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MIDA Workshop on Online Ethnography MIDA COORDINATING TEAM TRAINERS This project has received the European union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement N°813547. THE OVERALL AIM OF THIS WORKSHOP IS TO EXPLORE AND DISCUSS THE CONSEQUENCES OF FORCEDLY RESORTING TO ONLINE FORMS AND METHODS OF DOING ETHNOGRAPHY. WE SHALL OF COURSE DISCUSS ONLINE ETHNOGRAPHIC METHODS IN GENERAL, BUT THE FOCUS WILL BE ON POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVES AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. THE SEMINAR WAS REQUESTED BY A NUMBER OF ESR’S. THIS INFORMATION SHEET IS BASED ON THEIR SUGGESTIONS. THE COORDINATING TEAM HAS INVITED FOUR EXPERTS TO GIVE A SHORT INTRODUCTION, FOLLOWED BY TWO Q&A AND DISCUSSION SESSIONS. MIDA WORKSHOP ON ONLINE ETHNOGRAPHY DR. JENS HEIBACH PROF. DR. THIJL SUNIER PROF. DR. GERARD WIEGERS PROF. DR. ANNETTE MARKHAM DR. MARTIJN DE KONING DR. MARLEEN DE WITTE MR. MUHAMMAD KHAMAISEH 26/01/2021 | non_poster |
Assessing Innovation Quality of Regional Leading Industries from Patent Navigation Perspective Xiaoyu Wang*, Xian Zhang**, Yi Xu** and Shuying Li** * wangxy@clas.ac.cn 0009-0006-9886-4895 National Science Library (Chengdu), Chinese Academy of Sciences, China ** zhangx@clas.ac.cn; xuy@clas.ac.cn; lisy@clas.ac.cn 0000-0002-6297-1190; 0000-0001-7556-6875; 0000-0002-0544-2970 National Science Library (Chengdu), Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Department of Information Resource Management, School of Economics and Management, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Abstract: The construction of the China’s Chengdu-Chongqing economic circle is a major measure to build a new development pattern dominated by the China’s domestic cycle and mutually reinforcing domestic and international dual cycles. Chengdu High-tech Industrial Development Zone and Chongqing High-tech Industrial Development Zone are the "vanguards" in the construction of the Chengdu-Chongqing economic circle. Introducing the concept of patent navigation into regional industrial innovation evaluation, this paper constructs a progressive approach for industrial innovation quality research which consists of "innovation fundamentals judgment, input-output benefit measurement, innovation quality evaluation, and innovation path research". The methodology include an evaluation index system of industrial innovation quality, and a dynamic coordination analysis model of the innovation system. Keywords: Innovation Quality, Regional Leading Industries, Patent Navigation, China’s Chengdu-Chongqing Economic Circle 1. Introduction The construction of the Chengdu-Chongqing economic circle has become a major strategic support for promoting the coordinated development of the regional economic layout under the new situation. It is also a new growth point following mature city clusters such as the Yangtze River Delta, Pearl River Delta, and Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei. The Chengdu High-tech Industrial Development Zone (Chengdu HIDZ) and Chongqing High-tech Industrial Development Zone (Chongqing HIDZ) are national-level high-tech zones with a “natural mission” for reform, innovation, and high-quality development. They are the “vanguards” in the construction of the Chengdu-Chongqing economic circle. Their leading industries serve as the realistic foundation and future trend of the regional economy, with guiding, agglomerating, and diffusing roles. Seizing the leading industries means seizing the “leading edge” to promote the development of the Chengdu-Chongqing economic circle. Conducting research on the innovation quality evaluation of the leading industries in the two high-tech zones helps clarify the innovative elements of the Chengdu-Chongqing region, grasp the current status of industrial development, and determine the future direction of innovation. It provides decision support for further establishing a clear positioning, and realizing complementary advantages of the Chengdu- Chongqing region’s collaborative innovation network, thus promoting high-quality integrated development of the regional economy. 2. Research Background and Purpose Currently, there is a variety of research focuses on the connotation of regional industrial innovation quality and its evaluation. Haner (2002) first proposed the conceptual framework of innovation quality, which includes defining innovation quality at the product/service, process, and firm levels. Dian Prihadyanti (2019) defines the innovation quality of a firm as the sum of customer satisfaction and the evaluation of the firm’s innovation capability. In addition, | non_poster |
É NECESSÁRIO APRESENTAR DOCUMENTO DE IDENTIFICAÇÃO JUNTO COM O IMPRESSO DE AUTORIZAÇÃO DE ACOMPANHANTE PERMANEÇA SEMPRE JUNTO AO SEU PACIENTE LIMITANDOSE EXCLUSIVAMENTE A ATENDE-LO E EVITE CIRCULAR EM OUTROS SETORES NÃO REALIZAR NOS PROCEDIMENTOS QUE SÃO EXCLUSIVOS DOS PROFISSIONAIS DO SETOR HOSPITAL UNIVERSITÁRIO ANTÔNIO PEDRO UNIDADE SUPORTE CLÍNICO CIRÚRGICO | non_poster |
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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: Herzog, C., & Wastl, J. (2022). New horizons for research management indicators: development, deployment, application and responsible use. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres- Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22203). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6948242 Copyright: © 2022 the authors, © 2022 Faculty of Communication and Documentation, University of Granada, Spain. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Collection: https://zenodo.org/communities/sti2022grx/ | non_poster |
WORKING TOGETHER: Exploring collaborative opportunities to ‘SoTL’ Angela Carbone, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia ange.carbone@rmit.edu.au Dawne Irving-Bell*, Edge Hill University, UK belld@edgehill.ac.uk Trent Maurer, Georgia Southern University, United States tmaurer@georgiasouthern.edu Christopher Ostrowdun, University of Calgary, Canada chris.ostrowdun@ucalgary.ca Carol Rolheiser, University of Toronto, Canada carol.rolheiser@utoronto.ca Susan Smith, University of Sussex, UK Susan.Smith@sussex.ac.uk Angela Zito, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States azito@wisc.edu *Lead for correspondence: Dr Dawne Irving-Bell belld@edgehill.ac.uk Twitter: @belld17 Panel Presentation, ISSOTL 2021 | non_poster |
TÍTULO: Trastorno del estado del ánimo con síntomas maniacos, inducido por corticoides nasales. AUTORES: Cristina Liaño Arriola1, Jose Barana1, Estefanía Usuna1, Sara Pérez Gil2, Ángel Royuela Rico3, Eva Bravo Barba2, Francisco Carlos Ruiz Sanz4 FILIACIÓN: 1 MIR Psiquiatría, Servicio de Salud Mental, Complejo Asistencial de Palencia. 2 FEA Psiquiatría, Servicio de Salud Mental, Complejo Asistencial de Palencia. INTRODUCCIÓN Y OBJETIVOS: Se presenta el caso de una mujer con antecedentes de Trastorno Bipolar inducido por corticoides con características maniacas. El objetivo es mostrar la asociación de este fármaco con trastornos neuropsiquiátricos, siendo este caso de especial interés por la aparición a dosis bajas y el antecedente de otro episodio. DESCRIPCIÓN DEL CASO: Mujer de 49 años ingresada involuntariamente en UHB a través del servicio de Urgencias por episodios de agresividad y agitación. Cuadro de un mes de evolución de irritabilidad, disminución del sueño e ideas delirantes de perjuicio y autorreferenciales. Su marido relaciona el inicio del cuadro con la vuelta de un viaje de trabajo, cuando presentó un cuadro catarral, siendo tratada con un nebulizador nasal (con corticoide como principio activo). EXPLORACIÓN Y PRUEBAS COMPLEMENTARIAS: -EPP: Consciente, desorientada parcialmente en tiempo, bien orientada en espacio y persona. Abordable. Moderadamente colaboradora. Discurso desorganizado, limitado a preguntas, respuestas tangenciales. Hipertímica. Disfórica e irritable. No ideación autolítica. Ideas delirantes de perjuicio y autorreferenciales. No auto ni heteroagresividad. Nula conciencia de enfermedad. Sueño disminuido. -TAC craneal: no hallazgos significativos. Sin alteraciones respecto al previo (2017). -Analítica: no hallazgos significativos DIAGNÓSTICO DIFERENCIAL Y TRATAMIENTO: Se establece diagnóstico de Trastorno del estado del ánimo con síntomas maniacos. Como primer paso se retiran los corticoides intranasales. Se inicia tratamiento con Olanzapina 15 mg/24 horas y Valproato 500mg/12 horas, con mejoría del cuadro. DISCUSIÓN Y CONCLUSIONES: Efectos neuropsiquiátricos son reconocidos efectos secundarios del uso de corticoides. A corto plazo, el más frecuente es la manía/hipomanía; mientras que un tratamiento a largo plazo se relaciona más con síntomas depresivos. Pueden ocurrir hasta en un 60% de los casos, observándose una relación dosis-respuesta. Sin embargo, dosis bajas (corticoide nasal) puede provocar esta afección. La recuperación completa ocurre en más del 90%, siendo un pequeño porcentaje recurrente o permanente. Además, el haber presentado un cuadro neuropsiquiátrico inducido por corticoides, se asocia con un aumento de la recurrencia. Se puede plantear contraindicación de los corticoides o, si es posible, profilaxis con un antipsicótico de segunda generación. | non_poster |
Experimental Study of Wavy Surface Effects on Uplink Water-Air Optical Camera Communication Behnaz Majlesein LightBee S.L. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain bmajlesein@lightbeecorp.com J.M. Luna-Rivera Universidad Autonoma de San Luis Potosi San Luis Potosi, Mexico mlr@uaslp.mx Callum T. Geldard School of Engineering, Institute for Digital Communications, University of Edinburgh Edinburgh, U.K cgeldard@exseed.ed.ac.uk Julio Rufo Universidad de La Laguna San Cristobal de La Laguna, Spain jrufotor@ull.edu.es Jose Rabadan IDeTIC Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain jose.rabadan@ulpgc.es Victor Guerra Pi Lighting Sarl Sion, Switzerland victor.guerra@pi-lighting.com Wasiu O. Popoola School of Engineering, Institute for Digital Communications, University of Edinburgh Edinburgh, U.K w.popoola@ed.ac.uk ABSTRACT This paper presents an experimental study of water-to-air optical camera communication (OCC) in the presence of wavy surface conditions. It evaluates the system performance in terms of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), considering various camera exposure times and regions of interest (ROI) in captured images. The results reveal a noticeable reduction in the SNR due to the presence of surface waves. However, the system performance is improved by considering the average value of several illuminated pixels produced by the point spread function as the ROI. Furthermore, the statistical characteristics of the received optical signals in the presence of surface waves are assessed. KEYWORDS Optical camera communication, water-to-air communications, wavy water surface, statistical distribution, goodness of fit. 1 INTRODUCTION The connectivity of underwater sensors and airborne nodes across the water-air interface is highly desirable. These direct commu- nication links effectively eliminate the necessity for data to pass through multiple intermediary nodes, leading to a considerable reduction in latency. This is crucial for applications that require real-time data transmission, such as environmental monitoring. Ad- ditionally, the direct link offers low power consumption compared to multi-hop communication as there are fewer intermediate nodes in the communication path, resulting in reduced energy usage. Utilizing acoustic waves encounter significant limitations, mainly reflecting off the water surface rather than effectively traversing through it. Similarly, radio frequency (RF) waves suffer from high attenuation when propagated in water. Optical wireless communi- cation (OWC) is considered the most practical approach for inter- medium communication. However, the performance of an OWC system across the water surface, including water-to-air (W2A) and air-to-water (A2W), is influenced by the reflection and refraction of light beams that cross two different media due to various refractive indices [1]. Moreover, challenges arise due to unpredictable changes | non_poster |
36 EAAP – Programme of the 73rd annual meeting, Porto 2022 Session 10. Early career competition ‘Innovative approaches to pig and poultry production’, supported by Wageningen Academic Publishers Room: Piquete Chair: Nilsson / Vigors Session type: Young EAAP session Theatre Session 10 Book of Abstracts page 8:30 Precision feeding of lactating sows: evaluation of a decision support system in farm conditions 198 R. Gauthier, C. Largouët, D. Bussières, J.P. Martineau and J.Y. Dourmad 8:45 Growth performance and gut health of low and normal birth weight piglets fed different zinc sources 198 C. Negrini, D. Luise, F. Correa, L. Amatucci, S. Virdis, A. Romeo, N. Manzke, P. Bosi and P. Trevisi 9:00 Effect of maternal diet on slow and fast growing piglet faecal microbiota and volatile fatty acids 199 F. Palumbo, G. Bee, P. Trevisi, F. Correa, S. Dubois and M. Girard 9:15 Effect of dietary Ulva lactuca inclusion on weaned piglet small intestinal morphology and proteome 199 D.M. Ribeiro, D.F.P. Carvalho, C. Leclercq, M. Pinho, J. Renaut, J.A.M. Prates, J.P.B. Freire and A.M. Almeida 9:30 Effect of dietary carob pulp inclusion and high vitamin E on pigs carcass characteristics 200 D.N. Bottegal, L. Bernaus, B. Casado, I. Argemí-Armengol, S. Lobón, M.A. Latorre and J. Álvarez Rodríguez 9:45 Dietary yeast mannan-rich fraction as a gut health solution for sustainable broiler production 200 S.A. Salami, C.A. Moran and J. Taylor-Pickard 10:00 Jejunal and ileal nutrient uptake and epithelium integrity in pigs differing in protein efficiency 201 M. Tretola, P. Silacci, E.O. Ewaoluwagbemiga, G. Bee and C. Kasper 10:15 Coffee break 10:45 Effects of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens CECT 5940 or Bacillus subtilis DSM 32315 on chicken PBMCs 201 F. Larsberg, M. Sprechert, D. Hesse, G. Loh, G.A. Brockmann and S. Kreuzer-Redmer 11:00 Improving welfare of pigs through selection for resilience 202 A.T. Kavlak and P. Uimari 11:15 Single-step genomic prediction of sperm quality traits in Pietrain pigs 202 M. Bauer, C. Pfeiffer and J. Soelkner 11:30 From genotyping strategies to phenotype suitability – simulation of pig breeding schemes in MoBPS 203 T. Pook, L. Büttgen, L. Hanekamp, C. Reimer, H. Simianer, H. Henne and R. Sharifi 11:45 An open source pose estimation model for fattening pigs during weighing 203 C. Winters, W. Gorssen, R. Meyermans, S. Janssens, R. D’Hooge and N. Buys 12:00 Poster Presentation 204 K. Nilsson and S. Vigors Poster Session 10 Book of Abstracts page 10.14 Capsule for sampling (CapSa): a less invasive tool to sample small-intestinal content in pigs 204 I. García Viñado, M. Tretola, G. Bee and C. Ollagnier 10.15 Influence of body lesion score on oxidative status and gut microbiota of weaned pigs 205 F. Correa, D. Luise, G. Palladino, P. Bosi, D. Scicchitano, P. Brigidi, P.L. Martelli, G. Babbi, S. Turroni, M. Candela, S. Rampelli and T. Paolo 10.16 Effects of a diet containing a mixture of Chlorella and Spirulina on broiler performance 205 C. Paiva, R. Reis, D. Carvalho, A.M. Almeida and M. Lordelo | non_poster |
EGU General Assembly 2024, Friday, 19 April 2024, EGU24-5212 GreenSCENT and SEARCH projects Rates of Change in Past Warm Periods, Part 1 Manfred Mudelsee, Institute of Geosciences, University Potsdam, Germany Climate Risk Analysis, Germany Dear colleague, my apologies for being unable to come to Vienna and present this poster. This is the title page. The full PDF, available as Supplementary Material at the EGU site and also at https://www.manfredmudelsee.com/publ/pdf/mudelsee-egu-2024.pdf, has the content plus links to videos and online chat on Friday 10:45 to 12:30. MM. German Research Foundation Funded by | non_poster |
