to be presented at CHR 2023: Computational Humanities Research Conference, December 6 – 8, 2023, Paris, France $ qinyue.liu@etu.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr (Q. Liu); ruizfabo@unistra.fr (P. Ruiz Fabo); dbernhard@unistra.fr (D. Bernhard) 0000-0002-4349-4835 (P. Ruiz Fabo); 0000-0001-7857-5873 (D. Bernhard) | non_poster |
465 Estrat Crític 5.Vol.2 (2011): 465-470 Una visión arqueológica desde las fuentes escritas: Almuñécar Carlos Alberto Toquero Pérez Universidad de Granada karls@correo.ugr.es/ karlstoquero@hotmail.com RESUMEN Para este proceso de investigación que estamos llevando a cabo es fundamental tener en cuenta las fuen- tes escritas aplicadas a los estudios arqueológicos. Debido a que nos aportan multitud de información re- lacionada con la ciudad y el campo. Sobre todo para nuestro caso es sumamente importante tener en cuenta tanto las fuentes documentales como las arqueológicas debido a que Almuñécar a sufrido un poblamiento continuado durante toda su historia y es necesario acudir a las fuentes escritas, como un punto de sustento de la arqueología, para poder llegar a realizar una reconstrucción y de los medios de producción de la ciudad islámica en su tránsito a la ciudad castellana. Palabras clave: Actividad arqueológica, Ciudad, Conquista, Fuentes escritas, Edad Media, Libros de repartimiento, Medio ambiente, Reyes Católicos, Toponímia, Transformaciones ABSTRACT Due to all the information that written sources offer about city and countryside life, it is vital to use them related to the archaeological studies, as we have tried to do. For this case in particular, is really important to use both written and archaeological sources because Almuñecar has been continuously occupied for ages and it is often necessary to turn to the written sources as a support for Archaeology, in order to achieve an urban reconstruction and infer the means of production during the transition from the Islamic to the Castilian city. Keywords: Archaeology, City, Conquest, Written Sources, Middle Age, “Libros de Repartimiento”, Environment, Ca- tholic Kings, Toponymy, Transformations RESUM Per aquest procés d’investigació que estem duent a terme és fonamental tenir present les fonts escrites apli- cades als estudis arqueològics. Degut a què ens aporten multitud d’informació relacionada amb la ciutat i el camp. Sobretot per al nostre cas és summament important tenir en compte tan les fonts documentals com les ar- queològiques degut a què Almuñécar ha sofert un poblament continuat durant tota la seva història i és ne- cessari acudir a les fonts escrites, com un punt de sosteniment de l’arqueologia, per poder arribar a realitzar una reconstrucció i dels mitjans de producció de la ciutat islàmica en el seu trànsit a la ciutat castellana.. Paraules Clau: Activitat arqueològica, Ciutat, Conquesta, Fonts Escrites, Edat Mitjana, Llibres de repartiment, Medi ambient, Reis Catòlics, Toponímia, Transformacions. Rebut: 1 septembre 2010; Acceptat: 1 decembre 2010 | non_poster |
503 Anais do V Simpósio Internacional de Inovação em Mídias Interativas Goiânia: Media Lab / UFG, 2018 Protótipo de bafômetro desenvolvido com Arduino e Sensor de Álcool MQ3 aplicado na educação para o trânsito Hailton David Lemos1 André Dionizio de Freitas2 Introdução O bafômetro é um aparelho que permite determinar a concentração de bebida alco- ólica analisando o ar exalado dos pulmões de uma pessoa. É também conhecido pela denominação técnica “etilômetro”, devido às reações que envolvem o álcool etílico presente na baforada do suspeito e um reagente. Todos os tipos de bafômetros são baseados em reações químicas e os reagentes mais comuns são dicromato de potássio e célula de combustível. A diferença entre estes dois reagentes é que o dicromato muda de cor na presença do álcool enquanto a célula gera uma corrente elétrica. O mais usado pelos policiais no Brasil é o de célula de combustível. O médico, Doutor Robert Borkenstein, do Departamento de Polícia de Indiana (Estados Unidos) desenvolveu um aparelho que seria capaz de identificar a concentração de álcool no sangue por meio da análise do ar presente nos pulmões. Resultados Bafômetro ou etilômetro é um aparelho que permite determinar a concentração de bebida alcoólica em uma pessoa, analisando o ar exalado dos pulmões. Em vez de sistemas eletrônicos, os bafômetros do doutor Robert Borkenstein realizavam misturas químicas com várias soluções, sendo que a concentração alcoólica era revelada pela análise da cor do líquido gerado na reação – e não mostrada em um visor eletrônico, como acontece atualmente. A seguir uma tabela com os valores permitidos que se- param os limites de tolerância e infração. Forma de comprovação Tolerância Infração Infração + Crime Exame de sangue Até 2,0 dg/l 2,01 a 5,99 dg/l 6 dg/l em diante Teste de ar (valor medido) Até 0,13 mg/l 0,14 a 0,33 mg/l 0,34 mg/l em diante 1 Professor FANAP – Faculdade Nossa Senhora Aparecida. http://lattes.cnpq.br/6984620495 051513 2 Aluno do Curso Engenharia de Controle Automação –Faculdade Pitágoras | non_poster |
