69 research outputs found

    The Iray Light Transport Simulation and Rendering System

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    While ray tracing has become increasingly common and path tracing is well understood by now, a major challenge lies in crafting an easy-to-use and efficient system implementing these technologies. Following a purely physically-based paradigm while still allowing for artistic workflows, the Iray light transport simulation and rendering system allows for rendering complex scenes by the push of a button and thus makes accurate light transport simulation widely available. In this document we discuss the challenges and implementation choices that follow from our primary design decisions, demonstrating that such a rendering system can be made a practical, scalable, and efficient real-world application that has been adopted by various companies across many fields and is in use by many industry professionals today

    Referenzierung - eine Möglichkeit zur Korrektur des Laborbias bei der Bodendauerbeobachtung am Beispiel der Nationalen Bodenbeobachtung Schweiz (NABO)

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    In der Nationalen Boden¬be¬ob¬ach¬tung der Schweiz wird seit Beginn Mitte der 1980-er Jahre für die Schwermetallanalytik ein Re-fe¬ren¬zie¬rungs¬system zur Korrektur des Labor¬bias angewendet. Dieses Vorgehen ist wesentlich aufwän¬diger als die Ver-wen¬dung von Standardproben zur Korrektur des Laborbias und es stellte sich die Fra¬ge, ob dieser Mehrauf¬wand gerecht¬fer¬tigt ist. Zur Be¬antwortung wurden 15 Jahre nach Beginn der Zeitreihen sämt¬liche Ar¬chiv¬pro¬ben erneut aufgeschlossen und zu¬sam¬men mit den Proben aus der ak¬tu¬ellen Er¬he¬bung erneut analysiert. Damit steht ein Datensatz zur Verfügung, der es er¬laubt, verschiedenste Frage¬stel¬lun¬gen im Zu-sammenhang mit der Re¬pro¬du¬zier¬bar¬keit und Korrektheit von Zeit¬rei¬hen in der Bo-dendauerbeobachtung zu über¬prüfen. So kann gezeigt werden, dass das Ana¬ly-tik¬labor im Verlaufe der Zeit besser wurde, die zufällige Variabilität wurde stets ge¬rin-ger. Der Verlauf der zeitgleich gemessenen Wer¬te stimmt mit dem Verlauf der re¬fe¬ren-zierten Werte überein und bestätigt damit die Korrektheit. Die Referenzierung elimi-niert den Labor¬effekt weitgehend. Die Er-geb¬nisse zeigen, dass sich das Prin¬zip der Re¬ferenzierung in der Praxis be¬währt. Ohne Referenzierung kann der effektive Ver¬lauf der Gehalte über die Zeit nicht korrekt abgebildet werden. Dies kann im Ein¬zelfall zu nicht gerechtfertigten Mass-nah¬men durch die Vollzugsbehörden füh-ren

    Geochemical Soil Atlas of Switzerland - Distribution of Toxic Elements

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    Chemical elements such as copper and molybdenum are essential for animal and human health but may become toxic at elevated concentrations depending on the exposure and intake rate. Other elements such as mercury pose a threat to human health at already low concentrations. The soil acts as the main source of these elements for plant uptake and is thus driving accumulation along the food chain. However, in Switzerland, no nationwide information on elemental distributions in soils has existed up to now. The geochemical soil atlas of Switzerland will fill this gap by presenting the concentration ranges and the spatial distribution of 20 elements in the topsoil. In this summary, we present the methodological approaches and some main findings of the atlas with a focus on toxic elements as well as elements that can be or are toxic at higher concentrations

