text stringlengths 21 4k | label stringclasses 2 values |
|---|---|
ORCID and FUNDERS Connecting research information in real time using identifiers in research workflows GLOBAL RESEARCH COUNCIL ANNUAL MEETING | FAPESP | São Paulo, Brazil |May 3, 2019 Ana Heredia https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7862-8955 Americas Engagement | non_poster |
2 0 2 2 Service Commun de Documentation Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France Rapport d'activité annuel | non_poster |
Southern California CSU DNP Consortium California State University, Fullerton California State University, Long Beach California State University, Los Angeles Kaiser Permanente School of Anesthesia IMPROVING PROPER DISPOSAL OF OPIOID PRESCRIPTIONS AMONG PATIENTS A DOCTORAL PROJECT Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the degree of DOCTOR OF NURSING PRACTICE By Soomin Kim Gina Nguyen Doctoral Project Committee Approval: Sarah Giron, PhD, CRNA, Team Leader Sadeeka Al-Majid, PhD, RN, Team Member December 2020 | non_poster |
Named Entity Recognition and Knowledge Linkage Jonathan Baum University of Applied Sciences, Darmstadt jonathan.baum (at) stud.h-da.de Abstract Named entity recognition (NER) is an impor- tant method for Natural Language Process- ing. In this work, the Named Entity Recogni- tion model FLERT XLM-R by Schweter and Akbik (2021) is investigated with respect to Bertuch (1790) Bilderbuch f¨ur Kinder (1790- 1830). The objective is to successfully ap- ply the model for recognizing named entities of the book Bilderbuch f¨ur Kinder and to link the recognized entities to corresponding Wiki- data items. Achieving this undertaking leads to linking the entities to the current knowledge of the Wikidata database and gives researchers the opportunity to gain further knowledge in the historical education field. To achieve this goal, the author of this paper developed a data curation pipeline, starting with the extraction of named entities, followed by the creation of a gold-standard validated with the Inter- Annotator Agreement (IAA). The result of the extracted entities has been approved using F- measure and was processed through OpenRe- fine. The delineated procedure can be used to create similar knowledge linkages.1 1 Introduction Bertuch’s Bilderbuch f¨ur Kinder is a 19th cen- tury encyclopedia for children. Friedrich Justin Bertuch published the first booklet of the afore- mentioned book in 1790. Five panels each are accompanied by short, easy-to-understand texts, which were intended to be ”appropriate to the powers of understanding of a child” (Bertuch, 1790). To keep the children’s attention, the book addresses exotic and unusual topics (Kollmann, 2021). Each panel is accompanied by a one-page description. Usually, a short paragraph introduces 1The source code of this project is available upon request: https://code.fbi.h-da.de/stjtbaum/ bachelor_thesis the respective panel topic and the individual fig- ures or objects in the pictures are given an individ- ual description. The Semanitc MediaWiki (SMW) platform Interlinking Pictura2 enables a seman- tic view of the data of Bertuch’s Bilderbuch f¨ur Kinder. The picture book for children by Bertuch is a closed, firmly defined collection with a vol- ume of about 6k individual figures, which are rep- resented on 1185 plates. In order to gain further knowledge in the histor- ical education field about the entities in Bertuch’s encyclopedia, the recognition of named entities is a necessary task. For example, changes in the spelling (over time) of entities can be stud- ied. Since the 18th century, certain names of plants, countries and animals have changed - for instance, Vandiemensland has been known as Tas- mania since the 19th century. The state of the art in Natural Language Pro- cessing has been constantly evolving and reaching new heights compared to recent years. With an F-measure of 92.23, using the German CoNLL- 20033 dataset, the NER model FLERT XLM- R (Schweter and Akbik, 2021) is at the leading edge of current NER systems. This state-of-the- art named entity recognition model uses machine learning methods and has become the focus of my investigation, due to its popularity, relevance, code documentation and outstanding results for the Ger- man NER. The model by Schweter and Akbik (2021) was published within flairNLP4 and uses document-level features, word embeddings, and transformer models. The pipeline proposed in the following chapter describes the complete data curation process. 2https://interlinking.bbf.dipf.de/ index.php/Hauptseite 3https://www.clips.uantwerpen.be/ conll2003/ner/ 4https://github.com/flairNLP/flair | non_poster |
U.S. National Library of Medicine National Center for Biotechnology Information 568A - Annotation of Drosophila genomes by NCBI’s RefSeq project Terence Murphy, Françoise Thibaud-Nissen, Valerie Schneider, and the NCBI Genome Annotation Team National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20894, USA TAGC 2020 April 27, 2020 | non_poster |
Is motor outcome related to thalamic and brain volume at school- age in children born preterm? Presented During: Poster Session 1 Sunday, July 23, 2023: 12:15 PM - 02:15 PM Presented During: Poster Session 2 Monday, July 24, 2023: 01:00 PM - 03:00 PM Poster No: 1099 Submission Type: Abstract Submission Authors: Monica Crotti , Manu Lubián-Gutiérrez , Bahram Jafrasteh , Emiliano Trimarco , Simón Pedro Lubiań-López , Els Ortibus , Isabel Benavente-Fernańdez Institutions: KU Leuven, Department of Development and Regeneration, Leuven, Belgium, KU Leuven, Child and Youth Institute, Leuven, Belgium, Biomedical Research and Innovation Institute of Cádiz (INiBICA), Puerta del Mar University, Cádiz, Spain, Division of Neonatology, Department of Paediatrics, Puerta del Mar University Hospital, Cádiz, Spain, Area of Paediatrics, Department of Child and Mother Health and Radiology, University Medical School, Cádiz, Spain, University Hospitals Leuven, Department of Pediatric Neurology, Leuven, Belgium First Author: Monica Crotti KU Leuven, Department of Development and Regeneration|KU Leuven, Child and Youth Institute Leuven, Belgium|Leuven, Belgium Co-Author(s): Manu Lubián-Gutiérrez Biomedical Research and Innovation Institute of Cádiz (INiBICA), Puerta del Mar University|Division of Neonatology, Department of Paediatrics, Puerta del Mar University Hospital Cádiz, Spain|Cádiz, Spain Bahram Jafrasteh Biomedical Research and Innovation Institute of Cádiz (INiBICA), Puerta del Mar University Cádiz, Spain Emiliano Trimarco Biomedical Research and Innovation Institute of Cádiz (INiBICA), Puerta del Mar University Cádiz, Spain 1,2 3,4 3 3 4,5 1,2,6 3,4,5 1 2 3 4 5 6 | non_poster |
The UPWARDS project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under GA No. 763990. The information on this presentation reflects the views only of the author, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein. Coordinator Stiftelsen SINTEF Prof. Jon Samseth Postboks 4760 Torgard 7465 Trondheim, Norway jon.samseth@sintef.no Phone: +47 98230641 www.upwards-wind.eu Understanding of the Physics of Wind Turbine and Rotor Dynamics through an Integrated Simulation Framework UPWARDS A Horizon 2020 project funded by the European Union UPWARDS project aims to make the development of bigger and better designed wind turbines possible, thus increasing the capacity of societies all over Europe and the rest of the world to harness wind-energy. UPWARDS gathers a consortium of 11 partners (companies, research institutes and universities) across 8 countries and 2 continents. UPWARDS is an European Commission (EC) backed project that promises to make achieving ambitious sustainability goals a reality. | non_poster |
ABSTRACT for PVSEC 2020 TOPIC: No 4: Photovoltaic Modules and BoS Components SUBTOPIC: 4.3 Sustainability and Recycling Combustion based delamination of Si based glass/glass photovoltaic modules Xiang Ma1, Huaitian Bu1, Matas Rudzikas2,3, Julius Denafas4, Juras Ulbikas3,5, Alexander G. Ulyashin1 1SINTEF Industry, Forskingsveien 1, 0314 Oslo, Norway; 2Center for Physical Sciences and Technology, Sauletekio av. 3, LT-10257 Vilnius, Lithuania; 3UAB ”Modern E-Technologies”, Vismaliukų str. 34, Vilnius LT-10243, Lithuania; 4 SOLITEK R&D, Vilnius, 08412, Lithuania 5The Applied Research Institute for Prospective Technologies; Vilnius, Lithuania Abstract The first step in any recycling value chain for Si based PV modules is the delamination process to detach the glass from solar cell. This process can be done mechanically, by thermal or chemical treatments. In this work detailed analysis of a combustion based delamination of Si glass/glass modules provided by industrial partners has been performed. Conventional pyrolysis oven at temperature around 600 °C has been used to burn EVA (ethyl vinyl acetate) and to extract glass and Si based solar cells without any traces of contaminations from the combustion process, which can be realized at normal air conditions. It is established that crushing of PV modules into small pieces is desirable to regulate combustion process which generates intensive flame and extra energy. It is found that the holding time for the combustion process, which can provide full removal of EVA, can be as low as about 5-10 minutes at appropriate temperatures around 600 ° C. It is concluded that the proposed approach can be realized in a conveyor furnace, which can operate in air. Experimental results reported in this work can be used to design an automated process for the delamination of Si based glass/glass panels. It is established that the proposed approach provides recovery of more than 90% of the total weight of glass/glass Si based modules. Purity analysis of extracted during delamination process materials will be provided at the time of conference. | non_poster |
Uma Nova Realidade Educacional: Metodologias Ativas Potencializadas pela IA Generativa Thiago Maciel Ferreira1 https://doi.org/10.29327/7421021 RESUMO O artigo explora a integração da inteligência artificial generativa com metodologias ativas na educação moderna, destacando como essa combinação pode transformar práticas pedagógicas e promover uma aprendizagem mais personalizada e eficaz. O estudo investiga a aplicação de ferramentas como o ChatGPT, que potencializam a personalização do ensino, fornecendo feedback imediato e ajustando o conteúdo às necessidades individuais dos alunos. A pesquisa é estruturada em três capítulos: o primeiro aborda estratégias práticas para a aplicação dessas metodologias com IA, o segundo avalia sua eficácia na aprendizagem e o terceiro apresenta exemplos práticos de integração. A adaptação do ensino por meio da IA foi um elemento central para o desenvolvimento de um ambiente de aprendizagem mais eficiente e alinhado às necessidades específicas de cada aluno. Os resultados apontam para um aumento significativo no engajamento, compreensão e retenção de conteúdo pelos alunos, embora ressaltem a necessidade de uma implementação cuidadosa e ética para evitar desafios como superficialidade no aprendizado e questões de privacidade de dados. Conclui-se que a integração de IA generativa com metodologias ativas pode transformar significativamente o ambiente educacional, mas deve ser realizada de forma equilibrada e responsável, complementando as práticas pedagógicas tradicionais e assegurando a formação integral dos alunos. Palavras-chaves: Inteligência Artificial Generativa, Metodologias ativas, Personalização do Ensino, Aprendizagem Eficaz, Integração Pedagógica. INTRODUÇÃO: A pesquisa explora a interação entre a inteligência artificial generativa e as metodologias ativas na educação moderna, visando entender como essa integração pode transformar práticas pedagógicas ao promover uma aprendizagem mais eficaz e personalizada, adaptada às necessidades dos estudantes. "A aplicação das metodologias ativas no ensino superior garantirá para os estudantes habilidades e competências necessárias para o exercício de suas profissões" (Maciel, 2022, p. 7). O estudo investiga 1 Doutor pelo Curso de Ciência da Educação da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul - UFRGS, thiagomaciel.ufrgs@gmail.com e thiago.ferreira@aesa-cesa.br; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1863-0601 https://scholar.google.com.br Professor e Coordenador do curso de Análise e Desenvolvimento de Sistemas do Cesa. https://doi.org/10.29327/7421021 | non_poster |
Wearing Diaries Wendy Moody, Fashion Retail and Design, Department of Textiles and Paper, UMIST – UK Peter Kinderman, Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Liverpool – UK Abstract From my past life I gladly borrow I am who I was, who I am I will be. There is no yesterday nor tomorrow But only today forever for me (‘The Last Poems of Miguel de Unamuno’, 1974) Keeping wearing diaries can add further insight into the emotional and symbolic attachment and meaning the wearer has with their clothes and the memories associated with wearing. This information will contribute to the understanding of choice due to anticipation and the changeable self, but also have some implications for design. It is hypothesized that clothing contributes to regulating the self, affecting body and self-image processing. Clothing choices are linked to design and wearer variables - aesthetic, sensory, associative and self/body-image related signals and sensations that exist within clothing which are then translated by the wearer. These act as stimuli for positive and negative mood affects, individual personality factors, and in forming memories. In seeing oneself and in evaluating daily clothing choices the generation of self-relevant words evoke memories automatically from the signals or sensations, demonstrating that memory is essential to self processing during perception and wearing of clothing. We explore participants’ personal relationships with their clothing choices and wearing patterns in relation to positive and negative emotion/mood affect (Watson et al, 1988), and personality. Using exploratory measures we begin to reveal additional insights into how and why the self is managed. Results indicated that clothing can be used to moderate the self concept, through personality emotion/mood. Set deep in our autobiographical memories they provide a sense of stability. Keywords: emotion/mood, self, symbolic, memory Background Self concept This is crucial in the affective regulation of an individual’s cognitive system, “The self- concept is a mental (cognitive) representation of a particular person – oneself – and as such is part of the individual’s wider knowledge concerning objects and events in his or her social world”, (Markus & Wurf, 1987). Personality and Mood Affect “Clothes are seen as the outer skin of our personality and identity”, (Dittmar, 1992). | non_poster |
Navigating Borders: A young female Scientist’s Impact in Nanoscience and the Everyday Significance of Polymeric Materials Dr. Gjylije Hoti 29/10/2024, Tirana, Albania | non_poster |
