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Growing the Network for Earth-space Research, Education and Innovation with Data (NEREID) Building Convergence and Capacity Across Earth, Space, and Data Sciences Tim Spuck, Director of Education & Public Engagement, Associated Universities, Inc. Gretchen Stahlman, Assistant Professor of LIS, Rutgers University (presenter) LISA IX June 15, 2021 | non_poster |
Structure Activity Relationship Analysis and Development The structure of a chemical implicitly determines its physical and chemical properties and reactivities. Structure-activity relationships (SARs) and quantitative structure–activity relationships (QSARs) are basic and theoretical models to drug research and development, which can be used to predict the physicochemical, biological, and other properties of chemicals, and guide compound optimization. The former one is an (qualitative) association between a chemical substructure and the potential of a chemical. The latter one is a mathematical model that quantitatively relates a quantitative numerical measure of chemical structure, which has been commonly used in the absence of available data for prioritization, classification, and assessment. Classical QSARs methods are commonly used to build linear SAR models for compound series and prioritize analogs. SARs has long been used to design chemicals with commercially desirable properties with expected pharmacologic and therapeutic activities. Moreover, computer-based modeling methods, as well as AI-driven approaches relating chemical structure to qualitative biological activity and quantitative biological potency have been widely applied in diverse problem settings. CD ComputaBio provides intelligent services of structure activity relationship analysis and development for our clients in different stage of drug discovery, especially for screening large numbers of chemicals and decision making during chemical optimization. Goals Identify the “key” compounds. Propose possible “hole” of the chemical scaffold. Delineate classes of active chemicals representing distinct biological and chemical mechanism domains. | non_poster |
Khiva K A R A K U M K Y Z Y L K U M Urgench TOPRAK KALA A m u Da r y a Khazarasp KOI KRYLGAN KALA GULDURSUN KALA Exploring KHOREZM Exploring KHOREZM Exploring Exploring | non_poster |
Augmenting the Perception of Other’s Anxiety with Subliminal Interfaces Alberto González Olmos, Stephen Brewster G lasgow Interactive Systems Group, School of Computing Science, University of Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK alberto.gonzalezolmos@glasgow.ac.uk stephen.brewster@glasgow.ac.uk Paste the appropriate copyright statement here. ACM now supports three different copyright statements: • ACM copyright: ACM holds the copyright on the work. This is the historical approach. • License: The author(s) retain copyright, but ACM receives an exclusive publication license. • Open Access: The author(s) wish to pay for the work to be open access. The additional fee must be paid to ACM. This text field is large enough to hold the appropriate release statement assuming it is single spaced in a sans-serif 7 point font. Every submission will be assigned their own unique DOI string to be included here. Abstract Adoptive parents often care for children with attachment problems who have had traumatic experiences and in many cases, have problems communicating their emotions. Moreover, attachment problems are intimately related with behavioural dysregulation and the development of anxiety disorders later in life. To help in the mediation of relationships, therapies such as the Video Interaction Guidance stimulate positive interaction within families. In our research, we investigate how quantified-self devices can be used in combination with multimodal interfaces to augment the perception of the internal state of a child with attachment problems who is emotionally shut down. We are interested in the use of subliminal multimodal interfaces that can be used pervasively during psychotherapeutical interventions. With such interfaces we want to enhance the throughput of physiological information that adoptive parents receive in real time from their child, who is wearing a quantified-self device. We hope that over time, adoptive parents can acquire a better understanding of the internal state of their child, which they would not be able to perceive otherwise. Author Keywords Affective computing; quantified-self; technological interventions; mental health | non_poster |
BIBLIOTECA PRISIONAL E O ENCARCERAMENTO FEMININO EM FOCO: pesquisa nos repositórios institucionais da Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo e da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais PRISON LIBRARY AND FEMALE INCARCERATION IN FOCUS: research in the institutional repositories of the Federal University of Espírito Santo and the Federal University of Minas Gerais DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11247811 1 INTRODUÇÃO A presente pesquisa, em fase inicial, apresenta os estudos da Ciência da Informação (CI) e de outras áreas do conhecimento relacionadas à biblioteca prisional e ao encarceramento feminino. A finalidade é dar visibilidade ao ambiente prisional feminino, por se tratar de um assunto pouco explorado na CI. De acordo com Nascimento (2015), quando uma pessoa comete um delito, a sociedade se utiliza da voz da mídia para declarar a sua sentença de condenação. Pelo exposto, o objetivo deste estudo é investigar o que está sendo discutido no campo científico sobre está temática, principalmente, na CI. Com objetivo geral de apresentar o quantitativo de produções científicas sobre a Biblioteca prisional e a Mulher encarcerada nos Programas de Pós-graduação nas Universidades Federais do Espírito Santo (UFES) e de Minas Gerais (UFMG). 2 FU FUNDAMENTAÇÃO TEÓRICA O marco teórico-conceitual desta pesquisa fundamenta-se, inicialmente, sobre o campo científico e a pesquisa na CI com os autores Bourdieu (1975) e | 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: Santos, J. M., & Horta, H. (2022). The effect of Strategic Research Agendas on scientific productivity across Fields of Science. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti2219). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6959920 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 |
17th RDA Plenary 2021 | non_poster |
ABSTRACT Papalele is a group of people who are routine sellers activity. They have been known to the people of Ambon Maluku City, as tough sellers since the past. The term papalele is addressed to them, more because of their local identity. Therefore, this paper wants to show that the papalele struggle to meet the demands of household economic life and the distribution of household duties for family members is inevitable. Increasing various needs of household economy, but household economy still survive. Therefore, to answer the purpose of this paper, the research method used is a qualitative approach and the type of case study research. The results of this discussion indicate that the simple daily life of the papalele seems to help explain the strength of the struggle of live. When energy and time are fully devoted to the interests of the family, at least it has formed their character to maintain the existence of the family as a form of social responsibility. Keysword: Dynamic, Economi, Household, Papalele, Income I. INTRODUCTION Maluku Province, especially in Ambon City, has a number of people who carry out economic activities as small traders. Their activity group is no different from other small traders, the group that participates in activities with local clothes and equipment that are characteristic of local Maluku people. The clothes they wear are kebaya (traditional clothing). Meanwhile, merchandise tends to be of a small scale. These traders, are housewives who also struggle to increase the family level. With a small profit per day, but they can last from generation to generation. The activity of papalele traders has emerged for a long time and has become one of the traditional activities carried out by women. Generally, Ambonese people easily distinguish papalele from traveling traders. In plain view, the trading functions carried out by the two of them are no different, both of them sell, but papalele traders are known as local traders, in the sense that they are people who come from villages around Ambon city and even in the surrounding villages. Ambon Island and Saparua Island.. Papalele as a small trader who works in public spaces. But unfortunately there are no research documents or statistical data that can identify its existence. So far there has not been a single data regarding the number of papalele in Ambon city. This limitation makes it difficult to identify whether the papalelle has increased or decreased over time. However, this does not mean that it is difficult to mathematically calculate the contribution of papalele to development. (Soegijono, 2011) in general all villages in Ambon city have community members who become papalele. If we count the average of 20 papalele in Ambon city per village, there are 600 papalele. II. LITERATURE REVIEW Household Economics and Fulfillment of Living Needs (household economics and livelihood) The activities of petty traders are inseparable from household and the fulfillment of their daily needs. The household is a social unit that appears to meet the needs of its members. That is why when a household must be supported, the household members must at least PAPALELE'S HOUSEHOLD ECONOMIC DYNAMICS IN INCREASING INCOME Simon Pieter Soegijono1, Esther Kembauw2 1Economic Faculty, Indonesian Moluccas Christian University - Ambon 2Department Social Economic, Agriculture Faculty, Pattimura University - Ambon Email: 1pietersoegijono@yahoo.com; 2ekembauw@yahoo.co.id Income to Pay for Children's Education The income from the papalele business is prioritized to pay for children's schools. A form of indirect investment. Responsibility to children is manifested through the provision of education costs that come from papalele results Division of Work in Households Even though they have worked hard, it does not mean that household duties are delegated to their husbands. Household routine tasks are the obligations of a mother. This role is usually carried out alone, starting from cookin | non_poster |
convection in low-mass stars however, the occurrence and efficiency of mixing processes beyond formal convective boundaries (overshooting) is poorly known the treatment of convection* is a long- standing and crucial deficiency in our understanding of the evolution of low- mass stars (*) macroscopic motions of matter that carry energy and constitute a very efficient mixing mechanism NASA J. Pratt overshooting region centre surface Saniya Khan | non_poster |
Designing a Prompting System to Fa- cilitate the Rehabilitation of People with Acquired Brain Injury Abstract Assistive Technologies (AT) in the form of prompting systems can help people with Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) cope with cognitive impairments and executive dysfunction. Studies, however, show several factors that impact the uptake and effectiveness of AT, indicat- ing there is room for better design. To gather require- ments for the development of such a system in a user- centred way, we held 2 focus groups with people with ABI who follow a rehabilitation programme (n=13), and 1 focus group with the professionals running the reha- bilitation programme (n=7). We examined the common injury-induced difficulties in everyday life, the standard rehabilitation practices in the field, and the use of ex- ternal aids by people with ABI. Based on the findings, we outline some initial guidelines for the design of prompting systems to improve daily functioning of peo- ple with ABI. Author Keywords Acquired brain injury; assistive technology; cognitive rehabilitation; focus group ACM Classification Keywords H.5.2 Information interfaces and presentation: User In- terfaces (User Centered Design). Paste the appropriate copyright/license statement here. ACM now sup- ports three different publication options: • ACM copyright: ACM holds the copyright on the work. This is the historical approach. • License: The author(s) retain copyright, but ACM receives an exclu- sive publication license. • Open Access: The author(s) wish to pay for the work to be open ac- cess. The additional fee must be paid to ACM. This text field is large enough to hold the appropriate release statement assuming it is single-spaced in Verdana 7 point font. Please do not change the size of this text box. Each submission will be assigned a unique DOI string to be included here. Aris Malapaschas Glasgow Interactive Systems Group, University of Glasgow School of Computing Science Aris.Malapaschas @glasgow.ac.uk Matthew Jamieson University of Glasgow Institute of Health and Wellbeing Matthew.Jamieson @glasgow.ac.uk Jonathan J. Evans University of Glasgow Institute of Health and Wellbeing jonathan.evans@glasgow.ac.uk Stephen Brewster Glasgow Interactive Systems Group, University of Glasgow School of Computing Science Stephen.Brewster @glasgow.ac.uk | non_poster |
Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 Grounding Zone Wedges, Kveithola Trough (NW Barents Sea) Michele Rebesco1, Roger Urgeles2, Asli Özmaral3 & Coribar Scientific Party (T.J.J., Hanebuth, H. Lantzsch, A. Caburlotto, T. Hörner, J., Llopart, R.G. Lucchi, L.S. Nicolaisen, G. Osti, A. Sabbatini) 1 OGS (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale), 34010 Sgonico (TS), Italy 2 Institut de Ciències del Mar (CSIC), 08003 Barcelona, Spain 3 MARUM Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Bremen, 28359 Bremen, Germany. Abstract Multibeam-bathymetric data from Kveithola Trough show a seafloor characterised by E-W trending mega-scale glacial lineations (MSGLs) overprinted by transverse grounding-zone wedges (GZWs). GZWs are thought to form by deposition of subglacial till at temporarily stable, grounded ice-sheet marine termini between successive episodic retreats (Batchelor & Dowdeswell, 2015). Sub-bottom profiles show that the present-day morphology of Kveithola Trough is largely inherited from the palaeo-seafloor topography of the GZWs, which is now draped by a deglacial to early Holocene glacimarine sediment about 15 m thick. The ice stream that produced such subglacial morphology was flowing from east to west towards the shelf edge in Kveithola Trough during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Its rapid retreat was probably associated with progressive lift-off, and successive rapid melting of grounded ice, induced by eustatic sea-level rise. Description The E-W trending Kveithola Trough in the Barents Sea (Fig. 1) shows well-preserved subglacial morphologies (Rebesco et al. 2011; Bjarnadóttir et al. 2012; Fig. 1) including GZWs and MSGLs. The GZWs, up to 70 m high, and about 15 km apart from each other, result in the axial profile of the trough resembling a succession of stairs. The GZWs extend transversely across the entire width of the trough, except for the outermost wedge at the shelf edge which is fan-shaped. They have asymmetric axial profiles, with steeper, markedly lobate, west-facing outer slopes, and more gentle eastward-dipping inner sides. The upper surface of the GZWs and the flanks of the trough have been impacted by the grounding of iceberg keels producing a vertical roughness of about 1 m. The iceberg ploughmarks are sinuous to linear in planform but can also include sharp corners or kinks along their paths. In general, the ploughmarks have trough-parallel orientations on the northern flank of the trough and along-slope beyond the shelf edge. The seafloor of the eastern (inner) side of each GZW is marked by MSGLs that are sub-parallel to the flanks of the trough and divergent in the region of the trough-mouth. The MSGLs comprise ridges and depressions 100-600 m wide, <15 m high and about 8 km long (length to width ratio >10:1). Sub-bottom profiler data (Fig. 1b) show that the transparent facies in which the GZWs and MSGLs have formed is capped by a stratified sedimentary drape. Although this drape attains a thickness of 20 ms two-way travel time (about 15 m when converted using a sound velocity of 1500 m s-1), it does not obscure the morphologies inherited from the palaeo-subglacial landforms beneath it. | non_poster |
