1,758 results on '"lifecycle"'
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152. Empirical Assessment of Cyber-physical Systems Influence on Industrial Service Sector: The Manufacturing Industry as a Case Study
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Oluwafemi, Ifetayo, Laseinde, Timothy, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Pal, Nikhil R., Advisory Editor, Bello Perez, Rafael, Advisory Editor, Corchado, Emilio S., Advisory Editor, Hagras, Hani, Advisory Editor, Kóczy, László T., Advisory Editor, Kreinovich, Vladik, Advisory Editor, Lin, Chin-Teng, Advisory Editor, Lu, Jie, Advisory Editor, Melin, Patricia, Advisory Editor, Nedjah, Nadia, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Ngoc Thanh, Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Ahram, Tareq, editor, Karwowski, Waldemar, editor, Pickl, Stefan, editor, and Taiar, Redha, editor
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- 2020
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153. Statically Dissecting Internet of Things Malware: Analysis, Characterization, and Detection
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Anwar, Afsah, Alasmary, Hisham, Park, Jeman, Wang, An, Chen, Songqing, Mohaisen, David, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Meng, Weizhi, editor, Gollmann, Dieter, editor, Jensen, Christian D., editor, and Zhou, Jianying, editor
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- 2020
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154. Supporting Different Roles and Responsibilities in Developing and Using Context-Based Adaptive Personalized Collaboration Environments Compliant to the Law
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Goram, Mandy, Veiel, Dirk, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Sottilare, Robert A., editor, and Schwarz, Jessica, editor
- Published
- 2020
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155. Plastics Manufacture and Sustainability: Start Thinking in Cycles
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Bischof, Eric and Lambert, Susan, editor
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- 2020
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156. Optimization of the Life Cycle in the Warships: Maintenance Plan and Monitoring for Costs Reduction
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Fernández Jove, Antonio, Mackinlay, Antonio, Riola, José María, Carreño Moreno, Vice Admiral Jorge Enrique, editor, Vega Saenz, Adan, editor, Carral Couce, Luis, editor, and Saravia Arenas, Jymmy, editor
- Published
- 2020
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157. Seasonal Biology of Helicoverpa Armigera (Hubner) on Tomato
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Damanpreet, Chandi, R S, Kaur, Amandeep, and Aggarwal, Naveen
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- 2021
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158. Lifecycle cost forecast of 110 kV power transformers based on support vector regression and gray wolf optimization
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Mingming Du, Yuqi Zhao, Chaojun Liu, and Zhu Zhu
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Lifecycle ,Power transformer ,Gray wolf optimization (WGO) ,Support vector regression (SVR) ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
Power transformers are an important asset of power companies. To improve the economic benefits of power companies, it is of great significance to accurately predict the lifecycle cost of each power transformer. Based on the historical operating data on 83 110 kV power transformers, this paper estimates the lifecycle costs of different transformers, and then creates a dataset containing the estimated lifecycle costs and multiple features of the transformers, namely, bid price, transformer capacity, no-load loss, load loss, silicon steel cost, copper wire cost, annual failure frequency (AFF) of major repair, and AFF of minor repair. Based on the dataset, a lifecycle cost prediction model was established for power transformers, which couples grey wolf optimization (GWO) with support vector regression (SVR). The GWO-SVR model was simulated on the prepared dataset. The results show that the mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of the model was merely 5.20% on the test set. The proposed model provides a new method for power companies to accurately predict and evaluate the lifecycle cost of power transformers.
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- 2021
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159. Smart technology applications for the optimal management of underground facilities
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Isam Shahrour, Hanbing Bian, Xiongyao Xie, and Zixin Zhang
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Artificial intelligence ,Lifecycle ,Safety ,Smart city ,Maintenance ,Smart technology ,Engineering geology. Rock mechanics. Soil mechanics. Underground construction ,TA703-712 - Abstract
This study centers on the use of smart technology to improve the lifecycle management of underground facilities. It presents a comprehensive digital solution that addresses the challenges of underground facilities, particularly those related to the extensive use of underground space, as well as the requirements for safety, sustainability, and quality of services. The proposed solution emerged from discussions with experts, companies, and cities involved in the design, construction, and management of underground facilities. In this paper, we first discuss the major challenges of underground facilities, then, we present the development of a smart solution to address these challenges. This study demonstrates a promising perspective for the use of smart technology in the optimal management of underground facilities, and paves the way for its implementation.
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- 2021
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160. Strategic intent and the management of infrastructure systems
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Blom, Carron Margaret and Guthrie, Peter
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363 ,Infrastructure ,Complex adaptive system ,Public administration ,Infrastructure management ,asset management ,sustainability ,Resilience ,Infrastructure fitness ,System stewardship ,New Zealand ,Land Transport ,Systems thinking ,Public policy ,Strategy ,Benefit ,Engineering ,governance ,management ,new public management ,OPEX ,Road smoothness ,comfort ,Sense-making ,Lifecycle ,whole of life ,trans-disciplinary research ,mixed method research ,case study ,action research ,contemporaneous research ,deep dive ,organisation ,organisational research ,auckland transport ,transport ,public transport ,policy ,benefit management ,performance ,outcome ,system of system - Abstract
Infrastructure is presenting significant national and global challenges. Whilst often seen as performing well, infrastructure tends to do so against only limited terms of reference and short-term objectives. Given that the world is facing a new infrastructure bill of ~£40T, improving the benefits delivered by existing infrastructure is vital (Dobbs et al., 2013). This thesis investigates strategic intent and the management of infrastructure systems; how factors such as organisational structure and business practice affect outcomes and the ways in which those systems — not projects — are managed. To date, performance has largely been approached from the perspective of project investment and/or delivery, or the assessment of latent failures arising from specific shocks or disruptive events (e.g. natural disaster, infrastructure failures, climate change). By contrast, the delivery of system-level services and outcomes across the infrastructure system has been rarely examined. This is where infrastructure forms an enduring system of services, assets, projects, and networks each at different stages of their lifecycle, and affecting one another as they develop, then age. Yet system performance, which also includes societal, organisational, administrative and technical factors, is arguably the level relevant to, and the reality of, day-to-day public infrastructure management. This research firstly investigated industry perceptions in order to test and confirm the problem: the nub of which was the inability to fully deliver appropriate and relevant infrastructure outcomes over the long term. Three detailed studies then explored the reasons for this problem through different lenses; thereby providing an evidence-base for a range of issues that are shared by the wider infrastructure industry. In confirming its hypothesis that “the strategic intent and the day-to-day management of infrastructure systems are often misaligned, with negative consequences for achieving the desired long-term infrastructure system outcomes”, this research has increased our understanding of the ways in which that misalignment occurs, and the consequences that result. It found those consequences were material, and frequently not visible within the sub-system accountable for the delivery of those outcomes. That public infrastructure exists, not in its own right, but to be of benefit to society, is a central theme drawn from the definition of infrastructure itself. This research shows that it is not enough to be focused on technical outcomes. Infrastructure needs to move beyond how society interacts with an asset, to the outcomes that reflect the needs, beliefs, and choices of society as well as its ability to respond to change (aptitude). Although the research has confirmed its hypothesis and three supporting propositions, the research does not purport to offer ‘the solution’. Single solutions do not exist to address the challenges facing a complex adaptive system such as infrastructure. But the research does offer several system-oriented sense-making models at both the detailed and system-level. This includes the probing methodology by way of a diagnostic roadmap. These models aim to assist practitioners in managing the transition of projects, assets, and services into a wider infrastructure system, their potential, and in (re)orienting the organisation to the dynamic nature of the system and its societal imperative.
