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Efficient treatment of MP2 correlation energies at the plane-wave basis-set limit Justin Villard justin.villard@epfl.ch Laboratory of Computational Chemistry and Biochemistry Bircher, M. P., Villard, J. & Rothlisberger, U., J. Chem. Theory Comput. 16, 6550–6559 (2020) MP2 implementation in the CPMD code Isolated and periodic systems Monte-Carlo summation over numerous virtual space contributions Reduction of formal quintic to quadratic scaling Up to 1000 speedups with ~0.1 kcal/mol deviation Swiss Association of Computational Chemists (SACC) Spring Meeting 2021, 12th of February
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PROCEEDINGS OF THE 23rd International Symposium on Analytical and Environmental Problems October 9-10, 2017 University of Szeged, Department of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry Szeged Hungary
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Measurement of charmonium decays at BESIII Yizhuo Zhou Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, People’s Republic of China, Key Laboratory of Nuclear Physics and Ion-beam Application (MOE) and Institute of Modern Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai 200443, People’s Republic of China On behalf of the BESIII collaboration 17-21 July 2023 Abstract In this poster, recent measurements of charmonium decays of BESIII are pre- sented. The process of e+e−→ηJ/ψ at center-of-mass energy 3.773 GeV is ob- served for the first time. Its Born cross section is measured, and the branching fraction of ψ(3770) →ηJ/ψ is determined by a combined fit to the cross sec- tions at other energy points with the interference effect taken into account for the first time. Using the 448 million ψ(3686) events collected with the BESIII de- tector, the evidence of the process ηc(2S) →π+π−η has been seen in the decay sequence ψ(3686) →γηc(2S) →(π+π−η). The product of the branching fractions of ψ(3686) →γηc(2S) and ηc(2S) →π+π−η is reported as well as the individual branching fraction of ηc(2S) →π+π−η. Using the same ψ(3686) data sample, the branching fractions of the decays χcJ →φφ(J = 0, 1, 2) have been measured with improved precision, and the polarization parameters of χcJ →φφ have been de- termined for the first time via a helicity amplitude analysis. Utilizing 2708 million ψ(3686) events, the decays χcJ →Ω−¯Ω+(J = 0, 1, 2) have been observed for the first time via the radiative decays of ψ(3686) →γχcJ. CC-BY-4.0 licence
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COUSHATTA BASKET WEAVERS: MAPPING GIFT ECONOMY How not to lie with maps Denise Bates*, Arina Melkozernova** in collaboration with the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana, USA *Professor, Faculty of Leadership and Integrative Studies, Arizona State University **PhD Candidate, Comparative Culture and Language, Arizona State University Keywords: Historical maps, TEK, tribal economy, Coushatta, access “True Indigenous formulations are non-intrusive and build frameworks of respectful coexistence by acknowledging the integrity and autonomy of the various constituent elements of the relationship.” Alfred Taiaiake (2005) Arizona State University (ASU), in partnership with the Coushatta Tribe Council, the Coushatta Heritage Department, archivists and community members, funded by the Stowe Endowment Fund, are collaborating on generating the geospatial data from various resources. The oral histories, archeological findings, and cultural items held in public and private collections contain data about the Coushatta ecological knowledge and land stewardship practices. Based on this data, we developed the map of basket weavers’ housing along Bayou Blue, ca. 1970s (Langley, Bates, 2021, 23). The map demonstrates the strong connection of the basket weavers’ homesteads to the swamps, rivers, and pinewoods where all basket materials were collected. The clusters of homesteads show the community density that help transfer information and knowledge to the next generations. The map intended to serve as a geo-argument to support the claim about the Coushatta basket weaving as a communal endeavor that provided the prominent contribution to a tribal economy. As the result, in 1972, the Coushatta tribe was recognized by the State of Louisiana and federally acknowledged. This poster documents the process of producing a historic map of the Coushatta basket weavers, circa 1970 from archival materials provided by the Coushatta Heritage Department. The locations of basket weavers in 1970 were translated into coordinates (longitude and latitude) by using free Google maps. By using Python programming in the Jupiter Notebook, the data were imported from Excel into a map viewer. Producing the map by using the freely accessible Google maps as a base posed challenges of interpreting the accurate results. For Coushattas, baskets are sacred “gifts emanating from the landscape” (Pete, 75). The reduction of geo information by the Google algorithm wiped out small rivers and creeks from the interactive map. As the result, the place-based connection between homesteads and watershed was lost and with it the references to Coushattas’ cultural values and identity. To restore the narrative of the Coushatta’s Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), the watershed layers were reinstated through adding rivers to the map base by using commercial software (StoryMaps, Adobe Cloud). In order to convey the deep connection to land, the equitable and eminent collaboration in a cross-cultural setting and access to technology are necessary to enable communities to contribute to their presence in a digital space. Both technology and the TEK are equally important for imagining alternative futures (Duarte & Belarde-Lewis, 2015).
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Comparative Analysis of Mass Determination Methods for Pulsating White Dwarfs AIMS: Stellar mass determination poses a central challenge in stellar astrophysics. This study delves into the mass assessment of isolated pulsating white dwarf (WD) stars through spectroscopy, asteroseismology, and astrometry. Focusing on a sample of DAVs (pulsating H-rich atmosphere WDs), DBVs (pulsating He- rich atmosphere WDs), and GW Vir variables (pulsating hot C-, O-, and He-rich atmosphere WDs and pre- WDs), we carefully compare the mass values derived from these diverse methods (see slide #2). RESULTS: Employing consistent WD models and evolutionary tracks, our preliminar analysis reveals that: ●There is a broad agreement among methods for DAV stars, particularly for those with masses below 0.75 M⊙. However, significant discrepancies emerge for certain massive stars (see slide #3); ●Astrometric masses tend to surpass seismological and spectroscopic masses for DBV stars; ●Marked differences are evident in the mass of GW Vir stars, indicating methodological disparities in mass determinations. FUTURE WORK: In brief, we plan to include the accurate photometric technique (last method in slice #2) to assess de photometric mass and compare the results with the other techniques. Alejandro H. Córsico(1), Leila M. Calcaferro(1), Murat Uzundag(2), Leandro G. Althaus(1), S. O. Kepler(3), Klaus Werner(4) (1) Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina (e-mail: acorsico@fcaglp.unlp.edu.ar); (2) Institute of Astronomy, Belgium; (3) Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil; (4) Institut für Astronomie und Astrophysik, Germany
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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: Spatti, A. C., Muraro, V., Bezerra, L. M. C., Campos, M. L., & Fredo, C. E. (2022). The Common Bean: A comparison between the world’s main producers of scientific knowledge. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22114). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6951656 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/
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Lowering Barriers to Teach Earth Data Science to Undergraduates in Historically Underrepresented Communities Using a Virtual, Student-Directed Learning Environment Leah A Wasser¹,², Lauren Herwehe¹,², Patricia Montano², Anne U Gold², Nathan Quarderer¹,², William Travis¹,², Emily Biggane³, Jeremy Guinn³, James Sanovia⁴, David Parr⁵, & Nathan Korinek¹,²; ¹Earth Lab CU - Boulder, ²CU - Boulder, CIRES, ³United Tribes Technical College, ⁴Oglala Lakota College, ⁵Metropolitan State University of Denver ENTER NAMES OF AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS PRESENTED AT: AGU - iPosterSessions.com https://agu2020fallmeeting-agu.ipostersessions.com/Default.aspx... 1 of 24 12/23/20, 4:19 PM
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— 718 723 Celebration & Contemplation, 10th International Conference on Design & Emotion 27 — 30 September 2016, Amsterdam Introduction Interfaces of products are often characterized by the application of buttons, menu structures, and labels giving access to functionalities. Over the past two decades, interaction design approaches such as experience design, affective interaction, tangible interaction, embodied interaction and so forth were put forward to counterbalance this tradition by emphasizing the embodied skills of people (Dourish, 2001; Klemmer, Hartmann & Takayama, 2006; Harrison, Tatar & Sengers, 2007). In this countermovement, the aesthetics of interaction became an apparent focus for design research (see Djajadiningrat, Overbeeke & Wensveen, 2000; Löwgren & Stolterman, 2004). Abstract This pictorial presents the design and design process of the Expressive Toaster, a research through design case that explores the mapping between the way the toaster is used and the way the bread is toasted. The Expressive Toaster is characterized by a textured cover that can be stroked to set the temperature as well as the duration of toasting. On the other hand, the texture enables the user to feel what the bread will become in terms of its crispiness. Some key insights taken from the iterative design process of the Expressive Toaster are elaborated in a visually annotated manner. With this work, we aim to provide practical design pointers for developing interaction mappings of expressive input to a delayed output over diverse modalities. We further intend to inspire design engineers to shift from function and menu based interfaces to expressive rich and other embodied mechanisms for interaction. Keywords Interaction design, Research through design, Expressive interaction, Toaster, Feedforward Feedforward Toaster: Design mapping for expressive use - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Jelle Stienstra1,2 j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl Elise Pul1 e.pul@student.utwente.nl Miguel Bruns Alonso2 mbruns@tue.nl 1University of Twente, the Netherlands 2Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Figure 1. The Expressive Toaster as an experienceable prototype. The design is characterized by the lack of buttons, switches, knobs and so forth, to set the temperature and time. Instead, the Expressive Toaster can be set by stroking down the textured cover.
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Quantum optimization algorithms in battery adaptive charging George Kourousias12*, Francesco Scazza3,4, Fulvio Billè1, Sergio Carrato2 1Scientific Computing, Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste, Italy 2Department of Engineering and Architecture, University of Trieste, Italy 3Department of Physics, University of Trieste, Italy 4Istituto Nazionale di Ottica, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Trieste, Italy *george.kourousias@elettra.eu [abstract of poster presentation] keywords: quantum computing, batteries, adaptive charging, EV grid integration, quantum optimization, quantum variational algorithms, quantum approximate optimization algorithm Quantum Computing (QC) has the potential to revolutionize battery research by not only offering computational advantages over classical computers but aspiring at a potential paradigm shift in computational approaches. Potential research applications of high impact are in material discovery, electrolyte design, reaction kinetics, molecular dynamics, and optimization of charging algorithms. This work aims at providing an overview of these applications but focuses on optimisation of charging algorithms. Optimization of charging algorithms for batteries is an essential aspect of battery management and energy storage system design. The goal is to maximize the efficiency, performance, and lifespan of batteries while ensuring safe charging operations. Long term scientific progress may arise by simulations of the complex physical and chemical processes, including ion diffusion, electrochemical reactions, and thermal management but also in other domains such as rapid testing of multiple charging algorithms, safety considerations and grid integration. The goal of this research is to introduce an application for QC for adaptive charging where the quantum algorithm could adapt a prohibitively large number of charging parameters in real-time based on the battery’s current state. For example, if the battery is showing signs of heating or increased internal resistance, the algorithm could automatically reduce the charging rate and voltage to prevent overheating and extend the battery's life. Conversely, when the battery is in optimal conditions, it could allow faster charging to meet user demands. The scope of application goes beyond traditional battery systems and can be applied for optimisation of complex real-life large power grids where electrical vehicles (EVs) are relying on for charging. Such systems as whole are described by a large number of parameters and their optimisation is a topic of ongoing research [8,1].
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Jonathan Smoker et al., ESO Beta Cen is a B1 III star with mB=0.38 and mH=1.209 As part of the CRIRES closeout calibrations we obtained one hour of observation on this very bright target. The aim was to see what S/N ratio could be achieved using CRIRES for comparison with CRIRES plus and what are the limiting factors. A high signal to noise spectrum of Beta Cen with CRIRES
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Libraries developed in the TREX CoE A. Scemama1, V.G. Chilkuri1, E. Posenitskiy1, P. de Oliveira Castro2, C. Valensi2, W. Jalby2 04/10/2022 1University of Toulouse/CNRS, LCPQ (France) 2University of Versailles, Li-PaRAD (France)
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1 Raymond Yogo raymondyogo@gmail.com, Victor, Thomas Otieno votieno@strathmore.edu, Joshua Oduor joshuaoduor86@gmail.com, Neve Fields n.fields-18@student .lboro.ac.uk , Simone Osei-Owusu so121@ic.ac.uk, Energy Modelling Platform for Africa (EMP-A) 2022 Exploring Clean Energy Transition Scenarios for Kenya
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Daughters’ career aspirations are positively correlated with the amount of housework their father does1 What does your daughter want to be? 1Psychological Science, 2014 25: 1418-1428
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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MULTIDISCIPLINARY BULLETIN ISSN: 2996-511X (online) | ResearchBib (IF) = 9.512 IMPACT FACTOR Volume-2| Issue-4| 2024 Published: |30-11-2024| 210 THE ROLE OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY IN TEACHING ENGLISH https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14212799 Dinara Saitxanova Tashkent University of Applied Sciences, Gavhar Str. 1, Tashkent 100149, Uzbekistan (dinara.saitkhanova@mail.ru) Abstract Digital technologies not only speed up and significantly facilitate the learning process, but also make the learning process more interactive and cognitive. The quality of education is influenced by the effective intervention of the teacher or educational technologies or resources used in a foreign language class. Key words digital technology, subject, knowledge, software and hardware. Uzbekistan began having good, friendly relationships with other foreign countries, our government had become ready to have equal, deep social, educational, economical corporation with a number of countries from the first years of independence which also led us to learn as many foreign languages as possible. The English language is learnt and taught by thousands of people round Uzbekistan. As we know, on 19.05.2021 President of the Republic of Uzbekistan Sh.M. Mirziyoyev signed a decree “"On measures to bring the activities of popularization of foreign language learning in the Republic of Uzbekistan to a qualitatively new level". The analysis of the current system of organizing language learning shows that learning standards, curricula and textbooks do not fully meet the current requirements, particularly in the use of advanced information and media technologies. Education is mainly conducted in traditional methods. Further development of a variety of foreign languages learning at all levels of education; improving skills of teachers and provision of modern teaching materials are required. Digital technologies have been changing the teaching and learning process the world over since they first appeared and then became an inalienable part of our daily life. Furthermore, new ways of testing and preparing such assignments can open up a platform to reflect systematically upon students’ acquired knowledge, thus enabling teachers to review results immediately after completing theirs tasks; this way they can raise the learning process to a much higher level. Consequently, applying information technologies to the learning
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Poster: Empirical Cybersecurity Investment Decision-Making: Bridging the Gap Between Intuition and Metric-Driven Strategy Nadia Lorraine Niyonsaba University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands n.n.l.niyonsaba@utwente.nl Abhishta Abhishta University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands s.abhishta@utwente.nl Jeroen van der Ham-de Vos University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands j.vanderham@utwente.nl Laura Spierdijk University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands l.spierdijk@utwente.nl Abstract—Organizations are under constant threat of cyber attacks. Hence, they need to have information security measures put in place. Security managers lack methods to quantify how much effort should be invested in protecting their IT assets and training people. We propose developing a metric-based method to guide cybersecurity investments, aimed at improving an organization’s security posture. I. INTRODUCTION Cybersecurity managers lack clear metrics to guide security decisions especially when it comes to investing in security[1]. Optimal security investments are paramount as organizations increasingly rely on Information Technology (IT) [2]. How- ever, organizations rarely have insights into the potential added value offered by security investments. In 2016 RedSeal Inc. polled 200 CEOs; 87% of CEOs who were surveyed expressed the need for better metrics to evaluate cybersecurity investments, and 72% said that the lack of useful metrics for cybersecurity investment assessment was a “major challenge” [3], [4]. [5] and [6] proposed security investment models, but the models have limitations, including being based on security threats and vulnerabilities that are hard to quantify [6], [7], and lacking the organization security context[1], [8]. This research proposes a new decision-making process that is metric-centered and tailored to each organization’s security posture [9], [10]. Typically, organizations use different metrics to quantify and justify their decisions with several business operations but do not follow the same rational decision-making approach to allocate resources for cybersecurity in their organizations[1], [11]. The lack of proper resource allocation for cybersecurity makes information security passive and less important for most organizations, even though one single attack can be fatal and lead to business closure. For example, in 2021, a major gas pipeline (Colonial Pipeline) endured a ransomware attack that led to paying a ransom worth $4.4 million, following the attack. The attack also affected some of the pipeline’s digital programs, shutting it down for several days[12]. Organiza- tions use methods like discounted cash flow, Monte Carlo simulation, decision-tree analysis, and others for uncertain and complex decisions[13]. Nevertheless, interviews conducted by Fig. 1. Situation and complication - Information Technology adds value to business operations leading to success, however, cyberattacks use the same technology as a vector to harm organizations when there are no security measures put in place. [11] reveal that most security executives and other organization managers do not use any investment quantification methods to decide how much their organizations should invest in cybersecurity. Organizations using information technology must imple- ment cybersecurity measures to safeguard their IT assets and data. The increasing reliance on IT for competitive advantage [14] underscores the necessity of cybersecurity. Cyberattacks lead to consequences such as financial losses, reputational damage, and sometimes business closure; emphasizing the im- portance of effective cybersecurity measures [2]. For example, an Illinois hospital closed in 2021 after failing to financially recover from a ransomware attack[15]. Frequently, most orga- nizations don’t put enough information security measures or are passive to protect their IT assets from attacks, due to lack of awareness and lack of proper decision tools and models to quantify how much they shoul
