A mixed model-based Johnson's relative weights for eco-efficiency assessment: The case for global food consumption

2021 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 106588
Author(s):  
Galal M. Abdella ◽  
Murat Kucukvar ◽  
Radwa Ismail ◽  
Abdelsalam G. Abdelsalam ◽  
Nuri Cihat Onat ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Wang ◽  
Hui Tang ◽  
Jian-Feng Liu ◽  
Shizhong Xu ◽  
Qin Zhang ◽  
...  

SummaryWe have developed a rapid mixed model algorithm for exhaustive genome-wide epistatic association analysis by controlling multiple polygenic effects. Our model can simultaneously handle additive by additive epistasis, dominance by dominance epistasis and additive by dominance epistasis, and account for intrasubject fluctuations due to individuals with repeated records. Furthermore, we suggest a simple but efficient approximate algorithm, which allows examination of all pairwise interactions in a remarkably fast manner of linear with population size. Application to publicly available yeast and human data has showed that our mixed model-based method has similar performance with simple linear model-based Plink on computational efficiency. It took less than 40 hours for the pairwise analysis of 5,000 individuals genotyped with roughly 350,000 SNPs with five threads on Intel Xeon E5 2.6GHz CPU.Availability and implementationSource codes are freely available at https://github.com/chaoning/GMAT.


Author(s):  
Henry E. Alapiki ◽  
Luke A. Amadi

In recent decades, we have seen the rise of the sustainable food consumption field and its push for disciplinary space in development studies. This chapter turns to the original impetus of sustainable food consumption and the question of how neoliberal order can be reconciled with the need to save the ecology. Beyond the fundamental objectives, there is a need to assess the links between the global food system, as influenced by neoliberal order, and the signs that it leads to adversity for low-income countries. A review of relevant literature in the sustainable consumption field is explored using content analysis to examine links between neoliberal food consumption dynamics, the logic of global food politics, and the emerging terminological shifts from food consumption to food system. The world systems theory and the Marxian political ecology framework are used to show that sustainability is notable for emphasizing resource efficiency and equitability, which can be useful when sustainability challenges are matched with ecological policies. This chapter makes some policy recommendations.


Author(s):  
Luke Amadi

This chapter reviews key issues in global food politics. The aim is to investigate the character and trajectories of the prevailing food system in the liberal international order and, in particular, explore implications of global food politics on sustainable food consumption. Dominant theorizations of food consumption leverage on a common assumption of its essentially profit-oriented character based on the capitalist appropriation, social construction of consumption, and value augmentation leaving behind the more pressing problem of sustainability.


2013 ◽  
Vol 303-306 ◽  
pp. 1420-1425
Author(s):  
Qiang Pu ◽  
Ahmed Lbath ◽  
Da Qing He

Mobile personalized web search has been introduced for the purpose of distinguishing mobile user's personal different search interest. We first take the user's location information into account to do a geographic query expansion, then present an approach to personalizing web search for mobile users within language modeling framework. We estimate a user mixed model estimated according to both activated ontological topic model-based feedback and user interest model to re-rank the results from geographic query expansion. Experiments show that language model based re-ranking method is effective in presenting more relevant documents on the top retrieved results to mobile users. The main contribution of the improvements comes from the consideration of geographic information, ontological topic information and user interests together to find more relevant documents for satisfying their personal information need.


2015 ◽  
Vol 113 (7) ◽  
pp. 1148-1157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sinead A. O'Brien ◽  
M. Barbara E. Livingstone ◽  
Breige A. McNulty ◽  
Jacqueline Lyons ◽  
Janette Walton ◽  
...  

The present analysis aimed to investigate the changes in the reported portion sizes (PS) of foods and beverages commonly consumed by Irish adults (18–64 years) from the North South Ireland Food Consumption Survey (NSIFCS) (1997–2001) and the National Adult Nutrition Survey (NANS) (2008–10). Food PS, which are defined as the weight of food (g) consumed per eating occasion, were calculated for comparable foods and beverages in two nationally representative cross-sectional Irish food consumption surveys and were published in NSIFCS and NANS. Repeated measure mixed model analysis compared reported food PS at the total population level as well as subdivided by sex, age, BMI and social class. A total of thirteen commonly consumed foods were examined. The analysis demonstrated that PS significantly increased for five foods (‘white sliced bread’, ‘brown/wholemeal breads’, ‘all meat, cooked’, ‘poultry, roasted’ and ‘milk’), significantly decreased for three (‘potatoes’, ‘chips/wedges’ and ‘ham, sliced’) and did not significantly change for five foods (‘processed potato products’, ‘bacon/ham’, ‘cheese’, ‘yogurt’ and ‘butter/spreads’) between the NSIFCS and the NANS. The present study demonstrates that there was considerable variation in the trends in reported food PS over this period.


Appetite ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 449
Author(s):  
J. Gatzemeier ◽  
M. Price ◽  
L. Wilkinson ◽  
M. Lee

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document