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- 2017
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161. Biology of Pink Stem Borer Sesamia Inferens Walker on Barnyard Millet Echinochloa Frumentacea
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Roopika, M, Srinivasan, G, and Shanthi, M
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- 2022
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162. Carbon footprint of Power-to-X derived dimethyl ether using the sorption enhanced DME synthesis process
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Peter Styring, Peter W. Sanderson, Isaac Gell, Galina Skorikova, Carlos Sánchez-Martínez, Guillermo Garcia-Garcia, and Soraya Nicole Sluijter
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Power-to-X ,e-fuel ,sorption-enhanced ,dimethyl ether ,carbon footprint ,lifecycle ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Abstract
Dimethyl ether (DME) could have a promising future as a sustainable diesel fuel replacement as it requires only relatively minor engine modifications. It can be produced from renewable H2 and captured CO2 using Power-to-X technologies. To gain support through the EU Renewable Energy Directive, the production and use of CO2-derived DME as a fuel needs to produce emission savings of at least 70% over the petrodiesel alternative. This study assesses the carbon footprint of producing DME via the sorption-enhanced DME synthesis (SEDMES) process and using it as a transport fuel, compared to producing and using fossil-based petrodiesel. The cradle-to-grave (well-to-wheel) carbon footprint of using DME as a transport fuel is found to be 77% lower than for petrodiesel, if offshore wind power is used for H2 synthesis and DME production. If renewable energy is also used for CO2 capture and waste heat is used for the DME production and purification steps, the DME carbon footprint has the potential to be over 90% lower than that of the fossil-fuel comparator.
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- 2022
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163. Beyond MLOps: The Lifecycle of Machine Learning-based Solutions.
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Mucha, Tomasz, Sijia Ma, and Abhari, Kaveh
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INTERNATIONAL organization ,MACHINE learning ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,AUTOMATION ,SOCIOTECHNICAL systems - Abstract
Organizations increasingly use machine learning (ML) to transform their operations. The technical complexity and unique challenges of ML lead to the emergence of ML operations (MLOps) practices. However, the research on MLOps is in its infancy and is fragmented across disciplines. We extend and integrate these conversations by developing a framework that accounts for the technical, organizational, behavioral, and temporal aspects of the overarching ML-based solution lifecycle. We identify the key components of ML-based solution lifecycle and their configuration through an in-depth study of Finland’s Artificial Intelligence Accelerator (FAIA) and follow-up semi-structured interviews with experts from multiple international organizations outside FAIA. This study contributes to the recent IS literature concerned with the sociotechnical aspects of ML. We bring new insights into the discussion on organizational learning, conjoined agency, and automation and augmentation. These insights extend and complement MLOps practices, thereby helping organizations better realize the potential of ML technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
164. Biology and Ecology of Delia planipalpis (Stein) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae), an Emerging Pest of Broccoli in Mexico
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Guadalupe Córdova-García, Laura Navarro-de-la-Fuente, Diana Pérez-Staples, Trevor Williams, and Rodrigo Lasa
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lifecycle ,longevity ,sexual behavior ,sexual receptivity ,oviposition behavior ,genetic identity ,Science - Abstract
Delia planipalpis (Stein) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae) is a pest of crucifers, such as broccoli, radish, cauliflower, turnip and cabbage. It has been recently described in Mexico as a significant emerging pest of broccoli. Due the lack of knowledge of this pest, the present study aimed to determine its life cycle, female sexual maturation, copulation, oviposition behavior and adult longevity. The identity of the fly in Mexico was confirmed genetically by sequencing the cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 gene (COI). The mean development time of D. planipalpis was 32–33 days on radish at 24 °C under laboratory conditions. Females became sexually mature 1–2 days after emergence, and the highest incidence of matings was recorded on the second day (60%). Under choice conditions, D. planipalpis females preferred to oviposit on radish plants, rather than broccoli plants, possibly due to the use of radish for rearing the laboratory colony. Oviposition and the mean number of eggs laid varied among the broccoli varieties, with the highest oviposition observed on the Tlaloc variety. Repeated attempts to rear the laboratory colony on broccoli plants failed. Radish-reared insects of both sexes lived longer when individualized in the adult stage (14.5–22.5 days) than when adult flies were maintained in groups (10–11 days). This study contributes to the understanding of D. planipalpis biology and provides information that can be used to establish future control strategies against this pest.
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- 2023
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165. Recommendations for developing a lifecycle, multidimensional assessment framework for mobile medical apps.
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Tarricone, Rosanna, Petracca, Francesco, Cucciniello, Maria, and Ciani, Oriana
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Digital health and mobile medical apps (MMAs) have shown great promise in transforming health care, but their adoption in clinical care has been unsatisfactory, and regulatory guidance and coverage decisions have been lacking or incomplete. A multidimensional assessment framework for regulatory, policymaking, health technology assessment, and coverage purposes based on the MMA lifecycle is needed. A targeted review of relevant policy documents from international sources was conducted to map current MMA assessment frameworks, to formulate 10 recommendations, subsequently shared amongst an expert panel of key stakeholders. Recommendations go beyond economic dimensions such as cost and economic evaluation and also include MMA development and update, classification and evidentiary requirements, performance and maintenance monitoring, usability testing, clinical evidence requirements, safety and security, equity considerations, organizational assessment, and additional outcome domains (patient empowerment and environmental impact). The COVID‐19 pandemic greatly expanded the use of MMAs, but temporary policies governing their use and oversight need consolidation through well‐developed frameworks to support decision‐makers, producers and introduction into clinical care processes, especially in light of the strong international, cross‐border character of MMAs, the new EU medical device and health technology assessment regulations, and the Next Generation EU funding earmarked for health digitalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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166. BLACK SOLDIER FLY HERMETIA ILLUCENS (L.): IDEAL ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS AND REARING STRATEGIES.