Colección de ESMOS 1 Infografía Pequeñas partículas, grandes problemas: el impacto contaminante de los nanomateriales Claudia V. Flores Estrada ID, Diana Zuilem González Muñoz ID, Emily Medina Márquez* ID, Edgar A. Olvera Sandoval ID, Sofía I. Vázquez Martínez ID Licenciatura en Biotecnología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla, México. *Email autor para correspondencia: emily.medinama@alumno.buap.mx 12 de septiembre de 2023 Editado por: Jesús Muñoz-Rojas (Instituto de Ciencias, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla). Revisado por: Leslie Susana Arcilla Lozano (Investigadores por México - CONACyT, CIBA-IPN, Tepetitla de Lardizábal, Tlaxcala, México). Colección de ESMOS Resumen Los nanomateriales son estructuras muy pequeñas, inferiores a 100 nanómetros (100 millonésimas de milímetro). Estos materiales tienen propiedades únicas debido a su tamaño y estructura a escala nanométrica | non_poster |
3/15/2019 ScholarOne Abstracts - Abstract proof popup https://asfa2019.abstractcentral.com/submission?PARAMS=xik_RbLdKZjRkGBBX4MmUsvPtSexs5u3PBPn4J8xi5Q5kYedSv9wfHr5MHaZvBucBRFFXiS5yHmDbbUjywDJdpW1mTfCjXRVixsxAEqUgjsP… 1/3 View Abstract CONTROL ID: 3165191 TITLE: ALLOIMMUNIZATION FOLLOWING RED BLOOD CELL EXCHANGE IN A PATIENT WITH RH(D) VARIANT AUTHORS (FIRST NAME INITIAL LAST NAME): D. Allison , D. Loeffler , S. Campbell-Lee , L. Sereseanu , S. Saraf , J. Crane , V. Vidanovic , C. Sheppard INSTITUTIONS (ALL): 1. Pathology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States. 2. Hematology/Oncology, University of Illinois at Chicago , Chicago, IL, United States. 3. Vitalant-Illinois, Chicago, IL, United States. 4. Virginia Blood Services, Richmond, VA, United States. PRESENTATION TYPE: Oral CURRENT CATEGORY: Red Blood Cell Exchange ABSTRACT BODY: Purpose: The Rh system is the most important blood group after ABO. More than 60 Rh antigens are known, and Rh(D) is the most clinically significant. Alloantibodies against Rh antigens are the most commonly encountered clinically significant red blood cell alloantibodies. Rh variants may be mistyped by hemagglutination methods even with the more selective antisera in use today. Partial D antigens can be indistinguishable from the unaltered antigen by hemagglutination, however, exposure can still cause Rh alloimmunization. We present a D variant stem cell transplant recipient who developed anti-D following red blood cell exchange (RBCX) days before receiving hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Methods : A 27-year-old Nigerian male with sickle cell disease (Hb SS) complicated by acute chest syndrome and frequent vaso-occlusive crises was referred for allogeneic matched sibling HSCT. As part of his pre- transplant evaluation, he was typed as B Rh(D) positive, with a detectable cold autoantibody, and negative direct antiglobulin test (DAT) in July 2017. He was serologically negative for C, E, K1, Jk , S, M, Fy , and Fy American Society for Apheresis 1 1 1 3 2 3 1 4 b a b | non_poster |
Coloquio Flujos humanos y frontera flexible Sala de Eméritos 12 y 13 de agosto del 2024, FFyL UNAM De 09:0 14:00 y de 16:00 19: 00 horas Proyecto de investigación “Teoría crítica en América Latina” Coordinación del Programa de Investigación Coor. Carlos Oliva Mendoza Universidades invitadas: Universidad de Barcelona, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Université Alassane Ouattara, Universidad Central de Villas Cuba, Universidad Iberoamericana, Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México y Universidad Oparin | non_poster |
Science Objectives of the FOXSI Small Explorer Mission Concept Albert Y. Shih1, Steven Christe1, 1NASA/GSFC; 2FHNW (Switzerland); 3SSL, UC Berkeley; 4Southwest Research Institute; 5University of Maryland; 6NJIT; 7University of Minnesota; 8Caltech; 9University of Glasgow; 10JAXA/ISAS; 11Montana State University; 12Observatoire de Paris; 13NASA/MSFC; 14Air Force Research Laboratory Albert Y. Shih , Steven Christe , Meriem Alaoui1, Joel C. Allred1, Spiro K. Antiochos1, Marina Battaglia2, Juan Camilo Buitrago-Casas3, Amir Caspi4, Brian R. Dennis1, James Drake5, Gregory D. Fleishman6, Dale E. Gary6, Lindsay Glesener7, Brian Grefenstette8, Iain Hannah9, Gordon D. Holman1, Hugh S. Hudson9, Andrew R. Inglis1, Jack Ireland1, Shin-Nosuke Ishikawa10, Natasha Jeffrey9, James A. Klimchuk1, Eduard Kontar9, Sam Krucker2,3, Dana Longcope11, Sophie Musset12, Gelu M. Nita6, Brian Ramsey13, Daniel Ryan1, Pascal Saint-Hilaire3, Richard A. Schwartz1, Nicole Vilmer12, Stephen M. White14, Colleen Wilson-Hodge13 SPD 2016 Poster P8.14 | non_poster |
ISO 23494: Biotechnology – Provenance Information Model for Biological Specimen and Data⋆ Rudolf Wittner1,2[0000−0002−0003−2024], Petr Holub1,2[0000−0002−5358−616X], Heimo M¨uller3[0000−0002−9691−4872], Joerg Geiger4[0000−0002−7689−531X], Carole Goble5[0000−0003−1219−2137], Stian Soiland-Reyes5,11[0000−0001−9842−9718], Luca Pireddu6[0000−0002−4663−5613], Francesca Frexia6[0000−0003−1007−1286], Cecilia Mascia6[0000−0002−8952−725X], Elliot Fairweather7[0000−0003−0880−0785], Jason R. Swedlow8[0000−0002−2198−1958], Josh Moore8[0000−0003−4028−811X], Caterina Strambio9[0000−0002−1069−1816], David Grunwald9[0000−0001−9067−804X], and Hiroki Nakae10[0000−0002−5064−8468] 1 BBMRI-ERIC, AUT rudolf.wittner@bbmri-eric.eu 2 Institute of Computer Science & Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University, CZ 3 Medical University Graz, AUT 4 Interdisciplinary Bank of Biomaterials and Data W¨urzburg (ibdw), W¨urzburg, DE 5 Department of Computer Science, The University of Manchester, UK 6 CRS4 – Center for Advanced Studies, Research and Development in Sardinia, IT 7 King’s College London, UK 8 School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK 9 University of Massachusetts, US 10 Japan bio- Measurement and Analysis Consortium, JPN 11 Informatics Institute, University of Amsterdam, NL Abstract. Exchange of research data and samples in biomedical re- search has become a common phenomenon, demanding for their effec- tive quality assessment. At the same time, several reports address re- producibility of research, where history of biological samples (acquisi- tion, processing, transportation, storage, and retrieval) and data history (data generation and processing) define their fitness for purpose, and hence their quality. This project aims to develop a comprehensive W3C PROV based provenance information standard intended for the biomed- ical research domain. The standard is being developed by the working group 5 (”data processing and integration”) of the ISO (International Standardisation Organisation) technical committee 276 “biotechnology”. The outcome of the project will be published in parts as international standards 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 de- velopment and open issues. Keywords: provenance · biotechnology · standardization ⋆Supported by European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 654248, project CORBEL; grant agreement No. 824087, project EOSC-Life; and grant agreement No. 823830, project BioExcel-2. | non_poster |
SlideWiki – A Platform for Authoring FAIR Educational Content Ali Khalili and Klaas Andries de Graaf Department of Computer Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, NL {a.khalili, ka.de.graaf}@vu.nl Abstract. SlideWiki.org is a Web-based OpenCourseWare (OCW) authoring system that enables educators and learners to collaborate on creating, sharing, re-using and re-purposing multi-lingual open educa- tional content. The SlideWiki platform allows people to author FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) educational content. SlideWiki supports many features to semantically-enrich educational con- tent to support FAIR authoring. In this paper we will present those features of the platform such as Linked Data interface, manual and au- tomatic content annotation as well as content linking and metadata. 1 SlideWiki Platform A major obstacle to increase the efficiency, effectiveness and quality of educa- tion is the lack of widely available, accessible, multilingual, timely, engaging and high-quality educational material (i.e. OpenCourseWare). The creation of com- prehensive OpenCourseWare (OCW) is tedious, time-consuming, and expensive. Courseware employed by educators is therefore often incomplete, outdated, dull, and inaccessible to learners with disabilities. With the open-source SlideWiki platform (available at SlideWiki.org) the effort in creating, translating, and evolving FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) OCW can be widely shared (i.e. crowdsourced). Similarly to Wikipedia for encyclopaedic content, SlideWiki [1] allows its users (1) to collaboratively create comprehen- sive OCW (curricula, slide presentations, self-assessment tests, illustrations etc.) online in a crowdsourcing manner, (2) to semi-automatically translate this con- tent into more than 50 different languages and to improve the translations in a collaborative manner and (3) to support engagement and social networking of educators and learners around that content. SlideWiki.org (funded by an EU H2020 grant1) is already used by thousands of educators and learners. Figure 1 depicts the 3-tier technical architecture of the SlideWiki platform where data, service and user interaction concerns are decoupled as individual stand-alone components. Our contribution to semantically enrich educational content in SlideWiki, touches upon all those 3 layers: RDF and Linked Data version of content are provided in the data layer, NLP (Natural Language Pro- cessing) services are exposed for automatic content annotation, and user inter- faces for manual content annotation together with inline metadata to increase 1 see http://slidewiki.eu for more information | non_poster |
Awe of the Universe Eamonn Ansbro Awe is felt when our mind begins to comprehend something that we did not comprehend before. When Awe is triggered provides the opportunity to amazing realms Amazing Astronomy Programme Initiative’ | non_poster |
DataPLAN A Data Management Plan (DMP) Generator @nfdi4plants • AutomaticallycreatesaDMP • OfferstemplatesforDFG,EuropeanCommission,BMBF,userdefinedtemplates • CanincludeDataPLANTmetadatatools • IncreasereusabilityofDMPsacrossprojects • PreparemultipleDMPssimultaneously • CanupdateDMPs • Promotesstandardizations • Extremelysafe • Offlineusagepossible Livepreview Single page questionnaire | non_poster |
CALEDONIAN ACADEMY – A RESEARCH CENTRE IN TECHNOLOGY-ENHANCED PROFESSIONAL LEARNING p1 The Caledonian Academy is based at Glasgow Caledonian University in the UK: http://academy.gcal.ac.uk/ WORKING & LEARNING AT THE BOUNDARIES OF KNOWLEDGE This briefing paper summarises an industry- academia research partnership between the Chartered Institute for Securities and Investments and the GCU Caledonian Academy. The aim of the partnership was to examine how finance professionals learn when they reach the limits of their current knowledge. We found a range of situations where professionals had to learn new knowledge. For example when people are assigned new job roles or tasks. Solving these sorts of problems often involves a complex mix of different types of learning extending beyond formal training to include on-the-job learning. In these circumstances, learning has to be continual and personalised, so individuals have to have to be able and willing to regulate their own learning, blending formal training with on-the-job learning. What did we do? We created an instrument to measure each individual’s ability to regulate their own learning. This tool can be used by professionals to help them understand their approach to learning and improve their self-regulation. Using this instrument we measured the SRL scores of hundreds of people working in 19 organisations in the finance sector. From this we built and tested a mathematical model that represents professional self-regulated learning. We tested this model using interviews to explore in more depth how people learn. What did we find? We identified 3 significant factors that influence learning: an individual’s interest in the task, the range of strategies they use to learn and how they self-evaluate their learning. These 3 factors predict whether an individual is likely to self-regulate their learning at work. We identified a range of planning, performance and reflection strategies associated with each of these significant factors. Why is this work useful to the finance sector? One reason these antecedents of learning are important is because each individual’s ability to self-regulate learning is not fixed and can be increased. We identified a number of simple strategies that can encourage self-regulation. Techniques include self-developing clear learning goals, motivating the individual to achieve their objectives. Capitalising on professional networks beyond the immediate workplace team to diffuse and integrate knowledge across boundaries. Adapting and aligning learning goals as work tasks evolve to improve learning effectiveness. These tools and techniques are available to CISI members to help them accelerate their learning. | non_poster |
Geologiske undersøkelser av det ustabile fjellpartiet Åsvedkammen Raunig. M.S1, Skattum. S1, Rosseland, T.L1, Hilger. P1, Penna. I2, Bredal. M2 1Høgskulen på Vestlandet, institutt for miljø- og naturvitenskap 2Norges Geologiske Undersøkelse, geofare og skredobservasjon | non_poster |
Large scale testing of sticky traps for monitoring spittlebugs in different crops Dongiovanni C.2, Di Carolo M.2, Fumarola G.2, Hassan N.3, Usmani S.3, Tedone B.1, Ancona S.1, Cavalieri V.1,2 1Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, National research Concil, Italy, 2Centro di Ricerca, Sperimentazione e Formazione in Agricoltura “Basile Caramia”; 3Russel IPM Ltd, Deeside, Flinthire, Ch5 2NU, United Kingdom | non_poster |
Investigating rare stellar & binary evolution outcomes with the population synthesis code Giuliano Iorio International HPC Summer School Kobe, 15-16 July 2024 Researcher @ Unipd A significant fraction (>20%) of the stars in the Universe are not alone but gravitationally bound to other stars in binary systems. Stars in binaries interact through various processes, exchanging mass and influencing each other’s evolution. The interplay between stellar evolution and binary interactions can produce rare and peculiar objects, such as binary black holes that can merge later on due to the emission of gravitational waves. To study the properties of these rare populations, millions to billions of binary systems need to be simulated. Detailed stellar evolution and hydrodynamics codes are too computationally expensive for this task. Rapid population synthesis codes overcome this issue by using analytic and semi-analytic formalism to account for stellar and binary evolution. In the last three years, I developed a new, innovative, and flexible population synthesis code: SEVN. See the next slides to learn more about it! | 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: Zhang, G., Geng, Y., Wang, L., & Wang, X. (2022). What do academic employers want from candidates? A multi-disciplinary research. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22165). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6966543 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 |
