survey review
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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 92-100
Author(s):  
Yu Luan

The global spread of the pandemic has led to the stop of various industries, the shutdown of enterprises, the unemployment of workers and other problems. Recently, one of the issues that have aroused widespread global concern is the problem that the international shipping prices represented by the trans Pacific route continuously rising. This is the apparent performance of the global shipping supply chain interruption and brings interruption to the global supply chain. International shipping is a barometer of the international economic. The reasons behind the sharp rise in shipping prices are complex and diverse. The labor shortage under the pandemic is the root cause of low operation efficiency. The serious shortage of export containers in Asia is the direct cause of demand exceeds supply. The imbalance of international trade is the internal reason for the increase in demand. In addition, there are additional reasons such as the congestion accident in Suez Canal. In order to deal with this situation, each governments use policies, decrees and other measures to intervene moderately on the basis of the market power to restore balance for hoping to recover as soon as possible. But some international organizations related to this issue hold the opposite attitude. Shipping operators have interests directly relevant should reasonably dispatch all available transport capacity to meet demand, rationally treat and make use of short-term high profits and actively cooperate in the face of national survey, review and supervision. The problem of global shipping supply chain interruption needs to be solved jointly by all parties and strengthen pandemic control then solve the problem from the source, to release the delayed transportation efficiency as soon as possible to restore the global shipping supply chain and promote the recovery of the world economy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_6) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Khan ◽  
A Iqbal

Abstract Aim We assessed patient perceptions of hand trauma management through a plastic surgery trauma clinic. We also assessed effects of educating patients about outcomes of their condition on their desire to have prompt surgery. Method A prospective survey review was conducted at our plastic surgery trauma clinic. Patients included were those referred due to simple hand trauma. Any patients needing urgent admissions were excluded. An anonymous survey assessing patient perceptions before and after education about delay in surgery was distributed. Results Of 100 patients, there were mixed expectations regarding trauma clinic; 38% (n = 38) expect an operation, 32% (n = 32) expect no operation and 30% (n = 30) expect either option. 90% (n = 90) expect surgery within a week (50% n = 50) or within a day (40% n = 40); 10% expect it (n = 10) within a few weeks. After educating patients about no negative effects on their condition from surgical delay, 43% (n = 17) fewer patients desired surgery within a day, and 8% (n = 3) fewer patients desired surgery within a week. 190% (n = 19) more patients were willing to have surgery within a few weeks. 79% (n = 79) would rather come back at a guaranteed surgical slot than stay in hospital until a slot is available. 72% (n = 72) considered knowledge about long-term outcomes associated with surgical delay to influence their decision more than anaesthetic type (12% n = 12) and personal circumstances (16% n = 16). Conclusions If appropriate patients are assured that their condition will not be affected by surgical delay, fewer patients may stay in hospital with financial benefits of reduced bed occupancy and reduced covid risks.


Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 206
Author(s):  
Anna Bokowa ◽  
Carlos Diaz ◽  
Jacek A. Koziel ◽  
Michael McGinley ◽  
Jennifer Barclay ◽  
...  

When it comes to air pollution complaints, odours are often the most significant contributor. Sources of odour emissions range from natural to anthropogenic. Mitigation of odour can be challenging, multifaceted, site-specific, and is often confounded by its complexity—defined by existing (or non-existing) environmental laws, public ordinances, and socio-economic considerations. The objective of this paper is to review and summarise odour legislation in selected European countries (France, Germany, Austria, Hungary, the UK, Spain, the Netherlands, Italy, Belgium), North America (the USA and Canada), and South America (Chile and Colombia), as well as Oceania (Australia and New Zealand) and Asia (Japan, China). Many countries have incorporated odour controls into their legislation. However, odour-related assessment criteria tend to be highly variable between countries, individual states, provinces, and even counties and towns. Legislation ranges from (1) no specific mention in environmental legislation that regulates pollutants which are known to have an odour impact to (2) extensive details about odour source testing, odour dispersion modelling, ambient odour monitoring, (3) setback distances, (4) process operations, and (5) odour control technologies and procedures. Agricultural operations are one specific source of odour emissions in rural and suburban areas and a model example of such complexities. Management of agricultural odour emissions is important because of the dense consolidation of animal feeding operations and the advance of housing development into rural areas. Overall, there is a need for continued survey, review, development, and adjustment of odour legislation that considers sustainable development, environmental stewardship, and socio-economic realities, all of which are amenable to a just, site-specific, and sector-specific application.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 436-443
Author(s):  
Dr. Anupama Deshmukh ◽  
Vedhavathi A ◽  
BS Lakshmi ◽  
C Jayasree