1 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE / COLLOQUE INTERNATIONNAL VERNACULAR LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY IN THE MIDDLE AGES, 1100-1500 (FRANCE, ITALY, AND GREAT BRITAIN) LITTERATURE VERNACULAIRE ET PHILOSOPHIE AU MOYEN ÂGE, 1100–1500 (FRANCE, ITALIE, ET GRANDE BRETAGNE) SEPTEMBRE 2023 – PARIS (Exact Dates TBC : Sept 27-29) Organisers: Christophe Grellard & Marco Nievergelt Contact : christophe.grellard@ephe.psl.eu marco.nievergelt@ephe.psl.eu SCIENTIFIC RATIONALE The conference is organised by Christophe Grellard and Marco Nievergelt (both members of the LEM Laboratory, UMR 8584, at the at the École Pratique des Hautes Etudes). It concludes a series of conversations emerging from two different seminars on this topic, held at the EPHE between 2021 and 2023. The overarching purpose of the Conference is to facilitate the conversation between literary scholars and literary historians on the one hand, and intellectual historians and specialists in medieval philosophy, science, and theology on the other. The study of the relations between what is commonly referred to as ‘literature’ and ‘philosophy’ in the late medieval period is beset by a number of methodological difficulties that have long prevented the development of fruitful conversation among specialists in the different disciplines concerned. In addition, scholars working on different languages and withing different academic traditions, rarely have the opportunity to conduct a conversation that is genuinely comparative as well as interdisciplinary. As well as showcasing a variety of readings and case studies in different linguistic and literary traditions, then, the congress aims to address a number of larger, recurrent key questions — theoretical, practical, methodological, and historiographical. Some of the most important among these are the following: | non_poster |
Cosmic web influences the rapid evolution of cold interstellar medium in SIMBA galaxies Darko Donevski NCN Staring Grant Fellow 1. NCBJ,Astrophysics Division, Warsaw 2. SISSA, Astrophysics Group, Trieste A journey through galactic environments, Porto Ercole, 25-29/09/2023 darkdonevski@gmail.com darko.donevski@ncbj.gov.pl Collaborators: K. Kraljic, OAS, Strasbourg C. Lovell, Univ. of Portsmouth R. Davé, ROE, Edinburgh D. Narayanan, Uni. of Florida G. Lorenzon, K. Lisiecki, NCBJ, Warsaw | non_poster |
Disease Maps Community Meeting 2020 November 12, 2020 A comprehensive map of the SARS-CoV-2 replication cycle Marcio L. Acencio1, Alexander Mazein, Hanna Borlinghaus, Tobias Czauderna, Falk Schreiber, Marek Ostaszewski and Reinhard Schneider | non_poster |
Page | 1 The use of in-app data to drive geodemographic classification of activity patterns Mikaella Mavrogeni*1, Paul Longley†1, Justin van Dijk‡1 1Department of Geography University College London GISRUK 2023 Summary We use location data from multiple mobile phone applications to describe daily, weekly, seasonal and annual activity patterns. Geodemographics, or ‘the analysis of people by where they live’, provides an organising framework, extended to represent the ways in which neighbourhood residents interact with workplaces, recreational and leisure destinations and transport infrastructure. We evaluate how in-app location data can be incorporated into geodemographic analysis to better understand the flux of activity patterns that characterise densely populated areas throughout the day. Limitations and net benefits of in- app location data are critically assessed to evaluate the ways in which activity-based geodemographics are robust, effective and safe to use when characterising the population at large. KEYWORDS: geodemographics, big data, temporal analytics, in-app data, geospatial 1. Introduction Geodemographics present a conventional organising framework for representing the ways in which neighbourhoods are differentiated. They use a range of techniques for summarising large volumes of data into summary profiles that policymakers find helpful in making resource allocation decisions (see Figure 1 for an illustrative geodemographic classification). * mikaella.mavrogeni.19@ucl.ac.uk † p.longley@ucl.ac.uk ‡ j.t.vandijk@ucl.ac.uk | non_poster |
Version 1 (September 2020) ASMOHEJP2021 poster 2 D-PhD06-6.12.1 Responsible Partner: ANSES | non_poster |
Clustering and 10 Myr old Stellar Aggregates in the Orion OB1 Association César Briceño (1), Nuria Calvet (2), Jesus Hernández (3) (1) Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, Casilla 603, La Serena, Chile (2) University of Michigan, Astronomy Department, 500 Church St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA (3) Instituto de Astronomía, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ensenada BC 22860, Mexico | non_poster |
ICOS Science Conference online 2020 15-17 September Towards ICOS labelling of urban sites – review of ICOS protocols from an urban perspective Christian Feigenwinter1, Stavros Stagakis1, Roland Vogt1, Leena Järvi2, Andreas Christen3 1Department of Environmental Sciences, Atmospheric sciences, University of Basel, Klingelbergstrasse 27, 4056 Basel, SWITZERLAND 2Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research, University of Helsinki, Yliopistonkatu 3, 00100 Helsinki, FINLAND 3Environmental Meteorology, University of Freiburg, Werthmannstrasse 10, 79085, Freiburg, GERMANY ICOS Virtual Science Conference 2020 15.09.2020 Motivation ICOS RI is about to involve urban stations into the monitoring program. The first urban stations are already labelled as associated sites. The ETC Working Group „Measurements over Urban Areas“, established in 2018, aims to define standard methods for fluxes and meteorological measurements over urban areas. A „Workshop on strategies to monitor greenhouse gases in urban environments“ organized by this Working Group in Helsinki/Hyytiälä from July 1-4 in 2019 in order to discuss the topic. Among others, it was agreed, that the ICOS protocols and labelling criteria for natural ecosystems have to be adapted to the specific properties of urban flux towers, if it comes to a labelling process for urban sites within ICOS RI. This contribution reviews the ICOS protocols as published in Int. Agrophys. 2018, 32, the corresponding instruction documents and the labeling criteria for ICOS ETC class 1 and class 2 sites from an urban perspective and lists possible modifications to be implemented in a future labelling process for urban sites. | non_poster |
Poster abstract - Geospatial analysis of the Association of European Historians The poster aims to illustrate the geospatial analysis of the Association of European Historians (AEH), a network of 632 scholars from 23 different countries operative from 1981 to 1994. The latter methodology is included in my P.h.D. research project, whose objectives are both to examine the AEH activity and to analyze its impact on the European integration process as well as on the historiographical debate of the period. The poster focuses specifically on the application of network and spatial analysis to demonstrate the connection between the spatial evolution of the AEH and the collaboration with the European Economic Community (EEC) institutions. The main output is a digital interactive map aimed at representing the correspondence between the spatial shift and the AEH detachment from the EEC sphere of influence. According to a large part of the existing literature, the EEC in the 1980s supported the creation of what some called “Europeanness”. The Community bodies, notably the European Commission (EC), encouraged the meeting of researchers and historians to identify the common European origins and to promote the newborn history of European integration. The existing literature largely debates the EC attempts in this field, with particular reference to the “Liaison Committee of European historians” and the “European University Institute”. Conversely, one could note scarce attention to the European Parliament (EP) projects in the field and in particular the AEH framework. The few studies on the AEH focuses on president Armando Saitta and ostensibly concern the idea of Europe he supported or some congresses organized by the Association. Seemingly, the latter perspectives do not consider a broader significance of the AEH project. Indeed, in the first phase (1981-1985), it seemed closely linked to the EP and the member countries with the declared objective of producing an active contribution to the integration process. This collaboration was finalized to elaborate a common history of Europe that belonged to the Community institutions in a Euro-centric perspective, farther from the tendencies of historiographies in the 1980s towards the global turn and the criticism on modernity rhetorics. Conversely, in a second phase from 1985 onward, the AEH involved historians of the Soviet bloc to consider the history of Europe from a broader perspective. This East enlargement seems to correspond to a progressive detachment from the Community institutions. Hence, is there any connection between the spatial shift of the AEH and its collaboration with the EEC, notably the EP? For a distant reading of the AEH I am combining network and spatial analysis. I am using Gephi to study the evolution of the network, especially referring to its evolution across time. To ensure the public display of the results and the publication of the data in Linked Open Data (LOD) format, I am using an experimental digital history tool developed by the Digital Humanities Lab of Cagliari University (DH.UNICA). The software plugin aims to connect Omeka-S’s cataloging resources with the | non_poster |
Special issue on: International Research Partnership on Management and Organizational Theories in Business and Public Administration IMPORTANT DATES: Submission of Full Paper: until October 09, 2022. Review Process Ends: until March 2023. Special Issue publication (expected): June 2023. Guest Editors: Dr. William Newburry Florida International University (FIU), College of Business, International Business Department, USA (newburry@fiu.edu) Dr. Ronaldo Couto Parente Florida International University (FIU), College of Business, International Business Department, USA (rcparent@fiu.edu) BAR Editor-in-Chief: Dr. Ivan Lapuente Garrido Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos, Programa de Pós-Graduação de Gestão e Negócios, Brazil (bar-eic@anpad.org.br) | non_poster |
COMPLICACIONES RARAS TRAS LARINGUECTOMÍA SUPRAGLÓTICA LÁSER S. Ferrero Coloma1, M Sancho Mestre1, A.G. Jover Espla1, M. Caceda Chumbiauca1, R. Barnoya1, E Garcia1, S. Laraqui1,g. Severa Ferrandiz 1 1. Servicio de Otorrinolaringología. H. General Universitario de Alicante Objetivo Introducción 10 5 2 1 1 SANGRADO POTQUIRÚRGICO NEUMONÍA POR ASPIRACIÓN ENFISEMA DISNEA INFECCIÓN PORCENTAJE DE COMPLICACIONES Porcentaje Presentamos las complicaciones de un caso de tumor avanzado de supraglotis en paciente de edad avanzada tratado mediante resección endoscópica. Presentación del caso La laringectomía parcial supraglótica (LPS) láser supone una cirugía cuyo objetivo es resecar una lesión de probable origen neoplásico con suficiente margen de seguridad para controlar el proceso patológico permitiendo conservar en la medida de lo posible las funciones del órgano. Como toda cirugía a la que se expone al paciente no está exenta de complicaciones. En nuestra experiencia se destribuyen de la siguiente manera: No RAMc DLP, HTA; no DM. Exfumadora de 40 años/paq hace 5 años. No habito enólico FA crónica. Intervenida cataratas. TTO: Sintrom, Futuran, Digaril. Trabajó como pantalonera. Tienda de comestibles y cervecería. Mujer de 83 años con disfonía progresiva de meses evolución y otodinia derecha. Exploración física Cavidad oral y Faringe sin hallazgos NFC: lesión que afecta a banda ventricular derecha llegando hasta la línea media y pie de epiglotis, con cuerdas vocales sin alteraciones. Cuello: no adenopatías papables. Otoscopia bilateral Normal Exploración Radiológica Engrosamiento mucoso irregular supraglótico derecho compatible con neoplasia de 21 mm x 19 mm x 18 m (cc x ap x transv), que afecta a toda la banda ventricular derecha llegando hasta la línea media y pie de epiglotis, con signos de infiltración en profundidad de la grasa paralaríngea derecha y preepiglótica (10mm), existiendo un plano graso de clivaje entre la lesión neoplásica y la lámina interna del cartílago tiroides cT3cN0cM0 | non_poster |
The cold gas component in GASP ram-pressure stripped galaxies A. Moretti #63 | non_poster |
Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics XII, Proceedings of the XVI Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society held on July 15 - 19, 2024, in Granada, Spain. M. Manteiga, F. González Galindo, A. Labiano Ortega, M. Martínez González, N. Rea, M. Romero Gómez, A. Ulla Miguel, G. Yepes, C. Rodríguez López, A. Gómez García and C. Dafonte (eds.), 2025 Barb´a 2: A new supergiant-rich Galactic stellar cluster J. Ma´ız Apell´aniz1 and I. Negueruela2 1 Centro de Astrobiolog´ıa, CSIC-INTA, Spain 2 Universidad de Alicante, Spain Abstract We present a new supergiant-rich stellar cluster hidden by extinction and christen it as Barb´a 2, in honor of its discoverer Rodolfo Barb´a. The cluster is at a distance of 7.39+0.65 −0.55 kpc and contains several supergiants, of which we provide spectral classifications for one blue, one yellow, and five red ones. The cluster extinction indicates an above- average grain-size (R5495 ∼3.7), its age has a minimum value of 10 Ma, and its core radius is 0.84 ± 0.19 pc. 1 Motivation and summary A decade ago, our colleague Rodolfo Barb´a discovered two very interesting Galactic clusters. One of them is a large highly-extincted globular cluster, the Sequoia cluster which may be the remnant of a dwarf galaxy absorbed by the Milky Way (Barb´a et al. 2019). The results for the other one, a young and massive cluster rich in supergiant stars, were never published, as Rodolfo unexpectedly passed away in December 2021. Having worked with Rodolfo on this project, we collected our previous analysis and combined it with new data, mostly from Gaia, and we present it here for the first time. In honor of Rodolfo, we christen the two clusters he discovered as Barb´a 1 (Sequoia cluster) and Barb´a 2 (new one). As Rodolfo was an active participant in the Villafranca project to identify and characterize Galactic OB stellar groups (Ma´ız Apell´aniz et al. 2020, 2022), we add Barb´a 2 to that project and we assign it the catalog name Villafranca B-006 (Ma´ız Apell´aniz et al. 2025). 2 Discovery Rodolfo discovered Barb´a 2 scanning the plane of the MW using multi-wavelength surveys and looking for stellar clustering, possibly associated with warm dust. The region with l = 287−292◦(Fig. 1) is dominated on its western side by the Carina OB1 association, at a distance of 2.35 kpc, while the eastern half includes three prominent H ii regions: NGC 3576, | non_poster |
Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 Lithostratigraphic reconstruction of a nearly 20 m-long piston core collected in the sediment drift area west of Svalbard R.G. Lucchi1, C. Caricchi2, P. Del Carlo3, A. Di Roberto3, P. Macri2, L. Sagnotti2 1 Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale (OGS), Borgo Grotta Gigante 42c, 34010 Sgonico (TS), Italy (rglucchi@inogs.it); 2 Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Via di Vigna Murata 605, 00143 Roma, Italy. 3 Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Sezione di Pisa, Via della Faggiola, 32 - 56126 Pisa, Italy. Abstract Two long Calypso cores were collected during Eurofleets 2 cruise PREPARED with the geological objectives to 1) define a high-resolution, detailed age model for stratigraphic cross correlation still lacking in this area; 2) to reconstruct past climatic changes including minor scale fluctuations within each climate stage with special emphasis on the Holocene. One of the two cores collected an expanded Holocene sequence nearly 6 m-thick suitable for high-resolution climate reconstruction. Preliminary results seem to confirm the existence of sediment drift originated from the oceanographic configuration determined by the interplay between the shallow Western Spitsbergen Current and the deep Norwegian Deep Sea Water. Introduction The study of contourite drifts is useful for the reconstruction of the oceanographic and climate history of continental margins since these sedimentary deposits typically form along the pathways of major bottom currents (Rebesco et al., 2008). Contourite drifts are characterized by relatively high and continuous accumulation rates, in contrast to adjacent condensed pelagic sequences, generating expanded sedimentary sequences suitable for high-resolution detailed palaeo- reconstructions (Knutz, 2008). The Fram Strait in the north polar area is the only deep-sea open gate through which water masses are exchanged between the Nord Atlantic and Arctic Oceans (Fig.1). Warm Atlantic waters forming the West Spitsbergen Current (WSC, northern continuation of the North Atlantic/Norwegian current) are advected northward across the eastern side of the Fram Strait. The warm WSC is responsible for almost ice-free conditions in the west and north Svalbard area during winter, exerting a strong control on Arctic climate. At the same time, cold Arctic waters (East Greenland Current, Fig.1) descend southward across the western side of the Fram Strait contributing to the maintenance of the Greenland ice cap. According to Eiken and Hinz (1993) bottom currents influenced the sedimentation in the Fram Strait area since the Late Miocene. Two contourite drifts were identified on the seismic profiles collected along the western continental margin of the Svalbard Archipelago between 76-78°N, north of the Storfjorden glacial trough (Rebesco et al., 2013; Fig. 1). Two Calypso cores were collected during the Eurofleets 2- PREPARED cruise on board the RV G.O. Sars (June 2014) with the geological objectives to 1) define a high-resolution age model for stratigraphic cross correlation still lacking in this area; 2) to reconstruct past climatic changes including minor scale fluctuations within each climate stage with Figure 1: Location map the Calypso cores collected during the Eurofleet-2 PREPARED Cruise (red dots) and other Arctic projects (yellow dots). General ocean circulation is also indicated. *6 3& *6 3& (* (* 69 )5$0675$,7 (DVW *UHHQ ODQG &XUUHQW :HVW 6SLWV EHUJHQ &XUUHQW | non_poster |
