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27 pages, 3470 KiB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Evolution and Influencing Factors of Carbon Emission Efficiency of Apple Production in China from 2003 to 2022
by Dejun Tan, Juanjuan Cheng, Jin Yu, Qian Wang and Xiaonan Chen
Agriculture 2025, 15(15), 1680; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15151680 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
Understanding the carbon emission efficiency of apple production (APCEE) is critical for promoting green and low-carbon agricultural development. However, the spatiotemporal dynamics and driving factors of APCEE in China remain inadequately explored. This study employs life cycle assessment, super-efficiency slacks-based measures, [...] Read more.
Understanding the carbon emission efficiency of apple production (APCEE) is critical for promoting green and low-carbon agricultural development. However, the spatiotemporal dynamics and driving factors of APCEE in China remain inadequately explored. This study employs life cycle assessment, super-efficiency slacks-based measures, and a panel Tobit model to evaluate the carbon footprint, APCEE, and its determinants in China’s two major production regions from 2003 to 2022. The results reveal that: (1) Producing one ton of apples in China results in 0.842 t CO2e emissions. Land carbon intensity and total carbon emissions peaked in 2010 (28.69 t CO2e/ha) and 2014 (6.52 × 107 t CO2e), respectively, exhibiting inverted U-shaped trends. Carbon emissions from various production areas show significant differences, with higher pressure on carbon emission reduction in the Loess Plateau region, especially in Gansu Province. (2) The APCEE in China exhibits a W-shaped trend (mean: 0.645), with overall low efficiency loss. The Bohai Bay region outperforms the Loess Plateau and national averages. (3) The structure of the apple industry, degree of agricultural mechanization, and green innovation positively influence APCEE, while the structure of apple cultivation, education level, and agricultural subsidies negatively impact it. Notably, green innovation and agricultural subsidies display lagged effects. Moreover, the drivers of APCEE differ significantly between the two major production regions. These findings provide actionable pathways for the green and low-carbon transformation of China’s apple industry, emphasizing the importance of spatially tailored green policies and technology-driven decarbonization strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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24 pages, 1376 KiB  
Article
Smart Agriculture in Ecuador: Adoption of IoT Technologies by Farmers in Guayas to Improve Agricultural Yields
by Ruth Rubí Peña-Holguín, Carlos Andrés Vaca-Coronel, Ruth María Farías-Lema, Sonnia Valeria Zapatier-Castro and Juan Diego Valenzuela-Cobos
Agriculture 2025, 15(15), 1679; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15151679 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
The adoption of digital technologies, such as the Internet of Things (IoT), has emerged as a key strategy to improve efficiency, sustainability, and productivity in the agricultural sector, especially in contexts of modernization and digital transformation in developing regions. This study analyzes the [...] Read more.
The adoption of digital technologies, such as the Internet of Things (IoT), has emerged as a key strategy to improve efficiency, sustainability, and productivity in the agricultural sector, especially in contexts of modernization and digital transformation in developing regions. This study analyzes the key factors influencing the adoption of IoT technologies by farmers in the province of Guayas, Ecuador, and their impact on agricultural yields. The research is grounded in innovation diffusion theory and technology acceptance models, which emphasize the role of perception, usability, training, and economic viability in digital adoption. A total of 250 surveys were administered, with 232 valid responses (92.8% response rate), reflecting strong interest from the agricultural sector in digital transformation and precision agriculture. Using structural equation modeling (SEM), the results confirm that general perception of IoT (β = 0.514), practical functionality (β = 0.488), and technical training (β = 0.523) positively influence adoption, while high implementation costs negatively affect it (β = −0.651), all of which are statistically significant (p < 0.001). Furthermore, adoption has a strong positive effect on agricultural yield (β = 0.795). The model explained a high percentage of variance in both adoption (R2 = 0.771) and performance (R2 = 0.706), supporting its predictive capacity. These findings underscore the need for public and private institutions to implement targeted training and financing strategies to overcome economic barriers and foster the sustainable integration of IoT technologies in Ecuadorian agriculture. Full article
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25 pages, 1623 KiB  
Review
Genome-Editing Tools for Lactic Acid Bacteria: Past Achievements, Current Platforms, and Future Directions
by Leonid A. Shaposhnikov, Aleksei S. Rozanov and Alexey E. Sazonov
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(15), 7483; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26157483 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are central to food, feed, and health biotechnology, yet their genomes have long resisted rapid, precise manipulation. This review charts the evolution of LAB genome-editing strategies from labor-intensive RecA-dependent double-crossovers to state-of-the-art CRISPR and CRISPR-associated transposase systems. Native homologous [...] Read more.
Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are central to food, feed, and health biotechnology, yet their genomes have long resisted rapid, precise manipulation. This review charts the evolution of LAB genome-editing strategies from labor-intensive RecA-dependent double-crossovers to state-of-the-art CRISPR and CRISPR-associated transposase systems. Native homologous recombination, transposon mutagenesis, and phage-derived recombineering opened the door to targeted gene disruption, but low efficiencies and marker footprints limited throughput. Recent phage RecT/RecE-mediated recombineering and CRISPR/Cas counter-selection now enable scar-less point edits, seamless deletions, and multi-kilobase insertions at efficiencies approaching model organisms. Endogenous Cas9 systems, dCas-based CRISPR interference, and CRISPR-guided transposases further extend the toolbox, allowing multiplex knockouts, precise single-base mutations, conditional knockdowns, and payloads up to 10 kb. The remaining hurdles include strain-specific barriers, reliance on selection markers for large edits, and the limited host-range of recombinases. Nevertheless, convergence of phage enzymes, CRISPR counter-selection and high-throughput oligo recombineering is rapidly transforming LAB into versatile chassis for cell-factory and therapeutic applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Probiotics in Health and Disease)
22 pages, 3301 KiB  
Article
Parameter Identification of Distribution Zone Transformers Under Three-Phase Asymmetric Conditions
by Panrun Jin, Wenqin Song and Yankui Zhang
Eng 2025, 6(8), 181; https://doi.org/10.3390/eng6080181 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
As a core device in low-voltage distribution networks, the distribution zone transformer (DZT) is influenced by short circuits, overloads, and unbalanced loads, which cause thermal aging, mechanical stress, and eventually deformation of the winding, resulting in parameter deviations from nameplate values and impairing [...] Read more.
As a core device in low-voltage distribution networks, the distribution zone transformer (DZT) is influenced by short circuits, overloads, and unbalanced loads, which cause thermal aging, mechanical stress, and eventually deformation of the winding, resulting in parameter deviations from nameplate values and impairing system operation. However, existing identification methods typically require synchronized high- and low-voltage data and are limited to symmetric three-phase conditions, which limits their application in practical distribution systems. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a parameter identification method for DZTs under three-phase unbalanced conditions. Firstly, based on the transformer’s T-equivalent circuit considering the load, the power flow equations are derived without involving the synchronization issue of high-voltage and low-voltage side data, and the sum of the impedances on both sides is treated as an independent parameter. Then, a novel power flow equation under three-phase unbalanced conditions is established, and an adaptive recursive least squares (ARLS) solution method is constructed using the measurement data sequence provided by the smart meter of the intelligent transformer terminal unit (TTU) to achieve online identification of the transformer winding parameters. The effectiveness and robustness of the method are verified through practical case studies. Full article
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14 pages, 841 KiB  
Article
Enhanced Deep Learning for Robust Stress Classification in Sows from Facial Images
by Syed U. Yunas, Ajmal Shahbaz, Emma M. Baxter, Mark F. Hansen, Melvyn L. Smith and Lyndon N. Smith
Agriculture 2025, 15(15), 1675; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15151675 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
Stress in pigs poses significant challenges to animal welfare and productivity in modern pig farming, contributing to increased antimicrobial use and the rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). This study involves stress classification in pregnant sows by exploring five deep learning models: ConvNeXt, EfficientNet_V2, [...] Read more.