Project coordinator: Diego Morgavi (INRAE) Partners from 17 countries: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Lithuania, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, The Netherlands, United Kingdom and the United States Budget: € 9.724.765 Duration: 1 October 2021 - 30 September 2026 Concept The ambition of the European Commission is to make Europe the world’s first climate-neutral continent by 2050. The strategy is to protect, conserve, and enhance the environment and protect citizens’ health and well-being from environment-related risks and impacts. The HoloRuminant project will provide new knowledge on the microbiomes of the ruminant holobiont to address the microbiome-knowledge challenge for sustainability and resilience whilst fostering innovation. The generated knowledge will contribute valuable information to the European Green Deal and the Farm to Fork strategy for improving the sustainability of food systems. The European project HoloRuminant is funded under the EU Horizon 2020 programme. It aims to clarify the role of ruminant microbiomes and their interaction with the host animal in early life and throughout fundamental life events known to affect ruminant production systems’ health, welfare, and environmental efficiency. | non_poster |
Poster: Are we reasoning about cloud application vulnerabilities in the right way? 1st Stefano Simonetto Department of Pervasive Systems University of Twente Enschede, The Netherlands s.simonetto@utwente.nl 2nd Peter Bosch Department of Pervasive Systems University of Twente Enschede, The Netherlands h.g.p.bosch@utwente.nl Abstract—Enterprises are quickly transitioning to container orchestrators, like Kubernetes, which helps developers and en- gineers manage a large number of container images, pods, and nodes. However, this new approach does not solve the problem of software vulnerabilities but arguably it makes vulnerability management harder. Most of the time, companies have to deal with thousands of containers in a dynamic environment since they can fail, and be rescheduled in other nodes. All these factors have a great impact on the vulnerability management system because the vulnerabilities and misconfigurations in the system are too many to be manually operated, so we seek a tool to highlight the most dangerous (we need a clear definition of dangerous) to prioritize them. This paper wants to emphasize the need for a vulnerability prioritization method and a defense technique improvement. Index Terms—Vulnerability, Prioritization, Container orches- tration, Attack kill-chain. I. INTRODUCTION Cloud application vulnerabilities have devastating conse- quences on our digital society, threatening our privacy, fi- nances, and critical infrastructure. CISQ (Consortium for Information and software quality) estimates that the cost of poor software quality in the US has grown to at least $2.41 trillion, but not in similar proportions as seen in 2020. The accumulated software Technical Debt (TD) has grown to roughly $1.52 trillion [2]. In the past few years, the research community proposed sophisticated approaches and techniques to enhance automated security testing and promptly identify vulnerabilities before they can be exploited by malicious attackers. As a result, today a large variety of tools are available to effectively detect vulnerabilities. However, most organizations do not know how to deal with the tons of vulnerabilities also because these tools are prone to produce false positives. The usual behavior is to patch them based on the score produced by each individual vulnerability. As if the problem wasn’t complicated enough, the container orchestration scenario makes the situation more challenging due to the rapid and continuous deployment of new containers and pods in such environments. In the real world, attackers put together multiple vulnerabilities to successfully compromise systems as shown in Fig.1 which is taken from a real attack scenario and is related to the ATT&CK framework [5]. Thus, analyzing vulnerabilities in combination with each other represents a fundamental step to obtain a realistic “big picture” of their implications. Furthermore, most defensive solutions are reactive solutions, like intrusion detection systems, system calls monitoring, etc. Even if these techniques are very well-established, they are affected by scalability problems and are not meant to prevent an attack to happen. This poster’s abstract aims to create a discussion on how vulnerabilities are managed in the container orchestration environment and particularly in Kubernetes. More precisely, why don’t we prioritize the software patches according to the real attack path instead of focusing on a single score? And if this is possible, can we automate this discovering-fixing process? Can we be more proactive during the defense? Fig. 1. Real attack path in Kubernetes environment II. PROBLEM STATEMENT Bug-finding approaches have arguably become too success- ful thanks to: 1) fuzzers which inject automatically semi-random data into a program/stack and detect bugs, 2) scanners that identify vulnerabilities relying on a database of known vulnerabilities. Industries are finding more vulnerabilities than they can fix promptly. This leads to a kno | non_poster |
Version 1 (September 2020) Poster presentation at OHEJPASM2020 Congress D-PhD06-6.3 Responsible Partner: ANSES | non_poster |
1/13/23, 9:39 PM OHBM https://ww6.aievolution.com/hbm2301/index.cfm?do=abs.viewAbs&subView=1&abs=2259 1/6 CBRAIN: a web-based, distributed computing platform for collaborative neuroinformatics research Poster No: 2428 Submission Type: Abstract Submission Authors: Bryan Caron , Reza Adalat , Natacha Beck , Serge Boroday , Samir Das , Najmeh Khalili-Mahani , Darcy Quesnel , Pierre Rioux , Darius Valevicius , Alan Evans Institutions: McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, McGill Centre for Integrative Neurosciences MCIN, McGill, McGill, McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Montreal, Quebec, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec First Author: Bryan Caron McGill University Montreal, Quebec Co-Author(s): Reza Adalat McGill University Montreal, Quebec Natacha Beck McGill University Montreal, Quebec Serge Boroday McGill University Montreal, Quebec Samir Das McGill Centre for Integrative Neurosciences MCIN McGill, McGill Najmeh Khalili-Mahani, PhD McGill University Montreal, Quebec Darcy Quesnel McGill University Montreal, Quebec Pierre Rioux McGill University 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 4 1 2 3 4 | non_poster |
1 ExplOERer Survey This survey is part of the ExplOERer project, which is investigating and informing the ways in which educators learn about use and re-‐use of online resources. This study will support the creation of support materials and on-‐line courses to help educators create, share, discover and re-‐use open educational resources. The survey is designed to tell us something about how you learn in your role as an educator. We are interested particularly in how you learn about using and reusing online resources in your teaching or when designing curriculum. There are no right or wrong answers to these questions. So please indicate how you have typically behaved, rather than how you think you should behave. The main section of the questionnaire contains five groups of statements. Respond by choosing from a number of options on a scale. It is important you respond to every statement, otherwise we cannot include your data in the study. The questionnaire should take you around 15-‐20 minutes to complete. At the end of the survey, you will be invited to volunteer to participate in a follow-‐on telephone interview. Thank you very much for your time and input, which will benefit other educators across Europe by informing design of learning opportunities. The ExplOERer project runs from September 2014 to August 2016 and is funded by the European Commission under the European Erasmus+ programme. This communication reflects the views only of the author, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained therein. For more information see the project website: https://exploerer.wordpress.com/ CONSENT Before beginning this survey, we need your consent to participate. By clicking yes below you are agreeing to participate in the study. Data collected will be accessible only by the research team at the UK Open University. All data will be anonymised prior to publication and participants will not be identified (or identifiable). Participants are free to withdraw from the study at any time. I agree to participate in this survey: [Yes/No] BACKGROUND QUESTIONS Personal details: [1-‐ PD] Age ______ | non_poster |
A Review Article Hasa Abdullah1*, Sami Sayadi2, Mohammad A.Alghouti3 Management of Brine Disposal in Marine Environment: An Approach Towards Circular Economy in Qatar and other GCC countries Abstract: The direct disposal of this brine into seawater impacts marine ecosystems due to its elevated salinity and temperature. This comprehensive review will explore the various desalination techniques employed in Qatar and other GCC countries of brine discharge on coral reefs. Additionally, this review paper will assess Qatar's current brine management strategies. Furthermore, the study aims to facilitate and propose sustainable brine solutions utilizing the DPSIR framework. It will also outline a circular economy approach to brine management in Qatar, evaluating its contribution to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) targets such as SDG.6, SDG.7, and SDG.14 through sustainable brine management. Introduction: Many countries globally face water scarcity due to geographic location, environment, and population growth, with over 50% expected to experience scarcity or stress by 2025. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) confronts water scarcity due to limited freshwater resources, aridity, highly saline seawaters, climate change, low rainfall, and population growth. Despite lacking renewable water sources, the GCC countries, including Qatar, have undergone rapid economic development driven by abundant natural gas and fossil fuel reserves. However, this growth has intensified the demand for water resources, prompting substantial investments in desalination to meet the needs of populations and various sectors. Despite its benefits, desalination leads to brine discharge, posing environmental concerns. This review aims to provide a sustainable strategy for mitigating brine discharge impacts on marine ecosystems, utilizing the DPSIR framework to develop effective responses and contribute to circular economy principles and sustainable development goals. Major Desalination Technologies in Qatar and GCC countries: 1. Multi-Stage Flash (MSF) Figure 1. Multi stage Flash (MSF) desalination technique (1). | non_poster |
Star Formation and Chemical Enrichment from Protoclusters to Galaxy Clusters Keita Fukushima1 Kentaro Nagamine1 Ikkoh Shimizu2 Porto Ercole, Italy 25-29 Sep. 2023 k-fukushima@astro-osaka.jp 1. Osaka University, 2. Shikoku Gakuin University https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad2526 | non_poster |
96 O MONITORAMENTO DA POLUIÇÃO ATMOSFÉRICA: EM BUSCA DA QUALIDADE AMBIENTAL THE MONITORING OF AIR POLLUTION: IN SEARCH OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY INGRID ZANELLA ANDRADE CAMPOS Doutora e Mestre em Direito pela Universidade Federal de Pernambuco - UFPE. Professora Adjunta da Universidade Federal do de Pernambuco - UFPE. Pesquisadora da Linhares Geração em parceria com o Centro de Pesquisa e Projetos Tecnológicos (CPPT), em Projeto de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento pela Agência Nacional de Energia Elétrica (ANEEL). Auditora Ambiental Líder. Perita Ambiental Judicial. Coordenadora Acadêmica e Professora da Pós-Graduação em Direito Marítimo, Portuário e do Petróleo da UNINASSAU, Recife/PE. Professora da Pós-Graduação em Direito Marítimo e Portuário da UNISANTOS/SP, da Faculdade de Direito de Vitória/ES e da UNIVALI/SC. Presidente da Comissão de Direito Marítimo, Portuário e do Petróleo da OAB/PE. Membro da Comissão de Meio Ambiente da OAB/PE. Oficial do Conselho da Ordem do Mérito Naval/Marinha do Brasil. RESUMO O presente artigo trata da necessidade de controle e monitoramento ambiental contínuo das fontes de poluição atmosférica. Para tanto, abordar-se-á a previsão constitucional, para posteriormente, ingressar na normatização infraconstitucional. Assim, procura-se estimular a sustentabilidade ambiental, estudos e novas tecnologias que podem ser adotadas pelo órgão ambiental no monitoramento da qualidade ambiental, bem como, evitar atos de poluição ambiental e resguardar o direito ao meio ambiente não poluído. PALAVRAS CHAVE: direito ambiental; poluição atmosférica; monitoramento e controle ambiental. ABSTRACT This present article considers the needy of control and continuous environmental monitoring of air pollution sources. In this way, will be consider the constitutional provision, to subsequently join the infra constitutional law. Therefore, pretend to encourage environmental sustainability, studies and new technologies that can be adopted by the environmental agency in monitoring the environmental quality, such | non_poster |