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SINGH, ANSHIKA, MARATHE, DEEPAK, and KUMARI, KANCHAN
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HERMETIA illucens ,MORPHOLOGY ,ORGANIC waste recycling ,INSECT rearing ,WASTE treatment ,LARVAE ,EGG incubation ,EGGS - Abstract
Endeavours to recycle organic waste by utilizing black soldier fly (BSF) Hermetia illucens (L.) into waste management and high nutrient biomass development have indeed picked up momentum recently. But there is not much data on their appropriate rearing conditions. Very few studies delineating the fecundity and reproduction capacities of BSFs concluded that the presence of natural sunlight or artificial light with intensity of 110-200 µ mol m²s
-1 and above triggers mating and oviposition (about 85-90%) at successfully higher rates along with ideal temperature (26 to 40°C) and relative humidity (40-70%) conditions. Optimum food moisture (50-80%) also plays a vital role in enhancing the consumption rate of waste and therefore the treatment efficiency of the larvae. Significant development of the BSF larvae and the treatment efficiencies were also observed to be governed by the pH of waste and the optimum range was defined to be of 6.0 to 9.0. The type of organic waste also equally influences the development, fecundity, and the lifespan of flies. The present review highlights the significant research that has been conducted with respect to lifecycle of BSFs, under the set of different light combinations (LED and fluorescent lights), temperatures and organic waste composites (protein rich and fat rich substrates). Conclusively, it was inferred that ameliorations in rearing conditions such as investigation of suitable light source, modifications in egg collection and hatching structures and knowledge of biology of flies can further boost the reproductive capability of fly thereby promoting successful insect rearing and mass production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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167. Barriers in European spiny lobster (Palinurus elephas) aquaculture: What we know so far?
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Yeap, Adam L. K., de Souza Valente, Cecília, Hartnett, Finnian, Conneely, Ellie‐Ann, Bolton‐Warberg, Majbritt, Davies, Simon J., Johnson, Mark P., and Wan, Alex H. L.
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SPINY lobsters ,CRAYFISH ,AQUACULTURE ,KNOWLEDGE gap theory ,CRUSTACEA - Abstract
Palinurids, also known as spiny lobsters, are high‐value seafood, which is economically important for many European and Asian seafood trades. However, the reduction of wild European spiny lobster populations produces a need for developing alternative renewable strategies to meet current and future demands. Aquaculture of spiny lobsters has the potential to become of major economic importance in the coming years with growing markets in Asia, Europe, and America, with Palinurus elephas being a promising candidate species for use in the commercial culture and stock enhancement of natural fisheries. This is due to its shorter larval periods and rapid growth to the critical puerulus stage compared with other spiny lobster species. While we have a basic understanding of the lifecycle and biology of P. elephas, much of this is based on work undertaken on similar species globally. There are many gaps in our knowledge that need to be addressed to make its aquaculture viable with appropriate feeds being an immediate issue as well as many other husbandry‐related factors. Previous studies act as a platform providing a baseline for further research and highlighting constraints. Developments in the use of P. elephas are promising due to realistically bridgeable knowledge gaps, the likelihood of producing sustainable food and the high commercial value of spiny lobsters. This review identifies our present state of knowledge and outlines the scope for further research and necessary technological developments to make it a viable contribution towards crustacean aquaculture in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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168. Global Resource Circularity for Lithium-Ion Batteries up to 2050: Traction and Stationary Use.
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Kosai, Shoki, Takata, Ukyo, and Yamasue, Eiji
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LITHIUM-ion batteries ,CIRCULAR economy ,MINERAL industries ,MATERIAL requirements planning ,NATURAL resources - Abstract
The use of the lithium-ion battery (LIB) in both traction and stationary applications has become ubiquitous. It is essential that retired LIBs are wisely treated, with a basis in the concept of the circular economy, to mitigate primary resource use. A closed-loop repurposing and recycling treatment is required. Thus, using the concept of total material requirement as an indicator of natural resource use based on mining activity, a dynamic material flow analysis was executed considering the degradation of the battery, its lifespan, and demand patterns under several scenarios. Then, the effect of circularity on the savings in global natural resource use involved across the entire lifecycles of LIBs was evaluated. It was found that the global resource use for LIBs will increase to between 10 and 48 Gt in 2050. Circularity has the potential to contribute to an 8–44% reduction in the global resource use associated with LIBs in 2050. It was also found that a longer lifespan in the years leading up to 2050 would have a greater impact on the reduction of resource use for LIBs, despite the lower effectiveness of circularity, because it would reduce the demand for LIBs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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169. Phenology and Monitoring of the Lesser Chestnut Weevil (Curculio sayi).
- Author
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Filgueiras, Camila C. and Willett, Denis S.
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- *
CHESTNUT , *CASTANEA , *CURCULIONIDAE , *PHENOLOGY , *YOUNG adults , *PLANT phenology , *TUNDRAS - Abstract
Simple Summary: The lesser chestnut weevil (Curcilio sayi) is an emergent pest of chestnuts in the United States. Knowledge of this weevils phenology and the ability to monitor its populations will help us understand how this pest is emerging with expanding chestnut production and provide the means to begin to mitigate its effects on chestnut production. We explored the seasonal emergence of C. sayi in upstate New York through the use of traps and soil microcosms to understand when weevils begin to emerge and when the population peaks. We found that pyramid traps are most effective for monitoring and that populations have one generation that tends to peak late in the season. We also found that generational cohorts may stagger their emergence and delay leaving the soil for more than one year. With the introduction in recent years of high-yield blight-resistant chestnut varieties, the commercial chestnut industry in the United States is expanding. Accompanying this expansion is a resurgence in a primary pest of chestnut: C. sayi, the lesser chestnut weevil. This weevil damages the nut crop and infestations can surge from 0 to close to 100% in as little as two years. Understanding the dynamics of this pest has been challenging. Most work was conducted in the 1900s and only recently has this weevil garnered renewed interest. Recent work on C. sayi phenology has been completed in Missouri but conflicted with anecdotal reports from northern growers. From 2019 to 2020, we used a combination of trapping and microcosm studies to understand both C. sayi phenology and the means of monitoring this pest. C. sayi populations were univoltine and peaked in mid-October. Pyramid traps were the most effective at capturing adult C. sayi. C. sayi larvae, pupae, eclosed adults, and emerging adults were recovered from microcosm experiments. These results suggest that C. sayi emerges later in the northern US with the potential for a single generation to emerge over multiple subsequent years. Understanding C. sayi phenology along with the means of monitoring forms the basis for effective management and control in commercial chestnut orchards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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170. A Practical Approach for Managing End-of-Life Systems in Semiconductor Manufacturing Using Health Index.
