62,051 research outputs found
Interfaces of the Agriculture 4.0
The introduction of information technologies in the environmental field is impacting and changing even a traditional sector like agriculture. Nevertheless, Agriculture 4.0 and data-driven decisions should meet user
needs and expectations. The paper presents a broad theoretical overview, discussing both the strategic role of design applied to Agri-tech and the issue of User Interface and Interaction as enabling tools in the field. In
particular, the paper suggests to rethink the HCD approach, moving on a Human-Decentered Design approach that put together user-technology-environment and the importance of the role of calm technologies as a way
to place the farmer, not as a final target and passive spectator, but as an active part of the process to aim the process of mitigation, appropriation from a traditional cultivation method to the 4.0 one
New Hampshire University Research and Industry Plan: A Roadmap for Collaboration and Innovation
This University Research and Industry plan for New Hampshire is focused on accelerating innovation-led development in the state by partnering academia’s strengths with the state’s substantial base of existing and emerging advanced industries. These advanced industries are defined by their deep investment and connections to research and development and the high-quality jobs they generate across production, new product development and administrative positions involving skills in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM)
Crisis Analytics: Big Data Driven Crisis Response
Disasters have long been a scourge for humanity. With the advances in
technology (in terms of computing, communications, and the ability to process
and analyze big data), our ability to respond to disasters is at an inflection
point. There is great optimism that big data tools can be leveraged to process
the large amounts of crisis-related data (in the form of user generated data in
addition to the traditional humanitarian data) to provide an insight into the
fast-changing situation and help drive an effective disaster response. This
article introduces the history and the future of big crisis data analytics,
along with a discussion on its promise, challenges, and pitfalls
The Digitalisation of African Agriculture Report 2018-2019
An inclusive, digitally-enabled agricultural transformation could help achieve meaningful livelihood improvements for Africa’s smallholder farmers and pastoralists. It could drive greater engagement in agriculture from women and youth and create employment opportunities along the value chain. At CTA we staked a claim on this power of digitalisation to more systematically transform agriculture early on. Digitalisation, focusing on not individual ICTs but the application of these technologies to entire value chains, is a theme that cuts across all of our work. In youth entrepreneurship, we are fostering a new breed of young ICT ‘agripreneurs’. In climate-smart agriculture multiple projects provide information that can help towards building resilience for smallholder farmers. And in women empowerment we are supporting digital platforms to drive greater inclusion for women entrepreneurs in agricultural value chains
Earth as a Hybrid Planet - The Anthropocene in an Evolutionary Astrobiological Context
We develop a classification scheme for the evolutionary state of planets
based on the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of their coupled systems, including
the presence of a biosphere and the possibility of what we call an
agency-dominated biosphere (i.e. an energy-intensive technological species).
The premise is that Earths entry into the Anthropocene represents what might be
from an astrobiological perspective a predictable planetary transition. We
explore this problem from the perspective of the solar system and exoplanet
studies. Our classification discriminates planets by the forms of free energy
generation driven from stellar forcing. We then explore how timescales for
global evolutionary processes on Earth might be synchronized with ecological
transformations driven by increases in energy harvesting and its consequences
(which might have reached a turning point with global urbanization). Finally,
we describe quantitatively the classification scheme based on the maintenance
of chemical disequilibrium in the past and current Earth systems and on other
worlds in the solar system. In this perspective, the beginning of the
Anthropocene can be seen as the onset of the hybridization of the planet - a
transitional stage from one class of planetary systems interaction to another.
For Earth, this stage occurs as the effects of human civilization yield not
just new evolutionary pressures, but new selected directions for novel
planetary ecosystem functions and their capacity to generate disequilibrium and
enhance planetary dissipation.Comment: Accepted for publication in the journal Anthropocen
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