Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2024 (1)
- 2023 (13)
- 2022 (27)
- 2021 (29)
- 2020 (17)
- 2019 (11)
- 2018 (15)
- 2017 (12)
- 2015 (1)
- 2013 (2)
- 2012 (1)
- 2011 (1)
- 2010 (10)
- 2009 (1)
- 2008 (1)
- 2007 (4)
- 2006 (2)
- 2005 (10)
- 2004 (5)
- 2003 (2)
- 2002 (3)
- 2001 (2)
- 1999 (4)
- 1998 (3)
- 1997 (2)
- 1996 (3)
- 1995 (5)
- 1994 (3)
- 1993 (2)
- 1992 (2)
- 1991 (1)
- 1990 (1)
- 1989 (2)
- 1988 (2)
- 1987 (1)
- 1986 (2)
- 1985 (1)
- 1984 (3)
- 1983 (2)
- 1980 (2)
- 1978 (1)
- 1976 (1)
- 1973 (1)
- 1972 (2)
- (4)
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (220) (entfernen)
Sprache
- Englisch (123)
- Deutsch (94)
- Französisch (3)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (220) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Film (13)
- Geschichte (11)
- Satellitenfernerkundung (10)
- Deutschland (8)
- Germany (8)
- Modellierung (8)
- Fernerkundung (7)
- Reise (7)
- Filmgeschichte (6)
- Fotografie (6)
- Atmosphärische Grenzschicht (5)
- Frankreich (5)
- Kulturfilm (5)
- Meereis (5)
- Reisebericht (5)
- Treves (5)
- Arctic (4)
- Arktis (4)
- COVID-19 (4)
- China (4)
- Dokumentarfilm (4)
- Enlightenment (4)
- Filmwissenschaft (4)
- Frau (4)
- Höhlensalamander (4)
- Klima (4)
- Langzeitgedächtnis (4)
- Lebensmittel (4)
- Lernen (4)
- Luxemburg (4)
- Rheinland-Pfalz (4)
- Anpassung (3)
- Bodenerosion (3)
- Interaktion (3)
- Karl May (3)
- Katabatischer Wind (3)
- MODIS (3)
- Maschinelles Lernen (3)
- Modell (3)
- Nachhaltigkeit (3)
- Orient (3)
- Pandemie (3)
- Rezeption (3)
- Rutschung (3)
- Stereotyp (3)
- Stress (3)
- Travel (3)
- Trier (3)
- Wald (3)
- Waldinventur (3)
- episodic memory (3)
- long-term memory (3)
- mittelalterliche Naturkunde (3)
- regional climate model (3)
- sea ice (3)
- Alter (2)
- Amateur (2)
- Ambivalenz (2)
- Antarctic (2)
- Antarktis (2)
- Antisemitismus (2)
- Arbeitsgedächtnis (2)
- Argania spinosa (2)
- Aufklürung (2)
- Augenfolgebewegung (2)
- Biodiversität (2)
- Boden (2)
- Bodenmikrobiologie (2)
- Bodenwasser (2)
- CCLM (2)
- Chemische Analyse (2)
- Degradation (2)
- Episodisches Gedächtnis (2)
- Evaluation (2)
- Fernsehen (2)
- Filmklassiker (2)
- France (2)
- Französische Revolution (2)
- Frauenreisen (2)
- French Revolution (2)
- Greenland (2)
- Heinrich von Mügeln (2)
- Herztransplantation (2)
- Illustration (2)
- Information Retrieval (2)
- Infrarotthermographie (2)
- Italien (2)
- Judenverfolgung (2)
- Jugend (2)
- Larve (2)
- Learning (2)
- Lidar (2)
- Literatur (2)
- Literaturwissenschaft (2)
- Long-term memory (2)
- Luftbild (2)
- Lumière (2)
- MODIS ice surface temperatures (2)
- Mageninhalt (2)
- Marokko (2)
- Medizingeschichte (2)
- Memory (2)
- Mosella region (2)
- Nahrung (2)
- Nanopartikel (2)
- Polargebiete (2)
- Prognose (2)
- Psychological stress (2)
- Rezeptionsgeschichte (2)
- Risikomanagement (2)
- SARS-CoV-2 (2)
- Saar-Lor-Lux (2)
- Salamander (2)
- Salamanders (2)
- Sammlung (2)
- Selbstkontrolle (2)
- Sharing Economy (2)
- Silber (2)
- Strahlstrom (2)
- Switzerland (2)
- Vergessen (2)
- Wartezeit (2)
- Wasserbilanz (2)
- Weinbau (2)
- Wim Wenders (2)
- Working memory (2)
- Wunder des Ostens (2)
- ambivalence (2)
- atmospheric boundary layer (2)
- christliche Ikonographie (2)
- climate change (2)
- depression (2)
- digitalization (2)
- directed forgetting (2)
- drought (2)
- gypsum plaster (2)
- image segmentation (2)
- intervention (2)
- katabatic winds (2)
- leads (2)
- low-level jets (2)
- ozone (2)
- physical activity (2)
- psychology (2)
- stable boundary layer (2)
- verification (2)
- Ägypten (2)
- 'Der Marner' (Autorname) (1)
- 'Herzog Ernst'; mittelhochdeutsche Literatur; Text- und Überlieferungsgeschichte (1)
- 'Historia de prelliis' (1)
- 'Priester Johannes-Brief' (1)
- 'Rosengarten zu Worms' (1)
- 'Sündenfall und Erlösung' (mittelhochdeutscher Text) (1)
- 'Tirol und Fridebrant' (Werktitel) (1)
- 19th century (1)
- AFD (1)
- ALS (1)
- Abenteuer (1)
- Abhängigkeit (1)
- Aborigines (1)
- Abraham Wofgang (1)
- Abraham Wolfgang (1)
- Abwasser (1)
- Abwasserreinigung (1)
- Acidobacteria (1)
- Actinobacteria (1)
- Adaptation (1)
- Adult and vocational education (1)
- AfD (1)
- Affektstörung (1)
- Afroamerikaner (1)
- Agency (1)
- Agnes Varda (1)
- Aktivierung (1)
- Akzent (1)
- Alexander-Roman (1)
- Alexandre Promio (1)
- Allegorie des idealen Mannes (1)
- Almanach (1)
- Amateurfilm (1)
- Amazonas-Gebiet (1)
- Ambivalence (1)
- Anatolien / Süd (1)
- Andosol (1)
- Anemometrie (1)
- Angela Ricci-Luchi (1)
- Angola (1)
- Angststörung (1)
- Animal behaviour (1)
- Anorexia nervosa (1)
- Anthropogene Klimaänderung (1)
- Antiparasitäres Mittel (1)
- Anura (1)
- Anwendungssoftware (1)
- Aquatisches Ökosystem (1)
- Arbeit (1)
- Assisted Suicide (1)
- Asylbewerberunterkunft (1)
- Atmosphärische Turbulenz (1)
- Aufklärung (1)
- Aufmerksamkeit (1)
- Ausbildung (1)
- Ausdauer (1)
- Ausgangsgestein (1)
- Ausleihjournal (1)
- Ausrottung (1)
- Austalischer Busch (1)
- Australian bush (1)
- Australien (1)
- Australienforschung (1)
- Auswahl (1)
- Auswirkung (1)
- Autograph (1)
- Autographensammlung (1)
- Autokorrelation (1)
- Avenstein (1)
- BCI (1)
- BRDF (1)
- Bacteria phyla (1)
- Baum (1)
- Beeinflussung (1)
- Behavioral model (1)
- Behavioural methods (1)
- Belebtschlamm (1)
- Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) (1)
- Beregnung (1)
- Bericht (1)
- Bewaldung (1)
- Bewegungsmessung (1)
- Bibliothek (1)
- Bibliotheksverwaltungssystem (1)
- Bildnis (1)
- Bildungstheorie (1)
- Bildungswesen (1)
- Bildverarbeitung (1)
- Biogasgewinnung (1)
- Biogeochemie (1)
- Biological wastewater treatment (1)
- Bischof (1)
- Bishop (1)
- Blackness (1)
- Blaue Berge <Australien> (1)
- Blutegel (1)
- Bodenbakterien (1)
- Bodenbearbeitung (1)
- Bodenfruchtbarkeit (1)
- Bodengefüge (1)
- Bodengüte (1)
- Bodennahe Luftschicht (1)
- Bodennutzung (1)
- Bodenschutz (1)
- Book illustration (1)
- Brandverhalten (1)
- Briefsammlung (1)
- Bruch (1)
- Buchillustration (1)
- Burg Turaida (1)
- Burney (1)
- Buschballade (1)
- CAPE (1)
- COSMO-CLM (1)
- Candide (1)
- Casanova (1)
- Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Cave (1)
- Change (1)
- Charles (1)
- Charles de (1)
- Collection (1)
- Collection of Autographs (1)
- Coming-out (1)
- Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) (1)
- Contemptus Mundi (1)
- Continuity (1)
- Control theory (1)
- Coping strategies (1)
- Cortisol (1)
- Corvinus-Graduale (1)
- Coste (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Crop classification (1)
- DEFA (1)
- DNA isolation (1)
- DNS-Sequenz (1)
- Dachschiefer (1)
- Datensammlung (1)
- Daumer (1)
- David Malouf (1)
- David Malour (1)
- Deep learning (1)
- Definition (1)
- Deflation (1)
- Depression (1)
- Deutsche (1)
- Deutsche Literatur (1)
- Deutsche Schweiz (1)
- Deutschland <DDR> (1)
- Deutschland <Deutsches Reich> (1)
- Diet (1)
- Digitale Revolution (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- Disenchantment (1)
- Diskriminierung (1)
- Diskursanalyse (1)
- Dissonance (1)
- Disturbance Index (1)
- Dokumentarismus (1)
- Drift (1)
- Early Cinema (1)
- Ecology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Edelstein-Allegorese (1)
- Educational theory (1)
- Einstrahlung (1)
- Einzugsgebiet (1)
- Eisenhydroxide (1)
- Eisenoxide (1)
- Electricity market equilibrium models (1)
- Ella Maillart (1)
- Elsa von Schabelsky (1)
- Emotions (1)
- Emotionsregulation (1)
- Empfindung (1)
- Encodierung (1)
- Energie (1)
- Energiepflanzen (1)
- Energiepflanzenbau (1)
- Englisch (1)
- Engraving (1)
- Entwaldung (1)
- Environment (1)
- Enzym (1)
- Enzymatic reactions (1)
- Enzyme inhibition (1)
- Enzyme kinetics (1)
- Enzymes (1)
- Enzymimmunassay (1)
- Enzymkinetik (1)
- Eradication (1)
- Erdbeben <Motiv> (1)
- Ergebnis (1)
- Ernst Jandl (1)
- Ernährungssicherung (1)
- Erwachsenen- und Berufsbildung (1)
- Erwartung (1)
- Erzähltheorie (1)
- Erzählung (1)
- Essgewohnheit (1)
- Europäische Union / Wasserrahmenrichtlinie (1)
- Evapotranspiration (1)
- Evolution (1)
- Exil (1)
- Experiment (1)
- Experimentalfilm (1)
- Exposure time (1)
- Fahrerassistenzsystem (1)
- Fahrzeugverhalten (1)
- Faktorenanalyse (1)
- Familienfilm (1)
- Fanny (1)
- Faser (1)
- Feedback (1)
- Feldforschung (1)
- Feldfrucht (1)
- Fettsucht (1)
- Feuchtwiese (1)
- Feuersalamander (1)
- Film Filmgeschichte Kino (1)
- Film Filmgeschichte Kino Kulturpolitik Deutschland Indianer Abenteuer Medien Geschichte (1)
- Film History (1)
- Filmbiografie (1)
- Filmbiography (1)
- Filmpionier (1)
- Filmtheorie (1)
- Fitness (1)
- Flandern (1)
- Flugkörper (1)
- Forest evapotranspiration (1)
- Forstlicher Standort (1)
- Fotogeschichte (1)
- Franzüsische Revolution (1)
- Frau Welt-Motiv (1)
- French Revolutionary Wars (1)
- French national Library (1)
- Fronleichnamsspiel (1)
- Froschlurche (1)
- Fruchtbildung (1)
- Frühes Kino (1)
- Funktionalität (1)
- GEOBIA (1)
- GPS (1)
- Gamification (1)
- Gauja spillway valley (1)
- Gebrauchstexte (1)
- Gedächtnis (1)
- Gedächtnistest (1)
- Gefühl (1)
- Gehirn-Computer-Schnittstelle (1)
- Geier-Traktat (1)
- Geistesgeschichte (1)
- Geistiges Eigentum (1)
- Gemeinde (1)
- Genanalyse (1)
- Genauigkeit (1)
- Generationsbeziehung (1)
- Generationsverhältnis (1)
- Genetische Variabilität (1)
- Geneva Emotional Competence Test (1)
- Georg Friedrich (1)
- Georg Ludwig (1)
- Georges Louis (1)
- Georges-Louis (1)
- German travellers (1)
- Geschichte 1750-1800 (1)
- Geschichte 1780-1820 (1)
- Geschichte der modernen Demokratie (1)
- Gesichtsfeld (1)