Flow Cytometry: Technical Tips and Calibration Particles Flow cytometry is a technique used to detect and measure the physical and chemical characteristics of a group of cells or particles (Figure 1). In this process, a group of cells or particles is suspended in a liquid and then injected into a flow cytometer. Ideally, one cell at a time flows through the laser beam, and the light scattered in the laser beam is unique to the cell and its components. Cells are usually labeled with fluorescence so that the light is absorbed and emitted into a wavelength band. Tens of thousands of cells can be quickly detected and the data collected is processed by a computer. Flow cytometry is an instrument that provides quantitative data. Similar to flow cytometry, cell sorters can physically separate and purify cells of interest based on their optical characteristics. Figure 1. Flow cytometry is routinely used in basic research, clinical practice, and clinical trials. CD Email: info@cd-bioparticles.com Tel: 1-631-633-6938 Determine Cell Characteristics & Function Diagnosis of Health Disorders Such as Blood Cancers Protein Engineering Detection Detect Microorgan- isms Biomarker Detection Cell Counting Cell Sorting | non_poster |
Cosmic rays in the Orion-Eridanus superbubble Laboratoire AIM, CEA/DRF/Irfu/Dap - CNRS - Université Paris Diderot Théo Joubaud, Isabelle Grenier, Jean-Marc Casandjian on behalf of the Fermi-LAT collaboration | non_poster |
INTERNATIONAL CALL FOR AUTHORS SMART BUILDINGS & CITIES WITH REMOTE SENSING & GIS Book Title Publisher - CRC Press: Taylor & Francis Group, USA Final Book Publication - 2024 Unlocking the Potential: Harnessing the Power of Geomatics in Architecture & Planning | non_poster |
ﻧﺸﺮﯾﻪ ﻋﻠﻤﯽ اﻧﺠﻤﻦ اﯾﺮاﻧﯽ اﺧﻼق در ﻋﻠﻮم و ﻓﻨّﺎوري 13 - 16 آذرﻣﺎه1396 وﯾﮋه ﻧﺎﻣﮥ ﻧﺨﺴﺘﯿﻦ ﮐﻨﮕﺮه ﺑﯿﻦ اﻟﻤﻠﻠﯽ اﺧﻼق در ﻋﻠﻮم و ﻓﻨﺎوري ﺑﺎ اﻣﺘﯿﺎز ﻋﻠﻤﯽ- ﭘﮋوﻫﺸﯽ ) داراي ﻣﺠﻮز ﺷﻤﺎره 659 / 2910 / 3( ﺻﺎﺣﺐ اﻣﺘﯿﺎز : اﻧﺠﻤﻦ اﯾﺮاﻧﯽ اﺧﻼق در ﻋﻠﻮم و ﻓﻨّﺎوري ﻣﺪﯾﺮﻣﺴ : ولﺆ ﻣﺼﻄﻔﯽ ﻣﻌﯿﻦ ﺳﺮدﺑﯿﺮ : دارﯾﻮش ﻓﺮﻫﻮد اﺳﺘﺎد ﺑﯿﻤﺎري ﻫﺎي ﮐﻮدﮐﺎن، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﻋﻠﻮم ﭘﺰﺷﮑﯽ ﺗﻬﺮان اﺳﺘﺎد ژﻧﺘﯿﮏ ﭘﺰﺷﮑﯽ، داﻧﺸﮕﺎه ﻋﻠﻮم ﭘﺰﺷﮑﯽ ﺗﻬﺮان اﺳﺘﺎد آﻟﺮژي و اﯾﻤﻮﻧﻮﻟﻮژي ﺑﺎﻟﯿﻨﯽ و رﺋﯿﺲ ﮐﺮﺳﯽ ﯾﻮﻧﺴﮑﻮ در آﻣﻮزش ﺳﻼﻣﺖ ﮐﺎرﺷﻨﺎس ﺳﺎزﻣﺎن ﺟﻬﺎﻧﯽ ﺑﻬﺪاﺷﺖ- ژﻧﻮ Email: farhud@sina.tums.ac.ir Email: mmoin@sina.tums.ac.ir ﺷــــﻮراي ﺳــــﺮدﺑﯿﺮي ) ﺑــــﻪ ﺗﺮﺗﯿــــﺐ اﻟﻔﺒــــﺎﯾﯽ (: ﺳــــﻌﯿﺪ ﺳــــﻤﻨﺎﻧﯿﺎن، دارﯾـــﻮش ﻓﺮﻫــــﻮد، ﻣﺼـــﻄﻔﯽ ﻣﻌــــﯿﻦ، ﺟﻌﻔﺮ ﻣﯿﻠﯽ ﻣﻨﻔﺮد ﮐﻤﯿﺘﻪ ﻋﻠﻤﯽ ) ﺑﻪ ﺗﺮﺗﯿﺐ ﺣﺮوف اﻟﻔﺒﺎ (: اﻋﻈ ﻦﯿﺷﻬ ، زاد ﯽﺮﺟﯾﻢ ا اﻋﻮاﻧ ﯽ، ﻟﯿﻼ اﻓﺸﺎر ﯿﻋﻠ ، ،يﺑﺎﻗﺮ ﺮﺿﺎ اﺷﺮف ﺑﺮوﺟﺮد ، ي ﺣﺴـﻦ ﺑﻠﺨـﺎر ي، زﻫـﺮا ﭘﺎرﺳﺎﭘﻮر ﯿﻋﻠ ،ﯽﺗﺎﺑﻌ ﻦﯾﺎاﻟﺪﯿﺿ ﺪﯿﺳ ، ﺛﻘﻪ ﺮﺿﺎ اﻻﺳﻼم ، ﻣﺤﺴﻦ ﺟﻮاد ي، ﻣﺤﻤﺪرﺿﺎ ﺟﻮاد ي، ﯾ ﮕﺎﻧﻪ ﻓﺎﻃﻤـﻪ ﺟـﻮاﻫﺮ ﯽﻋﻠـ ،ي ﺧـﺎﮐ ﯽ، ﻖﯾﺻـﺪ ﻫـﺎد ي ،ﯽﮑﯿﺧـﺎﻧ ﻏﻼﻣﺮﺿﺎ ذاﮐﺮ ﺻﺎﻟﺤ ﯽ، ﻓﺎﻃﻤﻪ راﮐﻌ ﻦﯿﺣﺴ ، ﯽ ﺳﺎﻻرآﻣﻠ ﻦﯿﺣﺴ ﺪﯿﺳ ،ﯽ ﯿ اﻣ ،ه زاد ﺳﺮاج ﺮاﺣﻤﺪ ﺷﺠﺎﻋ ﯽ، اﺣﺴﺎن ﺷﻤﺴ ﯽ ﮔﻮﺷﮑ ﺦﯿﺷ ﻦﯿﺣﺴ ،ﯽ رﺿﺎﺋ ﯽ، ﺣﺴـﻦ ﯽﻋﻠ ،ﯽﺒﯾﻏﺮ ﻦﯿﺣﺴ ،يﺮﯾﻋﺸﺎ ،يﻏﻔﺎر ﻧﻌﻤﺖ اﷲ ﻓﺎﺿﻠ ﯽ، ﻣﻘﺼـﻮد ﻓﺮاﺳـﺘﺨﻮاه ، رﺿـﺎ ﻓﺮﺟـ ﯽ داﻧـﺎ ، رﺳـﺘﻢ ﻓـﻼح ، اﺑﻮاﻟﻘﺎﺳـﻢ ﻓﻨـﺎ ،ﯾﯽ ﻣﺤﻤـﺪاﻣ ﯿﻦ ﻗـﺎﻧﻌ ، راد ﯽ ﻣﺤﻤﺪﺻﺎدق ﮐﺎﻣﻼن ﯽﻋﻠ ،يﻣﺮاد يﻫﺎد ، ﻣﻘﺪار ، ي اردﺷ ﯿﺮ ﻣﻨﺼﻮر ي، ﻓﺮﺷﺎد ﻣﺆﻣﻨ ﯽ، ﺟﻮاد ﻣ ﯿﺮي، ﺟﻌﻔﺮ ﻣ ﯿﻠﯽ ﻣﻨﻔﺮد ، رﺿﺎ ﻣ ﯿ ﺮﻓﻼح ، يﺮﯿﻧﺼ ﻧﺠﻔﻘﻠﯽ ﺣﺒﯿﺒﯽ ﮐﻤﯿﺘﻪ داوري ) ﺑﻪ ﺗﺮﺗﯿﺐ ﺣﺮوف اﻟﻔﺒﺎ ﺪﯿ اﻣ (: آﺳﻤﺎﻧ ﯽ، ﻋﻠﯿﺮﺿﺎ آل ﺑﻮ اﺗﺮك ﻦﯿﺣﺴ ،ﻪﯾ ، يﻣﻬﺪ اﺧﻮان اﺑﺮاﻫ ، ﯿﻢ اﺻﻞ ﺳﻠ ، ﯽﻤﺎﻧﯿ ﻦﯿﺷـﻬ اﻋـﻮاﻧ ، ﯽ ﻟﯿﻼ اﻓﺸﺎر ﯽﻋﻠ ، اﻓﻀﻠ ﯽ ﮐﻮﺷﺎ ،يﺎزﯾا ﻢﯾﻣﺮ ، اﻋﻈﻢ ا ﯿﻋﻠ ، زاد ﯽﺮﺟﯾ ،يﺑﺎﻗﺮ ﺮﺿﺎ ﻓﺘﺎﻧﻪ ﺗﻘ ﯿﻋﻠ ،ﺎرهﯾ ﯽ ﺛﻘﻪ ﺮﺿﺎ اﻻﺳﻼﻣ ﻞﯿﺟﻠ ، ﯽ راﺷﺪ ﻣﺤﺼﻞ ، ﻣﺤﺴﻦ ﺟﻮاد ،ي يﮐﺒﺮ ﺟﻮدﮐ ، ﯽ زﻫﺮا ﺧﺰاﻋ ، ﯽ اﺣﻤﺪ د ، ﯽﻠﻤﯾ ﻏﻼﻣﺮﺿﺎ ذاﮐﺮ ﺻﺎﻟﺤ ﯽﻨﻌﻠﯿﺣﺴ ، ﯽ رﺣﻤﺘ ﯿ رﺷ ﺎﯾ رو ، ﯽ ﺪﭘﻮرا يﺪﯿﺳﻌ ﺪهﯿﺳﻌ ، ﯾﯽ ﺗﻬﺮاﻧ ﯽﺗﻘ ، ﯽ ﺷﺎﻣﺨ ، ﯽ ﺣﺴﻦ ﻦﯿﺣﺴ ، يﺮﯿﺷﺒ ، ﯽﺷﻘﺎﻗ اﺣﺴﺎن ﺷﻤﺴ ﯽ ﮔﻮﺷﮑ ، ﯽﺎﻧﯿﺷ ﺤﻪﯿﻣﻠ ، ﯽ ﺣﺴﻦ ﺷﯿﺦ رﺿﺎﺋ ﯿﻋﻠ ، ﯽ ﯿﺻ ﺮﺿﺎ ﺎدﻣﻨﺼﻮر اﮐﺒﺮ ﯽﻋﻠ ، ﻋﺒﺪل ، ي آﺑﺎد رﺿﺎ ﻓﺮﺟـ ﯽ داﻧـﺎ ، ﻫﻮﻣـﺎن ، ﯽﺎﻗﺘﯿﻟ ﻧﺎﺻﺮ ﻣﻌﺼﻮﻣ ﯽﻋﻠ ، يﻣﻘﺎر ﯽﻋﻠ ، ﯽ ﻣﻘﺪار ، ي اردﺷ ﯿﺮ ﻣﻨﺼﻮر ، ي ﻣﺤﻤﺪﺟﻮاد ﻣﻮﺣﺪ اﮐﺒﺮ ﯽﻋﻠ ، ي ﻣﻮﺳﻮ ي ﻣﻮﺣـﺪ ﻨـﺎ ﯿﻣ ، ي ﻣﻬـﺎﺟﺮ ، ﻋﺒﺪاﻟﻤﺠ ﺪﯿـ ﻣﻬـﺪو ي داﻣﻐﺎﻧ ، يﻧﻮر ﺪﯿ اﻣ ، ﯽ ﻣﺤﻤﺪﺟﻮاد ﭘﻨﺎه ﺰدانﯾ رﺋﯿﺲ ﮐﻨﮕﺮه : ﻣﺼﻄﻔ ﯽ ﻣﻌﯿﻦ دﺑﯿﺮ ﻋﻠﻤﯽ ﮐﻨﮕﺮه : ﺗﻘﯽ ﺷﺎﻣﺨﯽ دﺑﯿﺮ اﺟﺮاي ﮐﻨﮕﺮه : اﺣﺴﺎن ﺷﻤﺴﯽ ﮐﻨﮕﺮه وﯾﺮاﺳﺘﺎر و ﺻﻔﺤﻪ : آرا ﮔﻮﻫﺮ ﻧﺼﺮﺗﯽ ، زﯾﻨﺐ ﮐﺮﯾﻤﯽ ، ﻣﺮﺟﺎن ﻗﺎﺿﯽ ﻧﺸﺎﻧﯽ دﺑﯿﺮﺧﺎﻧﻪ ﻣﺠﻠﻪ : ﺧﯿﺎﺑﺎن ﻓﺎﻃﻤﯽ ﻏﺮﺑﯽ-ﺧﯿﺎﺑﺎن ﺷﻬﯿﺪ اﻋﺘﻤﺎدزاده-ﺧﯿﺎﺑﺎن ﮔﺮدآﻓﺮﯾﺪ)روﺑـﺮوي دژﺑـﺎن ﻣﺮﮐـﺰ(-ﭘـﻼك18 - ﻃﺒﻘﻪ ﺳﻮم ﮐﺪﭘﺴﺘﯽ : 45531 - 14118 – ﺗﻠﻔﻦ : 66945366 ﻧﻤﺎﺑﺮ : 66576738 ﻧﺸﺎﻧﯽ اﻟﮑﺘﺮوﻧﯿﮑﯽ: info@iranethics.ir وﺑﮕﺎه: www.iranethics.ir اﯾﻦ ﻧﺸﺮﯾﻪ در»اﯾﺮان ژورﻧﺎل«ﻧﻈﺎم ﻧﻤﺎﯾﻪ ﺳﺎزي ﻣﺮﮐﺰ ﻣﻨﻄﻘﻪ اي اﻃﻼع رﺳﺎﻧﯽ ﻋﻠﻮم و ﻓﻨّﺎوري ﺑﻪ ﻧﺸﺎﻧﯽwww.ricest.ac.irو ﭘﺎﯾﮕﺎه اﺳﺘﻨﺎدي ﻋﻠﻮم ﺟﻬﺎن اﺳﻼم )ISC ( ﺑﻪ ﻧﺸﺎﻧﯽ www.isc.gov.ir و ﻫﻤﭽﻨﯿﻦ در ﭘﺎﯾﮕﺎه اﻃﻼﻋﺎت ﻋﻠﻤﯽ ﺟﻬﺎد داﻧﺸﮕﺎﻫﯽ ﺑﻪ ﻧﺸﺎﻧﯽ : www.SID.ir ﻧﻤﺎﯾﻪ ﻣﯽ ﺷﻮد . | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 Melatonina (Estructura, funcionalidad e importancia) Jessica Samantha Niño Domínguez* iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: jessica.ninod@alumno.buap.mx 22 de Noviembre de 2022 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349622 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Ricardo Carreño-López (Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias Microbiológicas, Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen La melatonina fue aislada e identificada por primera vez en 1958 por Lerner y su equipo en el tejido de la glándula pineal bovina. La primera función que describieron fue la de aclarar la piel de los renacuajos (de ahí su nombre, "melatonina", ya que contraía los melanóforos de la piel de | non_poster |
By University of Genoa & University of Naples Parthenope Pre-feasibility study of Cold ironing for cruise ships RES4CITY CASE STUDY #2 | non_poster |
C u i d a d o s d o m i c i l i a r e s n a a s p i r a ç ã o d a s v i a s a é r e a s s u p e r i o r e s ( p a r t e 1 ) Introduza a sonda com delicadeza para evitar causar lesões. Não demore mais do que 10 segundos aspirando. Vestir a máscara, os óculos de proteção e o avental descartável Lavar as mãos com água e sabão, esfregando entre os dedos, até os punhos Separar o material de uso no momento da aspiração (sonda, soro fisiológico, etc.) Ligar o equipamento de aspiração portátil e sentar o paciente Calçar as luvas e medir a sonda (da ponta do nariz até o lóbulo da orelha) Lubrificar a sonda com água destilada antes de introduzi-la no paciente Inserir a sonda clampeada (sem sucção) Aplicar a sucção e fazer movimentos circulares enquanto remove a sonda Elaborado por: Cristiane de Almeida Faria Yasmin Saba de Almeida Felipe Guimarães Tavares | non_poster |
1 | P a g e – 2 0 2 3 © V o i c e o f D i f f e r e n t l y A b l e d P e r s o n s , A f g h a n i s t a n Mobility Equipment | non_poster |
DATA PROTECTION MODEL PRIVACY (“BEING ALONE”) SELF-REPRESENTATION IN THE PUBLIC INTERNAL DEVELOPMENT (“MANIPULATION”) EXTERNAL DEVELOPMENT (“NEGATIVE DECISIONS”) EQUALITY AND NON-DISCRIMINATION DATA PROTECTION | non_poster |
Statement of Astronomy Education in Chile Angie Barr* (1a), Carla Hernández (2a), Daphnea Iturra (3a), Maritza Arias (4a) and Hugo Caerols (5a) (1) Universidad Autónoma de Chile, campus Temuco, (2) Universidad de Santiago de Chile, (3) Universidad de la Santísima Concepción, (4) Colegio Leonardo da Vinci Vicuña, (5) Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (a) National Astronomy Education Coordination Team of Chile *Corresponding author: angie.barr.d@gmail.com | non_poster |
CSSI Element: The PERTURBO Package: A Community Code for Electron Interactions and Dynamics in Materials PI: Marco Bernardi, attendee: Shiyu Peng Institute: Department of Applied Physics and Materials Science, California Institute of Technology Award #: 2209262 NSF CSSI PI Meeting, Houston, TX, Sep. 26-27, 2023 Project overview p Innovation of electronic and information technologies highly depend on the understanding of scattering, dynamic and interaction between various carriers, such as electrons, phonons, photons and defects p Previous versions of Perturbo have already gained great success in the calculation of carrier scattering and transport calculation p Huge demands to further consider electron interactions and better description of dynamics in increasingly complex materials nowadays p Perturbo project aims at providing robust, highly efficient, user- oriented and sustained computational tools, which will be a bridge between academic and field and industry. It also prepares the code to the exascale era of computation. Spin relaxation & decoherence DMFT + e-ph Typical workflow V 1.0 (January, 2020) n Phonon-limited carrier mobility, electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficient n Imaginary part of electron-phonon (e-ph) self-energy and e-ph scattering rates n Phonon-limited carrier mean free path and relaxation times n Ultrafast carrier dynamics with fixed phonon occupation n electronic band and phonon dispersion n e-ph matrix elements for nonpolar and polar materials, and their Wannier interpolation New features in future versions Code structure and current features Beyond DFT e-ph scheme: DFT+U & DFPT+U Finite temperature cumulant Method for large polarons Compress of e-ph matrix by data-driven method GPU implementation Other features l Coupled electron and phonon dynamics l Magnon-phonon interactions l Lindblad dynamics / Heisenberg equation of motion l Small polaron transport l Time integrators (Interface with the Sundials library, Berkeley Lab) l Machine Learning of electron- phonon scattering matrix l Berry curvature Boltzmann transport equation l Ab initio approach for e-ph coupling and polarons in strongly correlated materials by DFT+U and DFPT+U l DFPT+U enables simulation of polaron effect in CoO by avoid unphysically divergences l A many-body approach captures phonon-induced spin decoherence of both Elliott-Yafet (EY) spin-flip and Dyakonov-Perel (DP) spin precesion mechanism l Prediction of huge renormalization of spin dynamics in GaAs beyond only EY spin relaxation mechanism l Capturing the strong e-ph interactions by using a cumulant diagram- resummation technique l Predicting accurate electron mobility and new charge transport mechanism in SrTiO3 between 150-300 K l Capture the renormalization of quasiparticle dispersion and spectral weight on equal footing l Compress e-ph matrix in real space by singular value decomposition l Accelerate e-ph calculations by about two orders of magnitudes without sacrificing accuracy Exciton-phonon interactions l Based on ab initio Bethe-Salpeter equation, the exicton-phonon matrix elements and relaxation times are derived l Accurate prediction of the phonon- assisted photoluminescence for bulk hexagonal boron nitride Powered by Project community Cyberinfrastructures Community building and broader impact l HDF5/YAML-assisted data IO l HPC by MPI+OpenMP and OpenACC l Post-processing library: Perturbpy l Docker: gcc/intel l Github-driven community l Active and continuous development in Prof. Bernardi group, refer to Perturbo website: l Two workshops: 10/2020 and 09/2023 l Over 700 official users l Over 80 peer-reviewed papers used Perturbo for their studies Acknowledgement Physical Review Letters, 127, 126404 (2021) Physical Review Researh 1, 033138 (2019) Physical Review Letters, 129, 197201 (2022) Physical Review Materials, 7, 093801 (2023) submitted Physical Review Letters, 125, 107401 (2020) Temperature (K) V 2.0 (March, 2022) n Magnetotransport calculations n Calculat | non_poster |
for Researchers & Teachers Empowering Education Standardisation through in Europe | non_poster |
Electrophysiological and Behavioral responses of Philaenus spumarius and Neophilaenus campestris females to host plant volatiles Eirini Anastasaki1, Aikaterini Psoma1, Georgios Partsinevelos1, Dimitrios Papachristos2 and Panagiotis Milonas1* 1 Laboratory of Biological Control, 2 Laboratory of Agricultural Entomology, Scientific Directorate of Entomology and Agricultural Ζoology, Benaki Phytopathological Institute *corresponding author: p.milonas@bpi.gr | non_poster |
ВСЕУКРАЇНСЬКА АСОЦІАЦІЯ ПСИХОЛІНГВІСТІВ загальна інформація про організацію Всеукраїнська асоціація психолінгвістів (ВАПЛ) – всеукраїнська громадська наукова організація. ВАПЛ об’єднує на добровільних засадах провідних вчених і спеціалістів з питань психолінгвістики, які працюють у різних освітніх галузях і регіонах України з метою ефективного використання їх творчого потенціалу для психолого-педагогічного, людинознавчого, науково- технічного, соціально-економічного та культурного розвитку країни; цілеспрямованого розкриття відповідних напрямків психолінгвістичної науки, захисту фахових інтересів, взаємної координації науково-дослідної роботи, обміну досвідом тощо. ВАПЛ створено і діє на основі добровільності, рівноправності усіх членів, самоврядування, законності та гласності. Самоврядність ВАПЛ полягає в самостійному визначенні своєї структури, вирішенні науково-практичних, фахово-світоглядних питань, здійсненні міжнародних наукових зв’язків і реалізації досліджень. ВАПЛ діє у відповідності з Конституцією України, Законами України «Про об’єднання громадян» і «Про наукову і науково- технічну діяльність», іншими законодавчими актами України та Статутом ВАПЛ. Мета ВАПЛ - вивчати й узагальнювати досягнення психолінгвістики та сприяти найбільш повному практичному використанню цих здобутків в усіх сферах життєдіяльності сучасного суспільства в інтересах ефективного професійного становлення студентської молоді навчальних закладів України, а також сприяти реалізації інтелектуального потенціалу магістрантів, аспірантів, докторантів, пошуковців, які поглиблено досліджують різні аспекти психолінгвістики. Основні завданнями ВАПЛ є: 1. Об’єднувати спеціалістів з психолінгвістики навчальних закладів України, громадських організацій, вищих навчальних закладів усіх форм власності, які є членами ВАПЛ, в інтересах гуманізації соціально-культурних відносин в Україні, в інтересах більш якісної підготовки фахівців – випускників ВНЗ. 2. Сприяти утвердженню засобами психолінгвістики навчально-методичних, етичних, психолого-комунікативних, людинознавчих, духовно-гуманістичних принципів, а також міжнародного та наукового співробітництва з метою зміцнення миру між народами. | non_poster |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 POSTER: An Open-Source Framework for Developing Heterogeneous Distributed Enclave Applications Gianluca Scopelliti gianluca.scopelliti@ericsson.com imec-DistriNet KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium Sepideh Pouyanrad sepideh.pouyanrad@kuleuven.be imec-DistriNet KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium Job Noorman job.noorman@kuleuven.be imec-DistriNet KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium Fritz Alder fritz.alder@acm.org imec-DistriNet KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium Frank Piessens frank.piessens@kuleuven.be imec-DistriNet KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium Jan Tobias Mühlberg jantobias.muehlberg@kuleuven.be imec-DistriNet KU Leuven Leuven, Belgium ABSTRACT We present an integrated open-source framework to develop, de- ploy, and use event-driven distributed enclaved applications across heterogeneous Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs). Our frame- work strives for strong application authenticity and integrity guar- antees, and optionally confidentiality and availability, while min- imizing the Trusted Computing Base (TCB). For software devel- opers, our framework provides a high level of abstraction over the platform-specific TEE layer that provides isolation, attestation and secure communication amongst distributed application compo- nents, allowing developers to focus of application logic. We provide a notion of event-driven programming to develop distributed en- clave applications in Rust and C for heterogeneous TEEs, including Intel SGX, ARM TrustZone and the open-source Sancus. This het- erogeneity makes our framework uniquely suitable for a broad range of use cases which combine cloud processing, mobile and edge devices, and lightweight sensing and actuation. CCS CONCEPTS • Security and privacy →Trusted computing; Distributed systems security; • Computer systems organization →Sen- sors and actuators; Availability; Maintainability and maintenance. KEYWORDS Trusted Execution; Event-Driven Systems; Intel SGX; ARM Trust- Zone; Sancus ACM Reference Format: Gianluca Scopelliti, Sepideh Pouyanrad, Job Noorman, Fritz Alder, Frank Piessens, and Jan Tobias Mühlberg. 