A transdisciplinary research agenda for understanding insect responses to ecological light pollution informed by evolutionary trap theory

2021 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. 91-96
Author(s):  
Kyle J Haynes ◽  
Bruce A Robertson
2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Franz Hölker ◽  
Timothy Moss ◽  
Barbara Griefahn ◽  
Werner Kloas ◽  
Christian C. Voigt ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
David Arney ◽  
Max Senges ◽  
Sara Gerke ◽  
Cansu Canca ◽  
Laura Haaber Ihle ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 531-537 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen F. Gambescia ◽  
Lynn D. Woodhouse ◽  
M. Elaine Auld ◽  
B. Lee Green ◽  
Sandra Crouse Quinn ◽  
...  

SOPHE leaders continue to challenge us to be true to the call for an “open society.” SOPHE has supported the Healthy People 2010 goal of eliminating health disparities through its Strategic Plan. SOPHE held an Inaugural Health Education Research Disparities Summit, Health Disparities and Social Inequities: Framing a Transdisciplinary Research Agenda in Health Education, August 8 and 9, 2005. This article explains the process used at the Summit where more than 80 researchers, academicians, practitioners, and students from across the country convened to ask fundamental questions about health disparity associated with race and ethnicity and how a health education research agenda could help in eliminating these disparities. From this Summit, about a dozen questions and/or recommendations have been developed to frame our future discussions about health disparities. Through its Research Agenda Committee, SOPHE has developed a process of translation and dissemination, including community participation, review, dialogue, and action


Author(s):  
Stefano De Paoli ◽  
GR Gangadharan ◽  
Aphra Kerr ◽  
Vincenzo D'Andrea

Trust has emerged as one of the key challenges for the Future of the Internet and as a key theme of European research. We are convinced that a transdisciplinary research agenda - that we define to as Trust as Result - shared by Sociology and Computer Science, is of paramount importance for devising sustainable Trust solutions for the (Future) Internet stakeholders. The scope of this paper is to present some aspects we consider important for building such an agenda. We distinguish our agenda by comparison with one of the current mainstream interdisciplinary approaches to Trust, that we define to as Trust Modelling and that assumes Trust to be the input of the design of trustworthy ICTs. We propose a different point of view based on the concept of Assemblage as proposed by DeLanda and focus on how we can obtain Trust as the result of the design.


Author(s):  
Stefano De Paoli ◽  
G. R. Gangadharan ◽  
Aphra Kerr ◽  
Vincenzo D’Andrea ◽  
Martin Serrano ◽  
...  

Trust has emerged as one of the key challenges for the Future Internet and as a key theme of European research. We are convinced that a transdisciplinary research agenda - that we define to as Trust as Result - shared by Sociology and Computer Science, is of paramount importance for devising sustainable Trust solutions for the (Future) Internet stakeholders. The scope of this paper is to present some elements we consider important for building such an agenda.


Author(s):  
Claudia Lemke

AbstractThis chapter discusses and reflects on the accomplished theoretical (see Chapter 2 and Chapter 3), methodological (see Chapter 4), and the empirical research (see Chapter 5). The present work is part of Phase C of the transdisciplinary research agenda in sustainability science (see Section 2.3.4; e.g. Lang et al., 2012). It draws on previous studies and problem framings from research and practice (Phase A), makes use of prior disclosures from the scientific and the practitioner community (Phase B), and finally provides new results that are relevant for both research and practice (Phase C).


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