- Gesundheit (1)
- Gesundheitsverhalten (1)
- Gewitter (1)
- Giacomo Girolamo (1)
- Gips (1)
- Gipsplatte (1)
- Goethe (1)
- Goethes Mater Gloriosa (1)
- Gojko Mitić (1)
- Grasslands (1)
- Grenzgebiet (1)
- Griechenland (1)
- Grönland (1)
- Grünland (1)
- HEXAGON (1)
- Hahn-Hahn (1)
- Hans Magnus Enzensberger (1)
- Hans Rosenplüt (1)
- Hans-Jürgen Syberberg (1)
- Harem (1)
- Haushalt (1)
- Hautfarbe (1)
- Heart rate (1)
- Heiliger Rock (1)
- Heinrich <VII. (1)
- Hellwig, Fritz (1)
- Herpetology (1)
- Heydenreich (1)
- Historische Karte (1)
- Hs. b des Nibelungenliedes (1)
- Human behaviour (1)
- Humangenetik (1)
- Humus (1)
- Hydrology (1)
- Hyperhidrose (1)
- Hyperspektraler Sensor (1)
- Häufigkeit (1)
- I.> (1)
- Ideengeschichte (1)
- Illustriertes Buch (1)
- Immundefekt (1)
- Immunglobulintherapie (1)
- Indianerfilm (1)
- Individualisierung (1)
- Influence (Literary (1)
- Information (1)
- Intelligence Structure Battery (1)
- Intelligence profiles (1)
- Intelligenz (1)
- Intelligenztest (1)
- Intention (1)
- Interaction (1)
- Interpersonale Kommunikation (1)
- Inversion (1)
- Isolation <Soziologie> (1)
- Jesuitenkolleg (1)
- Jesuitenschule (1)
- Jews (1)
- Johann Georg / über die Einsamkeit (1)
- Johann Hugo (1)
- Johann Wolfgang von (1)
- Johanna (1)
- Journalist (1)
- Juden (1)
- Kaiser (1)
- Kaiser> (1)
- Kaiserpanorama (1)
- Kakuma (1)
- Kalkulationsverfahren (1)
- Kardiovaskuläre Krankheit (1)
- Karikatur (1)
- Karl Heinrich (1)
- Karst (1)
- Karte (1)
- Kartographie (1)
- Katholische Erneuerung (1)
- Katholizismus (1)
- Kaulquappe (1)
- Kenia (1)
- Kenya (1)
- Kind (1)
- Kino (1)
- Klarissen (Nonnenorden) (1)
- Klassifikation (1)
- Klassiker Fernsehen Kollektives Gedächtnis (1)
- Klimaänderung (1)
- Koalitionskriege (1)
- Kognitive Psychologie (1)
- Kolonialismus (1)
- Kolonie (1)
- Konformitätsprüfung (1)
- Konrad von Würzburg (1)
- Kontamination (1)
- Kriegsfotografie (1)
- Kriemhild (Nibelungenlied) (1)
- Kriging (1)
- Kritik (1)
- Kultur (1)
- Kunststoff (1)
- Kunstwerk (1)
- Kupferstich (1)
- König Rindfleisch (1)
- Körpererfahrung (1)
- Körpertherapie (1)
- Küffner (1)
- Küfner (1)
- Künstliches Fließgewässer (1)
- LAP (1)
- LG children (1)
- Landnutzung (1)
- Landsat (1)
- Laptev Sea (1)
- Laptewsee (1)
- Larva (1)
- Laubwald (1)
- Leben (1)
- Lebensalter (1)
- Leech (1)
- Lerntechnik (1)
- Lesvos (1)
- LiDAR (1)
- Library (1)
- Lichtbild (1)
- Limnology (1)
- Linear complementarity problems (1)
- Lisbon (1)
- Lissabon (1)
- Louise Mühlbach (1)
- Lurche (1)
- Luzern (1)
- Lyrik (1)
- Längsschnittuntersuchung (1)
- MOSAiC (1)
- Madagascar (1)
- Mainzer Jakobiner (1)
- Mainzer Republik (1)
- Mainzer Republik 1792-93 (1)
- Maisanbau (1)
- Maissilage (1)
- Mann (1)
- Maria Belli (1)
- Marias Gürtelspende (1)
- Marienlob (1)
- Marienpreis (1)
- Mary Montagu (1)
- Massenmedien (1)
- Mathematik (1)
- Mathematisches Modell (1)
- Matthias Müller (1)
- Maya Deren (1)
- Meat Consumption (1)
- Meat Paradox (1)
- Medien (1)
- Meeresströmung (1)
- Meteorologische Messung (1)
- Middle Ages (1)
- Migration (1)
- Mikrofaser (1)
- MinION (1)
- Mindesthaltbarkeitsdatum (1)
- Mineral (1)
- Mineralogie (1)
- Mitgefühl (1)
- Mitochondria (1)
- Mittelalter (1)
- Mittelgebirge (1)
- Mittelhochdeutsche Dichtung (1)
- Mittelhochdeutsche Spruchdichtung (1)
- Mittelmoseltal (1)
- Moderator (1)
- Moderators and mediators (1)
- Moderner Roman (1)
- Montagu (1)
- Moria (1)
- Morphologie (1)
- Morphologie 〈Linguistik〉 (1)
- Mosel-Gebiet (1)
- Moseltal (1)
- Motivation (1)
- Motor mimicry (1)
- MouseTracker (1)
- Mozart (1)
- Multispektralfotografie (1)
- Mund-Nasen-Schutz (1)
- Municipal Library (1)
- Muster <Struktur> (1)
- Männlichkeit (1)
- Mündliche Literatur (1)
- Nachkrieg (1)
- Nadelwald (1)
- Nahrungsaufnahme (1)
- Napoleon <Frankreich (1)
- Napoleonic Era (1)
- Napoleonische Zeit (1)
- Nares-Straße (1)
- Nash–Cournot competition (1)
- Nationalbibliothek (1)
- Nationalpark Hunsrück-Hochwald (1)
- Nationalsozialismus (1)
- Natur-Allegorese (1)
- Naturbilder (1)
- Naturgefahr (1)
- Nederlands-Indie (1)
- Neil Postman (1)
- Neptungras (1)
- Netzwerkanalyse (1)
- Neue Rechte (1)
- Neuwied (1)
- Neuzeit (1)
- Nibelungenlied (1)
- Nicolas Humbert (1)
- Niederlande (1)
- Niederschlag (1)
- Nodier (1)
- Nordterritorium <Australien> (1)
- North Water Polynya (1)
- Nutzpflanzen (1)
- Oberflächentemperatur (1)
- One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (1)
- Open Source (1)
- OpenBiblio (1)
- OpenStreetMap (1)
- Optimierung (1)
- Organic phosphorus compounds (1)
- Organisationspädagogik (1)
- Organisationstheorie (1)
- Organisationswandel (1)
- Organization theory (1)
- Organizational education (1)
- Orientalismus (1)
- Orientierung (1)
- Otfrid von Weißenburg (1)
- Oxford Nanopore Technologies (1)
- Ozon (1)
- Ozonbelastung (1)
- PTSD (1)
- Paleogenetics (1)
- Parasitism (1)
- Parasitismus (1)
- Paris / Bibliothüque Nationale de France (1)
- Partikulargericht (1)
- Pascal Xavier (1)
- Pass (1)
- Passport (1)
- Passregister (1)
- Passwesen (1)
- Patagonien Süd (1)
- Pathogener Mikroorganismus (1)
- Patient (1)
- Patientin (1)
- Patients (1)
- Patrick White (1)
- Patriotismus (1)
- Pelikan-Exempel (1)
- Perfect competition (1)
- Perfektionismus (1)
- Personalisierte Psychotherapie (1)
- Personalisierung (1)
- Personalized mental health (1)
- Pflanzenwachstum (1)
- Philosophie (1)
- Philosophy (1)
- Phoenix (1)
- Phonologie (1)
- Phosphatelimination (1)
- Phosphatgips (1)
- Phosphor elimination (1)
- Phosphororganische Verbindungen (1)
- Photographie (1)
- Phylogenetic analysis (1)
- Phylogenie (1)
- Physical activity (1)
- Physikalisch-chemische Eigenschaft (1)
- Physiologus; mittelhochdeutsche Literaur (1)
- Plasmaersatz (1)
- Poetik (1)
- Political Correctness (1)
- Politische Ideengeschichte (1)
- Politische Motive (1)
- Politische Publizistik (1)
- Politisches Handeln (1)
- Politisches System (1)
- Polynja (1)
- Posidonia oceanica fibers (1)
- Posttraumatisches Stresssyndrom (1)
- Precision mental health (1)
- Predation (1)
- Premier Prix de Violoncelle (1)
- Press (1)
- Problemlösen (1)
- Process-Oriented Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Prognosis (1)
- Programm (1)
- Prosa (1)
- Prosocial behavior (1)
- Provinz Copperbelt (1)
- Provinz Golestan (1)
- Prozessanalyse (1)
- Präferenz (1)
- Pseudogley (1)
- Psychische Belastung (1)
- Psychisches Trauma (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Psychometrie (1)
- Psychometrischer Intelligenztest (1)
- Psychosoziale Situation (1)
- Psychotherapie (1)
- Public Opinion (1)
- Publikum (1)
- Q-sort method (1)
- Qualitätssicherung (1)
- Quelle (1)
- Radio (1)
- Rassismus (1)
- Reaktion (1)
- Reception (1)
- Rechte Hemisphäre (1)
- Reduktion (1)
- Refugee camps (1)
- Regierung (1)
- Regression Kriging (1)
- Reinmar von Zweter (1. H. 13. Jh.) (1)
- Reisefilm (1)
- Reisejournalismus (1)
- Reiseliteratur (1)
- Reisende (1)
- Reliabilität (1)
- Ressourcenpolitik (1)
- Restauration (1)
- Retranslation (1)
- Revolution (1)
- Robert Cahen (1)
- Robust optimization (1)
- Routine outcome monitoring (1)
- Rudolf Arnheim (1)
- Russisch-Ukrainischer Krieg (1)
- Rätselallegorie (1)
- Römisch-Deutsches Reich (1)
- Rückmeldung (1)
- Rückübersetzung (1)
- SARS‐CoV‐2 (1)
- SODAR (1)
- Saardepartement (1)
- Sambia (1)
- Samenkeimung (1)
- Sardinien (1)
- Satire (1)
- Schafweide (1)
- Schami, Rafik (1)
- Schelfeis (1)
- Schemata (Zeichnungen in mittelalterlichen Handschriften) (1)
- Schid (1)
- Schmerz (1)
- Schmid (1)
- Schmid d'Auenstein (1)
- Schmid d'Avenston (1)
- Schmid von Auenstein (1)
- Schopenhauer (1)
- Schule (1)
- Schulleistung (1)
- Schulzeugnis (1)
- Schweiz (1)
- Schweizer Alpen (1)
- Schweißabsonderung (1)
- Schwitzen (1)
- Science, technology and society (1)
- Seed germination (1)
- Selbstbild (1)
- Selbsteinschätzung (1)
- Selbstwertgefühl (1)
- Selbstwirksamkeit (1)
- Selbstüberwachung (1)
- Selektivität (1)
- Sequenzanalyse / Chemie (1)
- Sewernaja Semlja (1)
- Sex and the City (1)
- Sheep (1)
- Siamese Graph Neural Networks (1)
- Silver Nanoparticles (1)
- Silver nanoparticles (1)
- Sistānbecken (1)
- Situationskomödie (1)
- Soapopera (1)
- Social Media (1)
- Social anxiety disorder (1)
- Sociology (1)
- Sodar (1)
- Soil (1)
- Soil microbial community (1)
- Soil parameterization (1)
- Soil texture (1)
- Somatic experiencing (1)
- Sozialangst (1)
- Sozialer Stress (1)
- Sozialinnovation (1)
- Sozialverhalten (1)
- Sozialwesen (1)
- Spatial autocorrelation (1)
- Speichel (1)
- Spektroradiometrie (1)
- Speleomantes (1)
- Stability (1)
- Stadt (1)
- Stadtbibliothek Trier (1)
- Stadtforschung (1)
- Stadtplanung (1)
- Stagnosols (1)
- Statistik (1)
- Steilhang (1)
- Sterbehilfe (1)
- Sterbehilfe Italien (1)
- Sterbehilfe italienische Perspektive (1)
- Stickstoffoxide (1)
- Stipendiat (1)
- Stirnhirn (1)
- Stomach (1)
- Stream of (1)
- Student (1)
- Studienfürderung (1)
- Surface Lifted Index (1)
- Temperatur (1)
- Test (1)
- Test-retest (1)
- Testen (1)
- Testergebnis (1)
- Teufelsversammlung (Exempel-Motiv) (1)
- Textkritik (1)
- The Magic flute (1)
- Therapieabbruch (1)
- Therapieerfolg (1)
- Thermal stresses (1)
- Thermalluftbild (1)
- Tizian (1)
- Tourismus (1)
- Toxicity (1)
- Toxizität (1)
- Translation (1)
- Trier <Region> (1)
- Trier / Stadtbibliothek Trier (1)
- Trockenheit (1)
- Trockenwald (1)
- Trophic interactions (1)
- Tunika Christi (1)
- Twitter <Softwareplattform> (1)
- Türkei (1)
- UAV (1)
- Ufa (1)
- Ulrike Ottinger (1)
- Umfrage (1)
- Umweltbewusstsein (1)