Auteur principal : Chaire BEA Contributeurs : Marion Lévêque, Luc Mounier, Maryse Guinebritière, Laura Warin Infographie : Marion Weisslinger DOI : 10.5281/zenodo.13768891 https://chaire-bea.vetagro-sup.fr Septembre 2023 Tout savoir sur la poule pondeuse ! La poule vous paraît être un animal bête et ennuyeux ? … et pourtant ! Ses capacités cognitives pourraient vous surprendre ! Cette nouvelle fiche pédagogique est ainsi l’occasion de faire le point. Vous découvrirez que la poule est un animal social avec des besoins comportementaux spécifiques et une perception sensorielle du monde qui lui est propre ! Avec en bonus quelques petits faits amusants concernant cet animal ! Cette fiche a été réalisée avec l’aide et la relecture de Laura Warin, cheffe de projet bien-être animal à l’Itavi, et Maryse Guinebretière, chargée de projets Scientifique Santé/Bien-être Animal à l’Anses. | non_poster |
Rentz Daniel Alejandro Investigación, Análisis y Evaluación de Herramientas Basadas en Inteligencia Artificial Trabajo Práctico. | non_poster |
ISO 23494: Biotechnology – Provenance Information Model for Biological Specimen and Data R. Wittner & P. Holub & H. Müller BBMRI-ERIC, AUT J. Geiger IBDW, DE C. Goble & S. Soiland-Reyes University of Manchester, UK L. Pirredu & F. Frexia & C. Mascia & G. Zanetti CRS4, IT E. Fairweather KCL, UK H. Nakae JMAC, JPN C. Strambio & D. Grunwald University of Massachusetts, US J. Swedlow & J. Moore University of Dundee, UK Abstract Exchange of research data and samples in biomedical re- search has become a common phenomenon demanding for their effective quality assessment. At the same time, several reports address reproducibility of research, where history of biological samples (acquisition, processing, transportation, storage, and retrieval) and data history (data generation and processing) defines their fitness for purpose, and hence their quality. The project aims at developing a comprehensive W3C PROV based provenance information standard intended for the biomedical research domain. The standard is being devel- oped by the working group 5 ("data processing and integra- tion") of the ISO (International Standardisation Organisation) technical committee 276 "biotechnology". The outcome of the project will be published in parts as international stan- dards or technical specifications. The poster informs about the goals of the standardisation activity, presents the proposed structure of the standards, briefly describes its current state and outlines its future development and open issues. 1 Introduction Research in life sciences has undergone significant changes during recent years, evolving away from individual projects confined to small research groups to transnational consortia covering a wide range of techniques and expertise. At the same time several reports addressing the quality of research papers in life sciences uncovered an alarming number of ill- founded claims. The reasons for the deficiencies are diverse, with insufficient quality and documentation of the biological material used being the major issue [1,4,5]. Hence there is ur- gent need for standardized and comprehensive documentation of the whole workflow from the collection, generation, pro- cessing and analysis of the biological material to data analysis and integration. The PROV [6] family of documents serves as a current standard for provenance information used to describe the history of an object. On the other hand, as discussed in the results from EHR4CR and TRANSFoRm projects [2,3], its implementation for the biotechnology domain and the field of biomedical research in particular is still a pending issue. To address this, the International Standardisation Organisation (ISO) initiated the development of a Provenance Information Model for Biological Specimen and Data standard defining the requirements for interoperable, machine-actionable doc- umentation intended to describe the complete process chain from the source of biological material through its processing, analysis, and all steps of data generation and data processing to final data analysis. The standard is intended for implementers and suppliers of HW/SW tools used in biomedical research (e.g. lab automa- tion devices or analytical devices used for research purposes) and also for organisations adopting generated provenance (e.g. to require or use standardised tools). 2 Goals of the Standard and Its Structure The main goals of the standard are to (a) enable effective assessment of quality and fitness for purpose of the objects provided, such as biological material and data; (b) support reproducible research by exacting the capture of all relevant information; (c) track error propagation within scientific re- sults; (d) track the source of biological material in order to prevent fabrication of data and enabling notification of sub- jects in case of relevant incidental findings; (e) propagate withdrawal of or changes to an informed consent along the process chain. The proposed structure of the standard reflects the inten- tion | non_poster |
𝜈𝑒 𝜈𝜇 𝜈𝜏 Improving Non-Unitary Limits on the Tau Row Matrix Elements Using Tau Neutrino Appearance Rory Ramsden King’s College London NuPhys23, London, UK | non_poster |
Page | 1 A Turing test of urban expansion scenarios produced through machine learning Hagen-Zanker A*1, Yu J†1,2 and Hughes S‡1 and Santitissadeekorn N§3 1School of Sustainability, Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Surrey 2Institute of Geography and Sustainability, University of Lausanne 3School of Mathematics and Physics, University of Surrey GISRUK 2023 Summary Scenarios of future urban expansion are intended to be plausible: diverse to reflect future uncertainty, yet realistically depicting expansion processes. We investigated the plausibility of scenarios derived from a novel data-driven simulation approach. In a Turing-like test, experts completed a quiz which challenged them to identify the map showing true urban expansion amidst three model-generated scenarios. Across diverse expansion patterns, ranging from compact to dispersed, the experts had no significant ability to identify the true pattern. The results are supportive of the use of machine learning with dynamic models to produce convincing and wide-ranging scenarios of future urban expansion. KEYWORDS: validation, urban expansion model, scenarios, machine learning 1. Introduction In earlier work, we developed a model (Yu et al. 2021) that simulates urban expansion as a multi-scale dynamic process. We subsequently estimated the parameters of the model for multiple time periods and functional urban areas across Europe and applied cluster analysis on the estimated parameter sets (Yu et al. 2022). One aim of the cluster analysis was to establish a data-driven approach to the development of urban growth scenarios. The data-driven clusters represent substantially different, yet plausible future urbanisation patterns across the spectrum of possible developments. From the analysis four clusters emerged that present modes of expansion: compact, medium compact, medium dispersed and dispersed. The current article puts the model and approach to scenario development through a further test and investigates the plausibility of the generated scenarios. The hypothesis is that the model simulations using parameters drawn from the four emerging clusters provide plausible realisations of possible urban expansion trajectories. We will approach this with a Turing-like test by evaluating whether domain experts are able to visually differentiate between maps of true urban expansion data and model- generated data 2. Method 2.1 Quiz-based survey To develop a test of plausibility we asked experts (n = 9) to visually compare model outputs with actual * a.hagen-zanker@surrey.ac.uk † jingyan.yu@unil.ch ‡ s.hughes@surrey.ac.uk § n.santitissadeekorn@surrey.ac.uk | non_poster |
Naples 10th - 13th September 2019 COMPLESSO MONUMENTALE DI SAN LORENZO MAGGIORE PROGRAMME POSTER LIST SCIENCE AND INNOVATION FOR SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE INTENSIFICATION: THE CONTRIBUTION OF PLANT GENETICS AND BREEDING | non_poster |
Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID- 19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active. | non_poster |
4/2/24, 3:56 PM aas (iPosterSessions - an aMuze! Interactive system) https://aas243-aas.ipostersessions.com/Default.aspx?s=51-52-87-B5-82-FC-32-36-17-D4-BB-93-95-DE-3D-31&pdfprint=true&guestview=true 1/15 THE HUNT FOR BINARY STARS IN THE DARKEST GALAXIES Domani Sharkey | Josh Simon | Alex Ji California Institute of Technology | Carnegie Observatories | University of Chicago PRESENTED AT: | non_poster |
Abstract – NRM2018 Mapping alteration of dopaminergic neurons in a rat model of Parkinson Disease through the comparison of the presynaptic PET tracers, [18F]-LBT999 and 6-[18F]fluoro-L-m-tyrosine Pauline Roost, Francesco Gubinelli, Mylène Gaudin, Martine Guillermier, Noémie Cresto, Leopold Eymin, Charlène Josephine, Marie-Claude Gaillard, Alexis Bemelmans, Yann Bramoullé, Emmanuel Brouillet, Philippe Hantraye, Nadja Van Camp Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives (CEA), Direction des Recherches Fondamentales (DRF), Institut de Biologie François Jacob, MIRCen, F-92260 Fontenay-aux-Roses, France and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Paris-Sud, UMR 9199, Neurodegenerative Diseases Laboratory, F-92260 Fontenay-aux-Roses, France Introduction The pathological features of Parkinson’s Disease (PD) are mainly driven by the loss of the dopaminergic projection neurons in the substantia nigra (SN) resulting in a dopamine (DA) deficiency in the striatum [1]. We developed a pathologically relevant rodent PD model; overexpressing the mutant (A53T) human alpha-synuclein protein in the SN [2]. Our aims are triple: 1- map neuronal loss and DA deficiency over time using two different presynaptic PET tracers, 2- evaluate the respective sensitivity of each radioligand, and 3- correlate individual PET data to behavioural and histological results. Materials & Methods A total of ten rats were unilaterally injected in the SN with a viral vector (AAV2/6) overexpressing mutated (A53T) human alpha-synuclein, and were studied either at 6 weeks post-injection (6wpi, n=6, 543±36g) or 12wpi (n=4, 573±40g). PET imaging was performed using a ligand substrate for AADC, 6-[18F]fluoro-L-m-tyrosine (“FMT”, 60min acquisition, 31.3-60.8MBq; pre-treatment by IP injection of 10mg/kg benserazide 30’ before imaging [3]), or a ligand for DA transporter (DAT), [18F]- LBT999 [4] (“LBT", 90min acquisition, 40.3-63.0MBq). For behaviour, rats were subjected for 5 minutes to the cylinder test, in which contralateral and ipsilateral paw use was compared. After the in vivo studies rats were sacrificed for histological studies using tyrosine hydroxylase immunohistochemistry. From LBT and FMT PET scans, quantitative uptake images (BPnd and Ki, respectively) were calculated using Logan and Patlak graphical methods, with the cerebellum as a reference. Unilateral AAV injections allowed the contralateral striatum to serve as internal control. Paired student | non_poster |
JOURNAL OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY ISSN(Online): 2984-7117 SJIF Impact Factor |(2024): 6.879| Volume-7, Issue-12, Published |20-12-2024| 8 https://sirpublishers.org/ BUYRAKLARDA URAT TOSHLARINI XOSIL BO‘LISHI VA DAVOLASH YO‘LLARI https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14517896 Ergasheva Xonoyim Abdukaxxorovna Toshkent Tibbiyot akademiyasi Tibbiy va biologik kimyo kafedrasi assistenti Аnnotatsiya: siydik kislotasi nefrolitiazi, buyrak tosh kasalligining bir shakli, buyraklarda siydik kislotasi kristallarining to'planishi natijasida yuzaga keladi. Ushbu kristallar toshlarga to'planib, og'riqli va potentsial takrorlanadigan siydik yo'llarining obstruktsiyalariga olib kelishi mumkin. Kalit so‘zlar: siydik kislotasi, nefrolitiaz, buyrak tosh, kristallar, og'riq, potentsial, obstruktsiyalar. Резюме: Мочекислый нефролитиаз — форма почечнокаменной болезни, обусловленная накоплением кристаллов мочевой кислоты в почках. Эти кристаллы могут накапливаться в камнях, вызывая болезненные и потенциально повторяющиеся обструкции мочевыводящих путей. Ключевые слова: мочевая кислота, нефролитиаз, камни в почках, кристаллы, боль, потенциал, обструкция. Abstract: Uric acid nephrolithiasis, a form of kidney stone disease, is caused by the accumulation of uric acid crystals in the kidneys. These crystals can form stones, causing painful and potentially recurrent urinary tract obstructions. Keywords: uric acid, nephrolithiasis, kidney stones, crystals, pain, potential, obstructions. Siydik tarkibida ko'plab erigan minerallar va tuzlar mavjud. Agar siydikda ushbu minerallar va tuzlar yuqori bo'lsa, siz toshlarni hosil qilishingiz mumkin. Buyrak toshlari kichikdan boshlanishi mumkin, lekin kattalashib, hatto buyrakning ichki bo'shliq tuzilmalarini to'ldirishi mumkin. Ba'zi toshlar buyrakda qoladi va hech qanday muammo tug'dirmaydi. Ba'zida buyrak toshlari siydik pufagidan, buyrak va siydik pufagi orasidagi naychadan pastga tushishi mumkin. Agar tosh siydik pufagiga etib borsa, u siydik bilan tanadan tashqariga chiqishi mumkin. Agar tosh siydik yo'liga kirib qolsa, u buyrakdan siydik oqimini to'sib qo'yadi va og'riq keltiradi. Buyraklar va siydik tizimi | non_poster |
The BADC-CSV Format Meeting user and metadata requirements Graham A Parton, Samuel J Pepler British Atmospheric Data Centre graham.parton@stfc.ac.uk, sam.pepler@stfc.ac.uk Abstract The 2007 British Atmospheric Data Centre (BADC) Users Survey examined the skill base of the BADC’s user community. Results indicated a large proportion of users who were familiar with data held in ASCII formats such as comma-separated variables (csv) and there was a high degree of familiarity with spreadsheet programmes (e.g. Excel) for data analysis purposes. These result, combined with the experiences of the BADC staff dealing with user enquiries and assisting data suppliers in preparing data for submission, and the metadata requirements of the BADC, highlighted the need for a new ASCII format to be generated. The BADC-CSV format adheres to metadata conventions covered by the NASA-Ames and netCDF formats, the CF and Dublin Core metadata conventions, the ISO19115 standard and the metadata requirements of the BADC and its sister data centres within the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). The format meets end user and data supplier requirements by being a native format for spreadsheet software as well as other commonly used data production and analysis tools (e.g. IDL, MatLab). This paper presents the requirements for the format resulting from the 2007 user survey and data centre requirements, describes the structure of the format and demonstrates the format through short examples. Finally ongoing work to further develop the format is discussed. Keywords: Metadata standards, new format, netCDF, CF conventions, csv, ASCII, guidelines, 1 Introduction : Format History: An Alternative to NASA-Ames In 2007 the British Atmospheric Data Centre (BADC) undertook a user survey to determine the skill base within the BADC user community. Results from the survey (figure 1) indicated that within the user community there was a high proportion of users able to handle ASCII files (such as csv data) and a high degree of familiarity with spreadsheet programmes such as Excel. 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% CSV/tab- delimited/Other ASCII Grib HDF NetCDF Nasa Ames PP Binary Use all the time Proficient user I am OK with it I barely understand it Never used and/or never heard of Did not answer | non_poster |