- Author
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Patil, Deepak and Son, Stephen
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- *
SEMICONDUCTOR manufacturing , *MANUFACTURING processes , *CAPITAL investments , *PRODUCTION engineering , *SEMICONDUCTOR devices , *SUPPLY chains - Abstract
Equipment at the end of functional life poses several challenges for manufacturing operations and long-term asset sustainability. This is even critical for semiconductor manufacturing where equipment upgrades are capital intensive with a longer return horizon. This demands an objective and quantifiable approach to manage and monitor the end-of-life health of the manufacturing systems. The paper presents a practical three-level approach that brings together engineering, operational, and supply chain factors under a single indicator. A visualization heatmap correlates equipment health to manufacturing impact for engineering and commercial decision-making. The approach is simple yet proven to be effective in fab environments. The proposed analysis applies in formulating system priorities, upgrade strategies, and capital expenditures. Brief guidance on health improvement strategies, application to new fab, and cost-based evaluation are presented for practical use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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171. Toward Building a Functional Image of the Design Object in CAD.
- Author
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Shevel, Vladimir, Kritskiy, Dmitriy, and Popov, Oleksii
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ENGINEERING systems ,SYSTEMS engineering ,ENGINEERING design ,DESIGN - Abstract
The paper proposes an approach to the classification of lifecycle support automation systems for engineering objects, with the proposed structure of the description of the designed object, using a triple description approach: functional, mathematical, and physical. Following this approach, an algorithm for drawing up a functional description of the lifecycle is described, which is based on the principle of unity of analysis and synthesis of the created system in the design process. The proposed solutions are considered using the traditional aircraft shaping methodology with the application of the airplane make-up algorithm as an example. Furthermore, the architecture of a multiagent platform for structural–parametric synthesis of the object was presented; for convenient usage of this architecture, it was proposed to use classification of design tasks in the form of a design cube. The proposed approach allows obtaining an accurate description of the designed object and the subtasks needed to create it, which can reduce the time of the project. Unfortunately, not all decisions can be automated at the given stage of technical development, but what is possible to automate is enough to achieve a reduction in terms of realization and an acceleration of the prototyping process, as shown in the considered example. The actual reduction throughout the lifecycle of the product ranges from 10% to 21% of the planned time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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172. Evaluation of Resilience Parameters of Soybean Oil-Modified and Unmodified Warm-Mix Asphalts—A Way Forward towards Sustainable Pavements.
- Author
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Tarar, Muhammad Akhtar, Khan, Ammad Hassan, Rehman, Zia ur, Abbass, Wasim, Ahmed, Ali, Ali, Elimam, Sayed, Mohamed Mahmoud, and Aziz, Mubashir
- Abstract
The sustainable design and construction of highways is indispensable for the economic growth and progress of any region. Highway pavements are one of the core transportation infrastructures that require energy efficient materials with durability and an optimized lifecycle. Recent research has proven that warm-mix asphalt pavements prepared with renewable bio-binders are less susceptible to distresses. This study aims to investigate the resilience characteristics (load time, deformation time) of soybean oil modified and unmodified warm-mix asphalts. Aggregates, asphalt binders and asphalt mixes were characterized in accordance with the Superpave Mix Design Criteria. The resilient modulus tests were performed as per ASTM D7369. The test results indicated that the soybean-modified warm asphalt mix samples showed a 20% to 32% reduction in load-carrying capacity than unmodified warm asphalt mixes. The values of the horizontal and vertical recoverable deformations observed in the soybean-modified mixes were found to be 3% to 7% more than in the unmodified mixes. A slight variability (up to 7%) was also observed in the time-response spectra, i.e., peak load, unload and rest periods, in the soybean-modified mixes compared with the unmodified mixes. The Pearson correlation coefficient showed a significant trend between the resilient modulus test parameters for the soybean-modified warm asphalt mixes, i.e., load deformation, load time and deformation time. Soybean oil showed sustainable behavior as a bio-binder, particularly in the deformation-time response for the warm asphalt mixes. However, the effect of soybean in terms of the reduction of the load-carrying capacity from a sustainability perspective needs to be investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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173. Flexibility and adaptability within the context of decision-making in infrastructure management.
- Author
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Sánchez-Silva, Mauricio and Calderón-Guevara, Wilmar
- Subjects
- *
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *AIRPORT expansion , *DECISION making - Abstract
Worldwide, large infrastructure projects almost invariably have major delays, cost over-runs, benefit shortfalls, and generally fail to perform up to expectations. This questions the results of many models as tools for decision-making. The design and management of infrastructure systems requires making assumptions and decisions about aspects of the project that change over the project's lifetime. Thus, for real projects to meet performance objectives, it is necessary to combine short and long-term predictions with an understanding of the stakeholder's interests and decisions, which unravel as the project evolves with time. In practice, successful projects are those that better adapt to new circumstances as they materialize. Within this context, this paper discusses key elements of the decision-making process and examines the value of incorporating flexibility in the design and management of large infrastructure. It discusses the nature of flexibility, the complexities of integrating it within a project, and the gains of adopting this approach for both stakeholders and users. The ideas presented in this paper builds off of former published literature, including that by the author. At the end, the proposed approach for incorporating flexibility in infrastructure design and management is illustrated with the case of an airport design and expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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174. A Conceptual Methodology for the Renovation of Multi-apartment Buildings with a Combined Performance and Lifecycle Approach.
