text
stringlengths
21
4k
label
stringclasses
2 values
1 Prof. (Dr.) Maruthi TR, Professor of International Law & Coordinator of Model United Nations Conference, Department of Studies in Law, University of Mysore
non_poster
Revealing the orbital histories of the spiral population in the Abell cluster A496 Poster #42
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
ALMA observations of the disk- outflow system in S255IR-SMA1 at ~15 mas (~20 au) resolution Igor Zinchenko Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences Sheng-Yuan Liu, Yu-Nung Su Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Taiwan
non_poster
CHECKING SEXUAL COMPATIBILITY BETWEEN LECCINO AND FS17 V. Roseti1, F. Specchia2, S. Vanadia3, G. Melcarne4, P. La Notte2 1 Department of Soil, Plant and Food Sciences, University Aldo Moro, Via Amendola 165/A, 70126, Bari, Italy 2 Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, Italian National Research Council, Via Amendola 122/I, 70126, Bari, Italy. 3 Infoxylella.it. 4 Forestaforte Farm, 73034, Gagliano del Capo (LE), Italy.
non_poster
AUTHORS Pavel Tkach and Adam Stepien AFFILIATIONS Arctic Centre University of Lapland Arctic PASSION project 1. The state of data-driven decision-making and planning in the region. 2. Community-based monitoring, local experience and traditional knowledge in the decision-making and planning. 3. National, interregional and international administrative and scientific cooperation in the decision-making and planning. 4. Knowledge gaps and vision to the future. 5. Future of cooperation of scientists and decision. Data-driven Subnational Decision- making in the Arctic: towards identifying the key issues. Arctic PASSION Research Poster, based on ULAP Background paper "Data-driven Subnational Decision-making in the Arctic: Towards identifying the key issues" Click to read: loader.aspx (arcticcentre.org) 01. Arctic PASSION project Arctic PASSION (Pan-Arctic Observing System of Systems: Implementing Observations for Societal Needs), the project of which this policy paper and related workshop are part, contributes to addressing the remaining challenges while strengthening the sustainability of the earlier developments. It is a Horizon 2020 project funded by the European Union and bringing together 35 institutions from across Europe and around the circumpolar North, led by Alfred Wegener Institute. The project is to respond to the demand for faster access to observational data and services that are increasingly more reliable and diverse, and by that, to facilitate unrestricted access to the latest scientific observations. The goal is to enhance monitoring of ongoing environmental changes, reduce uncertainty in predicting future system changes, support risk assessment, inform and guide mitigation and adaptation measures and support sustainable development in the Arctic and beyond. The core principle of the project is to involve Indigenous Peoples, local populations, decision-makers and a broad range of Arctic stakeholders in the co-creation of useful services. In addition, the project includes a number of pilot services that are potentially relevant for subnational decision-making, including, among others, a permafrost service, local atmospheric pollution forecast service, integrated fire risk management, noise pollution and impacts on marine living resources, and lake ice service. See more at https://arcticpassion.eu/ • help to foster the outputs of the Arctic Science Ministerial Meetings (the meetings of Arctic and Arctic- interested ministers of science and relevant stakeholders), particularly regarding sustained funding for Arctic observations; • consult with and inform Arctic policymakers and Indigenous People through dialogue within the Arctic Council, its working groups and Permanent Participants; • maintain a close connection with the relevant European Union institutions; • provide decision-making support on regional and local levels, through consultations with stakeholders. 03. Methodology The current background paper is a descriptive and conclusive report based on interviews with policymakers, science experts affiliated with governing authorities at national and subnational levels in the Arctic states, and scientists working in close cooperation with authorities. Due to imposed operation limitations, the University of Lapland team carried out interviews with experts from every Arctic state, except the Russian Federation. The structure of the interview has been divided into the following sections: 04. Interviews Preliminary interviews were conducted with experts and officials from the following bodies: • Regional Council of Lapland, Finland • Lapland Centre for Economic Development, Transport and the Environment, Finland • Finnish Environment Institute, Liitteri Portal • Troms and Finnmark County, Norway • Municipality of Tromsø, Norway • The Government of Yukon, Canada • The Government of Northwest Territories, Canada • Alaska Centre for Climate Assessment and Policy, USA • Ministry for Agriculture, Self-Sufficiency, Energy and En
non_poster
Type something Um estudo sobre os descritores da Arquivologia Digital utilizando vinte periódicos científicos. #1 análise Foi observado que dos vinte periódicos científicos chamou a atenção a quantidade de ocorrências da "Preservação Digital". Aparece como destaque forte mesmo não tendo sido o tema principal pesquisado. #2 análise As imagens a seguir mostram que dos vinte artigos, houve um crescimento do tema "Digital Preservation" em meados de 2015. Como se tratam de periódicos científicos brasileiros, pode-se observar o atraso até então da incorporação da tecnologia junto a tecnicidade arquivista. Porém, pode-se observar um amadurecimento, à partir dos artigos coletados, do descritor e tema "Digital Preservation Policy", ou seja, políticas voltadas para a preservação digital de documentos e/ou os demais objetos que constituem o trabalho do arquivo. 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Digital Preservation Archival Science Digital Document Análise de palavras chaves: Share
non_poster
Version 1 (September 2020) ASMOHEJP2021 poster 1 D-PhD06-6.12 Responsible Partner: ANSES
non_poster
funded by EIP-AGRI WORKSHOP ‘Opportunities for farm diversification in the circular bioeconomy’ 6-7 February 2019 - Vilnius, Lithuania Operational Groups, innovative projects, Horizon 2020 multi-actor projects, Horizon 2020 thematic networks and projects under the Biobased Industry Joint Undertaking represented at the workshop update 31 January 2019
non_poster
1st International Conference on Sustainable Energy and Advanced Materials IC-SEAM’21 April 21-22, 2021, Ouargla, ALGERIA Optimization of Preparing Conditions for Activated Carbon from Date Stones (Phoenix Dactylifera L.) by Chemical Activation Using Response Surface Methodology Rania Remmani1, Ahmed Boutarfaia1, Miladi Malek², Mohammed Mesnoua3, Messaoud Roumani3, Bahia Messai1 1Applied Chemistry Laboratory LCA, University of Biskra, PO Box 145, 07000 Biskra, Algeria 2 Engineering Department, Miguel Hernández University, Alicante, Spain 3 Department of Phœniciculture, Biotechnology and Valorization of Date Palm Products and by-Products, Centre for Scientific and Technical Research on Arid Regions, BP 1682 R.P., Biskra, 07000, Algeria rania.remmani@univ-biskra.dz Abstract. This research aims to obtain optimal conditions of one-stage preparation of activated carbon (AC) from date stones using response surface methodology (RSM). The effects of three activation variables (activation temperature (T), activation time (t) and ZnCl2: precursor impregnation ratio (r) ) on the AC yield (Y), specific surface area (SSA), Micropore volume (VM) and total pore volume (Vt) were investigated. From the analysis of variance (ANOVA), the most influential factor in each experimental design response was identified. The optimum conditions for preparing AC were found as follows: T of 585 °C, t of 2.124 h and r of 2.434:1 which resulted in 20.16% of Y, 624 m²/g of SSA, 0.105 cm3/g of VM and 0.362 cm3/g of Vt. Herein, AC prepared under optimum conditions was characterized using SEM, FTIR, FRX, pHpzc analysis to evaluate the efficiency of optimization of chemical activation process in its morphological and chemical characteristics. Moreover, the obtained AC was used for phenol removal from wastewater using an ultrasonic-assisted adsorption manner. Some key parameters that influence the efficacy of ultrasonic-assisted phenol adsorption incorporate the initial concentration and sonication time were tested at ambient temperature without maintaining the pH of the solution. The results showed that The maximum amount of adsorption (442 mg/g) was noticed when the sonication time was 60 min and partially increased by the enhancement of the initial phenol
non_poster
© Fraunhofer SEMI-CRYSTALLINE POLY(ESTER AMIDE)S FROM 2,5-FURANDICARBOXYLIC ACID M. Kluge, L. Papadopoulos, A. Magaziotis, D. Tzetzis, A. Zamboulis, D. N. Bikiaris, T. Robert
non_poster
Categorizaci´on N IE-PETER Francisco Miralles Ferrer Pedro Abreu S´anchez Elisa Caballero Jos´e F. Reyes Rom´an 13 mayo 2024 1. Introducci´on Se presenta en este documento la naturaleza, funcionamiento y l´ogica de la funci´on de clasificaci´on en categor´ıas de los hallazgos N. Esta funci´on es utilizada en el proyecto IE-Peter, con objetivo de identificar los hallazgos N m´as relevantes entre los encontrados en el PET/CT. 2. Descripci´on de la funci´on de categorizaci´on N Se analiza en los siguientes subapartados diferentes aspectos relacionados con la l´ogica de la funci´on de categorizaci´on. 2.1. Atributos de entrada La funci´on acepta dos atributos de entrada que determina su comportamiento y resultados: 1. Hallazgo N, objeto que se evaluar´a con el objetivo de determinar su atributo categorizacion mediante el valor de retorno de la funci´on. No puede ser nulo. 2. Hallazgo T con el que el hallazgo N a categorizar se relaciona. Se identifica la relaci´on mediante el atributo idHallazgoTRelacionado del hallazgo N. Puede ser nulo. Se presenta el diagrama UML de las clases de hallazgoN y halazgoT con el que se relaciona. Ambas clases heredan de la clase hallazgo. Se indica la relaci´on que mantienen los hijos: un hallazgoN puede estar relacionado con cero o un hallazgoT mientras que este ´ultimo puedo ser relacionado con cero o muchos hallazgos N. 1
non_poster
Poster: Exploiting Timing Side-Channel Leaks in Web Applications that Tell on Themselves Vik Vanderlinden, Tom Van Goethem, Wouter Joosen and Mathy Vanhoef imec-DistriNet, KU Leuven {firstname.lastname}@kuleuven.be Abstract—The performance of remote timing attacks is highly dependent on the network connection that the attack is executed over, where jitter in both the up- and downstream direction can significantly deteriorate an attack’s perfor- mance. Traditional timing attacks overcome this problem by obtaining a large number of measurements. In this poster, we present a technique to remove the inaccuracies caused by downstream jitter in a remote timing attack, which we expect to reduce the number of measure- ments required to perform a successful timing attack. Our core idea is to exploit timestamps in HTTP responses, whose values are independent of the downstream jitter. To abuse these timestamps, the adversary synchronizes with the target web server’s clock edge, after which the observed timestamps allow the adversary to infer secret information. We present a method to synchronize with the server’s clock and discuss how to compensate for the clock drift between the attacker and target machines. To evaluate the feasibility of our technique, we also investigate the occur- rence of timestamps in HTTP responses for the top 10,000 sites according to the Tranco list. Index Terms—Side-channel attacks, timing attacks, web- based attacks, network security 1. Introduction The first remote timing attack was performed in 2005 by Brumley and Boneh, who used more than 1.4 million samples to leak a 1024-bit RSA key from a server [1]. Historically, to exploit a remote timing attack an adversary has to obtain many samples to be able to differentiate requests in a statistically significant way. Collecting a high number of samples makes the attack more robust against the jitter imposed by the network. By performing a test like the box test proposed by Crosby, Wallach and Riedi, an attacker can confidently differentiate between operations on a server using a quantifiable metric and leak private data [3]. In order to reduce the need for obtaining such a high amount of samples, the network jitter that is present has to be reduced or removed. By eliminating the dependence on one or both network paths, the jitter can be elimi- nated from the obtained samples. Previous work showed that both up- and downstream jitter can be removed by coalescing multiple requests into a single TCP segment and looking at the order in which the responses are being returned [5]. However, their technique only works over HTTP/2 and requires that the server uses concurrent processing. We propose a new sequential timing attack that eliminates downstream jitter and can leak sensitive information under less strict prerequisites. First, the core concept of the attack and the prereq- uisites will be presented. Second, some necessary opti- mizations to make the attack feasible will be discussed. Specifically, the clocks of the attacker and target machines have to be synchronized in order to leak information from the target. Adding to the complexity, these clocks will experience a relative drift between them over time, due to the minor inaccuracies in the physical hardware- clocks they use. Because the attack takes a non-negligible amount of time, the relative drift between machines should be compensated for in order to keep the synchronization valid throughout the attack. Finally, the occurrence of timing information on the web is discussed due to its vital importance to a successful attack. 2. Proposed Attack Consider two requests, one of which includes a secret operation that takes additional processing time (the ‘tar- get’ request), the other does not (the ‘baseline’ request). When these two requests are sent to a server at exactly the same moment, the expected outcome would be that the response to the target request is returned after the response to the baseline request be
non_poster
Single-cell migration data - import module in CellMissy This document describes in detail how to import single-cell experiments derived-data into the dedicated module of CellMissy. Which data is CellMissy expecting to receive as input The module expects text files containing four distinct columns: (i) the trajectory unique ID, (ii) the time point, (iii) the x coordinate (either in pixel or µm), and (iv) the y coordinate (either in pixel or µm): Formats accepted: tab-separated-values, comma-separated-values, XLS. Header of the text file
non_poster
Integrated IoT monitoring system and Data Science platform to monitor plant conditions under biotic and abiotic factors Monia Santini1, Paola Nassisi1, Valentina Scardigno1, Carlo Trotta1, Alessandro D’Anca1, Arianna di Paola1,3, Sandro Fiore4, Giovanni Aloisio1,2, Riccardo Valentini1 1 Fondazione Centro euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici, Lecce, Italy 2 University of Salento, Lecce, Italy 3 National Research Council of Italy, Roma, Italy 4 University of Trento, Trento, Italy
non_poster
Special issue on: Digital Technologies for Entrepreneurship and Social Change IMPORTANT DATES: Submission of Full Paper: until October 31, 2023. Initial decision sent to authors: until March 31, 2024 Deadline for revised papers: July 31, 2024 Notification of acceptance: until September 31, 2024 Deadline for final versions: October 31, 2024 Special Issue publication (expected): December 2024 Guest Editors: Dr. Amarolinda Zanela Klein Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos, Business and Management School, Brazil (aczanela@unisinos.br) Dr. Cristiane Pedron Universidade Nove de Julho, Brazil (cdpedron@uni9.pro.br) Dr. Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood Florida International University, USA (selalufc@fiu.edu) Dr. Winnie Ng Picoto Universidade de Lisboa, Instituto Superior Economia e Gestão, Portugal (w.picoto@iseg.ulisboa.pt) BAR Editor-in-Chief: Dr. Ivan Lapuente Garrido Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos, Business and Management School, Brazil (bar-eic@anpad.org.br)
non_poster
AMS 2021 - Poster # 1019 Daniel M. Gilford, January 2021 Recording Transcript, including time stamps [Recording transcribed by https://otter.ai; lightly edited/formatted for readability/accessibility] 0:00 My name is Daniel Gilford. I'm a postdoctoral associate at Rutgers University and I'm really excited to share with you pyPI, which is a tropical cyclone potential intensity calculator coded up in Python and now available as a Python package. 0:16 Tropical Cyclone potential intensity is effectively the speed limit that a tropical cyclone can spin at, given its environmental conditions and pyPI is designed to supply a freely available set of codes and algorithms to both calculate potential intensity and do some simple analysis on potential intensity. [The] potential intensity algorithm has been around since about the 1980s, and in 2002, there were sort of a new version of it in Bister and Emanuel (2002). But the code from that which was originally coded in Fortran and then in MATLAB has never been really fully documented, so one of the purposes of this Python package that I developed, was to fully document the potential intensity algorithm, and make it as transparent as possible for users within the tropical cyclone and meteorological communities. I also want to really demonstrate the usefulness and utility of potential intensity as a research tool and pyPI makes that really transparent and I'm excited to share it with you today, as I do, as I sort of show you what it's capable of and what its purpose is. 1:23 So let's just start off with what potential intensity is. It’s fundamentally the speed limit of a tropical cyclone when we consider that it is a thermal heat engine. So it takes in energy it does work on the environment and it turns its potential energy into kinetic energy which is represented by the rotation of the wind, the wind speed of the tropical cyclone. And that maximum wind speed is really useful because we can compare it directly to actual intensity of tropical cyclones, and we can see there's a strong significant correlation between those two that is well documented in previous research. 2:01 And so what we can do is we can take environmental conditions, namely the temperature, water vapor, and sea surface temperatures, and also mean sea level pressures from an environmental profile---a single profile or we can take a gridded profile--and we can put those things together to calculate the potential intensity through the potential intensity algorithm. This is really exciting because you can take the potential energies from the environment convert them into kinetic energy you have some maximum speed at which the hurricane can spin, and you can learn a lot about the tropical cyclone that way; it's thermodynamic properties. 2:39 So if you're looking to calculate potential intensity one of the big questions you might ask, using pyPI, is how fast does this algorithm run. In the case of pyPI we are using numba to optimize potential intensity calculations; that's something that my colleague, Daniel Rothenberg helped me to set up within pyPI and I'm really grateful to him for his help, because it really has gotten
non_poster
CDOCKER Tutorial CDOCKER is a molecular docking method based on CHARMm's position, which can produce highly accurate docking results. Taking the binding of natural ibuprofen ligand molecules to the COX-1 receptor as a point, the obtained docking conformation is compared with the natural conformation of the ligand in the crystal structure obtained by X-ray diffraction. 1. Prepare the docking system In the Files Explorer, find and double-click to open Samples| Tutorals| Receptor-Ligand Interations|1EQG.dsv. Open a three-dimensional protein structure with active sites in the branch window. (Figure 1) Figure 1 Three-dimensional structure of protein In the Tools Explorer, expand Receptor-Ligand Interactions|Define and Edit Binding Site, and then click Show/Hide Residues Outside Sphere and Show/Hide Sphere. Expand the menu bar View|Transform and click Fit To Screen to display the amino acid at the binding site in the center of the window. (Figure 2) Figure 2 Protein active site amino acids Find and double-click to open the Samples|Tutorials|Receptol-Ligand Interactions|1EQG-ibuprofen- conf.sd. file. A molecule of ibuprofen with an institutional image will open. (Figure 3)
non_poster
●Title CBRAIN: a web-based, distributed computing platform for collaborative neuroinformatics research ● Authors and Affiliations Bryan Caron 1, Reza Adalat 1, Natacha Beck 1, Serge Boroday 1, Samir Das 1, Najmeh Khalili-Mahani 1, Darcy Quesnel 1, Pierre Rioux 1, Darius Valvicius 1, Alan Evans 1 1 McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience (MCIN), Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics and Mental Health, Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI), McGill University, Montreal, Canada ● Introduction, Methods, Results, Conclusions Introduction CBRAIN (http://cbrain.ca) is an open source, web-based, collaborative research software platform designed to address major challenges in big data research. CBRAIN provides researchers in neuroinformatics, genomics and more the ability to easily collaborate, store and analyze data at scale using computational pipelines on heterogeneous computing and data resources around the world. CBRAIN is used in numerous major neuroinformatics projects and is a pillar component of NeuroHub (https://neurohub.ca), a core platform of McGill University’s Healthy Brains, Healthy Lives initiative (https://www.mcgill.ca/hbhl/). Methods In production since 2009, CBRAIN (Sherif et al., 2014) is a mature and flexible orchestration infrastructure seamlessly connecting scientists to a network of advanced computing and data resources. CBRAIN is a multi-tiered platform implemented in Ruby on Rails, a widely used RESTful, Ruby-based framework. See Figure 1 for a schematic of various components of CBRAIN. CBRAIN allows users to easily launch and manage the execution of complex computational pipelines and choreographs all associated data transfers across a distributed network of resources. CBRAIN is integrated with Globus Auth (Tuecke et al., 2016) for identity management, authenticating users with their institutional Identity Provider and authorizing access to CBRAIN services. With CBRAIN users are able to upload their own data, create datasets and share that data. Fine-grained access controls enable users to securely store and share data according to a study’s data management policy. A wide variety of open and controlled access datasets including those from the Canadian Open Neuroscience Platform (https://conp.ca) (Harding et al., 2022), the Human Connectome Project (Van Essen et al., 2013) and the UK Biobank (Miller
non_poster
Wanted egg parasitoids: Ooctonus vulgatus parasitizes Philaenus spumarius in Corsica and is probably widely distributed in Europe Mesmin X.; Chartois M.; Genson G.; Rossi J.-P.; Cruaud A.; Rasplus J.-Y CBGP, INRAE, CIRAD, IRD, Montpellier SupAgro, Univ Montpellier, Montpellier, France
non_poster
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283259146 Environmental risks of biochar in soils: ecotoxicological effects on plants and microarthropods Conference Paper · October 2015 CITATIONS 0 READS 128 4 authors: Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Sustainable Agriculture and Soil Conservation (SoCo) View project Soil sealing and land take View project Federica D. Conti Università degli studi di Parma 27 PUBLICATIONS 93 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Ciro Gardi EFSA European Food Safety Authority 121 PUBLICATIONS 969 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Giovanna Visioli Università degli studi di Parma 61 PUBLICATIONS 621 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Cristina Menta University of East London 56 PUBLICATIONS 609 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Federica D. Conti on 27 October 2015. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file.