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The ALCOHOLS survey (APEX Large CO Heterodyne Orion Legacy Survey) The ALCOHOLS Team: Thomas Stanke; H. Arce, J. Bally, P. Bergman, J. Carpenter, C.J. Davis, W. Dent, J. Di Francesco, J. Eisloeffel, D. Froebrich, A. Ginsburg, M. Heyer, D. Johnstone, D. Mardones, M.J. McCaughrean, S.T. Megeath, F. Nakamura, B. Reipurth, M.D. Smith, A. Stutz, K. Tatematsu, C. Walker, J.P. Williams, H. Zinnecker The SuperCam Team: B. Swift, C. Kulesa, B. Peters, B. Duffy, J. Kloosterman, U. Yildiz; J. Pineda And the APEX Team 24.05.2024 AtLAST @ Mainz
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Extending MINER𝛎A Data Preservation for fuzz study NuPhys 2023 Akeem L Hart On behalf of the MINER𝜈A collaboration
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د. سفيان خلوفي خطة مادة: التسويق اإللكتروني للخدمات 1 وزارة التعليم العالي والبحث العلمي املركز الجامعي عبد الحفيظ بوالصوف – ميلة معهد العلوم اال قتصادية والتجارية وعلوم التسيير قسم ال علوم الت جارية خطة الم ادة التسويق اإللكتروني للخدمات ماستر2، تخصص: تسويق الخدمات األستاذ مسؤول المادة الدكتور: خلوفي سفيان دفعة جانفى2222
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Dispersal of Philaenus spumarius, vector of Xylella fastidiosa, in olive grove and meadow agroecosystems Bodino N1*, Cavalieri V2, Dongiovanni C3, Simonetto A4, Saponari M2, Gilioli G4, Bosco D5 1 CNR—Istituto per la Protezione Sostenibile delle Piante, Torino, Italy 2 CNR—Istituto per la Protezione Sostenibile delle Piante, Bari, Italy 3 CRSFA—Centro di Ricerca, Sperimentazione e Formazione in Agricoltura Basile Caramia, Locorotondo (Bari), Italy 4 Agrifood Lab, Dipartimento di Medicina Molecolare e Traslazionale, Università degli Studi di Brescia, Brescia, Italy 5 Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie, Forestali e Alimentari, Università degli Studi di Torino, Grugliasco, Italy
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Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Azufre, ¿amigo o enemigo? Lucero García Tovar* iD, Diana Percino-Flores iD, María del Carmen Girón Pérez iD Posgrado en Ciencias (Microbiología), Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias Microbiológicas, Instituto de Ciencias (ICUAP), Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: lucero.tovar118@gmail.com 21 de julio de 2024 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12789291 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Revisado por: Estephanie Luna Pérez (Pasante de la Maestría en Ciencias [Microbiología], Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Apoyo en la maquetación: Luz del Carmen Cortés Reyes (Estudiante de Bioquímica Clínica, Universidad de las Américas Puebla, Puebla, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Dentro del ecosistema que nos rodea, transcurren diversos ciclos biogeoquímicos que funcionan como un circuito donde un nutriente se mueve entre los componentes biótico y abiótico de los ecosistemas [1]. El azufre es esencial para la vida, ya que forma parte de las proteínas y es
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Integrating Data Stewardship into the Research Lifecycle: A PARSEC Approach STALL, Shelley (1), DAVID, Romain (2), EDMUNDS, Rorie (3), MABILE, Laurence (4), MACHICAO, Jeaneth (5), MURAYAMA, Yasuhiro (6), O'BRIEN, Margaret (7), PIZZIGATTI, CORREA Pedro (5), SPECHT, Alison (8), VELLENICH, Danton Ferreira (5), WYBORN, Lesley (9,10) 1- American Geophysical Union, 2- European Research Infrastructure on Highly Pathogenic Agents, 3- World Data System, 4- University of Toulouse 5- University of São Paulo, 6- National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, 7- University of California, Santa Barbara, 8- The University of Queensland, 9- National Computing Infrastructure, 10– Australian National University
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Better CRediT for Everyone! http://credit.niso.org How? CRediT in a Sample Journal Article Workflow Endorsements “...[Our] Foundation is pleased to help support the CRediT project’s movement into this phase of broader implementation and adoption. Josh Greenberg, Director of Digital Technology Program, Sloan Foundation “We are pleased to support CRediT as a system to enable recognition for all members of research teams and an infrastructure to enable a shift in research culture and open practices.” Dr Georgina Humphreys, Open Research Programme, Wellcome CRediT is generously supported by Alfred P. Sloan Foundation G-2020-14051 & Wellcome Trust What? CRediT (Contributor Roles Taxonomy) is a high-level taxonomy of 14 roles that represent the roles typically played by contributors to scientific publication—from conceptualization and grant application through writing, review, and editing. These roles can be used to describe each contributor’s specific contribution to the scientific output. Publication CRediT roles are presented in final published paper according to journal style (location, list vs paragraph, etc.) Post-Publication Potential CRediT roles captured in Rescognito, ORCID, other systems Add CRediT roles to CVs Universities consider CRediT in promotion & tenure decisions Researchers use CRediT roles to identify potential collaborators Article Submission Authors include CRediT roles within article submission In the article itself or via selection in submission tool (e.g., Editorial Manager) Journal Production CRediT roles are copyedited/proofed and captured in article XML Liz Allen, Gabe Harp, Simon Kerridge, Nettie Lagace, Alison McGonagle-O’Connell, Alice Meadows Who? CRediT is a community of funders, institutions, publishers, and post- publication and other services that support transparency and recognition for all research contributions. Current Roles 1. Conceptualization 2 .Data curation 3. Formal Analysis 4. Funding acquisition 5. Investigation 6. Methodology 7 .Project administration 8. Resources 9. Software 10. Supervision 11. Validation 12. Visualization 13. Writing – original draft 14. Writing – review & editing
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12.11. 2021– 16.01. 2022 Artists: Zippy Kimundu & Małgorzata Mazur, Castro Osore & Anna Orlikowska, Wacu Kihara & Emilia Łapko, Mohamed Mbwana Omar & Piotr Pauk, Biko Wesa & Witek Orski, Simba Wanga & Anna Nowicka, Richard Onyango & Zbigniew Rogalski; Mramba Mweni, Said Chengo & Łukasz Jastrubczak, Said Luganje Kahindi, Christian Niccoli The National Museum in Szczecin – Museum of Contemporary Art COMMUNITY COMMUNITY 12.11. 2021– 16.01. 2022 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 COMMUNITY EXHIBITION: NOVEMBER 4 AT 13.00 MEETING WITH JOYCE KINYANJUI, CHIEF CURATOR OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF KENYA IN NAIROBI, NATIONAL MUSEUM IN SZCZECIN, 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 ZESPÓŁ MUZYKI WSPÓŁCZESNEJ AKADEMII SZTUKI W SZCZECINIE, NMS – MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, STAROMŁYŃSKA 1 NOVEMBER 13 AT 17.00 –18.00 MEETING WITH ARTISTS AND CURATORS, GUIDED TOUR OF THE EXHIBITION, NMS – MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, 1 STAROMŁYŃSKA STREET 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
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Designing evaluation framework and tool for astronomy content in the School Textbooks Dr. Asmita Redij Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education, TIFR, India For 5th Shaw-IAU Workshop on Astronomy for Education, 29th Nov to 1st Dec 2023 1 Collaborators: Pritesh Ranadive, Prof. Aniket Sule
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Kapila Y et al.,(2016) The Role of Apoptotic Factors in Assessing Progression of Periodontal Disease. Int J Dentistry Oral Sci. 3(9), 318-325. 318 OPEN ACCESS http://scidoc.org/IJDOS.php The Role of Apoptotic Factors in Assessing Progression of Periodontal Disease Research Article Dabiri D1, Halubai S1, Layher M1, Klausner C1, Makhoul H1, Lin GH1,2, Eckert G3, Abuhussein H1, Kamarajan P4, Kapila Y1, 4* 1 Department of Periodontics and Oral Medicine, School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, USA. 2 Department of Surgical Sciences, Marquette University School of Dentistry, USA 3 Department of Biostatistics, Indiana University, USA. 4 Department of Orofacial Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of California San Francisco, USA. International Journal of Dentistry and Oral Science (IJDOS) ISSN: 2377-8075 Introduction The mechanisms responsible for periodontal disease progression remain unclear. However, recent studies suggest that apoptosis or programmed cell death may be one mechanism underlying the pathophysiology of periodontal disease progression [1, 2]. Ap- optosis plays a critical role in the regulation of the host immune response and inflammation and can be modulated by various stimuli, including cytokines, bacterial and viral infections, immune cells themselves, and changes in growth factors, nutrients, and the extracellular matrix [3]. One of the best-defined apoptotic pathways is mediated by the death receptor Fas and Fas ligand (FasL) complex. The Fas recep- tor is expressed on many cell types that include gingival fibro- blasts, skin keratinocytes, and T cells [4-6]. Apoptotic cells are present in diseased gingiva [7]. During cell apoptosis, a sequential activation of cysteine proteases, called caspases, plays a central role in the execution phase of apoptosis. Caspase-3 is one of the key executor caspases that regulates a number of critical cellular *Corresponding Author: Yvonne L. Kapila, DDS, PhD, Professor, Vice-Chair Periodontology, Department of Orofacial Sciences, University of California San Francisco, School of Dentistry, 513 Parnassus Avenue, S612, Box 0422, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA. Tel: 415-502-4683 Fax: 415-476-4204 E-mail: Yvonne.Kapila@ucsf.edu Received: August 09, 2016 Accepted: August 31, 2016 Published: September 03, 2016 Citation: Kapila Y et al., (2016) The Role of Apoptotic Factors in Assessing Progression of Periodontal Disease. Int J Dentistry Oral Sci. 3(9), 318-325. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.19070/2377-8075-1600064 Copyright: Kapila Y© 2016. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Abstract Background: The mechanisms responsible for periodontal disease progression remain unclear. However, recent studies suggest that apoptosis may be one mechanism underlying the pathophysiology of periodontal disease progression. This pilot study is the 3 month follow-up of our published baseline study on the presence of apoptotic factors in serum, saliva, and gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) and their association with periodontal disease severity and activity. Methods: GCF samples were obtained from 37 adult patients with chronic periodontitis (CP) and 7 healthy controls. Clinical measurements, including probing depth (PD), clinical attachment level (CAL), and radiographs, were used to evaluate data by sites and to classify patients into healthy, mild, and moderate/severe CP groups. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays were used to measure apoptosis or DNA fragmentation levels in GCF. Western immunoblotting was used to detect several apoptotic proteins, Fas, FasL, sFasL, and caspase-3 expression and its cleavage products in GCF. Results: At the patient level clinical and apoptotic measurements change minimally over time. At the site level, DNA fragmen- tation levels increase with increasing PDs at 3 months and ba
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Poster: Towards Extensible Memory Isolation for Low-End Microcontrollers Marton Bognar DistriNet, KU Leuven 3001 Leuven, Belgium Jo Van Bulck DistriNet, KU Leuven 3001 Leuven, Belgium Abstract—In today’s interconnected world, specialized mem- ory isolation mechanisms for low-end embedded micro- controllers are becoming vital. Responding to this need, Texas Instruments has developed the promising Intellectual Property Encapsulation (IPE) feature for their popular ultra- low-power MSP430 microcontrollers. Academic researchers have, furthermore, implemented many trusted execution prototypes on the related openMSP430 open-source softcore. Recent research has shown, however, that these diverging code bases suffer from critical hardware and software vul- nerabilities that we believe could have been avoided with more coordination. Hence, we present our work in progress on an openly accessible and extensible research platform based on the specification of the proprietary IPE feature. We implement mature hardware support for IPE on open- MSP430, extending it with a fully configurable firmware layer, striving for extensible open-source building blocks that provide a solid foundation for future research. 1. Introduction In contrast to high-end servers and desktops, special- ized memory isolation features for ubiquitous ultra-low- end embedded devices are generally not as widespread and more limited in functionality. Specifically, some vendors are shipping limited hardware features for code protection and, in certain cases, data isolation in selected microcon- trollers. At the same time, a long line of academic research prototypes has explored specialized isolation mechanisms for trusted execution environments (TEEs) specifically aimed at low-end microcontrollers. A key driver behind these academic innovations has been the availability of open-source softcore implemen- tations, facilitating the rapid prototyping of hardware- software co-designs. OpenMSP430 [8], an open-source reimplementation of the popular line of ultra-low-power MSP430 microcontrollers from Texas Instruments (TI), is such a platform. While openMSP430 itself lacks any built-in security features, it has served as the basis for numerous academic TEE prototypes [6], [7], [12], [13]. Interestingly, newer MSP430 devices produced by TI ship with advanced security features that are not implemented by openMSP430, including a memory protection unit and Intellectual Property Encapsulation (IPE) [18]. IPE utilizes a capable program-counter-based hardware memory iso- lation mechanism to establish a secluded enclave memory region for confidential code and data. This approach has drawn explicit comparisons to the isolation guarantees offered by TEEs [3], and IPE itself has been used as a building block of academic proposals on secure intermit- tent computing [10], [11]. The emergence and popularity of these security fea- tures point to the importance of including hardware mem- ory isolation mechanisms in low-end microcontrollers. Unfortunately, however, current systems have been shown to suffer from critical vulnerabilities, including design flaws and implementation errors [4], improper input sani- tization [4], [19], and microarchitectural side channels [4], [20]. Even TI’s IPE has been shown vulnerable to different code and data extraction attacks [3], [14], [15], ultimately compromising the security of systems building on it. Crucially, we observe a large overlap in the impacted security features and hypothesize that many attacks could have been avoided with more coordination. For example, the most crucial vulnerability on IPE, controlled call corruption [3], assigned high severity by TI, was found to be already mitigated via a minimal hardware change in both Sancus and VRASED, two research systems built on openMSP430. Similarly, IPE does not enforce a sin- gle entry point, a well-understood design requirement for embedded TEEs [7], [9], [12], [13], [16]. IPE has, furthermore, been
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Removing Bottlenecks in High Performance Computational Science: 1450217 Mark S. Gordon (PI), Iowa State University Daniel Crawford (Virginia Tech) Todd MarBnez (Stanford University) David Sherrill (Georgia Tech) Lyudmila Slipchenko (Purdue University) Theresa Windus (Iowa State University)
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STI 2022 From Global Indicators to Local Applications 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: Zhang, Y., Wu, M., Lian, X., & Guo, Y. (2022). Profiling biomedical innovation from patents to research articles: Team structure, research leadership, and topic emphasis. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti2238). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6906606 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/
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NeuroHub Update - A Data and Computational Infrastructure for Collaborative, Reproducible Research Poster No: 3326 Submission Type: Abstract Submission Authors: Bryan Caron , Verena Schuster , Rida Abou-Haider , Natacha Beck , Serge Boroday , Samir Das , Alexandre Hutton , Diana Le , Xavier Lecours-Boucher , Melanie Legault , James Mehta , Emmet O'Brien , Liam O'Callaghan , Darcy Quesnel , Pierre Rioux , Adam Trefonides , Shen Wang , Ksenia Zaytseva , Shawn Brown , Alan Evans , Jean-Baptiste Poline Institutions: McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montréal, Quebec, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montréal, Quebec, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, McGill University, Montréal, Quebec, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, Pittsburg Supercomputing Center, Pittsburg, PA First Author: Bryan Caron McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montréal, Quebec Co-Author(s): Verena Schuster Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montréal, Quebec Rida Abou-Haider McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montréal, Quebec Natacha Beck McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montréal, Quebec Serge Boroday McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montréal, Quebec Samir Das McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montréal, Quebec Alexandre Hutton Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University|University of Southern California 1 2 1 1 1 1 2,3 2 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 2,5 1 2 6 1 2 1 2 3 4 5 6
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GESTÃO DO CONHECIMENTO E INTERDISCIPLINARIDADE: um estudo sob múltiplos olhares KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND INTERDISCIPLINARITY: a study from multiple perspectives DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11234727 1 INTRODUÇÃO A Ciência da Informação (CI) é um campo disciplinar que surge no Pós-Guerra com o objetivo de resolver o problema da explosão informacional. Portanto, a CI surge em meados dos anos 50 com o desafio de tratar o grande volume de informações e documentos. (Le Coadic, 2004). De acordo com Pinheiro e Loureiro (2004), somente na década de 60 são elaborados os primeiros conceitos de CI e nesse período também procura-se definir as conexões interdisciplinares e o seu campo de atuação profissional. Nesse contexto, o objetivo desse artigo é analisar no repositório de teses e dissertações da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG) a relação interdisciplinar e contribuições da Ciência da Informação e da Gestão do Conhecimento nos demais programas desta unidade de informação. 2 FUNDAMENTAÇÃO TEÓRICA Segundo Wilson (1981) a ciência da informação como profissão surgiu da biblioteconomia, mas que ela é multidisciplinar e que seu enfoque deve ser o social buscando atender de maneira mais útil e com mais benefícios o usuário da informação em seus diversos