Neutrino mixing and Leptogenesis with A4 modular symmetry Rukmani Mohantaa, Mitesh Kumar Beherab, Subhasmita Mishrac, Shivaramakrishna Singiralad University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad 500 046, Indiaa,b,c,d. rukmani98@gmail.coma, miteshbehera1304@gmail.comb, subhasmita.mishra92@gmail.comc,krishnas542@gmail.comd. Abstract. The objective of the present work is to develop a model based on A4 modular symmetry for understanding neutrino oscillation data as well as leptogenesis within the Linear Seesaw framework. Three Right handed (RH) neutrinos NRi, three Left handed (LH) sterile neutrinos SLi, and one weighton are added to the SM. In addition, an extra global U(1)χ symmetry has been imposed to avoid some undesired factors in the superpotential, We demonstrate that the proposed model successfully explains the observed neutrino oscillation data and leptogenesis. Keywords: Neutrino Physics, A4 modular symmetry, Leptogenesis 1 Introduction The standard model (SM) was introduced in the early 1970s and has been ex- tremely successful in explaining most of the observed data up to the electroweak scale. However, it is incapable of demonstrating many known phenomena in particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology, despite its huge success. As an illustration, SM is unable to answer the neutrino physics conundrum. Neutri- nos are the trendiest issue in science right now, as they are thought to have a role in both the microscopic and macroscopic worlds. The flavour oscillations of neutrinos, which suggest that neutrinos are massive, are among the most sig- nificant findings in neutrino physics. In addition, the three neutrino framework, supported by the present oscillation data characterised by six independent fac- tors, three mixing angles and two mass squared differences, and one CP violating phase. However, owing to experimental limitations, the CP violating phase has not yet measured, and has become the key emphasis to be realized in the near future. In addition to the aforementioned, neutrino mass hierarchy is yet to be determined, which is thought to be crucial in particle physics and cosmology. Under theoretical domain, to explain neutrino phenomenology we leap beyond the standard model by introducing right handed neutrinos and certain symme- tries both discrete and continuous in order to realize seesaw mechanism. In the context of discrete symmetries, to construct the Lagrangian many flavon fields are also required for symmetry breaking as well as to define some extra required | non_poster |
Pathogenicity and systemic colonization of Spanish strains of Xylella fastidiosa subsp. multiplex and pauca on olive under controlled conditions Román-Écija M, Olivares-García C, Domínguez-Calero C, Navas-Cortés JA, Landa BB Instituto de Agricultura Sostenible (IAS), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Córdoba, Spain | non_poster |
ANAIS 2017 VI CEFIVASF VI CONGRESSO DE EDUCAÇÃO FÍSICA DO VALE DO SÃO FRANCISCO 24 a 26 de Agosto de 2017, Petrolina-PE / Juazeiro-BA Educação Física no Brasil: Aplicações na Escola, Saúde e Desempenho GEPEGENE CEFIS Colegiado de Educação Física Prefeitura de Juazeiro O trabalho segue em frente para mudar ainda mais Ministério da Saúde Ministério do Esporte Realização Patrocínio Apoio Sec. Executiva TREINAMENTOS E EVENTOS FACULDADE INSPIRAR ® WZ PETROLINA | non_poster |
Characterization of anti-Xylella endolysins from genomic data. A preliminary insight into the identification of novel antimicrobial molecules Rosselli Riccardo, Guzmán Noemí M., Mojica Francisco JM, Garcia-Martinez Jesús Department of Physiology, Genetics and Microbiology. University of Alicante, Alicante (Spain) | non_poster |
