3,335 research outputs found

    Corona: Die Rolle der Stadtplanung fĂŒr die KrisenbewĂ€ltigung am Beispiel Wien

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    Die Auswirkungen von Covid-19 betrafen wie kaum eine Krise der jĂŒngeren Vergangenheit alle Lebensbereiche in drastischer Weise. Auf Grund der schwerwiegenden Gesundheitsfolgen und pandemischen Bedrohung musste ĂŒberdurchschnittlich rasant und einschneidend gehandelt werden. Die Stadtplanung und -entwicklung, als Disziplin mit einem lĂ€ngerfristigen Zeithorizont von mehreren Jahren bis Jahrzehnten, stellte dies vor eine ungewohnte Aufgabe. Dabei lassen die Entwicklungen der vergangenen Jahre vermuten, dass es sich bei Krisen wie der aktuellen wohl nicht um singulĂ€re Ereignisse handelt, sondern um AusprĂ€gungen zunehmend volatiler Rahmenbedingungen, die sich durch bereits jetzt eintretende klimatische oder ökonomische UmwĂ€lzungen tendenziell noch verschĂ€rfen werden. Entsprechend steigt das Interesse der planenden Disziplinen an der Auseinandersetzung mit NotfĂ€llen, Krisen und Katastrophen und zeitnahen Reaktionsmöglichkeiten. Nichtsdestoweniger ist die Stadtplanung und -entwicklung gefordert ihre Kernkompetenz nicht außer Acht zu lassen und auch zukĂŒnftig langfristige und vorausschauende Strategien zu verfolgen. Der vorliegende Text wirft einen Blick auf die Wiener Stadtplanung und Stadtentwicklung. Dabei werden Fragen zu den Auswirkungen durch Covid-19 in den Monaten MĂ€rz bis Juni 2020 in den unterschiedlichen Planungsaspekten, -sektoren und -disziplinen aufgegriffen. Ausgangspunkt ist die Frage welche Bedeutung langfristige, strategische AnsĂ€tze und die kontinuierliche Weiterentwicklung einer robusten Stadtentwicklung in Zeiten von akuten Krisen aufweisen. Es wird weiters beleuchtet, welche bestehendenArgumentationen der Wiener Stadtentwicklung im Zuge der Erfahrungen der letzten Monate gestĂ€rkt oder geschwĂ€cht wurden. Dabei wird auch auf das VerhĂ€ltnis von taktischen Adhoc-Lösungen und langfristigen Strategien eingegangen. Zu Grunde liegend ist das VerstĂ€ndnis, dass jede Entwicklung und VerĂ€nderung in der Stadtplanung ins VerhĂ€ltnis zur globalen Klimakrise und dem Umgang damit gesetzt werden muss

    Modeling drivers of biodiversity change emphasizes the need for multivariate assessments and rescaled targeting for management

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    The current policy and goals aimed to conserve biodiversity and manage biodiversity change are often formulated at the global scale. At smaller scales however, biodiversity change is more nuanced leading to a plethora of trends in different metrics of alpha diversity and temporal turnover. Therefore, large-scale policy targets do not translate easily into local to regional management decisions for biodiversity. Using long-term monitoring data from the Wadden Sea (Southern North Sea), joining structural equation models and general dissimilarity models enabled a better overview of the drivers of biodiversity change. Few commonalities emerged as birds, fish, macroinvertebrates, and phytoplankton differed in their response to certain drivers of change. These differences were additionally dependent upon the biodiversity aspect in question and which environmental data were recorded in each monitoring program. No single biodiversity metric or model sufficed to capture all ongoing change, which requires an explicitly multivariate approaches to biodiversity assessment in local ecosystem management

    Impulse dispersion of aerosols during playing the recorder and evaluation of safety measures