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Page | 1 Crop monitoring for the Colombian Orinoquia region in the framework of the BIOCARBONO project. A fundamental tool for sustainable low-carbon agricultural production. Javier Espejo*1, Maycol Zaraza†1, Karen Huertas‡1, Cristhian Forero§1, Osman Roa**1, Natalia Niño††1, Fabian Gerena‡‡1. 1 Proyecto BIOCARBONO Orinoquia. Colombia. GISRUK 2023 Summary A crop monitoring system at the regional or national level is a fundamental tool for agricultural management by facilitating decision-making processes from the government to the producer level. The implementation of the Biocarbon project in the Orinoquia region of Colombia aims to reduce GHG emissions from the AFOLU sector by incorporating sustainability in land use and deforestation control. To enable the analysis, estimation and reporting processes a Crop Monitoring System is being developed for the AFOLU sector that implements innovative and robust digital processing techniques of optical and radar satellite images in the cloud (Cloud Computing) to ensure the generation of timely and accurate data on the location, extension and change (Land Use, Land-Use Change LULUC) of land cover in the period 2020-2022 associated with 6 productive chains: Rice, Forest Plantations, Oil Palm, Cocoa, Cashew and Agricultural Pastures. KEYWORDS: Crop monitoring system, Cloud Computing, Satellite Imagery, GHG emissions, Land Use, Land-Use Change. 1. Biocarbono Orinoquia. Since 2018 in the Colombian Orinoquia region, covering an area of more than 266,000 km2 (≈23,000 km2 more than the area of the United Kingdom) the Biocarbono Orinoquia project, sustainable low carbon landscapes has been implemented as a science, technology, research and innovation initiative, which seeks to identify and develop alternatives that contribute with the improvement of conditions for sustainable agricultural planning and production, that aims to decrease GHG emissions from the AFOLU sector. This initiative is implemented in the departments of Arauca (23,818 km2), Casanare (44,640 km2), Meta (97,635 km2) and Vichada (100,242 km2) and covers a total of 23% of Colombia's territory. The project is coordinated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, co-executed with the Ministry of the Environment and Sustainable Development - Minambiente and the Institute of Hydrology, Meteorology and Environmental Studies - IDEAM; it is advised by the National Planning Department - DNP and supported by the Presidential Agency for International Cooperation - APC and the Regional Climate Change Node of the Orinoquia - NORECCO. The project is financed through a US$20 million grant agreement signed between the Government of Colombia and the World Bank. Biocarbono Orinoquia is implemented through three components: 1) Integrated land use planning and * oscar.espejo@biocarbono.org † maycol.zaraza@biocarbono.org ‡ karen.huertas@biocarbono.org § cristhian.forero@biocarbono.org ** osman.roa@biocarbono.org †† natalia.nino@minagricultura.gov.co ‡‡ fabian.gerena@minagricultura.gov.co
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506 Anais do V Simpósio Internacional de Inovação em Mídias Interativas Goiânia: Media Lab / UFG, 2018 Análise do grafismo infantil através de um app como instrumento pedagógico no processo de ensino aprendizagem Hailton David Lemos1 Lília Liciele Vieira Moreira2 Renato Ferreira de Morais3 Introdução Vivemos em tempos de mudanças na organização social, nas relações interpessoais e nas formas de gerenciar socialmente o conhecimento. A educação neste cenário passa a ser dinâmica, e os recursos educacionais e tecnológicos passam a ser empre- gada no processo ensino/aprendizagem, e a análise do desenho infantil é um destes recursos, que neste trabalho tem como objetivo o reconhecimento de padrões em: desenhos e cores que poderá ser um instrumento que virá corroborar para direcionar ações nos processos pedagógicos que visem um melhor aproveitamento no proces- so cognitivo do aluno. O processo cognitivo acontece em várias regiões do cérebro do individuo. Um dos processos mais intrigantes que acontecem no do cérebro é o inconsciente, e é neste inconsciente que os desenhos se originam, no mesmo lugar em que se originam os sonhos. A folha de papel em branco é como um universo, e, ao escrever ou desenhar, é possível deixar marcas e se manifestar dentro deste universo; à medida que vai se envolvendo, o consciente tende a ir relaxando e começa então, a ser comandados pelo inconsciente, que pode revelar muito sobre a pessoa. Objetivo Apresentar a análise do Desenho Infantil através de um APP, que permite entrar no mundo da criança numa dimensão de comunicação na qual ainda não há palavras, como instrumento e/ou ferramenta de corroboração auxiliar ao profissional da Educa- ção na identificação de manifestações de sentimentos como os medos, as frustrações e todas as outras emoções próprias de uma criança. Fundamentação teórica Desde o nascer até enveredar para o universo adulto, um indivíduo passa por distintas fases. Dentre estas fases as principais características são relacionadas ao desenvolvi- 1 FANAP – Faculdade Nossa Senhora Aparecida. http://lattes.cnpq.br/6984620495051513 2 SEDUC - Prefeitura Municipal de Aparecida de Goiânia. 3 Aluno Graduação Análise e Desenvolvimento de Sistemas - FANAP.
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EASAA 2018 Programme Sunday, 1st July 2018 17:00 – 19:00 Registration and reception (Palazzo Corigliano) Monday, 2nd July 2018, Monumental Complex of S. Domenico Maggiore 08:30 – 09:45 Registration Grande Refettorio 09:45 – 10:30 Welcome Address by Elda Morlicchio (Rector, University of Naples “L’Orientale”); Adriano Rossi (President of ISMEO); Michele Bernardini (Dean of the Department of Asian, African and Mediterranean Studies, University of Naples “L’Orientale”); Alessandra Sardu (City Council representative); Anna Filigenzi (EASAA President, University of Naples "L'Orientale") 10:30 – 11:00 Prof. Bruno Genito (Archaeology and Art History of Iran, University of Naples “L’Orientale”): The “Orientale” University of Napoli and South Asian Archaeology: A Long Fruitful History 11:00 – 11.30 Tea/Coffee Break 11:30 – 12:45 Keynote Talk by Prof. Hans Bakker: No Texts without Archæology, no Archæology without Texts: An inquiry into the history of the Hūṇas in South Asia 12:45 – 13:00 Discussion 13:00 – 14:00 Lunch European Association for South Asian Archaeology and Art Naples, Italy 2018 Supported in part by ERC synergy grant 609823
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Credit: ESO/B. Tafreshi (twanight.org) Justyn Campbell-White ESO/WANDA Postdoc @justyncw Disks and Planets across ESO Facilities - 29/11/22 With: Carlo F. Manara (ESO) G. Herczeg (KIAA), C. Espaillat (U. Boston), N. Calvet (U. Michigan), K. France (U. Colorado) R. Claes, M.L. Aru (ESO), K. Mauco (UNAM/ESO) N. Arulanantham, W. Fischer (STScI) ,R. Garcia-Lopez (UCD), H. Boffin, M. Petr-Gotzens (ESO), T. Thanathibodee, C. Pittman (U. Boston), C. Robinson (Amherst College), J. Bouvier (IPAG), J.F. Gameiro (U. Porto), A. Frasca, J. Alcala, B. Nisini, S. Antoniucci, M. Gangi (INAF), E. Fiorellino (U. Rome) A. Sicilia-Aguilar (U. Dundee), L. Venuti (NASA), M. Fang (P.M.Obs) G. Zsidi, A. Kospal, P. Abraham (Konkoli) ODYSSEUS & PENELLOPE collaborations Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them. Revolutionizing our understanding of young stars and protoplanetary disks from the ground and space
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La elevada capacidad resolutoria de la AP debe implicar una disminución de los ingresos hospitalarios. Los ingresos por ACSC (Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions) indican problemas de salud que se podrían prevenir con alguna intervención del primer nivel asistencial. Una tasa elevada de ACSC expresaría una atención subóptima que se definiría como atención inadecuada en tipo, localización, intensidad u oportunidad para el problema de salud que se está tratando atendiendo al grado de eficiencia del sistema abordando cada problema de salud en su nivel más adecuado. El Observatorio de la Salud estudia los resultados y determinantes de salud en Asturias a nivel municipal. Se considera interesante trasladar el modelo a la unidad geográfica de referencia la ZBS. En este estudio se pretende conocer la distribución de los ACSC a nivel geográfico con la ZBS como unidad geográfica. Estudio transversal descriptivo a partir de los datos de los datos de CMBD entre 2006-2010. Se analizan aquellos ACSC registrados en CMBD en Asturias en ese período de tiempo por ZBS con el cálculo de su tasa de incidencia según su población asignada con su patrón geográfico. Se analizan los ACSC de los períodos 2006- 07 y 2009-10 para todas las ZBS y Zonas Especiales de Salud analizando las diferencias geográficas así como los cambios en ACSC producidos entre ambos períodos. Los cambios se analizan mediante análisis de comparación de medias con la prueba T para muestras independientes para un nivel de significación de 5% unilateral con el programa SPSS V15 en función del tipo de gestión. Los mapas se realizan con modelización con GVsig 1.1. Se muestran mapas de evolución y distribución ANTECEDENTES Y OBJETIVO Los resultados muestran que existen grandes diferencias en tasas de ACSC entre las diferentes ZBS y ZES en Asturias. Las diferencias entre algunas de ellas son claramente significativas. Asimismo, se ha observado una caída más acusada de las tasas de ACSC en EAP en los últimos años, mayor en ZBS con gestión clínica. Se presentan los datos en formato tabla y múltiples mapas para todas las ZBS y ZES en distintos períodos de tiempo y su comparación ACSC Y ZONAS BASICAS DE SALUD EN ASTURIAS (1) Mario Margolles Martins (1), Ignacio Donate Suarez (1), Pedro Margolles García (2) (1) Consejería de Sanidad. Gobierno del Principado de Asturias (2) Facultad Psicología, UNED MÉTODO RESULTADOS N. 140 Desigualdades de salud Contacto: mariomargolles@gmail.com Declaración de conflicto de intereses: No existe ningún conflicto de intereses Listado de códigos de diagnóstico de ACSC, (CIE9‐MC): Gac Sanit 2001; 15 (2): 128‐141 Patología infecciosa prevenible por inmunización u otras: 032; 037, 045, 320.0, 390, 391 Sífilis congénita: 090 Tuberculosis: 012‐018 Diabetes: 250.1, 250.2, 250.3, 251.0, 785.4 + 250.7 Trastornos del metabolismo hidroelectrolítico: 276.5, 276.8 Infecciones ORL/infecciones agudas vías respiratorias altas: 475, Enfermedad cardiovascular hipertensiva: 401.0, 403.0, 404.0, 405.0, 410‐414, 430, 431, 436, 437.2 Insuficiencia cardíaca: 428, 402.01, 402.11, 402.91, 518.4 Neumonía: 482.2, 482.3, 483, 485, 486 Úlcera sangrante o perforada: 531.0, 531.2, 531.4, 531.6, 532.0, 532.2, 532.4, 532.6, 533.0, 533.2, 533.4, 533.6 Apendicitis perforada: 540.0, 540.1, Infecciones del tracto urinario: 590.1, Enfermedad inflamatoria pélvica: 614 (Rev Clín Esp 2001; 201:501‐507) Listado de códigos de diagnóstico de ACSC, (cie9‐mc) Patología infecciosa prevenible por inmunización u otras: 032; 033, 037, 045, 055, 056, 072, 320.0, 390, 391 Sífilis congénita: 090 Tuberculosis: 011, 012‐018 Diabetes: 250.0, 250.1, 250.2, 250.3, 250.7, 250.8, 250.9, 251.0, 251.2, 785.4 + 250.7 Deficiencias nutricionales: 260, 261, 262, 268.0, 268.1 Trastornos del metabolismo hidroelectrolítico: 276.5, 276.8 Anemia ferropénica: 280 Convulsiones: 345, 780.3 Infecciones ORL/infecciones agudas vías respiratorias altas: 382, 461, 462, 463, 465, 472.1, 475 Enfermedad cardiovascular hipertensiva: 401.0
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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
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By Technical University of Denmark Decarbonisation RES4CITY CASE STUDY #7 of the heating sector in Lyngby
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The 19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun Edited by G. A. Feiden THE UBVRI AND INFRARED COLOUR INDICES OF THE SUN AND SUN-LIKE STARS Mehmet TANRIVER1, Ferhat Fikri ÖZEREN1 1 Erciyes University, Astronomy and Space Sciences Department, 38039, Kayseri, Turkey Abstract The Sun is not a point source, the photometric observational techniques that are utilised for observing other stars cannot be utilised for the Sun, meaning that it is difficult to derive its colours accurately for astronomical work from direct measurements in different passbands. The solar twins are the best choices because they are the stars that are ideally the same as the Sun in all parameters, and also, their colours are highly similar to those of the Sun. From the 60 articles on the Sun and Sun-like stars in the literature from 1964 until today, the solar colour indices in the optic and infrared regions have been estimated. 1 INTRODUCTION The Sun is an average-low-mass star in the main sequence of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. Moreover, the Sun is not a point source, the photometric observational techniques that are utilised for observing other stars cannot be utilised for the Sun. Therefore, the colours and colour indices of the sun-like stars are used in order to determine the sun’s colour indices. These stars generally become the solar analog stars. The highlighted results of the important researches in the literature were collected 8240 records with the colour indices data of the Sun, solar analog, and solar twin stars. 2 THE ESTIMATION of THE SOLAR COLOUR INDICES The aim is to determine the sun’s colour indices and to cre- ate the ASAS catalogue (Pojmanski, 1997) (Paczyński et al., 2006) of the sun-like stars. It is taking the average of the colours and colour indices of the solar twin stars having the same spectral type with the sun. So, it is that the sun’s colour indices were determined indirectly. In this study, we have collected the colour indices of solar analog and solar twin stars in the literature. By averaging of these, we have in- directly estimated the colour indices of the sun ( Tanrıver (2012), Tanrıver (2014a), Tanrıver (2014b) ). For this, it is used the data given in the literature records (8240) Then, we have listed sun-like stars in the ASAS catalogue. These values are given in Table1 as follows. One of the Sun like system is HT Vir multiple system (Tanrıver & Özeren, 2016) . The range of colours valid for the solar analog and solar twin stars can also be seen in Figures 1 and 2. 3 THE SOLAR ANALOG nad SOLAR TWIN STARS in THE ASAS CATALOGUE The Sun-like stars in the ASAS catalogue are determined by using the obtained ranges of colour for the solar analog and solar twin stars ( Tanrıver (2012), Tanrıver (2014a), Tan- rıver (2014b) ). The table of the Sun-like variable stars in the ASAS catalogue is given as follows a portion of the table with Table 1: The obtained average colour indices values of the Sun with standart deviation (±σ)( Tanrıver (2012), Tanrıver (2014a), Tanrıver (2014b) ). B-V 0.6457 ± 0.0421 V-J 1.1413 ± 0.1063 H-K 0.0572 ± 0.0351 U-B 0.1463 ± 0.0596 V-H 1.4613 ± 0.1183 J-K 0.3777 ± 0.0494 R-I 0.3403 ± 0.0356 V-K 1.5210 ± 0.1149 J-L 0.4187 ± 0.0558 U-V 0.7926 ± 0.1032 V-L 1.5167 ± 0.0959 J-M 0.3711 ± 0.0529 V-R 0.4674 ± 0.0639 V-M 1.4621 ± 0.0759 K-L 0.0403 ± 0.0517 V-I 0.7053 ± 0.0872 J-H 0.3196 ± 0.0432 K-M 0.0063 ± 0.0546 3764 records. 4 CONCLUSION and DISCUSSION There are many studies in the literature concerning solar twin stars, such as 18 Sco, HIP 78399 and HD 98618. There are solar twin candidates suggested in the literature to be highly similar to the Sun, too. The other stars demonstrating con- sistency with our results from among solar twin stars in the literature are given in Table5 as follows. It can be asserted that these stars in our Sun-like ASAS list are the best solar twin stars, which are photometrically similar to the Sun ac- cording to our research. Simultaneously, there
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“A SAÚDE É PARA TODOS” RESUMO SIMPLES ANAIS
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Poster: Don’t Trust, Verify: Empowering Last-Mile Security and Privacy in Web3 Weihong Wang imec-DistriNet, KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium weihong.wang@kuleuven.be Tom Van Cutsem imec-DistriNet, KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium tom.vancutsem@kuleuven.be Abstract—The bridging of Web2 and Web3 infrastructure is a crucial step towards a fully decentralized internet. However, participating in blockchain systems can be a significant barrier for most users due to factors such as the high cost of operation and the computational resources required. To interact with the blockchain, Web3 application builders rely on endpoint API services, which can cause centralization issues in terms of privacy, availability, and security. In response, the community has turned to light nodes as a potential solution for resource-constrained clients such as smartphones and browsers to facilitate involve- ment. In this paper, we provide an overview of recent studies in light nodes, along with an analysis of light client implementations in Ethereum and their improvements. We conclude with a call for further development of light node technology to enable broader and more diverse participation in decentralized systems. Index Terms—Web3, Blockchain networks, Light clients I. INTRODUCTION Web3, also known as the Decentralized Web, is a vision for the next generation of Web applications where users can have stronger ownership over their data and identity, supported by blockchain technology. However, transitioning to Web3 from the current web (Web2) poses several challenges [1]. Many low-capacity remote clients, such as mobile wallets, lack the ability to run a full blockchain node due to the computational and storage requirements involved in downloading and verify- ing all transactions recorded by the chain on the first-time bootstrapping process. As a result, users have increasingly relied on trusted intermediaries, such as Infura and Alchemy. These companies offer JSON-RPC services, which is a remote procedure call (RPC) protocol that utilizes JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) to serialize data and send requests to a server. By using these services, users can access blockchain networks with reduced friction. However, the reliance on intermediaries creates multiple challenges that can negatively impact the privacy, availabil- ity, and security goals of Web3 [2]. Specifically, interme- diaries have unrestricted access to transaction requests and sensitive data from end-users, including IP addresses, which can jeopardize user privacy. Moreover, intermediaries have the ability to control the content displayed on the blockchain [1], which can affect the availability of data and undermine its reliability. Finally, there is no guarantee that the data returned by intermediaries is accurate or tamper-proof, which can compromise the security of transactions and user assets. While using trusted intermediaries can provide users with a better user experience, it is essential to find solutions that provide an optimal balance between minimizing user hardware requirements and maintaining privacy and security. In this paper, we focus on the current infrastructure that bridges Web2 and Web3 from the perspective of decentralized applications (DApps) builders. As builders are responsible for providing end-users with access to blockchain content and interactions, it’s crucial that we understand the privacy, availability and security implications of current approaches. Our long-term goal is to make access to Web3 seamless for Web clients while minimizing the trust assumptions. II. PROBLEM STATEMENT In this section, we will discuss the current infrastructure for bridging Web2 and Web3 and discuss in detail how it can cause privacy concerns, availability challenges, and security threats. A. Current Infrastructure for Bridging Web2 and Web3 Payment-based. Wallets play a critical role in Web3 by providing a secure way to manage blockchain assets and facilitating interactions with decentralized ap
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TRAYECTORIA ACADÉMICA TRAYECTORIA ACADÉMICA SEMILLERO DE INVESTIGACION TROPUS BOLETÍN INFORMATIVO. 2022 - 2.