Page | 1 Spatial-temporal Transformation of Habitat Causes the Northward Migration of Wild Elephants in Yunnan: Based on Google Earth Engine Donghao Jiang*1, Yue Zhang†2 1Department of Geography, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK 2School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming, China 19 January 2023 Summary From 2020 to 2021, a herd of wild elephants migrated more than 500 kilometers northward from their habitat (Yunnan, Southwest China) became an international hotspot. The study analysis the main habitat (Mengyang Reserve and surrounding areas) of this group of wild elephants from the natural environment, changes in land use types, and habitat fragmentation and found the rare hot and dry weather before the wild elephant migration and the habitat destruction caused by human activities in the past ten years contributed to this migration. KEYWORDS: Temporal-spatial, Land use change, Google Earth Engine, Habitat fragmentation 1. Introduction The population of wild Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) is estimated at less than 300 in China, and nearly all of them only exit in Yunnan province, southwestern part of China(Sukumar, 2006). Xishuangbanna located in the southern part of Yunnan, is the mainly activity area of wild elephants. It contains five parts of wild elephant natural reserve, Mengyang reserve (MYR) is the largest one among them (about 1000 km2, 600m – 1500m in altitude) (Lin et al., 2008). A herd of elephants northward migrating 500km from MYR to Kunming and returned to reserve after 17 months (from March 2020 to June 2021) has attracted widely international attention (Wang et al., 2021). There have been reported many times that wild elephants roamed irregularly to Puer (less than 100km away from the reserve) (Zhang et al., 2015), but the migrations similar to this time are extremely unusual in recent years. The study is to explore the reasons in it. The core area of this study is Mengyang Reserve, the largest one of 5 sub-reserves in Xishuangbanna, because this reserve is the start point of the herd of migration elephants, because the range of activities of elephants is not only within the protected area, the 20km outside the ginger protected area is used as a buffer area, which is also included in the scope of the study (Chen et al., 2022). The entire research area is not only in Xishuangbanna, but a small part in the north is located in Puer, and the southeast part of the research area also includes a part of Menglun Reserve. The extent of the total area is 6102.97 km2 (Figure 1). * donghao.jiang@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk † 20222207122@stu.kust.edu.cn | 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: Manco Vega, A. (2022). Content analysis of institutional policies on open science. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22185). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6912542 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 |
Inferring the potential spread of Xylella fastidiosa in Great Britain Occhibove F.1, Chapman D. S.2, and White S. M.1 1UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford, UK 2University of Stirling, Stirling, UK flaocc@ceh.ac.uk @flafflyfreak | non_poster |
ISSN 2358-0488 | ISBN 978-85-495-0020-5 | ROCHA, Cleomar (Org). Anais do IV Simpósio Internacional de Inovação em Mídias Interativas. Goiânia: Media Lab / UFG, 2016. 702 Ferramentas do design thinking no desenvolvimento do EuTeGuio, uma interface interativa de auxílio a crianças autistas Aline Cristina Antoneli de Oliveira, UFSC1 Maria José Baldessar,UFSC2 Priscila Basto Fagundes, SENAI Florianópolis3 Natália Terezinha Alves, SENAI Florianópolis4 RESUMO O presente trabalho objetiva apresentar como ferramentas que utilizam a abordagem do design thinking foram aplicadas na ideação, concepção e desenvolvimento do protótipo de uma interface interativa que objetiva auxiliar na autonomia de crianças que se encontram em algum nível do TEA (Transtorno do Espectro Autista). Várias ferramentas foram estudadas e aplicadas, como entrevistas em profundidade, Mapa de Stakeholders, Mapa de Empatia, Persona e Point of View. Ao final foi desenvolvido um protótipo web que auxilia os pais de crianças autistas em sua rotina diária, o EuTeGuio. Cerca de 160 (cento e sessenta) pais ou responsáveis validaram a ideia, sendo que destes 32 (trinta e dois) testaram o protótipo. Palavras-chave: design thinking, autismo, protótipo web ABSTRACT This paper aims to present how tools that use the design thinking approach were applied in the ideation, design and development of the prototype on an interactive interface that aims to help the autonomy of children who are at some level of ASD (autism spectrum disorder). Several tools were studied and applied, such as in-depth interviews, Stakeholders Map, Empathy Map, Persona and Point of View. At the end it developed a prototype website that helps parents of autistic children in their daily routine, called EuTeGuio. About 160 (one hundred and sixty) parents or guardians validated the idea, and of these 32 (thirty-two) tested the prototype. Keywords: design thinking, autism, web prototype 1 Mestranda em Engenharia e Gestão do Conhecimento 2 Doutora em Ciências da Comunicação 3 Mestre em Ciência da Computação 4 Graduanda em Análise e Desenvolvimento de Sistemas | non_poster |
AA01 Traccia il profumo botanico Francesca Rapparini, Luisa Neri, Mafalda Govoni, Matteo Mari, Osvaldo Facini, Elena Secomandi (CNR IBIMET) AA02 AGRICOLTURA+ALIMENTAZIONE+AMBIENTE: VIAGGIO NEL CIBO TRA SOSTENIBILITÀ E RICERCA (UNIBO) La biodiversità come non l’avete mai vista e… mangiata Luca Fontanesi, Giuseppina Schiavo, Claudia Geraci, Silvia Tinarelli, Giulia Moscatelli, Hamed Kazemi Il DNA nel piatto – vero o falso? Valerio Joe Utzeri, Anisa Ribani, Samuele Bovo, Luca Fontanesi I segreti del DNA in agricoltura Claudio Ratti, Silvio Salvi, Luca, Dondini, Stefano Tartarini, Luca Fontanesi Nuova vita alla vite Ilaria Filippetti, Giancarlo Allegro, Chiara Pastore, Gabriele Valentini, Emilia Colucci Il frutteto del futuro Luigi Manfrini, Brunella Morandi, Luca Corelli Grappadelli, Kushtrim Bresilla, Alexandra Boini , Giulio Perulli, Gianmarco Bortolotti Un suolo sano per una vita sana Livia Vittori Antisari, Gilmo Vianello, Gloria Falsone, Camilla Forti Probiotici per le api Diana Di Gioia, Loredana Baffoni, Francesca Gaggìa, Daniele Alberoni Sotto una nuova luce: coltivare si fa smart Alberto Barbaresi, Daniele Torreggiani, Maria Eva Giorgioni, Giovanni Pollicino, Stefano Benni, Claudio Caprara, Enrica Santolini, Filippo Bonora, Giulia Gatta, Patrizia Tassinari SCZ01 Il Laboratorio della Fisica Teorica | Seminario (Biblioteca W. Bigiavi - Ore 20:00; 21:15; 22.15; 23:15) Davide Fioravanti (INFN - UNIBO) SCZ02 Elettrizzanti esperienze di elettromagnetismo Franco Vazza (UNIBO-INAF) SCZ03 HadroCraps A. Sidoti (INFN - UNIBO) SCZ04 50 Anni di Astronomia a Bologna Associazione Astrofili Bolognesi SCZ05 C’è nebbia e nebbia Claudia Patrignani, Nicoletta Mauri (INFN - UNIBO) SCZ06 Occhi elettronici sull'invisibile Niccolò Masi (INFN) SCZ07 Extreme Energy Events: Scienza nelle scuole Rosario Nania (INFN - Centro Fermi) SCZ08 Le maree, le conchiglie e la luna Romano Serra (INFN - UNIBO) SCZ09 La doccia a raggi cosmici Daniele Cavazza (INFN) SCZ10 Sguardi verso l'Universo: A spasso tra i pianeti * (dalle 18:45, ogni 15 minuti) Sandro Bardelli, Antonio DeBlasi, Roberto DiLuca, Luciano Nicastro, Sara Ricciardi, Maura Sandri, Elena Zucca (INAF OAS, in collaborazione con Associazione SOFOS) SCZ11 Sguardi verso l'Universo: Il planetario (Accademia delle Scienze) INAF OAS in collaborazione con Associazione SOFOS SCZ12 Il progresso visibile Stefania Varano, Simona Righini (INAF IRA) SCZ13 Radio Natura Stefania Varano, Franco Fiocchi, Marco Poloni (INAF IRA) SCZ14 L’eruzione immaginata (INGV) SCZ15 La professoressa Astrogatta e le frontiere dello spazio | Laboratorio per bambini * (Associazione Hamelin, Via Zamboni 15 - Ore 17:00; 18:00; 19:00) Sara Ricciardi (INAF OAS, in collaborazione con Associazione Hamelin) SCZ16 L'ISTAT dà i numeri? Istat, Istituto Nazionale di statistica, Ufficio territoriale per l’Emilia Romagna SCZ17 La Terra Trasparente Roberto Braga, Deborah Lo Pò, Giulia Consuma, Giorgio Gasparotto e Giuseppe Bargossi (UNIBO) SCZ18 Quando la fisica va a teatro | Exhibit + Spettacolo (Palazzo Poggi - Spettacoli ore 20:00; 20:45; 21:30; 22:00) Laura Fabbri, Barbara Pecori, Silvia Castellaro, con il supporto di Romano Serra e Giovanni Ravaioli (UNIBO) SCZ19 L’apprendista stregone è diventato un chimico Gruppo Conoscere la chimica, coordinamento Lucia Maini (UNIBO) SCZ20 SIR – PURSUIT Scopri il futuro dalla cellula al cosmo Cellula e individuo - L. Milani, F. Danesi. Salute - M. Calvaresi, E. Turrini. Società - M. Bigoni, I. Bueno. Territorio - E. Mandanici, M. Proto. Cosmo - M. Baldi (UNIBO) SCZ21 L'universo è come un iceberg | Conferenza (Palazzo Poggi, Aula Carducci - Ore 21.30) Marco Baldi (UNIBO) TEC17 Alla ricerca di una città con strade sempre più smart! Cesare Sangiorgi, Riccardo Lamperti, Filippo Ubertini e Anna Laura Pisello (UNIBO) TEC01 Metal Organic Frameworks Barbara Ventura, Khaled Hassanein (CNR ISOF) TEC02 La TAC a raggi X in formato olografico Rosa Brancaccio, Elios Sequi, Maria Pia Morigi (INFN - UNIBO) TEC03 Intellige | non_poster |
1 8° Convegno Nazionale GdL SOI Postraccolta Pescia (PT), 29-30 settembre 2022 LIBRO DEI RIASSUNTI | non_poster |
ORD CLEARANCE FORM Initiator Information Product Category First Name: Vicki Last Name: Richardson E-mail Address: Richardson.Vicki@epa.gov Organization: ord, ccte, bctd, aetmb HISA (Highly Influential Scientific Assessment) ISI (Influential Scientific Information) Not HISA or ISI Requires Advance Notification Does not Require Advance Notification Principal Investigator / Project Officer Information Product Information First Name: Vicki Clearance Tracking #: ORD-045245 Middle Initial: EPA Publication #: Last Name: Richardson Product Type: Presentations and Technical Summaries Email: Richardson.Vicki@epa.gov Product Subtype: Abstract Phone #: 9195413917 Records Schedule: Not A Senior Official Product Title Evaluation of Microcystin Toxicity in 2D and 3D Primary Human Hepatocyte Cultures Author(s), Affiliation, and Address EPA Author EPA Author First Name: Justin First Name: Vicki Last Name: McGehee Last Name: Richardson Organization: ord, ccte, bctd, aetmb Organization: ord, ccte, bctd, aetmb Address: ORISE, Oak Ridge TN Address: RTP NC Telephone: Telephone: Email: McGehee.Justin@epa.gov Email: Richardson.Vicki@epa.gov Percentage Contribution %: Percentage Contribution %: Impact / Purpose Statement Note: The Impact / Purpose Statement information for this work product will be displayed on the additional pages. Product Description / Abstract Note: All Product Description / Abstract information for this work product will be displayed on the additional pages. Tracking and Planning Note: All Tracking and Planning Field data for this work product will be displayed on the additional pages. Bibliographic Citation Components Publisher: Meeting Name: Society of Toxicology 61st Annual Meeting and ToxExpo 2022 Publisher City: Meeting Start Date: 03/27/2022 Publisher State: Meeting End Date: 03/31/2022 Publisher Country: Meeting City: San Diego Editors: Meeting State: CA Edition: Meeting Country: USA Book Title: Journal: Chapter: Publication Title: Volume: Year: Issue: Pages: URL: | non_poster |
The 19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun Edited by G. A. Feiden Monitoring of the magnetic field topology and activity of the core helium-burning giant β Ceti in the period 2010-2013 Svetla Tsvetkova1, Pascal Petit2,3, Renada Konstantinova-Antova1,3, Michel Aurière2,3, Gregg A. Wade4, Corinne Charbonnel5, Rumen Bogdanovski1, Ana Borisova1 1 Institute of Astronomy and NAO, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 72 Tsarigradsko shose, 1784 Sofia, Bulgaria stsvetkova@astro.bas.bg 2 CNRS, Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie, IRAP, 14 Avenue Edouard Belin, 31400 Toulouse, France 3 Université de Toulouse, UPS-OMP, IRAP, Toulouse, France 4 Department of Physics, Royal Military College of Canada, PO Box 17000, Station ‘Forces’, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7K 4B4 5 Geneva Observatory, University of Geneva, 51, Chemin des Maillettes, 1290 Versoix, Switzerland Abstract β Ceti is a slowly rotating (v sin i = 3.5 km s−1) single giant. In our previous study (Tsvetkova et al. (2013)) we showed that it is in the core He-burning phase and we reconstructed two Zeeman Doppler imaging (ZDI) maps (using data from 2010 and 2011) revealing a simple large-scale magnetic field structure. We concluded that the magnetic field of β Ceti could have a fossil field origin. In addition, the study of Aurière et al. (2015) about the properties and origin of the magnetism of late-type giants, where β Ceti was a member of that sample, revealed that this star did not follow the general trends for dynamo-generated magnetic fields. Now, we present a new ZDI map of β Ceti and compare the new results with our previous study. This monitoring for several years of the magnetic field topology and line activity indicators variability supports our previous conclusion about the fossil field origin of the magnetic field of β Ceti. 1 Introduction β Ceti (HD 4128) is a star of spectral class K0 with V = 2.04 mag and B −V = 1.02 mag. It is a single giant with the highest X-ray luminosity log Lx = 30.2 erg s−1 (Maggio et al. (1998); Hünsch et al. (1996)) in the near solar neighborhood (d ≤30 pc). Magnetic events such as coronal loops (Eriksson et al. (1983)) and flares (Ayres et al. (2001)) have been detected. It is a slowly rotating giant with v sin i = 3.5 km s−1. In the previous study of Tsvetkova et al. (2013), we showed that β Ceti is a 3.5 M⊙giant in the core helium- burning phase with a radius of 18 R⊙. The main se- quence progenitor of β Ceti was a late B-type star. We were able to reconstruct two magnetic maps of the sur- face magnetic field topology of the star employing the ZDI technique. Both maps showed that the large-scale magnetic field of β Ceti was dominated by the poloidal component. The behavior of the line activity indicators Hα, CaII K, CaII IR (854.2 nm), and the radial veloc- ity correlated rather well with the longitudinal magnetic field Bl. Our main conclusion was that the magnetism of β Ceti might be (at least partly) of fossil origin and inherited from a main sequence Ap/Bp star. Here, we present a new dataset of β Ceti. We are able to reconstruct one more ZDI map and to compare the new results with the previous study. 2 Observations and data reduction 1 Observational data were obtained with two twin fiber-fed echelle spectropolarimeters – Narval (Aurière (2003)), which operates at the 2-m Bernard Lyot Téle- scope (TBL) at Pic du Midi Observatory, France, and ESPaDOnS (Donati et al. (2006a)), which operates at the 3.6-m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) of Mauna Kea Observatory, Hawaii. In polarimetric mode, both have a spectral resolution of about 65 000 and a nearly continuous spectrum coverage from the near- ultraviolet (at about 370 nm) to the near-infrared domain (at 1050 nm) in a single exposure, with 40 orders aligned on the CCD frame by two cross-disperser prisms. Stokes I (unpolarized light) and Stokes V (circular polarization) parameters are simultaneously obtained by four subex- posures between which the retard | 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: Mayhew, K., Henkel, M., Krause, G., Svab, C., & Mongeon, P. (2022). On the coverage of historical journals in Web of Science and Scopus. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22176). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6966925 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 |
