environmental demand
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magnus Liebherr ◽  
Andrew W. Corcoran ◽  
Phillip M. Alday ◽  
Scott Coussens ◽  
Valeria Bellan ◽  
...  

The capacity to regulate ones attention in accordance with fluctuating task demands and environmental contexts is an essential feature of adaptive behavior. Although the electrophysiological correlates of attentional processing have been extensively studied in the laboratory, relatively little is known about the way they unfold under more variable, ecologically-valid conditions. Accordingly, this study employed a real-world EEG design to investigate how attentional processing varies under increasing levels of cognitive, motor, and environmental demand. Forty-four participants were exposed to an auditory oddball task while (1) sitting in a quiet room inside the lab, (2) walking around a sports field, and (3) wayfinding across a university campus. In each condition, participants were instructed to either attend to (i.e., count) or ignore oddball stimuli. While behavioral performance was similar across the lab and field conditions, oddball count accuracy was significantly reduced in the campus condition. Moreover, event-related potential components (mismatch negativity and P3) elicited in both real-world settings differed significantly from those obtained under laboratory conditions. These findings demonstrate the impact of environmental factors on attentional processing during simultaneously-performed motor and cognitive tasks, highlighting the value of incorporating dynamic and unpredictable contexts within naturalistic designs.



2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 355
Author(s):  
Alice Paola Pomè ◽  
Chiara Tagliaro ◽  
Gianandrea Ciaramella

To reduce the environmental impact of the construction sector, sustainable strategies for managing the in-use phase of buildings must be integrated urgently. Current green certifications present several limitations and, in particular, do not help determine where to focus for reducing the environmental demand of buildings. Among existing indicators, the ecological footprint (EF) is the most useful for assessing the buildings’ environmental performance through impact sources that reveal the over-consumption of resources. The present paper expands EF by taking into account the role of human behavior in over-consumption, and thus the efficiency in buildings’ use. After comparing ecological footprint with the existing green certifications, the paper demonstrates how a new integrated ecological footprint assessment can describe the impact of built-up, energy consumption, water consumption, material consumption, food and drink, mobility, waste generation, recycling potential, and occupants in the environmental efficiency of a building. The application of a case study demonstrates the reliability and the effectiveness of the model and shows that the estimated ecological deficit reflects not only the consumption of energy and materials, but also the behaviors of building users. This highlights the need for integrating a sustainable culture in the users of buildings.



Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (17) ◽  
pp. 4311
Author(s):  
J.F. Luna-Tintos ◽  
Carlos Cobreros ◽  
Álvaro López-Escamilla ◽  
Rafael Herrera-Limones ◽  
Miguel Torres-García

The construction industry is responsible for a high percentage of the energy consumed on the planet and the emission of greenhouse gases, therefore it is considered necessary to rethink many of the processes that this industry carries out in order to reduce its environmental impact. For this, one of the paths could take into account the Life Cycle Assessment of the used materials, for which it is necessary to evaluate this aspect through indicators that allow the qualification and quantification of the weight of these environmental impacts. In this context, this article presents a methodological proposal for the quantitative evaluation of the embodied primary energy and CO2 production at each stage of the life cycle of prefabricated structural systems, taking as case studies eight prototypes from the “Solar Decathlon” competition in its editions of Europe (2014), United States (2015) and Latin America (2015), through a Simplified Life Cycle Analysis, using the Eco Audit tool from CES Edupack. Through this analysis, conclusions are drawn about the optimization of a structural system with lower environmental demand and the possibilities of transferring knowledge from this competition to be applied in innovative systems of new housing models.