- Umweltfaktor (1)
- Umweltprobe (1)
- Unterrichtsfach (1)
- Validierung (1)
- Vandalism (1)
- Vandalismus (1)
- Vater (1)
- Vegetarianism (1)
- Verbesserung (1)
- Verbreitung (1)
- Verbreitungsökologie (1)
- Verbundwerkstoff (1)
- Verfolgung (1)
- Verhaltensmuster (1)
- Verlangen (1)
- Vermeidung (1)
- Verpackung (1)
- Verschwendung (1)
- Verschwörungstheorie (1)
- Verstärkung (1)
- Verteilungsgerechtigkeit (1)
- Vertrauen (1)
- Verzerrung (1)
- Veyre (1)
- Videospiel (1)
- Villers (1)
- Violoncello (1)
- Virtuelle Umgebung (1)
- Visuelle Aufmerksamkeit (1)
- Visuelle Kommunikation (1)
- Voltaire (1)
- Voltaire / Candide ou l'optimisme (1)
- Waldtyp (1)
- Wandel (1)
- War in Ukraine (1)
- Wasser (1)
- Wasserstress (1)
- Water Framework Directive (1)
- Water balance simulation (1)
- Wechselwarme (1)
- Weddellmeer (1)
- Weimarer Republik (1)
- Werner Penzel (1)
- Whiteness (1)
- Willenskraft (1)
- Wind (1)
- Windfeld (1)
- Winnetou (1)
- Wochenschau (1)
- Wohnen (1)
- Wohnungspolitik (1)
- Wolfgang Amadeus / Die Zauberflöte (1)
- Wolfram von Eschenbach (1)
- Worringen (1)
- Wyttenbach (1)
- Wärmeanomalie (1)
- Yaak Karsunke (1)
- Yervant Gianikian (1)
- Zeit (1)
- Zeitreihenanalyse (1)
- Zeitschrift (1)
- Zentralaustralien (1)
- Zerstörung (1)
- Zimmermann (1)
- Zimmermann-Rezeption (1)
- Zuckergehalt (1)
- adolescents (1)
- advanced heart failure (1)
- aerial imagery (1)
- age stereotypes (1)
- aggregate stability (1)
- agricultural dust (1)
- althochdeutsche Glossen (1)
- althochdeutsche Literatur (1)
- althochdeutsche Psalmen (1)
- analysistransplantation (1)
- annual energy crops (1)
- antike Mythologie (1)
- argan tree (1)
- artistic (1)
- atmospheric modeling (1)
- atmospheric modelling (1)
- atmospheric water balance (1)
- basal area increment (1)
- behavioural ecology (1)
- best before (1)
- biodiversity (1)
- biodiversity hotspots (1)
- biogas (1)
- biomethantion (1)
- body composition (1)
- book illustration (1)
- bottom-up-therapy (1)
- change mapping (1)
- christliche Meditationsbilder (1)
- christliche Tierallegorese (1)
- co-registration (1)
- cognition (1)
- coming out (or disclosure) (1)
- common variable immunodeficiency (1)
- community-based production (1)
- composite materials (1)
- conformance checking (1)
- conservation value (1)
- conspiracy myths (1)
- conspiracy theories (1)
- convalescent plasma (1)
- correction factor (1)
- crop stress (1)
- cross-country (1)
- crystallized abilities (1)
- date labeling (1)
- deep learning (1)
- degradation (1)
- difference-in-differences (1)
- differentiated instruction (1)
- discourse analysis (1)
- distress (1)
- domestic food waste (1)
- dry tropical forest (1)
- early response (1)
- earthquake (1)
- eating behavior (1)
- eating behaviour (1)
- ecological modelling (1)
- ectotherms (1)
- education aid (1)
- emergency remote teaching (1)
- emissivity (1)
- emotional intelligence (1)
- encoding (1)
- environmental impact (1)
- erosion measurement (1)
- etc.) (1)
- eukaryotes (1)
- evaluation (1)
- evapotranspiration (ET) modeling (1)
- event log preprocessing (1)
- event reconstruction (1)
- experimental design (1)
- factor analysis (1)
- fathers (1)
- fillers (1)
- film poem (1)
- fire performance (1)
- fitness tracker (1)
- fluid abilities (1)
- food preference (1)
- food security (1)
- forensic voice comparison (1)
- forest (1)
- forest degradation (1)
- forest inventory (1)
- forests (1)
- foss (1)
- fructification (1)
- games, experimental (1)
- gap flow (1)
- geistliches Spiel des Mittelalters (1)
- geobia (1)
- geography of knowledge (1)
- geometric (1)
- glycaemic index (1)
- graph embedding (1)
- growth mixture modeling (1)
- heart failure (1)
- heart transplant (1)
- herpetology (1)
- hesitations (1)
- homosexuality (1)
- housing (1)
- housing policy (1)
- hybrid organizations (1)
- hyperspectral (1)
- ice shelves (1)
- ice thickness (1)
- immunoglobulin replacement (1)
- inclusion (1)
- inclusive education (1)
- individual tree detection (1)
- innovation (1)
- insect conservation (1)
- intellectual property rights (1)
- interference (1)
- intergenerational programs (1)
- intergenerational programs, evaluation, adolescents, older adults, age stereotypes, ageism, youthism (1)
- inversion (1)
- invisible deviating events (1)
- just transition (1)
- katabatic wind (1)
- koha (1)
- land use (1)
- land-use change (1)
- land-use intensity microbial biomass (1)
- landslides (1)
- learning (1)
- lengthening (1)
- library maintenance software (1)
- local wastewater planning (1)
- long DNA barcodes (1)
- machine-learning (1)
- management (1)
- media effects (1)
- mediated traumatization (1)
- metabarcoding (1)
- meteorology (1)
- mhd. Spruchdichtung (1)
- mhd. Verserzählung 'Udo von Magdeburg' (1)
- microrefugia (1)
- mineralogy (1)
- miombo woodland (1)
- mittelalterliche Buchgeschichte (1)
- mittelalterliche Buchkunst (1)
- mittelalterliche Handschriftenillustration (1)
- mittelalterliche Komputistik (1)
- mittelalterliche Universalkartographie (1)
- mittelhochdeutsche Dichtung (1)
- mittelhochdeutsche Mären (1)
- mittelhochdeutsche Rätsel-Texte (1)
- mittelhochdeutsche Sangspruch-Dichtung (1)
- mittelhochdeutsche Sangspruchdichtung (1)
- mittelhochdeutsche Spielliteratur (1)
- motion energy analysis (1)
- mountain topography (1)
- multispectral (1)
- nature imagery (1)
- new right (1)
- nitrogen oxides (1)
- nonverbal synchrony (1)
- norm mineral calculation (1)
- novel of the 20th century (1)
- numerical models (1)
- obesity (1)
- older adults (1)
- open data (1)
- open-canopy woodland (1)
- or optimism (1)
- organization theory (1)
- paraverbal behavior (1)
- particulate matter (1)
- patents (1)
- perennial energy crops (1)
- permanent grassland (1)
- personal trust (1)
- personalized psychotherapy (1)
- phosphogypsum (1)
- phototropism (1)
- phyllites (1)
- physico-mechanical properties (1)
- physiological parameters (1)
- plant adaptation mechanisms (1)
- plant architecture (1)
- plastic (1)
- platform economy (1)
- point set registration (1)
- polynyas (1)
- post-traumatic stress disorder (1)
- posttraumatic stress disorder (1)
- press photography (1)
- process mining (1)
- proof of concept study (1)
- psychology and behaviorsocial isolation (1)
- psychometric validation (1)
- public perception (1)
- questionnaires (1)
- reception patterns (1)
- recurring events (1)
- regeneration (1)
- region growing (1)
- remote sensing (1)
- resource governance (1)
- retrieval practice (1)
- ribosomal (1)
- risk assessment (1)
- risk factors (1)
- roof slates (1)
- salivary alpha-amylase (1)
- satellite TIR mission (1)
- scholarship students (1)
- school (1)
- school performance (1)
- school subject (1)
- sea-ice (1)
- segmentation (1)
- selective forgetting (1)
- self-perception (1)
- sentinel 1 (1)
- sentinel-2 (1)
- shales (1)
- sharing economies (1)
- similarity-based retrieval (1)
- slope stability modelling (1)
- smoking (1)
- social contactssurvival (1)
- social entrepreneurs (1)
- social innovation (SI) (1)
- social innovation networks (1)
- social service organizations (1)
- social sustainability (1)
- socio-nature relations (1)
- soil microbial activity (1)
- soil microbial biomass (1)
- soil water content (1)
- spaces of opportunity (1)
- spätmittelalterliche Eschatologie (1)
- stem detection (1)
- stream of consciousness (1)
- sub-Saharan Africa (1)
- sustainability (1)
- system trust (1)
- teachers (1)
- temperature (1)
- testing (1)
- text memory (1)
- thermal infrared (TIR) (1)
- thermal infrared remote sensing (1)
- thermal remote sensing (1)
- thunderstorm (1)
- time series analysis (1)
- topographic flow (1)
- trademarks (1)
- trauma therapy (1)
- tree density (1)
- tree inclination (1)
- tree matching (1)
- turbulence parameterization (1)
- uncritical patriotism (1)
- urban and rural boundaries (1)
- urban studies (1)
- video games (1)
- visual communication (1)
- visual empathy (1)
- viticulture (1)
- water stress (1)
- water use (1)
- waterlogging (1)
- wetland conservation (1)
- wind erosion (1)
- woody cover (1)
- Ästhetik (1)
- Öffentliche Meinung (1)
- Überflutung (1)
- Überleben (1)
- Übung (1)
- öffentliche Meinung (1)
- übersetzung (1)
Institut
- Raum- und Umweltwissenschaften (51)
- Universitätsbibliothek (47)
- Medienwissenschaft (36)
- Psychologie (30)
- Fachbereich 6 (15)
- Fachbereich 2 (8)
- Fachbereich 1 (6)
- Geschichte, mittlere und neuere (5)
- Informatik (3)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (3)