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338633406 Smoking prevalence and people's lack of knowledge about long-term tobacco use Poster · January 2020 DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.35062.14401 CITATIONS 0 1 author: Petru Emil Muntean Spitalul Judetean de Urgenta Arges 14 PUBLICATIONS 0 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Petru Emil Muntean on 16 January 2020. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. | non_poster |
HEAVY ION THERAPY RESEARCH INTEGRATION PLUS WWW.HITRIPLUS.EU WWW.HITRIPLUS.EU HITRIplus partners This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 101008548 A NEXT GENERATION TOOL AGAINST CANCER | non_poster |
A Change Management Dashboard for the SIEMA Malaria Surveillance Infrastructure Jon Haël Brenas1, Mohammad Sadnan Al-Manir2, Christopher J. O. Baker2, and Arash Shaban-Nejad1 1 The University of Tennessee Health Science Center- Oak Ridge National Laboratory Center for Biomedical Informatics, Department of Pediatrics, Memphis, Tennessee, USA {jhael, ashabann}@uthsc.edu 2 Department of Computer Science, University of New Brunswick, Saint John, Canada {sadnan.almanir, bakerc}@unb.ca Abstract. Malaria is an infectious disease that remains a major cause of death in low-income developing countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) has set a target for its eradication by 2030. Among the issues that will have to be solved to achieve this goal is interoperability between the various malaria data sources. This can be achieved through the adoption of semantic web service infrastructure to provide access to the data while abstracting its structure. Given that data sources, semantic metadata descriptions and ontologies evolve over time, it remains a challenge to propagate changes, ensuring services continue to be discoverable, while at the same time keep the services operational. We propose a dashboard to detect, identify, and classify changes based on their likely functional impact on data access, and propose steps to maintain infrastructure, either rebuilding or retiring services from a registry. 1 Introduction Malaria is an infectious disease caused by a parasitic microorganism and considered as one of the major causes of death in low-income developing countries (LIDCs) [1]. In 2015 [2], there were 212 million new cases of malaria, and more than 4 million malaria deaths, worldwide. African countries suffer most, bearing almost 90% of the burden in terms of global cases and deaths. In order to control and ultimately eradicate malaria, access to an efficient real-time surveillance based on consistent integrated data sources is of utmost importance. These data sources contain different types of data ranging from drug efficacy to patient profiles, vector species, climate, and location specific infection data. These heterogeneous data sources are distributed globally. The Semantics, Interoperability, and Evolution for Malaria Analytics (SIEMA) project aims to use ontologies (e.g. IDOMAL [3]) to integrate knowledge from domains of interest and combine malaria specific data or information from multiple heterogeneous sources as well as support interoperability between stakeholder organizations within and across different enterprises and geographies. | non_poster |
The EOSC Future project is co-funded by the European Union Horizon Programme call INFRAEOSC-03-2020 - Grant Agreement Number 101017536 EOSC Future Train-the-Trainer, Module 3, Lesson 1 A brief overview of ethical and legal Issues to consider in relation to the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) Louise Bezuidenhout reviewed and edited by the EOSC Future WP9 Train-the-Trainer team Open Science Open Science is commonly defined as the movement to make scientific research and its dissemination accessible to all levels of society, amateur or professional. Open science is transparent and accessible knowledge that is shared and developed through collaborative networks. Figure 1 Open science overview (Bueno de la Fuente, Gema: What is Open Science? FOSTER). Open Science is best understood as an umbrella term for a number of different movements. Many are well-established and will be familiar to researchers, such as Open Access and FOSS (free and open-source software), but others like Open Notebooks are newer and still being integrated into research practices. All movements are united by common goals to make scientific research, data and dissemination accessible to all levels of an inquiring society. The Open Science movements are all motivated by the common ethical norms of beneficence, non-maleficence, justice and equity. | non_poster |
Poster: Tight Short-Lived Signatures Arup Mondal Ashoka University Sonipat, Haryana, India arup.mondal phd19@ashoka.edu.in Ruthu Hulikal Rooparaghunath Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands r.rooparaghunath@student.vu.nl Debayan Gupta Ashoka University Sonipat, Haryana, India debayan.gupta@ashoka.edu.in Abstract—A Time-lock puzzle (TLP) sends information into the future: a predetermined number of sequential computations must occur (i.e., a predetermined amount of time must pass) to retrieve the information, regardless of parallelization. Buoyed by the excitement around secure decentralized applications and cryptocurrencies, the last decade has witnessed numerous con- structions of TLP variants and related applications (e.g., cost- efficient blockchain designs, randomness beacons, e-voting, etc.). In this poster, we first extend the notion of TLP by formally defining the “time-lock public key encryption” (TLPKE) scheme. Next, we introduce and construct a “tight short-lived signatures” scheme using our TLPKE. Furthermore, to test the validity of our proposed schemes, we do a proof-of-concept implementation and run detailed simulations. Index Terms—Time-Lock Puzzle, Short-Lived Signatures. I. INTRODUCTION A short-lived signature (SLS) provides a verifier with two possibilities: either a generated signature σ on m is correct, or a user has expended a minimum predetermined amount of sequential work (T steps or time) to forge the signature. In other words, the signatures created remain valid for a short period of time T. Formally, we define the unforgeability period as the time starting from when a signer creates a signature for a message using their private signing information (or key) and the Sign algorithm. Once the unforgeability period T has elapsed, anyone can compute a forged signature using some public signing information and the ForgeSign algorithm. Recall that any party can compute a forged signature (using ForgeSign) after the unforgeability period T has passed. However, there is no guarantee that a party cannot generate a forged signature in advance. To ensure this, we use the same model used in [1]. The signature incorporates a random beacon value to ensure it was not created before a specific time T0. Suppose a verifier observes the signature within ˆT units of time after T0. In this case, they will believe it is a valid signature if ˆT < T because it would be impossible to have forged the signature within that time period. Once ˆT ≥T, the signature is no longer convincing as it may have been constructed through forgery. Brief Concurrent Work: Recently, Arun et al. [1] studied the variants notion of short-lived cryptographic primitives, i.e., short-lived proofs and signatures. Similar to our work, they make use of sequentially-ordered computations (T-sequential computation) as a means to enforce time delay during which signatures are unforgeable but become forgeable afterward ((1+c)·T-sequential computations). In this work, we use the same models as used in [1], however, we define and construct tight short-lived signatures, where the forged signatures can be generated in time not much more than sequentially bound T. In other words, tight short-lived signatures ensure that forged signatures can be generated in exactly T sequential computations. TABLE I: Complexity comparison of SLS schemes. Paper Setup & Sign Forge Sign Verify Tight Arun et al. [1] poly(λ) O((1 + c) · T ) VDF ([2], [3]) No Algorithm poly(λ) O(T ) O(1) Yes Short-lived cryptographic primitives have many real-life use cases; we refer to [1] for a detailed discussion of its applica- tions. Our main contributions are summarised as follows: • First, we extend the time-lock puzzle [4] by formally defining the “time-lock public key encryption” (TLPKE) scheme, and demonstrate a construction using a re- peated squaring assumption in a group of unknown order (Sec. III). • We introduce and construct a “tight short-lived signature” scheme from our TLPKE sche | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Membrana Janus: sistema bioinspirado de condensación de humedad relativa Lizbeth Carreto-Flores*1 iD, Ángel Sulim Nophal-Carrillo2 iD, Joel Castro-Ramírez2 iD, Juan Crescenciano Cruz-Victoria2 iD 1Maestría en Ingeniería, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala, México. 2Programa académico de Ingeniería mecatrónica, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala, México *Email: lizbeth.carreto@uptlax.edu.mx 10 de julio de 2024 DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12704293 Editado por: Patricia Rodríguez-Cuamatzi (Programa Académico de Ingeniería Química, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala). Revisado por: Alma Rosa Netzahuatl-Muñoz (Programa Académico de Ingeniería en Biotecnología, Universidad Politécnica de Tlaxcala). Apoyo en la maquetación: Luz del Carmen Cortés Reyes (Estudiante de Bioquímica Clínica, Universidad de las Américas Puebla, Puebla, México). Colección de ESMOS | non_poster |
https://chaire-bea.vetagro-sup.fr/en/ May 2022 Species sheet – All about pigs! Author: Chaire BEA Contributing authors: Lydiane Aubé, Estelle Mollaret, Alice de Boyer des Roches, Céline Tallet, Valérie Courboulay, CNR Infographie : Marion Weisslinger DOI : 10.5281/zenodo.12913010 You probably know that pigs like to wallow, but do you know why ? Did you know that pigs have an excellent sense of smell and very advances cognitive abilities ? Thanks to this new species sheet, you will soon know everything about pigs! | non_poster |
EUROPROwebs Labelling and Tagging The verbal and visual components of the H2020 websites selected were downloaded and saved into plain text documents. The verbal texts were specifically stored as txt-documents, so that they could be processed and worked upon with quantitative software tools (e.g. AntConc, Wordsmith, #LancsBox; UAM Corpus Tool, SketchEngine). A master document was saved to include the whole content of the website (labelled NAMEOFTHEPROJECT). Individual documents were also saved corresponding to the most common and salient web sections or pages (e.g. Homepage; About us; Partners; Contact). Unifying labels were agreed to group the sections and pages from the different project websites, regardless of their original name in the website menu in question. Table 1 below illustrates the labels that we chose to name the documents of the EUROPROwebs Digital Corpus, as well as the diversity of original names that web sections and pages were given by the international research projects: Labels to name the sections of international project websites HOME Home; Homepage; Ø ABOUT About; About the project; About Us; Mission; Project; Concept PARTNERS Partners; Consortium; Team; Researchers NEWS News; Events; News and Events; Blog; Newsletter WORK Work Packages; Demo Sites; How we work; Model OUT Output; Publications; Materials; Media; Outlets; Guidelines; Deliverables NET Networking; Participate; Get involved; Sister projects In order to organize and store the documents from the Internet, specific labels were chosen to indicate the prominence and place of the corresponding sections within the international project website they are housed in. Table 2 highlights the three main options we came across in our corpus: | non_poster |
Vilnius University Press | non_poster |
XXIIIrd International Biometric Conference Montréal, Québec, Canada July 16 — 21, 2006 IBC2006 Program www.ibc2006.org This conference brings together statisticians and others interested in the development and application of statistical and mathematical methods for the biological sciences. | non_poster |
Footer – Please leave the footer blank Interpolating (and extrapolating) 3D turtle programs in Beetle Blocks Ken Kahn, toontalk@gmail.com Department of Education, University of Oxford, 15 Norham Gardens, Oxford, OX2 6PY Abstract (Demonstration) Turtle programs can be treated as objects to manipulate. In this demo a program takes two turtle programs as input and creates a new program that is the interpolation between the input programs. An input of .25, for example, will behave like one-fourth of the first program and three-fourths of the second. An input greater than 1 will extrapolate beyond the second program in the direction from the first program. This idea was explored in (Kahn 2007) for two-dimensional turtle programs. Here we generalise it for Beetle Blocks (Romagosa et al 2016), a 3D version of Snap! (Harvey & Mönig 2010). Keywords Program interpolation; Snap!; Turtle programming; 3D Turtles; Beetle Blocks; Codification; Interpolating and extrapolating between circles, stars, and pentagons | non_poster |
RELATO DE EXPERIÊNCIA: GINÁSTICA RÍTMICA NA ESCOLA PROFESSORA HADLA FERES EXPERIENCE REPORT: RHYTHMIC GYMNASTICS AT ESCOLA PROFESSORA HADLA FERES Professor Especialista Vilmar Rodrigues dos Santos Escola Estadual Professora Hadla Feres Faculdade Capital Federal – FECAF 10.5281/zenodo.14254708 Resumo A prática de modalidades esportivas no âmbito escolar geralmente nos remete aquelas mais praticadas como as coletivas. Quanto as modalidades individuais, temos uma diferenciação em modalidades como a Ginástica Rítmica. O fato de trabalhar com a disciplina de Ginástica Geral no ensino Superior no curso de Educação Física e os conteúdos voltados para a Ginástica Rítmica feminina e masculina motivou a experiência de trabalhar com as turmas de Educação Física escolar a referida modalidade. O conteúdo já é trabalhado em aulas regulares de Educação Física. Apesar disso, durante as aulas de Educação Física, os alunos, principalmente os meninos, ficam curiosos e até surpresos em ver um professor apresentando os movimentos da GR. Nessas aulas são apresentados aparelhos, as competições e coreografias, principalmente em vídeos. Nas aulas de GR os alunos conhecem a história da modalidade, regras e competições, além de conhecerem a Ginástica Rítmica masculina, ainda pouco conhecida e valorizada no Brasil. O objetivo desse trabalho foi o de apresentar mais uma possibilidade de trabalho diferenciado nas aulas de Educação Física, num primeiro momento com as meninas. Não houve a intenção de promover a competição entre as alunas participantes, mas o desejo em participar de uma modalidade que até então elas conheciam por vídeos e apresentações em Competições como Jogos Pan Americanos e Olimpíadas. A experiência foi positiva, haja visto que, além de promover um engajamento por parte das alunas participantes, despertou o interesse por outros alunos, inclusive dos meninos em participar dessa modalidade. Com isso a intenção é a de ampliar o acesso aos alunos interessados com a possibilidade de a partir daí, montar uma equipe que | non_poster |
Unconference Key takeaways Kahoot! for schools Unconference: key takeaways Top tips and tricks for creating and playing All about the Kahoot! app Best practices for using Kahoot! for formative assessment Get K!reative: making the most out of the new creator Go Pro: all the benefits for a Kahoot! Pro subscription Kahoot! Certified: our free PD program just got renewed 1 2 6 10 12 14 17 Thanks for attending the first Kahoot! for schools Unconference! We hope you enjoyed the sessions and got some inspiration for ways to use Kahoot! this new school year. In this document, you’ll find a short summary of the key takeaways that you can print out or share with other teachers from your school: ▶ ▶Top tips and tricks for creating and playing Kahoot! ▶ ▶All about the Kahoot! app: challenge mode for homework, smart practice, and more ▶ ▶Best practices of using Kahoot! for formative assessment ▶ ▶Walkthrough of the new kahoot creator with new media and question types ▶ ▶Overview of all the benefits you can get with a Pro subscription ▶ ▶Introduction of Kahoot! Certified, our free professional development program You can also find the recording of our Unconference in our YouTube channel, if you’d like to revisit some of these sessions in the future. | non_poster |
