116 research outputs found

    Supporting collaboration with non-literate forest communities in the congo-basin

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    Providing indigenous communities with ICT tools and methods for collecting and sharing their Traditional Ecological Knowledge is increasingly recognised as an avenue for improvements in environmental governance and socialenvironmental justice. In this paper we show how we carried out a usability engineering effort in the “wild” context of the Congolese rainforest – designing, evaluating and iteratively improving novel collaborative data collection interfaces for non-literate forest communities that can subsequently be used to facilitate communication and information sharing with logging companies. Working in this context necessitates adopting a thoroughly flexible approach to the design, development, introduction and evaluation of technology and the modes of interaction it offers. We show that we have improved participant accuracy from about 75% towards 95% and provide a set of guidelines for designing and evaluating ICT solutions in “extreme circumstances” – which hold lessons for CSCW, HCI and ICT4D practitioners dealing with similar challenges

    CiĂȘncia CidadĂŁ Extrema: Uma Nova Abordagem

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    A conservação da biodiversidade Ă© uma questĂŁo que tem preocupado o mundo todo. Nas Ășltimas dĂ©cadas, centenas de ĂĄreas protegidas foram criadas para assegurar a preservação da biodiversidade no planeta. Um grande nĂșmero de ĂĄreas protegidas Ă© habitado por comunidades que dependem do uso de seus recursos naturais nĂŁo apenas para a sua sobrevivĂȘncia, mas tambĂ©m para a sua reprodução social e cultural. Em muitos casos, as populaçÔes locais tĂȘm sido diretamente responsĂĄveis pela gestĂŁo sustentĂĄvel desses complexos ecossistemas por sĂ©culos. Iniciativas de CiĂȘncia CidadĂŁ – entendida como a participação de amadores, voluntĂĄrios e entusiastas em projetos cientĂ­ficos – tĂȘm envolvido o pĂșblico na produção cientĂ­fica e em projetos de monitoramento da biodiversidade, mas tĂȘm limitado essa participação Ă  coleta de dados, e tĂȘm normalmente ocorrido em locais afluentes, excluindo as populaçÔes nĂŁo alfabetizadas ou letradas e que vivem em ĂĄreas remotas. Povos e comunidades tradicionais conhecem os aspectos ambientais das ĂĄreas por eles habitadas, o que pode ser benĂ©fico para a gestĂŁo e o monitoramento bem-sucedidos da biodiversidade. Portanto, ao se tratar do monitoramento e da proteção da biodiversidade em ĂĄreas habitadas por populaçÔes humanas, o seu envolvimento Ă© central e pode conduzir a um cenĂĄrio onde todas as partes envolvidas se beneficiam. Extreme Citizen Science (ExCiteS) Ă© um grupo de pesquisa interdisciplinar criado em 2011, na University College London, com a finalidade de avançar o atual conjunto de prĂĄticas da CiĂȘncia CidadĂŁ. A ideia Ă© permitir que qualquer comunidade, em qualquer lugar do mundo – desde grupos marginalizados que vivem nas periferias de ĂĄreas urbanas atĂ© grupos de caçadores e coletores da floresta amazĂŽnica –, comece um projeto de CiĂȘncia CidadĂŁ para lidar com suas prĂłprias questĂ”es. Este artigo apresenta os diversos aspectos que tornam a CiĂȘncia CidadĂŁ “extrema” no trabalho do grupo ExCiteS, por meio da exposição de suas teorias, mĂ©todos e ferramentas, e dos estudos de caso atuais que envolvem comunidades tradicionais ao redor do mundo. Por fim, ressalta-se a maior preocupação do grupo, que Ă© tornar a participação verdadeiramente efetiva, e sugere-se como iniciativas de monitoramento da biodiversidade podem ser realizadas de maneira colaborativa, trazendo benefĂ­cios a todos os atores envolvidos

    Introducing Sapelli: A mobile data collection platform for non-literate users

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    With this poster we announce the imminent release of Sapelli, a new mobile data collection and sharing platform designed with a particular focus on non-literate and illiterate users

    Taking Participatory Citizen Science to Extremes

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    University College London's Extreme Citizen Science research group (UCL ExCiteS) is experimenting with ways to incorporate the most marginalized communities into participatory citizen science activities through which they can share their indigenous knowledge. The group works with communities at the extremes of the globalized world--both because of nonliteracy and the remote or forbidding environments they inhabit. These groups are the gatekeepers of some key environments on which the future health of the planet depend--from tropical forests to Arctic sea-ice. This article presents the methodologies and tools the group is developing to give these people a voice. This article is part of a special issue on pervasive analytics and citizen science

    Everyday Diplomacy: UKUSA Intelligence Cooperation and Geopolitical Assemblages

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    This article offers an alternative to civilizational thinking in geopolitics and international relations predicated on assemblage theory. Building on literature in political geography and elsewhere about everyday practices that produce state effects, this article theorizes the existence of transnational geopolitical assemblages that incorporate foreign policy apparatuses of multiple states. Everyday material and discursive circulations make up these assemblages, serving as conduits of affect that produce an emergent agency. To demonstrate this claim, I outline a genealogy of the UKUSA alliance, an assemblage of intelligence communities in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. I then trace the circulation of materialities and affects—at the scales of individual subjects, technological systems of mediation, and transnational processes of foreign policy formation. In doing so, I offer a bottom-up process of assemblage that produces the emergent phenomena that proponents of civilizational thinking mistakenly attribute to macroscaled factors, such as culture

    Writing Russia's future: paradigms, drivers, and scenarios

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    The development of prediction and forecasting in the social sciences over the past century and more is closely linked with developments in Russia. The Soviet collapse undermined confidence in predictive capabilities, and scenario planning emerged as the dominant future-oriented methodology in area studies, including the study of Russia. Scenarists anticipate multiple futures rather than predicting one. The approach is too rarely critiqued. Building on an account of Russia-related forecasting in the twentieth century, analysis of two decades of scenarios reveals uniform accounts which downplay the insights of experts and of social science theory alike

    Outcomes from elective colorectal cancer surgery during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic

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    This study aimed to describe the change in surgical practice and the impact of SARS-CoV-2 on mortality after surgical resection of colorectal cancer during the initial phases of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic

    Effect of salinity on natural community and production of <i>Litopenaeus vannamei</i> (Boone), within experimental zero-water exchange culture systems

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    Recent efforts have been made to culture marine shrimp in systems operating under low or zero-water exchange and with decreased water salinity. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of various salinity levels on qualitative and quantitative characteristics of the natural community and, more particularly, ciliated protozoa, and compare this information with shrimp growth and survival. Tanks with 9parts per thousand salinity were characterized by a higher pH, but also by a significantly higher concentration of chlorophyll a (Chl a ) per weight of suspended matter (1.93+/-0.72 mug Chl a/mg TSS) than tanks with 18parts per thousand (1.29+/-0.68 mug Chl a/mg TSS) or 36parts per thousand (1.37+/-0.61 mug Chl a/mg TSS) salinity. Concentrations of ciliates (max 6000 cells mL-1) showed considerable fluctuations over the sampling period, reflecting the impact of water salinity, dynamic interactions between ciliates and their diverse roles within the shrimp production system. There was no significant difference between survival rates of shrimp reared at 9parts per thousand, 18parts per thousand or 36parts per thousand, but decreasing salinity from 36parts per thousand to 9parts per thousand led to a significant decrease in final shrimp body weight (from 13.40+/-0.26 g to 10.23+/-2.72 g). Future work should address the potential of ciliates as an indicator of aquaculture water quality, as is currently being done in the wastewater industry, and the contribution of ciliates as food sources
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