2021. POSTER: An Open-Source Frame- work for Developing Heterogeneous Distributed Enclave Applications. In Proceedings of ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Secu- rity (Submission to ACM CCS 2021). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 3 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/nnnnnnn.nnnnnnn Submission to ACM CCS 2021, Due 16 August 2021, Coex, Seoul, South Korea 2021. ACM ISBN 978-x-xxxx-xxxx-x/YY/MM...$15.00 https://doi.org/10.1145/nnnnnnn.nnnnnnn 1 INTRODUCTION & PROBLEM Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs) allow an application to execute in a hardware-protected environment called enclave. En- claves are isolated and protected from the rest of the system, ensur- ing strong confidentiality and integrity guarantees. Cryptographic primitives and cryptographic keys, which are unique per enclave and which can only be used by that enclave, enable secure com- munication and remote attestation; the latter is a mechanism to obtain cryptographic proof that an application is running under enclave protection on a specific processor. There are several TEEs available, both in industry and research. Open-source TEEs include Sancus and Keystone; proprietary options are, e.g., SGX for Intel processors, SEV for AMD, TrustZone for ARM, and others [3]. De- veloping distributed applications that execute on heterogeneous TEEs is difficult, in particular for scenarios that combine Internet- of-Things, Edge, and cloud hardware: each TEE requires a platform- specific software implementation, comes with different approaches to key management and attestation, a different Trusted Comput- ing Base (TCB) fo | non_poster |
Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 Atmospheric Observations at Amundsen Nobile Climate Change Tower “The integrated atmosphere-hydrosphere-cryosphere system : radiation ,energy budgets, fluxes of mass, heat and momentum at the air-snow-ground interface” A.P. Viola1, M. Mazzola1, F. Tampieri1, A. Pelliccioni2, M. Schiavon1, C. Lanconelli1, A.Lupi1, V. Vitale1 1 National Research Council, Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (CNR-ISAC), Via Fosso del Cavaliere 100, 00133 Roma, Italy Via Piero Gobetti 121 Bologna 2 INAIL, DiMEILA, Monteporzio Catone, Italy The Amundsen-Nobile Climate Change Tower (CCT) is one of the important scientific platforms operating in Ny-Alesund, Svalbard. The CCT is equipped with a consistent set of meteorological sensors installed at different heights to provide continuous measurements of the atmospheric parameters that affect the climate and its variability. In the following table the list of sensor installed is presented. The data are continuously collected since November 2009 and stored in a dedicated built-in digital infrastructure ( IADC ) that allows users to visualize, access and download the data. The atmospheric characteristics at the site are used to describe the thermodynamic structure of the lower layers of the atmosphere and provide an overview of the phenomenology occurring in the Kongsfjord area, useful to proceed with further analysis of the arctic climatic system. The numerous and complex interactions between atmosphere, ocean, cryosphere and biosphere on a broad spectrum of temporal and spatial scales, are largely responsible for the phenomenon that goes under the name of "arctic amplification" and requires a detailed knowledge of the atmospheric processes at different scales. In this frame a climatological analysis of the atmospheric parameters is important to proceed with detailed studies the exchange processes and energy balance at the surface. • K&Z CNR 1 Net radiometer [ 33 m ] • K&Z CM11 and CGR4 upwelling radiometers [ 25 m ] • Young propeller anemometer [34m ,10m, 5m and 2m ] • Vaisala HMP45 Thermo-hygrometers, [34m ,10m, 5m and 2m ] • Campbell CSAT3 sonic anemometers [21 m ] • Campbell EC150 fast hygrometer [21 m ] • Gill R50 Solent sonic anemometer [7.5 m ] • Campbell Kh-20 fast hygrometer [7.5 m ] • Gill R50 Solent sonic anemometer [3.7 m ] • Campbell Kh-20 fast hygrometer [3.7 m ] • IR120 infrared sensor for snow skin temperature [5m] • SR50 sonic range sensor for the snow height [5m] • Flux plate at the interface soil-snow [at surface] • Temperature sensor in snow layer agl [ 5 cm , 15 cm ] | non_poster |
Amamentação na primeira hora de vida UM ATO DE AMOR A IMPORTÂNCIA PARA A MÃE E PARA O BEBÊ | non_poster |
DGZfP-Jahrestagung 2014 – Poster 21 1 Lizenz: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/de/ Quantitative Messung und Visualisierung von Faserorientierungs- und Faserlängenverteilung von Glas-, Kohle- und Zellulosefaserverstärkten Kunststoffen mittels µ-Röntgen-Computertomografie Johannes WEISSENBÖCK *, Mustafa ARIKAN * Dietmar SALABERGER *, Christoph HEINZL *, Johann KASTNER * * FH OÖ Forschungs & Entwicklungs GmbH, Wels, Österreich johann.kastner@fh-wels.at Kurzfassung. Faserverstärkte Kunststoffe haben wegen ihrer spezifischen Eigenschaften und ihrer vielseitigen Verarbeitungs- und Anwendungsmöglichkeiten eine sehr große praktische Bedeutung erlangt. Für die Qualitätskontrolle dieser Materialien sind hochgenaue und robuste 3D-Verfahren der zerstörungsfreien Werkstoffprüfung wesentlich. Insbesondere ist es wichtig zu erfassen, wie die Fasern in realen Bauteilen verteilt sind und wie lange jede einzelne Faser im Bauteil tatsächlich ist. In dieser Arbeit wurden drei verschiedene Materialsysteme (glas-, kohle- und zellulosefaserverstärkte Kunststoffe) mittels hochauflösender Kegelstrahl-Röntgencomputertomografie (XCT) mit Voxelgrößen zwischen 1 µm und 6 µm untersucht. Zur Analyse dieser XCT-Daten wurde ein Software-Tool mit einer Datenverarbeitungspipeline kombiniert, um einzelne Fasern zu extrahieren, diese entsprechend ihren spezifischen Eigenschaften zu klassifizieren, die Faserlängenverteilungen und Faserorientierungsverteilungen zu visualisieren und Faserregionen hervorzuheben. Die Anwendung dieser Techniken auf die unterschiedlichen Materialsysteme und ihren individuellen Eigenschaften, wie zum Beispiel einzelne gebogene Fasern im Falle des zellulosefaserverstärkten Kunststoffes oder aber Faserlagen des kohlefaserverstärkten Kunststoffes, liefern dabei vielversprechende Ergebnisse. 1 Einführung und Motivation Innovative Industriebetriebe, insbesondere die Luftfahrtindustrie, setzt vermehrt auf Hochleistungs-Verbundkomponenten, die kostengünstig, funktionsorientiert, hochintegrierbar und leicht sind. Hochleistungs-Verbundwerkstoffe und insbesondere faserverstärkte Kunststoffe werden mit steigendem Anteil in High-Tech-Produkten eingesetzt. Dieser Umstand hat zur Folge, dass auch die Nachfrage nach zerstörungsfreien Prüfmethoden steigt. Prüfmethoden müssen detaillierten Daten über Einzelobjekte, wie z.B. Poren, Einschlüsse, Partikel, Fasern etc., im Bauteil geben, da diese wesentlich die Charakteristik des finalen Bauteils bestimmen [6], [7]. In der vorliegenden Arbeit beschränken wir uns auf die Charakterisierung von Fasern in Verbundwerkstoffen. Da die Fasern die mechanischen Eigenschaften wie Steifigkeit, Festigkeit, Verformbarkeit etc. stark beeinflussen, ist es wichtig diese exakt zu charakterisieren, um die Materialsysteme zu optimieren [1]. In dieser Arbeit wird das Software-Tool FiberScout [5] in Kombination mit | non_poster |
Evolution and significance of signalling traits in squirrels Tree squirrels in the Indian subcontinent: Funambulus and Ratufa FUTURE DIRECTIONS • Study evolution of species-specific traits, with special emphasis on the genomic aspects of colour and stripe variation • Understand behaviour patterns like breeding periods and habitat use using long term automated recorders • Study behavioural contexts associated with significant note/call types Species often evolve complex signalling mechanisms to communicate within and across species. These traits could have separate evolutionary histories, and understanding the adaptive roles of separate traits can be challenging. We examine the role of size, morphology, colour, and acoustics in squirrels through behavioural and quantitative approaches. Body Size Visual classification: Spectrogram of note type repertoire Signalling traits in three palm squirrel species: which traits are under selection? Skull Morphology Dorsal Coat colour Acoustic signal Can acoustic signals explain behaviour? Nivetha M, Suyash S, Amira S, Shijisha AC and R Nandini Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Tirupati nivetham@students.iisertirupati.ac.in; www.sciuridlab.in How complex are acoustic traits? B -C B -C Dilip A The three Funambulus species are very similar in their morphological (body size,skull and colour) characteristics. Acoustic features are species-specific, implying significance of acoustic trait evolution. Spectral classification: Fuzzy clustering using non-correlated spectral parameters Note types of all species are graded in nature. The note types in the data can be optimally clustered into two groups using spectral parameters. Visual and spectral classifications are moderately similar. Do squirrels recognise and respond to the calls of their own species? AGONISTIC AFFILIATIVE Major hour No. of sample Month Detections per day No clear diurnal patterns emerge for Dusky squirrels. Also, dusky squirrels show different levels of vocalisations in different habitats. Giant squirrels are more vocal in the early morning hours. Further work might result in clearer patterns. Can we use calling rates to infer behavioural peaks?: Automated recorders for large-scale monitoring Hourly patterns of vocalisation Annual pattern of vocalisation Palm squirrels vocally respond to acoustic signals of conspecific neighbours. Major hour Detections per day ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS DST-SERB, BNHS, Robin Vijayan, Russel Ligon, Holger Kilnck, Russ Charif, Michael Pritzick of Cornell Lab Ornithology, Aravind PS, Sciurid lab, Amrutha Rajan, Viral Joshi, IISER Tirupati administrative staff, TIFR, BJ Rao, Behaviour Ecology and Evolution lab IISER Tirupati, AVC College. | non_poster |
Coordination Fabio Balli Charly Pache affiche téléchargeable Saviez-vous que nos poumons sont notre premier contact avec notre environnement ? Nos poumons filtrent le volume d’une montgolfière chaque jour. Si l’on dépliait toutes les alvéoles qui les composent, nos poumons couvriraient une surface de 130 m2 ! Des jeux pour souffler ? Game jam Breathing Games Breathing Games encourage chacun à prendre soin de sa santé respiratoire par le jeu. Nous repensons comment les individus peuvent se réapproprier leur santé en co-créant leur technologies. et en partageant les innovations pour qu’elles bénéficient au plus grand nombre. Breathing Games est co-financée par des fonds de recherche Canadien et Européen. Plus de 240 personnes ont contribué au commun, dont pour OpenGeneva : Santé Henrique Alves Fanny Balsiger Valérie Durand Ingénierie Lucas Delvalle Bernard Dugas Yannick Gervais Renaud Ory Arts visuels Aminata D. Pierson Levan Jeanneret Nibe Mbumba Pauline Rossel Megann Stephan Design de jeux Damien Fangous Thomas Gaudy Ivan Gulizia www.breathinggames.net PocBreath est un jouet qui capte notre souffle via un micro, et le représente visuellement. Le jouet sera enrichi d’interactions, et le public intéressé sera invité à ajouter des représentations. Accessible sur navigateur : www.breathinggames.net/poc Et si le souffle pouvait être utilisé pour valoriser les échanges et la créativité ? | non_poster |
International Congress Food Technology, Quality and Safety 4th PROCEEDINGS | non_poster |
Open Science Conference 2020 FOSTERING DATA MANAGEMENT BEST-PRACTICES & OPEN RESEARCH DATA: A DECENTRALIZED HIGH-INTENSITY APPROACH Harald von Waldow <harald.vonwaldow@eawag.ch> — 2020-03-11 1 | non_poster |
Supplementary files for the Cyber Security Economics Model (CYSEM) Reliance on cyber security experts' judgment and communication gaps between experts and board members weaken organizations' ability to respond to cyber threats, and research lacks a transparent way to quantify these risks. We propose a novel CYSEM that quantifies security risk in financial terms by integrating Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) with the Factor Analysis of Information Risk (FAIR) model. We decided to provide more details of the case study here to better explain and evaluate the CYSEM. In addition, we will briefly introduce the future extension and possible applications of the CYSEM. A Case Study Based on 2017 Equifax Data Breach for Cyber Security Economics Model (CYSEM) Evaluation To illustrate the application of the developed CYSEM, we will conduct a case study based on the 2017 Equifax data breach [3]. Accessing company data related to data breaches and cyber security is notably difficult due to the sensitivity of the information, which companies are generally reluctant to share publicly, even in anonymized and confidential formats. To address this issue, we enhance our modeling with semi-synthetic data, which blends realistic and synthetic data [2]. For this case scenario, we use the 2017 Equifax data breach (please see Table 1 for brief introduction), integrating actual data from the incident report and generating mock data based on expert opinions where the report lacks specifics. This mock data is detailed through inputs from experts with over 15 years of experience in consulting enterprises on cyber security matters, thus simulating real-world practices. Table 1. Brief Review of 2017 Equifax data breach TEF evaluation. In this stage, we will find out the potential threat actors (𝑇𝑛). We will map the characteristics and assets of Equifax with corresponding SDOs and properties in STIX. To be considered for deeper threat analysis, a threat actor must associate with at least one characteristic or asset to an SDO or property. For example, the threat actor FIN7, driven by financial gain, might benefit from the sale of consumer data. Dridex could also target Equifax due to its industry and location. Next, we will evaluate 𝑇𝐸𝐹𝑇𝑛 using Eq. (1) to Eq. (4). Using FIN7 as an example, this group is known for its sophisticated cyberattacks on financial organizations, using tactics such as spear-phishing, network infiltration, and infrastructure acquisition to steal funds or data. Based on the CTI sources, FIN7’s sophistication is advanced, and its resource level is organization-backed, thus, SFIN7 = 0.4, RFIN7 = 0.7 (check Figure 1). The experts in Equifax decided the weight of SFIN7 and RFIN7 are 0.6 and 0.4 respectively. Thus, TCFIN7 is known as 0.4×0.6+0.7×0.4 = 0.52 by Eq. (1). Additionally, FIN7’s primary motivation is financial gain, with a main goal of data theft, particularly targeting payment card data. This Background of Equifax The data breach details Causes of the breach Consequences Equifax is one of the largest credit reporting agencies in U.S. It collects and aggregates information on over 800 million individual consumers and more than 88 million businesses worldwide. The company's primary services include credit reporting and scoring, as well as marketing and fraud prevention services. The data breach exposed the personal information of approximately 147 million consumers. The breach also compromised credit card numbers for about 209,000 U.S. consumers and certain dispute documents containing personal identifying information for approximately 182,000 U.S. consumers. The breach was primarily caused by the vulnerability CVE- 2017-5638 in Apache Struts, a popular open- source software used for building web applications. Equifax failed to patch this known vulnerability in a timely manner. The breach of customer data at Equifax resulted in penalties and settlement fees amounting to $700 million, excess insurance losses of $7.5 million, quarter | non_poster |