Enhancing SWxSOC through Open Collaboration for Multi-Mission Data Processing and Expedited Release IN13C-2176 Damian Barrous-Dume1 (dbarrous@navteca.com), Amy Catherine Rager2 (amy.c.rager@nasa.gov), Andrew Robbertz2 (andrew.robbertz@gd-ms.com), Daniel Skeberdis3 (daniel.skeberdis@nasa.gov), Steven Christe4 (steven.d.christe@nasa.gov), Steve Kreisler5 (stephen.kreisler-1@nasa.gov), Tony Mercer6 (tonyfig@berkley.edu), William R Paterson7 (william.r.patterson@nasa.gov) 1 Community Coordinated Modeling Center, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Navteca, Greenbelt, United States 2 General Dynamics Mission Systems, Fairfax, United States 3 a.i. solutions, Inc., Lanham, MD, United States 4 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Solar Physics Lab, Greenbelt, United States 5 Columbus Technologies and Services, Greenbelt, MD, United States 6 Space science laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States 7 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Geospace Physics Laboratory, Greenbelt, MD, United States | non_poster |
Scented Material: Changing Features of Physical Creations based on Odors Olivia Jezler SCHI Lab University of Sussex, UK O.Jezler@sussex.ac.uk Marco Gilardi Media Technology Lab University of Sussex, UK m.gilardi@sussex.ac.uk Elia Gatti SCHI Lab University of Sussex, UK e.gatti@sussex.ac.uk Marianna Obrist SCHI Lab University of Sussex, UK m.obrist@sussex.ac.uk Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author. Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). CHI’16 Extended Abstracts, May 07-12, 2016, San Jose, CA, USA ACM 978-1-4503-4082-3/16/05. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2851581.2892471 Abstract Communication between designer and user is a challenge when designing for a wider spectrum of experiences and interfaces (e.g., tangible, multimodal, multisensory inter- action). Our research aims to explore non-verbal commu- nication methods for expressing olfactory experiences. In this paper, we present preliminary findings on the effect of scented material on physical creations using scented and unscented modeling clay. We compare features of ab- stract creations of three groups (i.e., vanilla scented, lemon scented, or unscented material). Our preliminary results confirm pre-existing mappings across shapes and scents. We discuss the various properties of the creations and dis- cuss their relevance based on previous work and in partic- ular its potential for HCI in the design of future interactive experiences. Author Keywords Expressiveness; Physicality; Odor; Scented material; Cross- modal correspondences; Creativity. ACM Classification Keywords H.5.m [Information interfaces and presentation (e.g., HCI)]: Miscellaneous | non_poster |
JOURNAL OF MULTIDISCIPLINARY BULLETIN ISSN(Online): 2984-6722 SJIF Impact Factor |(2024): 6.752| Volume-7, Issue-12, Published |20-12-2024| 45 https://sirpublishers.org/ ФОРМИРОВАНИЕ ЦЕННОСТНОГО ОТНОШЕНИЯ К ЗДОРОВЬЮ У МЛАДШИХ ШКОЛЬНИКОВ https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14511300 Саидасрорхожаева Шохсанамхон Зокиржон кизи магистрантка кафедры дошкольного и начального образования Ташкентского международного Университет Кимё https://kiut.uz/ru/ Аннотация В статье рассматривается актуальная проблема формирования ценностного отношения к здоровью у обучающихся начальных классах. В целом, формирование ценностного отношения к здоровью у детей начальных классов — это инвестиция в их будущее благополучие. Это не только снижает риск развития проблем со здоровьем, но и способствует их общему развитию, успеваемости и качеству жизни. Необходимо создать ценностно-ориентационное образовательное пространство, внутри которого и будет происходить формирование ценностного отношения к здоровью у современных школьников. Ведущая роль в этом процессе отводится педагогу как главному субъекту образовательно-воспитательного процесса. Annotation The article deals with the actual problem of formation of value attitude to health in elementary school students. In general, the formation of value attitude to health in elementary school children is an investment in their future well-being. It not only reduces the risk of developing health problems, but also contributes to their overall development, academic performance and quality of life. It is necessary to create a value-oriented educational space, within which the formation of value attitude to health in modern schoolchildren will take place. The leading role in this process is given to the teacher as the main subject of the educational process. Ключевые слова здоровье, здоровый образ жизни, ценность, ценностное отношение к здоровью, ценностно-ориентационное пространство, Валеология, школьник начального класса. Key words health, healthy lifestyle, value, value attitude towards health, value- orientation space, valeology, primary school student. | non_poster |
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