Efficiency enhancement of Cu2ZnSnS4 monograin layer solar cells via absorber surface treatment Kristi Timmoa, Maris Pilveta, Katri Muskaa, Mare Altosaara, Valdek Miklia, Mati Danilsona, Maxim Gucb, Victor Izquierdo-Rocab, Maarja Grossberga, Marit Kauk-Kuusika a Department of Materials and Environmental Technology, Tallinn University of Technology, Ehitajate tee 5, 19086 Tallinn, Estonia b Catalonia Institute for Energy Research, Jardins de les Dones de Negre 1, 08930 Sant Adrià de Besòs, Barcelona, Spain Introduction Currently, the efficiencies of Cu2ZnSnS4 (CZTS) monograin layer solar cells are mainly limited by high recombination losses at the p-n junction interface that need to be overcome. One approach to improve the performance of CZTS monograin layer solar cells is to apply a post-treatment to the monograin powder crystals` surfaces before the buffer layer deposition. Cu1.85Zn1.1SbS3.95 MGPs were synthesized in molten KI from 5N CuS, ZnS and SnS in evacuated quartz ampoules; VCZTS/Vflux(cm3/cm3) = 1; T = 740 oC ; t = 144 hours. This study includes the optimization of 3 post-treatment steps: I chemical etching of as-grown powder crystals with Br2-MeOH followed by KCN; II annealing in a sulfur-containing atmosphere; III additional chemical etching before CdS deposition.UnpublishedUnpublishedUnpublished | non_poster |
Newsletter Issue 2 June 2019 The overall objective of the MASTRO project is to develop intelligent bulk materials for the transport sector incorporating self-responsive properties 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 76094. 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. | 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: Olmos-Peñuela, J., Amara, N., & Castro- Martínez, E. (2022). Science-society interactions. Exploring the link between open research practices and knowledge transfer In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo-Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22188). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6920877 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 |
In drei Schritten zum wissenschaftlichen Poster „It’s just an illustrated abstract“ Dieses Poster wurde erstellt im Rahmen des EW-Kurses „Studierende auf der DHD-Konferenz“, Dozentin: Dr. Ulrike Wuttke, WiSe 2020 Autor*innen: Polina Helwig, Erik Kautz, Christian Mina Gestaltung: Aufbau orientiert sich am Aufbau der Forschung. Kategorisiere deine Informationen (Must / Good / Nice) Simple is good. Wichtige Informationen betonen. Planung: Grundsätzlich geht es darum den Kern der eigenen Forschung zu erkennen, um ihn dann zu präsentieren. W-Fragen als Leitfaden. Mündliche Präsentation: Der Inhalt sollte die wichtigsten Aspekte des Posters beinhalten (Länge ca. 3 Minuten). Neben dem Poster stehen, um es nicht zu verdecken. Die Präsentation als Werbespot. | non_poster |
13th International Conference on Society & Materials, SAM13, Pisa, 20-21 May 2019 1/4 PLASTIC MATERIAL RECYCLING IN STEEL INDUSTRY: A FRUITFUL EX- AMPLE OF CIRCULAR ECONOMY Filippo Cirilli, Antonello Di Donato, Eros Faraci, Daphne Mirabile, Michele De Santis, Rina Consulting Centro Sviluppo Materiali, filippo.cirilli@rina.org Loris Bianco, Ferriere Nord, loris.biancoittini.it Mirko Bottolo, Idealservice, m.bottolo@idealservice.it Jaroslav Brhel, HTT, jbrhel@htt.eu jbrhel@htte.eu The H2020 project POLYNSPIRE has been launched to demonstrate a set of innovative, cost effec- tive and sustainable solutions, aiming at improving the energy and resource efficiency of post-consumer and post-industrial plastic recycling processes, targeting 100% waste streams. To reach this ambitious goal, three innovation pillars are addressed: A. Chemical recycling to recover plastic monomers and valuable fillers B. Advanced additivation to enhance recycled plastics quality C. Valorization of plastic waste as carbon source in steel industry In particular, the application of plastics in the steel sector is studied by the Consortium Rina Consult- ing Centro Sviluppo Materiali as research center, Ferriere Nord (steel factory), I BLU (plastic collection of grains development and production), HTT (engineering company). The consortium will validate the pro- posed approach with industrial trials, up to TRL 7 (Threshold Readiness Level). The mix of polymers, discharged at the end of plastic recovery chain, can be used in the steel sector with the aim to recovery their carbon content and to valorize its energetic content replacing the fossil fuels currently used in the Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) process, such as natural gas and coal. In the EAF scrap melting is accomplished by supply electrical and chemical energy to the furnace. The chemical energy is supplied via several sources such as natural gas burning and injection of car- bon-based materials. In order to reduce the electricity consumption in the last decades the chemical en- ergy suppling has been increased, transforming the EAF from a simple scrap melting furnace to a chem- ical reactor where steel refining is also carried out. | non_poster |
December 12-16, 2021 Jeju Island UNESCO Global Geopark, Republic of Korea 2021.12.12.-16, 제주도 유네스코 세계지질공원 " # 4 5 3 " $ 5 # 0 0 , 제9차 유네스코 세계지질공원 제주 총회 | non_poster |
December 12-16, 2021 Jeju Island UNESCO Global Geopark, Republic of Korea 2021.12.12.-16, 제주도 유네스코 세계지질공원 " # 4 5 3 " $ 5 # 0 0 , 제9차 유네스코 세계지질공원 제주 총회 | non_poster |
The VIPERS quiescent population Environmental impact on the mass-size relation Miguel Figueira Sebastiao National Centre for Nuclear Research, Warsaw Institute of Astronomy, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Toruń Collaborators: Małgorzata Siudek (Institut de Física d'Altes Energies, Spain), Agnieszka Pollo (NCBJ, Uniwersytet Jagielloński, Poland), Janusz Krywult (Uniwersytet Jana Kochanowskiego, Poland) A journey through galactic environments From the halo assembly bias to the satellite quenching 25th-29th September 2023 | non_poster |
Translating Near to Far Detector for DUNE Oscillation Analysis Alex Wilkinson 19 December 2023 | 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: Tsivinskaya, A. (2022).Global Russian Studies: Quantitative Methodologies and the Production of Academic Knowledge. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22189). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6935745 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 |
Auf den Spuren Teobert Malers Proyectos arqueológicos en Campeche, México Exposición Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz Potsdamer Sr. 37 10785 Berlin 15.10.-9.12.2024 Dzehkabtún, palacio (foto: Teobert Maler, 1887. IAI, Legado Teobert Maler, N-0040 s 52). Dzehkabtún, Equipo de 2017. | non_poster |
Genre evolution Our results reveal that some sections of the H2020 webs display similarities when compared with previous offline (conventional) text genres. In contrast, other sections move away from those genres and show a more noticeable evolution. We find differences in terms of layout, structure and language. These changes are partly brought about by the writers’ desire to take advantage of the affordances that the Web 2.0 has to offer. The layout of the webpages is arranged in groups combining textual and visual elements. These multimodal clusters, are often placed in a similar position and display identical information and in a similar order. In other words, the position and order of these textual and visual elements tends to be fixed (crystalized) for each of the text types or genres in H2020 websites. Clusters are devoted to different contents (e.g. project, partners, news & events, etc.) and some of them are found in research project websites more frequently than others (see table below). For example, all of the websites analysed contain a header but not a footer. All of them include news and events but less than a half have a newsletter associated. Most of them elaborate about the project and all of them about the European Union. Finally, six out of ten websites include a cluster for social media The webpage | non_poster |
Nicolas Favelin, Adeline Sellier, Edith Sheng, Irene Maffucci, Séverine Padiolleau-Lefèvre, Bérangère Avalle-Bihan, Stéphane Octave Université de technologie de Compiègne, Génie Enzymatique et Cellulaire (CNRS UMR 7025), Compiègne, France New application of phage display to develop tools to fight against Xylella fastidiosa website: http://www.umr7025-gec.fr/ | non_poster |
Teaching astronomy with the GoChile project Jure Japelj1, Andreja Gomboc1 1Center for Astrophysics and Cosmology, University of Nova Gorica, SI-5000 Nova Gorica, Slovenia | non_poster |
Genetic diversity of Xylella fastidiosa subsp. fastidiosa after invasion to a new region Andreina I. Castilloa, Chi-Wei Tsaib, Chiou-Chu Suc, Ling-Wei Wengb, Yu-Chen Lind, Shu- Ting Chod, Chih-Horng Kuod, Rodrigo P. P. Almeidaa aDepartment of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley bDepartment of Entomology, National Taiwan University cDivision of Pesticide Application, Taiwan Agricultural Chemicals and Toxic Substances Research Institute dInstitute of Plant and Microbial Biology, Academia Sinica, Taiwan | non_poster |
Advancing Research Infrastructure and Solutions for Supporting Open Science in Iraq Dr. Salwan M. Abdulateef President of Open Science Community Iraq | non_poster |
An improved delimiting survey approach for Xylella fastidiosa Elena Lázaro1, David Conesa2, Antonio López-Quílez2, Vicente Dalmau3, Amparo Ferrer3, Antonio Vicent1 1IVIA, Institut Valencià d’ Investigacions Agràries, Moncada, Spain 2Departament d’ Estadística i Investigació Operativa, Universitat de València, Burjassot, Spain 3Servei de Sanitat Vegetal, Conselleria d’Agricultura, Desenvolupament Rural, Emergència Climàtica i Transició Ecològica, València, Spain | non_poster |
Biblioteca Seção Técnica de Referência e Atendimento ao Usuário e Documentação STRAUD UNESP – FACULDADE DE FILOSOFIA E CIÊNCIAS Plano de Gestão de dados: como utilizar a ferramenta DMPTool Elizabete Monteiro Marília 2023 | non_poster |
Improving Situational Awareness in Emergencies through Crowd Supported Analysis of Social Media Jakob Rogstadius, Vassilis Kostakos M-ITI, University of Madeira 9000-390 Funchal, Portugal {jakob,vk}@m-iti.org Jim Laredo, Maja Vukovic IBM T.J. Watson Research Center Hawthorne NY 10532, USA {laredoj,maja}@us.ibm.com Abstract. In this ongoing research project, we develop an information system that aims to improve situational awareness and shorten response times in emergency response situations. Through a combination of algorithmic and crowdsourcing techniques, the proposed system gathers, analyzes, organizes and then visualizes social media activity around an event in real-time and turns overwhelming streams of status updates into actionable pieces of information. This document is an extended abstract to the poster with the same name. Social media in emergency response Successful emergency response relies heavily on situational awareness, created from access to timely, accurate and relevant information about complex ongoing events. As a complement to traditional sources, researchers (Vieweg et al. 2010) and emergency response professionals (van der Vlugt and Hornery 2009) are now identifying social media as an emerging source of early breaking news, image and video footage, and an indicator of where to direct resources. However, existing information systems either fail to incorporate social media as a source, or do not meet the requirements imposed by use in crisis situations. | non_poster |
Mars 2022 Tout savoir sur la vache laitière ! Auteur principal : Chaire BEA Contributeurs : Amandine Rave, Alice de Boyer des Roches Infographie : Ilann Adjedj DOI : 10.5281/zenodo.12800459 https://chaire-bea.vetagro-sup.fr Vous ne pouvez démarrer la journée sans une goutte de lait dans votre café ou vous n’envisagez pas de manger des pâtes sans fromage ? Mais que savez-vous vraiment des vaches laitières, de leur taille, de leur poids, de leur espérance de vie, de leurs capacités cognitives, de leur comportement social, etc. ? Venez découvrir en images les principales caractéristiques de Marguerite, notre vache laitière ! | non_poster |
Community Windfarm By Tipperary Energy Agency Templederry RES4CITY CASE STUDY #1 | non_poster |
Accountability GDPR Art. 5.2.Principles relating to processing of personal data Lawfulness, Fairness, Transparency Purpose Limitation Data Minimisation Accuracy Storage Limitation Integrity, Confidentiality GDPR Art. 5.1.Principles relating to processing of personal data Data Protection; Fundamental Right Principles Marlon Domingus, Erasmus University Rotterdam marlon.domingus@eur.nl September 2020 Article 8 Protection of personal data 1. Everyone has the right to the protection of personal data concerning him or her. 2. Such data must be processed fairly for specified purposes and on the basis of the consent of the person concerned or some other legitimate basis laid down by law. Everyone has the right of access to data which has been collected concerning him or her, and the right to have it rectified. 3. Compliance with these rules shall be subject to control by an independent authority. Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union Art. 8. | non_poster |
PROFIL DOKTOR MENGABDI Lokalatih dan Pendampingan Peningkatan Pendapatan Masyarakat Melalui Optimalisasi Peran Badan Usaha Milik Desa (BUMDesa) Berbasis Potensi Ekonomi Lokal Desa KETUA Dr.rer.pol. Wildan Syafitri, S.E., M.E. Ekonomi Pembangunan/FEB Universitas Brawijaya wildans@ub.ac.id ANGGOTA 1 Bahtiar Fitanto, SE., MT. Ekonomi Pembangunan/FEB Universitas Brawijaya bfitanto@gmail.com ANGGOTA 2 Moh. Athoillah, SE., ME. Ekonomi Pembangunan/FEB Universitas Brawijaya athok@ub.ac.id ANGGOTA 3 Medea Rahmadhani U., SP., M.Si Agribisnis/Fakultas Pertanian Universitas Brawijaya medea_ramadhani@yahoo.com MITRA: Binti Anisusanti, Kepala Desa Gandusari, Kabupaten Blitar Kegiatan Doktor Mengabdi Dibiayai oleh: LPPM UB Melalui Dana PNBP Universitas Brawijaya Sesuai dengan Daftar Isian Pelaksanaan Anggaran (DIPA) Universitas Brawijaya Nomor DIPA- 042.01.2.400919/2019 Kenyataan bahwa kapasitas desa dalam menyelenggarakan pembangunan dalam perspektif “Desa Membangun”, masih terbatas. Keterbatasan itu tampak dalam kapasitas aparat Pemerintah Desa dan masyarakat, kualitas tata kelola desa, maupun sistem pendukung yang mewujud melalui regulasi dan kebijakan pemerintah yang terkait dengan desa. Sebagai dampaknya, kualitas perencanaan, pelaksanaan, pengendalian dan pemanfaatan kegiatan pembangunan desa kurang optimal dan kurang memberikan dampak terhadap peningkatan kesejahteraan masyarakat desa. Pengembangan ekonomi lokal dan kewirausahaan, baik pada ranah pengembangan usaha masyarakat, maupun yang diprakarsai desa melalui Badan Usaha Milik Desa (BUMDesa) dan Badan Usaha Milik antar Desa, serta produk unggulan kawasan perdesaan akan dilakukan dengan mengembangkan sentra produksi, sentra industri pengolahan hasil pertanian dan perikanan, serta membangun destinasi pariwisata. Untuk kasus di Desa Gandusari, Kabupaten Blitar pemerintah desa berupaya untuk menghidupkan kembali BUMDesa yang sempat mati suri. Oleh karenanya, dengan adanya lokalatih dan pendampingan yang dilakukan tim Doktor Mengabdi Universitas Brawijaya diharapkan BUMDesa sudah mampu menemukan potensi yang dijadikan usaha utamanya. Selama lokalatih dan pendampingan, ada tiga jenis usaha yang dimunculkan, yakni: (1) usaha ikan Koi, (2) kerajinan sabut kelapa, dan (3) batik. Katakunci: Pemerintah Desa, Tata Kelola Desa, Pengembangan Ekonomi Lokal, Badan Usaha Milik Desa (BUMDesa), Desa Gandusari 1. Social Entrepreneurship to Improve Community Welfare in Desa Gandusari, Blitar disubmit pada Jurnal Pengabdian kepada Masyarakat (Indonesian Journal of Community Engagement) 2. Product Capacity Improvement Through Based Local Training and Creative Economic in Gandusari Village, Blitar, Indonesia masih dalam proses pencarian jurnal yang tepat Tim Pengabdi Ringkasan Eksekutif HKI dan Publikasi | non_poster |
