Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2022 (25) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (25) (entfernen)
Sprache
- Englisch (25) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- China (4)
- Satellitenfernerkundung (4)
- COVID-19 (3)
- Deutschland (3)
- Pandemie (3)
- Degradation (2)
- MODIS (2)
- Modellierung (2)
- Agency (1)
- Animal behaviour (1)
- Anpassung (1)
- Antiparasitäres Mittel (1)
- Argania spinosa (1)
- Arktis (1)
- Asylbewerberunterkunft (1)
- Atmosphärische Grenzschicht (1)
- Augenfolgebewegung (1)
- Ausgangsgestein (1)
- Auswahl (1)
- Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) (1)
- Bewaldung (1)
- Boden (1)
- Bodenbearbeitung (1)
- Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Coping strategies (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Deflation (1)
- Drift (1)
- Ecology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Episodisches Gedächtnis (1)
- Feuersalamander (1)
- Forstlicher Standort (1)
- Fruchtbildung (1)
- Geistiges Eigentum (1)
- Genauigkeit (1)
- Germany (1)
- Gesichtsfeld (1)
- Grasslands (1)
- Griechenland (1)
- Grünland (1)
- HEXAGON (1)
- Herpetology (1)
- Humus (1)
- Hydrology (1)
- Hyperhidrose (1)
- Information Retrieval (1)
- Intention (1)
- Kakuma (1)
- Kenia (1)
- Kenya (1)
- Konformitätsprüfung (1)
- Künstliches Fließgewässer (1)
- Landnutzung (1)
- Langzeitgedächtnis (1)
- Laptev Sea (1)
- Laptewsee (1)
- Larve (1)
- Learning (1)
- Lernen (1)
- Lesvos (1)
- Limnology (1)
- Long-term memory (1)
- Luftbild (1)
- Luxemburg (1)
- Marokko (1)
- Mathematik (1)
- Meereis (1)
- Memory (1)
- Mineral (1)
- Mittelmoseltal (1)
- Moria (1)
- Motor mimicry (1)
- Mund-Nasen-Schutz (1)
- One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (1)
- Ozonbelastung (1)
- Patriotismus (1)
- Pflanzenwachstum (1)
- Problemlösen (1)
- Process-Oriented Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Prosa (1)
- Provinz Copperbelt (1)
- Prozessanalyse (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Refugee camps (1)
- Rheinland-Pfalz (1)
- SARS-CoV-2 (1)
- SODAR (1)
- Sambia (1)
- Samenkeimung (1)
- Schafweide (1)
- Schwitzen (1)
- Science, technology and society (1)
- Seed germination (1)
- Selektivität (1)
- Sewernaja Semlja (1)
- Sheep (1)
- Siamese Graph Neural Networks (1)
- Social Media (1)
- Sociology (1)
- Sodar (1)
- Spektroradiometrie (1)
- Steilhang (1)
- Stipendiat (1)
- Stress (1)
- Student (1)
- Temperatur (1)
- Toxicity (1)
- Toxizität (1)
- Trier (1)
- Trockenheit (1)
- Umfrage (1)
- Vergessen (1)
- Verschwörungstheorie (1)
- Virtuelle Umgebung (1)
- Waldinventur (1)
- Weinbau (1)
- Windfeld (1)
- Working memory (1)
- aerial imagery (1)
- agricultural dust (1)
- argan tree (1)
- atmospheric boundary layer (1)
- atmospheric modeling (1)
- basal area increment (1)
- change mapping (1)
- conformance checking (1)
- conspiracy myths (1)
- conspiracy theories (1)
- cross-country (1)
- degradation (1)
- difference-in-differences (1)
- differentiated instruction (1)
- directed forgetting (1)
- drought (1)
- early response (1)
- education aid (1)
- emergency remote teaching (1)
- episodic memory (1)
- erosion measurement (1)
- event log preprocessing (1)
- event reconstruction (1)
- forest (1)
- forest degradation (1)
- foss (1)
- fructification (1)
- geobia (1)
- graph embedding (1)
- growth mixture modeling (1)
- ice thickness (1)
- inclusion (1)
- inclusive education (1)
- intellectual property rights (1)
- invisible deviating events (1)
- leads (1)
- long-term memory (1)
- low-level jets (1)
- miombo woodland (1)
- motion energy analysis (1)
- nonverbal synchrony (1)
- open-canopy woodland (1)
- ozone (1)
- particulate matter (1)
- patents (1)
- plant architecture (1)
- polynyas (1)
- process mining (1)
- public perception (1)
- recurring events (1)