You are being invited to take part in a research project. Before you decide if you are happy to take part, and if you would like your child to take part, it is important for you to understand why the project is being done and what taking part will involve. Please take time to read this information sheet and discuss it with others if you wish. Ask us if there is anything that is not clear or if you would like more information. Who is doing this project? The project is being led by Professor Lucy Bray at Edge Hill University who has worked with an international group of nurses, doctors, play specialists, psychologists, youth workers, children and young people and parents to develop the rights based standards. You can find out more about the team on our webpage. https://www.isupportchildrensrights.com/ What is the point of the project? If you have used any part of the 'rights-based standards' when your child was having a test, investigation, examination or procedure we would really like to hear what you thought about them and what it was like using them. We are trying to work out if they are useful for children and parents, if anything needs changing or if there are things which make them difficult to use. We would love to hear from any children aged 7 to 16 years old and their parents/carers. Do I or my child have to take part? No. It is up to you to decide whether or not you or your child take part. You and your child can take part separately from each other. If your child would like to share their views, we will just ask you to tick a box at the beginning of their survey to say you have given them permission before they start answering the questions. Rights based standards for children undergoing clinical procedures Full Information Sheet for Parents/carers We are asking if you and your child would like to take part in a project. This sheet will tell you all about it. Parent/carer information sheet 22/08/22 v1: | non_poster |
Unlocking Success: A Guide to Implementing SLOs for Cloud SRE Translated Title: Unlocking Success: A Guide to Implementing Service Level Objectives (SLOs) for Cloud Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) An Introduction to SLOs for Cloud SRE As cloud-based services become increasingly ubiquitous in our digital landscape, the role of Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) has become paramount in ensuring the smooth and efficient operation of these critical systems. At the heart of effective cloud SRE lies the implementation of Service Level Objectives (SLOs), a powerful tool that enables organizations to define, measure, and continuously improve the performance of their cloud-based infrastructure and applications. In this comprehensive guide, we will delve into the world of SLOs for cloud SRE, exploring their importance, key components, and the steps required to successfully implement them within your organization. By the end of this article, you will have a deep understanding of how SLOs can unlock the path to success in managing your cloud-based environments. The Importance of Implementing SLOs for Cloud SRE In the fast-paced and ever-evolving world of cloud computing, the ability to set and achieve clear performance targets is crucial. SLOs provide a structured framework for defining and measuring the reliability, availability, and overall health of your cloud-based services. By establishing well-defined SLOs, you can: 1. Align Business and Technical Objectives: SLOs bridge the gap between business goals and technical implementation, ensuring that your cloud infrastructure and applications are designed and operated to meet the needs of your stakeholders. 2. Enhance Transparency and Accountability: SLOs provide a transparent and measurable way to communicate the performance of your cloud services, fostering trust and accountability between your organization and your customers or users. 3. Optimize Resource Allocation: By setting and monitoring SLOs, you can identify areas where resources can be optimized, leading to cost savings and improved overall efficiency. 4. Drive Continuous Improvement: SLOs serve as a feedback loop, enabling you to continuously monitor and refine your cloud SRE practices, ensuring that your services are consistently meeting or exceeding the agreed- upon performance targets. Key Components of SLOs for Cloud SRE Effective SLOs for cloud SRE are built upon several key components that work together to create a comprehensive and robust performance management framework. These components include: 1. Service Indicators: These are the specific metrics or measurements that you will use to evaluate the performance of your cloud-based services, such as availability, latency, error rate, or throughput. 2. Service Level Objectives: These are the numerical targets or thresholds that you set for each service indicator, defining the acceptable level of performance for your cloud-based services. 3. Service Level Indicators (SLIs): These are the specific measurements or data points that you will use to track and report on the performance of your cloud-based services in relation to the established SLOs. 4. Alerting and Notification: Mechanisms for proactively monitoring SLO performance and alerting your team when thresholds are approached or exceeded, enabling timely intervention and response. 5. Reporting and Analysis: Tools and processes for collecting, analyzing, and presenting SLO performance data, allowing you to identify trends, root causes, and opportunities for improvement. By understanding and incorporating these key components into your cloud SRE strategy, you can create a robust and effective SLO framework that drives continuous optimization and improvement. Steps to Implement SLOs for Cloud SRE Implementing SLOs for cloud SRE can be a structured and methodical process, and we recommend the following steps to ensure a successful implementation: 1. Define Your Service Indicators: Identify the critical metrics and measu | non_poster |
University of Porto, 6-7 July 2017 Innovative surface treatments investigation for composite – steel multimaterial design Innovation & Technology *Dr. Elena Rodríguez, Head of Advanced Materials Loudes Blanco, Laura Mera, M.Ivette Coto AIMEN Technology Center | non_poster |
MODELOS, TEORÍAS Y ESCUELAS RELACIONADOS CON LA COMUNICACIÓN SOCIAL v. 0.9 beta Idea y Periodo Representantes Consiste en Dialécticai 470-399 a.C. Sócratesii (Filósofo), Platóniii (Filósofo) - Descubrir la verdad por medio del discurso - Uso de la argumentación lógica y la discusión racional - El mito de la caverna de Platón Retóricaiv 350-322 a.C. Aristótelesv (Filósofo) - Conmover al auditorio por medio de persuasión usando argumento inductivo y la definición general - Enfocado en el emisor Etapas en la emisión de un mensaje: Invención del mensaje, Estilo, Emisión Comunicación basada en tres bloques: - Logos (uso de la razón), Ethos (Carácter-fiabilidad, simpatía, e inteligencia del emisor), Pathos (apelación emocional) Estructuralistasvi Ferdinand de Saussurevii (Lingüista-1880) Claude Lévi-Straussviii (Antropólogo -1955) - El signo lingüístico está compuesto por el significado y el significante - El lenguaje debe ser analizado como un sistema formal de elementos diferenciados (“El lenguaje es un sistema de signos que expresan ideas”) Concepción triádica del signoix Charles Sanders Peircex (filósofo lógico-1904) - Significado, significante, significación - El signo o representamen está en lugar de algo, su objeto. - El objeto es aquello por lo que está el signo, aquello que representa. - El interpretante es el signo equivalente o más desarrollado que el signo original, causado por ese signo original en la mente de quien lo interpreta. Este tercer elemento convierte a la relación de significación en una relación triádica Interaccionismo simbólicoxi (1969) Herbert Blumerxii (sociólogo-1937) - Los humanos interactúan con símbolos para construir significados. - Mediante las interacciones simbólicas adquirimos información e ideas, entendemos nuestras propias experiencias y las de los otros, compartimos sentimientos y conocemos a los demás. - Sin símbolos nada de lo anterior podría ocurrir. Nuestro pensamiento y acción serían totalmente restringidos. - Las conductas de los individuos están sujetas al significado que le otorguen a los objetos de su mundo de vida; - Lo que signifiquen las cosas para el sujeto depende de su interacción social con otros actores de su entorno; - Y los significados dependen de la experiencia social del sujeto Investigación sobre opinión pública 1940 Hadley Cantrilxiii (Investigador de opinión pública) - Pertenece a las teorías de la omnipotencia de los medios - Hace un estudio académico sobre la psicosis colectiva provocada por La guerra de los mundos de Orson Welles (1938)xiv - La sociedad es un conjunto homogéneo, aislado y pasivo - Se centra en el emisor, buscando como manipularle - La individualidad, la falta de interacción. - La unidireccionalidad – El mensaje afecta directamente - EL contexto social no tiene importancia Teoría Crítica Escuela de Frankfurtxv (Desde 1920 hasta 1960) Max Horkheimerxvi (filósofo) 1947, Theodor Adornoxvii (filósofo) 1947, Jürgen Habermasxviii (filósofo y - Un grupo de investigadores que basándose en las teorías de Hegel, Marx y Freud, las relacionan con su intento de conceptualizar teóricamente la totalidad de las condiciones sociales y la necesidad de su cambio - Plantea que la cultura pop ha producido una sociedad pasiva, con valores artificiales, artificialmente construidos, incapaz de reaccionar para seleccionar lo que desea y por lo tanto incapaz de plantear una revolución, un cambio, posicionarse en contra de lo establecido | non_poster |
Magnetic Moment Effect of High Energy Neutrinos Ting Cheng Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik 1 for Precision Tests of Fundamental Symmetries @ NuPhys, 18.12.2023, London | non_poster |
© Agnès Eyhéramendy !""#$!"$#$%&'()&% | non_poster |
MEASURING WHAT MATTERS: A refined NCD reporting framework for Indonesia. NCDs extend beyond cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer and chronic respiratory disease, the focus of recent policy. Implications for policy: Reporting of NCDs in Indonesia should include a focus on musculoskeletal disorders, poor mental health, cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, chronic skin conditions, vision and hearing defects and chronic respiratory conditions as these all contribute to the burden of disease in Indonesia and are, in part, preventable. 1 NCDs occur across all ages, not just in adulthood. Implications for policy: NCDs that emerge in childhood and adolescence provide a particularly important target for intervention as this can improve the health of young people now, their health as adults, and the health of the next generation. 2 4 Current data systems in Indonesia measure some but not all relevant NCDs. Particular gaps exist around some key NCDs, and data for adolescents is particularly lacking. Implications for policy: There is a need to further invest in better objective measures (e.g. improved mental health measures for RISKESDAS, expansion of the cancer registry), and extend data collection to younger age groups (e.g. POSBINDU risk measurement to begin at age 10). Key NCDs vary sub-nationally in Indonesia. Implications for policy: Geographic health inequity across the archipelago requires regular sub-national monitoring to take advantage of unique opportunities for change. 3 Key messages | non_poster |
2nd International Conference on Advanced Production and Processing 20th-22nd October 2022 Novi Sad, Serbia BOOK of ABSTRACTS | non_poster |
Csp1, A Cold-Shock Protein Homolog in Xylella fastidiosa Is Involved in Stress Response and Biofilm Formation Wei Wei, Lindsey Burbank USDA-Agricultural Research Service San Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center Parlier, California, USA | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 La Enzima Clorofilasa José María Peña-Martínez* iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: jose.penama@alumno.buap.mx 24 de Noviembre de 2022 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7363004 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Ma Dolores Castañeda-Antonio (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Clasificada como una hidrolasa, la enzima clorofilasa participa en las primeras etapas de la catalización de la clorofila (con agua) en clorofilida y fitol; de acuerdo a la Unión Internacional de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular lleva el código de EC 3.1.1.14 [1]. Fue descubierta por Willstäter y Stoll en 1910, veinte años después le siguió una investigación donde se descubrió su actividad en diferentes especies además de sus propiedades por Meyer [2, 3]. | non_poster |
BIOCLIMATIC ARCHITECTURE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES PROF. BUJAR BAJCINOVCI Mall 2 HOUSING HOUSING HOUSING HOUSING WATER VEGETATION VEGETATION WIND | non_poster |
Type Ia supernovae from stellar population of star formation deserts 1 Center for Cosmology and Astrophysics, Alikhanian National Science Laboratory, Armenia E-mail: a.karapetyan@yerphi.am; 2 Instituto de Astrofísica e Ciências do Espaço, Universidade do Porto, CAUP, Portugal 3 Departamento de Física e Astronomia, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade do Porto, Portugal A. A. Hakobyan1, A. G. Karapetyan1, L. V. Barkhudaryan1, M. H. Gevorgyan1, V. Adibekyan2,3 14–18 Nov 2022, Garching, Germany Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics • Spectroscopically classified 185 Type Ia SNe with available m15 • distances within 150 Mpc • inclinations i < 70 from Hakobyan+ 2020 The sample FITS are from Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) far- and near-UV, Swift UV, and available Himages. We perform a comparative analysis of the locations and light-curve (LC) decline rates (m15) of normal and peculiar SNe Ia in the star formation deserts (SFDs) and beyond (Hakobyan+ 2021). There are increasing evidences in observations and simulations that SFD consists of old stars, and the quenching of SF in this region was due to the bar formation, which dynamically removed gas from SFD over a time-scale of ∼2 Gyr (e.g. Donohoe-Keyes+ 2019). Given this, and if the progenitor age is the main driver of the decline rate (e.g. Shen+ 2017), the SNe Ia discovered in the SFDs should have faster declining LCs. | non_poster |
50 publications scientifiques de la Faculté dans l’Archive ouverte UNIGE1 1 Tous les chiffres présentés sur ce poster ont été extraits en octobre 2024 et concernent l’ensemble des publications de l’Archive ouverte UNIGE, à l’exception des thèses et masters 2 Seuls les documents présents dans l’Archive ouverte UNIGE le 1er janvier 2022 sont considérés Et les documents publiés en 2024? 74 recensés au 10 octobre En 2022, les publications2 en accès libre de la Faculté de droit ont été téléchargées 131’442 fois, soit 42x par document (un téléchargement tous les 9 jours) À titre de comparaison, les documents en accès restreint n’ont été téléchargés en moyenne que 0.9x Accès public 54% Sans texte intégral 26% Accès fermé 15% Accès restreint 5% 6’842 Types de publications dans l’Archive par année de publication À titre de comparaison (2020-2023) 42x 4 0.9x 17 / 98’039 au total 81% 76% + 508 thèses et mémoires Diffusion des publications (1927-2024) 60% Toutes les publications de la Faculté de droit 82% 3 Articles 2’945 Chapitres 2’619 Livres 1’020 Autres 258 62% 75% 68% 21% 10% 3% 18% 1% 3% 38% Suisse UNIGE Droit 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 67% L’Archive ouverte à la Faculté de droit BIBLIOTHÈQUE archive-ouverte@unige.ch Bibliothèque de l’UNIGE, 2024 Ce document est sous licence Creative Commons Attribution - Partage dans les mêmes conditions 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.fr https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13929766 | non_poster |
TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF AIR-BROADENED HALF WIDTH AND PRESSURE SHIFT COEFFICIENTS IN THE 30012 - 00001 BAND OF 12C16O2 D. Chris Benner, V Malathy Devi College of William and Mary Adriana Predoi-Cross University of Lethbridge A. R. W. McKellar National Research Council of Canada L. R. Brown, R. A. Toth and C. E. Miller Jet Propulsion Laboratory | non_poster |