- Author
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Chandrasekaran, Vidhyalakshmi and Dvarionienė, Jolanta
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BUILDING repair ,BUILDING performance ,BUILT environment ,REQUIREMENTS engineering ,REFUSE containers ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Background. Renovation of existing buildings has become a crucial tool to keep the built environment functional, by which unnecessary waste of resources can be reduced. Although many assessment methods and indicators are set, with the booming "renovation wave", a question that counters us is how influential and intact these are as a measuring tool. Several debates have emerged in the literature on the integration of different indicators and approaches to have a better way of accessing the buildings. Purpose. The aim of the study was, first, to have a set of integrated indicators for the renovation of residential buildings and, second, to develop an assessment methodology aimed at a comprehensive evaluation of the renovation process throughout its lifecycle stages. A requirement specification and an outline of the tool were developed based on the literature review and the survey. Design. The study has applied a qualitative multi-method research approach, including an online survey with experts, and case studies. The survey was part of renovation needs, barriers and evaluation methods and indicators comprising four sections addressed to experts about building renovation. The aim was, besides collecting general knowledge about the renovation in practice, to identify key indicators and areas where development or modification could have effect during the renovation. The developed methodology was applied in a case scenario of a multi-apartment building in Lithuania. Conclusions. This paper included the development of a combined methodology which applies to the renovation of the existing multi-apartment buildings with a checklist of indicators corresponding to environment, economic, and social aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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175. Bionomics and Damage of Schizotetranychus Baltazari Rimando on Curry Leaf Murraya Koenigii
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Safeena, Majeed A A and Sriniyasa, N
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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176. Biology and Morphometrics of Fall Army Worm Spodoptera Frugiperda (J E Smith) on Maize
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Siddhapara, M R, Patel, K M, and Patel, Aditi G
- Published
- 2021
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177. Transcriptomic analysis of the poultry red mite, Dermanyssus gallinae, across all stages of the lifecycle
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Kathryn Bartley, Wan Chen, Richard I. Lloyd Mills, Francesca Nunn, Daniel R. G. Price, Stephane Rombauts, Yves Van de Peer, Lise Roy, Alasdair J. Nisbet, and Stewart T. G. Burgess
- Subjects
Dermanyssus gallinae ,Poultry red mite ,Transcriptome ,Lifecycle ,Development ,Allergen ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background The blood feeding poultry red mite (PRM), Dermanyssus gallinae, causes substantial economic damage to the egg laying industry worldwide, and is a serious welfare concern for laying hens and poultry house workers. In this study we have investigated the temporal gene expression across the 6 stages/sexes (egg, larvae, protonymph and deutonymph, adult male and adult female) of this neglected parasite in order to understand the temporal expression associated with development, parasitic lifestyle, reproduction and allergen expression. Results RNA-seq transcript data for the 6 stages were mapped to the PRM genome creating a publicly available gene expression atlas (on the OrcAE platform in conjunction with the PRM genome). Network analysis and clustering of stage-enriched gene expression in PRM resulted in 17 superclusters with stage-specific or multi-stage expression profiles. The 6 stage specific superclusters were clearly demarked from each other and the adult female supercluster contained the most stage specific transcripts (2725), whilst the protonymph supercluster the fewest (165). Fifteen pairwise comparisons performed between the different stages resulted in a total of 6025 Differentially Expressed Genes (DEGs) (P > 0.99). These data were evaluated alongside a Venn/Euler analysis of the top 100 most abundant genes in each stage. An expanded set of cuticle proteins and enzymes (chitinase and metallocarboxypeptidases) were identified in larvae and underpin cuticle formation and ecdysis to the protonymph stage. Two mucin/peritrophic-A salivary proteins (DEGAL6771g00070, DEGAL6824g00220) were highly expressed in the blood-feeding stages, indicating peritrophic membrane formation during feeding. Reproduction-associated vitellogenins were the most abundant transcripts in adult females whilst, in adult males, an expanded set of serine and cysteine proteinases and an epididymal protein (DEGAL6668g00010) were highly abundant. Assessment of the expression patterns of putative homologues of 32 allergen groups from house dust mites indicated a bias in their expression towards the non-feeding larval stage of PRM. Conclusions This study is the first evaluation of temporal gene expression across all stages of PRM and has provided insight into developmental, feeding, reproduction and survival strategies employed by this mite. The publicly available PRM resource on OrcAE offers a valuable tool for researchers investigating the biology and novel interventions of this parasite.
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- 2021
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178. First Data on the Age and Growth of Schmidt’s cod Lepidion schmidti (Moridae) from Waters of the Emperor Seamounts (Northwestern Pacific)
- Author
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Nikolai B. Korostelev, Igor V. Maltsev, and Alexei M. Orlov
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longline catches ,biological parameters ,stocks ,bentho-pelagic fish ,bycatch ,lifecycle ,Naval architecture. Shipbuilding. Marine engineering ,VM1-989 ,Oceanography ,GC1-1581 - Abstract
This study presents the first data of growth and age of Schmidt’s cod Lepidion schmidti, a rare and poorly studied member of the Moridae family (Gadiformes, Teleostei). The research was focused on the Emperor Seamounts area with the aim of investigating the age, growth rates, and longevity of this species. The analysis involved examining annual growth increments on sagittal otoliths. Data were taken from longline catches in 2014 and 2016, resulting in the collection of 140 individuals and the use of 70 otoliths for age determination. The results revealed that Schmidt’s cod can live for up to 49 years, with a mean age of 31.5 years in the catches. The relationship between body weight and total length was described by a power function, indicating positive allometric growth. The most suitable growth model for this species was determined to be the Von Bertalanffy growth equation. These results provide valuable insights to add to the limited knowledge of growth and age in the Moridae family and emphasize the long lifespan and slow growth of Schmidt’s cod.
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- 2023
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179. Co-evolutionary digital twins: A multidimensional dynamic approach to digital engineering.
- Author
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Tong, Xiaodong, Bao, Jinsong, and Tao, Fei
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- *
DIGITAL twins , *BEHAVIORAL assessment , *ROCKET engines , *COEVOLUTION , *INFORMATION theory - Abstract
Digital Engineering (DE) must be able to maximize efficiency and update dynamically in order to keep up with the wave of global interconnection. The evolution of the Digital Twin (DT) plays a significant role in DE as it enables autonomous optimization and an iterative cycle. However, the intricacy of real-world settings renders conventional evolutionary investigations of a solitary DT inadequate in tackling intricate systems at a comprehensive lifecycle magnitude. To address this, this paper presents the Co-evolutionary DTs (CoEDT), which has several key characteristics. (1) CoEDT study the evolutionary behavior of interconnected multi-DT. (2) CoEDT use a co-evolutionary distributed system architecture and is a DT technology that integrate MBSE. (3) CoEDT offers detailed dynamic models for the complex interactions and co-evolution among multi-DT throughout the lifecycle. It also supports real time measurement of multi-DT behavior to detect system anomalies. The significance of CoEDT lies in providing a more comprehensive insight for future product development by constructing a parallel world that simulates the lifecycle. In the CoEDT, we tackle the behavioral identification and structure of these evolving multi-DT throughout product lifecycle through the following approaches. Initially, drawing inspiration from biological cytology, we have conceived a concept of Collective DTs (CollDTs) to observing a collective behavioral of multi-DT. Subsequently, we further developed CoEDT to depict co-evolutionary behavior patterns and established a co-evolution architecture for all DT throughout the lifecycle by fusing Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE). Then, dynamic expressions and algorithm that can measure the co-evolution of every DT are inferred using information theory. Finally, the viability of the proposed CoEDT framework is demonstrated through the development of a solid rocket engine, which promotes the application of DT in the DE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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180. Occurrence Regularity and Life History of Cigarette Beetle Lasioder-rma serricorne (Fabricius) in Tobacco Leaf Threshing and Redrying Workshop.