Which chromatic light combinations are ideal for hospitality spaces? Markus Reisinger - University of Technology, Delft, and Philips Research Europe, Eindhoven, The Netherlands, +31 (0)40 27 47954, m.reisinger@tudelft.nl Ana Huedo - Philips Research Europe, Eindhoven, The Netherlands Abstract Chromatic light is used increasingly often in buildings for the purpose of positively influencing the ambience of a space. For the hospitality domain we studied chromatic light preferences for different types of space, ranging from a restaurant to a hotel room. We were able to confirm in this study that preferences for colors of chromatic light depend on the room function. For selected room types from the hospitality domain ideal solutions for chromatic light combinations are described using semantic differentials. Conference theme: Design for hospitality Keywords: Interior lighting, Chromatic light, Environmental preference | non_poster |
Nurturing the career of clinician-scientists in a research institute Michela G. Bertero, Gemma Llaverias – August Pi i Sunyer Biomedical Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain Clinician-scientists are unique professional profiles combining clinical expertise with knowledge in research, to develop high-quality care that is founded on deep understanding of molecular and cellular mechanisms of the disease. The Barcelona Clínic Hospital has an historical commitment to research, with physicians donating a fixed percentage of their salary to create a common fund to support research careers. The August Pi i Sunyer Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBAPS) was created in 1996 to answer the vision by well-renown clinicians that medicine requires research. IDIBAPS mission is “from knowledge to cure”. | non_poster |
. . . . YOUNG PEOPLE AND COVID-19: CHALLENGES AND RESILIENT PRACTICES DURING THE PANDEMIC Key Points The emergency caused by the spread of COVID-19 has put a series of issues in the spotlight: the lack of information about the situations of women and young people, gender inequality, and how economic, social, and health measures affect people. There is an urgent need to educate people on the realities experienced by women and young people so that their aƳention is tended to in institutional response measures to the pandemic. Mental health, education, and food security are at the center of most of the challenges young people have experienced during the pandemic as a result of the physical isolation measures that have been put in place. Despite the adversities posed by the pandemic and the measures being taken by authorities, young people, their families, and communities have sought the assistance of others and depended on solidarity strategies to mitigate the impact of the situation. You can read our brief assessment "Understanding Teenagers' and Young Women's Resilient Experiences and Practices during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Colombia" at www.profamilia.org.co. Recommendations for local and national authorities are based on the recognition of human rights and sustainable development goals as guiding beacons for action in mental health, education, food security, migration, livelihood, health, sexuality and reproduction, security and protection, mobility, domestic coexistence and early marriage; issues explored and addressed by research paƱicipants. PaƱicipants provided proposals and advice to other young people and communities on what coping mechanisms have worked for them in addressing the pandemic's challenges. . | non_poster |
Uso de las Herramientas Digitales en la Educación Híbrida CECyTE Guanajuato | non_poster |
2 Analysis of US phase 3 ClinicalTrials.gov records (n=5051; time frame: 2002 to 2014) Jorge H. Ramírez Profesor Universidad del Valle Ramirez, Jorge H (2014): Analysis of US phase 3 ClinicalTrials.gov records (n=5051; time frame: 2002 to 2014). figshare. http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1194627 | non_poster |
DF15 III 6th International Dietary Fibre Conference DF15 1-3 June 2015 Paris, France BOOK OF ABSTRACTS We would like to thank all participants at the Conference for helping making this event such a big success! | non_poster |
Mapping the space between buildings using Open Street Map Obi Thompson Sargoni, Hannah Gumble, Nicolas Palominos The Bartlett Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London Defining Streets (a manifesto) In urban areas buildings should be accessible by foot or wheelchair. The spaces between buildings should provide space and infrastructure suitable to these modes. Digital representations of this infrastructure should help indicate the extent to which this objective is met. Streets and Sustainability The sustainable mobility paradigm1 creates demand for spatial information by emphasising the links between land use and transport planning. For example, the link and place function2 categorisation of urban roads highlights the role of roads as places in themselves, increasing the need to understand public space design and features of the urban realm encompassed in the space “between buildings”3. Furthermore, emerging transport innovations are increasing the demand for diverse high- resolution geographic information. The introduction of single rider vehicles (micromobility) and increased transport network connectivity through mobility-as-a-services (MaaS) platforms exemplify such innovations. The resulting diversified use of streetspace creates competing demands, motivating the need to measure streetspace. 1. Banister, D. "The sustainable mobility paradigm." Transport policy 15.2 (2008) 2. Jones, P., Boujenko, N., & Marshall, S. (2007). “Link & Place—A guide to street planning and design” Landor. 3. Gehl, Jan. “Life between buildings”. Vol. 23. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1987 4. Aderson, J et al. ‘Corporate Editors in the Evolving Landscape of OpenStreetMap’ ’, ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, 8(5), p. 232 Streets in Open Street Map OSM recommends a hierarchy for defining pedestrian routes. The overarching tag “highway”=”footway” should be applied to all pedestrian specific routes. The more specific “footway”=“sidewalk” tag identifies routes along sidewalks/pavements. Geometries with this tag map the ‘pavement centre line’. Alternatively, road centre line geometries can be assigned the “sidewalk”= “both|left|right|no” tags, indicating the availability of pedestrian infrastructure without adding geometries to show its location. Whilst a street can be represented by a one-dimensional road centre line geometry, understanding a ‘place’ effectively requires capturing activities across two and three dimensions. Furthermore, one-dimension representations are insufficient for assessing increasingly contested urban street space allocation. Only pavement centre line geometries, associated with the tag “footway”=“sidewalk”, extend the one-dimensional representation of streets by distinguishing between sides of the road. We make an initial assessment of the availability of pavement centre line geometries in OSM using a sample of 99 cities worldwide and compare this to the coverage of all ‘footways’ and of road centre lines (RCL) with ‘sidewalk’ tags. For each city we calculate the coverage of footways and sidewalk tagged geometries by dividing the total length of these geometries by twice the total length of the walkable road network, also downloaded from OSM. obi.sargoni.18@ucl.ac.uk hannah.gumble.17@ucl.ac.uk n.palominos@ucl.ac.uk Walkable Road Centre Line Geometries Pavement Centre Lines Road Centre Lines with Sidewalks ["highway"]["area"!~"yes"] ["highway"!~"abandoned|bus_guideway|construction| cycleway|motor|planned|platform| proposed|raceway|pedestrian|footway"] [“footway”!~ “sidewalk”] ["foot"!~"no"]["service"!~"private"] “footway”=“sidewalk” “sidewalk”= “both|left|right”] Access Movement Public Realm The spaces ‘between’ buildings. Pavement Centre Lines: ‘Sidewalks’ Walking routes: ’Footways’ Function Infrastructure Mapping Region N Cities Footways Coverage Pavement Centre Line Coverage Road Centre Line with Sidewalks Coverage US + Canada 57 0.124 0.084 0.042 Europe 18 0.181 0.023 0.063 Brazil 10 0. | non_poster |
Niraparib treatment for people with BRCA-mutated ovarian cancer: review of clinical data and therapeutic context Authors: Antonio González-Martín,1 Ursula A Matulonis,2 Jacob Korach,3 Mansoor R Mirza,4 Kathleen N Moore,5 Xiaohua Wu6, Whitney York7, Divya Gupta8, Stanislav Lechpammer8*, and Bradley J Monk9 1Grupo Español de Investigación en Cáncer de Ovario (GEICO), the Medical Oncology Department, Clínica Universidad de Navarra, Madrid, Spain and Program in Solid Tumors, Center for Applied Medical Research (CIMA), Madrid, Spain; 2Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA; 3Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel; 4Rigshospitalet Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark; 5Stephenson Cancer Center at the University of Oklahoma Health Science Center, Oklahoma City, OK and Sarah Cannon Research Institute, Nashville, TN, USA; 6Department of Gynecological Oncology, Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center, Shanghai, China; 7GlaxoSmithKline, Upper Providence, PA, USA; 8GlaxoSmithKline, Waltham, MA, USA; 9HonorHealth Research Institute, University of Arizona, Creighton University, Phoenix, USA. *Current affiliation: ImmunityBio, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. of people with ovarian cancer have a change in their DNA (a mutation) in a gene called BRCA (pronounced brak-uh) which increases their chances of getting cancer. About 25 % When the BRCA gene is mutated, it means the body's ability to repair damaged DNA does not work as well. Damaged DNA that does not get repaired works differently to normal DNA and it can cause cells in the body to divide faster and uncontrollably, which can cause a tumor to form. What is the aim of this article? What are BRCA mutations and why are they important in ovarian cancer? The aim of this summary is to inform/educate people with ovarian, fallopian tube, and/or primary peritoneal cancer (referred to here as ovarian cancer) and their caregivers, patient advocates, and health care professionals, about the benefits of niraparib treatment in BRCA-mutated ovarian cancer. Somatic mutations The mutation can happen during a person's lifetime and is only found in tumor cells. 2 A BRCA mutation, like other gene changes, can happen in two different ways. Germline mutations The mutation can be inherited from a person's mother or father and is found in all of the cells in the body. 1 This is a summary of an article published in Future Oncology, and can be downloaded for free at https://www.futuremedicine.com/doi/10.2217/fon-2022-0206 | non_poster |
Opolanie świętują wstąpienie Polski do Unii Europejskiej Fot. Jerzy Stemplewski Zapraszamy w podróż po Opolskiem przez ostatnie dwie dekady po wejściu do Wspólnoty Europejskiej. Pamiętamy ogromny entuzjazm i oczekiwania Opolan, jakie towarzyszyły wstąpieniu do Unii Europejskiej. Dzisiaj możemy ocenić i podsumować, jak zmienił się nasz region przez te ostatnie 20 lat. Pokażemy Pań stwu wybrane realizacje, które powstały dzięki unij nym funduszom. Pomagają nam one w codziennym życiu w obszarze zdrowia i opieki, edukacji, nowych technologii i rozwoju gospodarczego regionu. Od mo dernizacji infrastruktury, przez wsparcie przedsiębior czości, po projekty edukacyjne – Unia Europejska była partnerem, który umożliwił tworzenie nowoczesnej i zrównoważonej przyszłości. Stopniowe zmiany na lepsze jakości naszego życia we wspólnej Europie można odnieść do słów Roberta Schumana, które stanowiły fundamenty Unii Europej skiej. W Deklaracji Schumana z 9. maja 1950 r. czytamy bowiem, że: „Europa nie powstanie od razu ani w całości: będzie powstawała przez konkretne realizacje, tworząc najpierw rzeczywistą solidarność”. Prezentujemy Państwu przykładowe projekty, które przyczyniły się do rozwoju regionu opolskiego. Zapra szamy do odkrywania historii, świadectw oraz rezulta tów działań podejmowanych przez mieszkańców wo jewództwa opolskiego. Wystawa „Tworząc rzeczywistą solidarność” ukazuje, jak za sprawą wspólnych wysił ków, determinacji i wsparcia z Unii Europejskiej, region opolski przekształcił się, stając się dynamicznym obsza rem rozwoju. Cieszmy się razem sukcesami, które są czę ścią dziedzictwa naszego województwa. Andrzej Buła Swoimi opiniami podzielili się: Andrzej Buła, Anna Górka, Tomasz Hanzel, Zbigniew Kubalańca, Joanna Łaba, Dariusz Madera, Szymon Ogłaza, Przemysław Pospieszyński, Małgorzata Wysdak Wystawę przygotowali: Sebastian Ruszała, dr Aleksandra Starczewska-Wojnar, Andrzej Sznejweis, Maria Szwed, Bartosz Wojnar i Wojciech Wojnar Patronat honorowy: Marszałek Województwa Opolskiego Projekt sfinansowany z budżetu Województwa Opolskiego Tworząc rzeczywistą solidarność w województwie opolskim – 20 lat Polski w Unii Europejskiej | non_poster |
Giada Genua, Università degli Studi di Palermo Donatella Randazzo, INAF A DATABASE OF THE PALERMO ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY’S LIBRARY CONSERVATION PROJECT ON FONDO PIAZZI LISA IX: Multidimensional Astronomy Librarianship. From Open Science to the Preservation of Astronomical Heritage | non_poster |
Multiwavelength analysis of galaxies’ structure to unveil quenching signatures Paola Dimauro [paoladimauro@on.br] E. Daddi, R.Dupke, A.Cortesi, A.Cattaneo, F.Caro, R.Gonzalez Delgado, M. Huertas-Company | non_poster |
Lignin polyol in production of oil based polyurethane elastomers and rigid foams Tomaš Vlček1, Aiga Paberza2, Mikelis Kirpluks3, Ugis Cabulis4 1 Research scientist at SYNPO, akciová společnost,S. K. Neumanna 1316, 532 07 Pardubice, Czech Republic, tomas.vlcek@synpo.cz 2 Assistant of Polymer laboratory of Latvian State Institute of Wood Chemistry, Dzerbenes 27, Riga, Latvia, LV-1006, aiga.paberza@gmail.com 3 Assistant of Polymer laboratory of Latvian State Institute of Wood Chemistry, Dzerbenes 27, Riga, Latvia, LV-1006, mkirpluks@edi.lv 4 Head of Polymer laboratory of Latvian State Institute of Wood Chemistry, Dzerbenes 27, Riga, Latvia, LV-1006, cabulis@edi.lv Introduction Rigid polyurethane (PU) foams and PU elastomers belong to a group of products that are widely used in construction, automotive, thermal insulation etc. Nowadays, due to economical and environmental concerns, it is very actual and per- spective to replace petrochemical polyols by renewable biomass as example castor oil, tall oil, rapeseed, sunflower, soya oil, of which is possible to obtain polyol component that are suita- ble for production of various PU materials. Another possibility to increase renewable material content in PU foam and elastomer production is to apply lignin as co-polyol or/and filler. Lignin (from Latin lignum which means wood) isolated from the waste biomass is a natural polyol of a polyphenolic structure available in the form of a dark brown powder that is partially soluble in organic solvents. From chemical point of view, lignin is composed of car- bon, hydrogen and oxygen in different proportions; lignin contains hydroxyl, mehoxyl, car- bonyl and carboxyl functional groups in various amounts depending on its botanic origin. Hydroxyl groups and free positions in the aromatic ring determine reactivity of lignin and make it applicable in macromolecular chemistry [1]. The aim of this study was to varify applicability of lignin as a co-polyol in a solvent free production of castor oil based PU elastomers and tall oil amide based rigid PU foams. Tensile strength, toughness and surface hardness of PU elastomers and correlation between lignin content and closed cell content, density and compressive strengths for rigid PU foams were investigated Experimental In this work we studied the potential applicability of lignin (OH# = 120 mg KOH/g, A.V. = 74.2 mg KOH/g) (CIMV, France) as a co-polyol in a solvent free production of castor oil (OH# = 150 mg KOH/g, A.V. = 1.7 mg KOH/g) based PU elastomers and tall oil amide ((OH+NH)# = 286 mg KOH/g; A.V. = 4.4 mg KOH/g; H2O = 0.14 wt. %) based rigid PU foams. Prior to the synthesis we first prepared fine dispersion of powdery Kraft lignin in cas- tor oil and tall oil amide. Then we diluted the prepared up to 50 % dispersions in excessive amount of corresponding oil polyol and amide and in case of the foam preparation we added surfactants, catalysts and blowing agents. For foam production we made mixtures with differ- ent lignin content (0-50 wt. % in tall oil polyol) and reacted with polymeric 4,4'- | non_poster |