Wind Turbine Operation Optimization and Condition Monitoring Using Advanced Analytics GES23 - 248 Alan Rezazadeh, PhD, Ehsan Aminfar, PhD Applied Research and Innovative Services (ARIS) Southern Alberta Institute of Technology Calgary, Alberta June 15, 2023 | non_poster |
Question Answering on RDF Data based on Grammars Automatically Generated from Lemon Models Mohammad Fazleh Elahi1[0000−0002−8843−9039], Basil Ell1,2[0000−0002−8863−3157] Frank Grimm1[0000−0002−7045−8055], and Philipp Cimiano1[0000−0002−4771−441X] 1 CITEC, Universität Bielefeld, Germany {melahi,bell,fgrimm,cimiano}@techfak.uni-bielefeld.de http://www.sc.cit-ec.uni-bielefeld.de/home/ 2 Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway basile@ifi.uio.no Abstract. Many question answering (QA) systems over RDF induced from question-query pairs using some machine learning technique suf- fer from a lack of controllability, making the governance and incremen- tal improvement of the system challenging, not to mention the initial effort of collecting and providing training data. As an alternative, we present a model-based QA approach that uses an ontology lexicon in lemon format and automatically generates a lexicalized grammar used to interpret and parse questions into SPARQL queries. The approach gives maximum control over the QA system to the developer as every lexicon extension increases the coverage of the grammar, and thus of the QA system, in a predictable way. We describe our approach to gen- erating grammars from lemon lexica and show how these grammars generate specific questions that we index to support fast QA perfor- mance in a prototype that answers questions with respect to DBpedia. Keywords: question answering, RDF, grammar generation 1 Introduction As the amount of structured data on the Web increases, there is an increas- ing demand for interfaces that simplify the access and browsing of data by end-users. Approaches to QA over RDF data based on machine learning (see [3] for an overview of deep learning methods applied to QALD and [1] for an overview of recent work on natural language interfaces to databases) face however a number of limitations with respect to the governance and Copyright © 2021 for this paper by its authors. Use permitted under Creative Commons License Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) | non_poster |
The impact of environment The impact of environment on the Fall relation on the Fall relation Cecilia Bacchini INAF – Astronomical Observatory of Padova POSTER 31 | non_poster |
Assessment of litter decomposition in temperate deciduous forest: case study in Fruška gora, Serbia Andrijana Andrić1, Dušanka Vujanović1, Snežana Popov2, Zlata Markov Ristić2 INTRODUCTION. The litter decomposition is one of the largest fluxes in the global terrestrial carbon cycle, thus diverse extensive experiments have been focusing on this fundamental soil process. Our study has been conducted as a part of the large-scale decomposition experiment within the global collaborative network TeaComposition initiative. The aim of this initiative was to estimate short- to long-term plant litter decomposition rates by using standard protocols and substrates— commercially available Green tea and Rooibos tea with different decomposition rates—for comparison of the litter mass loss at numerous sites across various ecosystems worldwide. The objective of our study was to test the effects of both litter type and land-use on litter decomposition in three, 12, 24 and 36 months of incubation (year 2016 to 2019), by comparing the percentages of the tea mass lost. References: •Djukic I et al. 2018. Early stage litter decomposition across biomes. Science of the Total Environment 628-629:1369-1394. •Keuskamp J et al. 2013. Tea Bag Index: a novel approach to collect uniform decomposition data across ecosystems. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 4:1070-1075. •Kwon T et al. 2021. Effects of climate and atmospheric nitrogen deposition on early to mid-term stage litter decomposition across biomes. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change 4:678480. 1University of Novi Sad, BioSense Institute, Dr Zorana Đinđića 1, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia 2University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Sciences, Department of Biology and Ecology, Trg Dositeja Obradovića 2, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia METHOD & DESIGN. The TeaComposition method (modified Tea bag method by Keuskamp et al. 2013) involves measuring a tea bag before and after incubation in the field, and using mass loss as a measure of the organic material decomposed. The three localities chosen for our experiment corresponded to the three levels of protection regime established for the National park Fruška gora, with different management treatments. The 1st sub-site is within the highest level of protection—the least degraded and non-managed forest; 2nd and 3rd sub-sites are under 2nd and 3rd level of protection, both characterized by controlled wood exploitation. The guidelines of the standardized protocol of the TeaComposition initiative (Djukic et al. 2018) were followed throughout. Two homogenous plots were selected at each of the three sub-sites; two replicates of the two tea types were buried in the topsoil layer in each plot, resulting in four bags of each tea type per sub-site and sampling time (Figure 1). Acknowledgements: This study has been conducted within the TeaComposition initiative, as a part of the research campaign Global litter decomposition study initiated and supported by the ILTER (International Long Term Ecological Research network) Initiative Grant (2016). RESULTS. The values of the tea mass lost during all four incubation periods were higher for the Green tea than for the Rooibos tea (Table 1). This pattern was expected because of the faster decomposition rate of Green tea due to higher content of non-lignified cellulose and of water-soluble compounds (Keuskamp et al. 2013). Furthermore, the difference of the two tea types' mass loss was the highest in three- months incubation. Our study has also shown no clear pattern regarding the values variation of the tea mass loss among plots of three different sub-sites. However, the highest level of variation was found for the Green tea in the longer incubation periods (24 and 36 months). CONCLUSIONS. Our results are in accordance with previous research (e.g. Djukic et al. 2018; Kwon et al. 2021) showing that, in the early stage of litter decomposition, the litter quality had the strongest influence on mass loss, whereas there was no significant effect of land-u | non_poster |
L i u t o Identifcazione delle 7 specie di tartarughe marine C a r e t t a 5 PLACCHE LUNGO i margini DEL GUSCIO 2 Artigli sulle pinne anteriori TESTA GRANDE COLORE BRUNO ROSSAST RO T a r t a r u g a d i K e m p 5 placche lungo i margini del guscio 1 artiglio sulle pinne anteriori 1-2 artigli sulle posteriori Mascella stretta & becco curvo 2 artigli sulle pinne anteriori 4 coppie di placche sovrapposte sul guscio O l i v a c e s t r a colore verde olivastro 6-9 placche lungo i margini del guscio guscio quasi circolare 1-2 artigli su ogni pinna D o r s o p i a t t o guscio rotondo e piatto bordo del guscio sottile e coperto da cuticola cerosa 1 artiglio ad ogni pinna 4 placche ai m guscio 4 placche lungo i margini del guscio (senza sovrapposizione) 1 artiglio sulle pinne anteriori coppia di squame sul davanti della testa 5 creste lungo il dorso (senza squame) senza artigli pelle liscia come il cuoio dentatura sulla mascella superiore colore nero a blu scuro colore grigio a verde- olivastro chiaro E m br ic at a colore verdastro marrone Nero colore grigio olivastro V e r d e colore brunastro (verde nel nome si riferisce al grasso verde) di paige Strudwick tradotto da Sara gagliardi per l'ICrs reefbites ref: fisheries.noaa.gov | non_poster |
The Impact of Nurturing Narrative Intervention on Improving Phonological Skill in Persian-speaking Clients with Social Communication Disorder Pegah Nikrah, Elena Babatsouli University of Louisiana at Lafayette PRESENTED AT: | non_poster |
IMPORTANT DEADLINES Submission of Full Paper: until December 15, 2022. Review process ends: until October 28, 2023. Special Issue publication (expected): 2nd Semester of 2023. GUEST EDITORS Ludmila de Vasconcelos M. Guimarães – Centro Federal de Educação Tecnológica de Minas Gerais, Brazil (ludmilavmg@gmail.com) Deidi Maca – Universidad Santiago de Cali, Colombia (deidi.maca00@usc.edu.co) Josiane Silva de Oliveira – Universidade Federal de Goiás, Brazil (oliveira.josianesilva@gmail.com) Janaynna de Moura Ferraz – Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil (janaynna.ferraz@ufrn.br) Luiza Farnese Lana Sarayed-Din – Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (luiza.sarayed@gmail.com) Andrea Poleto Oltramari – Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil; Universidade de Lisboa, SOCIUS, Portugal (andrea.oltramari@ufrgs.br) Revista de Administração Contemporânea Journal of Contemporary Administration e-ISSN: 1982-7849 Revista de Administração Contemporânea - RAC | Call for Papers: The Exhaustion of Contemporary Women | doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5519244 | e-ISSN 1982-7849 | rac.anpad.org.br CALL FOR PAPERS SPECIAL ISSUE THEME Do you know what motivated this special issue on/with contemporary women suffering from exhaustion, an issue featuring female editors, authors, and reviewers? First off, approximately 65% of the publications in the Journal of Contemporary Administration (RAC) were carried out by men. This reality is certainly not very different from most journals in the field of administration in Brazil and other countries. In the academic context, gender oppression has intensified, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Candido and Campos (2020), in Brazil, the average percentage of female authors or co- authors is 40%. However, in the second quarter of 2020, this percentage was 28%. When analyzing the data referring to the presentation of women as the first author, the percentage reduced from an average of 36% to 13% in the same period (Candido & Campos, 2020). Have you ever paid attention to the gender composition of the editorial board of the main administration journals in Brazil? The Exhaustion of Contemporary Women | non_poster |
0 UNIVERSIDADE DE LISBOA FACULDADE DE DIREITO A FORMAÇÃO DO CONTRATO “O ACORDO (AGREEMENT)” Mestrado em Direito e Ciências Jurídicas –Especialidade Direito Comparado Ministrado pelo Professor Doutor António Barreto Menezes de Cordeiro. Lucas Lourenço de Andrade 2023 | non_poster |
https://github.com/open2c/bioframe https://bioframe.readthedocs.io https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.02.16.480748v1 https://bit.ly/open2c-slack | non_poster |
Direitos de Propriedade Intelectual Profa. Márcia Santana Fernandes marciafernandes@feevale.br 27 e 28 de fevereiro de 2019 https://figshare.com/s/167431cef50b4fe1eb49 DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.7772936 | non_poster |
[Patel*, 5(5): May, 2016] ISSN: 2277-9655 Impact Factor: 3.785 http: // www.ijesrt.com © International Journal of Engineering Sciences & Research Technology [335] IJESRT INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES & RESEARCH TECHNOLOGY STUDY OF ENERGY REQUIREMENT FOR MAIZE CULTIVATION IN PANCHMAHAL DISTRICT OF MIDDLE GUJARAT Parth G. Patel*, Akhil C. Bhut, Pankaj Gupta * Ex M. Tech. Student and 3- Associate Professor, CAET,AAU, Godhra Ex M. Tech. Student, CTAE, MPUAT, Udaipur DOI: ABSTRACT Energy analysis of crop production is essential to find out the current energy requirement as well as the future demand of energy in crop cultivation. A survey was conducted through structured questionnaire to 93 randomly selected farmers in four villages (Jakhripura, Kandach, Kankanpur and Ganagata) of talukas Godhra, Khanpur and Kalol. The raw data obtained were analyzed after converting data into energy equivalents. It was concluded that fertilizer application consumed maximum operation wise energy with a value of 7010.55 MJ/ha followed by seed bed preparation with the value of 3684.72 MJ/ha. According to source wise, chemical fertilizer consumed maximum energy, about 36.09 % of total energy consumption and then after fuel energy 22.62 % of total energy consumption. The total input energy requirement for maize production in Panchmahals district 18831.07 MJ/ha. Total output energy for maize cultivation was 83894.62 MJ/ha. Energy productivity of maize in the study area was found to be 0.25 kg/MJ. The net energy return from the cultivation of maize in Panchmahal district is 65063.55 MJ/ha KEYWORDS:. INTRODUCTION Energy is one of the most valuable inputs in crop production. Energy needed for agricultural production is about 3% of the national energy consumption in developed countries and about 5 to 6% in developing countries (Stout, 1989). Sufficient availability of the exact energy and its effective and efficient use are prerequisites for improved agricultural production and profitability. All the farming operations in crop production require energy inputs in various forms and in varying magnitude. Efficient use of energies helps to achieve increased production and productivity and contributes to the economy, profitability and competitiveness of agriculture sustainability (Ozkan et al., 2004; Singh et al., 2002). Although energy consumption is increasing with time, the energy use efficiency is declining constantly (Khan & Khan, 2007). Energy analysis, therefore, is necessary for efficient management of scarce resources for improved agricultural production. It would identify production practices that are economical and effective. Thus, it is our need to carry out energy analysis of crop production system and to establish optimum energy input at different levels of productivity prevailing in the area. In this regard, a research was aimed to assess the energy analysis of major crop of the area i.e. maize with the following objectives: 1. To collect farm operations data of maize cultivation in district Panchmahal. 2. To analyze energy involved in maize production. MATERIALS & METHODS The study was conducted to investigate the energy and economic analysis of maize crop grown in the Panchmahal district. The information was collected from farmers of four villages (Jakharipura, Kandach, Kankanpur and Ganagata) located in three talukas of the Panchmahal district. To conduct the research, district Panchmahal was selected as study area which is one of the highest producer districts of maize in Gujarat. The district is located in semi arid region with latitude of N 22°30’ to 23°23’ and longitude of E 73°15’ to 74°75 and at 119 m above MSL. | non_poster |
