530 research outputs found

    Modern meat: the next generation of meat from cells

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    Modern Meat is the first textbook on cultivated meat, with contributions from over 100 experts within the cultivated meat community. The Sections of Modern Meat comprise 5 broad categories of cultivated meat: Context, Impact, Science, Society, and World. The 19 chapters of Modern Meat, spread across these 5 sections, provide detailed entries on cultivated meat. They extensively tour a range of topics including the impact of cultivated meat on humans and animals, the bioprocess of cultivated meat production, how cultivated meat may become a food option in Space and on Mars, and how cultivated meat may impact the economy, culture, and tradition of Asia

    Music Production Behaviour Modelling

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    The new millennium has seen an explosion of computational approaches to the study of music production, due in part to the decreasing cost of computation and the increase of digital music production techniques. The rise of digital recording equipment, MIDI, digital audio workstations (DAWs), and software plugins for audio effects led to the digital capture of various processes in music production. This discretization of traditionally analogue methods allowed for the development of intelligent music production, which uses machine learning to numerically characterize and automate portions of the music production process. One algorithm from the field referred to as ``reverse engineering a multitrack mix'' can recover the audio effects processing used to transform a multitrack recording into a mixdown in the absence of information about how the mixdown was achieved. This thesis improves on this method of reverse engineering a mix by leveraging recent advancements in machine learning for audio. Using the differentiable digital signal processing paradigm, greybox modules for gain, panning, equalisation, artificial reverberation, memoryless waveshaping distortion, and dynamic range compression are presented. These modules are then connected in a mixing chain and are optimized to learn the effects used in a given mixdown. Both objective and perceptual metrics are presented to measure the performance of these various modules in isolation and within a full mixing chain. Ultimately a fully differentiable mixing chain is presented that outperforms previously proposed methods to reverse engineer a mix. Directions for future work are proposed to improve characterization of multitrack mixing behaviours

    The Plastics Collection Reference Packet

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    This reference packet is an informational tool to support further research into the history of plastics—whether interested in companies, individuals within the plastics industry\u27s history, historical plastics materials, essays, and more. All content featured within this packet was previously published on the former plastics.syr.edu website as part of a Syracuse University Libraries and Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) partnership established in 2007 with the Plastics Pioneers Association (PPA)—an association of plastics industry professionals interested in preserving the plastics industry\u27s past

    Versprechen als kulturelle Konfigurationen in politischen Kontexten: Interdisziplinäre Zugänge und Perspektiven

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    Versprechen prägen historische und gegenwärtige kulturelle Praktiken, Diskurse und Deutungen. Sie durchdringen unseren Alltag und können besonders in politischen Kontexten eine zentrale Rolle spielen. Der Band setzt sich mit Versprechen aus kulturwissenschaftlicher Perspektive auseinander und fragt danach, ob und wie Versprechen als kulturelles Konzept bzw. wissenschaftliche Kategorie gefasst werden können. Wo also werden Versprechen sicht- und fassbar? Welche Bedeutungen, Funktionen und Folgen sind mit ihnen verbunden? Und wie können sie konzeptualisiert und durch kulturwissenschaftliche Analysen zugänglich gemacht werden? Die in diesem interdisziplinären Band versammelten Beiträge beantworten diese Fragen aus ihrer jeweils eigenen Perspektive und bieten damit Ansatzpunkte für die Analyse eines als zentral erachteten Konzepts alltäglicher Lebenswelten.Promises shape historical and contemporary socio-cultural practices, discourse, and interpretation. They permeate everyday life, and can play a vital role especially in political contexts. This volume deals with promises from the perspective of cultural studies and asks whether and how they can be conceived as a cultural concept or scientific category. Where do promises become visible and tangible? What meanings, functions, and consequences are associated with them? And how can they be conceptualized and made accessible through cultural studies analysis? The contributions collected in this interdisciplinary volume answer these questions, each from its own perspective, and consequently offer starting points for the analysis of what is considered a central aspect of everyday life worlds

    A review of commercialisation mechanisms for carbon dioxide removal

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    The deployment of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) needs to be scaled up to achieve net zero emission pledges. In this paper we survey the policy mechanisms currently in place globally to incentivise CDR, together with an estimate of what different mechanisms are paying per tonne of CDR, and how those costs are currently distributed. Incentive structures are grouped into three structures, market-based, public procurement, and fiscal mechanisms. We find the majority of mechanisms currently in operation are underresourced and pay too little to enable a portfolio of CDR that could support achievement of net zero. The majority of mechanisms are concentrated in market-based and fiscal structures, specifically carbon markets and subsidies. While not primarily motivated by CDR, mechanisms tend to support established afforestation and soil carbon sequestration methods. Mechanisms for geological CDR remain largely underdeveloped relative to the requirements of modelled net zero scenarios. Commercialisation pathways for CDR require suitable policies and markets throughout the projects development cycle. Discussion and investment in CDR has tended to focus on technology development. Our findings suggest that an equal or greater emphasis on policy innovation may be required if future requirements for CDR are to be met. This study can further support research and policy on the identification of incentive gaps and realistic potential for CDR globally

