581 research outputs found
A Survey on Users' Perspectives to Functionalities of Web-Based Construction Collaboration Extranets
Construction collaboration extranets (CCEs) provide various functionalities depending on the vendors' origins, history, experiences, and financial status. Previous research has listed and described the functionalities that extranet systems can be capable of providing. However, no publication was found so far to systematically analyze users' perspectives to the provided functionalities. This article is to bridge this gap through a questionnaire survey to the users. It aims at examining user's attitude to functionalities of CCEs. The result may be useful to information system vendors, end-users and researchers involved in CCEs development and implementation
Urban greenery and mental wellbeing in adults: Cross-sectional mediation analyses on multiple pathways across different greenery measures
Multiple mechanisms have been proposed to explain how greenery enhances their
mental wellbeing. Mediation studies, however, focus on a limited number of
mechanisms and rely on remotely sensed greenery measures, which do not
accurately capture how neighborhood greenery is perceived on the ground. To
examine: 1) how streetscape and remote sensing-based greenery affect people's
mental wellbeing in Guangzhou, China; 2) whether and, if so, to what extent the
associations are mediated by physical activity, stress, air quality and noise,
and social cohesion; and 3) whether differences in the mediation across the
streetscape greenery and NDVI exposure metrics occurred. Mental wellbeing was
quantified by the WHO-5 wellbeing index. Greenery measures were extracted at
the neighborhood level: 1) streetscape greenery from street view data via a
convolutional neural network, and 2) the NDVI remote sensing images. Single and
multiple mediation analyses with multilevel regressions were conducted.
Streetscape and NDVI greenery were weakly and positively, but not
significantly, correlated. Our regression results revealed that streetscape
greenery and NDVI were, individually and jointly, positively associated with
mental wellbeing. Significant partial mediators for the streetscape greenery
were physical activity, stress, air quality and noise, and social cohesion;
together, they explained 62% of the association. For NDVI, only physical
activity and social cohesion were significant partial mediators, accounting for
22% of the association. Mental health and wellbeing and both streetscape and
satellite-derived greenery seem to be both directly correlated and indirectly
mediated. Our findings signify that both greenery measures capture different
aspects of natural environments and may contribute to people's wellbeing by
means of different mechanisms
Constraining sources of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays and shear acceleration mechanism of particles in relativistic jets
Ultrahigh energy cosmic rays are extreme energetic particles from outer space. They have aroused great interest among scientists for more than fifty years. However, due to the rarity of the events and complexity of the process of their propagation to Earth, they are still one of the biggest puzzles in modern high energy astrophysics. This dissertation is dedicated to study the origin of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays from various aspects. Firstly, we discuss a possible link between recently discovered sub–PeV/PeV neutrinos and ultrahigh energy cosmic rays. If these two kinds of particles share the same origin, the observation of neutrinos may provide additional and non-trivial constraints on the sources of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays. Secondly, we jointly employ the chemical composition measurement and the arrival directions of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays, and find a robust upper limit for distances of sources of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays above ∼ 55EeV, as well as a lower limit for their metallicities. Finally, we study the shear acceleration mechanism in relativistic jets, which is a more efficient mechanism for the acceleration of higher energy particle. We compute the acceleration efficiency and the time-dependent particle energy spectrum, and explore the feature of synchrotron radiation of the accelerated particles. The possible realizations of this mechanism for acceleration of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays in different astrophysical environments is also discussed
Response of carbon isotopic compositions of Early-Middle Permian coals in North China to palaeo-climate change
To investigate the magnitude to which the carbon isotopic ratio (delta C-13) varies in coals in response to their contemporary terrestrial environment, the Early-Middle Permian Huainan coals (including coals from the Shanxi Formation, Lower Shihezi Formation and Upper Shihezi Formation) in North China were systematically sampled. A 2.5 parts per thousand variation range of delta C-13 values (-25.15%o to -22.65%o) was observed in Huainan coals, with an average value of -24.06 parts per thousand. As coal diagenesis exerts little influence on carbon isotope fractionation, delta C-13 values in coals were mainly imparted by those of coal -forming flora assemblages which were linked to the contemporary climate. The delta C-13 values in coals from the Shanxi and Lower Shihezi Formations are variable, reflecting unstable climatic oscillations. Heavy carbon isotope is enriched in coals of the Capitanian Upper Shihezi Formation, implying a shift to high positive delta C-13 values of coeval atmospheric CO2. Notably, our study provides evidence of the Kamura event in the terrestrial environment for the first time
Chemical speciation and risk assessment of cadmium in soils around atypical coal mining area of China
The distribution characteristics of Cadmium (Cd) fractions in soils around a coal mining area of Huaibei coalfield were investigated, with the aim to assess its ecological risk. The total Cd concentrations in soils ranged from 0.05 to 0.87 mg/kg. The high percentage of phyto-available Cd (58%) when redox or base-acid equilibria changed. Soil pH was found to be a crucial factor affecting soil Cd fraction, and carbonate-bound Cd can be significantly affected by both organic matter and pH of soils. The static ecological evaluation models, including potential ecological risk index (PERI), geo-accumulation index (Igeo) and risk assessment code (RAC), revealed a moderate soil Cd contamination and prensented high Cd exposure risk in studied soils. However, the dynamic evaluation of Cd risk, determined using a delayed geochemical hazard (DGH), suggested that our studied soils can be classified as median-risk with a mean probability of 24.79% for Cd DGH. These results provide a better assessment for the risk development of Cd contamination in coal mining areas
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