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© Agnès Eyhéramendy !""#$!"$#$%&'()&%
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Detection of application-relevant user groups in anonymised in-app location data Hamish Gibbs*1, Rosalind M. Eggo2, James Cheshire1 1Department of Geography, University College London, London, United Kingdom. 2Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom. Correspondence: Hamish.Gibbs.21@ucl.ac.uk GISRUK 2023 Summary Location data collected by mobile applications is typically aggregated from a heterogeneous sample of mobile devices with varying demographic and behavioral characteristics. In this paper, we present a method for detecting homogenous groups of mobile devices relevant to specific scientific domains. We apply this method to an anonymized in-app location dataset of ~2,000,000 mobile devices in the United Kingdom, to detect homogeneous groups of devices relevant to applications including transport planning and infectious disease modeling. Keywords: Human mobility, Bias, In-app data
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International Bioscience Conference and the 8th International PSU – UNS Bioscience Conference IBCS2021 is organized jointly by: University Prince of Songkla, Thailand University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Sciences, Serbia Towards the SDG Challenges BOOK OF ABSTRACTS 25-26 November 2021, Novi Sad, Serbia ONLINE
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Creating Astronomy Festivals at Outdoor Concerts and Tourist Sites (US National Mall with monuments and museums) – 100,000 people participated Donald Lubowich (donald.lubowich@hofstra.edu), Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York I describe to how to create large astronomy festivals: Music and Astronomy Under the Stars (MAUS - NASA funded, 70,000 people; 60% families many with young children; 60% female; 20% seniors at mostly-free outdoor concerts (some organized by underserved communities) and The Astronomy Festival on the National Mall (AFNM, co-sponsored by the White House in 2010). These feature: solar, optical telescope observations; live-image projection; posters/banners/videos; demos, hands-on activities; citizen science projects; plus info on discoveries, careers, and science museums. AFNM is the largest annual astronomy outreach event in the US (30,000 people, 2-6 K/yr) with 120 educators from 30 scientific institutions, universities, and astronomy clubs (AAAS, AAS, AGU, APS, NASA, NASM, NOAA, NOAO, NRAO, NSF, The Planetary Society, STScI, Sky and Tel, USNO). MAUS Videos: https://shorturl.at/nsxK0 https://shorturl.at/hzEMQ AFNM Videos: https://youtu.be/7Zb5KG9c8ZE https://shorturl.at/tuV49 ¯ Music and Astronomy Under the Stars ¯ Bringing astronomy directly to the public Reached 70,000 people at outdoor concerts, festivals, fairs 100 person hours per event, set-up at 6:30, start at 7 pm, concert starts at 8 pm, star gazing afterwards, 10 -11 pm More activities/demos during daylight than at nighttime Guaranteed large attendance • Astronomy outreach program at parks before, during, and after outdoor concerts and festivals and at intermission • Audience at 85% free concerts in the parks have made a commitment to be outside at night for several hours • • From 800 - 35,000 people attend a concert or festival • Up to 5000 people/event get involved with astronomy • Audience does not regularly visit science museums, planetariums, or star parties (based on our survey • Different types of music selected to increase diversity: classical, folk, rock, pop, opera, county-western, and Latin music. • Performers included: Yo-Yo-Ma, Chicago and Boston Symphony Orchestras, Ravi Coltrane, Esperanza Spalding, Phish, Blood Sweat & Tears, Deep Purple, Patti Smith, Tony Orlando, Debbie Boone, James Taylor, and Wilco. • 60% of the audience is female; 20% are seniors. • Families with young children come to these events; First time many children and their parents looked through a telescope! Logistics: work with parks/festivals to Identify MAUS events; select location to maximize participants; dates selected after performers and schedules arranged; select weekend nights and dates with interesting astronomical events; work with local astronomy clubs; promote local science museums and planetariums; work with organizations representing underserved groups, plan for success & problems; cloudy weather programs; publicity and social media; use signs and flags to identify location within the parks; test equipment, easy set-up; add www links and QR codes to posters/hand outs. Promotes: follow-up STEM activities; membership in astronomy clubs; citizen science projects.
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Produto (E-book neonatal) Discentes: Natália mello, Thais Tavares e Yasmin Vasconcellos. GERÊNCIA DE ENFERMAGEM II Docentes: Erica Brandao de Moraes e Geilsa Soraia Cavalcanti Valente.
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Mercury: a live coding environment focussed on quick expression for composing, performing and communicating Timo Hoogland Music Technology Faculty, HKU University of Arts Utrecht info@timohoogland.com ABSTRACT In this paper the livecoding environment Mercury is introduced. An interpreted language that is designed with the focus on quick and hands-on composing, performing and communicating of live-coded music and sound. Mercury provides the performer with a highly abstracted programming language for music and sound complemented with visuals. By allowing for a higher level of abstraction, the coder does not need to write large amounts of code and the comprehension by the audience is improved. Combining the sound with visual elements adds value to this understanding. The environment incorporates generative and transformational list functions to assist in algorithmic composition processes. Mercury has been used for performances at various livecoding events and proven itself as a live-performance tool. 1 Introduction Livecoding is the art of programming software, in many cases from scratch, as a performance for auditive and/or visual output. During these performances the code is projected for the audience to read along. In little time the performer has to write many lines of code in order for the music to be generated. All of the musical parameters are written in code and manipulated by the code while running in real time. During the performance code has to be written for many layers in the music, on micro level, for notes and timbre of instruments, and also on macro level, for chord progressions, tension in the music and rhythmic structures. Meanwhile the performer tries to “maintain enough variety to keep the audience engaged” (Collins 2011), with the risk that some might find the music not up to their standards (Burland and McLean 2016). Given all this, a livecoding performance is a demanding task with a high cognitive load, “leading performers to rethink the design of their language interfaces” (McLean and Wiggins 2011). In this paper the live-coding environment Mercury is introduced. An interpreted language that is designed with the focus on quick and hands-on coding for live performances. Mercury provides the performer with a highly abstracted programming language for music and sound combined with visuals. The language is designed with two end-users in mind (Blackwell and Collins 2005). First and foremost the livecoder, but secondly also the audience. Firstly, the reader will be introduced to the general syntax of the environment, to get familiar with the basic principles of the code for better understanding all the examples throughout the paper. Secondly all design choices for the language, functions, interface and sound-design will be described based on the filosophy to provide the performer with a high abstracted language and keep transparency towards the audience. Concludingly ideas for future work will be discussed. 2 General syntax Mercury is an interpreted language, with a code structure similar to languages like javascript and ruby. The language is written as highly abstracted and uses the Max/MSP programming language for its audio engine and openGL visual engine. Every line of code is interpreted as a new line and it therefore does not need to be ended with a semicolon. The code is evaluated from top to bottom, and variables must be declared before the instantiation of a new instrument, if that instrument needs to use the variable. All functionalities are sorted in three categories. To create a list of values, the code is started with the command ring. A single variable is also created with this command, and is basically a list with only a single element. To produce sound a new instrument can be created, such as a sampler or synthesizer, with the command new. If a parameter from an instrument needs to be changed, the set command can be used. The entire code needs to be run in order to hear it take effect. This is done
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A Study on the Design Thinking and Drawing of the Concept Development Li-Shu Lu - Ph. D. Candidate in Graduate School of Design, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Yunlin, Taiwan. Assistant professor/Department of Digital Media Design & Graduate School of Computational Design, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Yunlin, Taiwan, (886) -5-5342601, #6513, luls@yuntech.edu.tw Shing-Sheng Guan - Professor/Department of Visual Communication Design, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Yunlin, Taiwan, (886) -5-5342601#6000, ssguan@yuntech.edu.tw Wen-shan Chang - Lecturer/Department of Digital Media Design & Graduate School of Computational Design, Yunlin, Taiwan, (886) -5-5342601#6516, wenshan@yuntech.edu.tw Abstract This study was aim to examine the cognitive progress of graphic design involved in concept development. The results show that: (1) Cognitive progress can be observed from the design thinking and drawing patterns that emerge in designing works. The thinking activity was distinguished into general, experiential and evaluating thoughts, whereas drawing activity was categorized into graphic drawing and word description. (2) On the whole, more time was spent on general thought, less on experiential thought, and the least on evaluating thought. (3) There were three stages of concept development. General thought occurs more frequent in the initial stage while picture sketch takes place more frequent in the middle and final stages. In the other words, the process of the concept development was filled up via the concepts formed at first stage and translated into idea sketches at the next two stages. Conference theme: Teaching across cultures design Keywords: Design Concept, Design Cognition, Protocol analysis
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Using Acoustic Measurement as an Estimate of Vowel Intelligibility PSLLT 2021 June 18-19 Mahdi Duris Background • Intelligibility measurements of L2 speech involve 2 factors: the speaker and the listener • Listener’s judgments of intelligibility by way of ratings • In English segmentals: vowels are the nucleus (Fogerty & Humes, 2012) • Furthermore, vowel height (F1) carries 80% of the energy in a vowel (Ladefoged & Johnson, 2015) • Estimating vowel intelligibility using acoustic phonetic measurements has been successfully done by Koffi (2021) for L2 intelligibility (12,000 tokens across 7 different L2s) • Acoustic thresholds that consider the Critical Band Theory (CBT), Just Noticeable Differences (JND) and Relative Functional Load (RFL) to posit the Acoustic Masking and Intelligibility (AMI) theory • AMI theory states that “ segments that are acoustically close may mask each other with only minimal risk to intelligibility, unless their relative functional loads indicate otherwise.” (p. 55) • Phoneticians can measure vowel intelligibility instrumentally ≠listener ratings • L1 phonological background of L2 speakers is taken into account Current Gap • Focus on native listener ratings for intelligibility = lack of L2 speaker independent learning • Most technology assisted tools designed to improve intelligibility do not give direct feedback to speakers in consideration of their L1 phonological background • Feedback by an ideal-IPA for the segment, coded with ARPABET. No threshold considerations or pedagogical solutions • Koffi’s AMI theory enables phoneticians to assess vowel intelligibility while considering the speakers L1 inventory of vowels and not requiring the judgements of native listeners. To demonstrate the use of acoustic measurements as an estimate of vowel intelligibility, 32 advanced L1 Arabic speakers of English provided the data to respond to the following: 1. What are the L2 vowel characteristics of the participants? • This considers their L1 vowel inventory and provides a clear picture of potential problematic vowels 2. How similar or different are these vowels compared with General American English vowels? • Some vowels may be less problematic than others when considering intelligibility 3. Do the differences in F1 interfere with intelligibility? Introduction Participants • 32 Saudi EFL adult teachers (23 females, 9 males) • Mean age: 33 years old (ranging from 19 years to 53 years old) Stimuli • Modified read speech from the George Mason Speech Accent Archive: Please call Stella… Data Analysis • Each vowel analyzed was manually extracted from 3 different words using PRAAT • 7392 tokens (11 vowels x 3 repetitions x 32 participants x 7 correlates) in total were measured with only F1 and F2 used for this study (2,112 tokens) Table 1 Vowel sound names from the read speech. Thresholds • CBT: 60 Hz (F1) is a robust criterion for distinguishing between perceptually similar vowels (Labov et al., 2013). • JND: If the distance between 2 vowels for F1 is ≤60 Hz = masking is likely. Complete masking occurs when the acoustic distance is £ 20 Hz (Koffi, 2021:75) • RFL: The higher the RFL = the greater the likelihood of unintelligibility. • Internal masking: how a speaker distinguishes between the frequencies of their own vowels • External masking: how a speaker distinguishes between the frequencies of their vowel compared to the vowels of another speaker (speaker vs listener) Table 2 Intelligibility Assessment Matrix (Koffi, 2021:75) Methodology L2 Vowel Characteristics for female participants Figure 2 Vowel characteristics of female participants (internal vs external masking) Table 3 Acoustic Masking and Intelligibility assessment for female participants Summary: For female participants, only one pair of vowels are problematic when considering internal masking ([ɪ] vs. [e]). For external masking, two pairs of vowels are problematic ([i] vs. [ɪ] and [ɪ] vs. [e]) L2 Vowel Characteristics for male participants Figure 3 Vowel c
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Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Hablemos sobre el Triclosán Evelyn Yeset Aniceto Hernández* iD, Yareli Gutiérrez López iD, Miriam Yessenia Luna Méndez iD, Alexa Limón Bonilla iD, Juan Pablo Ulloa Fernández iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: 202117036@viep.com.mx 17 de mayo de 2024 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11212648 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Revisado por: Ma Dolores Castañeda-Antonio (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 El triclosán (TCS) es catalogado como un contaminante emergente, corresponde a un fenoxifenol triclorado [5-cloro-2-(2, 4-diclorofenoxi) fenol)]. Es utilizado como desinfectante ya que, posee un amplio espectro bactericida contra bacterias Gram+, Gram‐, hongos y levaduras. En
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This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the grant agreement number 101000499. © COPYRIGHT FORK-TO-FARM AGENT-BASED SIMULATION TOOL AUGMENTING BIODIVERSITY IN THE AGRI-FOOD VALUE CHAIN 1. We are BioValue 2. Our Pilot Cases - Lathyrus 3. Our Recipes - Red Lentil Soup 4. Interview with NIBIO 5. News 6. News from CROPDIVA 7. Progress Update NEWSLETTER Magazine 3rd ISSUE May 2023 Contents
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Luke Daniell Growing Plants From Hair Growing Plants (Namely, Garlic and Sunflowers) Using Human Hair
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3rd PRESS RELEASE Integrative Management Platform and Question & Answer Documentation The SECRETed project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Grant Agreement No. 101000794. This publication reflects only the author’s views and the European Union is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained therein. Sustainable Exploitation of bio-based Compounds Revealed and Engineered from naTural sources © copyright
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Unfolding the Unknown Astronomy Education in Romania
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GUDRUN ZIPPER · ANDREAS KNOTH · PHILIPP SPIEGEL TRANSFORMATIONS- LABOR HOCHSCHULE Baukasten für Multi-Stakeholder-Projekte von Hochschulen und regionalen Partnern
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2 0 2 1 Service Commun de Documentation Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France Rapport d'activité annuel
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Quantum boundary-value algorithms for linear dissipative waves in dielectric media and kinetic plasmas Ivan Novikau 1, 2 Ilya Y. Dodin 1, 3 Edward A. Startsev 1 1Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey 08543, USA 2Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550, USA 3Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA 11.02.2023 65th Annual meeting of the APS DPP, Denver, Colorado Prepared under the auspices of the U.S. DOE by LLNL under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344 LLNL-PRES-856296