    Collected Papers (on Neutrosophics, Plithogenics, Hypersoft Set, Hypergraphs, and other topics), Volume X

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    This tenth volume of Collected Papers includes 86 papers in English and Spanish languages comprising 972 pages, written between 2014-2022 by the author alone or in collaboration with the following 105 co-authors (alphabetically ordered) from 26 countries: Abu Sufian, Ali Hassan, Ali Safaa Sadiq, Anirudha Ghosh, Assia Bakali, Atiqe Ur Rahman, Laura Bogdan, Willem K.M. Brauers, Erick González Caballero, Fausto Cavallaro, Gavrilă Calefariu, T. Chalapathi, Victor Christianto, Mihaela Colhon, Sergiu Boris Cononovici, Mamoni Dhar, Irfan Deli, Rebeca Escobar-Jara, Alexandru Gal, N. Gandotra, Sudipta Gayen, Vassilis C. Gerogiannis, Noel Batista Hernández, Hongnian Yu, Hongbo Wang, Mihaiela Iliescu, F. Nirmala Irudayam, Sripati Jha, Darjan Karabašević, T. Katican, Bakhtawar Ali Khan, Hina Khan, Volodymyr Krasnoholovets, R. Kiran Kumar, Manoranjan Kumar Singh, Ranjan Kumar, M. Lathamaheswari, Yasar Mahmood, Nivetha Martin, Adrian Mărgean, Octavian Melinte, Mingcong Deng, Marcel Migdalovici, Monika Moga, Sana Moin, Mohamed Abdel-Basset, Mohamed Elhoseny, Rehab Mohamed, Mohamed Talea, Kalyan Mondal, Muhammad Aslam, Muhammad Aslam Malik, Muhammad Ihsan, Muhammad Naveed Jafar, Muhammad Rayees Ahmad, Muhammad Saeed, Muhammad Saqlain, Muhammad Shabir, Mujahid Abbas, Mumtaz Ali, Radu I. Munteanu, Ghulam Murtaza, Munazza Naz, Tahsin Oner, ‪Gabrijela Popović‬‬‬‬‬, Surapati Pramanik, R. Priya, S.P. Priyadharshini, Midha Qayyum, Quang-Thinh Bui, Shazia Rana, Akbara Rezaei, Jesús Estupiñán Ricardo, Rıdvan Sahin, Saeeda Mirvakili, Said Broumi, A. A. Salama, Flavius Aurelian Sârbu, Ganeshsree Selvachandran, Javid Shabbir, Shio Gai Quek, Son Hoang Le, Florentin Smarandache, Dragiša Stanujkić, S. Sudha, Taha Yasin Ozturk, Zaigham Tahir, The Houw Iong, Ayse Topal, Alptekin Ulutaș, Maikel Yelandi Leyva Vázquez, Rizha Vitania, Luige Vlădăreanu, Victor Vlădăreanu, Ștefan Vlăduțescu, J. Vimala, Dan Valeriu Voinea, Adem Yolcu, Yongfei Feng, Abd El-Nasser H. Zaied, Edmundas Kazimieras Zavadskas.‬

    The Paradox of Openness

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    Openness implies bottom-up empowerment and top-down transparency. The Paradox of Openness analyses the tensions encountered when openness is applied to the quest for democracy and markets, freedom and truth, compliance and transparency, and consensus and dissent in progressive Nordic societies.; Readership: All interested in the history and contemporary practices of openness and transparency, and anyone concerned with the Nordic experience of combining the call for openness with consensual political cultures

    The European Pilgrimage Routes for promoting sustainable and quality tourism in rural areas

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    The International Conference the European Pilgrimage Routes for promoting sustainable and quality tourism in rural areas took place December 4 to 6, 2014 in Firenze (Italy) and was organized by the Department of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Systems – University of Florence in collaboration with the Tuscany Region, the Department for Life Quality Studies and Department of Agricultural Sciences – University of Bologna, the Italian Association of Agricultural Engineering and the European Association of the Francigena Way. The Conference involving 150 experts from 18 countries and was divided into five areas of discussion: conservation and evolution of the landscape along the routes; life quality and social impact; tourism and local development; sustainability in the rural areas; tools and methods for building a tourist attraction
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