non_poster
داستان ما در کارگاه سه روزه Health MBA گروه2 – دوره10 کیمیا احمدی، نازنین حسینی، عبدالرضا محمدی کوشکی، زهرا رادمرد، سید وحید موسوی، امیرعباس احدیت
non_poster
Dê a essa luta! fôlego 09 DE SETEMBRO Dia Mundial da Fibrose Cística #fibrosecistica #dêfôlegoaessaluta
non_poster
Digital Humanities Benelux 2022 conference University of Luxemburg June 1-3, 2022 Title Scholar-Curated Worksets for Analysis, Reuse & Dissemination (SCWAReD) from the HathiTrust Research Center Authors ● Ryan Dubnicek (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, HathiTrust Research Center) rdubnic2@illinois.edu ● John A. Walsh (Indiana University, HathiTrust Research Center) jawalsh@indiana.edu ● Maryemma Graham (University of Kansas) - non-presenting author ● J. Stephen Downie (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, HathiTrust Research Center) - non-presenting author ● Isabella Magni (Indiana University, HathiTrust Research Center) - non-presenting author ● Glen Layne-Worthey (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, HathiTrust Research Center) - non-presenting author Abstract The Scholar-Curated Worksets for Analysis, Reuse & Dissemination (SCWAReD) project, generously supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, is producing a suite of curated, targeted worksets of materials from the HathiTrust Digital Library, facilitated by its Research Center (HTRC). HTRC worksets are user-created collections of HathiTrust volumes that can be treated as data and analyzed using a variety of tools and services. Worksets can be shared and cited, contributing to research reproducibility and enduring scholarship. In addition to their intrinsic value as focused digital collections, SCWAReD’s enhanced, scholar-curated worksets also serve as illustrative, reusable research models, and include not only the worksets themselves, but also scholarly introductions, derived datasets and related documentation, and research reports, demonstrating the collaborative workset-building, textual analysis, workflow development, and dataset-creation activities typically carried out by HTRC. The special mission of SCWAReD is to highlight and center the work of historically under- resourced and marginalized textual communities. For this purpose, a flagship project and four sub-projects were selected competitively; each of them explores new methods for creating, analyzing, and reusing curated digital library collections and the research data derived from them. SCWAReD aims to address inequities in both library collections and digital humanities research by identifying data that can support research in these traditionally marginalized fields as well as remediating gaps within HathiTrust, and using computationally-assisted efforts to recover content that is already part of the HathiTrust Digital Library but that may be difficult to discover with traditional metadata, in a traditional catalog, from within a massive digital collection.
non_poster
5th PRESS RELEASE The SECRETed project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Grant Agreement No. 101000794. This publication reflects only the author’s views and the European Union is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained therein. Sustainable Exploitation of bio-based Compounds Revealed and Engineered from naTural sources © copyright A message from the Exploitation and Dissemination managers of SECRETed
non_poster
Poster Abstract: Run-time Dynamic WCET Estimation Lia Cagnizi lia.cagnizi@mail.polimi.it Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy Federico Reghenzani federico.reghenzani@polimi.it Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy European Space Agency, Noordwijk, Netherlands William Fornaciari william.fornaciari@polimi.it Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy ABSTRACT To guarantee the timing constraints of real-time IoT devices, en- gineers need to estimate the Worst-Case Execution Time. Such estimation is always very pessimistic and represents a condition that almost never occurs in practice. In this poster, we present a novel compiler-based approach that instruments the tasks to inform, at run-time, the operating system when non-worst-case branches are taken. The generated slack is then used to take better scheduling decisions. CCS CONCEPTS • Computer systems organization →Real-time systems; • Software and its engineering →Real-time systems software; Compilers; • Hardware →Timing analysis. KEYWORDS real-time scheduling, dynamic WCET, compiler transformation ACM Reference Format: Lia Cagnizi, Federico Reghenzani, and William Fornaciari. 2023. Poster Abstract: Run-time Dynamic WCET Estimation. In International Conference on Internet-of-Things Design and Implementation (IoTDI ’23), May 09–12, 2023, San Antonio, TX, USA. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 3 pages. https: //doi.org/10.1145/3576842.3589168 1 INTRODUCTION Many Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices must satisfy given timing constraints, which are usually expressed with the concept of a time deadline. Such IoT systems are then real-time systems. Mixed- Criticality Systems (MCS) are a particular class of real-time systems and have been a subject of research since the Vestal’s article [4]. These systems integrate components with different criticality onto the same platform, where criticality is meant as the level of assur- ance that a software component must guarantee. To guarantee that timing constraints are met for real-time systems, the scheduling analysis must consider the Worst-Case Execution Time (WCET) of each task. This pessimistic assumption leads to a waste of sys- tem resources, for two reasons: tasks rarely execute their longest execution path, and the execution time analyses are usually very pessimistic, substantially over-estimating the real WCET [3]. In Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than the author(s) must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from permissions@acm.org. IoTDI ’23, May 09–12, 2023, San Antonio, TX, USA © 2023 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM. ACM ISBN 979-8-4007-0037-8/23/05...$15.00 https://doi.org/10.1145/3576842.3589168 10 5 30 60 J2 J1 J3 J4 B1 B2 B3 B4 Figure 1: An example of CFG with four basic blocks (B1–B4) and four jump instructions (J1–J4). The number inside each block represent the worst-case execution time of that block. order to mitigate this problem, slack scheduling techniques have been developed to exploit unused WCET budgets [2]. MCS also targets this problem, with the aim to exploit over-provisioned re- sources and take advantage of the criticality concept. For example, the scheduler admits low criticality tasks during the slack time generated by high criticality tasks that do not run for their entire WCET [1]. However, the limitation of slack-reclaiming approaches is that the actual execution time of a task is known to the scheduler only after its completion. Instead, any info on the actual execution time before completion may help in performing a more ef
non_poster
Warming Uma Newsletter do PELD – CRSC Boletim 010 Dezembro 2022 https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.22584073 Ilha de vegetação no campo rupestre Foto: Paulo R. Siqueria
non_poster
Multiword Expressions – Comparative Analysis Based on Aligned Corpora Cvetana Krstev Association for Language Resources and Technologies Belgrade, Serbia CvetanaJK@gmail.com Ranka Stankovi´c University of Belgrade F. of Mining and Geology Belgrade, Serbia ranka@rgf.bg.ac.rs Aleksandra Markovi´c Institute for the Serbian Language SASA Belgrade, Serbia malexa39@gmail.com Relevant UniDive working groups: WG1, WG2 1 Introduction The aim of our paper is to research inter- and intra- linguistic similarities/differences in the use of sim- ile rhetorical figures (Niculae and Yaneva, 2013). We aimed at differences in the source concept in different languages, as well as in different means for expressing the comparison (simile, superlatives, compounds etc.). Our research relies on four bilin- gual aligned corpora containing mostly literary texts and involving English, French (Stankovi´c et al., 2017), German (Andonovski et al., 2019) and Italian (Periši´c et al., 2023) as one of the lan- guages and Serbian as the other.1 Similes have the recognizable formal structure; their surface form consists of the subject of com- parison, the object of comparison, a conjunction which signals a comparison, and the basis of the comparison implied by the expression. In our pre- vious research (Mitrovi´c et al., 2020; Krstev, 2021) we collected a set of 558 similes from Serbian lit- erary texts and presented their structure in a form of finite-state automata (FST), which facilitates our present research. Each FST describes possible lexico-syntactic variants of a simile. In the present study we focus on similes and their translations. Similes in Serbian texts were retrieved with the high precision (close to 100%) using the set of FSTs. We estimate that the re- call is significantly lower, but the goal of this re- search was not to retrieve all similes in analysed texts. Similes in other languages were retrieved using CQL (corpus query language) incorporated in systems that support aligned corpora. The cor- respondence between similes in one language and its source or translation in another language were established by using the “close reading” technique. 1English/Serbian (4.4MW) and French/Serbian (1.7MW) are available at Korpus, German/Serbian (1.6MW) and Ital- ian/Serbian (1MW) at Biblisha, and English/Serbian and Ital- ian/Serbian at Noske as well. These corpora are available to registered users. 2 Similarities Across Languages We established previously that the most frequent simile in Serbian literary texts is beo kao sneg ‘white as snow’ (Krstev, 2021:126). Therefore it is not surprising that this figure occurs in all our corpora. 1984-en: ...with everything forgiven, his soul white as snow; 1984-fr: Tout était pardonné et son âme était blanche comme neige; 1984-sr: ...gde mu je sve bilo oprošteno, gde mu je duša bila bela kao sneg; Eco-it: Chi aveva parlato era un monaco curvo per il peso degli anni, bianco come la neve; Eco-sr: Te je reˇci izgovorio monah poguren pod teretom godina, beo kao sneg; Jelinek-de: ...diese lang vergessene Weiblichkeit mit der Haut so weiß wie Schnee und dem Haar so schwarz wie Ebenholz. Jelinek-sr: ...ta dugo zaboravljena ženstvenost sa kožom belom kao sneg i kosom crnom kao abonos. Although the popularity of beo kao sneg ‘white as snow’ in Serbian was already established, in our aligned corpora it occurred only in translations to Serbian. Therefore, in all presented examples the phrase was used in the original; only 1984-fr is the translation from English. Today it is still natural to compare the pure white color to snow. In some cases, like zdrav kao dren ‘healthy as dogwood’, the motivation for using this particular tree for a comparison is blurred. In the French original and Italian translation different choices were observed: chêne ‘oak’ in French and pesce ‘fish’ in Italian. Flaubert-fr: Quant à lui il se portait toujours comme un chêne; Flaubert-sr: Što se njega tiˇce, on je zdrav kao dren; Andri´c-sr: ...i svak
non_poster
Development of self-degradable lipid-like material equipped with environment sensing units Daniel Zucker 1*, Yuta Nakai 2, Kota Tange 2, Hiroki Yoshioka 2, Hiroki Tanaka 3, Hidetaka Akita 3. 1 NOF EUROPE GmbH, Mainzer Landstrasse 46, 60325 Frankfurt, Germany. 2 NOF CORPORATION, 3-3 Chidori-cho, Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki, Kanagawa 210-0865, Japan. 3 Chiba University, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Inohana Campus: 1-8-1 Inohana, Chuo-ku, Chiba, 260-8675, Japan. * Presenter, e-mail: daniel.zucker@nofeurope.com An in-vitro transcribed messenger RNA (mRNA) is now becoming one of the most powerful tools for introducing a desired protein to cells and organisms. We previously developed a lipid-like material (COATSOME® SS-series) for the successful cytoplasmic delivery of the mRNA. COATSOME® SS-series contain two environment sensing units; tertiary amines for endosomal escape and a disulfide bonding for cytoplasmic collapse [1, 2]. In this study, we further improved the cytoplasmic release of the mRNA from the lipid nanoparticles by modifying the structure of COATSOME® SS-series. We have recently discovered that an enrichment of hydrophobic thiols in the particle under reducing environments induces an intra-particle hydrolysis reaction. In this study, we introduced a hydrolysable phenyl ester group to COATSOME® SS-OP (Fig. 1) as a self-degradation unit. The self-degradation reaction was confirmed using high performance liquid chromatography, liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Transmission electron cryomicroscopy observation revealed that the mRNA-encapsulating particle has a spherical and homogenous morphology. The COATSOME® SS-OP showed potent gene expressions in both in-vitro and in-vivo assays. 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 0 3 6 9 12 Blood EPO concentration (ng/mL) Time post administration (hour) COATSOME® SS-OP MC3 In vivo Erythropoietin-encoding mRNA delivery to Liver COATSOME® SS-OP O O O O N S S N O O O O
non_poster
Young, (metal-)rich ad not alone: formation of thin-disc RR Lyrae stars through binary evolution Giuliano Iorio In coll. with : Alexei Bobrick, Vasily Belokurov, Joris Vos, Maja Vuckovic Based on: Iorio & Belokurov, MNRAS, 2021, 502, 5686 Bobrick, Iorio et al., arXiv:2208.04332 Long story short: • Data from the Gaia satellite reveal a population of RR Lyrae stars with metallicity, kinematics and distribution typical of the Galactic thin-disc • Their existence is a conundrum for stellar evolution models, how do they form? Binary evolution is the solution! • Interesting implications for both Galactic and Binary studies Where are the plots? See next slides Wanna know more? Let’s talk! Where are the data? giuliano.iorio@unipd.it
non_poster
Cases (multiple values for parameters and Initial Conditions) Mathematical Model window The Ribbon changes when a different window is selected Graph window Table window Notes window Parameters and Initial conditions Animation Area The Green Button starts and pause the independent variable Hide/show small squares for Cases... Colapse all Windows... Hide/show ribbon... Modellys 4.5 HELP (available on the "?" button, top right). Page 1 of 7
non_poster
A socio-semantic analysis of the research domain on Xylella fastidiosa Structure and scientific dynamics Marc Barbier3, Pauline Farigoule1,2, Astrid Cruaud2, Jean-Pierre Rossi2 1 AgroParisTech, Paris, France 2 CBGP, INRAE, CIRAD, IRD, Montpellier SupAgro, Univ. Montpellier, Montferrier-sur-Lez, France 3 UMR LISIS, INRAE, Marne-la-Vallée, France Contact : Marc Barbier – marc.barbier@inrae.fr
non_poster
Practicing the Best Practice Designing Effective Health Care Experiences Susan L. Spraragen IBM T.J. Watson Research Center Hawthorne, New York, sprara@us.ibm.com Abstract: This paper offers a discussion on how to apply a service design technique to health care scenarios where positive service experiences are vital. When examining issues like patient compliance, applying techniques from the design world may afford health care providers with a clear visualization for understanding the patient’s perspective in interacting with their health care providers. Here we describe the Expressive Service Blueprinting method that links the patient’s journey with the actions and processes of the health care provider. The emotive responses of the patient as they progress through their journey are also reviewed as an element that augments the insight gained from constructing the blueprint. Key words: Service Design, Health Care, Emotion, Patient Compliance. 1. Introduction It is readily being recognized that design thinking can be applied to areas that reach beyond product design and into service experience design, where the service may be the use of public transportation, securing clean water for a community, or providing the best health care at a low cost [1]. This poster will demonstrate how the use of a design technique can bridge the chasm between design intentions and service processes in order to produce beneficial experiences for service providers and consumers. This discussion will focus on health care scenarios. As a health care provider constructs a regimen or intervention for a patient they have the hopes that the patient will readily adopt the procedures, show improvement, and grow along a planned path. But often the patient encounters many bumps and obstacles along that path. Thus the challenge becomes one of how to collaboratively design successful patient journeys, or at least ones that have better chances for being followed and producing positive outcomes. The answer lies in anchoring the design of the prescribed plan around the patient’s perspective while linking that perspective to provider intentions for their patient. A developing design technique that maps out the patient journey, as experienced from their viewpoint, is called Expressive Service Blueprinting. This technique, which I will illustrate in my poster, adds emotive states to traditional service blueprinting, where we consider the customer’s expected or observed emotional responses as they occur during their service interactions. Providers present emotions on the service stage as well, and that may represent opportunities for improved training and staffing. Service blueprinting is a method for visually representing the meaningful moments of a service engagement from the customer’s perspective [2, 3]. Linked to the steps of the customer’s experience, the map includes provider
non_poster
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Fosfatasa alcalina Verónica González Luna* iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: 202123056@viep.com.mx 01 de Febrero de 2023 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7593281 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Victor Rivelino Juárez-González (Departamento de Medicina Molecular y Bioprocesos, Instituto de Biotecnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Es una enzima proteica homodimérica formada por dos monómeros idénticos, cada monómero va a tener cinco residuos de cisteína, dos átomos de zinc y un átomo de magnesio. Esta enzima se encuentra en diversos individuos y a distinta concentración, esto va a depender de las condiciones del sistema, podrá estar presente en células procariotas y eucariotas entre los que destacan hongos y plantas [1]. En las bacterias Gram-negativas la fosfatasa alcalina se encuentra en el espacio
non_poster
CENTRO DE CIÊNCIAS HUMANAS, LETRAS E ARTES DEPARTAMENTO DE ADMINISTRAÇÃO E CONTABILIDADE PROGRAMA DE PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO EM ADMINISTRAÇÃO VI Seminários InterNacionais de Administração Pública Prof. Dr. Roberto Kern Gomes IBGE / SC Intraempreendedorismo em Organizações Públicas Convidado Prof. Dr. Josiel Lopes Valadares Universidade Federal de Viçosa Moderador Tema 29/05/2019 - 16h00 - Sala de Conferências DAD/UFV Prof. Antônio Vagner Almeida Olavo Universidade Federal do Amazonas - UFAM Debatedor Aberto ao público / sem inscrição prévia Realização Organização Apoio PPGAdm
non_poster