Author(s):  
Maciej Muskała

Many offenders follow the „ zigzag path”, interlacing many times criminal and noncriminal stages. The aim of this survey review is to show, on the example of the Self- Regulatory Model of Relapse Prevention analyses (SRM-r in modified version) the variety of ways and courses of action that an offender (mainly sexual) may follow in the process of desistance from offending.


Author(s):  
Anna Bokowa ◽  
Carlos Diaz ◽  
Jacek Koziel ◽  
Michael McGinley ◽  
Jennifer Barclay ◽  
...  

When it comes to air pollution complaints, odours are often the most significant contributor. Sources of odour emissions range from natural to anthropogenic. Mitigation of odour can be challenging, multifaceted, site-specific, and is often confounded by its complexity—defined by existing (or non-existing) environmental laws, public ordinances, and socio-economic considerations. The objective of this paper is to review and summarize odour legislation in selected European countries (France, Germany, Austria, Hungary, United Kingdom, Spain, The Netherlands, Italy, Belgium), North America (USA and Canada), South America (Chile and Colombia), as well as Oceania (Australia and New Zealand) and Asia (Japan, China). Many countries have incorporated odour controls into their legislation. However, odour-related assessment criteria tend to be highly variable between countries, individual states, provinces and even counties and towns. Legislation ranges from (1) no specific mention in environmental legislation that regulates pollutants which are known to have an odour impact to (2) extensive details about odour source testing, odour dispersion modeling, ambient odour monitoring, (3) setback distances, (4) process operations, and (5) odour control technologies and procedures. Agricultural operations are one specific source of odour emissions in rural and suburban areas and a model example of such complexities. Management of agricultural odour emissions is important because of the dense consolidation of animal feeding operations and the advance of housing development into rural areas. Overall, there is a need for continued survey, review, development, and adjustment of odour legislation that considers sustainable development, environmental stewardship, and socio-economic realities, all of which are amenable to a just, site-specific, and sector-specific application.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 3739 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dario Cazzato ◽  
Marco Leo ◽  
Cosimo Distante ◽  
Holger Voos

The automatic detection of eye positions, their temporal consistency, and their mapping into a line of sight in the real world (to find where a person is looking at) is reported in the scientific literature as gaze tracking. This has become a very hot topic in the field of computer vision during the last decades, with a surprising and continuously growing number of application fields. A very long journey has been made from the first pioneering works, and this continuous search for more accurate solutions process has been further boosted in the last decade when deep neural networks have revolutionized the whole machine learning area, and gaze tracking as well. In this arena, it is being increasingly useful to find guidance through survey/review articles collecting most relevant works and putting clear pros and cons of existing techniques, also by introducing a precise taxonomy. This kind of manuscripts allows researchers and technicians to choose the better way to move towards their application or scientific goals. In the literature, there exist holistic and specifically technological survey documents (even if not updated), but, unfortunately, there is not an overview discussing how the great advancements in computer vision have impacted gaze tracking. Thus, this work represents an attempt to fill this gap, also introducing a wider point of view that brings to a new taxonomy (extending the consolidated ones) by considering gaze tracking as a more exhaustive task that aims at estimating gaze target from different perspectives: from the eye of the beholder (first-person view), from an external camera framing the beholder’s, from a third-person view looking at the scene where the beholder is placed in, and from an external view independent from the beholder.


Author(s):  
Mário Reis

The representation of the human figure is rare in European Paleolithic art, and the Côa region is no exception, although Paleolithic anthropomorphs have been known in its open-air art since the beginning. At first restricted to two sites, their quantity and territorial dispersion has considerably expanded in recent years, with the continued work of survey, review and registration of decorated rocks, and currently amount to almost half a hundred, despite the doubts concerning the classification of several among them. This text presents the complete set of these figures in the Côa art, divided in their main chronological and typological groups, and briefly reflecting on their possible continuation for the cultural phase subsequent to the Upper Paleolithic.


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