82 research outputs found
Social Carrying Capacity of Mass Tourist Sites: Theoretical and Practical Issues about its Measurement
Congestion is an important management problem at mass tourist sites. This essay focuses on the social carrying capacity (SCC) of a tourist site as indicator of residents’ and visitors’ perception of crowding, intended as the maximum number of visitors (MNV) tolerated. In case of conflict between the residents’ MNV tolerated and the visitors’ MNV tolerated, the policy-maker has to mediate. We consider the case in which the residents’ SCC is lower than the visitors’ SCC, and the site SCC is the result of a compromise between these two aspects of the SCC. This can be measured by making reference to two criteria of choice: the utility maximisation criterion and the voting rule. The use of one method rather than the other depends on the data available about the individual preferences on crowding. Assuming that individual preferences are known, a maximisation model for the computation of the site SCC is conceived. It represents the case in which the residents’ SCC is the limiting factor. The site SCC is intended as the number of visitors which maximises the social welfare function. Because a local policy-maker maximises the welfare of residents, in this model visitors are represented by those residents whose welfare wholly depends on the tourism sector, while the social costs due to crowding are borne by those residents who are partially or totally independent from tourism. Nevertheless, in practice, the individual preferences about crowding are not always known. In this case, the MNV tolerated can be computed by applying the majority voting rule. It is shown that, under certain conditions, the optimum number of visitors, obtained through a maximisation model, is equal to the MNV tolerated by the majority of voters.Sustainable tourism development, Tourism carrying capacity, Social carrying capacity, Maximisation criterion, Majority voting rule, Overcrowding, Mass tourist site
On the additional boundary condition of wind-driven ocean models on the eastern coast
In the homogeneous model of the wind-driven ocean circulation, the dynamics of the basin interior is basically governed by the Sverdrup balance and the related no mass-flux condition on the eastern boundary of the basin, which we assume to be square for conceptual simplicity. In the presence of lateral diffusion of relative
vorticity, the additional condition on the eastern boundary (like the conditions on the other boundaries) is not demanded on physical grounds but it is arbitrary to a large extent. Hence, certain choices of such boundary condition can produce overall solutions which are “far” from that of Sverdrup in the eastern part of the domain, without any physical reason. In the present note we show that this discrepancy can be strongly reduced if the adopted additional boundary condition has the same form as that implicitly satisfied by the Sverdrup solution. Unlike the common approach, a criterion is thus derived which selects a suitable partial slip boundary condition according to the specific wind-stress field which is taken into account
On the benthic Ekman layer
A review of the standard model of the benthic Ekman layer is presented and reformulated in terms of relative vorticity in place of horizontal current. In this context, the possibility to use mixed boundary conditions to model this layer is explored. The related model solutions can be cast into two main groups: the first is a generalization of the classical Ekman result, while the second one has some
unexpected features which are problematic with respect to the Ekman pumping process. An investigation on the finite amplitude stability via the Lyapunov method shows that solutions belonging to the first group are stable while, in the second group, solutions are unstable. This fact poses a physical constraint to the set of the admissible boundary conditions. Finally, a connection between mass transport and
boundary condition at the sea floor is numerically investigated
Statistical mechanics of the mixed majority-minority game with random external information
We study the asymptotic macroscopic properties of the mixed majority-minority
game, modeling a population in which two types of heterogeneous adaptive
agents, namely ``fundamentalists'' driven by differentiation and
``trend-followers'' driven by imitation, interact. The presence of a fraction f
of trend-followers is shown to induce (a) a significant loss of informational
efficiency with respect to a pure minority game (in particular, an efficient,
unpredictable phase exists only for f<1/2), and (b) a catastrophic increase of
global fluctuations for f>1/2. We solve the model by means of an approximate
static (replica) theory and by a direct dynamical (generating functional)
technique. The two approaches coincide and match numerical results
convincingly.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Structure-preserving desynchronization of minority games
Perfect synchronicity in -player games is a useful theoretical dream, but
communication delays are inevitable and may result in asynchronous
interactions. Some systems such as financial markets are asynchronous by
design, and yet most theoretical models assume perfectly synchronized actions.
We propose a general method to transform standard models of adaptive agents
into asynchronous systems while preserving their global structure under some
conditions. Using the Minority Game as an example, we find that the phase and
fluctuations structure of the standard game subsists even in maximally
asynchronous deterministic case, but that it disappears if too much
stochasticity is added to the temporal structure of interaction. Allowing for
heterogeneous communication speeds and activity patterns gives rise to a new
information ecology that we study in details.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures. New version removed a section and found a new
phase transitio
Overview of the FTU results
Since the 2018 IAEA FEC Conference, FTU operations have been devoted to several experiments covering a large range of topics, from the investigation of the behaviour of a liquid tin limiter to the runaway electrons mitigation and control and to the stabilization of tearing modes by electron cyclotron heating and by pellet injection. Other experiments have involved the spectroscopy of heavy metal ions, the electron density peaking in helium doped plasmas, the electron cyclotron assisted start-up and the electron temperature measurements in high temperature plasmas. The effectiveness of the laser induced breakdown spectroscopy system has been demonstrated and the new capabilities of the runaway electron imaging spectrometry system for in-flight runaways studies have been explored. Finally, a high resolution saddle coil array for MHD analysis and UV and SXR diamond detectors have been successfully tested on different plasma scenarios
Social Carrying Capacity of Mass Tourist Sites: Theoretical and Practical Issues about its Measurement
Congestion is an important management problem at mass tourist sites. This essay focuses on the social carrying capacity (SCC) of a tourist site as indicator of residents and visitors perception of crowding, intended as the maximum number of visitors (MNV) tolerated. In case of conflict between the residents MNV tolerated and the visitors MNV tolerated, the policy-maker has to mediate. We consider the case in which the residents SCC is lower than the visitors SCC, and the site SCC is the result of a compromise between these two aspects of the SCC. This can be measured by making reference to two criteria of choice: the utility maximisation criterion and the voting rule. The use of one method rather than the other depends on the data available about the individual preferences on crowding. Assuming that individual preferences are known, a maximisation model for the computation of the site SCC is conceived. It represents the case in which the residents SCC is the limiting factor. The site SCC is intended as the number of visitors which maximises the social welfare function. Because a local policy-maker maximises the welfare of residents, in this model visitors are represented by those residents whose welfare wholly depends on the tourism sector, while the social costs due to crowding are borne by those residents who are partially or totally independent from tourism. Nevertheless, in practice, the individual preferences about crowding are not always known. In this case, the MNV tolerated can be computed by applying the majority voting rule. It is shown that, under certain conditions, the optimum number of visitors, obtained through a maximisation model, is equal to the MNV tolerated by the majority of voters
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