Comparing interactive and automated mapping systems for supporting fisheries enforcement activities—a case study on vessel monitoring systems (VMS)

2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
René A. Enguehard ◽  
Rodolphe Devillers ◽  
Orland Hoeber
2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 (1) ◽  
pp. 2017422
Author(s):  
D. Zuroski ◽  
T. Johnson ◽  
C. Benson ◽  
F. Stroud

In December of 2014, there was a substantial shortage (42,000 gallons) of Jet fuel noted in the inventory at the tank farm that supplies jet fuel to the Honolulu International Airport. The tank farm is directly adjacent to Ke'ehi Lagoon and in near proximity to Honolulu Harbor. Jet fuel was found floating on the water table (less than two feet below the ground surface) throughout a large area of the tank farm, as well as outside the tank farm and within 150 feet of the lagoon. EPA, the State of Hawaii, and the RP utilized a streamlined and nimble approach to Unified Command in performing the successful Emergency Response. Operations were conducted in close coordination with the USCG and Honolulu FD. All actions were designed to keep the fuel from reaching the surface water. This case study will detail the line of attack which included aggressive extraction the jet fuel, definition of the extent of the (subsurface) release, and design and installation of engineered capture, removal, and monitoring systems.


2001 ◽  
Vol 89 (10) ◽  
pp. 1498-1517 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Greiffenhagen ◽  
D. Comaniciu ◽  
H. Niemann ◽  
V. Ramesh

2008 ◽  
Vol 56 ◽  
pp. 557-562
Author(s):  
Sara Casciati ◽  
Sebastiano Floridia ◽  
Nicola Impollonia ◽  
Enrico Reale

A construction history that spans centuries often results in complex structural systems whose load-carrying behavior cannot be easily assessed by visual inspections. Their structural rehabilitation should be supported by numerical analyses during both the design and the implementation phases of a retrofit operation. Within this context, monitoring systems provide reliable information about the structure performance under serviceability conditions. When outputonly measurements are available for the dynamic system identification before and after the intervention, signals processing techniques can be applied to assess both the original deteriorated state of the structure, and the relative efficiency of the retrofit operation. The procedure is illustrated with reference to a specific case study, which concerns a part of the Archbishop Palace located in Siracusa, Italy. Experimental and numerical studies are carried out to evaluate the actual loads supported by an ancient stone arch. The arch is surmounted by a building which underwent several additions in elevation across the centuries. Experimental tests are performed using different excitation methods and accelerometer configurations. The measurements are taken before and after the retrofit of the arch. The elaboration and comparison of the collected data for the structural assessment of the system before and after its retrofit is the topic of this work.


2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (4/2014) ◽  
pp. 120-130
Author(s):  
Octavian DOSPINESCU ◽  
Roxana-Marina STRAINU

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
azita yazdani ◽  
Reza Safdari ◽  
Roxana Sharifian ◽  
maryam zahmatkeshan

Abstract Background: One of the most important types of information systems that play important role today in providing quality health care services are clinical decision support systems (CDSSs). These systems are effective in overcoming human resource constraint and intelligent analysis of information generated by Tele-monitoring systems. In spite of the many advantages of this architectures, these are single-purpose, meaning that only the CDSS of a disease is located on them. If we want to use the same model of architecture in the decision-making process of another disease, all the components of this architecture should be redevelopment with a new CDSS, which is time-consuming and costly. Due to the increasing demand for health information technology at low cost and mobile access in the health care industry, in this article, a scalable software platform(Patient Tele monitoring: PATEL) based on SOA for implementing and use different CDSSs on a common platform, for use in Tele-monitoring Systems, was created.Implementation: To develop PATEL platform, the component-based software development approach and hybrid programming approach to implementing various components used. In the evaluation phase of the proposed platform, the case study, accuracy and performance evaluation (transmission delays, patient data fetch, parsing overhead and inference time) used.Results: The results of the case study evaluation confirmed the scalability and interoperability between CDSSs on the platform. Based on performance evaluation, the proposed platform has responded to 89% of the requests in less than one second. Also, based on accuracy evaluation, the platform presented in this article was successful in diagnosing 91.6% of the cases.Conclusion: The proposed platform can support CDSSs of various diseases simultaneously and provides the necessary scalability to add a new CDSS. Tele-monitoring systems will be capable of service by connecting to this platform. Using this infrastructure is expected to be a lot of duplication in the implementation of tele-monitoring systems based CDSSs will be reduced.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document