    Combined STN/SNr-DBS for the treatment of refractory gait disturbances in Parkinson's disease: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Severe gait disturbances in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) are observed in up to 80% of all patients in advanced disease stages with important impact on quality of life. There is an unmet need for further symptomatic therapeutic strategies, particularly as gait disturbances generally respond unfavourably to dopaminergic medication and conventional deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in advanced disease stages. Recent pathophysiological research pointed to nigro-pontine networks entrained to locomotor integration. Stimulation of the pedunculopontine nucleus is currently under investigation, however, hitherto remains controversial. The substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) - entrained into integrative locomotor networks - is pathologically overactive in PD. High-frequent stimulation of the substantia nigra pars reticulata preferentially modulated axial symptoms and therefore is suggested as a novel therapeutic candidate target for neuromodulation of refractory gait disturbances in PD.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>12 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease and refractory gait disturbances under best individual subthalamic nucleus stimulation and dopaminergic medication will be enroled into this double-blind 2 × 2 cross-over clinical trial. The treatment consists of two different stimulation settings using <it>(i) </it>conventional stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus [STNmono] and <it>(ii) </it>combined stimulation of distant electrode contacts located in the subthalamic nucleus and caudal border zone of STN and substantia nigra pars reticulata [STN+SNr]. The primary outcome measure is the change of the cumulative 'axial score' (UPDRS II items '13-15' and UPRDS III items '27-31') at three weeks of constant stimulation in either condition. Secondary outcome measures include specific scores on freezing of gait, balance function, quality of life, non-motor symptoms, and neuropsychiatric symptoms. The aim of the present trial is to investigate the efficacy and safety of a three week constant combined stimulation on [STN+SNr] compared to [STNmono]. The results will clarify, whether stimulation on nigral contacts additional to subthalamic stimulation will improve therapeutic response of otherwise refractory gait disturbances in PD.</p> <p>Trial registration</p> <p>The trial was registered with the clinical trials register of <url>http://www.clinicaltrials.gov</url> (<a href="http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01355835">NCT01355835</a>)</p

    Pesticides in Agricultural Soils: Major Findings from Various Monitoring Campaigns in Switzerland

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    Synthetic pesticides are widely applied in modern agriculture, where they are used against diseases, pests, and weeds to secure crop yield and quality. However, their intensive application has led to widespread contamination of the environment, including soils. Due to their inherent toxicity, they might pose a risk to soil health by causing harm to non-target organisms and disrupting ecosystem services in both agricultural and other exposed soils. Following the Swiss National Action Plan on the reduction of pesticide risks, Agroscope has conducted several soil monitoring studies that are briefly presented here. All of them resort to different multi-residue trace analytical approaches to simultaneously quantify up to about 150 modern pesticides by either accelerated solvent, or Quick, Easy, Cheap, Efficient, Rugged, Safe (QuEChERS) extraction, followed by separation and detection with liquid chromatography-triple quadrupole mass spectrometry. While partly still in progress, our investigations led to the following major findings this far: Multiple pesticides are commonly present in soils, with individual concentrations in agricultural soils often reaching up to a few tens of µg/kg. Pesticide occurrence and concentrations in agricultural soils primarily depend on land use, land use history and cultivated crops. Pesticides can prevail much longer than predicted by their half-lives, and were found in soils even decades after conversion from conventional to organic farming. Corresponding residual fractions can be in the order of a few percent of the originally applied amounts. We further found negative associations of pesticide residues with the abundance of beneficial soil life, underpinning their potential risk to the fertility of agricultural soils. Traces of pesticides are also detected in soils to which they were never applied, indicating contamination, e.g., via spray drift or atmospheric deposition. These results confirm the general notion of both scientists and legislators that prospective risk assessments (RA; as executed during registration and use authorization) should be confirmed and adjusted by retrospective RA (e.g., by environmental monitoring studies of currently used compounds) to jointly lead to an overall reduced environmental risk of pesticides

    Widespread Occurrence of Pesticides in Organically Managed Agricultural Soils—the Ghost of a Conventional Agricultural Past?

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    Pesticides are applied in large quantities to agroecosystems worldwide. To date, few studies assessed the occurrence of pesticides in organically managed agricultural soils, and it is unresolved whether these pesticide residues affect soil life. We screened 100 fields under organic and conventional management with an analytical method containing 46 pesticides (16 herbicides, 8 herbicide transformation products, 17 fungicides, seven insecticides). Pesticides were found in all sites, including 40 organic fields. The number of pesticide residues was two times and the concentration nine times higher in conventional compared to organic fields. Pesticide number and concentrations significantly decreased with the duration of organic management. Even after 20 years of organic agriculture, up to 16 different pesticide residues were present. Microbial biomass and specifically the abundance of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, a widespread group of beneficial plant symbionts, were significantly negatively linked to the amount of pesticide residues in soil. This indicates that pesticide residues, in addition to abiotic factors such as pH, are a key factor determining microbial soil life in agroecosystems. This comprehensive study demonstrates that pesticides are a hidden reality in agricultural soils, and our results suggest that they have harmful effects on beneficial soil life
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