Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2022 (27) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (27) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- China (4)
- Satellitenfernerkundung (4)
- COVID-19 (3)
- Deutschland (3)
- Pandemie (3)
- Degradation (2)
- MODIS (2)
- Modellierung (2)
- AFD (1)
- Adult and vocational education (1)
- AfD (1)
- 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)
- Bildungstheorie (1)
- Boden (1)
- Bodenbearbeitung (1)
- Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Coping strategies (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Deflation (1)
- Drift (1)
- Ecology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Educational theory (1)
- Episodisches Gedächtnis (1)
- Erwachsenen- und Berufsbildung (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)
- Neue Rechte (1)
- One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (1)
- Organisationspädagogik (1)
- Organisationstheorie (1)
- Organization theory (1)
- Organizational education (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)
- Stadtforschung (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)
- Wohnen (1)
- Wohnungspolitik (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)
- housing (1)
- housing policy (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)
- new right (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)
- urban studies (1)
- wind erosion (1)
- woody cover (1)
- Übung (1)
Institut
- Raum- und Umweltwissenschaften (8)
- Fachbereich 6 (4)
- Psychologie (4)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (3)
- Fachbereich 2 (2)
- Informatik (2)
- Fachbereich 1 (1)
- Fachbereich 4 (1)
- Pädagogik (1)
- Soziologie (1)
Measurements of dust emissions and the modeling of dissipation dynamics and total values are related to great uncertainties. Agricultural activity, especially soil cultivation, may be an essential component to calculate and model local and regional dust dynamics and even connect to the global dust cycle. To budget total dust and to assess the impact of tillage, measurement of mobilized and transported dust is an essential but rare basis. In this study, a simple measurement concept with Modified Wilson and Cook samplers was applied for dust measurements on a small temporal and spatial scale on steep-slope vineyards in the Moselle area. Without mechanical impact, a mean horizontal flux of 0.01 g m2 min−1 was measured, while row tillage produced a mean horizontal flux of 5.92 g m2 min−1 of mobilized material and 4.18 g m2 min−1 emitted dust from site (=soil loss). Compared on this singular-event basis, emissions during tillage operations generated 99.89% of total emitted dust from the site under low mean wind velocities. The results also indicate a differing impact of specific cultivation operations, mulching, and tillage tools as well as the additional influence of environmental conditions, with highest emissions on dry soil and with additional wind impact. The dust source function is strongly associated with cultivation operations, implying highly dynamic but also regular and thus predictable and projectable emission peaks of total suspended particles. Detailed knowledge of the effects of mechanical impulses and reliable quantification of the local dust emission inventory are a basis for analysis of risk potential and choice of adequate management options.
We study planned changes in protective routines after the COVID-19 pandemic: in a survey in Germany among >650 respondents, we find that the majority plans to use face masks in certain situations even after the end of the pandemic. We observe that this willingness is strongly related to the perception that there is something to be learned from East Asians’ handling of pandemics, even when controlling for perceived protection by wearing masks. Given strong empirical evidence that face masks help prevent the spread of respiratory diseases and given the considerable estimated health and economic costs of such diseases even pre-Corona, this would be a very positive side effect of the current crisis.
Despite significant advances in terms of the adoption of formal Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) protection, enforcement of and compliance with IPR regulations remains a contested issue in one of the world's major contemporary economies—China. The present review seeks to offer insights into possible reasons for this discrepancy as well as possible paths of future development by reviewing prior literature on IPR in China. Specifically, it focuses on the public's perspective, which is a crucial determinant of the effectiveness of any IPR regime. It uncovers possible differences with public perspectives in other countries and points to mechanisms (e.g., political, economic, cultural, and institutional) that may foster transitions over time in both formal IPR regulation and in the public perception of and compliance with IPR in China. On this basis, the review advances suggestions for future research in order to improve scholars' understanding of the public's perspective of IPR in China, its antecedents and implications.
