61 resultados para Globes.
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En cub.: Unidades didácticas para Educación Secundaria
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En cub.: Unidades didácticas para Educación Secundaria
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En cub.: Unidades didácticas para Educación Secundaria
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En cub.: Unidades didácticas para Educación Secundaria
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En cub.: Unidades didácticas para Educación Secundaria
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En cub.: Unidades didácticas para Educación Secundaria
Extensión y uso de KML para la anotación, georreferenciación y distribución de recursos de tipo MIME
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En el actual contexto de la Web 2.0 y de la futura Web Geográfica o simplemente GeoWeb la información georreferenciada cobra cada día más importancia. Desde hace años distintas técnicas han sido desarrolladas para dar solución al problema de la georreferenciación de recursos de distinta índole. Sin embargo ninguna de estas técnicas está exenta de problemas y restricciones. En este estudio presentamos una nueva aproximación que intenta facilitar la georreferenciación y distribución de recursos de tipos contemplados como Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME). El elemento básico para la anotación, georreferenciación y también representación del recurso es el Keyhole Markup Language (KML). Este lenguaje permite la anotación y visualización de elementos, así como su extensión para aumentar su funcionalidad. Esta última propiedad se ha utilizado en nuestra aproximación para crear nuevos elementos que permitan la anotación de cualquier tipo de recurso MIME sobre KML obteniendo así la extensión KML MIMEXT. Esta extensión permite describir y georreferenciar tipos de recursos no habituales en el entorno SIG. La encapsulación del propio recurso junto con sus metadatos (incluyendo la georreferenciación) y otros recursos relacionados se realiza mediante la compresión de todos ellos en un único archivo KMZ facilitando así su distribución y mantenimiento. De forma similar a la interpretación de etiquetas HTML5 como video por los navegadores Web, el uso de la extensión MIMEXT podría ser implementado por visores basados en globos virtuales para visualizar o reproducir nuevos tipos de recursos. Para ejemplificar dicho comportamiento se ha implementado un prototipo de aplicación Java basado en el SDK World Wind Java
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Running hydrodynamic models interactively allows both visual exploration and change of model state during simulation. One of the main characteristics of an interactive model is that it should provide immediate feedback to the user, for example respond to changes in model state or view settings. For this reason, such features are usually only available for models with a relatively small number of computational cells, which are used mainly for demonstration and educational purposes. It would be useful if interactive modeling would also work for models typically used in consultancy projects involving large scale simulations. This results in a number of technical challenges related to the combination of the model itself and the visualisation tools (scalability, implementation of an appropriate API for control and access to the internal state). While model parallelisation is increasingly addressed by the environmental modeling community, little effort has been spent on developing a high-performance interactive environment. What can we learn from other high-end visualisation domains such as 3D animation, gaming, virtual globes (Autodesk 3ds Max, Second Life, Google Earth) that also focus on efficient interaction with 3D environments? In these domains high efficiency is usually achieved by the use of computer graphics algorithms such as surface simplification depending on current view, distance to objects, and efficient caching of the aggregated representation of object meshes. We investigate how these algorithms can be re-used in the context of interactive hydrodynamic modeling without significant changes to the model code and allowing model operation on both multi-core CPU personal computers and high-performance computer clusters.
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Although cross-cultural leadership research has thrived in international business literature, little attention has been devoted to understanding the effectiveness of non-western theories beyond their original contexts. The purpose of this study is to examine the cross-cultural endorsement of paternalistic leadership, an emerging non-western leadership theory, using data from GLOBE project. Using multigroup confirmatory factor analyses we found measurement equivalence of a scale derived from GLOBE’s data, which enabled us to compare the endorsement of paternalistic leadership dimensions across 10 cultural clusters and 55 societies. Our study revealed that there are significant differences in the importance societies give to each dimension, suggesting that paternalism as leadership style is not universally nor homogeneously endorsed. Furthermore, results suggest that different patterns of endorsement of each of these dimensions give rise to idiosyncratic shades of paternalistic leadership across societies. Implications for theory and future research on international business are discussed.
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Avaliou-se o ganho de peso de novilhas mestiças, 1/4 Simental e 3/4 Nelore, empregando-se o método experimental de esterilização, que consiste na introdução intrauterina de esferas inoxidáveis. Foram utilizadas 100 novilhas nulíparas, destinadas ao abate, com idades entre 12 e 24 meses e com média de peso de 275kg. Todos os animais receberam o mesmo manejo alimentar, em sistema de pastejo em Brachiaria brizantha, com água e sal mineral ad libitum, e pesagens a intervalos de 28 dias, obedecido o jejum prévio de 16 horas. Os animais foram distribuídos aleatoriamente em quatro grupos (G) experimentais: G1 - composto por 25 novilhas testemunhas; G2 - por 25 novilhas esterilizadas e aplicação de um modificador orgânico; G3 - por 25 novilhas esterilizadas; e G4 - por 25 novilhas não esterilizadas e aplicação de um modificador orgânico. Foram introduzidas 12 esferas de aço inoxidável, previamente esterilizadas, no útero de cada novilha. Houve maior ganho de peso total e diário entre os animais do G2, 140,50kg e 0,578g/dia vs 108,58kg e 0,447g/dia (G1), 103,73kg e 0,427g/dia (G3), 102,68kg e 0,423g/dia (G4), respectivamente. Esta técnica pode ser recomendada aos criadores.
