10 results
Search Results
2. The Most Innovative Countries In Information Technology.
- Author
-
Herper, Matthew
- Subjects
BIOLOGY ,COMPUTER science ,CLEAN energy investment ,PUBLICATIONS ,INFORMATION technology ,RESEARCH - Abstract
The article examines the scientific output of several countries in biology, computer science and clean energy. An analysis by Elsevier division's SciVal Analytics showed that China surpassed the U.S. as the top scientific publisher about information technology in 2008 and 2009. The U.S. remained the dominant publisher in biology, medicine and clean energy areas. The article notes that U.S. publications have more influenced than Chinese research.
- Published
- 2011
3. Vehicle Scheduling Schemes for Commercial and Emergency Logistics Integration.
- Author
-
Li, Xiaohui and Tan, Qingmei
- Subjects
COMPUTER scheduling ,LOGISTICS ,LARGE scale integration of circuits ,PROFIT maximization ,INDUSTRIAL engineering ,EMERGENCY management ,DISASTER relief ,VEHICLES - Abstract
In modern logistics operations, large-scale logistics companies, besides active participation in profit-seeking commercial business, also play an essential role during an emergency relief process by dispatching urgently-required materials to disaster-affected areas. Therefore, an issue has been widely addressed by logistics practitioners and caught researchers' more attention as to how the logistics companies achieve maximum commercial profit on condition that emergency tasks are effectively and performed satisfactorily. In this paper, two vehicle scheduling models are proposed to solve the problem. One is a prediction-related scheme, which predicts the amounts of disaster-relief materials and commercial business and then accepts the business that will generate maximum profits; the other is a priority-directed scheme, which, firstly groups commercial and emergency business according to priority grades and then schedules both types of business jointly and simultaneously by arriving at the maximum priority in total. Moreover, computer-based simulations are carried out to evaluate the performance of these two models by comparing them with two traditional disaster-relief tactics in China. The results testify the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Comparative Study of Four Time Series Methods in Forecasting Typhoid Fever Incidence in China
- Author
-
Zhang, Xingyu, Liu, Yuanyuan, Yang, Min, Zhang, Tao, Young, Alistair A., and Li, Xiaosong
- Subjects
TYPHOID fever ,TIME series analysis ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,STRATEGIC planning ,BACK propagation ,AUTOREGRESSION (Statistics) ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Accurate incidence forecasting of infectious disease is critical for early prevention and for better government strategic planning. In this paper, we present a comprehensive study of different forecasting methods based on the monthly incidence of typhoid fever. The seasonal autoregressive integrated moving average (SARIMA) model and three different models inspired by neural networks, namely, back propagation neural networks (BPNN), radial basis function neural networks (RBFNN), and Elman recurrent neural networks (ERNN) were compared. The differences as well as the advantages and disadvantages, among the SARIMA model and the neural networks were summarized and discussed. The data obtained for 2005 to 2009 and for 2010 from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention were used as modeling and forecasting samples, respectively. The performances were evaluated based on three metrics: mean absolute error (MAE), mean absolute percentage error (MAPE), and mean square error (MSE). The results showed that RBFNN obtained the smallest MAE, MAPE and MSE in both the modeling and forecasting processes. The performances of the four models ranked in descending order were: RBFNN, ERNN, BPNN and the SARIMA model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. ISS-An Electronic Syndromic Surveillance System for Infectious Disease in Rural China.
- Author
-
Yan, Weirong, Palm, Lars, Lu, Xin, Nie, Shaofa, Xu, Biao, Zhao, Qi, Tao, Tao, Cheng, Liwei, Tan, Li, Dong, Hengjin, and Diwan, Vinod K.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC surveillance ,RURAL geography ,EPIDEMICS ,COMMUNICABLE disease diagnosis ,INFORMATION technology ,HEALTH policy ,COMPUTER science - Abstract
Background: syndromic surveillance system has great advantages in promoting the early detection of epidemics and reducing the necessities of disease confirmation, and it is especially effective for surveillance in resource poor settings. However, most current syndromic surveillance systems are established in developed countries, and there are very few reports on the development of an electronic syndromic surveillance system in resource-constrained settings. Objective: this study describes the design and pilot implementation of an electronic surveillance system (ISS) for the early detection of infectious disease epidemics in rural China, complementing the conventional case report surveillance system. Methods: ISS was developed based on an existing platform ‘Crisis Information Sharing Platform’ (CRISP), combining with modern communication and GIS technology. ISS has four interconnected functions: 1) work group and communication group; 2) data source and collection; 3) data visualization; and 4) outbreak detection and alerting. Results: As of Jan. 31
st 2012, ISS has been installed and pilot tested for six months in four counties in rural China. 95 health facilities, 14 pharmacies and 24 primary schools participated in the pilot study, entering respectively 74256, 79701, and 2330 daily records into the central database. More than 90% of surveillance units at the study sites are able to send daily information into the system. In the paper, we also presented the pilot data from health facilities in the two counties, which showed the ISS system had the potential to identify the change of disease patterns at the community level. Conclusions: The ISS platform may facilitate the early detection of infectious disease epidemic as it provides near real-time syndromic data collection, interactive visualization, and automated aberration detection. However, several constraints and challenges were encountered during the pilot implementation of ISS in rural China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. China Passed The U.S. In Information Technology. What's Next?