TATA CARA PENYELESAIAN PERKARA PIDANA FAHMI ARDIYANTO (1311800149) KKN Desa Wonomerto | non_poster |
www.helmholtz.de Sichtbarkeit und FAIRness von Forschungssoftware erhöhen: das Research Software Directory Dr. Christian Meeßen1, Martin Hammitzsch1, Dr. Uwe Konrad2 dini Workshop „Forschungssoftware managen“ Stuttgart, 16. September 2022 DOI 10.5281/zenodo.7083034 1) Helmholtz Zentrum Potsdam, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam GFZ 2) Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) Shared under CC BY 4.0\ | non_poster |
Understanding urban inequality and scaling law: A human mobility perspective Qi-Li Gao∗1, Yikang Wang†1 and Chen Zhong‡1 1Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London GISRUK 2023 Summary Existing research mainly examined the urban scaling laws of social inequality based on income variable. Other forms of socio-spatial inequalities and their relationship with population size have not been well understood. Because of the powerful ability of human mobility in revealing socio-spatial inequality and the availability of data sources, this study extends the literature by introduced three types of mobility indicators (i.e., number of activity points, radius of gyration and self-containment). The results show that different characterisation of inequality present different spatial patterns and lead to different scaling laws. Overall, the inequalities in terms of the examined mobility dimensions don’t scale super-linearly with the population size, suggesting the complex nature of urban systems and the social phenomenon. KEYWORDS: urban inequality, scaling law, human mobility, gini. 1 Introduction Socio-spatial inequality, describing unequal access to urban resources and opportunities, has been an essential concern for urban policies. An increased inequality has been witnessed worldwide with social polarization and globalisation (Tammaru et al., 2020). Reducing inequality has become one of the key Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 10). It is believed that inequality is particularly high in large cities. For example, a positive relationship between city size and income inequality was observed (Baum-Snow and Pavan, 2013). The evidence mainly came from income based on census data and the Gini coefficient. Due to the limited fine-grain data, the other forms of socio-spatial inequalities and urban scaling theories have not been extensively studied. In this study, we aim to answer three key questions to fill the above-mentioned gaps. • How to measure urban inequality from the human mobility perspective. ∗qili.gao@ucl.ac.uk †yikang.wang.21@ucl.ac.uk ‡c.zhong@ucl.ac.uk | non_poster |
Dutch Heart Foundation The Dutch Heart Foundation has been committed for almost 60 years to a healthy heart. Heart and circulatory diseases are the second leading cause of death. 1.7 million people are living with a heart or circulatory condition Mission Dutch Heart Foundation: A healthy heart for all, now and in the future Our ambition for 2030 • A better heart health. • More people are healthy. • People with heart and circulatory diseases stay as healthy as possible. How are we going to achieve that? • A healthier living environment to prevent heart and circulatory diseases. In everything we do, we are mindful of the differences between people. For example, variations between men and women and distinctions caused by factors such as income and cultural background. All driven by the ambition to improve heart health in the Netherlands. • Detect people with increased risk of heart and circulatory diseases as early as possible and encourage them to lead healthy lives. • Earlier recognition of heart and circulatory diseases. • Treat patients with cardiovascular diseases faster and better. • Rapid response in emergency situations related to heart and circulatory diseases. Dutch Heart Foundation | non_poster |
Children and Covid-19: A conversation event research gallery Thursday 3rd June 2021, 1 – 3pm via ZOOM Live twitter feed: Twitter hashtag: #CCCE21 Gallery Room 1: Children’s voices Poster 1 Coronavirus and my life: What children say Organisation Children’s Research Centre at The Open University, Children Heard Contact: crc@open.ac.uk Twitter: @OpenUni_CRC Poster 2 Stay Home Stories Organisation Queen Mary University of London, Museum of the Home, University of Liverpool, Birkbeck University, Royal Geographical Society Contact: Jacqueline.Waldock@liverpool.ac.uk Twitter: @stayhomestories Website: www.stayhomestories.co.uk | non_poster |
International Journal of Education, Social Science & Humanities. Finland Academic Research Science Publishers ISSN: 2945-4492 (online) | (SJIF) = 8.09 Impact factor Volume-12| Issue-12| 2024 Published: |22-12-2024| 630 Publishing centre of Finland ETHERIFICATION, OXIDATION, ALKYLATION AND SKELETAL TRANSFORMATIONS OF ECDYSTEROIDS https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14527081 Soatboyeva Mukhayyo Master, Karakalpak State University, Nukus, Karakalpakstan Abstract Phytoecdysteroids (PEs) are naturally occurring polyhydroxylated compounds with a structure similar to that of insect molting hormone and the plant hormone brassinosteroids. PEs have a four-ringed skeleton composed of 27, 28, 29, or 30 carbon atoms (derived from plant sterols). The carbon skeleton of ecdysteroid is known as cyclopentanoperhydrophenanthrene and has a β-sidechain on C-17. ECs are polar steroids, and their solubility is identical to that of sugar molecules; thus, they are lipophilic and soluble in aqueous mediums. However, mammalian steroidal hormones are relatively non-polar and have variable structures. Keywords phytoecdysteroids, ecdysteroids, etherification, ecdysone, 20- hydroxyecdysteroid. 1. Introduction The name ecdysteroids (ECs) originates from the Ancient Greek word ecdysis, which means ―stripping‖, ‗‗the shedding of an exoskeleton in insects‖. Butenandt and Karlson [1] isolated the first EC—ecdysone—from silkworm pupae. Later, its structure was reported via X-ray crystallography [2]. ECs are steroidal hormones initially found in animals that control insect molting or ecdysis and other important metamorphotic processes in arthropods [3]. ECs have a polyhydroxylated four- ringed skeleton bearing 27–30 carbon atoms derived from cholesterol or other sterols. Depending on the natural source, ECs are subdivided into three groups: phytoecdysteroids (PEs), zooecdysteroids, and mycoecdysteroids. The naturally occurring ECs found in plants are differentiated from the ECs found in animals. However, 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-HE) is the most common and widely used [4,5,6,7]. Many ECs are present in plants and animals, such as 20-HE, ecdysone, ajugasterone C, polypodine B, and cyasterone (Figure 1). | non_poster |
Newsletter Issue 4 December 2020 The overall objective of the MASTRO project is to develop intelligent bulk materials for the transport sector incorporating self-responsive properties In this issue: 1. Overview 2. End-users’ Demos 3. Market landscape of MASTRO Nanotechnologies 4. Publications 5. Upcoming events 6. Deliverables & Milestones 7. Who we are From nanomaterials and manufacturing know-how to building self-responsive materials for the aerospace, automotive, and transport sectors 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 EUCommission takes no responsibility for any use made of the information set out. COPYRIGHT © AXIA INNOVATION | non_poster |
1 Falsación de teorías a partir de una medición cuantitativa aplicada en nivel medio, superior y posgrado Autores: Jessica Marlene López Hernández: https://orcid.org/0009-0007-9219-3936; Tapia Trinidad Alejandra https://orcid.org/0009-0004-7421- 3823; Jessica Cienega Martinez https://orcid.org/0009-0008-4770-3893; Andrea Nuñez Rodríguez https://orcid.org/0009-0009-4078-7323; Yasmin López https://orcid.org/0009-0005-3986-939X; Lizeth Deita Rosario https://orcid.org/0009-0003-2094-9715; Jesús Alberto Rosas Robreño http:/orcid.org/0009-0003-1600-1489 Resumen. A partir de una visión paradigmática en educación, se realiza una medición cuantitativa a poblaciones de diversos niveles educativos para verificar las condiciones de aprendizaje propuestas por dos teorías rivales ante un escenario de crisis de conocimiento diagnosticado por Enkvist en la transición de la escuela sueca, la cual estaba organizada por un modelo de aprendizaje riguroso hacia un modelo de educación de gobernanza igualitaria. Se advierte que el diagnóstico de la autora no toma en cuenta las nuevas necesidades del mercado de talentos dirigido por el Estado y propiciado por los acuerdos internacionales. Palabras clave: epistemología, paradigma, conocimiento, inteligencias, alfabetización Abstract. Starting from a paradigmatic vision in education, a quantitative mediation is carried out on populations of different educational levels to verify the learning conditions proposed by two rival theories in the face of a knowledge crisis scenario diagnosed by Enkvist in the transition from the Swedish school, the which was organized by a rigorous learning model towards an egalitarian governance model of education. It is noted that the author's diagnosis does not take into account the new needs of the state-directed talent market fostered by international agreements. | non_poster |
Measurements of NO3 and IO during ACSOE B.J. Allan, H. Coe, G. McFiggans and J.M.C. Plane . School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, UK | non_poster |
Star formation in IR dust Star formation in IR dust bubbles: bubbles: the S21 – S24 complex the S21 – S24 complex C.E. Cappa (IAR, CONICET and FCAG, UNLP, Argentina) N.U. Duronea (IAR, CONICET, Argentina) J. Borissova (U. de Valparaíso and Milenium Institute of Astrophysics, Chile) V. Firpo (U. de La Serena and Gemini Observatory, Chile) C.H.López-Caraballo (Pontifica Universidad Católica, Chile) M. Rubio (U. de Chile, Chile) M.M. Vazzano (IAR, CONICET, Argentina) G.A. Romero Grupo de Estrellas Masivas y Medio Interestelar (GEMMI) Argentina ESO, Santiago de Chile February 6th, 2017 | non_poster |
2 0 3 2 0 3 POST Review a preprint by leaving a comment Preprint server(s): bioRxiv/medRxiv or any other server with commenting functions. Navigate to the preprint on bioRxiv or medRxiv and select the commenting option from the toolbar. Getting started with reviewing preprints! Login, add your comment and hit post! Benefits: The review can be multi-format from limited comments to a full traditional-style review. The comments are linked to individual versions. ASAPbio.org 1 Getting started with reviewing preprints (CC BY 4.0) | non_poster |
Datamining Relational Databases for Regression Analysis Paul Harten1, Henry Helgen2, Wilson Melendez2 1US EPA/ORD, Center for Computational Toxicology and Exposure; 2General Dynamics Information Technology, Contractor to US EPA OBJECTIVES • Datamine EPA’s database NaKnowBase that contains details about thousands of experiments involving nanomaterials conducted by ORD scientists. • Predict the adverse effects of nanomaterials from models built from a rich number of examples via regression analysis. APPROACH Flatten the relational database NaKnowBase, pivoting on tables to place multiple entries for each experiment into one unique row, with all experiments placed in a spreadsheet format. MAIN RESULTS • EPA’s relational database NaKnowBase is flattened into a spreadsheet format. Other organizations can copy and modify the nanomaterial data for their own analysis. • Initial steps for EPA’s Chemical Safety for Sustainability (CSS), Emerging Materials and Technology (EMT) CSS 3.2.3 Predictive model - nanoQSAR IMPACT • Approaches to develop nanoQSAR models from relational databases will facilitate the prediction of adverse activities of novel nanomaterials. • EPA Office of Research and Development can use nanoQSAR models for additional investigative methods. • For more information, contact: Paul Harten, harten.paul@epa.gov This work does not reflect EPA policy. #235 | non_poster |
A SHARK’s view of the galaxy-AGN-environment connection across cosmic time Matías Bravo, Claudia Lagos, and the SHARK collaboration | non_poster |
Page | 1 Flood Impact to Urban Transport Networks Considering the Flooding Propagation- A case study of Beijing, China Yimeng Liu1,2, Alistair Ford1, Richard Dawson*1, Saini Yang*2 1 School of Engineering, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK 2 Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China GISRUK 2023 Summary Urban transport networks are vulnerable to surface water flooding, leading to impacts on economic activities, social well-being and the environment. This paper describes a flood-impact-assessment method to comprehensively assessed the economic impacts of traffic disruption from flooding in terms of time delay, fuel consumption and pollutant emission. Urban flooding in Beijing is simulated using the CADDIES-2D model, and impacts are propagated onto the transport network for assessment using the SUMO agent-based transport model. Comparing the economic damage of the baseline traffic scenario with that of three flooded scenarios, it’s demonstrated that rainfall occurring at 7 a.m. induces four times more cost than the baseline. The rain of the same intensity and duration occurring at 8 or 9 a.m. lead to a cost increase for 37.33% and 13.21% respectively. KEYWORDS: urban flooding; impact assessment; traffic simulation 1. Introduction Surface water flooding is an important and impactful weather-related challenge facing cities, which will increase under future climate change (Dodman, 2022). Such flooding, caused by extreme rainfall events, can induce substantial impacts on transport networks and affect their users (Hunt and Watkiss, 2010), but less attention is given to quantifying the impact of the flood induced by rainfall events that occurs at different times of day. This research developed a method in response to this challenge that comprehensively assesses the economic impacts of traffic disruption from the perspectives of time delay, fuel consumption and pollutant emission. This method was applied to Beijing, quantifying the economic damage when the flood occurred at different times of the morning peak. Such a method could assist local and national government to better understand the traffic cost mechanism and assist the optimisation of investment and targeting limited resources at critical locations, enabling adaptation strategies to be gradually implemented over the longer term to realise citywide resilience. 2. Methodology 2.1. Flood Modelling Flood events are simulated with CADDIES-2D flood model (MICHELE GUIDOLIN et al., 2012). This model produces the spatial extent of the simulated flood event, and a time series of hazard maps showing water depths (in metres) and extent of flooding across the model domain. Simulations were undertaken for a 1-in-5 year event of one hour duration across the Greater Beijing region (within the scope of Beijing's fifth ring road, covering an area of 900 km2) The simulation is facilitated by 5m-horizontal-resolution DEM, land-use data, soil porosity, and other characteristic parameters allowed more realistic simulation of flow paths in urban areas. The spatial resolution of output flood maps is 30-meter, and the time resolution is 10 minutes. The CADDIES-2D model was calibrated and validated by comparing a model simulation of 21st July 2012 pluvial flash | non_poster |