2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-194
Author(s):  
Jaqueline Reginato Koser ◽  
Celso Barbiéri ◽  
Tiago Maurício Francoy

The American stingless bees species have been used in management and breeding practices by local civilizations since the pre-Columbian era. Currently, many of these species are managed commercially and maintained in meliponaries. However, divergences exist among authors about the ecological utility of these practices. Some argue that meliponaries could serve to maintain local biodiversity while others argue that they have the opposite effect. Due to pressure from beekeepers and environmentalists there are efforts to draft specific rules that legislate production and market focusing on conservating native bees. In recent years, these norms have become more specific due to the use of empirical data from the scientific community and demands from social groups and producers. This paper presents a revision on Brazilian legislation as well its applicabilities and proposes alterations in the Environmental Crimes Law.



Competitiveness fully and synthetically characterizes the viability of an enterprise. In the economics literature competitiveness is analyzed in particular in economic and managerial terms with almost no insight into the analysis of the technology role in ensuring and developing competitiveness. Hence the need for manufacturing systems based on behavioral modeling and on line learning. The behavioral approach is based on a continuous awareness of the situations and decisions in real time on activities. Thus it can provide solutions to make manufacturing systems develop and be competitive. From theories of knowledge and complexity, we can design a flexible system that will lead to manufacturing processes, flexibly responding to any environmental demand. The behavioral management is characterized by the ability to perceive the environment, to take decision in time, as a result of interaction, with no specific procedures. The system environment provides on-line data on the actions undertaken which, properly analyzed and correlated, will further generate solutions in order to develop said system and make it competitive. The paper aims , in the field of manufacturing technologies, at approaching issues of manufacturing systems, in order to develop a new concept of management, which is in line with the current market dynamics: the concept of competitive management. The concept of competitive management can offer solutions even to make competitive and develop enterprises as a whole.



2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 1882 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.F. Luna-Tintos ◽  
Carlos Cobreros ◽  
Rafael Herrera-Limones ◽  
Álvaro López-Escamilla

The construction sector, by direct or indirect actions, consumes more than 40% of the global energy produced and is responsible for 30% of CO2 emissions. It is a need of the construction industry to transform its practices and processes by proposing systems of lower demand to the environment. In this sense, closed prefabrication and industrialization as a constructive process could be the key to seek savings and efficiency from its origin to the end of life of buildings. In this context, this article presents a methodological proposal of quantitative, qualitative and comparative analysis of the structural systems of eight prototypes presented in the “Solar Decathlon” contest in its North-American and Latin-American editions (both of them in 2015) and the European edition (in 2014). This methodology deduces the characteristics of a structural system of lower environmental demand and the characteristics of these constructive processes, in favor of a new paradigm of sustainability and to be applied in innovative systems of new housing models.



2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 7860-7863

This study aims to understand the effects of emotional intelligence towards job performance among primary school’s educators in Malaysia. The emotional intelligence effect educators’ abilities to success in controlling the pressure from the work responsibilities and environmental demand. In analysis part, descriptive study through distributing questionnaire will conduct to evaluate the effect of emotional intelligence on job performance among educators.



2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 59-70
Author(s):  
Dina Kanaan ◽  
Suzan Ayas ◽  
Birsen Donmez ◽  
Martina Risteska ◽  
Joyita Chakraborty

This research utilized vehicle-based measures from a naturalistic driving dataset to detect distraction as indicated by long off-path glances (≥ 2 s) and whether the driver was engaged in a secondary (non-driving) task or not, as well as to estimate motor control difficulty associated with the driving environment (i.e. curvature and poor surface conditions). Advanced driver assistance systems can exploit such driver behavior models to better support the driver and improve safety. Given the temporal nature of vehicle-based measures, Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) were utilized; GPS speed and steering wheel position were used to classify the existence of off-path glances (yes vs. no) and secondary task engagement (yes vs. no); lateral (x-axis) and longitudinal (y-axis) acceleration were used to classify motor control difficulty (lower vs. higher). Best classification accuracies were achieved for identifying cases of long off-path glances and secondary task engagement with both accuracies of 77%.



Author(s):  
Mohammad Karamouz ◽  
Hesam Barkhordari ◽  
Elham Ebrahimi
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