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    Introduction Group musical activities using wind instruments have been restricted during the CoVID19 pandemic due to suspected higher risk of virus transmission. It was presumed that the aerosols exhaled through the tubes while playing would be ejected over larger distances and spread into the room due to jet stream effects. In particular, the soprano recorder is widely used as an instrument in school classes, for beginners of all age groups in their musical education, in the context of leisure activities and in professional concert performances. Understanding the aerosol impulse dispersion characteristics of playing the soprano recorder could assist with the establishment of concepts for safe music-making. Methods Five adult professionally trained soprano recorder players (4 female, 1 male) played four bars of the main theme of L. van Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” in low and in high octaves, as well as with 3 different potential protection devices in the high octave. For comparison they spoke the corresponding text by F. Schiller. Before each task, they inhaled .5 L of vapor from an e-cigarette filled with base liquid. The vapor cloud escaping during speaking or playing was recorded by cameras and its spread was measured as a function of time in the three spatial dimensions. The potential safety devices were rated for practicability with a questionnaire, and their influence on the sound was compared, generating a long-term average spectrum from the audio data. Results When playing in the high octave, at the end of the task the clouds showed a median distance of 1.06 m to the front and .57 m diameter laterally (maxima: x: 1.35 m and y: .97 m). It was found that the clouds’ expansion values in playing the recorder with and without safety measures are mostly lower when compared to the ordinary, raised speaking voice of the same subjects. The safety devices which covered the instrument did not show clear advantages and were rated as unpractical by the subjects. The most effective reduction of the cloud was reached when playing into a suction funnel. Conclusion The aerosol dispersion characteristics of soprano recorders seem comparable to clarinets. The tested safety devices which covered holes of the instrument did not show clear benefits

    Does the Potential for Chaos Constrain the Embryonic Cell-Cycle Oscillator?

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    Although many of the core components of the embryonic cell-cycle network have been elucidated, the question of how embryos achieve robust, synchronous cellular divisions post-fertilization remains unexplored. What are the different schemes that could be implemented by the embryo to achieve synchronization? By extending a cell-cycle model previously developed for embryos of the frog Xenopus laevis to include the spatial dimensions of the embryo, we establish a novel role for the rapid, fertilization-initiated calcium wave that triggers cell-cycle oscillations. Specifically, in our simulations a fast calcium wave results in synchronized cell cycles, while a slow wave results in full-blown spatio-temporal chaos. We show that such chaos would ultimately lead to an unpredictable patchwork of cell divisions across the embryo. Given this potential for chaos, our results indicate a novel design principle whereby the fast calcium-wave trigger following embryo fertilization synchronizes cell divisions

    CRISPR-Cas9 screens in human cells and primary neurons identify modifiers of C9ORF72 dipeptide-repeat-protein toxicity.

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    Hexanucleotide-repeat expansions in the C9ORF72 gene are the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (c9ALS/FTD). The nucleotide-repeat expansions are translated into dipeptide-repeat (DPR) proteins, which are aggregation prone and may contribute to neurodegeneration. We used the CRISPR-Cas9 system to perform genome-wide gene-knockout screens for suppressors and enhancers of C9ORF72 DPR toxicity in human cells. We validated hits by performing secondary CRISPR-Cas9 screens in primary mouse neurons. We uncovered potent modifiers of DPR toxicity whose gene products function in nucleocytoplasmic transport, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), proteasome, RNA-processing pathways, and chromatin modification. One modifier, TMX2, modulated the ER-stress signature elicited by C9ORF72 DPRs in neurons and improved survival of human induced motor neurons from patients with C9ORF72 ALS. Together, our results demonstrate the promise of CRISPR-Cas9 screens in defining mechanisms of neurodegenerative diseases

    The twilight of the Liberal Social Contract? On the Reception of Rawlsian Political Liberalism

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    This chapter discusses the Rawlsian project of public reason, or public justification-based 'political' liberalism, and its reception. After a brief philosophical rather than philological reconstruction of the project, the chapter revolves around a distinction between idealist and realist responses to it. Focusing on political liberalism’s critical reception illuminates an overarching question: was Rawls’s revival of a contractualist approach to liberal legitimacy a fruitful move for liberalism and/or the social contract tradition? The last section contains a largely negative answer to that question. Nonetheless the chapter's conclusion shows that the research programme of political liberalism provided and continues to provide illuminating insights into the limitations of liberal contractualism, especially under conditions of persistent and radical diversity. The programme is, however, less receptive to challenges to do with the relative decline of the power of modern states

    Constitutivism

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    A brief explanation and overview of constitutivism
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