RESEARCH: Issues Related to Greenhouse Effect, Productivity Modeling, and Nutrient Cycling: A Case Study of Indian Wetlands

1997 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. PANDEY ◽  
S. C. DEB ◽  
P. KHANNA
Author(s):  
Roanne Van Voorst

Understanding human adaptation to climate changes is one of the most important research issues within the area of global environmental change, accounting for the fact that people worldwide are currently adapting to their changing environment (Adger and Kelly 2000: 253; Smit et al. 2008). The Greenlandic case study as presented in this paper is mainly based on a literature analysis and ethnographic data obtained during the Greenlandic winter of 2008, with emphasis on the latter. Participant observation and interviews were combined with a discursive analysis of climate change-related policies. The empirical findings as presented in this paper suggest that an exclusive and gender-neutral focus of policy makers on economic aspects of adaptation to climate changes may increase socio-economic inequality as well as male domestic violence over women. Social research can help to identify such chains of reactions resulting from climate changes and related policies, by focusing on individual adaptation strategies of male and female actors in vulnerable societies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (32) ◽  
pp. 1499-1508
Author(s):  
Sanchez Luis ◽  
Melo Valdinar ◽  
Nunes Taline ◽  
Portalanza Diego ◽  
Durigon Angelica ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 77 (12) ◽  
pp. 1602 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Brzenk ◽  
A. Moore ◽  
M. J. Alfano ◽  
P. T. Buckley ◽  
M. E. Newman ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-118
Author(s):  
Daniel E. O'Leary

ABSTRACT This paper investigates the use of crowdsourcing for innovation in the Big 4 consulting firms and Wikistrat. Information about each of the five firms' is captured in a case study developed for comparison purposes. Those cases are used to examine emerging intra-enterprise characteristics, to analyze some of the key emerging dimensions, and to begin to understand some of the primary concerns and research issues regarding crowdsourcing in consulting. This paper focuses both on internal enterprise use and issues related to developing crowdsourcing for others as part of advisory activities.


2011 ◽  
pp. 857-876
Author(s):  
Chrisoula Alexandraki ◽  
Nikolas Valsamakis

The chapter provides an overview of virtual music communities focusing on novel collaboration environments aiming to support networked and geographically dispersed music performance. A key objective of the work reported is to investigate online collaborative practices during virtual music performances in community settings. To this effect, the first part of the chapter is devoted to reviewing different kinds of communities and their corresponding practices as manifested through social interaction. The second part of the chapter presents a case study, which elaborates on the realization of virtual music communities using a generic technological platform, namely DIAMOUSES. DIAMOUSES was designed to provide a host for several types of virtual music communities, intended for music rehearsals, live performances and music learning. Our recent experiments provide useful insights to the distinctive features of these alternative community settings as well as the practices prevailing in each case. The chapter is concluded by discussing open research issues and challenges relevant to virtual music performance communities.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Thacker ◽  
Gale Sinatra

The purpose of this design based research study was to better understand and build from students’ perceptual experiences of visual representations of the greenhouse effect. Twenty undergraduate students were interviewed as they engaged with an online visualization for the learning of the greenhouse effect. We found that, even though all students agreed that climate change is happening, a majority initially held a misconception about how it works. Upon engaging with the visualization, students made perceptual inferences and formulated causal rules that culminated in an improved description of how climate change works. This trajectory was supported with prompts from the interviewer to make predictions, observe specific interactions in the visualization and revise their causal inferences based on these observations. A case study is presented to illustrate a typical learning trajectory.


1999 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 394-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre E. Dupont ◽  
Capt. Timothy M. Schulteis ◽  
Paul A. Millman ◽  
Robert D. Howe

Many applications can be imagined for a system that processes sensory information collected during telemanipulation tasks in order to automatically identify properties of the remote environment. These applications include generating model-based simulations for training operators in critical procedures and improving real-time performance in unstructured environments or when time delays are large. This paper explores the research issues involved in developing such an identification system, focusing on properties that can be identified from remote manipulator motion and force data. As a case study, a simple block-stacking task, performed with a teleoperated two-fingered planar hand, is considered. An algorithm is presented that automatically segments the data collected during the task, given only a general description of the temporal sequence of task events. Using the segmented data, the algorithm then successfully estimates the weight, width, height, and coefficient of friction of the two blocks handled during the task. This data is used to calibrate a virtual model incorporating visual and haptic feedback. This case study highlights the broader research issues that must be addressed in automatic property identification.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gloria Bordogna

This editorial introduces the special issue entitled “Geoinformatics in Citizen Science” of the ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. The issue includes papers dealing with three main topics. (1) Key tasks of citizen science (CS) in leveraging geoinformatics. This comprises descriptions of citizen science initiatives where geoinformation management and processing is the key means for discovering new knowledge, and it includes: (i) “hackAIR: Towards Raising Awareness about Air Quality in Europe by Developing a Collective Online Platform” by Kosmidis et al., (ii) “Coupling Traditional Monitoring and Citizen Science to Disentangle the Invasion of Halyomorpha halys” by Malek et al., and (iii) “Increasing the Accuracy of Crowdsourced Information on Land Cover via a Voting Procedure Weighted by Information Inferred from the Contributed Data” by Foody et al. (2) Evaluations of approaches to handle geoinformation in CS. This examines citizen science initiatives which critically analyze approaches to acquire and handle geoinformation, and it includes: (iv) “CS Projects Involving Geoinformatics: A Survey of Implementation Approaches” by Criscuolo et al., (v) “Obstacles and Opportunities of Using a Mobile App for Marine Mammal Research” by Hann et al., (vi) “OSM Data Import as an Outreach Tool to Trigger Community Growth? A Case Study in Miami” by Juhász and Hochmair, and (vii) “Experiences with Citizen-Sourced VGI in Challenging Circumstances“ by Hameed et al. (3) Novel geoinformatics research issues: (viii) “A New Method for the Assessment of Spatial Accuracy and Completeness of OpenStreetMap Building Footprints” by Brovelli and Zamboni, (ix) “A Citizen Science Approach for Collecting Toponyms” by Perdana and Ostermann, and (x) “An Automatic User Grouping Model for a Group Recommender System in Location-Based Social Networks” by Khazaei and Alimohammadi.


Author(s):  
NING ZHONG

Web Intelligence (WI)-based portal techniques (e.g. the wisdom Web, data mining, multi-agent, and data/knowledge grids) will provide a new powerful platform for Brain Sciences. New understanding and discovery of the human intelligence models in Brain Sciences (e.g. cognitive science, neuroscience, brain informatics) will yield new WI research and development. In this paper, we briefly investigate three high-impact research issues as well as present a case study, to demonstrate the potentials of Brain Informatics (BI) research from WI perspective.


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