The endemic argan tree (Argania spinosa) populations in southern Morocco are highly degraded due to overbrowsing, illegal firewood extraction and the expansion of intensive agriculture. Bare areas between the isolated trees increase due to limited regrowth; however, it is unknown if the trees influence the soil of the intertree areas. Hypothetically, spatial differences in soil parameters of the intertree area should result from the translocation of litter or soil particles (by runoff and erosion or wind drift) from canopy-covered areas to the intertree areas. In total, 385 soil samples were taken around the tree from the trunk along the tree drip line (within and outside the tree area) and the intertree area between two trees in four directions (upslope, downslope and in both directions parallel to the slope) up to 50 m distance from the tree. They were analysed for gravimetric soil water content, pH, electrical conductivity, percolation stability, total nitrogen content (TN), content of soil organic carbon (SOC) and C/N ratio. A total of 74 tension disc infiltrometer experiments were performed near the tree drip line, within and outside the tree area, to measure the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity. We found that the tree influence on its surrounding intertree area is limited, with, e.g., SOC and TN content decreasing significantly from tree trunk (4.4 % SOC and 0.3 % TN) to tree drip line (2.0 % SOC and 0.2 % TN). However, intertree areas near the tree drip line (1.3 % SOC and 0.2 % TN) differed significantly from intertree areas between two trees (1.0 % SOC and 0.1 % TN) yet only with a small effect. Trends for spatial patterns could be found in eastern and downslope directions due to wind drift and slope wash. Soil water content was highest in the north due to shade from the midday sun; the influence extended to the intertree areas. The unsaturated hydraulic conductivity also showed significant differences between areas within and outside the tree area near the tree drip line. This was the case on sites under different land usages (silvopastoral and agricultural), slope gradients or tree densities. Although only limited influence of the tree on its intertree area was found, the spatial pattern around the tree suggests that reforestation measures should be aimed around tree shelters in northern or eastern directions with higher soil water content or TN or SOC content to ensure seedling survival, along with measures to prevent overgrazing.
The argan woodlands of South Morocco represent an open-canopy dryland forest with traditional silvopastoral usage that includes browsing by goats, sheep and camels, oil production as well as agricultural use. In the past, these forests have undergone extensive clearing, but are now protected by the state. However, the remaining argan woodlands are still under pressure from intensive grazing and illegal firewood collection. Although the argan-forest area seems to be overall decreasing due to large forest clearings for intensive agriculture, little quantitative data is available on the dynamics and overall state of the remaining argan forest. To determine how the argan woodlands in the High Atlas and the Anti-Atlas had changed in tree-crown cover from 1972 to 2018 we used historical black and white HEXAGON satellite images as well as recent WorldView satellite images (see Part A of our study). Because tree shadows can oftentimes not be separated from the tree crown on panchromatic satellite images, individual trees were mapped in three size categories to determine if trees were unchanged, had decreased/increased in crown size or had disappeared or newly grown. The current state of the argan trees was evaluated by mapping tree architectures in the field. Tree-cover changes varied highly between the test sites. Trees that remained unchanged between 1972 and 2018 were in the majority, while tree mortality and tree establishment were nearly even. Small unchanged trees made up 48.4% of all remaining trees, of these 51% showed degraded tree architectures. 40% of small (re-) grown trees were so overbrowsed that they only appeared as bushes, while medium (3–7 m crown diameter) and large trees (>7 m) showed less degraded trees regardless if they had changed or not. Approaches like grazing exclusion or cereal cultivation lead to a positive influence on tree architecture and less tree-cover decrease. Although the woodland was found to be mostly unchanged 1972–2018, the analysis of tree architecture reveals that a lot of (mostly small) trees remained stable but in a degraded state. This stability might be the result of the small trees’ high degradation status and shows the heavy pressure on the argan forest.
In spite of the wide agreement among linguists as to the significance of spoken language data, actual speech data have not formed the basis of empirical work on English as much as one would think. The present paper is intended to contribute to changing this situation, on a theoretical and on a practical level. On a theoretical level, we discuss different research traditions within (English) linguistics. Whereas speech data have become increasingly important in various linguistic disciplines, major corpora of English developed within the corpus-linguistic community, carefully sampled to be representative of language usage, are usually restricted to orthographic transcriptions of spoken language. As a result, phonological phenomena have remained conspicuously understudied within traditional corpus linguistics. At the same time, work with current speech corpora often requires a considerable level of specialist knowledge and tailor-made solutions. On a practical level, we present a new feature of BNCweb (Hoffmann et al. 2008), a user-friendly interface to the British National Corpus, which gives users access to audio and phonemic transcriptions of more than five million words of spontaneous speech. With the help of a pilot study on the variability of intrusive r we illustrate the scope of the new possibilities.
Similarity-based retrieval of semantic graphs is a core task of Process-Oriented Case-Based Reasoning (POCBR) with applications in real-world scenarios, e.g., in smart manufacturing. The involved similarity computation is usually complex and time-consuming, as it requires some kind of inexact graph matching. To tackle these problems, we present an approach to modeling similarity measures based on embedding semantic graphs via Graph Neural Networks (GNNs). Therefore, we first examine how arbitrary semantic graphs, including node and edge types and their knowledge-rich semantic annotations, can be encoded in a numeric format that is usable by GNNs. Given this, the architecture of two generic graph embedding models from the literature is adapted to enable their usage as a similarity measure for similarity-based retrieval. Thereby, one of the two models is more optimized towards fast similarity prediction, while the other model is optimized towards knowledge-intensive, more expressive predictions. The evaluation examines the quality and performance of these models in preselecting retrieval candidates and in approximating the ground-truth similarities of a graph-matching-based similarity measure for two semantic graph domains. The results show the great potential of the approach for use in a retrieval scenario, either as a preselection model or as an approximation of a graph similarity measure.
Global human population growth is associated with many problems, such asrnfood and water provision, political conflicts, spread of diseases, and environmental destruction. The mitigation of these problems is mirrored in several global conventions and programs, some of which, however, are conflicting. Here, we discuss the conflicts between biodiversity conservation and disease eradication. Numerous health programs aim at eradicating pathogens, and many focus on the eradication of vectors, such as mosquitos or other parasites. As a case study, we focus on the "Pan African Tsetse and Trypanosomiasis Eradication Campaign," which aims at eradicating a pathogen (Trypanosoma) as well as its vector, the entire group of tsetse flies (Glossinidae). As the distribution of tsetse flies largely overlaps with the African hotspots of freshwater biodiversity, we argue for a strong consideration of environmental issues when applying vector control measures, especially the aerial applications of insecticides.rnFurthermore, we want to stimulate discussions on the value of speciesrnand whether full eradication of a pathogen or vector is justified at all. Finally, we call for a stronger harmonization of international conventions. Proper environmental impact assessments need to be conducted before control or eradication programs are carried out to minimize negative effects on biodiversity.
Low-level jets (LLJs) are climatological features in polar regions. It is well known that katabatic winds over the slopes of the Antarctic ice sheet are associated with strong LLJs. Barrier winds occurring, e.g., along the Antarctic Peninsula may also show LLJ structures. A few observational studies show that LLJs occur over sea ice regions. We present a model-based climatology of the wind field, of low-level inversions and of LLJs in the Weddell Sea region of the Antarctic for the period 2002–2016. The sensitivity of the LLJ detection on the selection of the wind speed maximum is investigated. The common criterion of an anomaly of at least 2 m/s is extended to a relative criterion of wind speed decrease above and below the LLJ. The frequencies of LLJs are sensitive to the choice of the relative criterion, i.e., if the value for the relative decrease exceeds 15%. The LLJs are evaluated with respect to the frequency distributions of height, speed, directional shear and stability for different regions. LLJs are most frequent in the katabatic wind regime over the ice sheet and in barrier wind regions. During winter, katabatic LLJs occur with frequencies of more than 70% in many areas. Katabatic LLJs show a narrow range of heights (mostly below 200 m) and speeds (typically 10–20 m/s), while LLJs over the sea ice cover a broad range of speeds and heights. LLJs are associated with surface inversions or low-level lifted inversions. LLJs in the katabatic wind and barrier wind regions can last several days during winter. The duration of LLJs is sensitive to the LLJ definition criteria. We propose to use only the absolute criterion for model studies.