Highlights of Non-Methane Hydrocarbon Measurements During EASE 96 & 97. Alastair C. Lewis1,2, James B. McQuaid1 & Michael J. Pilling1 1School of Chemistry and 2Environment Centre, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT. | non_poster |
The challenge of searching for Xylella fastidiosa genetic diversity in its natural habitats Eduardo Moralejo Tragsa, Passatge Cala Figuera, nº 6; Palma, Mallorca, Balearic Islands, Spain. | non_poster |
1. IPBES (2022). Summary for Policymakers of the Methodological Assessment Report on the Diverse Values and Valuation of Nature of the Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. Pascual, U., Balvanera, P., Christie, M., Baptiste, B., González-Jiménez, D., Anderson, C.B., Athayde, S., Barton, D.N., Chaplin-Kramer, R., Jacobs, S., Kelemen, E., Kumar, R., Lazos, E., Martin, A., Mwampamba, T.H., Nakangu, B., O’Farrell, P., Raymond, C.M., Subramanian, S.M., Termansen, M., Van Noordwijk, M., and Vatn, A. (eds.). IPBES secretariat, Bonn, Germany. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6522392 2. The references enclosed in curly brackets (e.g., {A5, B9, C7}) are traceable accounts and refer to sections of the summary for policymakers of the PBES assessment of the diverse values and valuation of nature. A traceable account is a guide to the section in the summary for policymakers and the chapters that contains the evidence supporting a given message and reflecting the evaluation of the type, amount, quality, and consistency of evidence and the degree of agreement for that statement or key finding. Prepared by the co-chairs and technical support unit of the assessment Factsheet Messages from the summary for policymakers The thematic assessment report on THE DIVERSE VALUES AND VALUATION OF NATURE1 Prepared by the co-chairs and technical support unit of the assessment Valuation to equitably consider the diverse values of nature in decision-making The causes of the global biodiversity crisis and the opportunities to address them are tightly linked to the ways in which nature is valued in political and economic decisions at all levels {A4, A9, C1, C7, C8}2 (KM1.) Despite the diversity of nature’s values, most policymaking approaches have prioritized a narrow set of values at the expense of both nature and society {A4, A8, A9, B10, C1, C3} (KM2). More than 50 valuation methods and approaches are available to date to assess nature’s values; choosing appropriate and complementary methods requires assessing trade-offs between their relevance, robustness and resource requirements {B1, B2, B3, B4, B5, B8, B9, B10} (KM5). Valuation processes can be tailored to equitably take into account the values of nature of multiple stakeholders in different decision-making contexts {A5, A6, B1, B6, B8, C2} (KM 4). Valuation processes can support policymaking across the different stages of the policy cycle (well established) {C2}. Transformative change towards more sustainable and just futures relies on a combination of actions that target different values centred leverage points, in particular: (i) undertaking valuation that recognizes the diverse values of nature; (ii) embedding valuation into decision-making; (iii) reforming policies and regulations to internalize nature’s values; and (iv) shifting underlying societal norms and goals (established but incomplete) {C9}. | non_poster |
Final conference, Rome October 11, 2016 ARCA WP2 - Greenland ice cap and outlet glaciers evolution: From South to North: the contribution of RES exploration technique Principal results of INGV Radio Glaciology group S. Urbini1, A. Zirizzotti1, L. Cafarella1, I. E. Tabacco1 and J. A. Baskaradas1,2. Corresponding author: stefano.urbini@ingv.it 1) Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Via di Vigna Murata 605, 00143 Rome, Italy 2) SASTRA University, Thanjāvūr, India Abstract Radio Echo Sounding (RES) system is an active remote-sensing instrument that uses the electromagnetic wave penetration into the ice to obtain information on the level of the bedrock, the ice thickness and inhomogeneity, i.e. the internal layering of glaciers and subglacial lake exploration (Fig. 1). Figure 1 – Sketch of airborne Radio Echo Sounding ice measurements From 1995 the INGV develop its own airborne radio echo sounding system (Fig. 2) which is continuously upgraded. During the 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001 and 2003 Italian Antarctic Expeditions, the RES system was put on an aircraft flying 1000 feet above the ice surface with two folded dipole antennas mounted beneath the aircraft wings, one for transmission and the other for receiving echo pulses. The maximum penetration depth (range) in the ice was about 5.3 km. | non_poster |
Background For the majority of displaced unstable distal radius fractures, open reduction and volar plating has become a well accepted treatment (1). At the same token, a number of authors have suggested that highly comminuted intra- articular fractures can not be dealt with by volar plating alone and may require additional dorsal and or radial approaches to allow visual control of the displaced articular fragments as well as to reduce and capture small but critical articular fragments (Fig. 1) (Ref. 2-5) However, if one is able to allow the soft tissues on the dorsal surface which often remain attached to the bony and dorsal articular fragments to remain undisturbed, then potential exists for threatening the entire comminuted fracture through just a volar approach. Scaffold Osteosyntesis: Volar Plating of Distal Radius Fractures A. Fernández Dell’Oca, Jesse B. Jupiter September 2022 | non_poster |
32nd Conference of The European Colloid and Interface Society Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2nd - 7th September 2018 Book of Abstracts | non_poster |
Demo: FoReCo – a forecast-based recovery mechanism for real-time remote control of robotic manipulators Milan Groshev Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Spain Javier Sacido Telcaria Ideas S.L. Spain Jorge Martín-Pérez Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Spain ABSTRACT This demonstration presents FoReCo [4], a solution to recover lost control commands in remotely controlled robots. In the demon- stration, visitors use a joystick to remotely control a robotic arm under the presence of packet losses in the wireless medium. The lost control commands result in a distorted trajectory of the robotic arm, thus, we deploy FoReCo to recover lost control commands using an ML model that we train with a real-world dataset. The demonstration shows how FoReCo recovers the lost commands, and how the robot arm operates smoothly despite the losses that are present in the wireless medium. CCS CONCEPTS • Networks →Cyber-physical networks. ACM Reference Format: Milan Groshev, Javier Sacido, and Jorge Martín-Pérez. 2022. Demo: FoReCo – a forecast-based recovery mechanism for real-time remote control of robotic manipulators. In ACM SIGCOMM 2022 Conference (SIGCOMM ’22 Demos and Posters), August 22–26, 2022, Amsterdam, Netherlands. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 3 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3546037.3546047 1 INTRODUCTION Real-time remote control of robotic manipulators is of high interest for industry 4.0 use cases [2], since it reduces costs and the exposure of operators to hazard situations. However, the presence of packet losses in the the network lead to trajectory deviations that prevent the robot from achieving the expected 99.9999% reliability [1]. The mechatronics and robotic community propose to overcome the lost/delayed control commands using time domain passivity- based solutions [3, 6, 11], or wave-variable passivity-based ap- proaches [9, 10]. But the proposed approaches assume constant network delays [6], or delays with small variability [3, 6, 9–11]. Such assumptions on the network delay do not apply for robots connected using IEEE 802.11 wireless technology, which suffers from uncontrolled packet losses and delays. Specially in industrial scenarios with electromagnetic interference jamming the wireless channel. Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the owner/author(s). SIGCOMM ’22 Demos and Posters, August 22–26, 2022, Amsterdam, Netherlands © 2022 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). ACM ISBN 978-1-4503-9434-5/22/08. https://doi.org/10.1145/3546037.3546047 Wi-Fi 1 2 3 4 5 6 Packet loss FoReCo 4 1 2 3 5 6 Forecast Drivers Internet Remote Controller control commands Figure 1: FoReCo forecasts/infers control commands lost in the wireless communication between the remote controller and the robotic arm. 2 FORECO SOLUTION Rather than making assumptions on the network delays, we propose FoReCo [4], a Forecast recovery mechanism for Remote Control that infers lost/delayed control commands. FoReCo feeds the ro- bot drivers with the lost/delayed commands it recovers through forecasting – see Figure 1. FoReCo receives the remote control commands and checks if they are received at the expected frequency, e.g., each 150ms. In case a command does not arrive on time (due to 802.11 collisions or interference not recovered with error-correction), FoReCo fore- casts/infers the out of time command using the recent command history. In this demonstration FoReCo uses a multinomial logistic re- gression that we train using a real-world dataset of an experienced robotic arm operator. The ML model receives as input: (1) the posi- tion of each joint 𝑗𝑖(𝑡), ∀𝑖; (2) for how long each joint has been mov- ing without stopping max𝑡0<𝑡{𝑡− | non_poster |
, n o it a c il p p A 0 2 0 2 R V o r u E k c a r T o m e D & n o iti b i h x E R V o r u E la u tri V e h t f o s g ni d e e c o r P e c n e r e f n o C nile H ja K | oin o t n A e d a cilé g n A | ).s d E ( a n o u c e L - s e y e R oid a c r A Y G O L O N H C E T T T V 1 8 3 | non_poster |
— 724 733 Celebration & Contemplation, 10th International Conference on Design & Emotion 27 — 30 September 2016, Amsterdam Introduction Design probes Probes are used in Science and Design as interventions to incite new ways of perceiving and interpreting reality, and to scope out opportunities for creative collaboration across both domains (Flory an Ivanova, 2015). In this practice-led research project, the idea of a probe emerged as an approach to making novel and conceptual materials tangible, communicable and acceptable to users and consumers, alongside any further development processes in the chain of realisation. The T-probe A specific probe was required that would test response to material and sensory concepts that in some way engaged with the body. The probe had to be usable and wearable, simple and neutral, culturally familiar, yet versatile and customisable, and capable of operating within a range of social situations. The ‘humble’ T-shirt, which is worn universally around the globe and has been successfully implemented as a powerful bridging mechanism for different purposes across a variety of demographics (Talbot, 2013), fulfilled the criteria of wearability and testability. The potential of the T-shirt to engage audiences with novel materials concepts and related experience was tested via three discrete, but methodologically-linked research propositions: Proposition (I) Fungi materials for clothing explored perception of mould as a potential medium for materials design and fabrication; Proposition (II) Fashion for deafblind people studied how a fashion experience may be introduced to people with visual and auditory impairment; Proposition (III) Synthetic ingredients for fine fragrance engaged consumer understanding of synthetic ingredients in perfumery. The three propositions were selected based on common challenges associated with public perception and engagement. Each proposition considered how the design of a T-probe may advance understanding of the proposition. Stimuli such as fungi, textiles, and synthetic fragrance ingredients, were introduced in each case as catalysts in the design and creation of the T-probe. Research Proposition (I): Fungi1 materials for clothing Research Proposition (I) sits comfortably within the field of materials design, where novel bio-based materials and fabrication mechanisms are being proposed and developed by designers in response to sustainability and wellbeing concerns (Antonelli, 2008; Braddock Clarke & Harris, 2012; Harris, 2013; Lee, Abstract This design case presents the synopsis of a practice-led PhD Design Research. The project was born within a contemporary field of design inquiry where designers are exploring novel materials and sensory concepts in response to advances in science and technology. Despite the human, societal, environmental, and potential commercial benefits, which underpin many of these design propositions, applying such ideas across science, industry and the market, proposes distinct challenges linked to human perception. This calls for intelligent and appropriate methods of introducing novel material concepts and related experience at the early stages of their development, which in turn, may inform and ensure the desirability and market viability of such concepts. The aim of the research was to determine the value of using the T-shirt as a wearable probe – i.e. the T-probe – to advance engagement with, and understanding of, novel and challenging material concepts and sensory experiences. Keywords Materials, Perception, Sensory engagement, Probes, Design methods The T-probe: Advancing engagement with material concepts and sensory experiences - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ninela Ivanova1,2 ninelaivanova@gmail.com 1Kingston University London, United Kingdom 2MindRheo, United Kingdom - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 A group of organisms includ | non_poster |
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338633297 A statement about future TB incidence and treatment adherence in developing countries if urgent measures are not taken Poster · January 2020 DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.31706.70084 CITATIONS 0 3 authors, including: 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 |
