21 research outputs found

    RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE BELIEF PRACTICES AND THE ECOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT WITHIN SOUTHWEST COASTAL FISHING COMMUNITY IN VIETNAM APPROACHING FROM THE THEORY OF CULTURAL ECOLOGY

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    This article aims to examine the relationship between the belief practices and the ecological environment within Southwest coastal fishing communities in Vietnam. The fishermenā€™s religious practices are diverse and adaptable to the coastal environment which significantly impacts their livelihood. Case-study research with observation and in-depth interviews indicate the obvious differences in the coastal environment between An Thuy fishing community (Ba Tri District, Ben Tre Province) and Song Doc fishing community (Tran Van Thoi District, Ca Mau Province) in the Southeast and Southwest of the East Sea respectively. The surveyed differences directly affect religious activities, including the time of festivals, offerings, cuisine, and decorations in the two researched areas. In particular, the research result support the scientific theory defined by Julian Stewart, an anthropologist of cultural ecology

    A SURVEY OF STUDENTSā€™ ABILITY OF IDENTIFYING ERRORS IN WRONG SOLUTIONS FOR THE MATHEMATICAL PROBLEMS RELATED TO THE MONOTONICITY OF FUNCTIONS

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    The monotonicity of a function plays an important role in the general mathematics curriculum in Vietnam, because it is considered as an effective tool for solving mathematical problems involved with the monotonic intervals of functions, their extreme, absolute maximum value and absolute minimum value. Normally, students commit errors in solving these problems because of their complexity and difficulty. In addition, specific characteristics of knowledge also make children make mistakes. The sample consisted of 362 students, and they had the task of identifying errors in false assumptions. From the results of the survey, it was found that when dealing with the monotonicity of the functions, students were still misled.Ā  Article visualizations

    In search of value: The intricate impacts of benefit perception, knowledge, and emotion about climate change on marine protection support

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    Marine and coastal ecosystems are crucial in maintaining human livelihood, facilitating social development, and reducing climate change impacts. Studies have examined how the benefit perception of aquatic ecosystems, knowledge, and emotion about climate change affect peoplesā€™ support for marine protection. However, their interaction effects remain understudied. The current study explores the intricate interaction effect of the benefit perception of aquatic ecosystems, knowledge, and worry about climate change on marine protection support. Bayesian Mindsponge Framework (BMF) analytics was employed on a dataset of 709 stakeholders from 42 countries generated by MaCoBioSā€”a research project funded by the European Commission Horizon 2020. The statistical analysis shows that the impacts of benefit perception of ocean ecosystems, knowledge, and worry about climate change on marine protection support vary due to their interactions. Specifically, when stakeholders perceive ocean ecosystems to have little utility in mitigating climate change, greater climate change knowledge and concern are associated with a higher level of marine protection support. Nevertheless, in the scenarios where stakeholders perceive the benefits of ocean ecosystems, the effect of climate change knowledge becomes conditional on the worry level. If stakeholders are concerned about climate change, those with a greater level of climate change knowledge will associate with a higher level of marine protection support. Otherwise, greater climate change knowledge will result in lower support. These findings highlight emotionā€™s importance in directing climate change knowledgeā€™s effect on marine protection support. Linking peopleā€™s ā€œobjects of careā€ to the consequences of climate change can help improve climate change communication effectiveness

    Optimizing Boiler Efficiency by Data Mining Teciques: A Case Study

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    In a fertilizer plant, the steam boiler is the most important component. In order to keep the plant operating in the effective mode, the boiler efficiency must be observed continuously by several operators. When the trend of the boiler efficiency is going down, they may adjust the controlling parameters of the boiler to increase its efficiency. Since manual operation usually leads to unex-pectedly mistakes and hurts the efficiency of the system, we build an information system that plays the role of the operators in observing the boiler and adjusting the controlling parameters to stabilize the boiler efficiency. In this paper, we first introduce the architecture of the information system. We then present how to apply K-means and Fuzzy C-means algorithms to derive a knowledge base from the historical operational data of the boiler. Next, recurrent fuzzy neural network is employed to build a boiler simulator for evaluating which tuple of input values is the best optimal and then automatically adjusting controlling inputs of the boiler by the optimal val-ues. In order to prove the effectiveness of our system, we deployed it at Phu My Fertilizer Plant equipped with MARCHI boiler having capacity of 76-84 ton/h. We found that our system have improved the boiler efficiency about 0.28-1.12% in average and brought benefit about 57.000 USD/year to the Phu My Fertilizer Plant

    Contradicting effects of subjective economic and cultural values on ocean protection willingness: preliminary evidence of 42 countries