The process of land degradation needs to be understood at various spatial and temporal scales in order to protect ecosystem services and communities directly dependent on it. This is especially true for regions in sub-Saharan Africa, where socio economic and political factors exacerbate ecological degradation. This study identifies spatially explicit land change dynamics in the Copperbelt province of Zambia in a local context using satellite vegetation index time series derived from the MODIS sensor. Three sets of parameters, namely, monthly series, annual peaking magnitude, and annual mean growing season were developed for the period 2000 to 2019. Trend was estimated by applying harmonic regression on monthly series and linear least square regression on annually aggregated series. Estimated spatial trends were further used as a basis to map endemic land change processes. Our observations were as follows: (a) 15% of the study area dominant in the east showed positive trends, (b) 3% of the study area dominant in the west showed negative trends, (c) natural regeneration in mosaic landscapes (post shifting cultivation) and land management in forest reserves were chiefly responsible for positive trends, and (d) degradation over intact miombo woodland and cultivation areas contributed to negative trends. Additionally, lower productivity over areas with semi-permanent agriculture and shift of new encroachment into woodlands from east to west of Copperbelt was observed. Pivot agriculture was not a main driver in land change. Although overall greening trends prevailed across the study site, the risk of intact woodlands being exposed to various disturbances remains high. The outcome of this study can provide insights about natural and assisted landscape restoration specifically addressing the miombo ecoregion.
Soil organic matter (SOM) is an indispensable component of terrestrial ecosystems. Soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics are influenced by a number of well-known abiotic factors such as clay content, soil pH, or pedogenic oxides. These parameters interact with each other and vary in their influence on SOC depending on local conditions. To investigate the latter, the dependence of SOC accumulation on parameters and parameter combinations was statistically assessed that vary on a local scale depending on parent material, soil texture class, and land use. To this end, topsoils were sampled from arable and grassland sites in south-western Germany in four regions with different soil parent material. Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed a distinct clustering of data according to parent material and soil texture that varied largely between the local sampling regions, while land use explained PCA results only to a small extent. The PCA clusters were differentiated into total clusters that contain the entire dataset or major proportions of it and local clusters representing only a smaller part of the dataset. All clusters were analysed for the relationships between SOC concentrations (SOC %) and mineral-phase parameters in order to assess specific parameter combinations explaining SOC and its labile fractions hot water-extractable C (HWEC) and microbial biomass C (MBC). Analyses were focused on soil parameters that are known as possible predictors for the occurrence and stabilization of SOC (e.g. fine silt plus clay and pedogenic oxides). Regarding the total clusters, we found significant relationships, by bivariate models, between SOC, its labile fractions HWEC and MBC, and the applied predictors. However, partly low explained variances indicated the limited suitability of bivariate models. Hence, mixed-effect models were used to identify specific parameter combinations that significantly explain SOC and its labile fractions of the different clusters. Comparing measured and mixed-effect-model-predicted SOC values revealed acceptable to very good regression coefficients (R2=0.41–0.91) and low to acceptable root mean square error (RMSE = 0.20 %–0.42 %). Thereby, the predictors and predictor combinations clearly differed between models obtained for the whole dataset and the different cluster groups. At a local scale, site-specific combinations of parameters explained the variability of organic carbon notably better, while the application of total models to local clusters resulted in less explained variance and a higher RMSE. Independently of that, the explained variance by marginal fixed effects decreased in the order SOC > HWEC > MBC, showing that labile fractions depend less on soil properties but presumably more on processes such as organic carbon input and turnover in soil.
List-method directed forgetting (LMDF) is the demonstration that people can intentionally forget previously studied information when they are asked to forget what they have previously learned and remember new information instead. In addition, recent research demonstrated that people can selectively forget when cued to forget only a subset of the previously studied information. Both forms of forgetting are typically observed in recall tests, in which the to-be-forgotten and to-be-remembered information is tested independent of original cuing. Thereby, both LMDF and selective directed forgetting (SDF) have been studied mostly with unrelated item materials (e.g., word lists). The present study examined whether LMDF and SDF generalize to prose material. Participants learned three prose passages, which they were cued to remember or forget after the study of each passage. At the time of testing, participants were asked to recall the three prose passages regardless of original cuing. The results showed no significant differences in recall of the three lists as a function of cuing condition. The findings suggest that LMDF and SDF do not occur with prose material. Future research is needed to replicate and extend these findings with (other) complex and meaningful materials before drawing firm conclusions. If the null effect proves to be robust, this would have implications regarding the ecological validity and generalizability of current LMDF and SDF findings.