- Author
-
Herper, Matthew
- Subjects
BIOLOGY ,COMPUTER science ,PUBLICATIONS ,RESEARCH ,INFORMATION technology - Abstract
The first of a four-part series of articles that examine the scientific output of several countries in biology, computer science and clean energy is presented. An analysis prepared by Elsevier division, SciVal Analytics showed that the U.S. still leads in the number of scientific research publications in reputable journals. However, Chinese researchers have outnumbered the U.S. in information technology publications in 2009. In biology and medicine, Great Britain came in second to the U.S.
- Published
- 2011
7. Effect of the One-Child Policy on Influenza Transmission in China: A Stochastic Transmission Model.
- Author
-
Liu, Fengchen, Enanoria, Wayne T. A., Ray, Kathryn J., Coffee, Megan P., Gordon, Aubree, Aragón, Tomás J., Yu, Guowei, Cowling, Benjamin J., and Porco, Travis C.
- Subjects
INFLUENZA transmission ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,POPULATION biology ,COMPUTATIONAL biology ,STOCHASTIC models - Abstract
Background: China's one-child-per-couple policy, introduced in 1979, led to profound demographic changes for nearly a quarter of the world's population. Several decades later, the consequences include decreased fertility rates, population aging, decreased household sizes, changes in family structure, and imbalanced sex ratios. The epidemiology of communicable diseases may have been affected by these changes since the transmission dynamics of infectious diseases depend on demographic characteristics of the population. Of particular interest is influenza because China and Southeast Asia lie at the center of a global transmission network of influenza. Moreover, changes in household structure may affect influenza transmission. Is it possible that the pronounced demographic changes that have occurred in China have affected influenza transmission? Methods and Findings: To address this question, we developed a continuous-time, stochastic, individual-based simulation model for influenza transmission. With this model, we simulated 30 years of influenza transmission and compared influenza transmission rates in populations with and without the one-child policy control. We found that the average annual attack rate is reduced by 6.08% (SD 2.21%) in the presence of the one-child policy compared to a population in which no demographic changes occurred. There was no discernible difference in the secondary attack rate, −0.15% (SD 1.85%), between the populations with and without a one-child policy. We also forecasted influenza transmission over a ten-year time period in a population with a two-child policy under a hypothesis that a two-child-per-couple policy will be carried out in 2015, and found a negligible difference in the average annual attack rate compared to the population with the one-child policy. Conclusions: This study found that the average annual attack rate is slightly lowered in a population with a one-child policy, which may have resulted from a decrease in household size and the proportion of children in the population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Comparing Effects of Climate Warming, Fire, and Timber Harvesting on a Boreal Forest Landscape in Northeastern China.
- Author
-
Li, Xiaona, He, Hong S., Wu, Zhiwei, Liang, Yu, and Schneiderman, Jeffrey E.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,LANDSCAPE protection ,TAIGAS ,ENERGY harvesting ,PLANT species ,FOREST biodiversity ,AGE of plants ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Forest management under a changing climate requires assessing the effects of climate warming and disturbance on the composition, age structure, and spatial patterns of tree species. We investigated these effects on a boreal forest in northeastern China using a factorial experimental design and simulation modeling. We used a spatially explicit forest landscape model (LANDIS) to evaluate the effects of three independent variables: climate (current and expected future), fire regime (current and increased fire), and timber harvesting (no harvest and legal harvest). Simulations indicate that this forested landscape would be significantly impacted under a changing climate. Climate warming would significantly increase the abundance of most trees, especially broadleaf species (aspen, poplar, and willow). However, climate warming would have less impact on the abundance of conifers, diversity of forest age structure, and variation in spatial landscape structure than burning and harvesting. Burning was the predominant influence in the abundance of conifers except larch and the abundance of trees in mid-stage. Harvesting impacts were greatest for the abundance of larch and birch, and the abundance of trees during establishment stage (1–40 years), early stage (41–80 years) and old- growth stage (>180 years). Disturbance by timber harvesting and burning may significantly alter forest ecosystem dynamics by increasing forest fragmentation and decreasing forest diversity. Results from the simulations provide insight into the long term management of this boreal forest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Modeling the Soil Water Retention Curves of Soil-Gravel Mixtures with Regression Method on the Loess Plateau of China.