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Pós-graduação em Medicina Veterinária - FMVZ
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There are many infectious complications related to vascular access in patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. We report two cases of endophthalmitis as a metastatic infection associated with a tunneled catheter and a temporary dual lumen catheter. Both patients were diabetic. A 61-year-old female on maintenance hemodialysis by a jugular tunnelized catheter during the past year was receiving parenteral antibiotics for catheter salvage due to fever episodes in the last 3 months. She was admitted to the hospital presenting pain, proptosis, conjunctival hyperemia, corneal infiltrate, and visual acuity of no light perception (NLP). A 51-year-old male recently undergoing hemodialysis by a temporary dual lumen catheter presented fever. His catheter was removed, but he was admitted to the hospital presenting fever, decreased vision, edema, and pain in his left eye. On examination, eyelid edema, conjunctival hyperemia, purulent secretion, hypopyon in the pupils, and visual acuity of NLP were verified. A diagnosis of endogenous endophthalmitis was made in both patients on clinical grounds and computed tomography. Evisceration of the left eye was the first option of treatment for both patients due to poor vision. Cultures of the eviscerated ocular globes showed Staphylococcus hemolyticus and Staphylococcus aureus, respectively. After evisceration, both patients received treatment, had a good outcome, and were discharged to continue their hemodialysis program. Metastatic bacterial endophthalmitis is a rare complication of dialysis catheter-related bacteremia. When suspected, urgent ophthalmologic evaluation and treatment are needed to reduce the risk of losing vision in the affected eye.
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Numerical simulations of eye globes often rely on topographies that have been measured in vivo using devices such as the Pentacam or OCT. The topographies, which represent the form of the already stressed eye under the existing intraocular pressure, introduce approximations in the analysis. The accuracy of the simulations could be improved if either the stress state of the eye under the effect of intraocular pressure is determined, or the stress-free form of the eye estimated prior to conducting the analysis. This study reviews earlier attempts to address this problem and assesses the performance of an iterative technique proposed by Pandolfi and Holzapfel [1], which is both simple to implement and promises high accuracy in estimating the eye's stress-free form. A parametric study has been conducted and demonstrated reliance of the error level on the level of flexibility of the eye model, especially in the cornea region. However, in all cases considered 3-4 analysis iterations were sufficient to produce a stress-free form with average errors in node location <10(-6)mm and a maximal error <10(-4)mm. This error level, which is similar to what has been achieved with other methods and orders of magnitude lower than the accuracy of current clinical topography systems, justifies the use of the technique as a pre-processing step in ocular numerical simulations.
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Over the past few years, archaeology has experienced a rapid development in geophysical prospection and remote sensing techniques. At the same time, the focus of archaeological research has shifted to landscape evelopment and human interaction. To impart the results, new methods and techniques are necessary. Virtual globes such as Google Earth offer fascinating methods of giving interested amateurs the possibility to interactively explore ancient cities and landscapes. Thanks to the increasing usage of GIS in cultural heritage, the implementation of interactive three dimensional learning opportunities becomes less and less tedious, but the non-linear narrative story telling medium demands for a special adaption of the content. This paper summarizes the experience gained during the realization of the “Virtual Cilicia Project” and outlines the future potential of virtual globes in the field of cultural heritage.
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Se muestra la existencia en España de una ética civil, coherente con el proceso de secularización y modernización experimentado por las sociedades europeas. Tras una exposición de las bases conceptuales de lo que se considera “ética civil”, y empleando los datos de la encuesta internacional Pew Global Attitudes Project, se contrastan un conjunto de hipótesis para España relativas al peso de factores estructurales (sexo, edad, educación e ideología) en la aceptación de una ética cívica o religiosa, y la influencia de esta en opiniones, actitudes y comportamientos relacionados con la religión en la vida pública. El contraste empírico de las hipótesis especificadas revela la influencia que tiene la opción ética en la opinión pública referida al Estado, la sociedad y la religión. Los resultados son acordes con los expuestos por investigaciones anteriores, validándolos, al emplear expresiones alternativas y permitiendo un análisis novedoso de la ética civil y religiosa en la sociedad española.