- Author
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Ding CHEN, Yingjie JIANG, Zijun ZHAO, Chaojun LUO, Xingling WANG, Jie XIE, Pengchao CHEN, Fei XU, Yongan REN, Lin LU, Xueqin ZHANG, and Shunxian LLANG
- Subjects
- *
TOBACCO , *CIGARETTES , *BEETLES , *SURVIVAL rate , *LIFE tables , *PUPAE - Abstract
[Objectives] The paper was to study the occurrence regularity and life history of cigarette beetle Lasioderrma serricorne (Fabricius) in tobacco leaf threshing and redrying workshop. [Methods] With the tobacco leaf threshing and redrying workshop as the survey site, the occurrence regularity of L. serricorne was investigated, and the life history table was inferred according to its biological characteristics. The temperature, humidity and duration of tobacco leaf threshing and redrying were simulated in the laboratory' to study the survival rate of all states of L. serricorne in this environment. [ Results] The lifecycle of L. serricorne in tobacco leaf threshing and redrying workshop was; the overwintering generation pupated in late February; the pupa began to emerge in early March, and reached its peak in late March. The first-generation eggs started hatching in late March, pupated in late May, emerged in early June, and reached the peak eclosion of the first-gen eration adults in mid-July. The second-generation eggs began to hatch in late July, pupated in mid-August, emerged in late August, and reached the peak e-closion of the second-generation adults in mid-September. The third-generation eggs began to hatch in mid-September; most of the larvae began to overwinter, some pupated in mid-November and survived the winter as pupae, and some pupae emerged to adults. The survival test results of different states of L. serricorne under simulated temperature, humidity and duration in the tobacco leaf threshing and redrying process showed that the mortality rates of eggs in simulated 1, 2 and 3 conditions were about 51.22%, 9Û. 24% and 100%, and the mortalities of larvae in simulated 1, 2 and 3 conditions were about 18.30%, 81.25% and 100%, respectively. The mortalities of pupae in simulated 1,2 and 3 conditions were about 69.39%, 100% and 100%, and the mortalities of adults in simulated 1,2 and 3 conditions were about 100%, 100% and 100%, respectively. [ Conclusions] L. serricorne of different states can be killed by appropriately raising the temperature during threshing and redrying. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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181. Critical Risks Inherent to the Transfer Phase of Public–Private Partnership Water Projects in China.
- Author
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Bao, Fengyu, Martek, Igor, Chen, Chuan, Wu, Qihong, and Chan, Albert P. C.
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- *
PUBLIC-private sector cooperation , *QUANTITATIVE research , *WATER transfer , *QUALITATIVE research , *GOVERNMENT ownership , *ENVIRONMENTAL risk - Abstract
Public–private partnership (PPP) infrastructure projects progress through separate phases, with each phase subject to unique risks, thereby requiring a phase-based strategy for managing risks. To date, most research on PPP risk has emphasized phases, with an obvious neglect of the final, transfer phase (TP) of PPP projects, in which the project ownership reverts to government. This study identified and evaluated critical risk categories of the TP, using China's PPP water sector as the context of analysis. A two-stage approach was adopted, including both qualitative and quantitative research methods. Seven critical transfer risk categories (CTRCs) were identified, namely overhaul risks, contract risks, posttransfer operation risks, residual value risks, political risks, information risks, and succeeding operator risks, of which three are unique to the TP. Expert recommendations were presented for the facilitation of a smooth transfer of water PPPs in China. The findings of this study contribute to the body of knowledge in PPP risk management, and the specialized research approach employed may be utilized in similar exploratory studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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182. CO2 reduction with coin catalyst.
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Xiao, Taishi, Tang, Can, Li, Hongbin, Ye, Tong, Ba, Kun, Gong, Peng, and Sun, Zhengzong
- Abstract
Most organic commodity chemicals are derived from fossil carbon resources. The dependency is so immense that it is difficult to compensate for the accompanying carbon footprint with current technology and chemical infrastructure. To mitigate the future fossil fuel usage, it is crucial to explore alternative chemical pathways, which are both sustainable and suitable for large-scale productions. Here we demonstrate a closed-loop carbon-neutral chemical route, using standard coin catalyst, to produce high concentrated formate and formic acid. The catalyst's Faradaic efficiency (FE) of formate is ∼ 95.3% with great durability. The chemicals are not only synthesized but also purified and utilized in zero-carbon scenarios. We successfully harvested 45% formate salt and 86.2% formic acid, for applications like anti-freezing reagent and green liquid fuel to power the fuel-cell vehicles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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183. 虚拟维修技术近 10 年研究进展综述.
- Author
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郭子玥, 周栋, 郝爱民, 王妍, 陈承璋, 周启迪, and 耿杰
- Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Computer-Aided Design & Computer Graphics / Jisuanji Fuzhu Sheji Yu Tuxingxue Xuebao is the property of Gai Kan Bian Wei Hui and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
184. SOFTWARE INTEGRATION TYPE CAD-CAM-CAE IN PRODUCT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT.
- Author
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IONEL, OLARU
- Subjects
PRODUCT management ,FINITE element method ,SIMULATION software ,INDUSTRIAL goods ,COMPUTER software - Abstract
Using the CAD-CAM-CAE type programs, case studies can be carried out to analyze some industrial tasks that may occur in the realization, manufacture, and operation of certain industrial components, before they are manufactured and put into operation under normal conditions. operation. Computer programs that perform a virtual modeling and an analysis of them based on the finite element method, help reduce launch and production times, control, and review of industrial products, before making the physical model. All this information resulting from simulations with specialized programs will be analyzed in detail, and the design team within the company can take the right measures to improve the final product. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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185. Evolutionary entrepreneurial ecosystems: a research pathway.