Dual Time and Frequency Domain Optical Layer Digital Twin M. Devigili(1), M. Ruiz(1), N. Costa(2), A. Napoli(3), J. Pedro(2), and L. Velasco(1) (1) Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), Barcelona, Spain (mariano.devigili@upc.edu) (2) Infinera Unipessoal Lda., Carnaxide, Portugal; (3) Infinera, Munich, Germany Abstract We demonstrate a digital twin for failure detection in optical networks. Artificial neural networks-based models for optical constellation analysis enable predicting the transmitted signal in the time domain whereas analytical models are usually used to estimate their spectral evolution.©2022 The Author(s) 1. Introduction Digital Twins (DT) can be defined as a combination of data, models, and algorithms that act as a bridge between real and virtual worlds. DT have been recently proposed to model optical communications [1]. Examples of applications of an optical layer DT are intelligent fault management and misconfiguration detection, where the real optical signal can be compared to the one generated by the DT to identify discrepancies and estimate their root cause. Note that the same objective can be achieved by applying different methods, like analytical models, simulation, or deep learning (see, e.g., [2]-[4]). The DT, however, provide a more complete characterization of the optical signal, which can be helpful to perform more complete analyses. For instance, employing methods that just estimate the channel’s OSNR or only work in the time domain may not be effective to detect a failure in an optical filter. The opposite is also true, by analyzing the received signal bandwidth, it may be difficult to detect excessive noise coming from an optical amplifier. In our previous work [4], we focused on the time domain and proposed the use of Artificial neural networks (ANN) to model the impairments arising in optical erbium doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs), optical fibers and filters. Then, the total optical performance degradation in end-to-end lightpaths (E2E) could be modelled by concatenating such ANNs, from the transmitter to the receiver. In this paper, we extend the work presented in [4] by including also frequency domain models. The new – frequency – models proposed in this work can be concatenated to the time-domain ones to increase the accuracy of the E2E lightpath optical performance estimation. Illustrative use cases are analyzed to show the application of the proposed time and frequency domain digital twin (TF-DT) of the optical layer. 2. Optical Layer Digital Twin and Use Cases We assume reconfigurable optical add drop multiplexers (ROADM) following a route & select architecture equipped with optical spectrum analyzers (OSA). The optical signal to noise ratio (OSNR) and bandwidth of the desired signal can be derived from the measured optical spectrum. This monitoring – carried out in intermediate ROADMs – complements the more detailed ones performed at the coherent receiver. An illustrative network scenario with n ROADMs is represented in Fig. 1. Each ROADM consists of two wavelength selective switches (WSSs) and an EDFA (except the last one). The ROADMs are connected by optical links which may consist of several fiber spans and inline EDFAs. The proposed TF-DT is also illustrated, consisting of the concatenated ANNs for the time domain analysis of the transmitted data signal whereas analytical models are used for the frequency domain. The ANNs model the propagation of constellation points (CP)s in the ROADMs and into optical links, whereas analytical models are used to model the bandwidth inside the ROADMs. Measurements collected from the network can then be compared to the expected signals generated using the TF-DT. Let us illustrate the application of the TF-DT through the analysis of the use cases depicted in Fig. 2. In this case, the configuration a) corresponds to normal network operation, i.e., without any failure or misconfiguration; b) illustrates a misconfiguration where a channel is wrongly
non_poster
University-Led Sports Academy: a space for developing student success gareth.barrett@staffs.ac.uk Gareth M. Barrett
non_poster
CD Bioparticles Provide one-stop customization service of gene therapy for academic and industrial customers.
non_poster
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Aldrín, un viejo enemigo Edgar Elias Torres iD, Danna Michelle Hernández Cabrera iD, María Esther Hernández Huerta iD, Camila Ojeda Fernández iD, América Oropeza Vázquez iD Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: edgar.elias@alumno.buap.mx 8 de Marzo de 2024 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10795826 Editado por: Yolanda Elizabeth Morales-García (Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Apoyo en la maquetación: Gadriana Scarlett Martínez Gómez (Estudiante de la Licenciatura en Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen El aldrín es un insecticida organoclorado que ya sea por contacto, inhalación o por ingestión es un veneno potencial y persistente [1, 2]. Su uso comenzó en los años 40 y se extendió hasta 1974, ya para los años 70’s y 80’s fue prohibido debido a su alta toxicidad en EUA, Malasia,
non_poster
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MULTIDISCIPLINARY BULLETIN ISSN: 2996-511X (online) | ResearchBib (IF) = 9.512 IMPACT FACTOR Volume-2| Issue-5| 2024 Published: |30-12-2024| 120 УЧУВЧИСИЗ УЧАДИГАН АППАРТЛАРИНИНГ ТАҲДИДЛАРИНИ АНИҚЛАШ ҲАМДА БАРТАРАФ ЭТИШ. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14511214 Муслимов Хусан Нишонбоевич Ўзбекистон Республикаси ИИВ Малака ошириш институти Жанговар тайёргарлик цикли ўқитувчиси, майор +99899 8228991 Аннотатсия Ушбу мақолада учувчисиз учадиган аппаратларнинг фойдаланиш мақсади, уларнинг назарияси, ривожланиши ва яратилиш тарихи, асосий хусусиятларининг таҳлили, қисқача тактик-техник тавсифи, турлари ҳамда икки томонлама ишлатиладиган квадрокоптерлар ҳамда разведка дронлари ҳақида маълумотлар келтирилган. Калит сўзлар учувчисиз учадиган аппаратлар, дронлар, разведка дронлари, квадроаоптерлар, тинчлик, хавфсизлик, технология, аниқ вақт, Орлан-10. ОБНАРУЖЕНИЕ И УСТРАНЕНИЕ УГРОЗ, ИСХОДЯЩИХ ОТ БЕСПИЛОТНЫХ ЛЕТАТЕЛЬНЫХ АППАРАТОВ. Аннотация В данной статье представлена информация о целях использования беспилотных летательных аппаратов, истории их теории, разработки и создания, анализе их основных характеристик, кратком тактико-техническом описании, типах квадрокоптеров двойного назначения, а также разведывательных беспилотных летательных аппаратов. Ключевые слова беспилотные летательные аппараты, дроны-разведчики, квадроаптеры, мир, безопасность, технологии, точное время, "Орлан-10". DETECTION AND ELIMINATION OF THREATS FROM UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES. Abstract This article provides information on the purposes of using unmanned aerial vehicles, the history of their theory, development and creation, analysis of their
non_poster
Saveena Solanki email:saveena100lanki@gmail.com . \ Based on the advances in the knowledge of human systems biology, we propose a ‘‘Cell-to-Human’’ approach to address human diseases. We outline a framework for the application of network modeling approach towards personalized medicine. The framework consists of five basic modules i.e.—(1) data mining module, (2) networking module, (3)modeling and analysis module(4)experimental cum development module and (5) validation cum Implementation module. The review Schematic diagram showing the typical coordination of genetic, signaling and metabolic networks for generating a phenotypic response. The figure shows the schematic of the typical information processing in a cellular network. Any defect at either of these levels of information process can lead to disruption in the adequate response leading to disease states mathematical. model for disease diagnosis to aid modern medical science. This approach has the potential to study the functioning of the human body as a whole operating system at the molecular and modular levels in biomedical research. Because In the case of diseases, it The role of the System Biology program in Health and Disease: from biological networks to modern medicine. Abstract Human physiology incorporates integrated biological processes ranging from cell-to-cell interactions within a Phenotypic, physiological response. The network is embedded in a structure that controls order, which has led to an unhealthy condition called disease when disturbed unusually. Here, we present a diagnostic problem similar to the problem of error detection in engineering systems. We are reviewing the use of engineering methods to deal with human diseases from a biological perspective. Research into the human system has provided an accurate understanding of the chemical and physical properties contributing to the human body in the last few decades. In general, mitigation measures often reduce this interaction by building a more comprehensive network of organisms. Biological networks contain interactions between genes, proteins, and metabolites that combine to control cellular processes. While the interaction of many cells contributes to tissues' response, the various organs that make up different types of tissue continue to adapt to the body's response. These interactions form the basis for network design that identifies natural designs' principles that govern the body's response capacity. The review highlights the potential networks and modeling methods used to analyze human diseases. It shows the use of this analysis of cancer and diabetes. We introduce the concept of human-to-human cellularization consisting of five modules (data mining, communication, modeling, testing, and validation) to address human physiology and diseases supported by the system-level paradigm analysis. The review focuses on the importance of multiple biological and modeling networks and subsequent analysis of drug-specific diagnoses and the development of effective treatment modalities
non_poster
Seawater properties and Ocean Heat Content in in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard S.Aliani, R. Sciascia, A. D’Angelo, F. Del Bianco, F. Giglio , L. Langone and S. Miserocchi CNR-ISMAR, Italy (stefano.aliani@ismar.cnr.it). Abstract The Arctic Ocean is the Northern hemisphere heat sink for our planet and is experiencing drastic and fast climatic changes. A major connection between the Arctic Ocean and global climate that has come to the foreground during the past decades is the oceanic component of the global water cycle. Two aspects of the interaction between the Arctic Ocean and global climate appear particularly important. The first involves sea ice and the second involves heat and ocean mass budgets. Considerable effort has been invested in understanding sea ice and the dynamics and thermodynamics of sea ice are probably as well understood as any part of the polar climate system. For example, we know that every year about 3,000 km3 less sea ice was frozen within the Arctic Ocean then is melted, and recently ice melting has increased (Murray et al, 2015). Data about freshwater balance of the Arctic Ocean had been mainly calculated from sea­ice melting and through the contribution of fresh water from land­based glacier runoff after increased atmospheric temperature. The contribution of heat from the ocean and from the oceanographic processes at the interface between the sea and tidewater glaciers has been suggested as a possible trigger destabilizing glaciers’ front. Freshwater input into the ocean and the estimate of seawater properties and movements able to affect submarine melting of tidewater glaciers has been studied theoretically and in situ in several locations (Straneo et al, 2012) and are one of the objectives of ARCA Project. Ocean Heat Content (OHC) is a powerful indicator of climate changes (Levitus et al, 2005), but plain temperature data are more widely used because they are easy to collect and manage and, as a matter of fact, a good indicator. OHC derived from the record of hydrographic profiles and seabed morphology is usually poorly addressed in most of papers on ocean tidewater glacier interaction, including from Kongsfjorden, except one general reference to surface OHC in Cottier et al (2005) and a recent paper by Aliani et al (2016). OHC is defined as the depth­averaged temperature over a given volume of seawater times its density, times the specific heat capacity (eq.1): H = c ρ p V T where = 1027 kg/m ρ 3 is water density, cp = 4000 J/kg◦C is sea water specific heat capacity, V is the volume and T is the depth averaged temperature. The concept of OHC from oceanographic data includes many variables that may locally affect the heat content of a water mass of the ocean and the properties of ocean glacier interaction. It is a global index (Levitus et al, 2005), but at the same time it is very site specific. A snapshot of the spatial differences in OHC between the inner fiord and the ocean at close proximity of glacier interface has been described by Aliani et al (2016) using CTD data collected in September 2014. In this paper, we estimated OHC, calculated as described in equation 1, based on volumes as inferred from bathymetric survey (Aliani et al, 2016) and on temperature time series from Mooring Dirigibile Italia. We used temperature time series over the year 2014­2015 at about 25 m depth, that is the depth where the warm core of Atlantic water has been historically found (Aliani et al, 2004) to infer OHC in the water column. The aim is to explore the seasonal changes of OHC in the Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016
non_poster
PARK OF SUNCLOCKS IN HORODNIC DE JOS – ROMANIA NAGHI ELISABETA ANA, NAEC& EDUCATION MINISRY, ROMANIA DIMITRIE OLENICI, TEACHER Types of sundials
non_poster
A journey through galactic environments | Porto Ercole - Italy | Sep 25 - 29, 2023 Is the taxonomy of early-type galaxies more complicated than we thought? Rogério Monteiro-Oliveira (Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics - ASIAA, Taiwan) Yen-Ting Lin (Academia Sinica); Wei-Huai Chen (National Taiwan University/Academia Sinica); Chen-Yu Chuang (National Tsing Hua University /Academia Sinica); Abdurro'uf (Johns Hopkins University); Po-Feng Wu (National Taiwan University); Eric Emsellem (ESO); Martin Bureau (Oxford University) 1 rmonteiro@asiaa.sinica.edu.tw monteiro-oliveira.com poster #44
non_poster
ICDL(International Conference on Digital Libraries) 2016: Smart Future: Knowledge Trends that will Change the World. 13-16 Dec. 2016. IHC, New Delhi The Changing Landscape and Future of Open Access in India Leena Shah1, Vrushali Dandawate2 and Sridhar Gutam3 1Formerly, Nanyang Technological University; DOAJ Ambassador (South India) <leena@doaj.org> 2AISSMS College of Engineering College Pune; DOAJ Ambassador (West India) <vrushali@doaj.org> 3ICAR RCER Research Centre Ranchi; DOAJ Ambassador (East India) <sridhar@doaj.org> Abstract The past few years has seen a tremendous change in information production and growth with new knowledge disciplines added into academics. With journal subscription costs increasing at 8-10% annually(Miller 2015), libraries worldwide are finding it difficult to sustain subscription costs to scholarly material. On the other hand making information and data available in interoperable electronic formats freely is a concept that is gaining momentum and OA (Open Access) holds promise to remove both price and permission barriers to scientific communication with the help of the internet. Scientists, policy makers, NGOs, government agencies and librarians are also collaborating together for OA implementation and making knowledge affordable to all. OA journals play a key role in making scholarly material immediately available on the internet. Keywords: open access, open access movement India, scholarly publishing, predatory publishers Introduction The OA movement in India started by advocates like Subbiah Arunachalam is more than a decade old. It is now gaining momentum with various organizations and departments under Government of India such as the DBT (Department of Biotechnology) and DST (Department of Science and Technology) adopting OA policies in 2014. However, there is long way to go as India does not have a national OA mandate for public funded research. Few universities and institutions in this region have adopted an OA mandate on university-funded research. It seems that while the awareness about making research outputs publicly available has certainly increased within academia, the steep increase in the number of questionable journal publishers around the world, has created a misunderstanding about the credibility and value of adopting the OA publishing route. This paper attempts to provide an account of the changing landscape of OA in India and proposes recommendations that can be taken to improve the adoption of OA in India. DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals):- The DOAJ (Directory of OA Journals) provides a valuable service by providing and maintaining a curated and authoritative index of quality peer-reviewed OA journals and aims to be the starting point for all information searches for quality OA journals. In this context, This paper makes an attempt to highlight the history of OA in India, the current strides made by the OA movement in India through the adoption of new media and some of the issues raised by questionable publishers exploiting the author- pay OA model. History of OA in India 1
non_poster
Constructoras M u j e r e s M u j e r e s M u j e r e s De Paz
non_poster
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION AND LEARNING ISSN: 2996-5128 (online) | ResearchBib (IF) = 9.918 IMPACT FACTOR Volume-2| Issue-4| 2024 Published: |30-11-2024| 557 PROBLEMS OF REFORMING THE CREATIVE STYLE IN FICTION TRANSLATION (BASED ON UZBEK TRANSLATIONS OF THE NOVEL “THE ALCHEMIST”) https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14212736 Kuchkorov KHoshimjon KHasanzoda Senior Lecturer, Department of “Uzbek Literary Studies”, Chirchik State Pedagogical University Abstract This article focuses on the ideological content of the novel “The Alchemist”, and its artistic and stylistic features are discussed and commented on. Attention is also paid to the author’s skill in creating images, his innovations in form and content, factors of influence and inspiration of the author from Eastern literature. In addition, the problems of style in translated works, the reconstruction of the creative style in literary translation, and the preservation of national color in the process of translation are taken into consideration. Keywords The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho, Santiago, miracle, art, image, style, language, expression, desert, sheep, treasure, treasure. Paulo Coelho's novel "The Alchemist", which has amazed the world, what can be said in comparison with the popularity and literary success of the creator, is one of the best and most famous works of all time. This work has found readers of different ages since it was written, illuminating the path of readers. "The Alchemist" is truly a highly content fiction novel, based on the development of the inner world of man. In this regard, we can separate the literary aspect of the book from the aspect of expanding thinking, which contributes to the development of personality. First, let's talk about fiction. The novel tells about the search and journey of a shepherd for treasure. In this case, we share his experience in a very fluent language and read the book with excitement, trying to understand what he is going through. There is a cycle in the book. While the protagonist of the novel, the shepherd, returns to his original place, he does not remain a shepherd until the end: he changes, he transforms. In this search, a side that supports the development of the personality appears. The shepherd begins his journey in search of his personal legend as a wanderer and ends the journey as a lover. He chooses the shepherd