- regeneration (1)
- scholarship students (1)
- sea-ice (1)
- segmentation (1)
- selective forgetting (1)
- sentinel-2 (1)
- similarity-based retrieval (1)
- soil water content (1)
- sub-Saharan Africa (1)
- text memory (1)
- topographic flow (1)
- trademarks (1)
- tree density (1)
- uncritical patriotism (1)
- wind erosion (1)
- woody cover (1)
- Übung (1)
Institut
- Raum- und Umweltwissenschaften (8)
- Psychologie (4)
- Fachbereich 6 (3)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (3)
- Fachbereich 2 (2)
- Informatik (2)
- Fachbereich 4 (1)
- Pädagogik (1)
- Soziologie (1)
Reconstructing invisible deviating events: A conformance checking approach for recurring events
(2022)
Conformance checking enables organizations to determine whether their executed processes are compliant with the intended process. However, if the processes contain recurring activities, state-of-the-art approaches unfortunately have difficulties calculating the conformance. The occurrence of complex temporal rules can further increase the complexity of the problem. Identifying this limitation, this paper presents a novel approach towards dealing with recurring activities in conformance checking. The core idea of the approach is to reconstruct the missing events in the event log using defined rules while incorporating specified temporal event characteristics. This approach then enables the use of native conformance checking algorithms. The paper illustrates the algorithmic approach and defines the required temporal event characteristics. Furthermore, the approach is applied and evaluated in a case study on an event log for melanoma surveillance.
Formulations of macrocyclic lactone anthelmintics such as moxidectin are regularly administered to sheep to combat parasites. A disadvantage of these pharmaceuticals are their side effects on non-target organisms when entering the environment. Little is known about anthelmintic effects on plant reproduction and whether the effects depend on environmental factors. For ecological and methodological reasons, we aimed at testing whether temperature affects the efficacy of a common moxidectin-based formulation on seed germination. We carried out a germination experiment including three typical species of temperate European grasslands (Centaurea jacea, Galium mollugo, Plantago lanceolata). We applied three temperature regimes (15/5, 20/10, 30/20°C), and a four-level dilution series (1:100–1:800) of formulated moxidectin (i.e., Cydectin oral drench). These solutions represent seed-anthelmintic contacts in the digestive tract of sheep shortly after deworming. In addition, a control was carried out with purified water only. We regularly counted emerging seedlings and calculated final germination percentage, mean germination time and synchrony of germination. Formulated moxidectin significantly reduced percentage, speed and synchrony of germination. A 1:100 dilution of the formulation reduced germination percentage by a quarter and increased mean germination time by six days compared to the control. Temperature moderated effects of the anthelmintic drug on germination in all response variables and all species, but in different patterns and magnitudes (significant anthelmintic x temperature x species interactions). In all response variables, the two more extreme temperature regimes (15/5, 30/20°C) led to the strongest effects of formulated moxidectin. With respect to germination percentage, G. mollugo was more sensitive to formulated moxidectin at the warmest temperature regime, whereas P. lanceolata showed the highest sensitivity at the coldest regime. This study shows that it is important to consider temperature dependencies of the effects of pharmaceuticals on seed germination when conducting standardised germination experiments.