The parameterization of ocean/sea-ice/atmosphere interaction processes is a challenge for regional climate models (RCMs) of the Arctic, particularly for wintertime conditions, when small fractions of thin ice or open water cause strong modifications of the boundary layer. Thus, the treatment of sea ice and sub-grid flux parameterizations in RCMs is of crucial importance. However, verification data sets over sea ice for wintertime conditions are rare. In the present paper, data of the ship-based experiment Transarktika 2019 during the end of the Arctic winter for thick one-year ice conditions are presented. The data are used for the verification of the regional climate model COSMO-CLM (CCLM). In addition, Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data are used for the comparison of ice surface temperature (IST) simulations of the CCLM sea ice model. CCLM is used in a forecast mode (nested in ERA5) for the Norwegian and Barents Seas with 5 km resolution and is run with different configurations of the sea ice model and sub-grid flux parameterizations. The use of a new set of parameterizations yields improved results for the comparisons with in-situ data. Comparisons with MODIS IST allow for a verification over large areas and show also a good performance of CCLM. The comparison with twice-daily radiosonde ascents during Transarktika 2019, hourly microwave water vapor measurements of first 5 km in the atmosphere and hourly temperature profiler data show a very good representation of the temperature, humidity and wind structure of the whole troposphere for CCLM.
Regional climate models are a valuable tool for the study of the climate processes and climate change in polar regions, but the performance of the models has to be evaluated using experimental data. The regional climate model CCLM was used for simulations for the MOSAiC period with a horizontal resolution of 14 km (whole Arctic). CCLM was used in a forecast mode (nested in ERA5) and used a thermodynamic sea ice model. Sea ice concentration was taken from AMSR2 data (C15 run) and from a high-resolution data set (1 km) derived from MODIS data (C15MOD0 run). The model was evaluated using radiosonde data and data of different profiling systems with a focus on the winter period (November–April). The comparison with radiosonde data showed very good agreement for temperature, humidity, and wind. A cold bias was present in the ABL for November and December, which was smaller for the C15MOD0 run. In contrast, there was a warm bias for lower levels in March and April, which was smaller for the C15 run. The effects of different sea ice parameterizations were limited to heights below 300 m. High-resolution lidar and radar wind profiles as well as temperature and integrated water vapor (IWV) data from microwave radiometers were used for the comparison with CCLM for case studies, which included low-level jets. LIDAR wind profiles have many gaps, but represent a valuable data set for model evaluation. Comparisons with IWV and temperature data of microwave radiometers show very good agreement.
Der vorliegende Artikel beschreibt die klimatische Situation des Naturparks Saar-Hunsrück. Neben der Einordnung der Region in die großskalige klimatische Zirkulation werden die wesentlichen Klimaelemente beschrieben. Da sich die Klimaelemente mit zunehmender Höhe verändern, bestimmt im unteren Saartal, im Saar-Nahe-Bergland und Hunsrück mit Osburger Hochwald, Schwarzwälder Hochwald und Idarwald die Höhenlage entscheidend die räumliche Struktur der einzelnen Klimaelemente. Die Niederschlagsverteilung zeigt deutlich den Luveffekt in den westlichen Teilen des Naturparks und die Abnahme der Niederschlagshöhen in nordöstlicher Richtung. Die räumlichen Muster der mittleren und maximalen Lufttemperatur folgen der Topographie, während Minimalwerte der Temperatur ein weniger differenziertes Bild zeigen. In den tiefer gelegenen Regionen des Naturparks treten 4-7 Hitzetage in langjährigen Mittel auf, in den Hochlagen des Hunsrücks werden nur noch 1-3 Tage / Jahr beobachtet. Oberhalb der 600 m-Höhenlinie ergeben sich im Mittel 110-130 Frosttage im Jahr, im südwestlichen Teil des Naturparks geht die Zahl auf 50 Tage / Jahr zurück. Die mittlere Anzahl der Tage mit Schneedecke liegt, bezogen auf das Areal des Naturparks, insgesamt zwischen 10 und 90 Tagen pro Jahr. Ihre Veränderung infolge des regionalen Klimawandels zeigt eine Abnahme zwischen 3-15 Tagen pro Jahr zwischen den Zeiträumen 1961-1990 und 1981-2010. Die aktuelle Sonnenscheindauer beträgt im westlichen Teil des Naturparks im Mittel 1500-1600 Sonnenscheinstunden pro Jahr, im südöstlichen Teil werden bis 1600 Stunden pro Jahr erreicht.
A satellite-based climatology of wind-induced surface temperature anomalies for the Antarctic
(2019)
It is well-known that katabatic winds can be detected as warm signatures in the surface temperature over the slopes of the Antarctic ice sheets. For appropriate synoptic forcing and/or topographic channeling, katabatic surges occur, which result in warm signatures also over adjacent ice shelves. Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) ice surface temperature (IST) data are used to detect warm signatures over the Antarctic for the winter periods 2002–2017. In addition, high-resolution (5 km) regional climate model data is used for the years of 2002 to 2016. We present a case study and a climatology of wind-induced IST anomalies for the Ross Ice Shelf and the eastern Weddell Sea. The IST anomaly distributions show maxima around 10–15K for the slopes, but values of more than 25K are also found. Katabatic surges represent a strong climatological signal with a mean warm anomaly of more than 5K on more than 120 days per winter for the Byrd Glacier and the Nimrod Glacier on the Ross Ice Shelf. The mean anomaly for the Brunt Ice Shelf is weaker, and exceeds 5K on about 70 days per winter. Model simulations of the IST are compared to the MODIS IST, and show a very good agreement. The model data show that the near-surface stability is a better measure for the response to the wind than the IST itself.
Measurements of the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) structure were performed for three years (October 2017–August 2020) at the Russian observatory “Ice Base Cape Baranova” (79.280° N, 101.620° E) using SODAR (Sound Detection And Ranging). These measurements were part of the YOPP (Year of Polar Prediction) project “Boundary layer measurements in the high Arctic” (CATS_BL) within the scope of a joint German–Russian project. In addition to SODAR-derived vertical profiles of wind speed and direction, a suite of complementary measurements at the observatory was available. ABL measurements were used for verification of the regional climate model COSMO-CLM (CCLM) with a 5 km resolution for 2017–2020. The CCLM was run with nesting in ERA5 data in a forecast mode for the measurement period. SODAR measurements were mostly limited to wind speeds <12 m/s since the signal was often lost for higher winds. The SODAR data showed a topographical channeling effect for the wind field in the lowest 100 m and some low-level jets (LLJs). The verification of the CCLM with near-surface data of the observatory showed good agreement for the wind and a negative bias for the 2 m temperature. The comparison with SODAR data showed a positive bias for the wind speed of about 1 m/s below 100 m, which increased to 1.5 m/s for higher levels. In contrast to the SODAR data, the CCLM data showed the frequent presence of LLJs associated with the topographic channeling in Shokalsky Strait. Although SODAR wind profiles are limited in range and have a lot of gaps, they represent a valuable data set for model verification. However, a full picture of the ABL structure and the climatology of channeling events could be obtained only with the model data. The climatological evaluation showed that the wind field at Cape Baranova was not only influenced by direct topographic channeling under conditions of southerly winds through the Shokalsky Strait but also by channeling through a mountain gap for westerly winds. LLJs were detected in 37% of all profiles and most LLJs were associated with channeling, particularly LLJs with a jet speed ≥ 15 m/s (which were 29% of all LLJs). The analysis of the simulated 10 m wind field showed that the 99%-tile of the wind speed reached 18 m/s and clearly showed a dipole structure of channeled wind at both exits of Shokalsky Strait. The climatology of channeling events showed that this dipole structure was caused by the frequent occurrence of channeling at both exits. Channeling events lasting at least 12 h occurred on about 62 days per year at both exits of Shokalsky Strait.
The parameterization of the boundary layer is a challenge for regional climate models of the Arctic. In particular, the stable boundary layer (SBL) over Greenland, being the main driver for substantial katabatic winds over the slopes, is simulated differently by different regional climate models or using different parameterizations of the same model. However, verification data sets with high-resolution profiles of the katabatic wind are rare. In the present paper, detailed aircraft measurements of profiles in the katabatic wind and automatic weather station data during the experiment KABEG (Katabatic wind and boundary-layer front experiment around Greenland) in April and May 1997 are used for the verification of the regional climate model COSMO-CLM (CCLM) nested in ERA-Interim reanalyses. CCLM is used in a forecast mode for the whole Arctic with 15 km resolution and is run in the standard configuration of SBL parameterization and with modified SBL parameterization. In the modified version, turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) production and the transfer coefficients for turbulent fluxes in the SBL are reduced, leading to higher stability of the SBL. This leads to a more realistic representation of the daily temperature cycle and of the SBL structure in terms of temperature and wind profiles for the lowest 200 m.
The present study covers the period from the late-ninth to the early-sixteenth centuries. Within this period, the late-thirteenth to mid-fourteenth centuries marked the decisive turning point, shaped more by attitudes and actions among the Christian majority than among Jewish agents. Our findings indicate an intensification of anti-Jewish tendencies, rooted in religious developments in Western Christendom. According to circumstances, however, these tendencies had a very varying impact across time and space. The frequent religious and ecclesiastical reform movements of Western Europe offer cases in point. In the 'German' Empire north of the Alps the monastic reforms of Saint Maximin and Gorze were by no means confined to the realm of monasticism; they were essential for shaping the historical circumstances in which the foundations of Ashkenazic Judaism were laid in the tenth and early-eleventh centuries. The concept of 'honor' was used by leading ecclesiastics such as bishop Rudiger of Speyer in 1084 to justify the settlement of Jews, but also by civic authorities such as those of Regensburg later on. It is significant for the long-term tendency, therefore, that the late-medieval expulsions from cities like Trier, Cologne, and Regensburg were eventually also legitimized by reference to the idea of honor.
Diese Arbeit gibt einen Überblick über Open Source-basierte Bibliotheksverwaltungssysteme (Stand Mai 2005). Deren Entwicklungsstand und Leistungsfähigkeit wurden untersucht und bewertet. Ein wichtiger Vergleichspunkt sind die Kosten bei einem Einsatz kommerzieller Systeme (Vergleichsmaßstab ALEPH 500) und einem Einsatz von Open Source-basierten Systemen und deren Weiterentwicklung.
Many people are aware of the negative consequences of plastic use on the environment. Nevertheless, they use plastic due to its functionality. In the present paper, we hypothesized that this leads to the experience of ambivalence—the simultaneous existence of positive and negative evaluations of plastic. In two studies, we found that participants showed greater ambivalence toward plastic packed food than unpacked food. Moreover, they rated plastic packed food less favorably than unpacked food in response evaluations. In Study 2, we tested whether one-sided (only positive vs. only negative) information interventions could effectively influence ambivalence. Results showed that ambivalence is resistant to (social) influence. Directions for future research were discussed.
Properties Evaluation of Composite Materials Based on Gypsum Plaster and Posidonia Oceanica Fibers
(2023)
Estimating the amount of material without significant losses at the end of hybrid casting is a problem addressed in this study. To minimize manufacturing costs and improve the accuracy of results, a correction factor (CF) was used in the formula to estimate the volume percent of the material in order to reduce material losses during the sample manufacturing stage, allowing for greater confidence between the approved blending plan and the results obtained. In this context, three material mixing schemes of different sizes and shapes (gypsum plaster, sand (0/2), gravel (2/4), and Posidonia oceanica fibers (PO)) were created to verify the efficiency of CF and more precisely study the physico-mechanical effects on the samples. The results show that the use of a CF can reduce mixing loss to almost 0%. The optimal compressive strength of the sample (S1B) with the lowest mixing loss was 7.50 MPa. Under optimal conditions, the addition of PO improves mix volume percent correction (negligible), flexural strength (5.45%), density (18%), and porosity (3.70%) compared with S1B. On the other hand, the addition of PO thermo-chemical treatment by NaOH increases the compressive strength (3.97%) compared with PO due to the removal of impurities on the fiber surface, as shown by scanning electron microscopy. We then determined the optimal mixture ratio (PO divided by a mixture of plaster, sand, and gravel), which equals 0.0321 because Tunisian gypsum contains small amounts of bassanite and calcite, as shown by the X-ray diffraction results.