Strange Quark Pair Production in High Energy Electron Positron Collisions Y. Okugawa*a,b, A. Irlesc, F. Richarda, H. Yamamotoc, and R. Pöschla aUnivesité Paris-Saclay, CNRS/IN2P3, IJCLab, 91405 Orsay, France bTohoku University, 6-3 Aoba Aramaki-aza Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8578, Japan cIFIC, Universitat de València and CSIC, c./ Catedrático José Beltrán 2, E-46980 Paterna, Spain E-mail: yuokugaw@cern.ch, irles@lal.in2p3.fr, richard@lal.in2p3.fr, yhitoshi@epx.phys.tohoku.ac.jp, poeschl@lal.in2p3.fr The process e+e−→q ¯q with q ¯q = s¯s,c¯c,b¯b,t¯t plays a central role in the physics programs of high energy electron-positron colliders operating from the O(100 GeV) to O(1 TeV) center of mass energies. Furthermore, polarised beams as available at the International Linear Collider (ILC) are an essential feature for the complete measurement of the helicity amplitudes that govern the production cross section. Quarks, specially the heaviers, are likely messengers to new physics and at the same time they are ideal benchmark processes for detector optimisation. All four processes call for superb primary and secondary vertex measurements, a high tracking efficiency to correctly measure the vertex charge and excellent hadron identification capabilities. We will show with detailed detector simulations of the International Large Detector (ILD) that production rate and the forward backward asymmetries of the the different processes can be measured at the 0.1% - 0.5% level and how systematic errors can be controlled to reach this level of accuracy. The importance of operating at different center of mass energies and the discovery potential in terms of Randall-Sundrum models with warped extra dimensions will be outlined. 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 |
Nyelvi önérvényesítés, asszertív kommunikáció Mit jelent az önérvényesítő, asszertív viselkedés? Az önérvényesítő viselkedés gondolataink, érzéseink és véleményünk világos és határozott közvetítését jelenti, anélkül hogy mások gondolatait, érzéseit vagy véleményét elnyomnánk. Más szóval, az asszertivitás gondolataink és érzéseink őszinte (Honest), világos (Appropriate), tisztelettudó (Respectful) és nyílt (Direct) kifejezése, amely elsőre nehéznek (HARD) tűnhet, de idővel és gyakorlással könnyebbé válik. Az asszertív kommunikáció előnye, hogy általa a beszélgetés minden résztvevője egyenrangúnak érezheti magát. Minden embernek joga van a nyelvi önérvényesítéshez, ezáltal pedig ● Méltóságának és önbecsülésének megőrzéséhez ● A bűntudat nélküli NEM-et mondás lehetőségéhez ● Érzései kifejezéséhez ● Igényei nyílt közvetítéséhez ● Önmagával való elégedettséghez ● Döntéseinek szabad megváltoztatásához ● Konfliktusok esetén a vitához és kompromisszumok kötéséhez ● Hibák elkövetéséhez | non_poster |
1 Hierarchical gravitational fragmentation. I. Collapsing cores within collapsing clouds Naranjo-Romero, Vázquez-Semadeni & Loughnane 2015 ApJ, 814, 48 | non_poster |
Realistic daily dynamics of olive and olive fly at 250 m resolution using MODIS LST calibrated with MODIS NDVI Luigi Ponti, Andrew Paul Gutierrez, Markus Metz, Julia Haas, Elisabeth Panzenböck, Markus Neteler, Ferdinando Baldacchino, Alfredo Ambrico, Gerardo Baviello, Maurizio Calvitti, Alessandro Dell'Aquila, Sandro Calmanti, Elena Lampazzi, Valerio Miceli, Daniela Cuna, Federica Stocchino, Davide Carroccio Daily temperature at 250 m is derived for 2003-2023 in Puglia from MODIS LST and calibrated with MODIS NDVI -5 0 5 10 15 20 (°C) Calibration achieves higher accuracy than interpolation from weather stations Max daily temperature Min daily temperature PBDM simulation for olive and olive fly uses daily weather from MODIS LST (and AgERA5) as input growth respiration wastage reproduction consumption water, minerals, CO2 respiration growth reproduction egestion consumption olive olive fly sun Model output has same space/time resolution and coverage as MODIS input Physiologically based demographic modeling (PBDM) provides realistic biological patterns that are otherwise unavailable Remote sensing is top-down with no mechanistic biology Field observations are bottom-up, scarce, and costly Field observations are bottom-up, scarce, and costly PBDM bridges the gap as it is weather-driven, mechanistic, and realistic Remote sensing is top-down with no mechanistic biology Without PBDM With PBDM Extant gap due to missing realistic biological layer with wide space and time coverage Resulting daily biological patterns and dynamics have unprecedented potential to inform machine learning Olive growing area Fruit weight (g dry matter/plant) >500 thousand grid locations 20 years of detailed daily dynamics https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11374208 | non_poster |
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the grant agreement number 101000499. © COPYRIGHT FORK-TO-FARM AGENT-BASED SIMULATION TOOL AUGMENTING BIODIVERSITY IN THE AGRI-FOOD VALUE CHAIN 1. BioValue Objetives 2. Our pilot cases – Tomatoes 3. Our recipes - Dandelion & Tomato Salad 4. Interview with ECOZEPT 5. News 6. Progress Update 7. Our Team NEWSLETTER Magazine 4th ISSUE December 2023 Contents | non_poster |
ARVO Annual Meeting Abstract | June 2023 Automatic Deep Learning-based Models for Retinal Layer Thickness Analysis as a Biomarker for Neurodegenerative Diseases Mateo Gende; Joaquim de Moura; Beatriz Cordón; Elisa Vilades; Elena García-Martín; Clara I. Sánchez; Jorge Novo; Marcos Ortega Abstract Purpose : The retina is the most accessible part of the central nervous system, allowing its non-invasive exploration and measurement. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) offers an objective monitoring method of progression in Neurodegenerative Disease (NDD), enabling the extraction of biomarkers such as retinal layer thickness. Machine learning models allow the automatic and repeatable measurement of the retinal layers and enable an early diagnosis of NDD. These need to be trained on annotated images representative of the visual patterns that characterise these diseases. We present a study in the automatic measurement of retinal layer thickness in patients of different NDDs and an assessment of the mutual compatibility of models trained in representative images of these diseases. Methods : Five independent samples of multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and essential tremor patients, along with | non_poster |
1 Dr. El Hassane Sidibé : Clinique Médicale Marc Sankalé ; BP 5062 FANN-Dakar 10700 Sénégal Objet : De l’Académie Nationale des Sciences et Techniques du Senegal en Clinique médicale et endocrinologie Direct au ‘’CONCOURS MEDICAL ‘’[France]du résumé de synthèse de thèse (1984) et du mémoire du College Medecine des Hopitaux de Paris (1988) à l’occasion du cinquantenaire du Centre de Clinique Médicale Marc Sankalé [2015] et du CENTENAIRE de la Faculté de Médecine et pharmacie de Dakar[2018]. Intitule : FORMES CLINIQUES HOSPITALIERES MULTICENTRIQUES DE L'HYPOTHYROÏDIE PÉRIPHÉRIQUE AUTOIMMUNE SUBSAHARIENNE Préambule épidémiologique : Relatées dès 1895 par EXALD cité par DUCROS, l’association diabète et myxœdème est longtemps apparue fortuite... Depuis l'affinement récent des moyens d'exploration thyroïdienne, l'épidémiologie de l'hypothyroïdie a été marquée par une fréquence croissante surtout dans le sexe féminin et chez le sujet âgé. Ailleurs, elle est rarement décrite. Ainsi, selon TROWELL en dehors d'un cas, aucune forme primitive n'a été observée avant 1960 en Afrique. Nous avons retrouvé une anomalie potentielle de la tolérance au glucose dans un cas. Le diabète Il est non insulinodépendant et de type pléthorique dans les 3 cas. Dans 2 cas, le diabète est postérieur et révélé par des signes cardinaux à type de polyurie polydipsie. A l’inverse, dans le dernier cas, le diabète est antérieur de 5 années à l'hypothyroïdie ; il est dépisté systématiquement à l'occasion d'un abcès de la fesse chez un sujet génétiquement prédisposé et jusque-là indemne de toute manifestation d’hypothyroïdie. OBSERVATION PIONNIERE D’HYPOTHYROIDIE AUTO-IMMUNE A DAKAR Sénégal. M. S.T., 37 ans, habitant la région du Cap-Vert, est hospitalisé le 22 mars 1983 pour dyspnée d’effort et œdèmes généralisés. L’aspect et la disproportion entre l’âge et la taille du malade, le pouls à 39, la température à 36°, un psychisme juste passable associé à un nanisme disharmonieux nous ont orientés vers une affection thyroïdienne. L’examen clinique et paraclinique mettent en évidence une insuffisance cardiaque globale (ICG), avec un choc de pointe non visible ni palpable, une augmentation de l’aire de la matité cardiaque, des bruits du cœur assourdis et réguliers, un gros foie cardiaque avec reflux hépato- jugulaire un bas voltage généralisé à l’examen électrocardiographique et un gros cœur en « théière » à la radiographie. Il s’agit là d’un épanchement péricardique avec décompensation cardiaque globale. La peau est ouverte de xanthomes multiples. Le malade est aussi porteur d’une hernie de la ligne blanche sus ombilicale. Après confirmation biologique de l’hypothyroïdie suspectée cliniquement, il a été mis sous opothérapie progressive. Après un mois de traitement, nous assistons à une amélioration spectaculaire de l’ICG et à la disparition des xanthomes cutanés. Le bilan radiologique de notre malade nous a permis de mettre en évidence une ostéopathie hypothyroïdienne, de multiples calculs des voies urinaires cliniquement latents et une néphrocalcinose. La recherche de l’étiologie de ces multiples calculs radio opaques nous révèle l’existence d’une acidose métabolique avec fonction rénale normale, sans trou anionique et d’une hypercalcémie. Les résultats des examens complémentaires figurent au tableau I. Une douleur persistante de l’hypochondre droit dans ce contexte nous a fait suspecter la possibilité d’une lithiase vésiculaire qui a été confirmée par l’échographie et la cholécystographie. | non_poster |
BOLETÍN INFORMATIVO TRAYECTORIA DEL SEMILLERO DE INVESTIGACIÓN TROPUS Fundación Universitaria De Popayán Programa de Psicología Linea Social Comunitaria 2021 | non_poster |
1 #WPC2019 @worldpdcongress BASIC SCIENCE PROGRAM Wednesday, June 5, 2019 DAY 1 WSL – SPECIAL LECTURE Mitochondrial energy crisis as a pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease Introduction by: Roger Barker (UK) Speaker: Yoshikuni Mizuno (Japan) LUNCH > 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM JAMES PARKINSON SPECIAL LECTURE > 12:15 – 1:15 PM WPL – PLENARY Alpha-synuclein and Parkinson’s Co-Chair: Glenda Halliday (Australia) Co-Chair: Serge Przedborski (USA) Talk 1: What is alpha-synuclein – The biology Speaker: Ronald Melki (France) Talk 2: The pathology of alpha-synucleinopathies (brain donation) Speaker: Shigeo Murayama (Japan) Talk 3: Patients as living science: The importance of participating in clinical trials Speaker: Soania Mathur (Canada) Talk 4: Clinical trials and efficacy of clinical trials targeting alpha-synuclein Speaker: Jesse Cedarbaum (USA) Learning Objectives: 1. To be able to explain what is known and not known about the normal function of alpha-synuclein in the brain; 2. To understand what makes alpha synuclein pathological in certain conditions and what this looks like in the brains of patients dying with Parkinson’s disease and related disorders; 3. To discuss the challenges of targeting alpha synuclein in clinical trials and where we are currently with such trials; 4. To explain the roles patients can play in clinical trials, beyond being in the trial itself. MORNING PLENARY > 9:30 – 11:30 AM Basic Science Clinical Science Comprehensive Care Crosstalk – Minimal or no scientific background required Moderate-level scientific sessions High-level scientific sessions Session Levels Session Type WPC 2019.org K Y O T O , J A P A N 5 t h W O R L D P A R K I N S O N C O N G R E S S | 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: Woodson, T., & Boutilier, S.(2022). From Intent to Impact-The Decline of Broader Impacts throughout an NSF Project Life-Cycle. In N. Robinson-Garcia, D. Torres-Salinas, & W. Arroyo- Machado (Eds.), 26th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, STI 2022 (sti22230). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6957404 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 |
TÍTULO: ¿Falso TP? Una observación desde Patología Dual AUTORES: Merizalde Torres Milton 1,4,6,9,10 Rodríguez Álvarez Manuel 2,6,7,10 Garzón de Paz María Ángeles 1,6,10 Vicente Hernández Begoña 1,6,10 González Sánchez Armando 3,5,6,8,10 Remón Gallo Diego 3,6,7,10 Aguilar Sánchez Lourdes1,4,6,7 Álvarez Navares Ana 1,4,6,10 1: Psiquiatra 2: Psicólogo Clínico 3: Psicólogo General Sanitario 4: Doctor en Medicina 5: Doctor en Estadística e Investigación Operativa 6: Unidad Patología Dual Servicio de Psiquiatría del Complejo Asistencial Universitario de Salamanca 7: Profesor/a Asociado/a USAL 8: Profesor Asociado UPSA 9: Colaborador docente USAL 10: Investigador IBSAL Neur 10 Adicciones y Patología Dual INTRODUCCIÓN Y OBJETIVOS Los trastornos de personalidad (TP) presentan una prevalencia de cerca del 50% en población con trastorno de uso de sustancias (TUS). No obstante, se conoce un importante infradiagnóstico reportado en estudios descriptivos y además visible en la práctica clínica. En la experiencia clínica de los autores de este trabajo en desintoxicación hospitalaria se observa adicionalmente el sobrediagnóstico de este trastorno. De forma interesante, la evidencia publicada a este respecto escasea. El objetivo de este estudio es encontrar la asociación entre diagnóstico de TP al ingreso y al alta en una muestra de pacientes en proceso de desintoxicación hospitalaria. MATERIAL Y MÉTODOS | non_poster |
Transverse vibration of slender sandwich beams with viscoelastic inner layer via a Galerkin-type state-space approach Evangelos Ntotsios E.Ntotsios@lboro.ac.uk Alessandro Palmeri A.Palmeri@lboro.ac.uk School of Civil and Building Engineering Loughborough University, U.K. September 10-14, 2012 | Vienna, Austria | non_poster |
EVOLUTION OF THE RELATIVE BLACK HOLE- GALAXY GROWTH IN MILKY WAY AND ANDROMEDA- MASS PROGENITORS MICHAEL COWLEY Australia-ESO Conference, Sydney, 18 July 2019 Image credit: NASA, ESA and the Hubble Heritage Team ZFOURGE FourStar Galaxy Evolution Survey | non_poster |
The entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium brunneum Petch for the control of whiteflies in protected cultivation Marco Di Domenico, Alessia Farina, Carmelo Rapisarda, Pompeo Suma Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment (Di3A), Applied Entomology Section, University of Catania, via S. Sofia 100 – 95123 Catania, ITALY suma@unict.it | non_poster |
Book of Abstracts of the 73rd Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science Book of abstracts No. 28 (2022) Porto, Portugal 5 – 9 September, 2022 | non_poster |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.