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Benefits of funding or hosting a School of Research Data Science The in-person 2 week long school for early-career researchers corresponds to 3-5% of an MSc degree1 and builds competence in data analysis and security for participants from all disciplines and backgrounds from sciences to humanities. The curriculum can also be offered virtually over 5 or 10 weeks with access to video materials using a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). 1 We use the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) credit system to assess the amount of learning for both types of schools. As outlined here, 1 ECTS credit corresponds to 25-30 hours of work. Hence a school corresponds to 2-3 ECTS credits. A full academic year under the ECTS system corresponds to 60 credits and hence the school corresponds to 3-5% of an MSc degree. 2Helpers are often recruited from the local community at the host site or alumni to support schools. Helpers support learners one-on-one if they are stuck installing software, understanding a certain line of code, or any other parts of the learning process. Curriculum topics • Research Data Management (RDM) • Open and Responsible Research • Open authoring and publishing, scholarly identity and reputation, and research impact (Author Carpentry that includes persistent identifiers and licensing, citation, creating reproducible reports) • Information Security • Data Visualisation • Machine Learning • Artificial Neural Networks • Introduction to the Unix shell and Git • Computational Infrastructures Benefits For funders: • The unique curriculum introduces early career researchers to best practices that allow them to comply with funding policies. • By supporting the schools, a funding organisation contributes to capacity building in Research Data Science. For attendees: • Collaborative learning experience. • Learning from internationally renowned instructors. • The materials are suitable for any early-career researcher who is working with data. • Getting to practise skills in hands-on sessions. • The broad range of materials covers not only technical skills such as coding and data analysis but also topics such as RDM that increasingly funders require. • Openly licensed material allows for re-use to further scale capacity building by hosting organisations and attendees. For hosts: • Useful addition to your existing MSc course offer to gain skilled students. • Internationally renowned instructors. • Opportunity for local staff and students to gain further experience as helpers2. • The hosting organisation expands its local and international Research Data Science network. • The hosting organisation can include this activity in any reports that catalogue diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. • Openly licensed material allows for re-use to further scale capacity building by hosting organisations and attendees. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 101017536. The funding was awarded through the RDA (https://www.rd-alliance.org/) Open Call mechanism (https://eoscfuture-grants.eu/provider/research-data-alliance) based on evaluations of external, independent experts.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. https://www.datascienceschools.org/ @DataSciSchools Contemporary research – particularly when addressing the most significant, transdisciplinary research challenges – cannot effectively be done without a range of skills relating to data. The range of skills is varied - it includes the use of a range of data platforms and infrastructures, large scale analysis, statistics, visualisation and modelling techniques, coding skills and data annotation as well as research data management and curation, responsible conduct of research and open and reproducible research. We define ‘Research Data Science’ as the ensemble of these skills. Research Data Science skills are relevant to all disciplin
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Multiprespective neutrino studies Sara Rodríguez Cabo Universidad de Oviedo
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IMPORTANT DEADLINES Submission of Full Paper: November 30th, 2020. Review Process Ends: until March 31st, 2021. Special Issue publication (expected): until May, 2021. GUEST EDITORS João Vinícius de França Carvalho – University of São Paulo, FEA, Brazil (jvfcarvalho@usp.br) Eduardo Flores – University of São Paulo, FEA, Brazil (eduardoflores@usp.br) Emiliano A. Valdez – University of Connecticut, USA (emiliano.valdez@uconn.edu) Revista de Administração Contemporânea Journal of Contemporary Administration e-ISSN: 1982-7849 Revista de Administração Contemporânea - RAC | Call for Papers: Insurance Industry | doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3900264 | e-ISSN 1982-7849 | rac.anpad.org.br CALL FOR PAPERS SPECIAL ISSUE THEME Actuarial science has risk as its primary object of study. There are risks from any source or nature. A person faces the risk of becoming ill or getting injured, limiting his/her capacity to generate income or losing his/her properties and assets. A person faces the risk of premature death, leaving behind a grieving family who may be financially dependent. Companies, in turn, deal with the possibility of losing their operational capacity because of unforeseen events. There is the additional possibility of damages caused to third parties not directly linked to the action. Insurance contracts are financial instruments for asset protection against risks with possibly low probability of occurrence but bring severe losses, leaving those affect with damages that may lead to financial ruin. The insurance industry and risk managers interact with different fields of expertise: Finance, Economics, Accounting, Probability, Statistics, Computer Science among others. In Brazil, the insurance industry has been showing increasing economic importance, since there is a growing demand for protection. Between 2000 and 2018, the Brazilian insurance market experienced a real increase of 69% in premiums earned, which represents an average growth of around 3% per year, going from 1.5% to almost 4% of the GDP. Insurance Industry
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Open-source QSAR-ready chemical structure standardization workflow K Mansouri1, C Grulke2, R Judson2, A Richard2, A Williams2, and N Kleinstreuer1 1NIH/NIEHS/DNTP/NICEATM, RTP, NC, USA; 2EPA/CCTE, RTP, NC, USA OBJECTIVES • Provide a free and open-source tool to process chemical structures associated with experimental data for building robust QSAR models, especially from public domain sources • Define a consistent structure standardization set of rules to apply prior to making predictions on existing QSAR models • Improve the consistency and accuracy of QSAR models and facilitate their applicability domain assessment APPROACH • Use only free and open-source tools: KNIME environment • Provide a flexible workflow generating consistent QSAR- ready structures from different file formats • Involve experts in the field to reach consensus about certain arbitrary decisions and choices for molecular rendering • Share the workflow online in different formats to accommodate different uses. MAIN RESULTS • The initial workflow was designed and built in KNIME desktop version • The workflow was then modified to provide different input- output file formats and variables for command line use • The modified version was implemented in OPERA suite of QSAR models and deployed to NIEHS KNIME server and dockerized IMPACT • The resulting QSAR-ready standardization workflow was used in three international collaborative modeling projects • The command line version was implemented in OPERA and used to provide all OPERA predictions that are available on the EPA Comptox Chemicals dashboard and NTP ICE • The standardized structures are also being used for other purposes such as similarity search, metabolite predictions, and mass-spectrometry analysis. Abstract 229 This work does not necessarily represent the views or policy of the US EPA. Any mention of tradenames does not constitute endorsement
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ILC Higgs Physics Potential Shin-ichi Kawada (IPNS, KEK, Japan) skawada@post.kek.jp The International Linear Collider (ILC) is one of the proposed Higgs factories. In this contribution, we will discuss the potential of Higgs physics studies at the ILC, mainly based on Ref [1]. The evaluation of Higgs measurements was performed with full detector simulation of the International Large Detector (ILD) concept and/or Silicon Detector (SiD) concept [2]. The starting center-of-mass energy (√s) is 250 GeV, which is suitable for the precision Higgs measurements using Higgs-strahlung process (e+e−→Zh). The √s can upgrade up to 1 TeV enabling access to rare Higgs decays, Higgs self-coupling, as well as the BSM signatures in the Higgs sector. The beam polarization, 80% for electrons and 30% for positrons, helps us to improve the precision measurements. The key measurement of the Higgs boson is the measurement of the absolute size of an inclusive cross-section σZh using the recoil mass technique. Figure 1 left shows the Feynman diagram of e+e−→Zh with the decay of Z →µ+µ−. Since the initial state of e+e−collision is well-known, the mass of the Higgs boson can be determined only by measuring muon momenta, without looking at any Higgs decay products. Figure 1 right shows the spectrum of the recoil mass taken from Ref. [3]. This recoil technique is also applicable for Z →e+e−and Z →qq decay channel and has been analyzed in Refs. [3, 4]. Assuming the twenty years running scenario of the ILC with beam polarization sharing [5, 6, 7], the mass of the Higgs boson Mh can be measured with a precision of 14 MeV, σZh can be determined with 0.7% precision, and the hZZ coupling ghZZ can be measured with 0.4% relative statistical uncertainty. Figure 1: Left: Feynman diagram of e+e−→Zh with Z →µ+µ−. Right: Recoil mass spectrum of events in the signal region 110-155 GeV at √s = 250 GeV. Taken from Ref. [3]. To extract Higgs boson couplings, we use dimension-6 SM Effective Field Theory (EFT) formalism. We use Higgs observables, triple gauge coupling observables, and electroweak precision observables as the inputs to the global fit under the EFT framework. We additionally use the ratio of branching ratio (h →γγ, ZZ∗, Zγ, and µ+µ−) from the HL-LHC prospects as the inputs. Details of the precisions of observables and EFT framework can be found in Refs. [1, 8, 9]. Here, we only present the important remarks and results. The Lagrangian used in this EFT framework is Lorentz invariant, gauge invariant, and CP conserving. Though this Lagrangian has 23 free parameters, it is possible to determine all these parameters simultaneously. The Higgs couplings can be extracted in a highly model-independent way in the sense that all models of new physics are describable either by the addition of Presented at the 30th International Symposium on Lepton Photon Interactions at High Energies, hosted by the University of Manchester, 10-14 January 2022. 1
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Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 Isotopic and physical-chemical monitoring of glacial drainages and sea water in the Ny-Ålesund area, Svalbard Marco Doveri1, Matteo Lelli1, Ilaria Baneschi1, Antonello Provenzale1. 1 Institute of Geosciences and Earth Resource (IGG-CNR)- Via Moruzzi 1, Pisa; Abstract The monitoring of glacial meltwaters, which are transferred to the ocean, can represent a valid tool to understand the climate conditions and their change and effects. In this framework, ISMOGLAC project is aimed at investigating the dynamic processes of the glacial melting and evaluating the consequent transfers of fresh water towards the Arctic Ocean. The activities that are carried out to accomplish these goals consist of an isotopic and physical-chemical monitoring of inland glacier drainages and ocean water into Kongsfjorden. The project activities started in June 2015 and will be performed for 5 years, thus providing to achieve information both on the seasonal and medium periods evolution of glacial melting. Introduction Some studies (e.g.: Bingham et al., 2005; Bartholomew et al., 2011; Chandler et al., 2013), carried out on meltwater in Arctic regions using hydrological observations and tracer tests, suggest that the hydrological system of the glacial bodies can evolve significantly as the melt season advances. This may increase the velocity of ice masses, allowing them to respond much more rapidly to climatic warming. The penetration of supraglacial meltwater within the glacier bodies seems to play a key role in the evolution of subglacial drainage systems, nevertheless in the outflow volumes other components such as water from basal melting and water stored during the winter in “subglacial reservoirs” are involved (Bingham et al., 2005; Bartholomew et al., 2011). Studying the mass balance, the Norsk-Polar Institutt outlines that the glaciers near Ny-Ålesund mainly have lost mass over the last 40 years (http://mosj.npolar.no/en/climate/land/). The superficial drainage system of these glaciers consists of numerous meltwater channels, short-lived lakes and few open moulins and crevasses, all leading the water into the englacial and/or subglacial system (Hagen et al., 2003). The freshwater that generates throughout such drainage systems is then transferred to the fjord by surface runoff (glaciers ending on land) or directly (calving glaciers). In the Arctic region the isotopic parameters have been successfully tested as a powerful tool to trace the glacial meltwater dynamics and to distinguish water sources in mixing processes (e.g. Ostlund & Hut, 1984; Azetsu-Scott & Tan, 1997; Bauch et al., 2005). At the Svalbard Islands, few data were published on meltwater and their relationship with ocean water. A first salinity-δ18O mixing line within Kongsfjorden was proposed by MacLachlan et al. (2007). In this framework, the ISMOGLAC project aims at producing knowledges on the dynamic processes of the glacial melting in the Ny-Ålesund area (Fig. 1) and the transfers of fresh water towards the Arctic Ocean, by means of an isotopic and physical-chemical monitoring of inland glacier drainages and ocean water into the Kongsfjorden. Methods and preliminary results The inland field-work regards glacial streams that originate in supraglacial, englacial and subglacial zones of different glaciers neighbouring the Kongsfjorden. The distribution of the sampling points on the glacier systems and the fjord is showed in Fig. 1. The collection of various aliquots of water and in-situ measurements of the physical-chemical parameters (temperature, electrical conductivity, pH, alkalinity, flow rate), trough portable devices, are performed starting from the higher sector of the glaciers, where the first meltwater is encountered, continuing towards the glaciers terminus, both laterally and centrally, and downstream, on the proglacial rivers, up to the sea.
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CONHECIMENTO DOS PAIS NO MANEJO DA DIABETES MELLITUS TIPO 1 EM CRIANÇAS Anicheriene Gomes de Oliveira¹ Camila Alessandra da Silva Marcelo¹ Matheus Henrique Alves de Moura¹ Camila Mendonça de Moraes² Namie Okino Sawada¹ Patrícia Scotini Freitas¹ 1. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Enfermagem da Universidade Federal de Alfenas. 2. Escola de Enfermagem da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. 1. INTRODUÇÃO O Diabetes mellitus (DM) é uma doença caracterizada pela deficiência total ou parcial do hormônio insulina. É resultante da adaptação metabólica ou alteração fisiológica em quase todas as áreas do organismo. Sendo o Diabetes mellitus tipo 1 (DM1) o mais comum dentre as doenças crônicas prevalentes na infância e adolescência. Desse modo, é considerado um grave problema de saúde pública mundial devido a sua incidência e agravos decorrentes de sua condição crônica, suas consequências na infância e adolescência, estão relacionadas ao diagnóstico tardio (GOMES et al., 2019; IDF, 2018). O surgimento de alguns sintomas e alterações comportamentais constituiu o principal sinal de alerta e motivo para a busca por assistência. Do início dos primeiros sintomas até a aceitação do diagnóstico há um processo em curso, pois o diagnóstico de DM1 no filho representa uma experiência desafiadora e que gera angústia e sofrimento, sobretudo para aqueles que assumem a responsabilidade pelo cuidado e
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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: Gay, M., Falvo, I., & Lepori, B. (2022). Digital Transformation in Higher Education Institutions: A Systematic Literature Review. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti2287). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6975089 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/
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UNPUBLISHED Incorporation of Ge into the surface layer of CZTSSe monograins I. Mengü, M. Kauk-Kuusik, , V. Mikli, K. Muska, R. Kaupmees, J. Krustok, M. Grossberg Department of Materials and Environmental Technology, Tallinn University of Technology, Ehitajate tee 5, 19086 Tallinn, Estonia Introduction (Kesterite Cu2ZnSn(S,Se)4 absorber) Aim of the study Monograin powder technology Possible benefits of Ge incorporation  Molten salt synthesis process was used for producing CZTSSe micro-crystalline powders so-called monograin powders. These powders are formed in the presence of the liquid phase of KI salt at elevated temperatures. The unisize grains could be used as absorber layer in monograin layer solar cell applications [4].  Device efficiency improvement for very small quantities of Ge below 0.5 at% [3]  Decreasing the interface recombination [5]  Reducing the risk of Sn loss, secondary phases and Sn- related deep defects formation [6]  Increase in the minority carrier lifetime [2]  Critical raw-material-free and environmentally friendly [1]  Suitable band gap for solar energy conversion (in between 1 to 1.5 eV depending on the Se/S ratio) [1]  High absorption coefficient (~104 cm-1) [2] [1] M. Grossberg et al. J. Phys.: Energy 1 (2019) 044002 [2] Y. E. Romanyuk et al 2019 J. Phys. Energy 1 044004 [3] S. Giraldo et al. Prog. Photovoltaics, 2016, 24(10), 1359–1367 [4] E. Mellikov et al. 2015 Wiley, p. 289 [5] E. Avancini t al. Prog. Photovoltaics, 2017, 25(3), 233–241 [6] G. Larramona et al. Adv. Energy Mater., 2015, 5(24), 1501404 Schematic representation of some sections of the Periodic Table, highlighting the most interesting candidates for doping and alloying in kesterite. Figure adapted from [3] 1 12th European Kesterite+ Workshop 2022 Challenges  High recombination rate at the absorber-buffer interface [2]  Sn volatility, that changes surface composition during last stages of the annealing process or during cool-down process after the synthesis [3]  Ge doping of the CZTSSe absorber surface layer  Developing a strategy to introduce bandgap grading to CZTSSe absorber crystals.