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    Coastal protection is crucial to human development since the ocean has many values associated with the economy, ecosystem, and culture. However, most ocean protecting efforts are currently ineffective due to the burdens of finance, lack of appropriate management, and international cooperation regimes. For aiding bottom-up initiatives for ocean protection support, this study employed the Mindsponge Theory to examine how the publicā€™s perceived economic and cultural values influence their willingness to support actions to protect the ocean. Analyzing the European-Union-Horizon-2020-funded dataset of 709 respondents from 42 countries, we discovered that perceived economic values have negative effects on the tendency of ocean protection supports (i.e., food, transportation, renewable energy, oil and gas, and recreation). In contrast, certain perceived cultural values can help increase the willingness to do so (i.e., mental well-being and sense of identity). However, the effects of perceived cultural values are only moderately reliable. These findings suggest that designing cultural information delivery campaigns can help promote coastal reserve supports, such as fundraisings and preserving the oceans from the community

    Effectiveness of perindopril/amlodipine fixed-dose combination in the treatment of hypertension: a systematic review

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    Background: Uncontrolled blood pressure is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Fixed-dose combination (FDC) therapy offers a promising approach to addressing this challenge by providing a convenient single-tablet solution that enhances the effectiveness of blood pressure control. In our systematic review, we assess the effectiveness of perindopril/amlodipine FDC in managing blood pressure.Methods: We conducted a comprehensive search across four primary electronic databases, namely, PubMed, Virtual Health Library (VHL), Global Health Library (GHL), and Google Scholar, as of 8 February 2022. Additionally, we performed a manual search to find relevant articles. The quality of the selected articles was evaluated using the Study Quality Assessment Tools (SQAT) checklist from the National Institute of Health and the ROB2 tool from Cochrane.Results: Our systematic review included 17 eligible articles. The findings show that the use of perindopril/amlodipine FDC significantly lowers blood pressure and enhances the quality of blood pressure control. Compared to the comparison group, the perindopril/amlodipine combination tablet resulted in a higher rate of blood pressure response and normalization. Importantly, perindopril/amlodipine FDC contributes to improved patient adherence with minimal side effects. However, studies conducted to date have not provided assessments of the cost-effectiveness of perindopril/amlodipine FDC.Conclusion: In summary, our analysis confirms the effectiveness of perindopril/amlodipine FDC in lowering blood pressure, with combination therapy outperforming monotherapy and placebo. Although mild adverse reactions were observed in a small subset of participants, cost-effectiveness assessments for this treatment remain lacking in the literature

    Existence of multiple solutions to elliptic equations satisfying a global eigenvalue-crossing condition

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    We study the multiplicity of solutions to the elliptic equation Deltau+f(x,u)=0Delta u+ f(x,u)=0, under the assumption that f(x,u)/u crosses globally but not pointwise any eigenvalue for every x in a part of the domain, when u varies from āˆ’infty-infty to inftyinfty. Also we relax the conditions on uniform convergence of f(x,s)/s, which are essential in many results on multiplicity for asymptotically linear problems

    Nonlinear versions of Stampacchia and Lax-Milgram theorems and applications to p-Laplace equations

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    Abstract We obtain the nonlinear versions of the Stampacchia theorem and the Lax-Milgram theorem. Our results are stronger than the classical ones even in the linear case. Applying these theorems we get nontrivial solutions of p-Laplace elliptic and pseudo-pLaplace problems

    In search of value: The intricate impacts of benefit perception, knowledge, and emotion about climate change on marine protection support

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    Marine and coastal ecosystems are crucial in maintaining human livelihood, facilitating social development, and reducing climate change impacts. Studies have examined how the benefit perception of aquatic ecosystems, knowledge, and emotion about climate change affect peoplesā€™ support for marine protection. However, their interaction effects remain understudied. The current study explores the intricate interaction effect of the benefit perception of aquatic ecosystems, knowledge, and worry about climate change on marine protection support. Bayesian Mindsponge Framework (BMF) analytics was employed on a dataset of 709 stakeholders from 42 countries generated by MaCoBioSā€”a research project funded by the European Commission Horizon 2020. The statistical analysis shows that the impacts of benefit perception of ocean ecosystems, knowledge, and worry about climate change on marine protection support vary due to their interactions. Specifically, when stakeholders perceive ocean ecosystems to have little utility in mitigating climate change, greater climate change knowledge and concern are associated with a higher level of marine protection support. Nevertheless, in the scenarios where stakeholders perceive the benefits of ocean ecosystems, the effect of climate change knowledge becomes conditional on the worry level. If stakeholders are concerned about climate change, those with a greater level of climate change knowledge will associate with a higher level of marine protection support. Otherwise, greater climate change knowledge will result in lower support. These findings highlight emotionā€™s importance in directing climate change knowledgeā€™s effect on marine protection support. Linking peopleā€™s ā€œobjects of careā€ to the consequences of climate change can help improve climate change communication effectiveness
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