Addition of Phosphogypsum to Fire-Resistant Plaster Panels:
A Physic–Mechanical Investigation
(2023)
Gypsum (GPS) has great potential for structural fire protection and is increasingly used in construction due to its high-water retention and purity. However, many researchers aim to improve its physical and mechanical properties by adding other organic or inorganic materials such as fibers, recycled GPS, and waste residues. This study used a novel method to add non-natural GPS from factory waste (phosphogypsum (PG)) as a secondary material for GPS. This paper proposes to mix these two materials to properly study the effect of PG on the physico-mechanical properties and fire performance of two Tunisian GPSs (GPS1 and GPS2). PG initially replaced GPS at 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50% weight percentage (mixing plan A). The PGs were then washed with distilled water several times. Two more mixing plans were run when the pH of the PG was equal to 2.4 (mixing plan B), and the pH was equal to 5 (mixing plan C). Finally, a comparative study was conducted on the compressive strength, flexural strength, density, water retention, and mass loss levels after 90 days of drying, before/after incineration of samples at 15, 30, 45, and 60 min. The results show that the mixture of GPS1 and 30% PG (mixing plan B) obtained the highest compressive strength (41.31%) and flexural strength (35.03%) compared to the reference sample. The addition of 10% PG to GPS1 (mixing plan A) improved fire resistance (33.33%) and the mass loss (17.10%) of the samples exposed to flame for 60 min compared to GPS2. Therefore, PG can be considered an excellent insulating material, which can increase physico-mechanical properties and fire resistance time of plaster under certain conditions.
Background: The growing production and use of engineered AgNP in industry and private households make increasing concentrations of AgNP in the environment unavoidable. Although we already know the harmful effects of AgNP on pivotal bacterial driven soil functions, information about the impact of silver nanoparticles (AgNP) on the soil bacterial community structure is rare. Hence, the aim of this study was to reveal the long-term effects of AgNP on major soil bacterial phyla in a loamy soil. The study was conducted as a laboratory incubation experiment over a period of 1 year using a loamy soil and AgNP concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 1 mg AgNP/kg soil. Effects were quantified using the taxon-specific 16S rRNA qPCR.
Results: The short-term exposure of AgNP at environmentally relevant concentration of 0.01 mg AgNP/kg caused significant positive effects on Acidobacteria (44.0%), Actinobacteria (21.1%) and Bacteroidetes (14.6%), whereas beta-Proteobacteria population was minimized by 14.2% relative to the control (p ≤ 0.05). After 1 year of exposure to 0.01 mg AgNP/kg diminished Acidobacteria (p = 0.007), Bacteroidetes (p = 0.005) and beta-Proteobacteria (p = 0.000) by 14.5, 10.1 and 13.9%, respectively. Actino- and alpha-Proteobacteria were statistically unaffected by AgNP treatments after 1-year exposure. Furthermore, a statistically significant regression and correlation analysis between silver toxicity and exposure time confirmed loamy soils as a sink for silver nanoparticles and their concomitant silver ions.
Conclusions: Even very low concentrations of AgNP may cause disadvantages for the autotrophic ammonia oxidation (nitrification), the organic carbon transformation and the chitin degradation in soils by exerting harmful effects on the liable bacterial phyla.
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.
Currently, new business models created in the sharing economy differ considerably and they differ in the formation of trust as well. If and how trust can be created is shown by a comparison of two examples which diverge in their founding philosophy. The chosen example of community-based economy, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA), no longer trusts the capitalist system and therefore distances itself and creates its own environment including a new business model. It is implemented within rather small groups where trust is created by personal relations and face-to-face communication. On the contrary, the example of a platform economy, the accommodation-provider company Airbnb, shows trust in the system and pushes technological innovations through the use of platform applications. It promotes trust and confidence in the progress of technology. For the conceptual analysis, the distinction between personal trust and system trust defined by Niklas Luhmann is adopted. The analysis describes two different modes of trust formation and how they push distrust or improve trust. Grounded on these analyses, assumptions on the process of trust formation within varying models of the sharing economy are formulated as well as a hypothesis about possible developments is introduced for further research.
For grape canopy pixels captured by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) tilt-mounted RedEdge-M multispectral sensor in a sloped vineyard, an in situ Walthall model can be established with purely image-based methods. This was derived from RedEdge-M directional reflectance and a vineyard 3D surface model generated from the same imagery. The model was used to correct the angular effects in the reflectance images to form normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI)orthomosaics of different view angles. The results showed that the effect could be corrected to a certain scope, but not completely. There are three drawbacks that might restrict a successful angular model construction and correction: (1) the observable micro shadow variation on the canopy enabled by the high resolution; (2) the complexity of vine canopies that causes an inconsistency between reflectance and canopy geometry, including effects such as micro shadows and near-infrared (NIR) additive effects; and (3) the resolution limit of a 3D model to represent the accurate real-world optical geometry. The conclusion is that grape canopies might be too inhomogeneous for the tested method to perform the angular correction in high quality.
With the ongoing trend towards deep learning in the remote sensing community, classical pixel based algorithms are often outperformed by convolution based image segmentation algorithms. This performance was mostly validated spatially, by splitting training and validation pixels for a given year. Though generalizing models temporally is potentially more difficult, it has been a recent trend to transfer models from one year to another, and therefore to validate temporally. The study argues that it is always important to check both, in order to generate models that are useful beyond the scope of the training data. It shows that convolutional neural networks have potential to generalize better than pixel based models, since they do not rely on phenological development alone, but can also consider object geometry and texture. The UNET classifier was able to achieve the highest F1 scores, averaging 0.61 in temporal validation samples, and 0.77 in spatial validation samples. The theoretical potential for overfitting geometry and just memorizing the shape of fields that are maize has been shown to be insignificant in practical applications. In conclusion, kernel based convolutions can offer a large contribution in making agricultural classification models more transferable, both to other regions and to other years.
In order to discuss potential sustainability issues of expanding silage maize cultivation in Rhineland-Palatinate, spatially explicit monitoring is necessary. Publicly available statistical records are often not a sufficient basis for extensive research, especially on soil health, where risk factors like erosion and compaction depend on variables that are specific to every site, and hard to generalize for larger administrative aggregates. The focus of this study is to apply established classification algorithms to estimate maize abundance for each independent pixel, while at the same time accounting for their spatial relationship. Therefore, two ways to incorporate spatial autocorrelation of neighboring pixels are combined with three different classification models. The performance of each of these modeling approaches is analyzed and discussed. Finally, one prediction approach is applied to the imagery, and the overall predicted acreage is compared to publicly available data. We were able to show that Support Vector Machine (SVM) classification and Random Forests (RF) were able to distinguish maize pixels reliably, with kappa values well above 0.9 in most cases. The Generalized Linear Model (GLM) performed substantially worse. Furthermore, Regression Kriging (RK) as an approach to integrate spatial autocorrelation into the prediction model is not suitable in use cases with millions of sparsely clustered training pixels. Gaussian Blur is able to improve predictions slightly in these cases, but it is possible that this is only because it smoothes out impurities of the reference data. The overall prediction with RF classification combined with Gaussian Blur performed well, with out of bag error rates of 0.5% in 2009 and 1.3% in 2016. Despite the low error rates, there is a discrepancy between the predicted acreage and the official records, which is 20% in 2009 and 27% in 2016.
Der Aufsatz ist eine Gemeinschaftsarbeit zweier renommierter Gelehrten auf dem Gebiet der christlichen Ikonographie (Gerhardt) und der Goethe-Philologie (Reinhardt). Sie spannt einen weiten Bogen: Von einer Notiz des Italienreisenden Goethe, der 1786 im Dom von Verona seinen ersten Tizian betrachtet und – in Verkennung des tatsächlich dargestellten Motivs – sein Gefallen daran notiert, dass "die Himmelfahrende Maria nicht hinaufwärts sondern nach ihren Freunden niederwärts" blickt; über die mittelalterlichen Tradition der (tatsächlich dargestellten) sogenannten Gürtelspende Marias an den Apostel Thomas und Goethes produktives Missverständnis im Sinne der Weltzugewandtheit der Madonna (als Beispiel einer säkularisierten Wendung eines religiösen Bildthemas); bis hin zur Fernwirkung der Veroneser Madonna in der Mater Gloriosa und ihrem Retterblick in der Schluss-Szene des Faust.
Die exempelhafte Kurzerzählung 'Der Welt Lohn' mit Contemptus Mundi-Thematik (Frau Welt-Motiv) des mittelhochdeutschen Dichters Konrad von Würzburg, entstanden wohl um 1250, war ausweislich ihrer Überlieferung in Handschriften des 13. bis 15. Jahrhunderts außerordentlich beliebt. Die Studie geht der Frage nach, welchem Publikum und welcher Lesehaltung sich dieser Erfolg verdankte.
Erörterung grundsätzlicher Fragen der Textkritik volkssprachlicher mittelalterlicher Literatur an dem äußerst seltenen Fall einer autographen Überlieferung, die insbesondere Anlass gibt, die traditionelle textkritische Voraussetzung eines fehlerfreien Originals im Unterschied zum fehlerbehafteten Archetypus der Überlieferung in Frage zu stellen
Den Begriff 'Fabelwesen' konnte es in der mittelalterlichen Naturkunde nicht geben, weil sie wesentlich von literarischer Tradtion und christlicher Naturdeutung geleitet war, nicht von moderner Naturbeobachtung und empirischer Naturwissenschaft. Der Aufsatz illustriert dies auf ebenso unterhaltsame wie lehrreiche Weise an einer Vielzahl von Beispielen und in einem Durchgang durch zentrale lateinisch-theologische Autoritäten wie volkssprachlichen Äußerungen in Literatur für/von Laien.
Die nachträgliche Ergänzung der mittelhochdeutschen Weltchronik-Handschrift Cgm 5 aus dem Ende des 14. Jahrhunderts um einen Faszikel mit der Exempelerzählung 'Udo von Magdeburg' wird als bewusster eschatologischer Abschluss der Weltchronik interpretiert, wobei der zentrale Inhalt der Erzählung, das Partikulargericht über den sündigen Erzbischof nach seinem Tod, seine Verdammung und grausame Bestrafung, der spätmittelalterlichen Verlagerung des Interesses an den Letzten Dingen vom allgemeinen Jüngsten Gericht auf das Individualgericht unmittelbar nach dem Tod entspricht.
"In dem überaus prächtig illuminierten zweiten Band der Arnsteiner Riesenbibel (London, British Library, Harley Ms. 2799; 547 x 371 mm) ist eine Reihe von (Kreis-) Schemata und Zeichnungen überliefert, die, nach dem Eindruck der Schrift zu urteilen, in unmittelbarer zeitlicher Nachbarschaft zu dem Entstehungsdatum der Amsteiner Bibel selbst ( ca. 1172) noch in den siebziger Jahren des 12. Jahrhunderts entstanden sein könnten. […] Diese Federzeichnungen sind mit äußerster Sorgfalt gezeichnet, ja mit ästhetischer Qualität und alles andere als Fingerübungen oder Blattfüllsel. Dass sie in der Amsteiner Bibel dennoch auf den ersten Blick ein Fremdkörper sind, steht auf einem anderen Blatt. Das Miteinander von Bibelprachthandschrift und schematischen Zeichnungen zu Themen aus dem Bereich der Komputistik, Kosmologie, Astronomie und Universalkartographie ist ungewöhnlich, aufregend und fordert eine Erklärung."