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Cho, Daniel Sunghwan, Ryan, Paul, and Buciuni, Giulio
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GEOGRAPHIC boundaries ,ECOSYSTEMS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,UNIVERSITY research - Abstract
The recent widespread interest of policy in entrepreneurial ecosystems has been complemented by a burgeoning academic research output. This research to date may be broadly categorized as focusing on place, actors, governance, and evolution. Of these groupings, evolutionary processes have been paid least attention despite their centrality to a dynamic ecosystem phenomenon that evolves from an origin through processes of growth, adaptation, and resilience. To redress this imbalance, we frame a future research agenda on evolutionary processes of entrepreneurial ecosystems. Foremost amongst these are the competing lens for the evolutionary processes, the appropriate and evolving geographic scope and boundaries of the ecosystem, and the evolving visible or invisible modes of governance. Methodologically, we call for greater use of longitudinal studies of such evolutionary processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
186. Impact of Age of Comb on Greater Wax Moth Galleria Mellonella L.
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Kumar, Vinay, Mall, Pramod, and Pandey, Renu
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- 2021
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187. A Comparative Analysis of the Implementation of the Software Basic Profile of ISO/IEC 29110 in Thirteen Teams That Used Predictive Versus Adaptive Life Cycles
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Muñoz, Mirna, Peña, Adriana, Mejia, Jezreel, Gasca-Hurtado, Gloria Piedad, Gómez-Alvarez, María Clara, Laporte, Claude, Barbosa, Simone Diniz Junqueira, Editorial Board Member, Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Kotenko, Igor, Editorial Board Member, Yuan, Junsong, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, Walker, Alastair, editor, O'Connor, Rory V., editor, and Messnarz, Richard, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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188. 24 Economic Demography
- Author
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Mason, Andrew, DeLamater, John, Series Editor, and Poston Jr., Dudley L., editor
- Published
- 2019
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189. Stage 2A and 2B: Batch Determination, Sampling, and Testing Plan
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Pazhayattil, Ajay, Sayeed-Desta, Naheed, Fredro-Kumbaradzi, Emilija, Ingram, Marzena, Collins, Jordan, Zavod, Robin M., Series Editor, Pazhayattil, Ajay, Sayeed-Desta, Naheed, Fredro-Kumbaradzi, Emilija, Ingram, Marzena, and Collins, Jordan
- Published
- 2019
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190. Efficient Energy Re-organized Clustering Based Routing for Splitting and Merging Packets in Wireless Sensor Network
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Naga Gopi Raju, V., Rao, Kolasani Ramchand H., Xhafa, Fatos, Series Editor, Smys, S., editor, Bestak, Robert, editor, Chen, Joy Iong-Zong, editor, and Kotuliak, Ivan, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
191. BIM and Through-Life Information Management: A Systems Engineering Perspective
- Author
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Chen, Yu, Jupp, Julie, Mutis, Ivan, editor, and Hartmann, Timo, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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192. Social and Technological Impact of Businesses Surrounding Electric Vehicles
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Rachana Vidhi, Prasanna Shrivastava, and Abhishek Parikh
- Subjects
electric vehicles ,battery ,business models ,lifecycle ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 - Abstract
Electric vehicle (EV) penetration has been increasing globally and is expected to continue its exponential growth over the coming decades. Several countries have already announced plans to achieve total or partial electrification of their vehicle fleets. Such rapid transportation electrification will have a significant impact on society and businesses that support the transportation industry. Additionally, new business opportunities will be available to support this technological evolution. In this paper, the business opportunities emerging from EVs and their supporting infrastructure are reviewed. It has been observed that several businesses, such as sustainable mining and manufacturing, will need to be developed before EV growth as they provide the initial platform required for EV adoption. Other businesses such as fleet optimization, battery management, and recycling can be developed at a later stage. All of these businesses will also have social and technological impacts, which will drive policy decisions. Regional governments play a critical role in ensuring the smooth execution of a transition to transportation electrification through social programs, such as training and education for equitable growth, and legislative decisions, such as technology standardization.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
193. Hard life in cold waters: Size distribution and gonads show that Greenland halibut temporarily inhabit the Siberian Arctic
- Author
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A.N. Benzik, L.K. Budanova, and A.M. Orlov
- Subjects
Reinhardtius hippoglossoides ,Lifecycle ,Reproduction ,Testes ,Ovaries ,Spawning ground ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The range of the Greenland halibut Reinhardtius hippoglossoides (Walbaum, 1792) includes vast areas in the northern parts of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, as well as the seas of the Arctic Ocean. Despite its commercial importance and decades of study, many aspects of its life cycle and reproduction remain poorly understood. Here, we evaluate the size distribution of Greenland halibut in the catches of research surveys in the Barents, Kara, and Laptev seas and conduct micro- and macroscopic studies of their gonads in the Laptev Sea. The size of Greenland halibut individuals increases from west to east, which is associated with the settling of pelagic juveniles and the subsequent residency of growing individuals near their settling sites. To the greatest extent, this size imbalance is manifested in the areas most remote from spawning grounds, i.e. the Kara and Laptev seas. The process of maturation in large individuals of Greenland halibut in the Arctic seas is characterized by a state of inhibition-waiting in the early stages of gametogenesis (previtellogenesis). The data obtained indicate that Greenland halibut in the North Atlantic and the Siberian Arctic have a continuous range. The continental slope of the Barents Sea is a spawning and maturing ground, while the northern parts of the Barents and Kara seas, as well as the continental slope of the Laptev Sea, are feeding grounds for juveniles. The results of this study might serve as a necessary basis for monitoring condition of halibut stocks as well as for reallocation of the total allowable catch between countries that exploited them in the Norwegian and Barents seas.
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- 2022
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- View/download PDF
194. Use of Blockchain in Vehicle Manufacturing Life Cycle Concept.
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Karandikar, Varsha, Umrani, Anand, Patil, Supriya, and Bade, Sandeep
- Subjects
BLOCKCHAINS ,AUTOMOBILE industry ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,LIFE cycle costing ,INTERNET of things ,INFORMATION sharing - Abstract
"With the advent of Industry 4.0, Blockchain is the new technology which current in its nascent stage but seems to have high prospectus in the coming decade. In todays senario when each application and tool is getting tied to the digital thread and each aspect of the data related to product is captured with sensors and exceptional devices thus making its place in Internet of things. This high diverse spectrum of data has changed the way will work in future. These technologies are bound to exponentially change the speed of growth. In such time we need to have strong foundation like Blockchain which will bring in more transparancy, trust, privacy, appropriate access sharing, and will channel the chaos inherant to these new technology coming in. As rightly said by B. Bias, C. Bisiere, Executive Director American Blockchain Council: Blockchain in simple terms "Wherever people, processes, businesses, governments, or the social good requires proof of identity, ownership, transactions, or commitments; Blockchain technologies promise to meet those needs with a degree of trust and integrity never before possible". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
195. The role of manufacturing in affecting the social dimension of sustainability
- Author
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Friemann, Felix [ETH Zurich (Switzerland)]
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- 2016
- Full Text
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196. A COMPARATIVE STUDY ON NEST ARCHITECTURE AND LIFECYCLE OF TWO SMALL CARPENTER BEES CERATINA SMARAGDULA (F.) AND CERATINA HIEROGLYPHICA SMITH.