5/27/2020 casca (iPosterSessions - an aMuze! Interactive system) https://casca2020-casca.ipostersessions.com/Default.aspx?s=88-A0-5C-0B-E0-3D-6D-0C-D9-34-60-25-07-58-0E-99&pdfprint=true… 1/19 Do radio jets drive ionized outflows in Low Excitation Radio Galaxies? Mainak Singha, Christopher P. O'Dea, Yjan Gordon, Cameron Lawlor-Forsyth and Stefi A. Baum University of Manitoba PRESENTED AT: | non_poster |
Despoina Ev. Kapantaidaki*, Spyridon Antonatos, Vasiliki Evangelou, Dimitrios P. Papachristos and Panagiotis Milonas Scientific Directorate of Entomology and Agricultural Zoology, Benaki Phytopathological Institute, Attica, Greece *corresponding author, email: d.kapantaidaki@bpi.gr Genetic diversity and bacterial community of European populations of Philaenus spp. and Neophilaenus spp., insect vectors of Xylella fastidiosa | non_poster |
Searching for Quasi Periodic Pulsations in flares from low mass stars using TESS data Gavin Ramsay (Armagh, UK); Dmitrii Kolotkov (Warwick, UK); Gerry Doyle (Armagh); Lauren Doyle (Warwick) QPPs from Solar observations Solar Flare observed using Solar Dynamic Observatory NASA/SDO QPPs have been seen in Solar Flares at optical, X-ray and radio wavelengths and enables physical conditions in the flare region to be determined and the nature of flare to be better understood. QPPs from low mass stars Using TESS 2 min data from Cycles 1 & 2 we searched the light curves of 15437 low mass stars for high (>0.5 mag) amplitude flares. We identified candidate QPPs from 11 flares from 7 low mass stars. We show the stars position in the Gaia HRD below. Abstract: We have searched the light curves of low mass stars with TESS 2 min cadence data in Cycles 1 & 2 for Quasi Periodic Pulsations (QPPs). We identified 11 flares from 7 stars which have QPPs with periods ranging from ~10 min to 70 min. We use several methods for determining the loop length of the flares and find they can extend to a handful of stellar radius. Based on scaling relationships we determine the magnetic field strength in the coronal loops and compare the loop lengths to distance to the habitable zone for the host star. | non_poster |
การศึกษาวิจัยทางคลินิก คืออะไร? คู่มือแนะแนว สำหรับเยาวชน เคยไดยินหมอและพอกับแมพูดคุยกันเกี่ยวกับเรื่อง การวิจัย ทางคลินิก การทดลองทางคลินิก และการศึกษาทางคลินิก เรื่องพวกนี้หมายความวาอะไรบาง? การวิจัยทางคลินิก การทดลองทางคลินิก และการศึกษาทาง คลินิก เปนคำที่มีความหมายคลายกัน ใช้เพื่ออธิบายการศึกษาสิ่ง ใหม ๆ เช่น วิธีการวินิจฉัย การรักษา และการปองกันโรค เพื่อ ความเข้าใจง่าย เราจะใช้คำวา ‘การวิจัย’ การวิจัยมีหลายรูปแบบ บางครั้งเปนการทดสอบยาชนิดใหม บางครั้งเปนการศึกษาทดลองอุปกรณทางการแพทย หรือหาวิธี รักษาใหม ๆ นอกจากนี้ยังมีการวิจัยเพื่อปรับปรุงวิธีการรักษา ค้นหาสาเหตุของการปวย และหาวิธีปองกันไมใหคนปวย MRCTCENTER.ORG/FOR-KIDS ลองคิดถึงยาและวัคซีนทั้งหมด ที่ช่วยใหเรามีสุขภาพที่ แข็งแรง ทั้งยาและวัคซีน เหลานี้ไดผานการทดสอบใน กระบวนการวิจัยทางคลินิก มาแลว และโครงการวิจัยอาจ มีทั้งเด็กและเยาวชนที่เข้ารวม เปนอาสาสมัคร ใครเปนคนทำโครงการศึกษาวิจัยพวกนี้? เราเรียกคนทำโครงการวิจัยเหลานี้เรียกวา “นักวิจัย” ซึ่งนักวิจัยนั้น อาจจะเปนหมอ หรือนักวิทยาศาสตร หรือคนอื่น ๆ ก็ไดหากพวกเขามี สวนรวมในการดำเนินการทำโครงการวิจัยก็ถือวาเปนนักวิจัยได | non_poster |
14 Право та інновації № 1 (29) 2020 РОЗГОН ОЛЬГА ВОЛОДИМИРІВНА кандидат юридичних наук, доцент, провідний науковий співробітник НДІ правового забезпечен- ня інноваційного розвитку НАПрН України УДК 330.341.1 DOI: 10.37772/2518-1718-2020-1(29)-2 ФІЗИЧНІ ОСОБИ, ЯКІ БЕЗПОСЕРЕДНЬО БЕРУТЬ УЧАСТЬ У СТВОРЕННІ, ТРАНСФЕРІ ТА ЗАСТОСУВАННІ ТЕХНОЛОГІЙ ТА/АБО ЇХ СКЛАДОВИХ У цій статті аналізуються суб’єкти трансферу технологій, яких можна віднести до третьої групи суб’єктів, визначених у ст. 3 Закону України «Про державне регулювання діяльності у сфері трансферу технологій». Ви- явлено проблеми їх невизначення за дослідженим Законом, оскільки в ньому міститься лише перелік таких суб’єктів. Запропонована систематизація суб’єктів, які належать до третьої групи за ст. 3 дослідженого Закону: фізичні особи, що безпосередньо беруть участь у створенні, трансфері та застосуванні технологій та/або їх скла- дових, надають необхідні для цього інформаційні, фінансові та інші послуги на всіх стадіях просування техноло- гій та/або їх складових на ринок. Ключові слова: трансфер технологій, технологія, послуги, фізична особа — підприємець, автор, інвестор. Постановка проблеми. Правовим підґрунтям реалізації трансферу технологій в Україні є норма- тивно-правова база, зокрема, Закон України «Про державне регулювання діяльності у сфері трансферу технологій», яка має певні недоліки у сфері держав- ного регулювання трансферу технологій, оскільки ст. 3 зазначеного Закону встановлює лише перелік суб’єктів, але не конкретизує і не систематизує їх. Отже, на сьогодні державне забезпечення здій- снення трансферу технологій в Україні є неузгодже- ним на підставі того, що відсутнє належне інститу- ційне забезпечення. Актуальність теми визначила мету наукової праці, яка полягає в дослідженні групи суб’єктів трансферу технологій, що безпосередньо беруть участь у створенні, трансфері та застосу- ванні технологій та/або їх складових, а також нада- ють необхідні для цього інформаційні, фінансові та інші послуги на всіх стадіях просування технологій та/або їх складових. Аналіз останніх досліджень і публікацій. Трансфер технологій як категорію досліджували такі вчені, як Ю. Є. Атаманова, О. М. Вінник, О. М. Да- видюк, Г. І. Жиц, Ю. М. Капица, Д. С. Махновський, В. С. Мілаш, Є. А. Новіков, Б. М. Падучак, О. С. Тро- фімчук, Н. М. Фонштейн, О. А. Чобот, І. Є. Якубів- ський. Але поза увагою вчених залишилося досліджен- ня питання аналізу діяльності та систематизації суб’єктів трансферу технологій за ст. 3 Закон Украї- ни «Про державне регулювання діяльності у сфері трансферу технологій». Мета дослідження. Отже, метою цієї статті є аналіз діяльності та систематизація суб’єктів, які належать до третьої групи за ст. 3 зазначеного Зако- ну: фізичні особи, що безпосередньо беруть участь у створенні, трансфері та застосуванні технологій та/або їх складових, надають необхідні для цього інформаційні, фінансові та інші послуги на всіх ста- діях просування технологій та/або їх складових на ринок. Виклад основного матеріалу. Основним норма- тивно-правовим документом, який безпосередньо регулює сферу трансферу технологій в Україні, є Закон України «Про державне регулювання діяльнос- ті у сфері трансферу технологій». У ньому роз’яснені деякі поняття у сфері трансферу технологій, визна- © Розгон О. В., 2020 | 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: Han, X. S., Tinkle, S., Panko, P., Dinh, N., Hazan, G., Wong, G., Goldman, A., & Katz, L. (2022). Identifying Outstanding Scientists Using Bibliometric Indicators. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22116). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6951705 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 |
1 Who is this article for? • Doctors who treat patients with non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) • People with NMIBC, their families and caregivers, and healthcare professionals, including those who are helping people learn more about clinical trials for patients with NMIBC • Patients with NMIBC • Caregivers/family members of patients with NMIBC The purpose of this plain language summary is to describe the design of an ongoing research study. • Sasanlimab is not approved to treat people who have high chances of non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer. More information can be found in the scientific article of this research, which you can access here: View Scientific Article. Authors: Gary D Steinberg, Neal D Shore, Joan Palou Redorta, Matthew D Galsky, Jens Bedke, Ja Hyeon Ku, Michal Kretkowski, Hailong Hu, Konstantin Penkov, Jennifer J Vermette, Jamal C Tarazi, Alison E Randall, Kristen J Pierce, Daniel Saltzstein, and Thomas B Powles Additional information More information can be found in the scientific article of this study, which you can access here: For more information on this study, please visit: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/ show/NCT04165317 For more information on clinical studies in general, please visit: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ ct2/about-studies/learn https://www.cancerresearchuk. org/about-cancer/find-a- clinical-trial/what-clinical- trials-are View Scientific Article Summary • The ongoing CREST study includes people with high-risk bladder cancer that was not muscle-invasive • Researchers want to see how safe and effective sasanlimab combined with Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is in these people • The study started in December 2019 • The study is expected to end in December 2027 How to say: Bacillus Calmette-Guérin <buh-SIH-lus KAL-met-gay-RIN> Catheter <KA-theh-ter> Cystoscopy <sis-TOS-koh-pee> Cytology <sy-TAH-loh-jee> Immunotherapy <IH-myoo-noh-THAYR-uh-pee> Sasanlimab <sass-AN-lih-mab> Subcutaneous <SUB-kyoo-TAY-nee-us> Transurethral resection <TRANZ-yoo-REE-thrul ree-SEK-shun> Tuberculosis <too-BER-kyoo-LOH-sis> TURBT <Tee-U-R-be-T> Urethra <yoo-REE-thruh> Date of summary: March 2023 Study number: NCT04165317 Study start date: December 2019 Study end date: December 2027 This summary is based on the scientific article: CREST: Phase 3 study of sasanlimab and BCG for BCG-naïve patients with high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer Please note that this summary only contains information from the full scientific article: The design for the ongoing CREST study of sasanlimab plus BCG for people with non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer View Scientific Article Plain Language Summary | non_poster |
Matusz Hübner, MA Institute for the History of Science Polish Academy of Sciences STANISŁAW MICHALSKI THE FOUNDING FATHER OF THE SCIENCE OF SCIENCE INTRODUCTION Stanisław Michalski (1865–1949), Polish educational and scientific activist, believed that theoretical reflection, which is considered as a part of – as he called it – “knowledge of science” (1923) or “science of science” (1929), should be undertaken simultaneously to the working practices for the development of science. He presented this program in the yearbook “Nauka Polska Jej Potrzeby, Organizacja i Rozwój” [“Polish Science: Its Requirements, Organization and Development”] (1918– 1947), founded and edited by him, which was a forum for the science of science. Stanisław Michalski (1865-1949) | non_poster |
The Ecological Society of Germany, Austria and Switzerland GfÖ ICC, GHENT THE JOINT ANNUAL MEETING OF: 11-14 DECEMBER 2017 ECOLOGY ACROSS BORDERS | non_poster |
Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 Evolution of the Kveithola sediment drift inside a glacially-carved trough (NW Barents Sea) Michele Rebesco1, Asli Ozmaral2, Roger Urgeles3, Daniela Accettella1, Renata G. Lucchi1, Denise Rüther4, Monica Winsborrow4, Jaume Llopart3, Andrea Caburlotto1, Hendrik Lantzsch2, Till J.J. Hanebuth2 1 OGS, Sgonico, TS, Italy 2 MARUMdCenter for Marine Environmental Sciences, Bremen, Germany 3 Institut de Ci_encies del Mar, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain 4 Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway Abstract Kveithola is a glacially-carved, E-W trending trough located in the NW Barents Sea, an epicontinental shelf sea of the Arctic Ocean located off northern Norway and Russia. A set of confined sediment drifts (the “Kveithola Drift”) is located in the inner part of the trough. In general, drift deposits are commonly characterized by high lateral continuity, restricted occurrence of hiatuses and relatively high accumulation rates, and thus represent excellent repositories of paleo-environmental information. We provide for the first time a detailed morphological and seismostratigraphic insight into this sediment drift, which is further supported by some preliminary lithological and sedimentological analyses. The complex morphology of the drift, imaged by combining all available multibeam data, includes a main and a minor drift body, two drift lenses in the outer part of the trough, more or less connected drift patches in the innermost part and small perched sediment patches in a structurally-controlled channel to the north. The seismic (PARASOUND) data show that the main and minor drift bodies Figure 1: Bathymetric map of the Kveithola Trough produced using all available multibeam datasets (see text for details) superimposed onto IBCAO data (Jakobsson et al., 2012). Grid size: 20 m for depth less than -700 m depth and 40 m for deeper data; vertical exaggeration: 2.7; Light Direction Attitude 35°; Azimuth -30°. A dashed black line indicates the outline of the Kveithola drift bodies. Location map of the study area is shown in the bottom-left corner. | non_poster |
Accepted Manuscript © The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com. The High Prevalence and Complexity of Over-the-Counter Medication Misuse in Older Adults Jason S. Chladek, PharmD, MPH1 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3382-9352 Aaron M. Gilson, MS, MSSW, PhD1,2 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3627-9627 Jamie A. Stone, MS1,2 Maria E. Berbakov, BA1,2 Taylor L. Watterson, PharmD, PhD3 Elin C. Lehnbom, BScPharm, MPharmSc, MClinPharm, PhD2,4 Emily L. Hoffins, MS1 Katherine A. Hemesath, BA1 Jukrin Moon, PhD1 Lauren L. Welch, PharmD, BCGP1,5 Denise L. Walbrandt Pigarelli, PharmD, BC-ADM1,5 Edward C. Portillo, PharmD1,5 Stephanie M. Resendiz, MHA1 Shiying Mai, MBBS, MPH, MHSA1 Michelle A. Chui, PharmD, PhD1,2 1Division of Social and Administrative Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Pharmacy, Madison, Wisconsin, USA 2Sonderegger Research Center for Improved Medication Outcomes, University of Wisconsin- Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA 3Department of Pharmacy Systems, Outcomes, and Policy, University of Illinois Chicago College of Pharmacy, Chicago, Illinois, USA 4Department of Pharmacy, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden 5William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin, USA *Address correspondence to: Michelle A. Chui, PharmD, PhD. E-mail: michelle.chui@wisc.edu Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/innovateage/advance-article/doi/10.1093/geroni/igae083/7754288 by Applied Life Studies Library user on 12 September 2024 | non_poster |
BTG Biomass Technology Group have de- veloped and built a thermo-chemical frac- tionation plant to transform all kinds of biomass into lignin, sugars and extractives – feedstock for bio-based products. In this approach, a short thermal treatment at elevated temperature (fast pyrolysis) is followed by a low temperature fraction- ation of the mineral free, liquid product (fast pyrolysis bio-oil) that keeps the key chemical functionalities intact in separate, depolymerised fractions. The plant has a throughput capacity of 3 tonnes per day of fast pyrolysis bio-oil. PILOT PLANT FOR EXTRACTING BIO-BASED CHEMICALS AND MATERIALS FROM PYROLYSIS OIL | non_poster |
Page 1 of 7 Left circumflex artery originating from right sinus vasalva with left atrial diverticulum and left-sided atrial septal pouch: 128-slice computed tomography findings Poster No.: P-0040 Congress: ESTI ESCR 2018 Type: Scientific Poster Authors: N. Isiksalan Ozbulbul, E. Emekli, K. U. Mert; Eskisehir/TR Keywords: Congenital, Computer Applications-Detection, diagnosis, CT, Cardiac This PDF document has been automatically generated from a digital poster submitted online, and is meant for personal use only. Copyright restrictions might apply. Certain materials like for example videos - or multimedia files other than images in general, are not included in this PDF. | non_poster |
Analysis of Six Bulge Globular Clusters with Multiple Populations using the HST UV Legacy Survey R. A. P. Oliveira, S. O. Souza, L. O. Kerber, B. Barbuy, A. Pérez-Villegas, S. Ortolani, G. Piotto, and the HST UV Legacy Survey of Galactic GCs collaboration | 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: Karmakar, M., Banshal, S. K., & Singh, V. K. (2022). Measuring Altmetric Events: The Impact of Longer Observation Period and Article Level Computations. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22145). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6975645 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 |
