15 resultados para MacKaye, Lavinia Gould
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies
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The concept of species in Paleontology is of paramount importance since the correct taxonomic determinations are essential to establish the age of the beds where fossils are collected. Particularly since 1940, the concept of species from a biological context, corresponding to the variability of a set of interpopulation compatibility, led us to a new approach, in which a typological conception has been replaced by a populationist one. If the notion of species is not necessarily identical for all living organisms, the greater the difficulties of interpretation in the private world of cephalopod fossils. The latter, lend themselves well to population systematics, and where this concept of species rests primarily on the morphological similarities. Thus, the introduction of general ideas analyse "typological species", "biological species", the problem of the definition of a "population" in Paleontology, and also the importance of the biometric analysis of fossil associations. The classic examples of polymorphism amd polytypism, in existing or extinct organisms, show that the concept of fossil species, observed in a well-defined period of its lifetime, is no different from that of biological species. The study of the evolution of fossil organisms allow us to understand the modelities of evolution and the mechanisms of speciation here synthesized and fully documented, namely the anagenesis or sequential evolution and the cladogenesis or divergent evoltuion; these mechanisms are the basis of the synthetic or gradualist theory of evolution developed by Dobzhansky, Mayr, Huxley, Rensch and impson. This summary ends with a reference to the theory of punctuated (or intermittent) equilibria proposed by Gould and Eldredge, who presented a more objective interpretation of morphological gaps, considered as elements of evolution itself. The interdisciplinary collaboration between zoologists, geneticists and paleontologists, is compulsory in this domain. Paleozoology has a key role since it conveys the dynamism and depth to the dimension of space-time duality.
Resumo:
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies.
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies.
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies.
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Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies.
Sequênciação e análise do genoma de um presumível flavivírus isolado de Aedes (Ochlerotatus) Caspius
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O género Flavivirus (Flaviviridae) inclui mais de setenta vírus com genoma a RNA de cadeia simples, muitos dos quais são importantes agentes patogénicos para o Homem e os outros animais. A maioria dos flavivírus pode ser transmitidos por carraças, mosquitos ou, aparentemente, restringir-se a vertebrados (Cook e Holmes, 2006). No entanto, um grupo de flavivírus designados “não clássicos”, não parece ter hospedeiro vertebrado conhecido. Estes últimos são comumente colocados junto à raiz de árvores filogenéticas do género Flavivirus, sendo frequentemente isolados em mosquitos, justificando a sua designação de vírus específicos de insectos (ISF, do inglês insect-specific flaviviruses) (Farfan-Ale et al., 2009). A classificação dos ISF como flavivírus tem sido suportada por semelhanças ao nível da sua organização genómica, perfil de hidropatia proteica, locais de clivagem conservados da sequência da poliproteína que codificam, e domínios enzimáticos. No entanto, são distintos em termos antigénicos, partilhando o mesmo nível de distância genética quando comparados com outros membros do género que quando comparados com outros dois outros géneros da família Flaviviridae (Cook e Holmes, 2006; Gould et al., 2003). Esta tese apresenta uma caracterização inicial, que inclui a obtenção da sequência genómica quase completa, de um novo ISF. Este vírus, com a designação proposta de OCFVPt, foi isolado de mosquitos adultos classificados como Aedes (Ochlerotatus) caspius (Pallas, 1771), os quais são encontrados em densidades elevadas nas zonas costeiras estuarinas dos distritos de Faro e Setúbal (Almeida et al., 2008). Este vírus replica rapidamente na linha celular C6/36 (derivada de Aedes albopictus), e, como esperado, não replica em células Vero. Contrariamente a outros ISF, o OCFVPt aparentemente causa efeito citopático óbvio em células C6/36, as quais, depois de infectadas, rapidamente se separam do suporte sólido da placa de crescimento, ficando pequenas e redondas. Análises por microscopia electrónica de secções finas de células C6/36 48h após infecção com OCFVPt revelaram uma hiperplasia nuclear acentuada com aumento do espaço entre as cisternas da membrana nuclear, no qual podem ainda ser encontradas vesículas de várias dimensões. O genoma do OCFVPt tem, no mínimo, 9.839 nt e codifica para uma única poliproteína com as caraterísticas normalmente associadas aos membros do género Flavivirus. As árvores filogenéticas geradas após alinhamento de sequências virais mostram que o OCFVPt forma, juntamente com HANKV (Huhtamo et al., 2012) um grupo monofilético distinto dentro da radiação dos ISF.
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Generally, smart campus applications do not consider the role of the user with his/her position in a university environment, consequently irrelevant information is delivered to the users. This dissertation proposes a location-based access control model, named Smart-RBAC, extending the functionality of Role-based Access Control Model (RBAC) by including user’s location as the contextual attribute, to solve the aforementioned problem. Smart-RBAC model is designed with a focus on content delivery to the user in order to offer a feasible level of flexibility, which was missing in the existing location-based access control models. An instance of the model, derived from Liferay’s RBAC, is implemented by creating a portal application to test and validate the Smart-RBAC model. Additionally, portlet-based applications are developed to assess the suitability of the model in a smart campus environment. The evaluation of the model, based on a popular theoretical framework, demonstrates the model’s capability to achieve some security goals like “Dynamic Separation of Duty” and “Accountability”. We believe that the Smart-RBAC model will improve the existing smart campus applications since it utilizes both, role and location of the user, to deliver content.
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The existing parking simulations, as most simulations, are intended to gain insights of a system or to make predictions. The knowledge they have provided has built up over the years, and several research works have devised detailed parking system models. This thesis work describes the use of an agent-based parking simulation in the context of a bigger parking system development. It focuses more on flexibility than on fidelity, showing the case where it is relevant for a parking simulation to consume dynamically changing GIS data from external, online sources and how to address this case. The simulation generates the parking occupancy information that sensing technologies should eventually produce and supplies it to the bigger parking system. It is built as a Java application based on the MASON toolkit and consumes GIS data from an ArcGis Server. The application context of the implemented parking simulation is a university campus with free, on-street parking places.