- Author
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P. S., ANUSREE PADMANABHAN and CHELLAPPAN, MANI
- Subjects
BEES ,HORTICULTURAL crops ,CROPS ,APIDAE ,POLLINATORS ,FLOWERING trees ,PUPAE ,NESTS - Abstract
Small carpenter bees Ceratina smaragdula (F.) and C. hieroglyphica Smith (Xylocopinae: Apidae) are the major pollinators of many agricultural and horticultural crops. Nesting sites of these native bee pollinators were located at dried twigs of peacock flower tree Caesalpinia pulcherrima, and a total of 199 nests were collected from 2019-2021. Both species constructed linear nests at soft pithy region of stems with a maximum of 12 cm depth and individual cells ranged 6 to 10 mm in length which were separated with partitions of 2 to 4 mm. There were no significant differences in height of the nests constructed from ground level. The younger cells were near to the entrance, whereas the mature cells were arranged towards the innermost side. The nests of bees consisted of egg, larva, pupa and adult stages; and C. smaragdula took 15.51± 0.19 days while C. hieroglyphica took 15.93± 0.27 days for completion of larval period. Total pupal period of C. smaragdula ranged from 20.71± 0.26 days whereas C. hieroglyphica ranged from 18.56± 0.16 days. Total lifecycle for C. smaragdula and C. hieroglyphica took 49.15± 0.40 and 43.19± 0.58 days under laboratory conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
197. 物联网技术在海洋钻完井中的应用.
- Author
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李金蔓, 孙金生, 霍宏博, 陶林, 刘兆年, and 程林松
- Subjects
NERVE endings ,DISRUPTIVE innovations ,OIL wells ,PETROLEUM industry ,OIL fields ,HORIZONTAL wells - Abstract
Copyright of Oil Drilling & Production Technology / Shiyou Zuancai Gongyi is the property of Shiyou Zuancai Gongyi Bianjibu and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
198. Mitigating occupational health and safety risks in the proposed Australian offshore wind energy industry: lessons from the safety case regime.
- Author
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Wifa, Eddy and Hunter, Tina Soliman
- Subjects
- *
WIND power industry , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene , *WIND power , *PETROLEUM in submerged lands , *ENVIRONMENTAL risk ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection planning - Abstract
The offshore wind energy industry is growing at an encouraging rate, and Australia is seeking to commence offshore wind development. Although there is research on the planning and environmental risks, there is limited research addressing health and safety risks. Some scholars argue the two industries are different, while others support the application of offshore petroleum safety to wind. This article analyses whether the industries have many similarities, and whether the safety case provides the most robust safety regulatory framework for both industries, concluding that Australia's approach is a solid foundation for safety in the developing wind industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
199. inML Kit: empowering the prototyping of ML-enhanced products by involving designers in the ML lifecycle.
- Author
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Sun, Lingyun, Zhang, Yuyang, Li, Zhuoshu, Zhou, Zihong, and Zhou, Zhibin
- Subjects
- *
SELF-efficacy , *DESIGNERS , *PARTICIPATORY design , *MACHINE learning , *PRODUCT design - Abstract
Machine learning (ML) is increasingly used to enhance intelligent products in the field of product design. However, ML has a never-ending lifecycle in which its capabilities and technical properties iteratively change as new annotated data are utilized. The never-ending lifecycle of ML (which includes data annotation, model training, and other steps) has led to challenges to the prototyping of ML-enhanced products and requires a high level of ML literacy in designers. To facilitate the prototyping of ML-enhanced products and improve the ML literacy of designers, we draw inspiration from a design method called Material Lifecycle Thinking (MLT), which regards ML as a continuously evolving design material. Based on the MLT, we proposed a cyclical prototype workflow and developed inML Kit, a toolkit enabling designers to make functional ML prototypes and improve ML literacy by involving them in the never-ending ML lifecycle. The toolkit was designed, iterated, and implemented through the participatory design process with experienced designers in this field. We evaluated inML Kit by conducting a controlled user study where our toolkit was compared with Google AIY. The evaluation results imply that our inML Kit helps designers to make functional ML prototypes while improving their ML literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. Mainstreaming the Environment: Exploring pathways and narratives to improve policy and decision‐making.
- Author
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Scott, Alister, Holtby, Rachel, East, Holly, and Lannin, Aisling
- Subjects
NATURAL capital ,DECISION making ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOSYSTEM services ,GENDER mainstreaming ,CLIMATE change denial ,PERSUASION (Psychology) - Abstract
Mainstreaming is an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary endeavour of normalising an idea from one policy domain into the decision‐making and routine activities of other policy domains necessary for effective delivery over the long term.The desire to mainstream springs from an increasing acceptance of the need for interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches to tackle key societal challenges such as climate change and biodiversity decline. Here, traditional policy and disciplinary silos are broken down to pursue and deliver more holistic interventions.This paper offers an additionality perspective to mainstreaming based on four questions. What is mainstreaming and what additionality does it offer for environmental policy and practice? What theoretical insights emerge from the mainstreaming and associated literatures? How can mainstreaming processes and outcomes be conceptualised and assessed? How can we improve future environmental mainstreaming pathways?Building from literatures focussed on mainstreaming and policy integration, we construct a framework and supporting narrative focussing on the lifecycle dynamics of mainstreaming pathways; a significant research gap. Their nonlinear progress is captured using theoretical adaptations of diffusion of innovation and sustainability, moving from initial innovation through to persuasion and to acceptance pathways, with progress dependent on the interplay and impacts of hooks and barriers and the degree of collaboration and system change pursued.Our narrative is further illuminated using natural capital and ecosystem services which reveal that while some progress has been made primarily through weaker mainstreaming pathways, current efforts are still focussed on 'persuading' stakeholders of the environment's value, rather than on initial framing and governance arrangements to maximise future impact.We conclude that the framing and development of natural capital and ecosystem services primarily in the environment and economic sectors has limited mainstreaming activity to wider audiences due to the lack of interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches being pursued from the outset, including a more publicly and professionally accessible vocabulary and collaborative governance and decision‐making structures.We contend that our lifecycle narrative, with a focus on multiple pathways, hooks, barriers and collaboration makes a useful contribution to understanding mainstreaming dynamics and characteristics from which improved interventions can be developed. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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