22 research outputs found

    Navigieren

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    Prof. Dr. Jens Schröter, Christoph Borbach, Max Kanderske und Prof. Dr. Benjamin Beil sind Herausgeber der Reihe. Die Herausgeber*innen der einzelnen Hefte sind renommierte Wissenschaftler*innen aus dem In- und Ausland.Navigieren ist lĂ€ngst kein Unikum professionalisierter Seefahrer:innen mehr, sondern als Smartphone- und Browser-Praktik fester Bestandteil des vernetzten digitalen Alltags. Da Wegfindungen durch On- und Offline-RĂ€ume navigationsspezifische Formen von Medienkompetenz voraussetzen und hervorbringen, fordern sie die Intensivierung der medienkulturwissenschaftlichen BeschĂ€ftigung mit den situierten und technisierten Medienpraktiken der Navigation geradezu heraus. Die Ausgabe nimmt diesen Befund zum Anlass, polyperspektivische ZugĂ€nge zum »Navigieren« vorzustellen. Die körper-, kultur- und medientechnischen Facetten des Navigierens stehen dabei ebenso im Fokus wie ihre historischen Ausgestaltungen, die Arbeit am und im Datenmaterial von Navigationsmedien und die Theoretisierung postdigitaler Sensor-Medien-Kulturen, die dem Umstand Rechnung trĂ€gt, dass es nicht allein Daten, Dinge und Körper sind, die es zu navigieren gilt, sondern zunehmend nicht-menschliche Akteure selbst zielgerichtete Raumdurchquerungen praktizieren. Fehlte es in der (deutschsprachigen) Medienkulturwissenschaft bislang an einer BĂŒndelung heterogener navigationsspezifischer Forschungsarbeiten, gibt diese Ausgabe einen Überblick ĂŒber das Feld, seine Forscher:innen und Fragestellungen. Denn trotz des Spatial Turns in den Humanities und der gegenwĂ€rtigen Konjunktur geomedialer Arbeiten, scheint die synthetisierende Fokussierung auf Medien und Praktiken des Navigierens in historischer, ethnografischer, technischer und theoretischer Perspektive bislang ein Desiderat darzustellen.Navigation is no longer unique to the context of professional seafaring, but has become an integral part of networked digital everyday life enabled through smartphones and web browsers. Indeed, finding one’s way through online and offline spaces increasingly presupposes and produces specific forms of media competence one could call »navigational«. In this, a â€șmedia cultural studiesâ€č perspective on the situated and â€ștechnologizedâ€č media practices of navigation becomes imperative to understanding the contemporary media landscape. Issue 1/22 of Navigationen answers this call by presenting polyperspectival approaches to »navigating«. The contributions discuss the bodily, cultural, and media-technical facets of navigation, as well as its historical forms, the work on and in the data produced by and with navigational media, and the theorization of post-digital â€șsensor media culturesâ€č. In doing so, the issue acknowledges that not only do data, things, and bodies need to be â€șnavigatedâ€č in the context of logistics, but that the increasingly autonomous wayfinding processes of non-human actors change the notion of navigation itself. As (German language) media cultural studies has so far lacked a convincing compilation of heterogeneous approaches to studying navigation, this issue provides an overview of the field, its researchers and questions. Despite the spatial turn in the humanities and a recent surge in geomedia studies, an approach towards the media and practices of navigation that combines historical, ethnographic, technical and theoretical perspectives, has remained a desideratum until now. The issue fills this gap

    Reproductive performance and diving behaviour share a common sea-ice concentration optimum in Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae)

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    This study was financially supported by the following institutions: the WWF-UK through R. Downie, the Japanese Mombukagakusho and the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science, the Zone Atelier Antarctique et Subantarctique –LTER France of the CNRS.The Southern Ocean is currently experiencing major environmental changes, including in sea‐ice cover. Such changes strongly influence ecosystem structure and functioning and affect the survival and reproduction of predators such as seabirds. These effects are likely mediated by reduced availability of food resources. As such, seabirds are reliable eco‐indicators of environmental conditions in the Antarctic region. Here, based on 9 years of sea‐ice data, we found that the breeding success of AdĂ©lie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) reaches a peak at intermediate sea‐ice cover (ca. 20%). We further examined the effects of sea‐ice conditions on the foraging activity of penguins, measured at multiple scales from individual dives to foraging trips. Analysis of temporal organisation of dives, including fractal and bout analyses, revealed an increasingly consistent behaviour during years with extensive sea‐ice cover. The relationship between several dive parameters and sea‐ice cover in the foraging area appears to be quadratic. In years of low and high sea‐ice cover, individuals adjusted their diving effort by generally diving deeper, more frequently and by resting at the surface between dives for shorter periods of time than in years with intermediate sea‐ice cover. Our study therefore suggests that sea‐ice cover is likely to affect the reproductive performance of AdĂ©lie penguins through its effects on foraging behaviour, as breeding success and most diving parameters share a common optimum. Some years, however, deviated from this general trend, suggesting that other factors (e.g. precipitation during the breeding season) might sometimes become preponderant over the sea‐ice effects on breeding and foraging performance. Our study highlights the value of monitoring fitness parameters and individual behaviour concomitantly over the long‐term to better characterize optimal environmental conditions and potential resilience of wildlife. Such an approach is crucial if we want to anticipate the effects of environmental change on Antarctic penguin populations.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Follow the action : understanding the conflicting temporalities of ships, river, authorities and family through distributed ethnography

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    This article analyses the interplay between movement and stasis on Western European inland waterways by looking at four different orderings: navigational, regulatory, market, and intimate. These orderings are ongoing situated practices, which actors carry out in distributed sociomaterial assemblages. This was investigated through ethnographic fieldwork that was not only mobile, but also distributed across sites, both on land and the water. When following different actors, the key is to follow the action through which they are connected. Mobilising and immobilising ships is also achieved from land by control room operators, cargo brokers, family members and non-human actors like radar networks, geo-locative AIS apps, and water level databases. It became clear that often actors need to give market orderings priority and rearrange their position in other orderings accordingly, which results in palpable pressure, manifested in different problems that all concern time. Skippers take risks to be just in time, to find resting time and to mediate asynchronous rhythms of loved ones on land, all the while maintaining critical spatio-temporal separation with riverbed, embankment and other ships. Media play an important role in the assemblages: they keep separate what would otherwise collide and connect to deal with separation.publishe
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