Influence of Ozone and Drought on Tree Growth under Field Conditions in a 22 Year Time Series
(2022)
Studying the effect of surface ozone (O3) and water stress on tree growth is important for planning sustainable forest management and forest ecology. In the present study, a 22-year long time series (1998–2019) on basal area increment (BAI) and fructification severity of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) and Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H.Karst.) at five forest sites in Western Germany (Rhineland Palatinate) was investigated to evaluate how it correlates with drought and stomatal O3 fluxes (PODY) with an hourly threshold of uptake (Y) to represent the detoxification capacity of trees (POD1, with Y = 1 nmol O3 m−2 s−1). Between 1998 and 2019, POD1 declined over time by on average 0.31 mmol m−2 year−1. The BAI showed no significant trend at all sites, except in Leisel where a slight decline was observed over time (−0.37 cm2 per year, p < 0.05). A random forest analysis showed that the soil water content and daytime O3 mean concentration were the best predictors of BAI at all sites. The highest mean score of fructification was observed during the dry years, while low level or no fructification was observed in most humid years. Combined effects of drought and O3 pollution mostly influence tree growth decline for European beech and Norway spruce.
The global spread of the coronavirus pandemic has particularly dramatic consequences for the lives of migrants and refugees living in already marginalised and restricted conditions, whose ongoing crisis is at risk of being overlooked. But refugees are not only extremely vulnerable and at risk of infection, as several reports show, quickly develop their own protection measures like the production of hygienic products, the publication of their situation and calls for action and help. Therefore, this paper aims to research the effects of the coronavirus crisis on refugees in camp settings with a special ethnographic focus on how refugees actively deal with this crisis and if they, through already developed resilience, are capable of adapting to the restrictions as well as inventing strategies to cope with the difficult situation. To account for the variety of refugee camps as well as the different living conditions due to their locality, history and national asylum politics, we will look at three different locations, namely refugee asylum homes in Germany, hotspots on the Greek islands as well as one refugee camp in Kenya. The main questions will be how, under structurally and institutionally framed conditions of power and victimisation in refugee camps, forms of agency are established, made possible or limited. The goal is to show which strategies refugees apply to cope with the enhanced restrictions and exclusion, how they act to protect themselves and others from the virus and how they present and reflect their situation during the coronavirus pandemic. Finally, this discussion offers a new perspective to consider refugees not only as vulnerable victims, but also as actively engaged individuals.
Extension of an Open GEOBIA Framework for Spatially Explicit Forest Stratification with Sentinel-2
(2022)
Spatially explicit information about forest cover is fundamental for operational forest management and forest monitoring. Although open-satellite-based earth observation data in a spatially high resolution (i.e., Sentinel-2, ≤10 m) can cover some information needs, spatially very high-resolution imagery (i.e., aerial imagery, ≤2 m) is needed to generate maps at a scale suitable for regional and local applications. In this study, we present the development, implementation, and evaluation of a Geographic Object-Based Image Analysis (GEOBIA) framework to stratify forests (needleleaved, broadleaved, non-forest) in Luxembourg. The framework is exclusively based on open data and free and open-source geospatial software. Although aerial imagery is used to derive image objects with a 0.05 ha minimum size, Sentinel-2 scenes of 2020 are the basis for random forest classifications in different single-date and multi-temporal feature setups. These setups are compared with each other and used to evaluate the framework against classifications based on features derived from aerial imagery. The highest overall accuracies (89.3%) have been achieved with classification on a Sentinel-2-based vegetation index time series (n = 8). Similar accuracies have been achieved with classification based on two (88.9%) or three (89.1%) Sentinel-2 scenes in the greening phase of broadleaved forests. A classification based on color infrared aerial imagery and derived texture measures only achieved an accuracy of 74.5%. The integration of the texture measures into the Sentinel-2-based classification did not improve its accuracy. Our results indicate that high resolution image objects can successfully be stratified based on lower spatial resolution Sentinel-2 single-date and multi-temporal features, and that those setups outperform classifications based on aerial imagery only. The conceptual framework of spatially high-resolution image objects enriched with features from lower resolution imagery facilitates the delivery of frequent and reliable updates due to higher spectral and temporal resolution. The framework additionally holds the potential to derive additional information layers (i.e., forest disturbance) as derivatives of the features attached to the image objects, thus providing up-to-date information on the state of observed forests.