Improving learning experiences through customizable metagames Ioana Andreea Stefan1, Jannicke Baalsrud Hauge2,3, Ancuta Florentina Gheorge1, Antoniu Stefan1 1Advanced Technology Systems Str. Tineretului Nr 1., 130029, Targoviste, Romania. {ioana.stefan,anca.gheorghe,antoniu.stefan}@ats.com.ro orcid.org/0000-0002-9367-2943 orcid.org/0000-0002-6701-5843 2BIBA – Bremer Institut für Produktion und Logistik GmbH, Hochschulring 20, D-28359 Bremen, Germany. baa@biba.uni-bremen.de orcid.org/0000-0002-3747-0845 3Royal Institute of Technology Mariekällgt. 3, 15181 Södertälje, Sweden. jmbh@kth.se Abstract. Since game-based learning require much planning and careful design, and also tailoring the learning content to game structures, the uptake of game- based learning activities remains limited, as their construction often requires a significant amount of time, and the reuse capabilities of such activities are min- imal. This paper describes how the different components of a gamified lessons path can be adapted and reused. In order to ensure the reusability of the differ- ent learning paths, a set of minigame templates has been used. Keywords: AT-CC, minigame, reuse, Beaconing. 1 Introduction The shift toward student-centric teaching requires uptake of new methodologies and teaching practices. Gamification and gaming technologies offer opportunities in line with the new demands [1] and can be used in order to achieve “learning at the speed of need through formal, informal and social learning modalities” [2], which is the definition of pervasive learning. “The purpose of adaptation is to optimize the rela- tionship between the learning requirement and course content, hence, the learning outcome could be obtained with minimum time and interaction expended on a course” [3]. However, while the intention of the adaption of a lesson plan towards fitting indi- vidual needs is to increase the learning outcome and as Muhammed et al. write thus to | non_poster |
V JORNADA DE PESQUISA DO PPGE/UNESA III ENCONTRO INTERNACIONAL DE EDUCAÇÃO DA UNESA/CIIEP 7 E 8 DE DEZEMBRO DE 2022 EVENTO HÍBRIDO | non_poster |
Lehrstuhl für globales Wirtschaftsrecht, internationale Schiedsgerichtsbarkeit und Bürgerliches Recht (Prof. Dr. Florian Bien) Richterfortbildung: Private Durchsetzung des Beihilferechts 14./15. November 2019 Zum Thema Staatliche Beihilfen an einzelne Unternehmen oder ganze Wirtschaftszweige treten in Form von Sub- ventionen, Steuer- oder Zinsvergünstigungen, Bürgschaften oder ermäßigten Entgelten auf. Sie dro- hen den Wettbewerb zu verzerren. Sieht man von wenigen Ausnahmen ab, sind sie verboten (Art. 108 AEUV). Die Überwachung des Beihilfeverbots obliegt in erster Linie der Europäischen Kommis- sion. Bei ihr sind Beihilfen anzumelden und ihre Entscheidung ist abzuwarten. Darüber hinaus über- prüft die Kommission aus eigener Initiative oder aufgrund von Beschwerden Dritter auch nicht ange- meldete Beihilfen auf ihre Übereinstimmung mit dem EU-Beihilferecht. Gegebenenfalls weist die Kommission den staatlichen Beihilfegeber an, bereits gewährte Vergünstigungen zurückzufordern. Neben diese Form der behördlichen Durchsetzung des Beihilfeverbots treten in letzter Zeit vermehrt private Konkurrentenklagen vor staatlichen Gerichten. Wettbewerber des Beihilfeempfängers kön- nen sich auf die unmittelbare Wirkung von Art. 108 Abs. 3 AEUV berufen und den Beihilfegeber auf Rückforderung rechtswidriger Beihilfen verklagen. Je nachdem, ob die Beihilfe auf Grundlage eines Verwaltungsakts oder eines privatrechtlichen Vertrags gewährt wurde, sind entweder die ordentli- chen Gerichte oder die Verwaltungsgerichte für die Konkurrentenklagen zuständig. Das Programm der Richterschulung vermittelt zunächst die Grundlagen des materiellen Beihilfe- rechts und gewährt dann einen Überblick über die verschiedenen Rechtsschutzmöglichkeiten vor den deutschen ordentlichen und Verwaltungsgerichten. Einen Schwerpunkt bildet sodann die Darstellung und Diskussion des nach wie vor umstrittenen Zusammenspiels zwischen nationalem Gerichtsverfah- ren und parallelen Überprüfungsverfahren vor der Europäischen Kommission, die zudem auch als Amicus curiae vor den nationalen Gerichten auftreten kann. Es ist ausreichend Zeit für Fragen und Diskussionen sowie den kollegialen Austausch von Erfahrungen vorgesehen. Die Referenten sind als hochrangige Richter, Universitätsprofessoren, Behördenmitarbeiter und führende Anwälte anerkannte Experten und Autoren auf dem Gebiet des Beihilferechts und seiner privatrechtlichen Durchsetzung. An der Entwicklung der einschlägigen Rechtsprechung sind oder waren sie unmittelbar beteiligt. | non_poster |
Nathan Pao Science Fair Board Material Science Fair Board Information on Subatomic Particles The standard model; one of the fundamental models in particle physics. It is also an important reference resource for subatomic particles. “File:Standard Model of Elementary Particles Anti.svg.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Standard_Model_of_Elementary_Particles_Anti.svg. “How Particle Accelerators Work.” Energy.gov, www.energy.gov/articles/how-particle-accelerators-work. Jones, Andrew Zimmerman. “What Are the Fundamental Forces of Physics?” ThoughtCo, ThoughtCo, 19 Jan. 2019, www.thoughtco.com/what-are-fundamental-forces-of-physics-2699070. | non_poster |
Mindsponge https://mindsponge.info/posts/308 Last updated: 05/18/2024 BMF CP72: The effectiveness of knowledge management systems in motivation and satisfaction in Vietnamese higher education institutions Dan Li College of Educational Science, Yan’an University, Yan’an, Shaanxi, China May 18, 2024 “Today, Kingfisher the Wise teaches the most important lesson: “Wisdom in fishing”.” —In “The Weirdest Fishhook”; The Kingfisher Story Collection [1] ~~~ 1. Project description 1.1. Main objectives The current study is conducted to examine the following research questions: • Examine how knowledge acquisition and knowledge dissemination are associated with academic staff’s job satisfaction and teaching motivation • Examine whether job satisfaction mediates the relationship between knowledge acquisition, knowledge dissemination and teaching motivation 1.2. Materials The mindsponge theory will be used for conceptual development, and Bayesian | non_poster |
ASPECTOS JURÍDICOS E ECONÔMICOS DE FOMENTO AO TRABALHO FORMAL Luiz Alberto Blanchet* Cristiano Puehler de Queiroz** Resumo: A geração de empregos é obrigação do Estado e da Sociedade, pois acarreta desenvolvimento e gera oportunidades, contribui na erradicação da pobreza. Um dos três principais itens de satisfação humana, junto com Saúde e Convivência em Família, é o Trabalho. Há várias formas de fomento, tais como investimentos em infraestrutura, políticas públicas de qualificação, implementação de salário-mínimo, redução de jornadas, desoneração fiscal das relações de trabalho, programas de incentivo ao empreendedorismo. Palavras-chave: Emprego, Desenvolvimento, Fomento, Atividades, Políticas Públicas, Trabalho 1. Introdução: Fomento, embora denotativamente seja a fricção que gera aquecimento, tornou-se um conceito econômico a significar o impulsionamento, indução, exortação, estímulo ou mesmo a criação de meios para o “aquecimento” de determinada atividade. Fomentar atividade produtiva não é apenas provocar aumento do agronegócio, como alguns projetos governamentais costumam se referir, mais que isto, redunda em direcionar o crescimento da indústria, comércio, turismo, serviços, agronegócio e outros, sob os caminhos mais adequados ao interesse público, à sustentabilidade econômica e, enfim, rumo aos objetivos prioritários. É dever constitucional do Estado e da Sociedade promover os valores sociais do trabalho * Mestre e Doutor em Direito pela UFPR. Membro do Instituto dos Advogados do Paraná e Membro catedrático da Academia Brasileira de Direito Constitucional. Professor dos cursos de graduação, mestrado e doutorado da PUC/PR. Advogado. E-mail: secretaria@blanchet.adv.br ** Mestrando em Direito pela PUCPR. Advogado. E-mail: adv.queiroz@hotmail.com | non_poster |
Minimum Record Recommendation for Museums and Collections (v1.0.1) www.minimaldatensatz.de & https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12759620 Dr. Domenic Städtler, Martin Stricker • Minimum Record Recommendation Working Group • CC BY 4.0 ICOM-UMAC & UNIVERSEUM 2024 • September 26th, 2024 • DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13577911 Data element set *) BY WHOM Minimum Record Recommendation Working Group Element preview Example: „Object type or designation“ in German FOR WHOM • Museum staff • Database software providers • Beneficiaries like cultural portals, general public, researchers, etc. Aims of the recommendation • Support museums and collections with online publication • Communicate relevant documentation standards (CIDOC CRM, LIDO, EDM, etc.) in a low-threshold approach • Raise awareness of data quality • Facilitate the integration of authority files Feedback is welcome! info@minimaldatensatz.de Subscribe to our newsletter: *) An English translation of the recommendation is currently being prepared. The data element names are therefore work in progress. | non_poster |
MeThAL : Vers une macroanalyse du théâtre en alsacien Pablo Ruiz Fabo, Delphine Bernhard, Pascale Erhart, Dominique Huck, Carole Werner Université de Strasbourg, LiLPa UR 1339, F-67000 Strasbourg, France Plusieurs travaux abordent l’analyse de corpus dramatiques de grande taille avec des méthodes quantitatives, suivant des approches assimilables à la « macroanalyse » de Jockers (2013). La Revue d’Historiographie du Théâtre (2017) offre une synthèse de ces recherches en France. Les travaux de Schöch (2017) sur le théâtre classique français ou ceux de Fischer et al. (2015 ; 2017) et du projet QuaDramA (2016) sur le théâtre allemand 1 2 sont aussi proches de nos questionnements. Ces analyses examinent généralement les principales traditions dramatiques européennes. En raison de l’absence d’un corpus numérique approprié, de telles analyses sont à ce jour impossibles pour le théâtre alsacien, une tradition en dialecte dans laquelle les genres populaires et humoristiques prédominent. Le projet MeThAL vise à créer un grand corpus de théâtre dialectal alsacien encodé selon les recommandations de la Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) et à le valoriser, constituant un premier pas vers une macroanalyse du théâtre alsacien. Nous couvrirons la période 1870-1940, incluant l’âge d’or du théâtre dialectal, autour de la fondation du Théâtre Alsacien de Strasbourg en 1898 (Wackenheim, 1997). Nous travaillons sur un fonds documentaire récemment numérisé par la Bibliothèque Nationale et Universitaire (BNU) de Strasbourg, à savoir, un ensemble représentatif de 3 pièces de théâtre en alsacien, dont nous avons commencé l’océrisation et l’encodage TEI. L’énorme variation orthographique de l’alsacien présente, comme pour toute langue peu dotée, des défis spécifiques en Traitement automatique des langues (TAL). Ces défis soulignent des besoins imparfaitement couverts par les outils d’analyse textuelle existants, orientés prioritairement vers les langues majoritaires. Dans ce sens, le projet élargira les ressources du projet RESTAURE pour les langues régionales de France (Bernhard et al., 4 2019). Le corpus permettra d’aborder des questions en sociolinguistique diachronique de l’Alsace de façon quantitative et d’examiner dans quelle mesure ce corpus permet de documenter les pratiques sociolinguistiques des différentes époques qu’il reflète. L’encodage TEI rendra possible l’analyse d’aspects formels de la technique dramatique et leur progression au cours de l’action, comme le « dynamisme » des pièces selon les changements du nombre de personnages sur scène (Fischer et al., 2017). Nous voulons également examiner de possibles patrons d’interaction entre groupes de personnages selon leur âge, position sociale, sexe ou origine. 1 Projet DLINA : https://dlina.github.io/ 2 Projet QuaDramA : https://quadrama.github.io/index.en 3 Voir https://www.numistral.fr/fr/theatre-alsacien 4 https://restaure.unistra.fr/ 1 | non_poster |
Author: Izuegbunem Chris Onyedikachi Institution: Tuskegee University, USA Topic: Monkeypox in Nigeria: Understanding the impact and Confronting The Growing Public Health Concern | non_poster |
Wellbeing Education For Musicians In Professional Training: Interdisciplinary Recommendations Ann Shoebridge B.App.Sc. (Physiotherapy) ann.shoebridge@unimelb.edu.au Margaret S. Osborne PhD, Psychologist mosborne@unimelb.edu.au | non_poster |
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Understanding the Plasma bullet evolution and its interaction with a dielectric in a capillary helium plasma jet Charalambos Anastassiou, University of Cyprus (UCY) 29/06/2017 | non_poster |
RESEARCH ARTICLE Genomic epidemiology of SARS-CoV-2 during the first four waves in Mozambique Nalia IsmaelID1,2☯*, Stephanie van Wyk3,4☯*, Houriiyah Tegally3,4, Jennifer Giandhari3,4, James Emmanuel San3,4, Monika MoirID3,4, Sureshnee Pillay3,4, Christian Utpatel5, Lavanya SinghID3,4, Yeshnee Naidoo3,4, Upasana RamphalID3,4, Ne´dio Mabunda1, Nuro Abı´lioID1, Paulo Arnaldo1, Joicymara Xavier3,4,6, Daniel Gyamfi Amoako7,8, Josie EverattID7, Yajna Ramphal3,4, Arisha MaharajID3,4, Leonardo de Araujo5, Ugochukwu J. Anyaneji3,4, Derek Tshiabuila3,4, Sofia ViegasID1, Richard Lessells3,4, Susan Engelbrecht2, Eduardo Gudo1, Ilesh JaniID1, Stefan Niemann5,9, Eduan WilkinsonID3,4, Tu´lio de Oliveira3,4* 1 Instituto Nacional de Sau´de (INS), Marracuene, Mozambique, 2 Division of Medical Virology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa, 3 Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation (CERI), School of Data Science and Computational Thinking, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 4 Kwazulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform (KRISP), Nelson R Mandela School of Medicine, University of Kwazulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa, 5 Molecular and Experimental Mycobacteriology, Research Center Borstel, Borstel, Germany, 6 Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Universidade Federal dos Vales do Jequitinhonha e Mucuri, Unaı´, Brasil, 7 Centre for Respiratory Diseases and Meningitis, National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) of the National Health Laboratory Service, Johannesburg, South Africa, 8 School of Health Sciences, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, 9 German Center for Infection Research, Partner Site Hamburg-Lu¨beck-Borstel-Riems, Borstel, Germany ☯These authors contributed equally to this work. * nalia.ismael@ins.gov.mz (NI); stephanievanwyk@sun.ac.za (SW); tulio@sun.ac.za (TO) Abstract Mozambique reported the first case of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in March 2020 and it has since spread to all provinces in the country. To investigate the introduc- tions and spread of SARS-CoV-2 in Mozambique, 1 142 whole genome sequences sam- pled within Mozambique were phylogenetically analyzed against a globally representative set, reflecting the first 25 months of the epidemic. The epidemic in the country was marked by four waves of infection, the first associated with B.1 ancestral lineages, while the Beta, Delta, and Omicron Variants of Concern (VOCs) were responsible for most infections and deaths during the second, third, and fourth waves. Large-scale viral exchanges occurred during the latter three waves and were largely attributed to southern African origins. Not only did the country remain vulnerable to the introductions of new vari- ants but these variants continued to evolve within the borders of the country. Due to the Mozambican health system already under constraint, and paucity of data in Mozambique, there is a need to continue to strengthen and support genomic surveillance in the country as VOCs and Variants of interests (VOIs) are often reported from the southern African region. PLOS GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH PLOS Global Public Health | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001593 March 6, 2023 1 / 16 a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 OPEN ACCESS Citation: Ismael N, van Wyk S, Tegally H, Giandhari J, San JE, Moir M, et al. (2023) Genomic epidemiology of SARS-CoV-2 during the first four waves in Mozambique. PLOS Glob Public Health 3(3): e0001593. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pgph.0001593 Editor: Julio Croda, Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz, BRAZIL Received: September 28, 2022 Accepted: January 20, 2023 Published: March 6, 2023 Copyright: © 2023 Ismael et al. 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 credite | non_poster |
