66 research outputs found
The RainBO Platform for Enhancing Urban Resilience to Floods: An Ecient Tool for Planning and Emergency Phases
Many urban areas face an increasing flood risk, which includes the risk of flash floods.
Increasing extreme precipitation events will likely lead to greater human and economic losses unless
reliable and efficient early warning systems (EWS) along with other adaptation actions are put in place
in urban areas. The challenge is in the integration and analysis in time and space of the environmental,
meteorological, and territorial data from multiple sources needed to build up EWS able to provide
efficient contribution to increase the resilience of vulnerable and exposed urban communities to
flooding. Efficient EWS contribute to the preparedness phase of the disaster cycle but could also be
relevant in the planning of the emergency phase. The RainBO Life project addressed this matter,
focusing on the improvement of knowledge, methods, and tools for the monitoring and forecast of
extreme precipitation events and the assessment of the associated flood risk for small and medium
watercourses in urban areas. To put this into practice, RainBO developed a webGIS platform, which
contributes to the “planning” of the management of river flood events through the use of detailed data
and flood risk/vulnerability maps, and the “event management” with real-time monitoring/forecast
of the events through the collection of observed data from real sensors, estimated/forecasted data
from hydrologic models as well as qualitative data collected through a crowdsourcing app
An Agent Based Tool to Support Tactical Dialogues in Industrial Enterprise Networks
The globalization of competition has entailed that organizations of developed countries have toface a new kind of competitor with low labour costs, and often-advantageous exchange rates (resulting infavorable export selling prices). In such a state of affairs, innovation and organizational flexibility are
becoming fundamental levers to enable enterprises to increase their competitiveness. Consequently, the need arises for a formalized methodology that enables organizational flexibility and capacity of performing innovation. These findings originate from the analysis of a case study which highlighted that enterprise
networks can enable organizational flexibility, and defined the formalization of the VDO concept \u2013 Virtual Development Office \u2013 a network organizational model based on an independent subject that has the role of enabling innovation in a collaborative environment to reach world class manufacturing capabilities. A multiagent system based on architecture is proposed to model and support tactical dialogues inside the network.
The VDO has been modeled as a supervisor and coordinator agent able to perform a selection process in order
to create the best coalition for managing emerging business opportunities. The context analyzed in this research assumes a virtual market place where enterprises, represented by agents, can \u201emeet each other\u201f and cooperate in order to achieve a common business goal given through collaborating opportunities
VALIDATION OF DEVELOPMENT MODELS FOR WINTER CEREALS AND MAIZE WITH INDEPENDENT AGROPHENOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS IN THE BBCH SCALE
Abstract
Phenological observations of four cereals (soft and durum wheat, barley and maize), carried out with the BBCH centesimal
scale for three to four years in Cadriano, Italy, were compared with the numerical output of independently developed and
calibrated phenological models taken from an operational agrometeorological software. The comparison produced rather
stable and satisfactory results and so it was used to produce empirical translation functions from the model scale to the
more widely used BBCH scale
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