non_poster
Single molecule studies of membrane proteins on glass substrates using atomic force microscopy Nagaraju Chada1, Krishna P. Sigdel1, Tina R. Matin1, Raghavendar Reddy Sanganna Gari1, Chunfeng Mao2, Linda L. Randall2, and Gavin M. King1,2 1Department of Physics and Astronomy, 2Department of Biochemistry, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, USA 65211 Abstract Since its invention in the mid-1980s, the atomic force microscope1 (AFM) has become an invaluable complementary tool for studying membrane proteins in near-native environments. Historically, mica is the most common substrate utilized for biological AFM. Glass being amorphous, transparent, and optically homogeneous has its own set of advantages over mica and has the potential to broaden the use the AFM into fields that require high quality non-birefringent optical access. The use of silanized glass as AFM substrates has been reported as a means to fine tune surface chemistry. However, such coatings usually require hours of additional preparation time and can lead to increased surface roughness. In this work2, we present a simple technique for preparing borosilicate glass as a substrate for two membrane systems: non- crystalline translocons (SecYEG) of the general secretary system from E. coli, and bacteriorhodopsin (BR) from H. salinarum. For both these membrane proteins, quantitative comparisons of the measured protein structures on glass versus mica substrates show agreement. An additional advantage of glass is that lipid coverage is rapid (< 10 minutes) and complete (occupying the entire surface). A goal is to study the bacterial export system using recently developed precision measurement techniques such as ultra-stable AFM. Why use glass as a substrate?  Typical AFM substrates mica and HOPG exhibit birefringence, complicating optical paths  Many well established biological and biochemical assays like FRAP, FRET, Fluorescence Microscopy, FIONA and TIRF require transparent and optically homogeneous substrates  Recently developed techniques like US-AFM4, 3D AFM and polarization anisotropy methods require transparent substrates and non-birefringence due to polarization based detection  Amorphous and optically homogeneous substrates like glass enable coupling AFM with advanced imaging techniques2 Heights of SecYEG Potential Applications Raw glass vs. KOH treated glass References Acknowledgements This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (CAREER Award #:1054832), the Burroughs Wellcome Fund (Career Award at the Scientific Interface) and the MU Research Board. We thank the JILA Scientific Communications Office for artwork. High Resolution Images of SecYEG Bacteriorhodopsin on Glass and Mica Evaluating Different Cleaning Treatments Sec-translocase  >30% of proteins are transported from the site of synthesis into or through a membrane5  In E. coli, the Sec system orchestrates the translocation of polypeptides across membrane before they acquire stable tertiary structure and SecYEG provides the path way5,6  SecA and SecB act as chaperones to maintain newly synthesized polypeptides in a state compatible with transport6  Numerous questions remain regarding the mechanistic details of translocation  Novel AFM modalities could measure molecular “fly fishing”6  Map trajectories of protein domains in 3D  Dynamic Loops of SecYEG, linking transmembrane helices 6-7 and 8-9, play a vital role in capturing SecA and in translocation  Probing translocation of precursor through Sec- translocase 1. Binnig, G.; Quate, C. F.; Gerber, Ch. (1986). "Atomic Force Microscope". Physical Review Letters. 56 (9): 930–933 2. Chada, N., Sigdel, K., Gari, R. et al. Glass is a Viable Substrate for Precision Force Microscopy of Membrane Proteins. Sci Rep 5, 12550 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep12550 3. Chada, Nagaraju. "Growth and Characterization of Transition Metal Oxides for Chemical Sensor Applications: Setting up Initiated Hot Wire Chemical Vapor Deposition System."
non_poster
Revisiting the IR line decrements of T Tauri stars with magnetospheric accretion models. Jesús V Díaz1,3, María José Colmenares1,3 ,Nuria Calvet2, Thanawuth Thanathibodee2, Gladis Magris3 , James Muzerolle4 Results Observations Model Click on each heading to review the desired section. Objectives • Understand more about the limitations and physical conditions required for different magnetospheric accretion models. • Compare available models with a set of observations in order to test the validity of the models and interpret the results. Figure 1: A representation of magnetospheric accretion. Matter from the disk falls onto the star following the magnetic field lines. From Hartmann et al. (2016) References Introduction We use magnetospheric accretion, Figure 1, to explain and constrain the observations presented by Bary et al. (2008). That work used recombination models to find that temperatures below 5000 K are necessary in order to fit the Balmer and Paschen decrements for a set of CTTS in the Taurus-Auriga star forming regions. However, magnetospheric models can explain the observations using higher temperatures, from 8000 K to 11000 K. These magnetospheric models have successfully explained the emission line profiles from brown dwarfs (Muzerolle et al. 2003) to Herbig Ae/Be (Muzerolle et al. 2004) Bary et al 2008, ApJ, 687, 376. White, R. J., & Ghez, A. M. 2001, ApJ, 556, 265 Calvet & Gullbring 1998, ApJ, 509, 802 Muzerolle et al. 2003 ApJ, 592, 266 Muzerolle et al. 2004. ApJ, 617, 406 Cardelli et al. 1989, ApJ, 345, 245. Hartmann et al. 2016, ARAA, 54, 135. Muzerolle et al. 1998a , ApJ, 492, 743. Muzerolle et al., 1998b, AJ, 116, 455. Muzerolle et al., 2001, ApJ, 550, 994. 1 Universidad de Los Andes, 2 University of Michigan, 3 Centro de Investigaciones de Astronomía (CIDA), 4 Space Telescope Science Institute
non_poster
PEER REVIEW REPORT FOR: Salm, J. F., Araujo, V. M., Schommer, P. C., & Raupp, F. M. (2024). Open data standards for public procurement and contracting: A collaborative construction. Revista de Administração Contemporânea, 28(2), e230175. https://doi.org/10.1590/1982- 7849rac2024230175.en HOW TO CITE THIS PEER REVIEW REPORT: Salm, J. F., Araujo, V. M., Schommer, P. C., Raupp, F. M., Medeiros-Costa, C. C., & Teixeira, M. A. C. (2024). Peer review report for: Open data standards for public procurement and contracting: A collaborative construction. RAC. Revista de Administração Contemporânea. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11068844 REVIEWERS: Caio César de Medeiros-Costa (Universidade de Brasília, Brazil) Marco Antônio Carvalho Teixeira (Fundação Getulio Vargas, Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo, Brazil) Revista de Administração Contemporânea Journal of Contemporary Administration e-ISSN: 1982-7849 RAC - Revista de Administração Contemporânea, e-ISSN 1982-7849 | Peer Review Report | doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11068844 | rac.anpad.org.br Reviewer 1 report Reviewer: Caio César de Medeiros-Costa Date review returned: October 01, 2023 Recommendation: Reject Comments to the authors Obrigado pela submissão. O trabalho versa sobre um tema relevante e atual. Todavia, carece ainda melhorias importantes para ser publicado. O primeiro ponto é acerca de afirmações trazidas: ”Sabe-se que é no contexto municipal que o contato com o cidadão acaba sendo mais próximo e talvez a exigência e a relevância da abertura dos dados públicos torne-se mais aparente.” Existem outras realidades no mundo, não necessariamente essa afirmação é verdadeira. Em um texto que tergiversa a questão da tecnologia com esse, tal afirmação pode ser ainda mais complicada. O que significa o contato com o cidadão ser mais próximo? E por que nesse contexto de maior proximidade a questão dos dados abertos é mais relevante? Peer Review Report ROUND 1 Disclaimer: The content of the Peer Review Report is the full copy of reviewers and authors' reports. Typing and punctuation errors are not edited. Only comments that violate the journal’s ethical policies such as derogatory or defamatory comments will be edited (omitted) from the report. In these cases, it will be clearly stated that parts of the report were edited. Check RAC's policies.
non_poster
The 19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun Edited by G. A. Feiden TiO Band Analysis of Cool Stars Using Model Atmospheres H. V. Şenavcı1, D. O’Neal2, D. Montes3, B. Plez4, F. Allard5, E. Bahar1 1 Ankara University, Faculty of Science, Department of Astronomy and Space Sciences, TR-06100 Tandoğan-Ankara, Turkey 2 Keystone College, School of Arts and Sciences, La Plume, PA, 18440, USA 3 Dpto. Astrofisica, Facultad de CC. Fisicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain 4 LUPM, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, Montpellier, France 5 Univ Lyon, ENS de Lyon, Univ Lyon 1, Centre de Recherche Astrophysique de Lyon UMR5574, F-69007, Lyon, France Abstract We present the preliminary results of Titanium Oxide (TiO) band analysis using model atmospheres, in order to accurately determine the spot filling factor and the spot temperature of magnetically active stars. This study includes the basic steps of TiO band analysis code together with the robustness tests using MARCS and PHOENIX Models, which also allows us to perform a comparison between model atmospheres and search for the most convenient one for TiO band analysis of active stars. 1 Introduction Investigating the intensity variation of molecular lines such as Titanium Oxide (TiO) allows us to obtain spotted regions that cannot be dimensionally resolved by existing techniques (Berdyugina, 2002) and provides more sensitive way to determine the spot temperatures (O’Neal et al., 1996). The TiO band analysis technique, which has been extensively used by O’Neal and collaborators, is simply based on the de- termination of spot filling factors (fs) and spot temperatures (Ts) by fitting the depths of the TiO bands near 7055 Å and 8860 Å with the help of the observed non-active standards called "proxy" stars (see O’Neal et al. 1996 & 2004 for details). Taking the advantage of "cool" atmosphere models, as well as to prevent instrumental and reduction related side-effects of proxies, here we present the TiO band analysis for dwarfs un- der model atmospheres approximation to generate synthetic spectra. 2 Selection of Models TiO bands are visible in the stellar spectra, of which the effective temperatures are below 4000 K. Taking into ac- count that sensitivity together with the main principle of the technique based on two-temperature models, we choose our model temperatures in order to represent the "quiet" and "spotted" photosphere as 4000 K < Teff < 6000 K (G-K dwarf spectra) and 2700 K < Teff < 3900 K (M dwarf spectra), re- spectively. Though we only present here the TiO band anal- ysis using dwarf synthetic spectra, it is critical to accurately determine the surface gravity (logg) values especially in the case of giants, for the selection of convenient model atmo- spheres. In this context, we use the PASTEL Catalogue data by Soubiran et al. (2010), for the determination of logg values as can be seen in Fig. 1. We previously performed TiO band analysis of SB1 type RS CVn binary II Peg using ATLAS9, in which the sub-giant models converge for temperatures between 3000 K - 4000 K (see Senavci et al. 2015 for details). However, we couldn’t ob- tain converged dwarf models as well as the giants for the same temperature range with ATLAS9. We therefore use MARCS (Gustafsson et al., 2008) and latest PHOENIX (Allard et al. 2012a & 2012b) Models that can able to generate cool enough synthetic spectra convenient for TiO band analysis purposes. Those models also enable us to extend the temper- ature range down to 2700 K. 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 Teff 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 logg dwarfs subgiants giants Figure 1: Teff - logg diagram generated using the PASTEL Catalogue data. As mentioned before, we use dwarf models of Solar com- position with the convenient selection of Teff and logg val- ues described above. In this context, the synthetic spectra using MARCS Models are obtained via the Turbospectrum code (Alvarez & Plez, 1998), together with the help of the linelist from VALD database (Kupka
non_poster
— 657 664 Celebration & Contemplation, 10th International Conference on Design & Emotion 27 — 30 September 2016, Amsterdam Introduction I initially became interested in collaborative maker spaces when a colleague mentioned he was part of an all-night hack-a-thon hosted in Minneapolis, Minnesota to respond to the digital needs of area non-profit companies. I was fascinated by the notion of an informal, creative environment, seemingly unified by little more than a group’s shared interest in making something. I wondered about how these entities came together, and what made them, and the individuals who constituted them, work effectively. Over time, my exposure to a variety of maker spaces, and my subsequent conversations with people involved in them, led me to a specific question, “What are the most significant factors in the emergence of a sense of community in collaborative maker spaces?” This question became the basis of a phenomenological investigation into the nature of identity and interaction amongst individuals in collaborative maker spaces. To explore this question, I embedded myself as an artist-in-residence at Standard Projects, a small multidisciplinary maker studio in Hortonville, Wisconsin. The studio was started in 2014 by artist and designer Claire Abitz. My decision to use Standard Projects as the context for my inquiry was based on three characteristics of the studio, which I did not find elsewhere. First, the studio has a residency program. This attribute was primary in my decision-making, as I wanted to consider the studio’s social structure and interpersonal dynamics from within that structure and with the ability to contribute to its dynamics. Second, the studio had been founded fairly recently. Due to this, I reasoned that its social network would still be emerging and thus, might provide more insightful observations related to the process of relationship building. Third, I saw evidence in the marketing and news content associated with the studio of an emphasis on sustainability and ecologically sensitive practices. I felt that, in this way, the value structure of the studio aligned with my own, and therefore hoped this similarity would lead to productive interaction. During August of 2015, I spent eight days living and working at Standard Projects. My activities during this time involved interviewing, collaborating, and socializing with the other artists-in-residence, as well as with many members of the studio’s broader social network. Having reflected upon these experiences and compared my initial conclusions with those of others, three factors have emerged as being the most prominent in influencing the development of a sense of community at Standard Projects. These factors are skill, instruction, and emotion, described below. Factors in community building The factors described herein are three related ideas, and are understood to be influential in the development of a sense of community at Standard Projects. These ideas were identified based on experiential investigation and systematic reflection and corroboration with others. I present these ideas as categories of description, which are intended to generalize the knowledge derived from this inquiry to aid in understanding the development of a sense of community within other collaborative maker spaces. Skill Individual skill was understood as a major influence in how interpersonal relationships develop. The character of this skill can be analyzed along two main axes, the nature of an individual’s skills (e.g., woodworking) and skill level (e.g., expert). During my time at the studio, no individual was considered to be the most proficient with all media or techniques. Instead, it was understood that each person brought to the enterprise either a unique level of competence with a particular process or material, or a breadth of knowledge that could be used to facilitate communication. Skill was identified as a primary determiner of opportunities for collabo
non_poster
Uso da Telerreabilitação para indivíduos pós Acidente Vascular Cerebral Mariane Regina de Carvalho Miranda Faculdade de Educação Física e Fisioterapia Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0003-1526-9187 Karollyne Vitória Clementino Borges Faculdade de Educação Física e Fisioterapia Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID :0000-0002-2483-8065 Domenique Cerqueira Dantas Faculdade de Educação Física e Fisioterapia Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0001-8146-8446 Lílian de Fátima Dornelas Faculdade de Educação Física e Fisioterapia Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0001-8662-5463 Juliana Silveira Alves Faculdade de Educação Física e Fisioterapia Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0002-5560-566X Victor Rodholfo de Oliveira Silva Faculdade de Educação Física e Fisioterapia Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0003-0694-972X Abstract — Post stroke rehabilitation faces additional barriers such as the high cost of caregiver dependency, lack of rehabilitation programs, transportation challenges and high costs. Telereaction emerges as a promising modality for supervising, managing and remotely motivating various forms of physical, occupational and other therapeutic discourse. The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review to determine the use of telehabilitation to improve motor skills in post stroke patients. The systematic review was performed according to PRISMA guidelines. The databases used were: Pubmed, Embase, Lilacs, Cochrane. The terms used were stroke, telerehabilitation, motor skills and randomized controlled trials. This review was limited to randomized clinical trials in Portuguese, English and Spanish, from 2014 to 2019. Four studies were selected to participate in the review and all presented satisfactory results from the use of telehabilitation, regarding the reacquisition of motor skills associated with balance and day-to-day activities, being considered a cost-effective intervention tool with good acceptance and user satisfaction. Keywords — stroke, telerehabilitation, health education, motor kills I. INTRODUÇÃO O Acidente Vascular Cerebral (AVC) é um distúrbio neurológico focal de desenvolvimento abrupto devido a um processo patológico em vasos sanguíneos. A reabilitação pós AVC enfrenta barreiras adicionais, como o alto custo de dependência de cuidadores, falta de programas de reabilitação, desafios com transporte e altos custos [1] [2] [3]. Para combater estes desafios, a Telerreabilitação surge como uma modalidade promissora para supervisionar, administrar e motivar à distância, várias maneiras de discurso físico, ocupacional e outras formas terapêuticas [4] [5] [6]. A Telerreabilitação é entendida como um recurso terapêutico em que especialistas de reabilitação tem o objetivo de emponderar o indivíduo e seus familiares no processo reabilitacional, estimulando a participação e o protagonismo na recuperação e/ou manutenção da saúde à distância [7] [8]. De um modo geral, acredita-se que a telerreabiltiação tem um papel importante na melhoria ou pelo menos na manutenção da continuidade de cuidados de reabilitação e serviços de saúde, aumentando a eficiência e reduzindo custos. II. OBJETIVO O presente estudo tem como objetivo realizar uma revisão sistemática para determinar o uso da telerreabilitação na melhoria das habilidades motoras de indivíduos pós AVC. III. METODOLOGIA Foi realizada uma revisão sistemática de acordo com as diretrizes do PRISMA. As seguintes bases de dados foram utilizadas: Pubmed, Embase, Lilacs, Cochrane. Os termos usados foram: stroke, telerehabilitation, motor skill e randomized controlled trials. Esta revisão foi limitada apenas a ensaios clínicos randomizados, nos idiomas português, inglês e espanhol, nos anos de 2014 a 2019. Critérios de inclusão: com base na estratégia de busca PICOT onde, População: as amostra