Abbildungen der besprochenen vier Seiten 1r, 241v-243r online im Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts der British Library:
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/ILLUMIN.ASP?Size=mid&IllID=32355
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/ILLUMIN.ASP?Size=mid&IllID=20317
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/ILLUMIN.ASP?Size=mid&IllID=20319
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/ILLUMIN.ASP?Size=mid&IllID=20321
Auf dem Hintergrund der bekannten Überlieferung lateinischer Psalter-Handschriften mit althochdeutschen Übersetzungen von Einzelwörtern oder mit althochdeutschen Interlinearversionen wird die Frage erörtert, wie eine nur aus einem mittelalterlichen Bibliothekskatalog bekannte Psalter-Handschrift Bischof Egberts ausgesehen haben könnte, von der es im Katalog heißt, sie sei teutonice glossatum, deutsch glosssiert.
Anlässlich der Edition des mhd. 'Geiertraktats' (Stürmer 1978), einer heilkundlichen sog. Drogen-Monographie aus dem 13. Jahrhundert mit langanhaltender volkssprachlicher Überlieferung bis in die frühe Neuzeit, werden in diesem weit ausholenden Besprechungsaufsatz unterschiedliche naturkundliche Traditionen des Mittelalters an den beiden Vögeln Geier (Medizin) und Pelikan (christliche Tierallegorese und Ikonographie) vergleichend dargestellt.
Perseus kristallîner schilt
(1976)
Nachweis eines nicht überlieferten Illustrationszyklus zum mittelhochdeutschen 'Rosengarten zu Worms' (einem der beliebtesten Texte der sog. 'aventiurehaften Dietrichepik') anhand von Abschnittsüberschriften in der handschriftlichen Überlieferung, die ursprünglich Bildunterschriften gewesen sein müssen.
Abstract: Thermal infrared (TIR) multi-/hyperspectral and sun-induced fluorescence (SIF) approaches together with classic solar-reflective (visible, near-, and shortwave infrared reflectance (VNIR)/SWIR) hyperspectral remote sensing form the latest state-of-the-art techniques for the detection of crop water stress. Each of these three domains requires dedicated sensor technology currently in place for ground and airborne applications and either have satellite concepts under development (e.g., HySPIRI/SBG (Surface Biology and Geology), Sentinel-8, HiTeSEM in the TIR) or are subject to satellite missions recently launched or scheduled within the next years (i.e., EnMAP and PRISMA (PRecursore IperSpettrale della Missione Applicativa, launched on March 2019) in the VNIR/SWIR, Fluorescence Explorer (FLEX) in the SIF). Identification of plant water stress or drought is of utmost importance to guarantee global water and food supply. Therefore, knowledge of crop water status over large farmland areas bears large potential for optimizing agricultural water use. As plant responses to water stress are numerous and complex, their physiological consequences affect the electromagnetic signal in different spectral domains. This review paper summarizes the importance of water stress-related applications and the plant responses to water stress, followed by a concise review of water-stress detection through remote sensing, focusing on TIR without neglecting the comparison to other spectral domains (i.e., VNIR/SWIR and SIF) and multi-sensor approaches. Current and planned sensors at ground, airborne, and satellite level for the TIR as well as a selection of commonly used indices and approaches for water-stress detection using the main multi-/hyperspectral remote sensing imaging techniques are reviewed. Several important challenges are discussed that occur when using spectral emissivity, temperature-based indices, and physically-based approaches for water-stress detection in the TIR spectral domain. Furthermore, challenges with data processing and the perspectives for future satellite missions in the TIR are critically examined. In conclusion, information from multi-/hyperspectral TIR together with those from VNIR/SWIR and SIF sensors within a multi-sensor approach can provide profound insights to actual plant (water) status and the rationale of physiological and biochemical changes. Synergistic sensor use will open new avenues for scientists to study plant functioning and the response to environmental stress in a wide range of ecosystems.
Because EU water quality policy can result in infrastructure creation or adaptation at the local level across member states, compliance cases are worth examining critically from a sustainable spatial planning perspective. In this study, the 2000 EU Water Framework Directive’s (WFD) reach to local implementation efforts in average towns and cities is shown through the case study of nonconforming household wastewater infrastructure in the German state of Rhineland Palatinate. Seeing wastewater as a socio-technical infrastructure, we ask how the WFD implementation can be understood in the context of local infrastructure development, sustainability, and spatial planning concepts. In particular, this study examines what compliance meant for the centralization or decentralization of local wastewater infrastructure systems—and the sustainability implications for cities
from those choices.
Optimal mental workload plays a key role in driving performance. Thus, driver-assisting systems that automatically adapt to a drivers current mental workload via brain–computer interfacing might greatly contribute to traffic safety. To design economic brain computer interfaces that do not compromise driver comfort, it is necessary to identify brain areas that are most sensitive to mental workload changes. In this study, we used functional near-infrared spectroscopy and subjective ratings to measure mental workload in two virtual driving environments with distinct demands. We found that demanding city environments induced both higher subjective workload ratings as well as higher bilateral middle frontal gyrus activation than less demanding country environments. A further analysis with higher spatial resolution revealed a center of activation in the right anterior dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. The area is highly involved in spatial working memory processing. Thus, a main component of drivers’ mental workload in complex surroundings might stem from the fact that large amounts of spatial information about the course of the road as well as other road users has to constantly be upheld, processed and updated. We propose that the right middle frontal gyrus might be a suitable region for the application of powerful small-area brain computer interfaces.
We examined the long-term relationship of psychosocial risk and health behaviors on clinical events in patients awaiting heart transplantation (HTx). Psychosocial characteristics (e.g., depression), health behaviors (e.g., dietary habits, smoking), medical factors (e.g., creatinine), and demographics (e.g., age, sex) were collected at the time of listing in 318 patients (82% male, mean age = 53 years) enrolled in the Waiting for a New Heart Study. Clinical events were death/delisting due to deterioration, high-urgency status transplantation (HU-HTx), elective transplantation, and delisting due to clinical improvement. Within 7 years of follow-up, 92 patients died or were delisted due to deterioration, 121 received HU-HTx, 43 received elective transplantation, and 39 were delisted due to improvement. Adjusting for demographic and medical characteristics, the results indicated that frequent consumption of healthy foods (i.e., foods high in unsaturated fats) and being physically active increased the likelihood of delisting due improvement, while smoking and depressive symptoms were related to death/delisting due to clinical deterioration while awaiting HTx. In conclusion, psychosocial and behavioral characteristics are clearly associated with clinical outcomes in this population. Interventions that target psychosocial risk, smoking, dietary habits, and physical activity may be beneficial for patients with advanced heart failure waiting for a cardiac transplant.
A lack of ability to inhibit prepotent responses, or more generally a lack of impulse control, is associated with several disorders such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and schizophrenia as well as general damage to the prefrontal cortex. A stop-signal task (SST) is a reliable and established measure of response inhibition. However, using the SST as an objective assessment in diagnostic or research-focused settings places significant stress on participants as the task itself requires concentration and cognitive effort and is not particularly engaging. This can lead to decreased motivation to follow task instructions and poor data quality, which can affect assessment efficacy and might increase drop-out rates. Gamification—the application of game-based elements in nongame settings—has shown to improve engaged attention to a cognitive task, thus increasing participant motivation and data quality.
The benefits of prosocial power motivation in leadership: Action orientation fosters a win-win
(2023)
Power motivation is considered a key component of successful leadership. Based on its dualistic nature, the need for power (nPower) can be expressed in a dominant or a prosocial manner. Whereas dominant motivation is associated with antisocial behaviors, prosocial motivation is characterized by more benevolent actions (e.g., helping, guiding). Prosocial enactment of the power motive has been linked to a wide range of beneficial outcomes, yet less has been investigated what determines a prosocial enactment of the power motive. According to Personality Systems Interactions (PSI) theory, action orientation (i.e., the ability to self-regulate affect) promotes prosocial enactment of the implicit power motive and initial findings within student samples verify this assumption. In the present study, we verified the role of action orientation as an antecedent for prosocial power enactment in a leadership sample (N = 383). Additionally, we found that leaders personally benefited from a prosocial enactment strategy. Results show that action orientation through prosocial power motivation leads to reduced power-related anxiety and, in turn, to greater leader well-being. The integration of motivation and self-regulation research reveals why leaders enact their power motive in a certain way and helps to understand how to establish a win-win situation for both followers and leaders.
Amphibian diversity in the Amazonian floating meadows: a Hanski core-satellite species system
(2021)
The Amazon catchment is the largest river basin on earth, and up to 30% of its waters flow across floodplains. In its open waters, floating plants known as floating meadows abound. They can act as vectors of dispersal for their associated fauna and, therefore, can be important for the spatial structure of communities. Here, we focus on amphibian diversity in the Amazonian floating meadows over large spatial scales. We recorded 50 amphibian species over 57 sites, covering around 7000 km along river courses. Using multi-site generalised dissimilarity modelling of zeta diversity, we tested Hanski's core-satellite hypothesis and identified the existence of two functional groups of species operating under different ecological processes in the floating meadows. ‘Core' species are associated with floating meadows, while ‘satellite' species are associated with adjacent environments, being only occasional or accidental occupants of the floating vegetation. At large scales, amphibian diversity in floating meadows is mostly determined by stochastic (i.e. random/neutral) processes, whereas at regional scales, climate and deterministic (i.e. niche-based) processes are central drivers. Compared with the turnover of ‘core' species, the turnover of ‘satellite' species increases much faster with distances and is also controlled by a wider range of climatic features. Distance is not a limiting factor for ‘core' species, suggesting that they have a stronger dispersal ability even over large distances. This is probably related to the existence of passive long-distance dispersal of individuals along rivers via vegetation rafts. In this sense, Amazonian rivers can facilitate dispersal, and this effect should be stronger for species associated with riverine habitats such as floating meadows.
The microbial enzyme alkaline phosphatase contributes to the removal of organic phosphorus compounds from wastewaters. To cope with regulatory threshold values for permitted maximum phosphor concentrations in treated wastewaters, a high activity of this enzyme in the biological treatment stage, e.g., the activated sludge process, is required. To investigate the reaction dynamics of this enzyme, to analyze substrate selectivities, and to identify potential inhibitors, the determination of enzyme kinetics is necessary. A method based on the application of the synthetic fluorogenic substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate is proven for soils, but not for activated sludges. Here, we adapt this procedure to the latter. The adapted method offers the additional benefit to determine inhibition kinetics. In contrast to conventional photometric assays, no particle removal, e.g., of sludge pellets, is required enabling the analysis of the whole sludge suspension as well as of specific sludge fractions. The high sensitivity of fluorescence detection allows the selection of a wide substrate concentration range for sound modeling of kinetic functions.