Performing, Engaging, Knowing: Proceedings of the 7th Study Group Meeting of the ICTM Study Group on Applied Ethnomusicology, edited by Marc-Antoine Camp, Natalie Kirschstein, Johannes Kretz, Wei-ya Lin, Huib Schippers, and Yannick Wey, Lucerne 2022. doi:10.5281/zenodo.7274292 The Resurgence of Favela Funk Balls in Rio de Janeiro and the Resistance of Black Youth in the Context of 150 bpm Research Group on Ethnomusicology and Education Dona Ivone Lara (GPEDIL): Jhenifer Raul, Juliana Freire, Lucas Assis, Matheus Ferreira, Pedro Macedo Mendonça, Raphaela Yves Abstract. The state of Rio de Janeiro set historical records in 2019 for police deaths in actions such as so-called police operations in favelas, mainly located in the capital city of Rio de Janeiro. This approach of “toughening” in public security policy was also reflected in current government practices on music and culture. In an announcement widely circulated on WhatsApp early in the administration of Wilson Witzel – a judge elected in October 2018 with promises to end corruption in the state, but who was removed from office in August 2020 on suspicion of corruption – the governor promised broad repression of slum funk balls, giving ample freedom of action to military police commanders to curb these widely-attended popular parties. These developments happened at the same time as the arrest of DJ Renan da Penha, the organizer and mentor of the “Baile da Gaiola” (Cage Ball), a party that gathered thousands of people every week in the Penha slum complex, north of Rio de Janeiro, and inspired similar parties of the same name elsewhere in the city, throughout the country, and even abroad. DJ Renan and the “Baile da Gaiola” gave rise to a new and extremely young funk subgenre, the 150 bpm, in which the traditional drummer beat is sped up and its rhythmic foundations complexified through mixtures with musical genres such as the “arrocha.” In September 2018, before we imagined a state government like this, we at GPEDIL (Research Group in Ethnomusicology and Musical Education Dona Ivone Lara) defended a collectively written thesis. With 5 people presenting (4 black and one bi-racial white), a half black thesis evaluation board and a large black majority audience, it was a milestone in participatory ethnomusicology, questioning the ethnographic authority of white academic researchers about black and peripheral musical practices, and affirming our leading role in a struggle towards a more just and egalitarian world that surpasses the barriers of academia. From this perspective we would now like to analyze the 150 bpm. We present the socio-political context of resistance of this black youth, who have dared to practice funk in Rio’s favelas in this environment of increasing repression, reflecting on the possible influence of ethno- racial, gender and sexuality relations within the structure of persecution and affront to this youth. Brazil is a federal republic, divided into 26 states plus the federal district. One of these states is Rio de Janeiro, whose capital is the city of Rio de Janeiro. Recently, with the imprisonment of former governor Luiz Fernando Pezão, Rio achieved the impressive distinction that all its governors who were elected since 1998, were condemned for corruption. Some were released, and others are in prison, as is the case of ex-governor Sérgio Cabral, who currently faces 10 criminal cases and could be sentenced to up to 300 years in prison. Governor Wilson Witzel, of whom we will speak more specifically in this text, was elected in 2018. For allegations of corruption, he was first removed from his duties as governor (so that he could not interfere with investigations in August 2020), and then impeached definitively in April | non_poster |
1 ●Cryo-PoF: Cryogenic Power over Fiber. ●It is founded by “CSN5 Young Researcher Grant” from Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN, Italy) from February 2022 for 2 years; PI: M. Torti; Institutions: Univ. Milano-Bicocca and Univ. Milano Statale. ●Cryo-PoF’s main goal is to power, at cryogenic temperature, both SiPM and cold amplifier, using a single Power over Fiber line and to tune SiPM bias with the laser power. ●The Power over Fiber (PoF) technology delivers electrical power by sending laser light, through an optical fiber, to a photovoltaic power converter, in order to power sensors or electrical devices. ●This project arose from the DUNE Vertical Drift module, in which the Photon Detection System has to be placed on the high voltage cathode surface. Cryogenic Power over Fiber for fundamental and applied physics at Milano Bicocca: the Cryo-PoF project. Marta Torti - Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), Sezione di Milano Bicocca (Italy) M.Torti – Cryo-PoF at MiB – NuPhys23 Poster EX-18 | non_poster |
Now at * Department of Photonics Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, 2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark, † BT Applied Research, Ipswich IP5 3RE, United Kingdom, # Infinera Pennsylvania, 7360 Winsdor Dr, Allentown, PA 18106,USA Impact of Chromatic Dispersion in Discrete Raman Amplifiers on Coherent Transmission Systems Pratim Hazarika1, Mahmood Abu-Romoh1, Mingming Tan1, Lukasz Krzczanowicz1,*, Tu T. Nguyen1, #, Md Asif Iqbal1, †, Ian Phillips1, Paul Harper1, Ming-Jun Li2 and Wladek Forysiak1 1Aston Institute of Photonic Technologies, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, United Kingdom 2Corning Incorporated, 1 Riverfront Plaza, Corning, NY 14831, USA p.hazarika@aston.ac.uk Abstract: The impact of chromatic dispersion in discrete Raman amplifiers on coherent transmission systems was investigated. Systems with positive dispersion gain fibre show a SNR improvement of ~1.8 dB for 23-GBaud DP-QPSK signals transmitted over >1800km. 1. Introduction With the ever-growing demand of data, a need for wideband systems in conjunction with advance modulation formats is the foreseeable future for next generation optical fibre communication systems. In terms of amplifiers for such systems, the existing technology based on erbium doped fibre amplifiers (EDFA) suffices only for the C- and L-band of the optical spectrum [1]. For broader spectral support, Raman amplifiers are potential candidates for ultra- wide signal amplification, with recent literature showing an extensive amplification of ~ 150 nm bandwidth, and NF < 8.5 dB [2]. An important aspect in design of a discrete Raman amplifier (DRA) is the type of nonlinear fibre used for signal gain. A preferable fibre is the one with high Raman gain coefficient (gr). However, another parameter that can also potentially impair the amplifier performance is fibre chromatic dispersion (CD). The sign and value of dispersion can significantly affect the received signal to noise ratio (SNR) in long-haul transmission. Previous demonstrations have used Raman gain fibre with positive and negative dispersion in various DRA schemes [3, 4]. However, a comprehensive study and its impact on digital coherent systems has not been reported so far. In this paper, we studied the impact of positive and negative dispersion Raman gain fibre in DRA-assisted coherent transmission systems. For our test case we evaluated dispersion compensating fibre (DCF) and a new experimental fibre, referred to as Corning Raman fibre (CRF); the parameters of these fibres are stated in Table 1. Our experimental measurements show an improved SNR for positive dispersion CRF, with the improvement in SNR varying from ~0.6 dB over ~600 km transmission to ~1.8 dB over ~1800 km for 23 GBaud DP-QPSK signals, in reasonable agreement with theoretical predictions. 2. Theoretical modelling Schematic diagrams of the unit cell of transmission are shown in Figure 1. Our theoretical model is based on a piece-wise signal profile approximation for non-linear noise accumulation [5], where the accumulated non-linear power, after N transmission and amplification stages shown in Fig. 1 (a-b) can be represented by (Eq. 1). Fig. 1. a) Single span transmission with backward pumped discrete Raman amplifier b) Amplified links with log signal profile (1) Here, the two terms inside the modulus represent the transmission span single mode fibre (SMF) loss (CD= 16 ps/nm/km, 0.2 dB/km, = 1.3 /W/km) and DRA gain sections, respectively. and are the three non- linear components in the system, is the SMF length and is the DRA fibre length, is the Raman gain- Th1A.14 OFC 2021 © OSA 2021 Authorized licensed use limited to: ASTON UNIVERSITY. Downloaded on January 04,2022 at 10:20:54 UTC from IEEE Xplore. Restrictions apply. | non_poster |
Search for di-jet resonances along with an isolated charged lepton at √풔= 13 TeV pp collision with the ATLAS detector Wasikul Islam∗ On behalf of the ATLAS Collaboration Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA E-mail: wasikul.islam@cern.ch A search for dijet resonances in events with identified leptons was performed using the full Run 2 data collected in pp collisions at √푠= 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb−1. The dijet invariant-mass (푚푗푗) distribution from events with at least one isolated electron or muon was probed in the range of 0.22 < 푚푗푗< 6.3 TeV. The analysis probes much lower 푚푗푗than traditional inclusive dijet searches and is sensitive to a large range of new physics models in association with a final-state lepton. As no statistically significant deviation from the Standard Model background hypothesis was found, limits were set on contributions from generic gaussian signals and on various beyond-the-Standard Model (BSM) scenarios including the Sequential Standard Model, a charged Higgs boson model, a simplified Dark Matter model etc. Presented at the 30th International Symposium on Lepton Photon Interactions at High Energies, hosted by the University of Manchester, 10-14 January 2022 ∗Speaker © Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). https://pos.sissa.it/ | non_poster |
1 2 : ! " #$ %& ' ' ( )$ *& + + ($ ,-. +/ '$ +(& 01 2(& 34 + ! :( 5 1 : pictures - in - school - https://matt.might.net/articles/phd 2 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4079-703X | non_poster |
T R A N S M I T T I N G : D E B U G G I N G DIGITAL HEALING | non_poster |
Population definition: 40 DRF cases included in the database, where intra-op 3D imaging was used, and a post-op Conventional CT was performed March 2023 Pre-opera(ve 3D-CT Colored Bone Models and Intra-opera(ve 3D-Fluoroscopy as Adjuncts in the Surgical Treatment of DRF J. Eguiguren, M. Lemos, L. Chiquiar, A. Liu, A. R. Bhashyam, A. Fernández, J. Jupiter, P. Regazzoni - IMAGE GALLERY - | non_poster |
Póster científicoo Estudio de casoo Doctorantes 2021-2 (7) | non_poster |
Grammatical description and communities of practice Simon Musgrave, Monash University The question of whether grammatical categories can be compared across languages has been the subject of debate amongst typologists (e.g. Haspelmath 2010; Lazard 2012). One aspect of this question that is not always considered is the extent to which different grammar writers may deploy different vocabularies as a result of belonging to different communities of practice (Wenger 1998). This paper suggests a method by which such questions might be investigated and presents some preliminary results of a pilot study. A stratification matrix was constructed to investigate three dimensions of possible variation: language family studied (Indo-Aryan v. Oceanic), linguistic training (PhD awarded in the US v. PhD awarded in Europe), and time (grammars published before 2000 v. grammars published after 2000). Each cell was populated with two sources giving a sample size of 16 items. The lists of abbreviations provided in these sources are the data on which the analysis is based. Across the sample, there are one-to-many mappings between abbreviations and concepts (one abbreviation is used for more than one concept) and also in the other direction (one concept is represented by more than one abbreviation). The initial tabulation of abbreviations consisted of 523 items; when concepts judged to be equivalent were unified, this reduced to 406 items. Of these, 138 items appeared in more than one source and it is this list which forms the basis of a network analysis resulting in the visualisations presented as Figure 1 (Variation by language family described), Figure 2 (Variation by training) and Figure 3 (Variation across time). Not surprisingly, Figure 3 shows the least differentiation across the salient dimension. The time span represented here (1972 to 2017) is not very large, indeed the use of interlinear text as a major part of language description and the concomitant reliance on grammatical glossing is a relatively recent development. One initial hypothesis in regard to this dimension was that some trend towards standardisation might be evident in the 21st century, with the Leipzig Glossing Rules (Comrie, Haspelmath & Bickel 2003, first version) possibly having an effect. There is little evidence supporting this hypothesis; three abbreviations only used in 21st century sources (OBJ, PROH, QUOT) are included in the Leipzig rules; however another nine items only occur in sources after 2000 and are not included in the Leipzig list. In contrast, the networks for languages described and linguist training do show a degree of differentiation along those dimensions. Descriptions of Oceanic languages use 27 concepts not used in descriptions of Indo-Aryan languages, while there are 17 concepts used only by Indo-Aryanists. Looking at variation by training, there are 19 concepts used only by US- trained linguists, and 21 used only by European-trained scholars. In some cases, the variation is hard to explain: for example, the concept OBJECT is used by Oceanists but not (or not in exactly the same way) by Indo-Aryanists. But in other cases, the variation seems more obviously motivated: for example, linguists trained in Europe use the concepts represented by S, A and O (after Dixon 1979) but US-trained linguists do not and this can plausibly be attributed to more general differences in theoretical orientation. | non_poster |
Berlanas et al., 5-9 Sept 2022 Massive stars in Carina from GES, GOSSS & LiLiMaRlin A new census of OB stars to obtain a reliable distribution of rotational velocities for the O-star population S. R. Berlanas1,2, J. Maíz Apellániz3, A. Herrero4,5 et al. 1. UA, Alicante, Spain. 2. Keele University, UK. 3. CAB, Madrid, Spain. 4. IAC, Tenerife, Spain. 5. ULL, Tenerife, Spain. The Carina Nebula complex consists on several stellar groups, some bound and some not, immersed in the Car OB1 association, a unique region to study Galactic massive stars. Containing a large number of O-stars, it is the most massive star-forming region within 3 kpc of the Sun. Even though the Carina nebula harbors hundreds of massive stars, there is no systematic spectroscopic analysis of its early-type members. In this contribution we present results from Berlanas et al. 2022 (in prep) in which we created the most complete to date census of massive stars in the central part of the Carina Nebula, Car OB1. Thanks to this census and high- resolution spectra from GES and the LiLIMaRlin library, we obtained a reliable distribution of rotational velocities for the O-star population in the GES footprint of Carina. | non_poster |