non_poster
CONSTRUÇÃO E UTILIZAÇÃO DE INSTRUMENTOS ALTERNATIVOS: BATUREX E BELISCOFONE NAS ATIVIDADES DE EURITMIA Ednardo Monteiro Gonzaga do Monti, (Doutor em Educação - UERJ) – UFPI; Maria Francinete de Araújo (Especialista em Educação) – CETI Freitas Neto Jarbas de Morais Ferreira Junior, Graduando em Música – UFPI; Francisco Adriano dos Santos, Graduando em Música – UFPI; Renan Pinheiro de Pinheiro, Graduando em Música – UFPI. 1 Introdução São diversas as maneiras de se trabalhar a euritmia, dentre elas, destaca-se na presente investigação em andamento o uso de instrumentos alternativos, na perspectiva da realidade do ensino público no Brasil, contexto no qual os usos e as construções com materiais alternativos mostram-se necessários. Isto pelo fato do Beliscofone e o Baturex serem instrumentos de fácil construção e custos. Nesta perspectiva, o objetivo deste trabalho é analisar a viabilidade da utilização de instrumentos alternativos como parte integrante das atividades de euritmia, baseadas no método Dalcroze, nas aulas de Música na Escola Estadual Freitas Neto. O movimento corporal é o fator essencial para o desenvolvimento rítmico do ser humano e contribui para o desenvolvimento da sua musicalidade. A euritmia utiliza a resposta do aluno ao ritmo proposto através de movimentos rítmico- corporais. Dalcroze afirma que qualquer fenômeno musical é objeto de uma representação corporal. (FERNANDINO, 2008, p. 24). Acredita-se que por meio da utilização do corpo há um apelo continuo da atenção à memória auditiva e à capacidade de livre expressão do aluno, mediante a criação de exercícios rítmicos e melodias com ritmo, de movimentos simples e coreografados. No método Dalcroze trabalha-se a audição musical, que consiste em desenvolver a percepção auditiva da altura dos sons; o senso rítmico, que consiste em fazer e sentir o ritmo através dos movimentos; despertar o aluno através de atividades concretas e físicas, adequadas à faixa etária; e fundamentos rítmicos, alcançar o domínio dos ritmos através de sua mobilidade natural. Palavras-chave: Educação Musical. Construção de Instrumentos Musicais. Euritmia.
non_poster
METODOLOGÍA PARA EL DÍA A DÍA. LA PROSPECCIÓN ARQUEOLÓGICA DEL POLÍGONO SR-6 DE ATARFE (GRANADA): ÁREAS DE PROSPECCIÓN Y ANÁLISIS ESTRATIGRÁFICO DE PERFILES ANTONIO MALPICA CUELLO, GUILLERMO GARCÍA-CONTRERAS RUIZ, ÁNGEL GONZÁLEZ ESCUDERO, TERESA KOFFLER URBANO, ANA PALANCO NOGUEROL, SONIA VILLAR MAÑAS, CARLOS ALBERTO TOQUERO PÉREZ y MARÍA MOLINA PARRA DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3778378
non_poster
The Effect of Real-World Contexts on L2 Vocabulary Learning Janet Nicol & Jake Monzingo Background. Repetto, Pedroli & Macedonia (2017) have argued that concepts are represented in the mind as a network of features (nodes). An L2 word that is learned in the context of additional sensory or motor information has a larger network than one that is not. Larger networks are remembered better and retrieved faster. Linguistics, Psychology, Cognitive Science Second Language Acquisition & Teaching If additional sensory information helps learning, expect better learning in contexts that more closely resemble the real world because the real world offers additional visual information and other sensory information. We conducted 2 studies to test this. 1. Word learning in a virtual reality gaming environment 2. Word learning with real objects Studies by Macedonia and colleagues (Macedonia & Knösche, 2011; Macedonia & Von Kriegstein, 2012; Macedonia, 2014; Macedonia & Klimesch, 2014; etc…) support this. They found that learners benefited if they learned new L2 words along with a gesture. Experiment 1 – Learning L2 Italian Vocabulary Participants. 52 students enrolled in Italian 101 3 groups: • PC Game (N= 17) • VR version of PC Game (N=18) • Screenshots from PC Game (N=17) Materials & Procedure. 4 Phases: 1. Survey (gaming/immersitivity) 2. Vocabulary pre-test (24 items) provide English translation 3. Training PC Game & VR Groups: Scene from Fallout4 15 min. to get oriented Set up in-game home with specific set of objects Manipulated objects to move them around. Screenshot Group 20 min. to view screenshots from game. 4. Vocabulary post-test 5. Post-experiment reflection Experiment 2 – Learning Novel Labels for Real Objects vs. Pictures Participants. 32 college-aged students Materials. 20 novel labels paired with real object OR photo of real object Procedure. 1. Training of the 20 items • 2 counterbalanced lists • 2 variants of each list (balancing order of objects/pictures) • 3 rounds: each item handled 3 times 2. Language background survey 3. Testing of newly learned labels (see clipart picture, type label) 4. Test of items remembered (in English) Scoring. Typed labels scored as: Correct or Incorrect or Partially Correct (50% of label) Results of Experiment 1 0 5 10 15 20 Screenshots PC VR Vocabulary Gains * èResults not consistent with the idea that additional sensory information would be beneficial. Possibly due to cognitive overload. 0.5 0.55 0.6 0.65 Real Object Picture Picture Naming Test - Proportion Correct + Partially Correct ns 0 0.5 1 Real Object Picture Remembered Items (English) Results of Experiment 2 * èResults suggest that handling real objects during word learning does not significantly affect novel word learning, though it does help people remember the items they encountered.
non_poster
Searching for Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay with the LEGEND Experiment Giovanna Saleh - University of Padova, INFN Padova On behalf of the LEGEND Collaboration giovanna.saleh@phd.unipd.it NuPhys2023 - King’s College London 18 - 20th December 2023
non_poster
Response of Philaenus spumarius and Neophilaenus campestris to potential semiochemicals Nencioni A.1,2, Rosi M.C.1, Ortiz Hernández A.J.3 Cantini C.2, Sacchetti P.1 1Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry (DAGRI) – University of Florence (Italy) 2 Institute of BioEconomy – Biology, Agriculture and Food Sciences Department – National Research Council of Italy. Research Campus of Florence (Italy) 3 Department of Inorganic and Organic Chemistry – University of Jaen - Campus de Linares, Escuela Politécnica Superior Linares (Spain)
non_poster
F1000Research 2021- DRAFT ARTICLE F1000Research Article Template Please provide a concise and specific title that clearly reflects the content of the article. Author Name-11 and Author Name-22 1Address of author-1 2Address of author-2 Please list all authors that played a significant role in writing the article. As a guide, authors should refer to the criteria for authorship that have been developed by The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). Please provide full affiliation information (including full institutional address, ZIP code and e-mail address) for all authors, and identify who is/are the corresponding author(s). Abstract Abstracts should be up to 300 words and provide a succinct summary of the arti- cle. Although the abstract should explain why the article might be interesting, care should be taken not to inappropriately over-emphasise the importance of the work described in the article. Citations should not be used in the abstract, and abbrevia- tions, if needed, should be spelled out in full. Keywords Please list up to eight relevant keywords that describe the subject of their article. These will improve the visibility of your article. Page 1 of 4
non_poster
Author: Chaire BEA Contributing authors: Marion Lévêque, Luc Mounier, Maryse Guinebritière, Laura Warin Graphics: Marion Weisslinger DOI : 10.5281/zenodo.12912563 https://chaire-bea.vetagro-sup.fr/en/ September 2023 Species sheet – All about laying hens! The laying hens seem to you to be silly and boring animals? Their cognitive abilities may surprise you! This new species sheet is your chance to learn more about hens. You’ll discover that the hen is a social animal with specific behavioral needs and a unique sensory perception of the world! Discover also fun facts about the animal! This species sheet was produced with the help and proofreading of Laura Warin, Animal Welfare Project Manager at Itavi, and Maryse Guinebretière, Scientific Project Manager for Health/Animal Welfare at Anses.
non_poster
Andy S.H. To 2nd Year PhD Student UCL/MSSL Collaborators: David M. Long, David H. Brooks, Deborah Baker, Lidia van Driel-Gesztelyi, J. Martin Laming, Gherardo Valori Anomalous Evolution of Plasma Composition During a Small Solar Flare Understanding the Strange Composition Evolution using Hinode/EIS, SDO/AIA, SDO/HMI; and Techniques like FIP Bias Measurements and Wavelet Analysis shu.to.18@ucl.ac.uk
non_poster
Transforming Research through Innovative Practices for Linked interdisciplinary Exploration Copyright 2020 TRIPLE Project | Graphic design by EKT | CC-BY-Licence TRIPLE will be a dedicated service of the OPERAS RI This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 863420. GOTRIPLE: Building an innovative discovery platform for the social sciences and humanities CiƟzens Journalists Companies Researchers Textual search Visual search Social network Data/ Publications Projects Profiles WHY TRIPLE PROJECT? • Strong fragmentation of SSH research • SSH open scholarly resources (data, publications, other researchers‘ profiles and projects) currently scattered across local repositories • Low use and reuse of SSH research • Interdisciplinary collaboration possibilities are missed • Societal impact is limited GOTRIPLE
non_poster
Enhancing Risk Aware Decision in Healthcare through Probabilistic Modeling of Uncertainty Rahul Vishwakarma∗ rahuldeo.vishwakarma-sa@csulb.edu California State University Long Beach, California, USA Jinha Hwang∗ jinha.hwang01@student.csulb.edu California State University Long Beach, California, USA Benyamin Ahmadnia benyamin.ahmadnia@csulb.edu California State University Long Beach, California, USA ABSTRACT In domains with high stakes, like healthcare and medicine, trust- worthy and robust decision-making is crucial due to the potential risks associated with misclassification. However, many traditional machine learning classifiers lack calibrated predictions, and reliable uncertainty estimates for new unseen data. This paper addresses the challenge of uncertainty quantification in text classification in healthcare and proposes a three-fold approach to support robust and trustworthy decision-making by medical practitioners. To evaluate our solution, we implement it on a multi-label medical transcrip- tion dataset from Kaggle. Our study demonstrates three significant results: the ability of our model to reject uncertain predictions by providing a null set, the provision of set predictions with guaran- teed coverage for further investigation, and the prioritization of decision-making based on confidence levels of predictions with the same label. Additionally, we tackle the issue of imbalanced datasets in the medical domain by employing the Mondrian Conformal Pre- dictor with a Naïve Bayes classifier. Our findings are expected to enhance the risk-aware decision-making process in the medical field. CCS CONCEPTS • Computing methodologies →Probabilistic reasoning. KEYWORDS uncertainty, conformal inference, risk-aware decision 1 INTRODUCTION Machine learning has emerged as a powerful tool in the medical domain, providing healthcare professionals with a means to make more informed decisions and improve patient outcomes [1]. Medical transcript analysis, in particular, holds the potential to assist in diagnostics [2], treatment planning [3], and patient monitoring [4]. However, traditional natural language processing techniques have limitations that can result in inaccuracies in classification [5, 6]. Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques, specifically text classification, can be leveraged in various industry applications to overcome these limitations. Several methods have been proposed to achieve this goal. [3, 7] However, they are often under-utilized due to the criticality of the decisions involved and a lack of confidence in individual decisions. Currently, with text classification, we don’t have a mechanism to ‘tell’ the model to be more strict or lenient while making a decision. Hence, the accuracy of the model solely depends on the classifier. ∗Both authors contributed equally to this research. 1.1 Related Work Text classification has been widely explored in the field of NLP, and it has found applications in various domains such as finance [8], military [9], and medical [10, 11], among others. Most of the research in this field has focused on developing algorithms that can improve accuracy while keeping the computational cost low [12]. A few works [13] have used aleatory and epistemic uncertainty. Still, they do not quantify the prediction of each new prediction, while [14] focuses on the profound learning aspect of text classification. However, we still see a gap in the practical realization and the applicability of the metrics for confident decision-making for a text classification system. 2 NOVEL CONTRIBUTIONS The novelty of this work is that the proposed mechanism not only gives classification out, but two measures, i.e., confidence and cred- ibility, to tune those decisions based on the criticality and control the algorithmic decision-making. The main contributions of this paper are as follows: • Uncertainty quantification for each prediction for improved and robust decision-making for the medical domain with imbalance
non_poster
— 688 696 Celebration & Contemplation, 10th International Conference on Design & Emotion 27 — 30 September 2016, Amsterdam Introduction How could we forget a garment that evokes a memory even more beautiful than the events that actually happened? How could we fail to be moved by a garment that evokes our collective imagination, through the weaving of its intended use and sheer physical aesthetic? By applying the postulate that nostalgia is a common human emotion, we can affirm that it reaches our passions and as such, colours each person’s memories (Saint Augustin, trad. 1861). Should the emotion of “nostalgia” be included as a source of inspiration in creative curriculum in fashion design education? Nostalgia, etymology, definition and semantics The term “nostalgia” has Greek roots; it is actually made up of two combined words: nostos, “return”, and the suffix – algia (algos), meaning “pain, suffering”, and in its modern application means “a decline caused by the violent desire to return to one’s home country”. So the term “nostalgia” conveys a feeling of sadness, caused by being at a great distance from one’s native country. It also evokes a wish to return to the past, the melancholia of missing a thing, a state, a life that one has known or had, or that one has not known or had; much like an unsatisfied urge. (www.cntrl.fr) Recently, writer Milan Kundera has utilised this word in the sense of “the suffering of ignorance” in his novel entitled Ignorance, published in the year 2000: “You are far, and I do not know what you are becoming. My country is far, and I do not know what happens there.” The writer goes on to explain that, according to its Greek etymology, “the term nostalgia therefore is a suffering, caused by the unquenchable desire to return (to your country)”; however, by observing the regionalisms of various European languages, many nuances can be observed in each language’s semantics.1 Nostalgia in fashion design – to convey a far-away (native) country, a by-gone era Nostalgia is a recurring theme in the creative process of many fashion designers (Mollow, 2004). It seems obvious that nostalgia is a social phenomenon; clothing styles which imitate costumes of the past and popular films with nostalgic themes demonstrate that nostalgia can be experienced collectively. Davis (1979) explains that although nostalgia is a collective manifestation, it is also an emotion and that feeling Abstract Nostalgia is a recurring theme throughout the creative process of many fashion designers (Mollow, 2004). According to Tilburg, Sedikides & Wildschut (2015), nostalgia can particularly favour and encourage creativity. Thanks to their research on creativity and literature, based on a nostalgic daydream of the present and the future, they have come to the conclusion that nostalgia can be a very efficient tool to spur on a creative process. But how does nostalgia fuel a creative approach in fashion design? How does the past merge with the present to formulate fashion’s future? This phenomenon will be explored by using nostalgia as a starting point for the creative process of three designers, as well as for three of the author’s creative projects in fashion design: the 3D Tutu, the 3D dress and the mathDress. This research aims to concretely demonstrate how nostalgia can be applied in the conception of a garment collection for fashion design students or professionals, and how to gain a deeper insight on this emotion without losing one’s self in it, or feeling overwhelmed. Keywords Nostalgia, Inspiration, Fashion, Design, Creativity Nostalgia as inspiration for fashion design – Designing the present of future through nostalgia - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Danielle Martin1 martin.danielle@uqam.ca 1Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 Milan Kundera further points out that because of its
non_poster
NEWSLETTER March 2020 - First Issue Risk Reduction For Building Energy Efficiency Investment www.eenvest.eu /eenvest @eenvest_eu With the aim of de-risking investments in the field of energy efficiency in buildings, EEnvest will develop a comprehensive technical-financial due-diligence mechanism to provide investors with reliable information on financing opportunities in the building renovation sector, therefore promoting the injection of equity capital of existing buildings. EEnvest will build bridges between technical and financial communities through the creation of a web-based search and match platform connecting building owners, designers and potential transaction financers, as well as private investors. The quality and security of the data shared through the platform will be guaranteed by a blockchain-based data exchange validation system. Investing in EEB: how to deal with risk? INSIDE Investing in energy efficiency in buildings - 1 Interview with EURAC - 2 Demo case buildings - 4 Activities - 5 Consortium - 5
non_poster
Mathematical Surveys and Monographs Volume 110 The Ricci Flow: An Introduction Bennett Chow Dan Knopf American Mathematical Society
non_poster
Final Project mixing Astronomy, sciences, art, and fantasy. Engaging students in the Astronomy course. Cuauhtemoc Mendez R.