The forward testing effect is an indirect benefit of retrieval practice. It refers to the finding that retrieval practice of previously studied information enhances learning and retention of subsequently studied other information in episodic memory tasks. Here, two experiments were conducted that investigated whether retrieval practice influences participants’ performance in other tasks, i.e., arithmetic tasks. Participants studied three lists of words in anticipation of a final recall test. In the testing condition, participants were immediately tested on lists 1 and 2 after study of each list, whereas in the restudy condition, they restudied lists 1 and 2 after initial study. Before and after study of list 3, participants did an arithmetic task. Finally, participants were tested on list 3, list 2, and list 1. Different arithmetic tasks were used in the two experiments. Participants did a modular arithmetic task in Experiment 1a and a single-digit multiplication task in Experiment 1b. The results of both experiments showed a forward testing effect with interim testing of lists 1 and 2 enhancing list 3 recall in the list 3 recall test, but no effects of recall testing of lists 1 and 2 for participants’ performance in the arithmetic tasks. The findings are discussed with respect to cognitive load theory and current theories of the forward testing effect.
A model-based temperature adjustment scheme for wintertime sea-ice production retrievals from MODIS
(2022)
Knowledge of the wintertime sea-ice production in Arctic polynyas is an important requirement for estimations of the dense water formation, which drives vertical mixing in the upper ocean. Satellite-based techniques incorporating relatively high resolution thermal-infrared data from MODIS in combination with atmospheric reanalysis data have proven to be a strong tool to monitor large and regularly forming polynyas and to resolve narrow thin-ice areas (i.e., leads) along the shelf-breaks and across the entire Arctic Ocean. However, the selection of the atmospheric data sets has a large influence on derived polynya characteristics due to their impact on the calculation of the heat loss to the atmosphere, which is determined by the local thin-ice thickness. In order to overcome this methodical ambiguity, we present a MODIS-assisted temperature adjustment (MATA) algorithm that yields corrections of the 2 m air temperature and hence decreases differences between the atmospheric input data sets. The adjustment algorithm is based on atmospheric model simulations. We focus on the Laptev Sea region for detailed case studies on the developed algorithm and present time series of polynya characteristics in the winter season 2019/2020. It shows that the application of the empirically derived correction decreases the difference between different utilized atmospheric products significantly from 49% to 23%. Additional filter strategies are applied that aim at increasing the capability to include leads in the quasi-daily and persistence-filtered thin-ice thickness composites. More generally, the winter of 2019/2020 features high polynya activity in the eastern Arctic and less activity in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, presumably as a result of the particularly strong polar vortex in early 2020.
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has also led to many conspiracy theories. While the origin of the pandemic in China led some, including former US president Donald Trump, to dub the pathogen “Chinese virus” and to support anti-Chinese conspiracy narratives, it caused Chinese state officials to openly support anti-US conspiracy theories about the “true” origin of the virus. In this article, we study whether nationalism, or more precisely uncritical patriotism, is related to belief in conspiracy theories among normal people. We hypothesize based on group identity theory and motivated reasoning that for the particular case of conspiracy theories related to the origin of COVID-19, such a relation should be stronger for Chinese than for Germans. To test this hypothesis, we use survey data from Germany and China, including data from the Chinese community in Germany. We also look at relations to other factors, in particular media consumption and xenophobia.
The larval stage of the European fire salamander (Salamandra salamandra) inhabits both lentic and lotic habitats. In the latter, they are constantly exposed to unidirectional water flow, which has been shown to cause downstream drift in a variety of taxa. In this study, a closed artificial creek, which allowed us to keep the water flow constant over time and, at the same time, to simulates with predefined water quantities and durations, was used to examine the individual movement patterns of marked larval fire salamanders exposed to unidirectional flow. Movements were tracked by marking the larvae with VIAlpha tags individually and by using downstream and upstream traps. Most individuals showed stationarity, while downstream drift dominated the overall movement pattern. Upstream movements were rare and occurred only on small distances of about 30 cm; downstream drift distances exceeded 10 m (until next downstream trap). The simulated flood events increased drift rates significantly, even several days after the flood simulation experiments. Drift probability increased with decreasing body size and decreasing nutritional status. Our results support the production hypothesis as an explanation for the movements of European fire salamander larvae within creeks.