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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: Dittmann, P. (2022). Structural properties and epistemic effects of scientific careers in transition to tenured professorships. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22124). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6975389 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/
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Lexico-grammatical features and phraseological patterns in research project websites When drafting the pages of a research project website writers often use certain strategies to make the texts more effective in promoting and disseminating their work as well as in connecting with the audience. Based on our Deliverable about Genre evolution in research project websites, here we include an overview of the discursive and linguistic characteristics salient in the three main genres proposed: 1) research mission statement; 2) research activity description; 3) research partners’ profile. Per each genre, we provide a set of lexico-grammatical and phraseological features and include examples extracted from the EUROPROwebs corpus Positive evaluative markers Additive markers The mission statement of a project is usually presented in one of the webpages of the project website. This webpage receives different names, e.g. Summary, Overview, About, Home, Mission. The main function of this section of the website is to state the purpose and aims of the project, in other words, why the project exists. (1) (The project) aims to … and to promote…. (2) (The project) has been constructed with the ambition of …. Its vocation is to …, and to … When stating these aims, writers may also want to explain the means or procedure used to achieve those aims (Example 3) or the benefits which those aims may bring about (Example 4). (3) (Project) aims to achieve both … through a … and … , as well as significant … (4) The (Project) mission is to provide comprehensive … and … in order to increase … and … RESEARCH MISSION STATEMENT
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Conforto, qualidade de vida Conforte-se Imagine um aplicativo que redefine o suporte em cuidados paliativos, oferecendo uma experiência verdadeiramente inovadora. Apresentamos o “Conforte-se”, desenvolvido por alunos da disciplina de Atenção à Saúde do Idoso (ASAI), que combina inovação e empatia para melhorar a qualidade de vida dos pacientes. Com funcionalidades que incluem perfil personalizado, diário dos sentimentos, escala de dor, agenda do cuidado e uma seleção de playlists de vídeos e músicas de diversos temas, o “Conforte-se” é mais do que um aplicativo—é um aliado essencial. Explore também o robô Cora, uma inteligência artificial projetada para interagir e apoiar. Além disso, o app conta com uma seção dedicada a feedback, reclamações e resolução de problemas técnicos. Prepare-se para conhecer uma nova forma de cuidado. Vamos explorar? App Conforte-se Todas as imagens são meramente ilustrativas*
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Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Dimetilsulfóxido reductasa (DMSOR) Miriam Yessenia Luna-Méndez* iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: miriam.luname@alumno.buap.mx 11 de Febrero de 2023 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7633071 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: María del Rocío Bustillos Cristales (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Las enzimas son moléculas orgánicas importantes que ayudan a que sucedan determinadas reacciones químicas de forma más rápida en los seres vivos, siendo catalizadores en las reacciones de las células y el organismo. La DMSOR es parte de una familia de enzimas que contiene un ión de Molibdeno en su sitio activo que se encarga de reducir el dimetilsulfóxido (DMSO) a dimetilsulfuro (DMS), el DMSO es el aceptor de electrones
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1 تكو :ةلوفطلا لحارم يف ةيصخشلا ني رنوسكيرإ ةيرظن تايساسأ يف ةقيمع ةيؤ مق ةلسلس ن مض ةروشنم ريغ ةلا تالاقم ع نإ كيرإر ييف نوسك الا ومنلن ف يسوايعامتجال لةيصخشل ادادع د. يئارماسلا تهزن مساب ت يعامتجالا ومنلا روطتو ةيصخشلا نيوكت مهف يف ةلاّعفلا رطألا دحأ ةلوفطلا لحارم لوح نوسكيرإ ةيرظن ربتع ل ةلحرم :ةركبملا ةلوفطلا نم أدبت ةيلاتتم لحارم ىلإ موهفملا دنتسي .دارفألال ةلحرم :ةرخأتملا ةلوفطلا ىتح رمتستو ةعاضر ا.ةلحرم لك يف لافطألا اههجاوي يتلا تايدحتلاو ةلوفطلا لحارم فلتخم نع ةحمل لاقملا ذخأي ،قايسلا اذه يف .ةيئادتبال ف لفطلا تاجايتحا ةيبلت وحن ميلعتلاو ةيبرتلا هيجوت يف نوسكيرإ ةيرظن لماكتت ،لافطألا ضورو ةسردملا طيحم ي في مهاست ،لباقملا يف .ةسردملا يف داهتجالاو ةقثلا ءانب ىلع نوعجشيو لافطألا تاعلطت عم نوملعملا لماعتي .ةلحرم لك يزعتو مهتيوه ليكشت يف ةيباجيإلا ملعتلا براجتز.ةءافكلاب مهروعش ه متيس .ميلعتلا ةئيب يف نوسكيرإ ميهافم قيبطتو ةلوفطلا لحارم مهف ةيمهأ ىلع ءوضلا طيلست وه لاقملا اذه فد ال هذه ريثأت ضارعتسا متيس .داهتجالاو ةقثلا ةيمنت فادهأ قيقحتل لافطألا ضورو ةسردملا هيجوت ةيفيك ليلحت ىلع زيكرت حتلل ريضحتلاو ةيصخشلا ةيوهلا نيوكت ىلع جهنلاد.ةيلبقتسملا تاي أةيصخشلل يعامتجالا يسفنلا روطتلا يف نوسكيرإ ةيرظن تايساس ت ةيلاتلا تارقفلا يف لوانتت اهنأ ،نوسكيرإ ةيرظن اًقفو ةلوفطلا لحارم يف ةيوهلا نيوكت قمع ةلاقملا هذه فشكتس أ ىلع زيكرتلا متي .ةيدرفلا ةيوهلا ريوطت ىلع ةيعامتجالا ةيسفنلا تامزألاو تالوحتلا ريثأت ىلإ ةريشم ،ةيرظنلا هذه تايساس طت قايس يف فيكتلا تايدحتو انألا رودور ديدحتو ةيصخشلا ليكشت ىلع تايلمعلا هذه تاريثأت ىلع ءوضلا طلسي امم ،لفطلا ا.ةايحلا راسم يف ةيوهلا تاهاجت ةئيبلاو ةثارولا. قس .ديورف لحارمل ةهباشم ىلوألا ةعبرألا .ةيعامتجا ةيسفن لحارم ينامث ىلإ ةيصخشلا ومن نوسكيرإ م ال نيب يسيئرلا فالتخاال، نيتيرظنأن ددش نوسكيرإ عل لماوعلا ىلع ديورف زكر نيح يف ،ةيعامتجالا ةيسفنلا طباورلا ى ال ينيجاللا ج ضنلا أ دبم هامس أ ا مل عضخ ت ومنل ا ةيل مع ن أ نوسك يرإ ح رتقا . ةيجولويبepigenetic principle of maturation . ومنلا نأ يأ ،ومنلا لحارم ددحت يتلا صئاصخلا يه ةثوروملا ىوقلا نأ دصقي ناك اذهبوي لماوعلا ىلع دمتع ا قيقحت اهلالخ نم متي يتلا قرطلا يف مكحتت يتلا يه اهل ضرعتن يتلا ةيئيبلاو ةيعامتجالا ىوقلا نإف ،كلذ عمو .ةيثارول مر.ةيعامتجالاو ةيجولويبلا لماوعلاب انتيصخش ومن رثأتي ،يلاتلابو .اًيثارو اًقبسم ةددحملا ومنلا لحا ا.ةيعامتجالا ةيسفنلا تامزأل في تاعارصلا نم ةلسلس نع ةرابع رشبلا ىدل ةيصخشلا يف ومنلا ،نوسكيرإ ةيرظن ال اقحال ةفلتخم لحارم يف زربت مث نمو ةيرطف تادادعتسا ةغيصب ةدالولا ذنم أشنت دق يتلاو ،ةيصخش تاباجتسا ىلإ مت تابلط ال نوسكيرا فرعي .ةئيبلا اهضرفت يتلا فيكت ةمزألا اهنأب ةيأ م هذه نإف ،نوسكيرإل ةبسنلاب .درفلا لبق نم ةئيبلا عم ةهجاو
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NEWSLETTER Issue 5: August 2022 AGENT-BASED SUPPORT TOOL FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE POLICIES The Agricore project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Grant Agreement No. 816078 In this issue: In this issue: 1. Data characterisation 1. Data characterisation 2. Partner´s Interview- UNIPR 2. Partner´s Interview- UNIPR 3. ARDIT Tool 3. ARDIT Tool 4. Synthetic Population Generation 4. Synthetic Population Generation 5. Progress 5. Progress 6. AGRIMODELS Cluster 6. AGRIMODELS Cluster 7. Who we are 7. Who we are
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Gregor Pobezin Open Challenges in Traditional Biographical Research Novel Approaches to Biographical Research in InTaVia Target Group: A complex, heterogeneous audience, represented by 10 Personas The project InTaVia has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101004825. Interested? https://intavia.eu intavia@donau-uni.ac.at @projectintavia Problem: Challenges of Traditional Historiography Research • three sets of biographies • little overlap • very different focuses Emilia Curator Noah Tourist Guide Anne Collection Manager Luka GLAM Media Designer Johanna Digital Art Historian Elea Museum Education Specialist Leon Historian Caspar Casual User Helena Histroy Teacher Noel Research Librarian Free University Amsterdam Danube University Krems Slovenian Academy of Sciences & Arts Aalto University University of Southern Denmark Stuttgart University Fluxguide GesmbH University of Helsinki Sources of cultural history SI Biographies & cultural (hi)stories …E FI Object collections Europeana National prosopographical databases Digital object databases InTaVia knowledge graph several types of experts Narrative designs for in/tangible (hi)stories 1a) Search 1b) Create 3 1c) Curate 4 2))Analyse 3) Communicate AT NL 1 2 3 1) Data Curation Lab 2) Visual Analytics Studio 3) Storytelling Suite General public Own object data Oown biographical data Aim: The InTaVia Platform Austrian Center for DH & CH Linking and Visualizing Cultural Heritage Data for Humanities Research I Slovenian Academy of Sciences & Arts • Challenge of narrative texts. The world of (or rather in) a literary work is constructed linguistically. This applies to literary characters – but inevitably also to “real-life” protagonists insofar as they are literary characters. A reality within the literary world is not “real” in the general sense: once committed to the realm of the literary, it becomes a quasi-reality (Ingarden). • Accessibility of textual sources. Ever since the first word, or perhaps even a pictogram, was written, someone may have wondered: what was meant by that? Countless analyses of Homer's monumental epics and hymns show that textual subtleties have the capacity not only to amaze but also to confound. Since ancient times, questions have been raised (Aristotle, Poetics 1451b) as to whether the narrative text - a tool "adapted" to epic poems and mythological narratives - is a suitable vessel for historiographical treatises. From Plato's "proto-narratological" insights and Aristotle's skepticism about historiography to the modern coinage of the term non-narrative history the same thing has been observed: texts are tricky. • Doubts about knowledge exchange. Some of the world’s leading post-modern theorists (Derrida) expressed doubt in the possibility that texts can convey anything to readers – much less any real knowledge. / / Example: The case of Pier Paolo Vergerio InTaVia aims for an interoperable system that supports the work of CH experts with in/tangible data across Europe. It focuses on data integration, curation, creation, as well as visual analysis and communication, while critically reflecting sources, data, and methods. This will be achieved by: • an integrated data model for object data and biographical data • advanced NLP models for linguistic analysis of textual data in multiple languages from different time periods. • visualizations to provide multiple views on cultural objects and actors over time. Multiple cultural / historical activities
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Strategies for Professors on How to Mitigate the Negative Effects of ChatGPT in Higher Education Estrategias para Profesores sobre Cómo Mitigar los Efectos Negativos de ChatGPT en la Educación Superior Thiago Maciel Ferreira1 SUMMARY The research identified challenges faced by teachers, suggested effective pedagogical strategies, and proposed practical recommendations to mitigate the negative impacts of ChatGPT in higher education. These strategies promote the ethical and responsible use of artificial intelligence, ensuring academic integrity. The article deeply analyzes pedagogical strategies to prevent plagiarism and promote academic integrity, offering a practical guide for educators on how to ethically integrate AI into their pedagogical practices. By filling a gap in the literature, the study contributes to the discussion on the ethical use of AI in education, offering evidence-based recommendations and fostering critical reflection on the impact of emerging technologies in the academic environment. The research highlights effective pedagogical strategies to mitigate the negative effects of ChatGPT, promoting an educational approach that prevents plagiarism and encourages the ethical use of AI. Through documentary analysis of scientific articles and data coding according to Bardin's methodology, patterns and trends were identified for the development of innovative pedagogical practices. The qualitative approach included a literature review and content analysis of articles published in the last five years. The results indicated that, although ChatGPT can personalize teaching and support content development, it also increases the risk of plagiarism and reduces students’ critical engagement. To combat these challenges, it is suggested to create personalized assessments, promote critical thinking, and use plagiarism detection tools. Continuous teacher training and the development of clear policies on the ethical use of AI are essential to ensure academic integrity and quality of learning. Keywords : Negative Effects of Chatgpt, Strategies for Teachers, Mitigating the Impacts of AI, Pedagogical Strategies, Preventing Academic Plagiarism. RESUMEN La investigación identificó dificultades enfrentadas por los profesores, sugirió estrategias pedagógicas eficaces y propuso recomendaciones prácticas para mitigar los impactos negativos de ChatGPT en la educación superior. Estas estrategias promueven el uso ético y responsable de la inteligencia artificial, garantizando la integridad académica. El artículo analiza profundamente las estrategias pedagógicas para prevenir 1 PhD in Education from UFRJ, Specialist in Business Management; Graduated in: Pedagogy, logistics and Systems; Coordinator of the Commercial Management and System Analysis Course at Cesa! thiago.ferreira@aesa- cesa.br thiagomaciel.ufrgs@gmail.com https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1863-0601 10.6084/m9.figshare.27135270 10.5281/zenodo.13861555
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Contents 1 Introduction 1 2 Atoms, Bonds and Molecules 3 2.1 Atoms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2.1.1 IElement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2.1.2 IIsotope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2.1.3 IAtomType . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2.1.4 Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.2 Bonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.2.1 Electron counts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2.2.2 Bond stereochemistry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2.3 Molecules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2.3.1 Iterating over atoms and bonds . . . . . . . . . . 10 2.3.2 Neighboring atoms and bonds . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2.3.3 Molecular Formula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 2.4 Implicit and Explicit Hydrogens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 2.5 Chemical Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 2.6 Rings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 3 Stereochemistry 17 3.1 Stereochemistry in a flat world . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.2 Tetrahedral chirality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 4 Salts and other disconnected structures 23 4.1 Salts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 4.2 Crystals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 5 Paired and unpaired electrons 27 5.1 Lone Pairs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 5.2 Unpaired electrons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 6 Protein and DNA 31 v
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Identifying Off-Task Users in a Large-Scale, Game-Based Practice Assessment Matthew Emery Roblox Inc. memery@roblox.com David Laing Roblox Inc. dlaing@roblox.com Philip Simmons Roblox Inc. psimmons@roblox.com Jacob Seybert Roblox Inc. jseybert@roblox.com Katrina Yu Roblox Inc. kyu@roblox.com Erica Snow Roblox Inc. esnow@roblox.com ABSTRACT Kaiju Cats, a game-based practice assessment, was devel- oped and launched on the Roblox platform to prepare job candidates for a game-based hiring assessment. Since Septem- ber 2023, Kaiju Cats has been played over 50,000 times; however, many of these playthroughs were completed by non-candidates who were motivated to redeem avatar re- wards rather than to prepare for the hiring assessment. To better gain insight into how players may be approaching and interacting with the practice test, we deployed a finite mixture model to distinguish between on-task and off-task playthroughs. This initial analysis provided useful insights and laid out next steps for the continued development and iteration of our game-based practice assessments. Keywords game-based assessment, clustering, finite mixture model, mixed effect model 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 Game-Based Hiring Assessments at Roblox Roblox is an online game platform and game creation sys- tem with a growing employee base. Each year, Roblox re- ceives thousands of applications from new college graduates for entry-level positions in software engineering and product management. In 2021, Roblox developed and operational- ized a game-based hiring assessment for these roles, designed to measure cognitive skills such as creative problem-solving and systems thinking. 1.2 Roblox Practice Assessment: Kaiju Cats Leveraging evidence that practice tests can elevate both or- ganizational and candidate success[3], we launched the Kaiju Cats practice assessment in 2023 to strategically prepare ap- plicants for our hiring process. Kaiju Cats integrates user interface patterns from our hiring assessment, complete with introductory and concluding screens, an intuitive tutorial, and a real-time timer. It familiarizes candidates with the specific UI and gameplay mechanics they will encounter in the hiring assessment and immerses them in a strategic sce- nario that produces similar cognitive and decision-making challenges. The game is designed to engage candidates in complex problem- solving tasks that require careful resource management and strategic planning, core competencies that are crucial across diverse roles at Roblox as identified through an exhaustive job analysis. Players must effectively allocate a limited bud- get and predict the outcomes of various strategies within the constraints of time. This setup illustrates the application of problem-solving skills, as candidates iterate their strategies in response to feedback, mimicking the dynamic and inter- active nature of the problem-solving scenarios with which applicants must engage. In Kaiju Cats, players are challenged to create a plan that directs a trio of cats across a city. The objective of the game is to maximize the cats’ total power—the sum of the numeric score associated with each cat—by causing them to destroy buildings and reach their respective destinations, cat beds located at the opposite side of the city. Players start with a fixed amount of dollars, which they can spend to define their plan. Each time players submit a plan for testing, they see the resulting power gains. Players have fifteen minutes to submit a plan that maximizes the cats’ power. Within this time limit, players can submit as many plans as they wish. Kaiju Cats was designed and developed in collaboration with game designers and engineers over a period of six months. The development phase included regular "think aloud" ses- sions with test users, which helped us ensure that the game appealed to a wide audience and effectively facilitated our learning objectives. Moreover, these sessions allowed us to confirm that players engaged
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March 2022 Species sheet – All about dairy cows! Author: Chaire BEA Contributing authors: Amandine Rave, Alice de Boyer des Roches Graphics: Ilann Adjedj DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12913161 https://chaire-bea.vetagro-sup.fr/en/ You can’t start the day without a drop of milk in your coffee, or wouldn’t consider eating pasta without cheese? But what do you really know about dairy cows, their size, weight, life expectancy, cognitive abilities, social behaviour, etc.? Let us discover in pictures the main characteristics of Annabelle, our dairy cow!