non_poster
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: Boyack, K. W., Klavans, R., & Smith, C. (2022). Raising the bar for bibliometric analysis. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22143). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6975632 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
INTRODUCCIÓN OBJETIVOS PROBLEMATICA ACTIVIDAD CONCLUSIONES BIBLIOGRAFÍA ALESSANDRI, L.; BAIOCCHI, V.; MONTI, F. (2022): Intensive archaeological survey at Piscina Torta: use of a low-cost RTK portable kit to materialise a UTM grid on the ground, 2022 IMEKO TC-4 International Conference on Metrology for Archaeology and Cultural Heritage University of Calabria (Italy) (October 19-21, 2022), 181-185. AANENSEN, D. M.; HUNTLEY, D. M.; FEIL, E. J.; AL-OWN, F. A.; SPRATT, B. G. (2009): EpiCollect: linking smartphones to web applications for epidemiology, ecology and community data collection, PloS one, 4 (9), e6968. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006968 AANENSEN, D. M.; HUNTLEY, D. M.; MENEGAZZO, M.; POWELL, C. I.; SPRATT, B. G. (2014): EpiCollect+: linking smartphones to web applications for complex data collection projects, F1000Research 3. DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.4702.1 CHMIELEWSKI, S.; BAILEY, C.; GAWRYLUK, A. (2019): Beyond 3D Building Modelling: Citizen Science for 3D Cultural Mapping, GI_Forum 7 (2), 3-9. HEIGL, F.; ZALLER, J. G. (2014): Using a citizen science approach in higher education: a case study reporting roadkills in Austria, Human Computation 1(2), 163-173. PROSPECTANDO EPICOLLECT5: UNA HERRAMIENTA DE CIENCIA ABIERTA PARA EL APRENDIZAJE COLABORATIVO Agustín Diez Castillo Departament de Prehistòria, Arqueologia i Història Antiga ¿Pueden las herramientas propias de la ciencia abierta contribuir a la formación del estudiantado del máster de arqueología? En el ejemplo que se presenta la utilización de Epicollect5 (una base de datos colaborativa) permitió a los participantes en la prospección del cerro de Migallón (Requena) ver en tiempo real los resultados de su trabajo. Máster en Arqueología 23 estudiantes 1. Introducir al estudiantado en el diseño de una base de datos georreferenciada y multimedia (fotos, vídeos, notas de voz). 2. Famialirizar al estudiantado con la tomas de datos en campo a través de una herramienta que todos llevamos en el bolsillo: el teléfono móvil. En cursos anteriores, uno de los mayores problemas que nos encontrábamos tanto el equipo docente, como el estudiantado, era la manera de compartir los datos. Habíamos utilizado la base de datos de Moodle, pero eso depende de la voluntad de cada persona para transcribir sus notas de campo. También habíamos tratado de compartir hojas de cálculo en las que se registrarán los hallazgos personales. Con esas y otras soluciones, el mayor problema era como combinar los datos tomados en papel, con la geolocalización tomada con un gps y con las fotografías tomadas con una cámara fotográfica, o con un móvil. Se realizó la prospección arqueológica del cerro del Migallón ayudados solamente por el teléfono móvil y la app Epicollect5. Se diseñaron transectos teóricos que debido a la vegetación existente no se pudieron realizar de manera óptima. Los hallazgos se subían inmediatamente a la nube y todas las participantes podían ver el resultado de la prospección en tiempo real. Además de comprobar, mediante la fotografía, el tipo de material arqueológico que las compañeras y compañeros estaban realizando. La aplicación permite visualizar, en cualquier navegador, los resultados de la propección por categorías, a la vez que realiza un mapa de calor que permite conocer tanto las posibles zonas no prospectadas, como las zonas en la que la densidad de hallazgos es realmente más importante. El uso de Epicollect5, una herramienta de ciencia colaborativa, en la prospección del cerro del Migallón ha permitido al estudiantado compartir, entre ellos, pero también con cualquier persona interesada, los resultados de su trabajo. Epicollect5 se puede utilizar de manera segura en un contexto del desarrollo profesional de la actividad arqueológica profesional. El único incoveniente destacado, es que no graba el trazado realizado, pero otras aplicaciones (Osmand, Wikiloc, Osmtracker, oruxmaps y otras) lo hacen. AGRADECIMIENTOS Este trabajo no hubiera sido posible sin la co
non_poster
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía ¿Cómo se hacen las nanopartículas? Mariana Castillo-Hernández iD, Lilia Sánchez-Minutti* iD Laboratorio de Procesos Biotecnológicos, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala, México. *Email: lilia.sanchez@uptlax.edu.mx 26 de febrero de 2024 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10710020 Editado por: Alma Rosa Netzahuatl-Muñoz (Programa Académico de Ingeniería en Biotecnología, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala). Revisado por: Patricia Rodríguez-Cuamatzi (Programa Académico de Ingeniería Química, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala). Colección de ESMOS Resumen La nanotecnología es una ciencia multidisciplinaria que estudia la creación y construcción de nanomateriales. Las nanopartículas son materiales formados por átomos o moléculas enlazados entre sí y que presentan en al menos una de sus dimensiones un tamaño entre 0.1- 100 nm [1]. Se clasifican en inorgánicas, orgánicas, cerámicas y bionanopartículas y de acuerdo a sus dimensiones los nanomateriales se clasifican en de una, dos o tres dimensiones [2]. Algunos ejemplos son los
non_poster
Demonstrating the use of the alphabetic telegraph through a collaborative AR activity Iason Panagiotis Diakoumakos Department of Informatics and Telecommunications National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Athens, Greece sdi1100009@di.uoa.gr Akrivi Katifori, Vassilis Kourtis, Manos Karvounis, Yannis Ioannidis Athena Research Center Athens, Greece {vivi, vkourtis, manosk, yannis}@di.uoa.gr Abstract—Augmented reality (AR) has been extensively used in different contexts, including tourism and cultural heritage, in both commercial and research applications, and they are well known for their ability to capture the attention of their potential users. On the other hand, collaboration among groups in a museum context is proven to engage the visitors and offer a more personal experience. The combination of these two technics has not yet been thoroughly explored. In this work, we present a card-based AR application with the objective to engage the visitors in a collaborative activity designed to showcase on-site the use of a 19th century‟s alphabetic telegraph, exhibited in the History Museum of the University of Athens. The users are able to manipulate photorealistic 3D models that simulate the operation of the telegraph transmitter and receiver and use them to send messages to one another. The application has been evaluated with 19 pairs of teenage students with very promising results. Keywords—augmented reality, collaborative experience I. INTRODUCTION Augmented reality (AR) has been extensively used in different contexts, including gaming, sports, marketing, commerce, even military applications and it has been gradually being turned into a common technological approach accessible even to the wider public through devices like their mobile phones. Tourism and cultural heritage has been a field where AR has been applied in both commercial and research applications, and has been a major focus and research direction in projects like Mesch1 and CHESS2. Collaboration among groups in a museum context has also been proven to engage the visitors and offer a more personal experience. People typically visit museums and heritage sites in social groups, either in conjunction with organized parties, or with family or friends [1][3]. The value of social interactions taking place in such visits has long been recognized as important in museum studies [2][4], and a growing line of research now focuses upon digital technologies as means to enhance this social context [5]. The combination of these two technics, AR and collaboration, in a cultural heritage context is an approach that 1 http://www.mesch-project.eu/ 2 http://www.chessexperience.eu/ has not yet been thoroughly explored. In this work we present a collaborative AR application with the objective to engage the visitors in a common activity designed to showcase on site the use of the alphabetic telegraph, exhibited in the History Museum of the University of Athens. Section II offers an overview of related approaches in the field of cultural heritage, whereas Section III presents the objectives of this work, IV provides implementation details and V the evaluation details. Section VI concludes the paper. II. AR IN CULTURAL HERITAGE AR may offer different views of an artefact or cultural site, visualizing its original state or different states of its preservation and thus providing to the visitor a more in depth view of the artefact. An example of an AR application on a 3D exhibit with the purpose to present its original state has been the one developed in the context of the EU funded project CHESS and presented in [6]. The visitors were offered the possibility to view status of Ancient Greek women (“Korai”) through their mobile device and see them in their original colourful state. They also could interact with the augmented view of the statue and listen to information for specific details and parts that were not directly evident or visible in the original statue. Mesch also explored the use
non_poster
Products Learn More Professional Cost-Effective Home / Enzymes / Featured Products  Products  Online Inquiry     Enzymes Applications Biological Functions Catalytic Mechanism Featured Products  Extracts  Probiotics Zymogens Coenzymes Enzyme Protectant & Stabilizer  Others  Nanozymes  Custom Blends Bacteriophages Name Name Email * Email * Phone * Phone * Company/Institution Featured Products inquiry Catalog Product Name Activity Size Price Qty NATE-0418 Native Bovine Lactoperoxidase Food grade, ≥ 100,000 U/g 1 kg $2808 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE-0418 Native Bovine Lactoperoxidase Research grade, 100 U/mg solid 100 mg $629 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE-1868 Native Roxburgh Superoxide Dismutase 5,000 U/g 1 kg $388 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE-1868 Native Roxburgh Superoxide Dismutase 20,000 U/g 1 kg $1188 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry OBE-001 Ox bile extract powder Cholic acid 40%-55% 1 kg $356 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry BAK-001 Glucose Oxidase (Food Grade) 10,000 U/g 1 kg $352.74 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry DAI-1212 Concentrated food-grade lactase powder for Dairy Processing 100,000 ALU/g 1 kg $626 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE-1619 Native Soy Superoxide Dismutase 20, 000 U/G 1 kg $1125 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE-0504 Native Porcine Pancreatin Lipase 8 USP units/mg Amylase 100 USP units/mg Protease 100 USP units/mg 1 kg $298 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE-0504 Native Porcine Pancreatin Lipase 80 USP units/mg Amylase 250 USP units/mg Protease 250 USP units/mg 1 kg $538 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry DIA-409 Fructosyl-Amino Acid Oxidase from E. coli, Recombinant 100 U/mg protein 10 mg $474 1  Add to Cart  Inquiry NATE 1144 Cystathionine gamma- 11 25 KU/mg 10 mg $3098 1 Add to Cart Inquiry Privacy - Terms  0 Click unfold / close cat#, product name, and keywords Website Search  HOME PRODUCTS SERVICES RESOURCE COMPANY INQUIRY ORDER
non_poster
Abstract Book 7-9.09.2023, Kraków, Poland XIXth European Symposium on the Quality of Eggs and Egg Products XXVth European Symposium on the Quality of Poultry Meat
non_poster
Page | 1 Long-time series, small-area statistics for sustainable transport Morgan M*1, and Philips I†1 1Institute for Transport Studies, University of Leeds, UK GISRUK 2023 Summary Transport policy often suffers from a paucity of data on which to build a robust evidence base. Long- time series, small-area transport statistics over a large geographical area can provide insights into the effects of a broad range of transport policies. Unfortunately there are important gaps in the UK’s small-area statistics that limit their usability and effectiveness for answering key policy questions. This paper reviews the state of data in the UK and reports early progress on filling data gaps. KEYWORDS: transport, land use, zonal statistics, spatiotemporal data, geodemographic 1. Introduction Car ownership and use are at the heart of many of the transport sustainability crises which require urgent action including carbon emissions, NOx and particulates, road death, car dependence and social exclusion. Understanding the dynamic changes in patterns of car ownership and use is fundamental to addressing these crises. Strangely, whilst the UK government (and likely many other governments in other countries) have a constantly updating complete census of vehicle ownership and an annual census of use (UK MOT road worthiness tests), transport analysis relies upon much more data sparse methods, such as modelling and natural experiments. One challenge of implementing rapid change to the transport system is a lack of evidence of what works and where. Transport is part of and interacts with a complex socio-technical system, and so effective solutions need to account for a wide range of variables, making it unclear if a solution that worked in one place and time is transferable to another context. This can be especially true if new solutions must be implemented against resistance from sceptical politicians and the public. Unfortunately for researchers, studying transport interventions in a controlled environment is usually impossible. Academics rarely have the power or resources to build infrastructure or change regulations for research. Thus, much transport research utilises observational studies such as natural experiments, modelling, or qualitative work. While these methods are a well-established in many disciplines, the lack of control limits how generalisable their conclusions can be. Large sample sizes can boost confidence in findings, but in practice, only so many changes occur each year and not every change is studied. Thus, many transport policies are supported by an evidence base of only a handful of case studies. Given the limited opportunities for natural experiments, a missed opportunity is especially disappointing and often occurs when an ex-anti study was either not conducted or was inadequate. For example, data gathered as part of the transport planning process is often insufficiently robust for academic research. So researchers must be embedded early in the planning process to conduct successful research. Fortunately, recent improvements in the publication of administrative data may provide a low-cost way to study many natural experiments, including historical events previously considered missed opportunities. * M.Morgan1@leeds.ac.uk † I.Philips@leeds.ac.uk
non_poster
Theory and Phenomenology of BSM Dark Mesons Lingfeng Li (Brown U.) 2110.10691 w/ H-C. Cheng and E. Salvioni 1803.03561 w/ H-C. Cheng, E. Salvioni and C. Verhaaren 1905.03772 w/ H-C. Cheng, E. Salvioni and C. Verhaaren Introduction IrreIevant portal: the suppressed coupling with the SM is introduced by a heavy scale (~TeV is a good conjecture) Comprehensively easy, well- motivated, rich phenomenology. Hidden Valley: Weakly interacting with SM and strongly self-coupled (dark hadrons). Long-lived particle (LLP) is a natural outcome of suppressed interactions. The displaced decays of dark hadrons give striking collider signals Dark QCD makes dark hadrons experience dark showers and form jet-like structures (a.k.a. “emerging jets”)
non_poster