- Author
-
Wang, Huifang, Xiao, Bo, Wang, Mingyu, and Shao, Ming'an
- Subjects
SOIL moisture ,POTTING soils ,REGRESSION analysis ,ZONE of aeration ,ROCKS ,SUBMARINE geology - Abstract
Soil water retention parameters are critical to quantify flow and solute transport in vadose zone, while the presence of rock fragments remarkably increases their variability. Therefore a novel method for determining water retention parameters of soil-gravel mixtures is required. The procedure to generate such a model is based firstly on the determination of the quantitative relationship between the content of rock fragments and the effective saturation of soil-gravel mixtures, and then on the integration of this relationship with former analytical equations of water retention curves (WRCs). In order to find such relationships, laboratory experiments were conducted to determine WRCs of soil-gravel mixtures obtained with a clay loam soil mixed with shale clasts or pebbles in three size groups with various gravel contents. Data showed that the effective saturation of the soil-gravel mixtures with the same kind of gravels within one size group had a linear relation with gravel contents, and had a power relation with the bulk density of samples at any pressure head. Revised formulas for water retention properties of the soil-gravel mixtures are proposed to establish the water retention curved surface models of the power-linear functions and power functions. The analysis of the parameters obtained by regression and validation of the empirical models showed that they were acceptable by using either the measured data of separate gravel size group or those of all the three gravel size groups having a large size range. Furthermore, the regression parameters of the curved surfaces for the soil-gravel mixtures with a large range of gravel content could be determined from the water retention data of the soil-gravel mixtures with two representative gravel contents or bulk densities. Such revised water retention models are potentially applicable in regional or large scale field investigations of significantly heterogeneous media, where various gravel sizes and different gravel contents are present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Effects of Increased Nitrogen Deposition and Rotation Length on Long-Term Productivity of Cunninghamia lanceolata Plantation in Southern China.
- Author
-
Zhao, Meifang, Xiang, Wenhua, Tian, Dalun, Deng, Xiangwen, Huang, Zhihong, Zhou, Xiaolu, and Peng, Changhui
- Subjects
CHINA fir ,PLANTATIONS ,SOIL composition ,NITROGEN in soils ,DATA analysis ,SOIL chemistry ,EARTH sciences ,SOIL ecology - Abstract
Cunninghamia lanceolata (Lamb.) Hook. has been widely planted in subtropical China to meet increasing timber demands, leading to short-rotation practices that deplete soil nutrients. However, increased nitrogen (N) deposition offsets soil N depletion. While long-term experimental data investigating the coupled effects related to short rotation practices and increasing N deposition are scarce, applying model simulations may yield insights. In this study, the CenW3.1 model was validated and parameterized using data from pure C. lanceolata plantations. The model was then used to simulate various changes in long-term productivity. Results indicated that responses of productivity of C. lanceolata plantation to increased N deposition were more related to stand age than N addition, depending on the proportion and age of growing forests. Our results have also shown a rapid peak in growth and N dynamics. The peak is reached sooner and is higher under higher level of N deposition. Short rotation lengths had a greater effect on productivity and N dynamics than high N deposition levels. Productivity and N dynamics decreased as the rotation length decreased. Total productivity levels suggest that a 30-year rotation length maximizes productivity at the 4.9 kg N ha
−1 year−1 deposition level. For a specific rotation length, higher N deposition levels resulted in greater overall ecosystem C and N storage, but this positive correlation tendency gradually slowed down with increasing N deposition levels. More pronounced differences in N deposition levels occurred as rotation length decreased. To sustain C. lanceolata plantation productivity without offsite detrimental N effects, the appropriate rotation length is about 20–30 years for N deposition levels below 50 kg N ha−1 year−1 and about 15–20 years for N deposition levels above 50 kg N ha−1 year−1 . These results highlight the importance of assessing N effects on carbon management and the long-term productivity of forest ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.