An interdisciplinary research perspective on the future of multi-vector energy networks

Author(s):  
P.C. Taylor ◽  
M. Abeysekera ◽  
Y. Bian ◽  
D. Ćetenović ◽  
M. Deakin ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 26
Author(s):  
Norbert Bátfai ◽  
Márió Bersenszki ◽  
Miklós Lukács ◽  
Renátó Besenczi ◽  
Gergő Bogacsovics ◽  
...  

Jelen közlemény célkitűzése egyrészt az e-sport adott vertikális területei státuszának rövid áttekintése az interdiszciplináris, tudományos kutatás szempontjából, másrészt az e-sport és a mesterséges intelligencia kutatások kapcsolatának vizsgálata, különös tekintettel a lehetséges kutatási kitörési pontok feltárására. Az eredmények a fejlesztendő Entrópia Samu című új e-sport projekt zászlaja alatt kerülnek bemutatásra. A közlemény külön kitér az egyetemi közegben alapítandó e-sport csapatokkal kapcsolatban felmerülő kérdésekre. A munka végső tézise, hogy a jövő programozása nem egyéni fejlesztőkön, hanem tömegek e-sportolásán alapszik majd. --- The Common Future of E-sport and Robopsychology The objective of this paper is twofold. Firstly, a short survey is provided on the state of the art of some specialized areas of e-sport from an interdisciplinary research perspective. Secondly, the link between e-sport and artificial intelligence is investigated in order to identify possible breakout points. The results are presented within the framework of the new e-sport project to be created under the name Samu Entropy. The overall thesis of this paper is that the programming of the future will be based on the mass sport of gamer fans rather than individual developers.


Author(s):  
Leon Green

Much speculation on the future nature of electic utilities has concerned transmission; e.g., complications from access by multiple generators and how to effect higher line loadings to accommodate them. This paper proposes an alternative concept: pipeline transmission of a liquid fuel produced from domestic coal by nuclear heat at centralized facilities to multiple, dispersed sites for local generation and distribution of power.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (15) ◽  
pp. 8250-8253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Torben C. Rick ◽  
Daniel H. Sandweiss

We live in an age characterized by increasing environmental, social, economic, and political uncertainty. Human societies face significant challenges, ranging from climate change to food security, biodiversity declines and extinction, and political instability. In response, scientists, policy makers, and the general public are seeking new interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary approaches to evaluate and identify meaningful solutions to these global challenges. Underrecognized among these challenges is the disappearing record of past environmental change, which can be key to surviving the future. Historical sciences such as archaeology access the past to provide long-term perspectives on past human ecodynamics: the interaction between human social and cultural systems and climate and environment. Such studies shed light on how we arrived at the present day and help us search for sustainable trajectories toward the future. Here, we highlight contributions by archaeology—the study of the human past—to interdisciplinary research programs designed to evaluate current social and environmental challenges and contribute to solutions for the future. The past is a multimillennial experiment in human ecodynamics, and, together with our transdisciplinary colleagues, archaeology is well positioned to uncover the lessons of that experiment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meiqun Yin ◽  
Lei Sheng

Purpose This paper aims to find the endogenous relationship between innovation input and corporate performance and deepen the study of innovation performance theory in industry and enterprise at the micro level. Design/methodology/approach This paper selects the firms listed on A shares in Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges from 2009 to 2015 as samples. The authors cluster these samples according to the factors of production and classify the samples into three types: technology-intensive, capital-intensive and labor-intensive. After obtaining the samples and classifying them, the authors conduct a research on the endogenous relationship between the innovation input and the corporate performance through the simultaneous equations model and 3SLS estimation method. Meanwhile, they also make a study on the influence of executive incentive mechanism on the relationship between the innovation input and the corporate performance. Findings In technology-intensive industry, the increase of pre-innovation input will enhance the corporate performance in the current period, however, which will slow down the pace of innovation and lead to lower corporate performance in the future, and then increase innovation input again. In contrast, in capital-intensive industries, innovation input just improves corporate performance in the current period and the promotion of corporate performance will promote the intensity of innovation input in the future. With labor-intensive industries, innovation input also depends on early good returns, but innovation input has no significant impact on the corporate performance both at present and in the future. While in the executive incentive mechanism, salary incentive has a significant positive regulatory effect on the relationship between innovation input and corporate performance. Originality/value This paper presents a new research perspective on the relationship between innovation input and firm corporate performance, which is of great value to the listed company in balancing the R&D input with the company’s target performance and the design of executive incentive mechanism.


This book articulates what it is to do collaborative interdisciplinary research drawing on projects from the UK based Arts and Humanities Research Council funded Connected Communities programme. This book tells stories of the value of collaborative research between universities and communities. It offers a set of resources for people who are interested in doing interdisciplinary research across universities and communities. It provides a lexicon of key ideas that researchers might find useful when approaching this kind of work. The book aims to enhance ways of doing collaborative research in order to improve the ways in which that kind of research is practiced and understood. Nine chapters, based on particular projects, articulate this value in different ways drawing on different research paradigms. Chapters include discussions of tangible and intangible value, an articulation of performing and animation as forms of knowing, explorations of such initiatives as community evaluation, a project on the role of artists in collaborative projects and ways in which tools such as community evaluation, mapping and co-inquiry can aid communities and universities to work together. Chapters also focus on the translation of such research across borders and the legacy of such research within universities and communities. The book ends by mapping the future directions of such research.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. e218-e223
Author(s):  
Stephen W Smye ◽  
Alejandro F Frangi

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