Exploring the effects of scalar Non Standard Interactions at DUNE and T2HK Abinash Medhi,𝑎,∗Debajyoti Dutta𝑏and Moon Moon Devi𝑎 𝑎Department of Physics, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam-784028, India 𝑏Department of Physics, Assam Don Bosco University, Kamarkuchi, Sonapur, Assam-782402, India E-mail: amedhi@tezu.ernet.in, debajyoti.dutta@dbuniversity.ac.in, devimm@tezu.ernet.in Abstract: The discovery of the phenomena of neutrino oscillation was the first clear evidence of physics beyond the Standard Model (SM). It requires as extension of the SM to explain the masses and mixing of neutrinos. The models explaining beyond SM (BSM) physics naturally comes with some additional unknown interactions of neutrinos which are beyond the scope of SM, often called as Non Standard Interactions (NSIs). Wolfenstein was the first to propose the idea of NSI where he explored how neutrino coupling with a vector field can give rise to matter effect in neutrino oscillations. Apart from that, there is also a possibility of neutrinos coupling with a scalar field called scalar NSI. Instead of appearing as a matter potential, scalar NSI appears as a medium dependent correction to the mass matrix, which may offer unique phenomenology in neutrino oscillations. In this work, we have studied the effects of scalar NSI at two proposed flagship Long Baseline Experiments - DUNE and T2HK. As the effect of scalar NSI scales linearly with the matter density, it can feel the matter density variations which makes LBL experiments one of the best candidate to probe it. We have seen that the effect of scalar NSI on the oscillation probabilities of DUNE and T2HK is significant. Moreover, scalar NSI can significantly effect the CP violation sensitivity as well as 23 octant sensitivity of these LBL experiments. Finally, we have also done a combined sensitivity of these experiments towards finding the effects of scalar NSI. In addition, as the scalar NSI affects the neutrino mass term probing it to various neutrino mass models is quite interesting and promising. Keywords: Neutrino Oscillations, Non Standard Interactions, Beyond Standard Model. Presented at the 30th International Symposium on Lepton Photon Interactions at High Energies, hosted by the University of Manchester, 10-14 January 2022. ∗Speaker
non_poster
VETERINARY LEGISLATION AND ORGANISATION OF VETERINARY SUPERVISION IN THE POLISH LANDS FROM 1774 TO 1918 Jarosław Sobolewski Department of Public Health Protection and Animal Welfare, Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Nicolaus Copernicus University ul. Lwowska 1, 87-100 Torun, Poland; jsobolewski@umk.pl SUMMARY The first Polish legal regulations on veterinary medicine date back to the second half of the 18th century. In 1774, a parliamentary constitution was passed obliging doctors to supervise hospital revirs in order to prevent the spread of cattle and sheep blight. In 1780, the Royal Commission of Good Order issued 46 laws regulating the slaughter of animals and the meat trade. The period of the Duchy of Warsaw brought the first normative act devoted exclusively to aspects of animal health protection - the 'Regulations for the Rescue of Horned Cattle in Present Diseases, together with Measures Sufficient to Safeguard them from Immediate Multiplication of Mortality'. In 1844, the 'Veterinary Police Act' was issued in Warsaw. This was the first piece of legislation detailing the scope of tasks performed by the state administration bodies responsible for veterinary matters. At the time of the loss of statehood in the Polish lands, the law of the partitioners was in force. The veterinary service on Polish soil at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries developed differently in each of the three partitions, which also applied to legal regulations. Regaining independence in 1918 led to the unification of the functioning of the veterinary administration and the introduction of new legal solutions. Key words: veterinary law, history of veterinary medicine, infectious diseases of animals The organisation of veterinary supervision of animal husbandry and, in particular, the prevention of the spread of infectious diseases and the protection of public health in the context of food of animal origin, has quite a long history and dates back to before the establishment of organised veterinary education, i.e. before 1762, when the College of Veterinary Medicine was founded in Lyon (France). From the beginning, these activities were based on the premise of an administrative-veterinary police force, which is still the case today. The tasks of such an organisation were and are to protect public welfare and safety in the broadest sense [1]. The administrative apparatus organised in this way uses tools to influence the economic sphere especially in terms of rationing and regulation, and from the point of view of the application of the law - supervision, control and enforcement of the law in force [2]. In Poland, the first police agenda appeared during the Four-Year Sejm as one of the five departments of the Permanent Council. The competence of the police included, among other things, the activities of supervising hygienic and health conditions in the country [3]. The first legal regulations date back to the second half of the 18th century. In 1774, a parliamentary constitution was enacted, which was part of the above-mentioned agenda and obliged doctors and feldspersons to supervise hospital revirs in order to prevent the spread of cattle and sheep pestilence [4]. In 1780, the Royal Commission of Good Order issued 46 laws regulating the slaughter of animals and the meat trade. This was a set of laws significantly restricting the guild monopoly, as well as regulating the slaughtering of animals and sanitary supervision of the quality of animal raw materials on offer [5]. Despite the introduction of the aforementioned regulations, the manner in which they were respected appeared to be
non_poster
Message from the coordinator MASTRO Newsletter Issue 1: March 2019 We are happy to introduce you to the first newsletter of MASTRO, a European collaborative effort to develop nano-enabled bulk materials for the transportation sector. These novel materials will present self-responsive properties and will improve safety, sustainability, and comfort in transportation. MASTRO is a 3.5 year project funded by the European Commission under the Horizon 2020 scheme that kicked off on December, 2017. This issue is providing an overview of the project objectives, its structure, the scientific efforts during the first year of operation, and our partner’s communication and dissemination activities. Welcome and enjoy! Dr. Silvia Hernandez Rueda This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Grant Agreement No. 760940. The material presented and views expressed here are the responsibility of the author(s) only. The EC takes no responsibility for any use made of the information set out. Project indicators 17 Partners 6 Countries 10 Companies 7 RTDs 43 Deliverables 42 Months
non_poster
project@induce2020.eu circe@fcirce.es INDUCE offers you an open access platform (after registration) with training material, online lessons, guidelines Fundación Circe Parque Empresarial Dinamiza, Avenue Ranillas, Building 3D, 1st Floor, 50018 Zaragoza (Spain) project@induce2020.eu +34976976859 This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Coordination & Research and Innovation Action under Grant Agreement No 785047. circe@fcirce.es
non_poster
De l'homme moyen à la population statistique : Quetelet et Galton Académie royale de Belgique, 2024-04-15 Charles H. Pence @pence@scholar.social
non_poster
THE TRANSFERENTIAL RELATIONSHIP FROM THE DISCOURSES BETWEEN CHILDREN AND MONITORS IN AN OBSERVATORY Gleici Kelly de Lima - UNESP/Bauru Rodolfo Langhi - UNESP/Bauru
non_poster
for Researchers & Teachers Empowering Education Standardisation through in Europe
non_poster
Panoramic NIR surveys of the first generation of galaxies with Nancy Roman Space Telescope, Subaru/ULTIMATE and G REX A. K. Inoue (Waseda), T. Kodama (Tohoku), Y. Koyama (Subaru) To securely select very high-z Lyman break galaxies at z>10, photometry at wavelengths longer than 2 micron is essentially important. However, Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (NGRST) will be limited up to 2 micron. Subaru/ULTIMATE, a future wide field near infrared imager with GLAO, can perform a sufficiently wide and deep K band imaging survey in a part of the high latitude survey by NGRST in late 2020s. The K band data will provide ~10/deg^2 z>12 objects, including non-zero z>14 objects, in an optimistic case. We recall that Subaru Telescope secured 100 nights of observing time for NGRST Subaru 'synergistic' observations in the middle late 2020s supplying deep and wide K band imaging data coordinated with NGRST deep fields can be an excellent use of this NGRST Subaru synergistic program. We also have a plan of a new space based wide field imager focusing on the wavelengths longer than 2 micron, called G REX, in 2030s. G-REX will detect many galaxies at z>15, dropping out in NGRST filters. 2020/10/5-9 Galaxy Formation & Evolution in the Era of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope 1
non_poster
to the Subterranean fauna of the cenotes in the Yucatan Peninsula Quick identification guide Dorottya Flóra Angyal Efraín Chávez - Solís Luis Liévano - Beltrán Nuno Simões
non_poster
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía ¿Lucha de bacterias? Estephanie Elizabeth Luna-Pérez* iD Estudiante de Posgrado en Ciencias (Microbiología), Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias Microbiológicas, Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email: fannyluunnaa@gmail.com 25 de abril de 2023 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7869024 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Yolanda Elizabeth Morales-García (Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Las bacterias compiten constantemente contra otros microorganismos principalmente por nutrientes en los diversos ambientes que habitan, es por ello que han desarrollado mecanismos que les confieren ventajas en su comunidad microbiana [1]. Uno de estos mecanismos es la antibiosis, la cual se basa en la síntesis de compuestos antimicrobianos que impiden el crecimiento de otros microrganismos que representan una amenaza para la sobrevivencia de la bacteria productora de estas sustancias [2].
non_poster
HARMONI Simulated High-Redshift Galaxy Gas Kinematics with HSIM for HARMONI on the ELT Laurence Routledge in collaboration with Richardson, M., Thatte, N., Tezca, M., Houghton, R. and Pereira-Santaella, M.
non_poster
Prescribed Antibiotics? Public Health Infographic Vanessa Hanson References Acharya, K. P., & Subedi, D. (2020). Use of social media as a tool to reduce antibiotic usage: a neglected approach to combat antimicrobial resistance in low and middle income countries. Frontiers in Public Health, 8, 1-2. Ashiru-Oredope, D., & Hopkins, S. (2015). Antimicrobial resistance: Moving from professional engagement to public action. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 70(11), 2927– 2930. Clarke, A. E. (2010). From the rise of medicine to biomedicalization: U.S. healthscapes and iconography, circa 1980-present. In Adele E. Clarke, Laura Mamo, Jennifer Ruth Fosket, Jennifer R. Fishman, and Janet K. Shim (Eds.), Biomedicalization: Technoscience, health and illness in the U.S. (pp. 104-146). Duke University Press. Clarke, A. E., Shim, K., Mamo, L. Fosket, J.R., & Fishman, J. (2010). Biomedicalizaton: Technoscientific transformations of health illness and U.S. medicine. In Adele E. Clarke, Laura Mamo, Jennifer Ruth Fosket, Jennifer R. Fishman, and Janet K. Shim. (Eds.), Biomedicalization: Technoscience, health, and illness in the U.S. (pp. 47-87). Duke University Press. Council of Canadian Academies (2019). When antibiotics fail. The Expert Panel on the Potential Socio-Economic Impacts of Antimicrobial Resistance in Canada. Crosby, M., von den Baumen, T. R., Chu, C., Gomes, T., Schwartz, K. L., & Tadrous, M. (2022). Interprovincial variation in antibiotic use in Canada, 2019: A retrospective cross- sectional study. Canadian Medical Association Open Access Journal, 10(1), E262–E268.
non_poster
【予稿集】 公開査読(OPR)を実施しているプラットフォームの Web 調査 井野詩織*, 高久雅生** *筑波大学 情報学群 知識情報・図書館学類 **筑波大学 図書館情報メディア系 *s2113594@u.tsukuba.ac.jp **masao@slis.tsukuba.ac.jp 著者のアイデンティティへの言及や、過度な査読期間の超過といった研究倫理問題などの背景から、 解決手段の1つとして公開査読(Open Peer Review:OPR )の注目が集まっている。しかし F1000Research などといった OPR を実施しているプラットフォームの特徴や実態は明らかにされてい ない。したがって、本調査では、今後の OPR 研究の一助となることを目的として、国内外の OPR を 実施しているプラットフォームの Web 調査を実施した。そして、その調査結果をもとに OPR を実施 しているプラットフォームの実態を明らかにする。 Web survey on Open Peer Review platforms Shiori INO*, Masao TAKAKU** * College of Knowledge and Library Sciences, University of Tsukuba ** Institute of Library, Media and Information Science, University of Tsukuba 1. はじめに 近年、オープンサイエンスの潮流より、公開 査読(OPR)という査読モデルに注目が集まってい る。 OPR に明確な定義は存在せず、広範にわたる 定義をレビューしたロス=ヘラーは、OPR につい て“査読者や著者を公開すること、査読レポート を公開すること、査読プロセスへの参加機会を 拡大することなど、オープンサイエンスの目的 に沿って査読モデルを適応させるための、いく つかの重複した方法を表す包括的な用語であ る”[1]と述べている。 佐藤は、ロス=ヘラーと国際STM 出版社協会 (STM)がそれぞれ作成した公開査読に関する用語 集に共通する要素として、下記の5 点を挙げてい る[2]。 1:アイデンティティの公開 2:査読レポート等の公開 3:オープンなやり取り 4:査読前原稿の公開 5:最終版へのコメント機能 しかし、いずれも明確な定義ではないため、 公開査読研究をする上で、雑誌やプラットフォ ームが公開査読をどのように定義づけているか は確認する必要がある。 以上のように、公開査読というオープンサイ エンスの潮流の一つが注目を集めているが、こ のような研究成果の公開手段が消滅することへ の懸念がある。西岡はOA ジャーナルの消滅につ いて“OA ジャーナルの最後の刊行年からウェブ からの消滅までの期間は,約3 分の1 が1 年以 内,約4 分の3 が5 年以内である。” [3]と述べて おり、消滅したジャーナルやプラットフォーム に掲載されていた論文は読めなくなる可能性が 高い。 そこで、本研究ではOPR プラットフォームに ついて、収録数や分野、言語といった基礎的な 項目に加え、OPR プロセスから各プラットフォ ームにおけるOPR の考え方や定義、OPR プラッ トフォームの永続性についても調査を行う。 2. 方法 本調査では、OPR プラットフォームについて の文献調査とWeb 調査を実施した。本研究にお けるOPR のプラットフォームの定義は、“OPR を査読モデルとして採用しており、かつ投稿さ れた研究成果へのオープンアクセスが可能であ る出版プラットフォーム”とする。そのため、運 営元が出版社であった場合でも、OPR を実施す るための独立したプラットフォームであれば調 査対象とした。 文献調査では、OPR に関連する用語、および 関係するプラットフォーム名称で検索した。 Web 調査では、すでに多くの文献で触れられ ているプラットフォーム以外は、文献調査の過 程で発見したプラットフォーム[4]を参考として調 査した。調査項目は下記の6 点である。調査期間 は2023 年6 月14 日~2023 年6 月19 日である。 1:収録数 収録している論文数 2:分野 投稿対象とする分野 3:言語 投稿内容の言語
non_poster
Global River Width and Inundation Database from Sentinel-1 SAR Satellites C. Gangodagamage, F. Meyer, F. Policelli, J. Kennedy, S. Lamont, and K. Hogenson Hydrologic Science Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC), University of Maryland, MD Alaska SAR Facility Center, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK One Concern, Menlo Park, CA Earth Sciences Division – Hydrosphere, Biosphere, and Geophysics
non_poster
Open Connectome Project & NeuroData: Enabling Data-Driven Neuroscience at Scale Contact: jovo@jhu.edu References [1]: Burns et al, SSDBM, 2013 [2]: Burns et al, Neuron, 2014 [3]: Gray Roncal et al., Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, 2015 OCP is graciously supported by the following awards: NIBIB 1RO1EB016411-01 (CRCNS), DARPA N66001-14-1-4028 (GRAPHS), NSF ACI-1261715, NSF OCI-1040114, NIDA 1R01DA036400-01, JHU Applied Physics Laboratory IRAD, and JHU Whiting School of Engineering, Dean's Award, Kavli Neuroscience Discovery Institute.. Acknowledgements How do I: - Look at some data? - Show some data to my labmates/colleages? - Download some data to play with on my computer? - Share my data? - Manually annotate some data? - Train my machine vision algorithm on some data? - Run my machine vision algorithm at scale? - Assess the performance of my classifiers? - Infer neuroscientific meaning? Background Challenges Resolution http://neurodata.io - Modalities that now obtain terascale images: - Electron Microscopy - Array Tomography - CLARITY - Calcium Imaging - Expansion Microscopy - X-Ray Microscopy - Multimodal MRI - Loading the entire dataset into memory using MATLAB/R/Python is not possible. - Many neuroscientists want access to the most expensive and difficult datasets to obtain. - In genetics and physics, there exist reference datasets and Web-services that the entire community uses essentially daily. - In neuroscience, we did not yet have reference datasets, or Web-services to enable access and analysis by anybody of interest. Action Action - We built open source Web-services including a neurodata datastore and analytics stack. - We have Ingested >100 terabytes of data across modalities and scales. - We answered scientific questions requiring data-intensive computing, including counting & discovering spatial distributions of various organelles. Challenge - The data are too large to visualize, analyze or often even store on local hardware. - Data management & analytics both need petascale capabilities. - Raw & derived data need to be accessible in ways convenient for analysis. - Different modalities have different needs. Background - Neuroscientists can now routinely collect multi-terabyte neuroimage datasets. - The traditional pattern of storing and analyzing data locally fails for these data. - We need a new computing paradigm that supports analysis and sharing of petascale neuroimages across modalities and scales. Resolution - Many exciting datasets publicly available at http://neurodata.io - Anybody can visualize, download, upload, or analyze neuroimages of any kind/size. - Neurodata analysis at any scale is now trivially reproducible and extensible. - A data standard for massive neuroscience image stacks exists and is extensible. Come to our Booth #2139 Workflow Visualize Images Spatial DB Color Corrected Segments / Skeletons Visualize Overlay Aligned Images NeuroData Analysis Reproduce / Extend Geometric Alignment Machine Vision Ingest Chromatic Alignment Compute Statistics ocpviz ocpviz Jupyter Anno DB Visualize Overlay RAMONify ocpviz Nonlinear Register ocpviz Global Coordinate Legend Local Datastore NeuroDataCloud Cluster/AMI Local Workstation Images Metadata Local Workstation NeuroDataAnalysis Cluster/AMI NeuroDataVision NeuroData Notebooks FlashR FlashGraph Petascale Datastore NeuroDataBase Ingest Cutout OCPviz Image Database Annotation Database Tile Cache Metadata Machine Annotation Geometric Alignment Manual Annotation Chromatic Alignment LONI i2g/m2g CAJAL/ndio RESTful Services RESTful Services CAJAL/ndio Ingested Datasets Computational Ecosystem Example Use Case - If you have big data problems, we might be able to help. - All our software is open source and documented at http://docs.neurodata.io. - We have released an Amazon Marketplace Instance (AMI) to enable running our NeuroData analysis stack without managing a cluster. - All analyzed are performed either in MATLAB or in iPython/Jupyter notebooks. - We are al