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Colloque gestion de crise et numérique : nouvelles menaces et nouvelles solutions Posters présentés le Jeudi 31 mars 2022 à l’Institut Mines-Télécom – Palaiseau Comité de programme : • Frederick Benaben, IMT Mines Albi • Hervé Debar, Télécom SudParis • Hassen Drira, IMT Nord Europe • Gilles Dusserre, IMT Mines Alès • Jean-Max Dutertre, Mines-Saint-Étienne • Aurélien Francillon, EURECOM • Marc-Oliver Pahl, IMT Atlantique • Laurent Pautet, Télécom Paris Edité par : IMT Mines Alès
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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: Sigurðarson, E. S. (2022). Societal Impact, the SDGs, and the Humanities: A case study from the University of Iceland. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22134). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6975524 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/
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PublicaƟons  2013 Page 1 Refereed Journal Articles (in press) Baldwin DS, Whitworth KL, Hockley CL (Dec 2013) Uptake of dissolved organic carbon by biofilms provides insights into the potenƟal impact of loss of large woody debris on the funcƟon in of lowland rivers. Freshwater Biology. DOI: 10.1111/fwb.12296 Campbell CJ, Johns CV, Nielsen DL (Jan 2014) The value of plant funcƟonal groups in demonstraƟng and communicaƟng vegetaƟon responses to environmental flows. Freshwater Biology. DOI: 10.1111/fwb.12309 Dwyer GK, Stoffels RJ, Pridmore PA (Jan 2014) Morphology, metabolism and behavior: Reponses of three fishes with different lifestyles to acute hypoxia. Freshwater Biology. DOI : 10.1111/fwb.12306 Evans TN, Watson G, Rees G, Seviour RJ (Jan 2014) Comparing acƟvated sludge fungal community populaƟon diversity using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and terminal restricƟon fragment length polymorphism. Antonie van Leewenhoek. DOI:10.1007/s10482-013-0108-x Jardine TD, Hadwen WL, Hamilton SK, Hladyz S, Mitrovic SM, Kidd KA, Tsoi WY, Spears M, Westhorpe DP, Fry VM, Sheldon F and Bunn SE (Dec 2012) Understanding and overcoming baseline istopic variability in running waters. River Research and Applications DOI: 10.1002/rra.2630 McCarthy B, Sukowski S, Whiterod N, Vilizzi L, Beesley L, King A (Feb 2014) Hypoxic blackwater event severely impacts Murray crayfish (Euastacus armatus) populaƟons in the Murray river, Australia. Austral Ecology. DOI: 10.1111/aec.12109 Stoffels RJ, Clarke R, Rehwinkel RA, McCarthy BJ (Oct 2013) Response of a floodplain fish community to river-floodplain connecƟvity: natural versus managed reconnecƟon. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2013-0042 Vilizzi L, Thwaites LA and Smith BB (Dec 2013) ExploitaƟon by common carp (Cyprinus Carpio) of a floodplain wetland of the lower river Murray under drought and flood condiƟons. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia Whitworth KL, Silvester E, Baldwin DS (Nov 2012) Alkalinity capture during microbial sulfate reducƟon and implicaƟons for the acidificaƟon of inland aquaƟc ecosystems. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta Refereed Journal Articles (published) Baldwin DS (2013) Organic phosphorus in the aquaƟc environment. Environmental Chemistry. 10, 439-454 Albury-Wodonga Campus P: 02 6024 9690 Mildura Campus P: 03 5051 4050 E:cfe@latrobe.edu.au W: latrobe.edu.au/centre-for- freshwater-ecosystems School of Life Sciences PublicaƟons 2013
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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
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Does size play a role in induced displacement in magneto-motive ultrasound imaging? Saeideh Arsalani Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo ORCID: 0000-0001-9451-8254 Oswaldo Baffa Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0002-0622-2814 Yaser Hadadian Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo ORCID: 0000-0003-2176-2891 Theo Z. Pavan Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0002-9931-8558 Soudabeh Arsalani Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo ORCID: 0000-0002-1957-7956 Antonio Adilton. O. Carneiro Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0002-1752-7170 Abstract— Over the past decade, a technique called magneto- motive ultrasound imaging (MMUS) has been established to obtain displacement of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) due to the interaction between MNPs and the magnetic field. Recently, shear wave dispersion magneto-motive ultrasound imaging (SDMMUS), which is a subdivision of MMUS modality, has been introduced as a novel elasticity imaging to obtain viscoelastic properties of soft tissue mimicking phantoms labeled with iron oxide nanoparticles. In this technique, an alternating external magnetic field applied to induce displacements in order of micrometers and the mechanical properties of the medium results from these movements. Here, two different iron oxide MNPs synthesized by co-precipitation method, having the same saturation magnetizations but two different mean particle sizes were used as contrast agent in MMUS. Gelatin tissue mimicking phantoms were prepared containing inclusion with the MNPs to perform the experiments. According to the obtained results, the induced displacements were almost the same for both samples, suggesting in MNPs with the same magnetization and the mean size ranges studied here, the effect of size on the induced displacement can be neglected. Moreover, the mechanical properties of phantoms were reported the same values for both MNPs used. Keywords—Magneto-motive ultrasound, shear wave, magnetic nanoparticles, mechanical properties. I. INTRODUCTION Over few decades, elastography has been known as a well- known imaging modality due to mapping mechanical properties of tissues. Some diseases in different tissues including breast, liver, and so on have been recognized through changes of mechanical properties. Since the viscoelasticity of soft tissues is often associated with pathological state, they can be used as a diagnostic tool in medicine [1]. Ultrasound-based methods have been widely used compared to other techniques including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and so forth due to many inherent advantages, including real time, cost effectiveness, portability and non-ionizing radiation[2]. However stand-alone ultrasound imaging has a poor contrast for magnetic nanoparticles. Currently, magnetic nanoparticles have become a promising tool in the clinical diagnostic and therapeutic techniques as their capacity to function at the cellular and molecular level of biological as well as their physical properties. MNPs in the form of superparamagnetic iron oxides (SPIO) have been established as a contrast enhancement for MRI imaging as MR imaging [3, 4]. As mentioned above, magnetic nanoparticles have shown weak contrast agents to ultrasound imaging. While, a novel remote elastogarphy called MMUS method has been introduced by oh et al. [5] to deal with this issue. MMUS is one of the recent modalities which benefits from superparamagnetic nanoparticle as contrast agent to visualize molecular and cellular levels through ultrasound imaging. In this technique, an external magnetic excitation is applied to induce a motion within tissue labeled with magnetic nanoparticles and this movement is detected by ultrasound technique (ref). Later, many
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Masanobu Kunitomo (Kurume Univ.),Tristan Guillot (OCA) Cool Stars 20.5@online An imprint of planet formation in the deep interior of the Sun Planet formation does not affect the solar abundance problem, but does affect the solar central metallicity Take-home message Kunitomo & Guillot, in prep. see also Kunitomo+18, A&A and Kunitomo+17, A&A kunitomo.masanobu@gmail.com
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1 QUANTUM TUNNELING NEMS 3D MONOLITHIC DEVICES UTILIZING QUANTUM TUNNELING BETWEEN 2D ARRAYS OF QUASI–1D NANOWIRES M.T. Michalewicz, P. Glowacki, Z. Rymuza, N. Lumpkin, S. Bremner, and E. Radlinska ABSTRACT Quantum tunneling is an exceedingly sensitive probe of inter-electrode separation, electrode area, the type of electrode material and the nature of intervening insulator. Our devices are based on variable overlap area of the quasi 1D–nanowires 1,2, electrodes placed on two opposing atomically flat surfaces. A generic nanoTrek® device is composed of two plates separated by a very thin layer of insulator, e.g. soft-matter spacer, air, vacuum. Several hundred to many thousands quasi-1D nanowires are deposited on each plate. The device can be thought of as a 2D plate/insulating layer (liquid)/ 2D plate sandwich. The nanowires on the two opposing surfaces facing each other and aligned with each other form elongated electrodes in the tunneling process. We have built and successfully tested devices composed of two individual Si chips separated with monolayer of soft-matter spacer 3,4,5 In this poster we describe the concept leading to 3D monolithic nanoTrek® device specifically suited for sensing dynamic quantities. Both 2D substrates are part of one monolithic unit. One plate is suspended on etched beams. Depending on desired functionality or performance there can be one to four beams with width-to-length-to-thickness ratios designed for specific device sensitivity. Nanowires are fabricated on the top surface of the larger, bottom plate and, opposing them, at the bottom surface of a movable, top plate. Separation between the plates is in the range of 1–10 nm. We discuss several different candidate processes suitable for fabrication of our monolithic devices. INTRODUCTION Quantum Precision Instruments Inc. (Quantum-π) proposes to develop a new type of Nano Electro-Mechanical System (NEMS) vibration sensors based on quantum tunneling between arrays of nanowires. Our nanoTrek® devices are based on variable overlap area of the quasi-1D nanowire electrodes placed on two opposing atomically flat surfaces 1,2. Apart of building a standalone vibration sensor we will address issues of distributed power supply, either through energy harvesting or storage, and of building a large wired and wireless networks of sensors, with a goal of delivering a network system for structural health monitoring. Our sensors utilize exceedingly sensitive physical phenomenon of quantum tunneling hence will be superior in accuracy, smaller in size and of lower cost than existing sensors. Eighty six years after the proposal of quantum mechanics by M. Planck in 1900 G. Binnig and H. Rohrer were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for constructing and successful demonstration of the Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM). Very soon after their feat several groups attempted to build cantilever or beam geometry sensors based on quantum tunneling through a variable inter–electrode gap 7,8,9,10,11. Despite considerable efforts and some successes, cantilever geometry quantum tunneling sensors have not achieved broad commercial success. Here, we propose an entirely different principle of operation for quantum tunneling devices. Unlike their commercially less successful predecessors Quantum-π’s nanoTrek devices are not cantilever or beam devices. They are based on a constant inter–electrode separation, but variable area tunneling between two sets of nanowire arrays deposited on two substrates. Hence, Quantum-π sensors are unlike any previously built or designed devices 13,14,15,16,17,18,19. 1 Q1Quantum Precision Instruments Asia Pte Ltd, 14A Prince George’s Park, Singapore – 2Technical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland – 3Cavendish Laboratory, The University of Cambridge, UK – 4Department of Applied Mathematics, The Australian National University, Australia 3D MONOLITHIC DEVICES UTILIZING QUANTUM TUNNELING BETWEEN 2D ARRAYS OF QUASI–1D NANOWIRES M.T. Michalewicz1, P. Glow
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Holistic Service Design: The BPaaS Extension to Design IT-Support Robert Woitsch1, Wilfrid Utz1 1 BOC Asset Management, Operngasse 10b, 1040 Vienna, Austria, {robert.woitsch|wilfrid.utz}@boc-eu.com Abstract. This paper focuses on so-called digital services, hence services that rely to a significant extend on ICT, and in introduces a new concept called Busi- ness Processes as a Services (BPaaS) that is worked out in the H2020 project CloudSocket to support the alignment form domain-specific services layer to IT specific cloud applications. Concept models and semantics are used not only to enable collaborative service design but also to align domain specific business processes with executable workflows that are deployed in a cloud environment. The Business Process Management System Paradigm (BPMS) is re-questing the functional capabilities of the so-called BPaaS Environments (i) de-sign, (ii) allo- cation, (iii) execution and (iv) evaluation, which technically com-pose the ClouSocket Broker platform. This paper introduces first findings of aligning cus- tomers’ business needs with BPaaS cloud offerings using a model-based ap- proach and second how this can be used to support collaborative services design. Keywords: Business Process as a Service, Cloud Workflows, Business and IT Alignment 1 Introduction Co-Creation of services is both an opportunity and challenge for the public and the private sector to innovate collaborative service delivery models, embracing creative disruption from technology, and adopting an attitude of experimentation and entrepre- neurship1. In particular we see that service offerings are confronted with digital chal- lenges like but not limited to Big Data including Open Data, Cloud Computing, Ad- vanced Manufacturing, robotics, cybercrime, social networks as well as artificial intel- ligence and smart computing as the technological baseline with challenges in new de- sign and deployment forms of entrepreneurship and a citizen empowerment as reality of public services. We particularly focus on so-called digital services, which we under- stand as service deliveries that rely significantly on data processing, such as services requiring data – e.g. remote maintenance using sensors –; services generating data – e.g. club card models for better analysis of service provision or customer demand – as well as services processing data – e.g. personalized guide. 1 “A vision for Public Services” by the European Commission (2013)
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Zinkicide® nanoformulation efficacy to mitigate xylem limited Xylella fastidiosa strains in tobacco and blueberry Shantharaj D.1, Naranjo E.1, Santra S.2, De La Fuente L.1 1Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, USA. 2NanoScience Technology Center, Department of Chemistry, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA. E-mail: lzd0005@auburn.edu
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LiveCoding.space: Towards P2P Collaborative Live Programming Environment for WebXR Nikolai Suslov Fund for Supporting Development of Russian Technology Vologda, Russia SuslovNV@krestianstvo.org ABSTRACT WebVR and WebXR are the new standards of Virtual/Augment/Mixed Reality for the Web Browser. A wide variety of head mounted displays, motion controllers, mobile and standalone headsets bring that technology to the masses. But software engineering was not ready for these new challenges. Web applications become look like desktop apps with all advantages and dis- advantages of application-centric approach. For example, using existed React VR or A-Frame libraries, someone could easily create a rich Web app, but it will lack of self-exploratory envi- ronment, multi-user collaboration and live programming at runtime mode. To address this problem, we propose to use the Virtual World’s concept for WebXR applica- tions development. Virtual World as the new computational paradigm blurs the borders be- tween application and hosted environment, runtime and development mode. The Virtual Worlds in conjunction with WebXR technologies offers to both programmers and domain ex- perts nearly unlimited capabilities for creating novel computer-based simulated environments just in Web browser. Virtual time, user-defined meta language, live coding, avatar, self- exploratory environment become the new crucial concepts of the Web applications. This paper introduces the prototype of pure-decentralized P2P collaborative, live programming environment: LiveCoding.space. Having the tight integration of A-Frame, Virtual World Framework, Gun DB storage system and Ohm language, it provides all-in-one solution for de- velopment of creative applications in modern Web standards for virtual reality. 1. INTRODUCTION Let’s describe a web application as a virtual world with self-exploratory entities inside compu- tation-centric live programming environment. Virtual worlds represent the new computational paradigm and the new form of software, where everything is just some form of a computation. End-user could generate or change the content of a virtual world in real-time. The user also is represented in a virtual world as a computational process, an object known as Avatar. Such full- body immersion environment, which is built using virtual worlds, can scales conformal up to the unlimited number of hardware and software nodes (Figure 1). The most known virtual world platforms existed today are High Fidelity, Sansar, Spatial OS, Immersive Terf. Still, they are all desktop-based applications, they are considered as Web ready. For example, High Fidelity has JavaScript API and deep integration with Clara.IO, a full- featured cloud-based 3D modeling, animation and rendering software tool that runs in a web browser. Also, there are a huge amount of standalone applications developed using game en- gines like Unity3D or Unreal Engine with support of Web Socket API and HTML WebGL ren-