COGAIN Symposium Wuppertal, August 21st 2017. 1 Introduction As of today, low-cost eye tracking hardware like the Tobii EyeX (Tobii Gaming, 2017) is available for end users. These affordable devices offer easy to use and stable eye tracking performance. However, most games utilize gaze data only as additional input source, while still relying on mouse and/or keyboard or gamepad input (Isokoski & Martin, 2006; Isokoski, Joos, Spakov, & Martin, 2009; Nacke, Stellmach, Sasse, & Lindley, 2010), or perform gaze-based emulation of the traditional devices (Istance, Bates, Hyrskykari, & Vickers, 2008; Istance, Hyrskykari, Immonen, and Mansikkamaa, & Vickers, 2010). In this work, we primarily focus on two questions: How is a game solely controlled by gaze accepted and performed by lay users; and how to interpret the gaze on the screen within the gaming environment. For this purpose, we developed a gaze-controlled game and placed it in a standalone arcade box on the state horticulture exhibition 2015 in Landau, Germany, for a period of six month. Multiple disciplines of eye tracking research (Kumar, Menges, & Staab, 2016) were combined to provide a wholesome user experience. Players were introduced to eye tracking, fulfilled a 5-point calibration, selected the language via dwell time buttons and entered a nickname for the high score list using a gaze- based text input mechanism – inspired by Dasher (Ward, Blackwell, & MacKay, 2000). Key features of this work: x Interface and avatar controlled solely by user’s gaze x Three approaches of mapping gaze to avatar position x Educational part including flower species information, and collection of users’ fixation data on images Methods The game is subdivided into five consecutive states, as shown in Figure 1: After an idle screen and introduction about eye-based input (a), which are controlled with a sin- gle physical buzzer, the player is guided through a 5-point calibration process. Then, the tutorial screen (b) presents the game mechanics, where either German or English local- ization can be selected by the fixation of dwell time based buttons. The actual game state loads and the avatar is pre- sented (c). After a session, the player is asked to enter her nickname for the high score table, using the onscreen key- board (d). This keyboard consists of the Latin alphabet including German umlauts in uppercase and is displayed at top of the screen. On fixation, the chosen letter starts to move downwards while increasing in size. When a certain vertical offset is reached, the letter is typed and the key- board is reset. After the gaming session, a qualitative sur- vey is presented to some players (e). Game State The game state itself is split into the flower mode, which is the initial mode, and the picture mode. During flower The 2017 COGAIN Symposium: Communication by Gaze Interaction Wuppertal, Germany. August 19th and 21st, 2017 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercialNoDerivatives 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc- nd/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA. Schau genau! A Gaze-Controlled 3D Game for Entertainment and Education Raphael Menges1 Chandan Kumar1 Ulrich Wechselberger1 Christoph Schaefer2 Tina Walber2 Steffen Staab1 1Institute of Web Science and Technologies University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany 2 EYEVIDO GmbH Koblenz, Germany Eye tracking devices have become affordable. However, they are still not very much pre- sent in everyday lives. To explore the feasibility of modern low-cost hardware in terms of reliability and usability for broad user groups, we present a gaze-controlled game in a standalone arcade box with a single physical buzzer for activation. The player controls an avatar in appearance of a butterfly, which flies over a meadow towards the horizon. Goal of the game is to collect spawning flowers by hitting them with the | non_poster |
Avaliação de idosos caidores por meio da classificação de dados da marcha Eduardo de Mendonça Mesquita Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica, Mecânica e da Computação Universidade Federal de Goiás Goiânia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0002-6336-929X Adriano de Oliveira Andrade Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica Universidade Federal de Uberlândia Uberlândia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0002-5689-6606 Guilherme Augusto Gomes de Villa Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica, Mecânica e da Computação Universidade Federal de Goiás Goiânia, Brazil ORCID: 0000 0003 3331 9678 Marcus Fraga Vieira Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica, Mecânica e da Computação Universidade Federal de Goiás Goiânia, Brazil ORCID: 0000-0001-9096-1603 Abstract— Dados da marcha humana, bem como outros sinais biológicos, apresentam padrões de medidas distinguíveis os quais são importantes na avaliação e análise do movimento. Neste trabalho foram utilizados dados espaço-temporais da marcha para classificação de idosos caidores, idosos não caidores e jovens. A classificação foi realizada pelos algoritmos baseados em aprendizagem de máquina, kNN (k-nearest neighbors) e RF (random forest). Três condições de caminhada foram analisadas: plano (0% de inclinação), aclive (+8%) e declive (-8%). Essas condições foram importantes para estabelecer em quais cenários os dados da marcha discriminam melhor os grupos. A classificação dos grupos, considerando todas as condições, apresentou acurácia de 79,6% e 78,4% para kNN e RF, respectivamente. O melhor resultado foi obtido na classificação dos idosos caidores em relação aos demais indivíduos pelo algoritmo kNN (90,9%) com os participantes caminhando na condição declive, indicando que esta condição impõe uma maior demanda ao sistema de controle motor dos participantes gerando assim maiores diferenças entre os grupos nas variáveis extraídas da marcha. Keywords— classificação, variáveis espaço-temporais, marcha humana, idosos caidores, k-nearest neighbor, random forest. I. INTRODUÇÃO Biomecânica é uma ciência que estuda e analisa os padrões da locomoção e postura humanas através de diversas variáveis, tais como: espaço-temporais (fase de apoio, fase de balanço, comprimento do passo, etc.), cinemáticas (posicionamento linear e angular dos segmentos) e cinéticas (forças de reação, torque nas articulações, etc.). A avaliação dessas variáveis pode, assim, contribuir para a identificação e entendimento das adaptações e limitações dos padrões de postura e locomoção humanas [1]. Devido à importância do uso dessas variáveis na comparação e identificação de diferenças nos aspectos físicos de diferentes grupos, muitos estudos têm analisado esses dados para discriminação de indivíduos, tais como: portadores de Parkinson e grupo saudável, idosos e jovens, obesos e atletas, etc. Com o uso de ferramentas e variáveis não-lineares [2], cinéticas [3] e espaço-temporais [4] é possível extrair características que permitem esta discriminação. Ferramentas estatísticas são amplamente utilizadas neste tipo de análise, alguns dos métodos mais utilizados são os algoritmos de classificação proveniente das técnicas de aprendizagem de máquina. O algoritmo kNN (k-nearest neighbor) e LDA (linear discriminant analysis) foram usados para classificar os movimentos dos dedos da mão usando sinais eletromiográficos [5]. Máquina de vetor de suporte (SVM) foi aplicada por um classificador automático da marcha de jovens e idosos, utilizando dados MFC (minimum foot clearance) [6]. As Redes Neurais Artificiais são encontradas na classificação de pacientes pós acidente vascular cerebral [7], e no reconhecimento de emoções nos padrões da marcha [8]. Dessa forma, a proposta deste estudo é discriminar três grupos, idosos caidores, idosos não caidores e jovens, caminhando em diferentes condições de inclinação, usando variáveis espaço-temporais da marcha. Essa análise visa reconhecer a viabilidade de uma ferramenta do tipo ADS (sistema de diagnóstico automático) para acompanhamento em idosos. A classificação | non_poster |
WED 12 FEB 2020 P R O G R A M M E SCIENCE, RELIGION AND BIG QUESTIONS | non_poster |
Contenido de fósforo en hueso bovino, y potencial de este residuo orgánico para aumentar el perfil nutricional de suelos agrícolas. Cestari-Abreu, Sebastián¹; y Flores, Saúl¹ ². ¹ Laboratorio de Biofertilizantes y Biocontroladores, Centro de Biotecnología Agrícola; ² Laboratorio de Ecología de Suelos, Centro de Ecología, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Caracas, Venezuela. Seminario: | UC | non_poster |
Lack of in-situ profiles in the Arctic 2 floats equiped with ISA deployed during the ARcticGo 2021 cruise Will we see them again ? Trajectories simulations using Virtual Fleet software To analyze the impact of the deployment strategy and environmental conditions (ice concentration and thickness) 📷: Déploiement d’un flotteur lors de la campagne ARticGO 2021 sur le Commandant Charcot. N. Kolodziejczyk, C. Lique Figure 1 - Description of the ISA behavior, one of the ice detecting methods availabe for under-ice argo floats (I. M. Angel-Benavides/ BSH) Argo Science Workshop #7 | non_poster |
Differentiable nuclear deexcitation simulation for low energy neutrino physics 19/12 NEUTRINO GROUP King’s College London 18-20 December 2023 Pablo Barham Alzás Radi Radev | non_poster |
Culture and metagenomic approaches for the identification of olive xylem microbial communities as a biological tool to cope against Xylella fastidiosa infection Anguita-Maeso, M1; Navas-Cortés, JA1; Coletta-Filho, HD2; Landa, BB1 1Institute for Sustainable Agriculture (IAS), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Córdoba, Spain. 2Centro APTA Citros Sylvio Moreira, Instituto Agronômico, Cordeirópolis, Brazil. | non_poster |
Programa Científico www.ciiis.es PRESENCIAL - ONLINE | non_poster |
Bibliological data science and drug discovery Knowing the knowns* Effectively Harnessing the World’s Literature To Inform Rational Compound Design - ACS National Meeting, Philadelphia, Aug 21-24, 2016 Jeremy J Yang Translational Informatics Division School of Medicine University of New Mexico Integrative Data Science Lab School of Informatics & Computing Indiana University *phrase borrowed from Edgar Jacoby, Janssen. | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Metabolitos producidos por el hongo Fusarium solani Grisel Ruiz Andrade*iD Maestría en Ciencias (Microbiología), Bioquímica y Genética Microbiana, Centro de Investigación en Ciencias Microbiológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. 17 de septiembre de 2023 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Dalia Molina Romero (Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen El género Fusarium es uno de los géneros dentro del reino fungi con endófitos más abundantes, éste comprende unas 70 especies caracterizadas por discrepancias extraordinarias en términos de genética, con una capacidad para crecer en una amplia gama de sustratos, afectando no solo su biología e interacción con los organismos que los rodean, sino también su metabolismo secundario. Miembros del género Fusarium son una fuente de metabolitos secundarios con diversidad | non_poster |
Determinación de grados Brix en bebidas no alcohólicas de elaboración artesanal como factor de riesgo obesogénico Víctor Hugo Solís Valladares, Ph.D.; Antecedentes y Objetivos La combinación del consumo frecuente de bebidas azucaradas y la escasa actividad física, incrementan considerablemente el riesgo de obesidad (1). El desarrollo de la industria alimentaria, ha colocado mercancías nuevas en los establecimientos comerciales, favoreciendo el acceso a tales productos (2) mismos que satisfacen los gustos de los clientes. Fue hasta 2010 que la alerta por los elevados niveles de sobrepeso y obesidad llamó la atención a las autoridades de salud pública (3), creando estrategias de control y orientación para el consumidor. El elevado consumo de bebidas azucaradas se ha asociado con desenlaces negativos la salud como diabetes, síndrome metabólico, enfermedades cardiovasculares entre otras (6). Sin embargo, las bebidas no alcohólicas que se venden en la vía pública y en locales tradicionales (refresquerías y paleterías), no tienen ninguna información nutricional donde el consumidor pueda considerar su riesgo a la salud, por el consumo de azúcares totales. La industria de las bebidas azucaradas se ha visto obligada en etiquetar con sellos informativos del riesgo de contenido elevado en azúcar o calorías, pero, las bebidas tradicionales, no obedecen a ninguna normativa de salud pública. El objetivo de la investigación fue determinar la concentración de grados Brix en bebidas azucaradas no alcohólicas de fabricación artesanal, a fin de calcular los gramos de azúcar libre (sacarosa) contenidos por litro de producto. De esta manera, conocer el riesgo a la salud por consumo de azúcares simples (4). Métodos El estudio consistió en medir el contenido total de azúcares utilizando un refractómetro de Abbe. Las muestras fueron seleccionadas de los expendios en la vía pública de aguas frescas, taquerías, refresquerías y paleterías. Las muestras fueron transportadas al laboratorio en una hielera a 20°C. Se determinó la concentración de azúcares en grados Brix (°Bx) de 28 muestras de diferentes sabores. Se calculó el contenido de sacarosa en 100 gr de solución y se utilizaron las equivalencias entre unidades de volumen y masa para calcular la cantidad de sacarosa en gramos por cada litro de producto. Resultados Se analizaron 28 muestras de aguas frescas de diferentes sabores (piña colada, fresa, limón, jamaica, horchata, cebada y piña). Son bebidas no alcohólicas carentes de alguna información nutricional, puesto que son de elaboración artesanal. Se obtuvo un valor mínimo de 71.89 gr sacarosa/1000 ml y un valor máximo de 274.3 gr sacarosa /1000 ml. El promedio de gramos de sacarosa fue de 144.69 gr de sacarosa por litro de bebida. En la Tabla 1 se puede observar los valores en gramos de sacarosa por cada litro de producto. La línea roja indica la recomendación de consumo de azúcar diario, como referencia al estudio. | non_poster |
مقالة عن نموذج راش:االحتمالي من النشأة التاريخية إلى التحديات والتطبيقات الحديثة مقتطفات من مقدمة كتاب"التصميم األفضل لالختبارات" BEST TEST DESIGN Benjamin D.Wright Mark H. Stone بمراجعة أستاذ القياسات النفسية المشارك الدكتور باسم نزّهت السامرائي المقالة غير منشورة في المقالة "تطور علم القياسات:النفسية من النشأة التاريخية إلى التحديات والتطبيقات"الحديثة،نستعرض الدوافع والتاريخ لألفكار التي أدت إلى نشأة نموذج راش االحتمالي لبعض اختبارات الذكاء.واإلنجازات دراسة تاريخ نشأة نموذج راش االحتمالي مهمة لعدة أسباب؛ تساهم في فهم السياق الذي نشأ فيه والمشكالت التي كانت تواجه النموذج في ذلك،الوقت مما يسهل فهم تطور الفكرة.وتطبيقها يمكن استخدام دراسة تاريخ النموذج لفهم كيفية تطور علم القياسات النفسية عبر،الزمن واالستفادة من الخبرات السابقة في تصميم النماذج.الحالية كما يمكن استخدام تاريخ النموذج كأداة تعليمية لفهم العلوم النفسية ،وتطورها مع تعزيز فهم الطالب للعمق والتعقيدات الموجودة في مجال القياسات.النفسية بشكل،عام يعتبر فهم تاريخ نموذج راش االحتمالي أمرًا مهمًا لفهم علم القياسات النفسية وتحدياته عبر.العصور تتناول المقالة في الجزء األخير عرض موجز لكل فكرة من األفكار الرئيسية وحسب ما طرحت في الجزء الخاص "النشأة"التاريخية،وتقديم أيضا مثاال تطبيقيا يمكن دعم الفكرة .الرئيسية واخيرا،نوضح كيفية ارتباط كل من هذه األفكار بأفكار وعمل نموذج.راش من النشأة التاريخية إلى التحديات والتطبيقات الحديثة ثورندايك- 1926 .قبل خمسين،عاما اشتكى ثورندايك من أن اختبارات الذكاء المعاصرة فشلت في تحديد "إلى أي مدى من المناسب إجراء عمليات،الجمع،الطرح،الضرب،القسمة وحساب النسب باستخدام القياسات التي."استخرجت،(ثورندايك 1926 ، 1 .)قال:ثورندايك "يجب أن تكون قياسات القدرة جيدة بحيث يُمثل الصفر فقط عدم وجود أي من القدرة،المطلوبة واألرقام1 ، 2 ، 3 ، 4 ،وهكذا ستمثل كميات تزداد بفارق."ثابت ولدى ثورندايك الشجاعة للشكوى ألنه كان يعتقد أنه قد وجد ًحال للمشكلة في اختبار الذكاء الخاص.به وكذلك عند ثورستونLouis Thurstone ، 1925 . ثورستون- 1925 .كانت طريقة ثورستونThurstone methodهي تحويل نسبة األفراد في الفئة العمرية الذين يجتازون الفقرة االختبارية إلى وحدة تسمى االنحراف الطبيعي المعدلnormal deviate(هذا التحويل يهدف إلى توحيد المقاييس بين مجموعات العمر)المختلفة واستخدام هذه القيم كأساس لعملية.التقييس تم الحصول على قيم المقياس المشترك لمختلف الفئات العمرية من خالل افتراض وجود عالقة خطية بين قيم المقياس المختلفة الخاصة بفقرات االختبار المشتركة بين | non_poster |
Democratizing IC Design: The SSCS PICO Program Boris Murmann Chair, IEEE Solid-State Circuits Directions September 6, 2021 | non_poster |
1st/ŶƚĞƌŶĂƟŽŶĂůŽŶĨĞƌĞŶĐĞ ŽŶĚǀĂŶĐĞĚWƌŽĚƵĐƟŽŶĂŶĚWƌŽĐĞƐƐŝŶŐ 10th-11thKĐƚŽďĞƌϮϬϭϵ EŽǀŝ^ĂĚ͕^ĞƌďŝĂ BOOK ŽĨ^dZd^ | non_poster |
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