non_poster
STRIKE-HBV Study. Version 4.0. October 2022. STR KE-HBV Stratification for Treatment using Risk factors and bIomarkers in Kenyan Adults - HBV QUESTIONNAIRE Study Name: STRIKE-HBV Introduction: Thank you for agreeing to participate in our study to investigate liver disease in Kilifi. These questions will help us understand how common liver disease is in Kilifi, and what the main causes are. In the long term, this will help us make better assessments using simple tools (like blood tests) and will help provide better care for people who need it. The answers you provide will be stored anonymously and will not affect your current or future care. Section 1: Identification details ID number: STRIKE-HBV - ___________________ (please insert ID number) Date of questionnaire completion (DD / MM / YY) _________________ Section 2: Personal information Sex at birth M / F Age Section 3: History of liver disease • Have you ever had jaundice (turning yellow)? Yes / No • If yes, please specify when (circle one option): Within the past one year Within the past 5 years Within the past 10 years More than 10 years ago Section 4: Liver disease in your family • Has anyone in your family died of liver disease, or suspected liver disease (including turning yellow, swollen tummy)? Yes / No. If yes, please specify relationship to you _______________________ (e.g. mother, uncle, brother etc) • Do you know of any members of your family who have hepatitis virus infection (Hepatitis B virus or Hepatitis C virus)? Yes / No If yes, please specify relationship to you _______________________ (e.g. mother, uncle, brother etc) Section 5: Risk factors for liver disease • Do you currently take medicine for any reason (prescribed by a clinic)? Yes / No If yes, please specify the medicine, or what it is for:
non_poster
B.W. Holwerda - Lorentz Center Roman Telescope 2020 - 5-10 October 2020 - B.W. Holwerda High-redshift galaxies with the Roman Telescope B.W. Holwerda (University of Louisville) @benneholwerda benne.holwerda@gmail.com
non_poster
1 QUANTUM TUNNELING SENSORS - QUANTUM TUNNELING BETWEEN LARGE ARRAYS OF NANOWIRES NEW SENSING PRINCIPLE, APPLICATIONS IN DEFENSE AND SECURITY AND DEMONSTRATION OF nanoTrek® FUNCTIONALITY M.T. Michalewicz, P. Glowacki, N. Singh, S. Balakumar and N. N. Gosvami QUANTUM TUNNELING SENSORS QUANTUM TUNNELING BETWEEN LARGE ARRAYS OF NANOWIRES – NEW SENSING PRINCIPLE, APPLICATIONS IN DEFENSE AND SECURITY AND DEMONSTRATION OF nanoTrek® FUNCTIONALITY M.T. Michalewicz 1, P. Glowacki 1, N. Singh 2, S. Balakumar 2 and N. N. Gosvami 3 ABSTRACT Realisation of the first working sensor based on quantum tunneling between arrays of nanowires[1,2,3] is presented. The sensing element consists of 12,000 nanowires, each 90 nm wide and 5 mm long (~1:55,000 aspect ratio), on an area of 5 x 4.3 mm. The sensing element was fabricated using phase shift mask lithography and dry etch processes followed by CMP. Characterisation was carried with SEM and AFM. The first devices we built were configured as linear encoders of position and motion. The devices performance was demonstrated with electrical testing using an independent nanopositioner. Strong signals in μA range were obtained on scans from several hundred nm to several mm range. The principle of operation can be utilized for trunsduction of dynamic quantities such as vibration, acceleration, pressure, flow and others when timer mechanism is inbuilt or harmonic analysis of signal is implemented. Dynamic quantum tunneling nanoTrek® devices depending on final configuration may be designed and built to function as: • wireless networks smart sensors for motion detection and perimeter security; • sonobuoys for Navy; • vibration sensors in perimeter security sensing, ship building, air-foil testing, building stability; • accelerometers and gyroscopes for inertial guidance systems, missile guidance, aviation, shipping and automotive; • image stabilization systems in optical devices in infra-red, night vision, vehicle mounted, cameras and video; • ultra sensitive microphones for intelligence, medicine or mobile phones; • displacement and tremor sensors in nuclear test monitoring, mining, mineral exploration, geology, tectonics; or • seismometers for early earthquake warning systems or tsunami detection. nanoTrek® APPLICATION IN POSITIONAL METROLOGY: Motivation Sub-nanometer dimensional metrology plays essential role in advancing microelectronic manufacturing below the 100 nm critical dimensions limit, and then on to the next nodes defined by Sematech International: 65 nm and 45 nm. Metrology tools to reach those next nodes are not well developed. New sub-nanometer metrology solutions and new technology is required [3]. Quantum-π proprietary technology [2] is well suited to offer solutions and to provide the necessary metrology tools. Nanometer and sub-nanometer scale positional metrology is also critical to advancements in nanotechnology, in general. nanoTrek® may address problems of dimensional metrology and alignment at the next technology nodes in micro-fabrication, nano- positioning and nano-imprinting. 1 Quantum Precision Instruments Asia Pte Ltd, 14A Prince George’s Park, Singapore 118413 – 2 Institute of Microelectronics, 11 Science Road, Singapore 117685 – 3 Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, 9 Engineering Drive 1 Singapore 117576
non_poster
Boletim 001 Setembro, 2020 Esta iniciativa do Ministério de Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovação do Governo Federal via o Conselho Nacional de Pesquisas – CNPq está centrada no estudos dos campos rupestres da Serra do Espinhaço. Comemoramos com você a Nova Newsletter que trará informes dos desenvolvimentos mais recentes do Programa de Pesquisas Ecológicas de Longa Duração nos Campos Rupestre e Serra do Cipó (PELD-CRSC). Warming Uma Newsletter do PELD – CRSC 1. Homenagear o brilhante cientista dinamarquês, pai da Ecologia Vegetal, Eugen Warming; 2. Refletir sobre o período de intenso aquecimento (warming, em inglês), sem precedentes na história da humanidade! Essa iniciativa do sítio do PELD-CRSC tem como objetivos: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14099258.v2
non_poster
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: Dong, H.-R., & Huang, M.-H. (2022). Effect of Collaboration on Patent Maintenance Length. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti2277). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6974674 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
HEPscape: an escape room about high energy physics F. Cavallari1, P. Astone1, M. Bauce1, M. Campana1, S. Dall’Osso1, E. Di Marco1, M. Drago1,2, L. Fantini1,2, S. Mariottini1,2, G. Padovano1,2, R. Paramatti1,2, G. Pisegna1,2, S. Porzio1,2, L. Roberti1,2, C. Rovelli1, L. Soffi1, R. Tramontano1,2 Abstract Escape rooms are more and more popular nowadays. They have the challenges of a treasure hunt and represent a pleasant way to encourage team building. In addition they are a fun way to discover a new subject, a key point that can be exploited for science outreach. In 2021 a team from INFN has built an escape room about high energy physics, called HEPScape. The visitors have the impression of visiting the Large Hadron Collider at CERN and of entering one of the experimental control rooms. It makes use of projectors and posters which replicate the control room environment. Through some clues, that are hidden in the room, the visitors discover the purpose of particle accelerators and high energy physics experiments. The games can be tuned to the age group, resulting in a fun experience for everybody. HEPScape is made of portable equipment that can be transported and assembled in less than two hours. This allows to use it in science fairs and exhibitions. In addition it can be brought on demand to high schools in remote provinces. The material and the format of the games are simple and it is possible to replicate and translate the games in other languages. Feedback and experience from two science fairs is presented. Keywords High Energy Physics, Outreach, Escape room Introduction In contemporary world, teaching methods have not evolved as fast as the new communication methods that the young generations adopt. The perception that the students may have of old-fashioned frontal lessons is therefore not enthusiastic, particularly for what concerns scientific subjects. New teaching methods that make use of active discovery of the subjects may help stimulate the curiosity of the students, and convey the idea that studying scientific subjects is fun. Since a few years escape rooms have become very popular in most cities. An escape room is like a treasure hunt in a closed room. The team must solve a series of puzzles and quizzes within a given amount of time, in order to open the room door and escape from the site. The activity is often guided by an external moderator who helps the team from outside to find the clues hidden in the room and solve them in time. Escape rooms are so intriguing and fun that they are also often used by adult co-workers as a team building exercise. Usually the room has an underlying theme and decoration: ancient history, detective story, crimes eccetera. In the past few years escape rooms were adopted by few teachers as an unconventional method to teach a new subject through active discovery, see for example [2] and references therein. For the initial overview of a subject they have proven to be very effective. This fact can be exploited for science outreach. In 2019 a team proposed an escape room to the Open Day visitors. In 2020 a similar attempt was made by a team from the CMS experiment for a high school student internship. In 2021 a group from INFN Rome put up an escape room, named HEPscape [1], and brought it to two science festivals in Italy with great success, as explained in this paper. More than 1100 visitors participated in the activity in Rome and Genova. Escape room setup HEPscape can be installed outdoor in a gazebo or indoor in an adequate room. The required space is about 25 m2. The visitors are welcomed outside the room, they are given a helmet and they are told that they are going to visit the LHC, the largest particle accelerator in the world, which is located in an underground tunnel. The door of the escape room is made with a PVC curtain showing the image of the LHC tunnel. Inside the room there are many posters hanging on the walls, showing photos of the LHC and its experiments, as well as som
non_poster
FA I R W I S H FAIR Workflows to establish IGSN for Samples in the Helmholtz Association Project Team Motivation Use Cases IGSN Metadata Outcome/ Results IGSN: background and future
non_poster
Revisiting and updating chemical categorizations using chemical fingerprint and high-throughput screening data Kellie A. Fay1, Kamel Mansouri2, John Prindiville3, Grace Y. Patlewicz4, Mark Lewis5, Ann Richard4, Mahmoud Shobair4, Ellery Saluck6, Daniel T. Chang4 1USEPA OCSPP/OPPT, Washington, DC, USA. 2NIEHS NTP, Durham, NC, USA. 3Environment and Climate Change Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada. 4USEPA ORD/CCTE, Durham, NC, USA. 5Health Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada. 6Student Intern, USEPA OCSPP/OPPT, Washington, DC, USA BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES • Traditional approaches to chemical categorization are based on accumulated data and past decisional precedents. • Many new chemicals across various regulatory jurisdictions cannot be categorized using existing in silico models and methods. • How do we incorporate new approach methodologies (NAMs) and cheminformatic approaches to assist in identifying new chemical categories (or classes), and to create more robust models at predicting chemical toxicity? • Primary focus of this work: Identification of narcotic (N) and specific-acting (S) chemicals for aquatic (fish) toxicity using a consensus Mode-of-Action (cMOA) classification dataset. APPROACH • Classify narcotic and specific-acting mechanisms for a set of ~7000 ToxCast chemicals based on a consensus Mode-of-Action (cMOA) methodology4 developed by Kienzler et al., 2019. • Use classified cMOA data to develop predictive models based on ToxPrint (TxP) chemotypes. • Identify and use targeted dichotomized NAM bioassays hit calls to improve characterization and comparisons with existing Envirotox database aquatic toxicity data. RESULTS • Development of a robust N/S classification model for aquatic toxicity. • Known limitations regarding unclassified cMOA chemicals were identified. • Chemotype enrichment suggests targeted use of NAM information – suggested use of specific assay data. SUMMARY/IMPACTS • Increase the available chemical space of EnviroTox w/ cMOA classifications. • Develop a robust N/S classification structural ToxPrint based model. • Identify challenges in unclassified cMOA chemicals – i.e., metal & metalloids, as well as amino acids and polydentate ligands . • Using chemotype enrichments to identify potential bioassays with bioactivity to provide support of NAM data in category development. For more information, contact: Daniel T Chang, (chang.daniel@epa.gov) This work does not reflect EPA policy. Acknowledgments: ILS (contractor support) and Kristan Markey (USEPA) Abstract 309
non_poster
OCR ERROR DETECTION AND POST-CORRECTION WITH WORD2VEC AND BERTJE ON DUTCH HISTORICAL DATA Authors: ● Nynke van ‘t Hof (University of Amsterdam) ● Vera Provatorova (University of Amsterdam) Twitter: @vera__pro ● Mirjam Cuper (KB, national library of the Netherlands) Twitter: @CuperMirjam ORCID: 0000-0003-0187-9873 ● Evangelos Kanoulas (University of Amsterdam) Twitter: @ekanou ORCID: 0000-0002-8312-0694 Category: short paper Plan to attend: not yet decided between virtual or in person. Keywords: OCR post-correction, Natural Language Processing, Word Embedding Models, historical data, digital heritage Relevance and introduction: With a high quality of OCR-output, documents become more accessible to readers, and NLP tasks can thrive on the data. However, the extent to which all this is possible is dependent on the quality of the OCR-output. OCR on historical data often creates a significant amount of errors due to, among others, the poorer condition of the documents, and variances in font size and spelling1. This research focuses on post-processing the OCR-generated machine-readable text. Its focus is on post-correcting OCR-output from historical documents with the use of word embedding models (WEMs). Background: Two approaches have recently shown to be promising for OCR post-correction: static word embeddings and the more novel context-aware word embeddings2. There are two popular techniques that represent them: static word2vec and context-aware BERT. Static methods (like word2vec) generate one and the same embedding for all different senses in which a word can be used. Thus, homonyms for example get the same representation despite having different meanings. Contextualized methods (like BERT) embed different senses of the same word differently, so these methods are aware of the different meanings one word might have. 2 Hammarstrom, Harald, and Shafqat Mumtaz Virk, and Markus Forsberg. Poor man’s ocr post-correction: Unsupervised recognition of variant spelling applied to a multilingual document collection. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Digital Access to Textual Cultural Heritage, pages 71–75, 2017.; Nguyen, Thi Tuyet Hai, and Adam Jatowt, Nhu-Van Nguyen, Mickael Coustaty, and Antoine Doucet. Neural machine translation with bert for post-ocr error detection and correction. In Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries in 2020, pages 333–336, 2020. 1 Salimzadeh, Sara. Improving OCR Quality by Post-Correction. PhD thesis, Universiteit van Amsterdam, 2019. 1
non_poster
The role of citizen scientists in preparing for a national response to the invasive insect-transmitted plant pathogen Xylella fastidiosa Ana Pérez-Sierra https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5403-1433; Gerard Clover; Alan Stewart https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7878-8879; Claire Harkin https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4106-038X; Sarah Plummer; Suzanne Sancisi-Frey; Chris Pollard https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1278- 6891; Mariella Marzano https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4306-5886; Michael Wilson; James Turner; Felicity Perry;Ruby O’Grady; Saskia A. Hogenhout https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1371-5606
non_poster