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Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=tjas20 Italian Journal of Animal Science ISSN: (Print) (Online) Journal homepage: www.tandfonline.com/journals/tjas20 ASPA 25th Congress Book of Abstract Angela Gabriella D’Alessandro, Pasquale De Palo, Aristide Maggiolino & Marcello Mele To cite this article: Angela Gabriella D’Alessandro, Pasquale De Palo, Aristide Maggiolino & Marcello Mele (2023) ASPA 25th Congress Book of Abstract, Italian Journal of Animal Science, 22:sup1, 1-320, DOI: 10.1080/1828051X.2023.2210877 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2023.2210877 © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Published online: 12 Jun 2023. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 1251 View related articles View Crossmark data
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Methodological Tool of Qualitative and Content Analysis of 107 Demonstrators_ CREATIONS PROGRAMME_ Horizon 2020, Call: H2020-SEAC-2014-1, Topic: SEAC-1-2014, Type of action: CSA, Proposal number: 665917_ National Kapodistrian Universityty School of Philosophy, Faculty of Philosophy, Pedagogy and Psychology Smyrnaiou Zacharoula, Georgakopoulou Eleni, 2018 1 Qualitative Analysis of the Structure of 107 Demonstrators Smyrnaiou, Z., Sotiriou, M., Georgakopoulou, E. National Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA) 1 CREATIONs European Research Programme The framework of the European Project CREATIONS (http://creations-project.eu/), 16 partners from ten European countries develop creative approaches based on Art for an engaging science classroom. CREATIONS will establish a pan-European network of scientists, teachers, artists and students with the aim to improve the skills of young people in STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) and to pool talent to scientific careers. This initiative follows the principles of the Science Education Declaration, of creativity, of effective and efficient research and aims at enhancing creativity in class-room (http://www.opendiscoveryspace.eu/community/culture-creativity-curiosity-413201 ) in the context of STEAM. The aims of CREATIONS Program are: i. giving students and teachers opportunities to experiment with many different places, activities, personal identities, and people ii. simulating the work of the scientist and researcher in the classroom iii. promoting a better understanding of how science works iv. enhancing students’ science related career aspirations v. encouraging and empowering science teachers to affect change vi. implementing and promoting inquiry-based science teaching and learning vii. learning and (self)creating in emotionally rich learning environments viii. disseminating and exploiting the results 2 Qualitative Analysis of 107 Demonstrators as Innovative Ideas 2.1 Worldwide challenges- A need for a renewed approach on Science teaching models Over the last few years, there is a need both from political decisions and scientific paradigms to redefine teaching methods and reform educational systems. This change from traditional ways of teaching to a new way of educating students seems to establish a new pedagogy and to be a deep change of world’s, countries’ and people’s philosophy of teaching and learning. In fact, it is considered that a better future of Europe can be designed only if new theories, practices and scientific approaches start to take place on educational communities. Nowadays educational systems but also all the members of a school community face lots of challenges. These challenges are firstly relevant to the educational practices and the purposes of school education. One of the main problems of the most school systems is the students’ lack of motivation. Another relative problem is scientific outflow. In addition, although most school curriculums have managed to simplify scientific knowledge to school knowledge, they have failed to deal with modern scientific notions according to the global, new findings on science. The teaching methods are, also, old or inappropriate for their acquisition of knowledge, as these are not creative and challenging. At the same time, it is observed that there are some efforts of introducing news methods on educational practice, but these efforts finally do not have any support, as actual science teaching keeps existing. In addition, the difficult scientific notions acquire a different way of thinking and teaching, where modern pedagogical framework is taken into account and is adjusted to basic principles, such as the use of different cognitive semiotic systems of the representation of scientific knowledge. Since the origins of the declining interest among young people for science studies are found largely in the way science is taught in schools, we have to try not only to establish new ways of teaching, scientificall
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Mahdi Rokni Neda Abdoust, Maryam Hadizadeh, Melika Gonbadi, Reyhaneh Johari, Fatemeh Hamidani, Parham Eisvandi www.skylian.org mahdirokni75@yahoo.com Omar khayyam in astronomy and literature, regarding to its effect in Persian culture
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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION AND LEARNING ISSN: 2996-5128 (online) | ResearchBib (IF) = 9.918 IMPACT FACTOR Volume-3| Issue-5| 2024 Published: |25-12-2024| 490 UUT: 633. 11. 631. 52. 59 QOROQOLPOG’ISTON SHAROITIDA XAR XIL SHO’RLANISH FO’NIDA EKILGAN KUZGI YUMSHOQ BUG’DOY NAM UNALARINING MAHSULDORLIGI VA DONSIFAT KO’RSATGICHLARI https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14466711 Aberkulov Mardan Nurbaevich Toshkent davlat agrar universiteti professori Annotatsiya Qoroqolpog’iston sharoitida xar xil sho’rlanish fonida ekilgan kuzgi yumshoq bug’doy nav namunalarining o’sish va rivojlanishi, mahsuldorligi, donining sifat ko’rsatgichlari o’rganildi.Ikki marta sho’ri yuvilgan dalaga ekilgan bug’doy navlari mahsuldorlik va don sifati ko’rsatgichlari bo’yicha bir marta sho’ri yuvilgan dalaga ekilgan bug’doy nav namunalariga nisbatan yuqori bo’lishi aniqlandi.Ayniqsa bu qonuniyat Tanya, Bezostaya-1, Krasnodar-99, Utiqul-96, Qoraqalpog’iston-100 navlarida yaqqol namoyon bo’ldi. Kalit so’zlar Tuproq sho’rlanishi, stress-javob, vegetaciya davri, nav, namuna, konsentratsiya, agrafon, unuvchanlik, kleykovina, oqsil, genofond, andoza, ijobiy, salbiy. Kirish: Sayyoramizning qishloq xo’jaligida foydalaniladigan ekin maydonining to’rdan bir qismi turli darajada sho’rlangan bo’lib,olimlarning hisoblashicha 2050 yilga kelib qishloq xo’jaligida foydalaniladigan erlarning taxminan 50% sho’rlanish ehtimoli mavjud [3]. Hozirgi kunda Qoraqolpog’istoon sharoitida suv tanqisligi natijasida erlarning ikkinchi bor sho’rlanishi, tuproq eritmasida tuzlsar miqdorining o’simlik uchun muqobil darajasidan bir necha marta oshib ketishi kuzatilmoqda.Bu jarayon xududda o’simliklarning o’sib rivojlanishiga salbiy ta’sir ko’rsatib,hosildorlik va ularning sifat ko’rsatgichlarining pasayishiga olib kelmoqda. Shu bois o’simliklarning tuproq sho’rlanishiga chidamliligini oshirish hozirgi vaqtda seleksiyaning eng dolzarb muommalaridan biri hisoblanadi. O’simliklarning har xil darajada sho’rlanishga chidamliligi tur va populyatsiyalarning tabiiy sharoitda yashash tarzining uzoq evolyutsiya jarayonida, yoki sho’rlanishga chidamlilikka yo’naltirilgan selekciya natijasida shakllanadi [1]. Tuproq sho’rlanishi hududimizda qishloq xo’jalik ekinlarini
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Wide band instantaneous coverage receiver concept for ALMA Andrey Baryshev, Kirill Rudakov, Ronald Hesper, Andrey Khudchenko, Daniel Montofre, J. Adema, Rob de Haan Stijkel, Pavel Dmitriev, Valery Koshelets, M. Bekema and F.P. Mena
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Authors: Oscar Cavichia and Adalberto Cunha Silva Universidade Federal de Itajubá, Brazil E-mail: cavichia@unifei.edu.br Radial abundance gradients in the disk: are one of the most important observational constraints to study the chemical evolution of the spiral galaxies. The Milky Way disk radial gradient from planetary nebulae reveled by Gaia Oring of the gradient: it is the result of many physical processes that occur since the formation of a galaxy, as e.g. the infalling gas to form the disc, the star formation history, radial gas flows and the radial migration of stars. Planetary nebulae (PNe): resulted from the evolution of low and intermediate-mass stars consisting of an expanding, glowing shell of ionised gas ejected from red giant stars late in their lives. Fig. 1: Spoiler! The Milky Way's radial gradient as reveled by the Gaia DR3 distances. Problem #1: PNe distances are subject of great uncertainties, since, unlike main sequence stars, these objects do not have a physical parameter that is direct dependent of the distance. Solving problem #1: By obtaining the distances to the PN's central star (CSPN) using the Gaia DR3 archive we can derive the Milky Way's radial abundance gradient with better accuracy. Spoiler: below the gradient obtained in this work. 1
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Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 Clay mineral analyses in Post Last Glacial Maximum sediments recovered South of Svalbard (NW Barents Sea, Arctic) Maria Elena Musco1,2, Giovanna Giorgetti1, Renata Giulia Lucchi2, Andrea Caburlotto2 and CORIBAR Scientific Party 1Università di Siena, mmusco@inogs.it; 2OGS, Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale-OGS Abstract Investigation of post Last Glacial Maximum sediments of the North-Western Barents Sea continental shelf can provide information about the ice-stream pathways and the onset of the deglaciation of the western terminus Barents Sea Ice Sheet. The trough-mouth fan slope facing the Kveithola glacial trough has been investigated during the International Cruise CORIBAR on board the RV-Maria S. Marien (July-August 2013). Here we present some preliminary results on clay mineral analyses of core GeoB17603-3, aiming to elucidate the variations in the sources of sediment and strength fluctuations of the North Atlantic Current (NAC). Introduction The Kveithola depositional system is a small glacial trough, located South of the Svalbard Archipelago (North-western Barents Sea) (Fig. 1). The Kveithola trough has an E-W orientation and it is 90 km long, 15-20 km wide and 200-400 m deep (Rüther et al., 2012; Bjarnadóttir et al., 2013). During the last glaciation (MIS-2) it hosted ice streams that contributed to the build-up of the Kveithola trough-mouth fan (TMF). TMFs are sedimentary depocenters derived primarily from debris-flow accumulation at the front of ice troughs on continental shelves (Vorren et al., 1989, 1998). The marine sedimentary record of TMFs provides the most direct proxies on ice-stream dynamics during glacial periods, giving indications on the onset of deglaciations and environmental/climatic variability during interglacials. Core GeoB17603-3 is a 974 cm-long gravity core, collected from the middle slope, containing a very expanded, continuous sedimentary sequence that deposited after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). This core records important information about the extent of the North-western terminus of the Barents Sea Ice Sheet (BSIS). Clay mineral composition of marine surface sediments can provide information about source areas and transport mechanisms of terrigenous material. Illite is a typical detrital clay mineral of high latitudes, as well as chlorite both deriving from physical weathering and glacial erosion (Junttila et al., 2010). Kaolinite is usually concentrated in tropic- humid areas (Fagel, 2007). In Figure 1: location map of the study area, with indication of the core position and the direction of the palaeo ice-stream in the Kveithola trough.
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Ketoasidosis diabetikum merupakan penyebab morbiditas dan mortalitas anak sakit diabetes melitus tipe 1.1-3 Ketoasidosis diabetikum saat awitan sering ditemukan terutama karena: • keterlambatan penanganan dini diabetes • keterbatasan akses terhadap sarana pelayanan kesehatan3 Gambar 1: Hasil pemeriksaan kadar C peptida Presentasi Klinis Klasik Pasien Diabetes Melitus tipe 1 dengan Kegawatdaruratan Ketoasidosis Diabetikum Indra Sandinirwan, Faisal, Novina Departemen Ilmu Kesehatan Anak, Fakultas Kedokteran, Universitas Padjadjaran, RS Dr. Hasan Sadikin, Bandung LATAR BELAKANG Melaporkan kasus Diabetes Melitus tipe 1 yang baru terdiagnosis dengan kegawatdaruratan ketoasidosis diabetikum. TUJUAN Seorang laki-laki usia 14 tahun, dibawa ke unit gawat darurat dengan keluhan penurunan kesadaran. Sejak dua bulan terakhir, pasien mengalami poliuria, polidipsia, polifagia, dan penurunan berat badan. Pasien pertama kali sakit seperti ini dan tidak ada riwayat diabetes di keluarga. Pemeriksaan fisis menunjukkan keadaan umum sakit kritis, kesadaran somnolen, takikardi, dan pernapasan Kussmaul. KASUS Anak dengan ketoasidosis diabetikum perlu mendapat tata laksana adekuat untuk mencapai luaran yang baik. Beberapa hal yang perlu diperhatikan dalam tata laksana antara lain resusitasi cairan, identifikasi faktor presipitasi, pemberian insulin, pemantauan penanda laboratorium, dan pencegahan komplikasi lebih lanjut.4 KESIMPULAN 1. Usher-Smith JA, Thompson M, Ercole A, Walter FM. Variation between countries in the frequency of diabetic ketoacidosis at first presentation of type 1 diabetes in children: a systematic review. Diabetologia. 2012;55(11):2878–94. 2. Klingensmith GJ, Tamborlane WV, Wood J, Haller MJ, Silverstein J, Cengiz E, dkk. Diabetic ketoacidosis at diabetes onset: still an all too common threat in youth. J Pediatr. 2013;162(2):330–4. 3. Dabelea D, Rewers A, Stafford JM, Standiford DA, Lawrence JM, Saydah S, dkk. Trends in the prevalence of ketoacidosis at diabetes diagnosis: the SEARCH for diabetes in youth study. Pediatr. 2014;133(4):e938–e45. 4. Wolfsdorf, JI, Glaser, N, Agus, M. ISPAD Clinical Practice Consensus Guidelines 2018: Diabetic ketoacidosis and the hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state. Pediatr Diabetes. 2018; 19(Suppl. 27): 155– 177 REFERENSI Hasil laboratorium sebelum pasien dipindahkan ke ruang perawatan anak menunjukkan perbaikan (glukosa darah 153 mg/dL, pH 7,341, pCO2 22,8 mmHg, bikarbonat 14,4 mmol/L). Setelah perawatan selama 8 hari, pasien dipulangkan dan dijadwalkan untuk berobat jalan. Hasil pemeriksaan kadar C peptida adalah 1,5 ng/mL dan hasil pemeriksaan kadar antibodi glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) berada dalam kisaran normal (<5 IU/mL). Gambar 2: Hasil pemeriksaan kadar GAD Hasil temuan laboratorium awal menunjukkan hiperglikemia (407 mg/dL), asidosis (pH 7,197), hipokapnea (15,9 mmHg), dan bikarbonat rendah (6,2 mmol/L). Urinalisis menunjukkan glikosuria (+3) dan ketonuria (+3). Pasien mendapat tata laksana suplementasi oksigen, cairan parenteral (rehidrasi dan rumatan dengan tambahan kalium), dan infus insulin. Pasien ditangani selama ±48 jam di unit gawat darurat dan mengalami perbaikan. Setelah kondisi pasien stabil, insulin kontinu diganti menjadi regimen basal bolus. Antropometri Berat badan : 45 kg Tinggi badan : 160 cm Indeks massa tubuh : 17,57 kg/m2 Lingkar lengan atas : 22 cm, P10–15 Tinggi/usia : P10–25 Berat/usia : P10–25 IMT/usia : P10–25 (CDC reference 2000) Tanner stage : G4P3
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Warming Uma Newsletter do PELD – CRSC Boletim 04 Julho 2021 Pelidnota sumptuosa, Foto: G. Wilson Fernandes https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.15062832.v10
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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: Asemi, A., & Rasti, R. (2022). Mendeley Readership and Scopus Citation: A Comparison Study in Nursing. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti226). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6946126 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/
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Yong-Taek Kim Georgia Institute of Technology Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts School of Modern Languages ykim791@gatech.edu Applying Semantic Map Approach to Verbal Aspect Second Language Research Forum 2020 October 23, 2020
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Population dynamics of Xylella fastidiosa subsp. pauca indicate that coffee strains are the founding populations for the olive-associated Xylella infections in Brazil Francisco CS1; Safady NG2; 1Pereira DAS; 3Almeida RPP; Coletta-Filho HD2 1Environmental Genomics Group, Christian Albrechts University Kiel, Kiel, Germany 2Centro APTA Citros Sylvio Moreira, Instituto Agronômico, Cordeirópolis, Brazil 3University of California, Berkeley, USA
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Better Phone Communications in the age of COVID 19 by Dr Damien Howard Jody Barney and Ann Carmody Dr Damien Howard April 2020 1
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