Red Giants in Eclipsing Binaries Exploring Non-Oscillators and Testing Asteroseismic Scalings Meredith L. Rawls New Mexico State University University of Washington/LSST (Fall 2016) June 10, 2016 • Cool Stars 19 @merrdiff Image: G Perez, IAC, SMM In collaboration with P. Gaulme, J. McKeever, J. Jackiewicz, et al. | non_poster |
This document has been reviewed and determined not to contain export controlled technical data. JPL/Caltech Proprietary - Not for Public Release - Do Not Distribute or Duplicate Acceptable Use of Computer and Network Resources 1.0 Applicability This document applies to JPL employees using computer and network devices, whether owned or leased by JPL or a third-party (known as “subscribed systems”), to conduct JPL business. Note: This document is to be used in conjunction with the Caltech policy Acceptable Use of Electronic Information Resources (JPL Rules! DocID 78698). 2.0 Introduction Effective security is a team effort involving the participation and support of every JPL employee who interfaces with information and/or information systems. It is the responsibility of every system user to know the applicable requirements, and to conduct their activities accordingly. All JPL Internet/Intranet/Extranet-related systems, including but not limited to computer equipment (including phones and tablets, or other similar devices), software, operating systems, storage media, and network accounts providing Internet services (email, web, FTP, etc.), are to be used for business purposes in serving JPL interests in the course of normal operations. These resources should not be used for personal activities except to the extent authorized either by written Laboratory policies or in support of activities approved by the Director or Deputy Director. Please review the Ethics and Business Conduct, (JPL Rules! DocID 58572), and Use of JPL and Sponsor Resources, (JPL Rules! DocID 58720) for further details. 3.0 Purpose The purpose of this document is to outline safeguarding of computer equipment and network resources at JPL. These rules are in place to protect the user and JPL. Inappropriate use of resources exposes JPL to risks including virus and other attacks, compromise of network systems and services, and legal issues. This document is intended to reinforce JPL’s established culture of openness, trust, and integrity, while complying with government requirements and regulations as well as other JPL procedures. The Office of the Chief Information Officer (OCIO) is committed to protecting JPL's employees and the Laboratory at large from illegal or damaging cybersecurity-related actions by external individuals. 4.0 Users of JPL Computer and Network Resources are Responsible for: a. Exercising good judgment regarding appropriate use of information, electronic devices, and network resources in accordance with JPL policies and standards, and local laws and regulation. | non_poster |
Book of Abstracts Edited by: Baca A., Wessner B., Diketmüller R., Tschan H., Hofmann M., Kornfeind P., Tsolakidis E. EUROPEAN COLLEGE OF SPORT SCIENCE CROSSING BORDERS THROUGH SPORT SCIENCE 21 st Αnnual Congress of the 6th - 9th July 2016, Vienna - Austria Hosted by the Centre for Sport Science and University Sports, University of Vienna | non_poster |
COMPETÊNCIAS-CHAVE PARA IMPLEMENTAÇÃO DE BPMS UTILIZANDO PLATAFORMAS LOW-CODE KEY COMPETENCIES FOR IMPLEMENTING BPMS USING LOW-CODE PLATAFORMS DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11372541 1 INTRODUÇÃO O cenário de transformação digital, agravado pela pandemia de COVID-19, tem apresentado às organizações desafios e oportunidades sem precedentes. A necessidade de reavaliar estratégias e modelos de negócios para prosperar em um ambiente digital em constante mudança torna-se cada vez mais evidente (PATEL; MCCARTHY, 2000). Nesse contexto, a digitalização dos processos de negócios e infraestrutura de Tecnologia da Informação (TI) surge como uma necessidade fundamental para otimizar a eficiência e a capacidade de resposta das organizações. O Business Process Management (BPM) emerge como uma abordagem estratégica para impulsionar a eficiência e eficácia dos processos empresariais, com suporte de sistemas como os Business Process Management Systems (BPMS) e as Low-code Development Platforms (LCDP’s). No entanto, a escassez de profissionais altamente qualificados em TI e gestão da informação representa um desafio significativo, agravado pela crescente demanda por talentos nessa área. Este estudo visa investigar as competências técnicas essenciais para implementar BPMS por meio de plataformas low-code, com o objetivo de aprofundar a compreensão desse cenário dinâmico. A questão central que orienta esta pesquisa é: "Quais são as | non_poster |
Supplemental Material: Explanation via illustration and text Effectiveness of animated informational videos for improving the public understanding of research involving human embryos or stem cells: An attempt to make a tool for attitude survey | non_poster |
Poster: The Beauty and the Beast (40 years of process algebra and cybersecurity) 1st Silvia De Francisci SySMA Unit IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy silvia.defrancisci@imtlucca.it 2nd Gabriele Costa SySMA Unit IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy gabriele.costa@imtlucca.it 3rd Rocco De Nicola SySMA Unit IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy rocco.denicola@imtlucca.it Abstract—Process algebras provide the mathematical foun- dation for several formal verification techniques, and they profoundly influenced many fields, from correct design to testing. Process algebras were greatly influential also for the security community. One of the main reasons for their success is their compact, yet expressive and flexible syntax, which allows to model the relevant aspects of computation while abstracting away the secondary ones. Although most authors acknowledge the importance of process algebras for the security community, it is not trivial to estimate how they shaped the past and present researches. The goal of this work is to provide a comprehensive outlook on some prominent works about process algebras and security. These include both the application of process algebras to security problems and process algebras inspired by security-related aspects of computation. To achieve this, we consider three fundamental fields of cybersecurity, i.e., secure development, threat modeling and vulnerability assess- ment. Index Terms—process algebra, cybersecurity, formal meth- ods in security. 1. Introduction Process Algebras (PA) are formal languages com- monly used to model the behavior of a computational agent. Roughly speaking, PA put most of the emphasis on the control flow structure of the modeled agent, rather than on its data flow. In most PA, computational steps also emit observable actions. This allows to elegantly introduce the role of an external observer, i.e., someone who aims at understanding an agent’s behavior, but has no control on its internal structure. Under reasonable assumptions, an attacker is, in fact, an external observer. As a matter of fact, an attacker is generally represented by its capa- bilities and goals. In terms of capabilities, the possibility to partially interact with the agent’s I/O mechanism is a typical setting (e.g., think of information flow [19]). In terms of goals, the attacker’s aim can be modeled as a target state, e.g., denoting a failure of the agent, she wants to reach. Formal models of both the attacker and the system are the fundamental building blocks of most automated, formal reasoning techniques. Not surprisingly, a vast literature about the adoption of PA in cybersecurity exists. As a result, determining the overall influence of PA in cybersecurity and its sub-fields is difficult. This poster proposes a systematization of the existing PA and their applications to the cybersecurity fields. Our contributions are the following.1 • We show significant PA from a genealogy stand- point, as well as their unique characteristics. • We discuss the impact of some PA and its ge- nealogy in three application scenarios for cyberse- curity classification: Secure Development, Threat modeling, and Vulnerability assessment. • We show the state-of-the-art of PA for secure Development Life Cycle (DLC). 2. Genealogy of PA The genesis of PA goes back to the 80s, when a few authors independently proposed different calculi for the specification of processes: Milner’s Calculus of Communicating Systems (CCS) [16], Brookes, Hoare and Roscoe’s Communicating Seqential Processes (CSP) [8], and Bergstra’s Algebra of Communicating Processes (ACP) [6], which inspired a considerable number of other PA. Typically, derived PA introduce some new elements w.r.t. their archetypes. These elements often aim to model some specific aspects of computation. In order to better highlight these extensions we label PA with icons de- noting their peculiar features. Such features include the ability to model security asp | non_poster |
Ruins, archaeology and the postcolonial archive Iain Chambers … there exists no historical community that has not been born out of a relation that can, without hesitation, best be likened to war. What we celebrate under the title of founding events are, essentially, acts of violence legitimated after the fact by a precarious state of right. Ricœur (2006:79) For, contrary to what one might think at first sight, the breaking of tradition does not at all mean the loss or devaluation of the past: it is rather likely that only now the past can reveal itself with a weight and an influence it never had before. Agamben (1994: 162) If battlefields, war cemeteries, monuments, mausoleums and museums are physically the most obvious symbolic sites of a conflict heritage, there is also the altogether more insidious evidence that can be traced in wider, non-European, landscapes that have been riven and racialised by conflicts over the interpretation and representation of the past. The subordination of others to a particular telling of time and place, often through the deployment of racialising categories of power and value, where as Fanon reminds us in Black Skin, White Masks, to be ‘black’ is already to be marked as the subordinated, introduces the centrality of European colonialism and imperialism to the making of modernity. This is to open up the past, its archives, monuments and processes of museumification, to novel and frequently unauthorised questions. Here, for example, certain postcolonial artistic practices and works provide and provoke a transversal passage over this terrain. To nominate a racialised space is precisely to cast considerations beyond provincial European conflict and its aftermath. To introduce race into the landscapes, memory and archives of the past, is insist on the colonial fashioning of the modern world. Behind the European strife of the Twentieth century, shaped and shattered by world wars and genocide, lie the longer and deeper history of European colonialism and its imperialist apotheosis in the violent bio-politics of racist profiling and the governance of the non-European world | non_poster |
A Data-Driven Selection of the Cell Lines with Maximal Biological Diversity for High Throughput Transcriptomics- Based Toxicity Testing [Poster Pitch #33] Dahea You North Carolina Society of Toxicology 2020 Meeting | non_poster |
Educación sin Barreas I n c l u s i ó n | non_poster |
– …) it could be very useful to make these colors invariant to these external parameters s …), we can evaluate a color transform from the current RGB components to these reference | non_poster |
Queer Whispers; Gay and Lesbian Voices of Irish Fiction Author: José Carregal Publication date: 1 October 2021. ISBN-13: 9781910820889 'Kudos to Jose Carregal for gathering the scattered pieces of LGBT representation in Irish literature from the 1970s and producing an intelligent and insightful analysis. Queer Whispers is a long overdue and crucial study.' - Emma Donoghue Description of book: Before gay decriminalisation in 1993, there was no solid gay or lesbian tradition in Irish writing, due to the political and cultural dominance of a conservative, censorious Catholic ideology that conflated itself with notions of national identity and social respectability. Praised today as a beacon of gay rights, Ireland has become the first nation to legalise same-sex marriage by popular vote in 2015. Significantly, whereas in the recent past there was much silence, stigma | non_poster |
Training, Workshops and Events 450 people supported via CEDA led activitie s last year National and International Communities We share our expertise, skills and resources to many environmental and technical circles both in the UK and internationally. Recent examples include: invited panel speaker at iPRES in Belgium (an international conference for digital preservation) presented work on uncertainty communication at climate event in Venice remote attendance at the Research Data Alliance plenary in Costa Rica advisory session with NHS on green metrics for their IT landscape meeting with Scottish government about how they can use JASMIN/CEDA JASMIN User Seminar Series A chance for researchers to share their work bein g done on JASMIN Introduction to Scientific Computing Yearly course covering essential programming skills fo r environmental scientists JASMIN User Conference - June A great chance to meet others in the JASMIN community, learn about all the ne w and exciting things happening, and gi ve your feedback! User support Last year, we responded to 3600 helpdesk queries. We also have over 150 help documents to support users. JASMIN Workshop - 26th Feb, Leeds Perfect for anyone new to JASMIN. A one day worksho p covering everything you ne ed to know to get started. CF Conventions We contribute to the Climate and Forecast (CF) standar d names and metada ta conventions - serving the atmospheric science and modelling community among other expanding domains. They were awarded the AGU Open Science Recognition Prize in 2024. Intelligent Earth CDT We’re supporting a 4 year doctoral programm e equipping environment al scientists with advanced AI and data science skills. 2025 | non_poster |
A Mathematical Perspective on the Sharing of Biodiversity-related Models Daniel Mietchen, FIZ Karlsruhe & MaRDI: The Mathematical Research Data Initiative 19 June 2024 - DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12155878 | non_poster |
Storage and Handling Tips for Nanoparticles CD Email: info@cd-bioparticles.com Tel: 1-631-633-6938 Nanoparticles, nanomaterials, and nanopowders must always be stored in closed and sealed containers, and in cool and well-ventilated areas. If possible, it is best to use a laboratory cabinet restricted for storing nanomaterials only. • Storage temperatures • All containers containing nanoparticles should be clearly identified (e.g., Gold Nanoparticles). If the nanoparticles are received in a plastic bag provided by the supplier, the bag should be placed in a second hard-sealed container. Nanoparticles and nanopowders should be stored away from acids, oxidants, and other metals. • Storage Ambient Temperature 2 °C 8 °C 15 °C Gold (spheres, nanoshells, rods, polystyrene) Silica shelled gold Silver (spheres, plates, cubes) Silica shelled silver Silica, aminated silica, mesoporous silica Dry powders Acceptable in a dry place Recommended in a dry place Acceptable Recommended Recommended Acceptable for brief periods & during use Recommended Powders In solution | non_poster |
For new UG students in UK HE UG Student Induction Ensuring students have a supportive and smooth transition into Higher Education, leading to a sense of belonging and positive student experience Key considerations for providing a pre-arrival induction resource for new students What is the resource - general, specific, internal/external information, information-only or interactive, links to other induction activity Who is accessing the resource - alt text, contrast, size of text, format of document, jargon How is the resource accessed - mobile friendly, offline/online, data volume, log-ins When is the resource accessed - time limited, up-to-date information, time-relevant information, support available Utility of resource - metrics on usage, evaluation Things students may want to know Topic Content Purpose of the resource and how to use it Introduction to the resource Possible video demonstration of the resource/navigation menu Links to other induction material and resources Information about the course Staff team - names, pictures, roles Links to course-related social media Talking heads from previous students Course Induction timetable Location and systems information Direction to key buildings on campus Information about where support services located on campus | non_poster |