- Fluorescence array technique for fast and sensitive analysis of high sample numbers
- No need for particle separation – analysis of the whole (diluted) sludge suspension
- Simultaneous determination of standard and inhibition kinetics
Climate change is expected to cause mountain species to shift their ranges to higher elevations. Due to the decreasing amounts of habitats with increasing elevation, such shifts are likely to increase their extinction risk. Heterogeneous mountain topography, however, may reduce this risk by providing microclimatic conditions that can buffer macroclimatic warming or provide nearby refugia. As aspect strongly influences the local microclimate, we here assess whether shifts from warm south-exposed aspects to cool north-exposed aspects in response to climate change can compensate for an upward shift into cooler elevations.
Background: Increasing exposure to engineered inorganic nanoparticles takes actually place in both terrestric and aquatic ecosystems worldwide. Although we already know harmful effects of AgNP on the soil bacterial community, information about the impact of the factors functionalization, concentration, exposure time, and soil texture on the AgNP effect expression are still rare. Hence, in this study, three soils of different grain size were exposed for up to 90 days to bare and functionalized AgNP in concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 1.00 mg/kg soil dry weight. Effects on soil microbial community were quantified by various biological parameters, including 16S rRNA gene, photometric, and fluorescence analyses.
Results: Multivariate data analysis revealed significant effects of AgNP exposure for all factors and factor combinations investigated. Analysis of individual factors (silver species, concentration, exposure time, soil texture) in the unifactorial ANOVA explained the largest part of the variance compared to the error variance. In depth analysis of factor combinations revealed even better explanation of variance. For the biological parameters assessed in this study, the matching of soil texture and silver species, and the matching of soil texture and exposure time were the two most relevant factor combinations. The factor AgNP concentration contributed to a lower extent to the effect expression compared to silver species, exposure time and physico–chemical composition of soil.
Conclusions: The factors functionalization, concentration, exposure time, and soil texture significantly impacted the effect expression of AgNP on the soil microbial community. Especially long-term exposure scenarios are strongly needed for the reliable environmental impact assessment of AgNP exposure in various soil types.
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 study analyzes the long-term trends (1998–2019) of concentrations of the air pollutants ozone (O3) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) as well as meteorological conditions at forest sites in German midrange mountains to evaluate changes in O3 uptake conditions for trees over time at a plot scale. O3 concentrations did not show significant trends over the course of 22 years, unlike NO2 and NO, whose concentrations decreased significantly since the end of the 1990s. Temporal analyses of meteorological parameters found increasing global radiation at all sites and decreasing precipitation, vapor pressure deficit (VPD), and wind speed at most sites (temperature did not show any trend). A principal component analysis revealed strong correlations between O3 concentrations and global radiation, VPD, and temperature. Examination of the atmospheric water balance, a key parameter for O3 uptake, identified some unusually hot and dry years (2003, 2011, 2018, and 2019). With the help of a soil water model, periods of plant water stress were detected. These periods were often in synchrony with periods of elevated daytime O3 concentrations and usually occurred in mid and late summer, but occasionally also in spring and early summer. This suggests that drought protects forests against O3 uptake and that, in humid years with moderate O3 concentrations, the O3 flux was higher than in dry years with higher O3 concentrations.
Laboratory landslide experiments enable the observation of specific properties of these natural hazards. However, these observations are limited by traditional techniques: frequently used high-speed video analysis and wired sensors (e.g. displacement). These techniques lead to the drawback that either only the surface and 2D profiles can be observed or wires confine the motion behaviour. In contrast, an unconfined observation of the total spatiotemporal dynamics of landslides is needed for an adequate understanding of these natural hazards.
The present study introduces an autonomous and wireless probe to characterize motion features of single clasts within laboratory-scale landslides. The Smartstone probe is based on an inertial measurement unit (IMU) and records acceleration and rotation at a sampling rate of 100 Hz. The recording ranges are ±16 g (accelerometer) and ±2000∘ s−1 (gyroscope). The plastic tube housing is 55 mm long with a diameter of 10 mm. The probe is controlled, and data are read out via active radio frequency identification (active RFID) technology. Due to this technique, the probe works under low-power conditions, enabling the use of small button cell batteries and minimizing its size.
Using the Smartstone probe, the motion of single clasts (gravel size, median particle diameter d50 of 42 mm) within approx. 520 kg of a uniformly graded pebble material was observed in a laboratory experiment. Single pebbles were equipped with probes and placed embedded and superficially in or on the material. In a first analysis step, the data of one pebble are interpreted qualitatively, allowing for the determination of different transport modes, such as translation, rotation and saltation. In a second step, the motion is quantified by means of derived movement characteristics: the analysed pebble moves mainly in the vertical direction during the first motion phase with a maximal vertical velocity of approx. 1.7 m s−1. A strong acceleration peak of approx. 36 m s−2 is interpreted as a pronounced hit and leads to a complex rotational-motion pattern. In a third step, displacement is derived and amounts to approx. 1.0 m in the vertical direction. The deviation compared to laser distance measurements was approx. −10 %. Furthermore, a full 3D spatiotemporal trajectory of the pebble is reconstructed and visualized supporting the interpretations. Finally, it is demonstrated that multiple pebbles can be analysed simultaneously within one experiment. Compared to other observation methods Smartstone probes allow for the quantification of internal movement characteristics and, consequently, a motion sampling in landslide experiments.
Karl May wurde Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts zum Erfolgs- und Volksschriftsteller mit seinem Orient-Zyklus "Durch die Wüste". In Abgrenzung dazu stellt dieser Vortrag einige heute unbekannte Frauen vor, deren Reiseschilderungen sich so abenteuerlich lesen wie die Romane Karl Mays - allerdings mit dem entscheidenden Unterschied, dass ihre Reisen real, und nicht nur in der Phantasie, stattfanden. - Der Aufsatz gibt einen Vortrag der Verfasserin wieder, der an der Hochschule Darmstadt am 28.04.1989 gehalten wurde. rn
Der Vortrag zeigt das Spektrum auf, in dem Frauenreisen als eigenständige Kategorie der Literatur- und Medienwissenschaft etabliert wurde. Ohne den Fokus der Konfrontation mit der orientalischen Lebenswelt und der Exklusion der Männer in bestimmten Lebensbereichen hätte sich diese Form von Reiseberichten nicht etablieren können.
Was ist Reiseliteratur? Mit diesem vagen und historisch divergenten Begriff befasst sich dieser Artikel. Die literarische Dimension trifft, so die These, auf die historische Ankunft der Figur des Touristen und der Ausformung des Reisens als Massenphänomen im 19. Jahrhundert: ein Begriffswandel vom Reisenden zum Tourist
Ausgelotet wird in diesem Aufsatz das Spektrum der ästhetischen und technischen Entwicklung des ältesten Genres, das der Film hervorgebracht hat: der Reisefilm. Schwerpunkt der Analyse ist das Frühe Kino und dessen filmästhetische Besonderheiten. rnNeue experimentelle Formen - wie die "Cartes postales Video" von Robert Cahen und filmkünstlerische Verwandlungen historischer Reisefilme durch die Mailänder Künstler Yervant Gianikian und Angela Ricci Lucchi - greifen zeitgenössisch auf dieses kreative Potential der Frühzeit des Kinos zurück. rn
Der Aufsatz, aus Anlaß der Ausstellung "Film-Ansichten aus der Ferne" im Düsseldorfer Filmmuseum und in dessen Auftrag entstanden, behandelt die Anfänge des Filmtourismus. rn1895 betrat der Film die Bühne der Reisemedien und begann, dem klassischen medialen Repertoire " von der Reisebeschreibung in Wort, Gemälde, Zeichnung bis hin zur Reisephotographie und dem steroskopischen Kaiser-Panorama " Konkurrenz zu machen. rnBesonders erfolgversprechend war jene topographische Bezugsgrösse, die auch schon in den tradierteren Medien massenmediale Quantität garantiert hatte: der "Orient" zwischen Maghreb und Ägypten.
Der Aufsatz erschien in der Zeitschrift "Deutschunterricht" 1994, zu einem Zeitpunkt, als über die Dominanz der visuellen Bilder und die Reizüberflutung durch das Fernsehen, das massenhaft und rastlos konsumierte Medium, allerorten diskutiert wurde. Er setzt sich mit der zentralten These von Neil Postman auseinander, in der Bilder per se als dumm eingestuft wurden, und seziert die Logik der notorischen Fernsehkritiker.
Zur Sache Schätzchen
(2005)
"Triumph der Bilder"
(2004)
Rundfunkmanuskript - gesendet in der Reihe "Reisen damals " vom Norddeutschen Rundfunk. Der Reisebericht von Louise Mühlbach über ihre Reise nach Ägypten, veröffentlicht 1871, ist mittlerweile online nachzulesen unter https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101012484679;view=1up;seq=140. Sprecherin des Beitrages war Evelyn Hamann.
Rezensiert wird das umfangreiche Buch von Matthias Steinle, das die wechselseitige Darstellung der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik in Dokumentarfilmen analysiert. Die Materialauswahl umfasst mehr als 60 Filme, wobei der Begriff von Dokumentarfilm weit gefasst ist und auch Kino-Wochenschauen berücksichtigt werden,
Rezension des 21. Bandes der Gesellschaft für Exilforschung, der sich unter dem Titel "Film und Fotografie" mit der Exilsituation in der NS-Zeit auseinandersetzt. Der Sammelband stellt unbekannte Emigranten-Schicksale aus dem Bereich Film vor, fünf Beiträge befassen sich mit der Fotografie während und nach der NS-Zeit.
Heinz Piontek
(1986)
Der Aufsatz umreißt die Konkurrenz auf kulturpolitischem Gebiet zwischen den beiden deutschen Staaten. Im Zentrum steht das neu erfundene Genre des Indianerfilms, das sich aus DDR-Sicht deutlich von den populären Karl-May-Filmen des Westens absetzen wollte. Leider mußte aus Kostengründen weitgehend auf Abbildungen verzichtet werden.
Wie geht die Medieninstitution Fernsehen mit ihrem Sendematerial um? Und wie kommt es zu der Etablierung von Fernsehsendungen, die für sich in Anspruch nehmen können, Klassiker des deutschen Fernsehens geworden zu sein und damit einen Platz im kollektiven Gedächtnis der Nation beanspruchen? Diesen Fragen geht der Artikel, der als Einleitung zu dem Buch "Fernsehklassiker"(Alfeld: Coppi, 1998 [Aufsätze zu Film und Fernsehen Bd. 61]) verfaßt wurde, nach.
Der Aufsatz ist eine launige Hommage an das Frühe Kino. Er lässt die zeitgenössischen Quellen sprechen, die belegen, wie in den Pionierjahren des Films, vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg, das Ereignis "Kino" wahrgenommen wurde. Erinnert wird somit an einen Abschnitt der Filmgeschichte, der zu unrecht vergessen wurde bzw. ein Schattendasein führt - gemessen am nachfolgenden Schema der Langfilme und der zivilisierten Lichtspieltheater.
Der Hauptmann von Koepenick
(2005)
Im Zentrum dieses Aufsatzes steht der Spielfilm "Lisbon Story" (Deutschland / Portugal 1994/1995) des Filmregisseurs Wim Wenders. Es werden aber auch die früheren Arbeiten wie "Alice in den Städten" (BR Deutschland 1973/1974) und "Im Lauf der Zeit" (BR Deutschland 1975/1976) herangezogen, denn Kinder spielen in Wenders Spielfilmen eine bedeutende Rolle.