The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited Gonzalo Avila, Barbara Barratt, Asha Chhagan, Neil Audsley Pre-emptive biocontrol: a novel approach to increase preparedness against high- risk biosecurity threats XXVI International Congress of Entomology Helsinki, Finland, July 17-22, 2022 | non_poster |
Quality Improvement Projects Dr Saba Khan Institute of Medical and Biomedical Education (IMBE) St George’s, University of London Abstract The QIPs are a concept that have been developed to promote leadership and clinical improvement skills in student learners. The concept of transformational change and its three key theoretical stages are mirrored in Quality Improvement Projects (QIPs). These changes (psychological, Convictional and Behavioural) are integral to developing a learner’s skills in practice which will better prepare them for their professional career. On reflection there are challenges associated with QIPs that relate to clinical maturity, implementation of change and the time needed to effectively deliver QIPs. However, on balance these projects present a unique learning opportunity that will present students with the ability to demonstrate and develop skills that are difficult to practically apply anywhere else. The application of these projects in primary care also prepare students for the professional responsibility of appraisal and revalidation regardless of their speciality of choice. Keywords Transformational Change; Quality Improvement; Leadership Reflection The poster was developed to illustrate the concept of Quality Improvement in Practice as part of an educational activity that students can engage in, across both primary and secondary care. In Primary Care the concept of Quality Improvement forms part of the foundation for appraisal and revalidation processes. This concept of developing existing improvement activity to formal QIPs is a natural educational progression for students already engaged in research projects | non_poster |
Contact Dr Amina Price Theme Coordinator Centre for Freshwater Ecosystems La Trobe University P: +61 2 6024 9642 E: amina.price@latrobe.edu.au Dr Nikki Thurgate Project Coordinator Centre for Freshwater Ecosystems La Trobe University P: + 61 2 60 249690 E: n.thurgate@latrobe.edu.au W: latrobe.edu.au/freshwater -ecosystems Centre for Freshwater Ecosystems Research to support environmental watering: a collaborative approach in the Murray–Darling Basin Work Summary Fish theme Overview The distribution and abundance of native fish species within the MDB have declined significantly in the last 50-100 years (MDBC 2004) and as such, are a key target for improvement under a number of basin-wide programs including The Basin Plan and The Living Murray. The Basin-wide environmental watering strategy lists improvements in distribution, abundances, population structure and move- ment as expected outcomes for fish (MDBA 2014). In order to appropriately design environmental watering programs to benefit native fish, it is vital that the links between key watering parameters and potential fish responses are clearly understood. This requires an understanding of the biotic processes that maintain fish populations, the key drivers of these processes and the how these are influenced by flow. Research outcomes will assist manag- ers by providing significantly improved predictive and explanatory capacity across a range of species. Research questions The overarching question in relation to the MDB EWKR Fish Theme is: What are the drivers of sustainable populations and diverse communities of native fish? This is the key question that underpins the fish theme and it seeks to explore the key functional pro- cesses that drive outcomes for native fish populations and communities, as well as the situations under which each of these processes become limiting. The Fish theme will focus on fish recruitment, with research addressing the relative importance of key drivers and their interaction with flow and other variables at multiple spatial scales. The decision to focus on recruitment was based on early consultation with managers who considered recruitment to be the highest priority area. The high level questions for recruitment are: What flow regimes best support the recruitment and survival of native fish populations? How significant are the individual drivers? How do key drivers interact to influence outcomes? How should flows be managed to enhance drivers and thereby the fish response? How do threats impact on the drivers and recruitment and survival outcomes? We define recruitment as the process of survival to the end of the first year of life. Australian Smelt Fact Sheet | non_poster |
Page | 1 Using ensemble learning and interpretable machine learning to assess flash flood susceptibility - A GIS-based Watershed Similarity Analysis Zheng Guan*1,2, Xiaoxiang Zhang†1,2 and Jing Yao‡3,4 1 College of Hydrology and Water Resources, Hohai University, Nanjing, China 2 Center for Geospatial Intelligence and Watershed Science (CGIWaS), Hohai University, Nanjing, China 3 Urban Big Data Centre, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK 4 Centre for Sustainable Healthy and Learning Cities and Neighbourhoods, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK GISRUK 2023 Summary This research aims to assess flash flood susceptibility, to identify watersheds with similar susceptibility risks, and to analyse the contribution of conditioning factors in Jiangxi Province, China, using four tree- based ensemble learning approaches and an interpretation tool (SHAP). Results show that flash flood susceptibility areas in Jiangxi Province are scattered and the ensembles can efficiently perform flash flood susceptibility mapping. A comprehensive assessment of flash flood susceptibility will provide direction for flood prevention and mitigation, as well as obtaining the factors that have the greatest impact on flash floods in order to prevent them in terms of their formation mechanisms. KEYWORDS: Flash flood susceptibility; Tree-based Ensemble Learning; Machine Learning; GIS; SHAP 1. Introduction Flash floods are one of the most serious flood hazards, inducing serious loss of life around the world, while damaging infrastructure and having a financial impact (Diakakis et al., 2020; Gaume et al., 2009). In order to mitigate the damage and loss, it is necessary to estimate and predict the susceptibility of flash floods through conditioning factors. Flash flood susceptibility refers to predicting “which watershed (where)” flash floods will occur, or “how frequently” it will take place, regardless of the size of hazards e.g., area or scale (Reichenbach et al., 2018). Traditional GIS-based spatial analysis methods had been widely used for flash flood susceptibility analysis (Rahmati et al., 2015; Youssef et al., 2015). With the continuous development of novel technologies in hydrology, various machine learning methods (GeoAI) have been used in the field of hydrological analysis and modeling (Bui et al., 2020; Fang et al., 2021). Compared to previous approaches, machine learning has a significant improve in terms of algorithmic robustness, accuracy, effectiveness, and speed (Khosravi et al., 2019; Costache et al., 2020). Moreover, the effectiveness of a single model can be improved by data analysis, algorithm integration and model optimization. Based on machine learning, scholars further propose ensemble learning methods (Choubin et al., 2019), which have better adaptability and higher prediction accuracy than single algorithms (Costache et al., 2020). However, there is no consensus on the best tree-based ensemble machine learning approach for flash flood susceptibility mapping, more research is still needed. Therefore, this research applies four * guanzh1999@163.com † xiaoxiang@hhu.edu.cn ‡ Jing.Yao@glasgow.ac.uk | non_poster |
1 Mello, Eduardo; Spektor, Matias. "How to Fix Brazil: Breaking Addiction to Bad Government". | non_poster |
1 Collapsing cores in the Hierarchical Gravitational Collapse scenario. Raúl Naranjo Romero, Enrique Vázquez Semadeni and Robert Loughnane Poster 23 Naranjo-Romero et al. 2015. ApJ, 814, 48 Instituto de Radioastronomía y Astrofísica, UNAM | non_poster |
— 767 773 Celebration & Contemplation, 10th International Conference on Design & Emotion 27 — 30 September 2016, Amsterdam Introduction Some time ago, I co-incidentally happened to take part in a Tibetan singing bowl1 session. For the first time, I was not hearing music with my ears only, but was experiencing it as a vibration throughout my entire body. This outstanding experience left a deep impression on me. It made me wonder about how frequencies resonate with the body and it had become the starting point of my graduation project in fashion design. I tried to imagine for one moment: if I could see sound, what shape and colour would it then be? In this writing, I will first elaborate on what sound actually is, on how it relates to colour and to the human body. This will form the core of the concept and will then be translated into ingredients for an interactive womenswear collection “Beings of Frequency”, further referred as The Collection. The shape of sound Sound vibration is so subtle, that it cannot be perceived by the human eyes. However, it is a delicate, perfect balance between frequencies that keeps us alive and forms the basis of all the natural cycles that we see around us. There is a common misconception of what sound really is. It is believed, that sound is a wave and it ‘wiggles’ through the air from one point to the other just like that. Sound researcher, Professor John Stuart Reid (2009), has done deep studies in the shape of sound and states that sound can rather be described as a rapidly expanding bubble, having the ‘sonic event’ in the middle of it (for example from vibrating vocal cords of a human). Starting at that core, different densities of air are created by vibration and travel in all directions at the same time creating a sphere-like shape. Sound can only be made visible to the human eye when exposed to matter. The act of making sound visible is called Cymatics2. Every sound creates a unique geometrical structure in air densities from the core outwards, looking very much like a mandala3 if you would slice the sonic bubble in half (Figure 1). Reid has developed a special scientific device, called the CymaScope. With help of a digital camera, the patterns are captured that appear in ultra-pure water that is exposed to sound vibrations. This sound visualization is called a Cyma Glyph and is used as the aesthetic base of The Collection and is interpreted and applied in the clothing in various ways and scales (Figure 2-6). Abstract “Beings of Fequency” is a bachelor graduation project, currently being developed in the form of a collection in fashion design. In the collection, parallels are being laid between the seven musical notes, the seven colours of the rainbow and the the seven main energy centers of the human body, the so called chakra’s. Before seeing the collection, each visitor will get the chance to scan their chakra status via a GDV scan developed by Dr. Korotkov, PhD and according to that, a sound will be designed containing mainly the notes that are ought to resonate with their “weaker” chakras. While the music is playing, by use of incorporated micro-processors, mini-microphones and coloured LEDs, the collection will give the viewer a real-time sound & light therapy which is believed to charge the energy of the corresponding chakra’s; operating as a resonant, interactive mechanism. The collection consists out of seven outfits, each representing one of the chakras. Keywords Fashion, Chakra, Colour, Sound, Interaction Beings of frequency. In-progress graduation project in fashion design - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Linda Plaude1 lindaplaude@live.nl 1Amsterdam Fashion Institute, the Netherlands - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 A musical instrument made of metal, dating back from the pre-Buddhist Tibetan Bon culture. It is a type of bell that is rather placed in a standing posit | non_poster |
Municipalities of Rovaniemi, Kemi, Kuusamo (Finland) Luleå, Stockholm municipalities (Sweden) Municipalities of Harstad, Tana, Vardø, Kvænangen (Norway) Reykjavik municipality (Iceland) Avannaata municipality (Greenland) City & Borough of Juneau, Anchorage Municipality (Alaska, USA) Insights Interviews: 1 Data availability, needs and gaps with respect to managing and planning green transition The state of inclusion of Indigenous knowledge in sub-national decision- making (including the patterns of interactions between Indigenous Peoples and local/regional policymakers) The insights presented in the Policy brief and paper emerge from over 30 semi-structured in- depth interviews with a sample of Arctic and sub-Arctic subnational decision-makers, stakeholders and rightsholders. Data-driven Subnational Decision-making in the Arctic: The power of Indigenous voices and data supporting the green transition Policy Brief Full Policy Paper (CLICK) Pavel Tkach & Adam Stepien Arctic Centre University of Lapland firstname.lastname@ulapland.fi This Policy Brief summarizes the preliminary findings of the Arctic PASSION project’s work related to enhancing evidence-based decision-making at the local and regional level in the Arctic, with respect to two themes: The full policy paper summarizes the current status of consultations with decision-makers at the sub-national level and its leading institutions implemented by the University of Lapland as part of Arctic PASSION’s actions to support coherent policy- and decision- making. The policy paper, can be found at the following link. 1 2 The Governments of Yukon, NWT, Nunavut (Canada) Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development of Norway 2 3 Norwegian Centre for Climate Services (Norway) Environment and Climate Change (Canada) 4 Inuit Circumpolar Council Canada This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101003472 Kiruna, Swden Tromso, Norway Anchorage, USA (c) iStock Nuuk, Greenland (c) Gregor Kallina (c) PeakPX (c) Pxfuel | non_poster |
Abigail Azari (azari@umich.edu) Co-Authors & Co-Instructors: M. W. Liemohn & B. M. Swiger Acknowledgements: A. Huang-Saad Presented at Fall AGU, December 13th, 2019 Lessons from Teaching Data Visualization & Statistics in Geosciences Photo Credit: NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Seán Doran | non_poster |
Malariaworld The Malariaworld exhibition was developed for World Malaria Day 2024 to raise awareness of malaria and malaria research. We highlight some of the Nuffield Department of Medicine’s contributions to malaria research. This exhibition was curated by Shuma Banik, Claire-Lise Kessler and Phaik Yeong Cheah, and funded by Wellcome with help and advice from many colleagues. All illustrations are original and created by Shuma Banik and Matt Cherrill. Scan to visit website https://mesh.tghn.org/malaria-home-page/ | non_poster |
Mapping Xylella fastidiosa infection and xylem microbiome composition on olive tree branches Anguita-Maeso, M1; Gasparini, BN2,3; Navas-Cortés, JA1; Landa, BB1; Coletta-Filho, HD2 1Institute for Sustainable Agriculture (IAS), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Córdoba, Spain. 2Centro APTA Citros Sylvio Moreira, Instituto Agronômico, Cordeirópolis, Brazil. 3Universidade de São Carlos, UFSCAr, Araras, Brazil. | non_poster |
Results of official annual survey for Xylella fastidiosa in Montenegro Tamara Popović1, Jelka Tiodorović2, Jelena Plavec3, Aleksa Obradović4 1Administration of Food Safety, Veterinary and Phytosanitary Affairs, Podgorica, Montenegro 2 University of Montenegro, Biotechnical Faculty, Podgorica, Montenegro 3Croatian Agency for Agriculture and Food, Zagreb, Croatia 4University of Belgrade, Faculty of Agriculture, Belgrade, Serbia | non_poster |
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