Stress in pigs poses significant challenges to animal welfare and productivity in modern pig farming, contributing to increased antimicrobial use and the rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). This study involves stress classification in pregnant sows by exploring five deep learning models: ConvNeXt, EfficientNet_V2, MobileNet_V3, RegNet, and Vision Transformer (ViT). These models are used for stress detection from facial images, leveraging an expanded dataset. A facial image dataset of sows was collected at Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC) and the images were categorized into primiparous Low-Stressed (LS) and High-Stress (HS) groups based on expert behavioural assessments and cortisol level analysis. The selected deep learning models were then trained on this enriched dataset and their performance was evaluated using cross-validation on unseen data. The Vision Transformer (ViT) model outperformed the others across the dataset of annotated facial images, achieving an average accuracy of 0.75, an F1 score of 0.78 for high-stress detection, and consistent batch-level performance (up to 0.88 F1 score). These findings highlight the efficacy of transformer-based models for automated stress detection in sows, supporting early intervention strategies to enhance welfare, optimize productivity, and mitigate AMR risks in livestock production. Full article
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21 pages, 6621 KiB  
Article
Ecological Restoration Reshapes Ecosystem Service Interactions: A 30-Year Study from China’s Southern Red-Soil Critical Zone
by Gaigai Zhang, Lijun Yang, Jianjun Zhang, Chongjun Tang, Yuanyuan Li and Cong Wang
Forests 2025, 16(8), 1263; https://doi.org/10.3390/f16081263 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
Situated in the southern hilly-mountain belt of China’s “Three Zones and Four Belts Strategy”, Gannan region is a critical ecological shelter belt for the Ganjiang River. Decades of intensive mineral extraction and irrational agricultural development have rendered it into an ecologically fragile area. [...] Read more.
Situated in the southern hilly-mountain belt of China’s “Three Zones and Four Belts Strategy”, Gannan region is a critical ecological shelter belt for the Ganjiang River. Decades of intensive mineral extraction and irrational agricultural development have rendered it into an ecologically fragile area. Consequently, multiple restoration initiatives have been implemented in the region over recent decades. However, it remains unclear how relationships among ecosystem services have evolved under these interventions and how future ecosystem management should be optimized based on these changes. Thus, in this study, we simulated and assessed the spatiotemporal dynamics of five key ESs in Gannan region from 1990 to 2020. Through integrated correlation, clustering, and redundancy analyses, we quantified ES interactions, tracked the evolution of ecosystem service bundles (ESBs), and identified their socio-ecological drivers. Despite a 31% decline in water yield, ecological restoration initiatives drove substantial improvements in key regulating services: carbon storage increased by 6.9 × 1012 gC while soil conservation rose by 4.8 × 108 t. Concurrently, regional habitat quality surged by 45% in mean scores, and food production increased by 2.1 × 105 t. Critically, synergistic relationships between habitat quality, soil retention, and carbon storage were progressively strengthened, whereas trade-offs between food production and habitat quality intensified. Further analysis revealed that four distinct ESBs—the Agricultural Production Bundle (APB), Urban Development Bundle (UDB), Eco-Agriculture Transition Bundle (ETB), and Ecological Protection Bundle (EPB)—were shaped by slope, forest cover ratio, population density, and GDP. Notably, 38% of the ETB transformed into the EPB, with frequent spatial interactions observed between the APB and UDB. These findings underscore that future ecological restoration and conservation efforts should implement coordinated, multi-service management mechanisms. Full article
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18 pages, 7965 KiB  
Article
Identification of Environmental Noise Traces in Seismic Recordings Using Vision Transformer and Mel-Spectrogram
by Qianlong Ding, Shuangquan Chen, Jinsong Shen and Borui Wang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8586; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158586 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Environmental noise is inevitable during seismic data acquisition, with major sources including heavy machinery, rivers, wind, and other environmental factors. During field data acquisition, it is important to assess the impact of environmental noise and evaluate data quality. In subsequent seismic data processing, [...] Read more.
Environmental noise is inevitable during seismic data acquisition, with major sources including heavy machinery, rivers, wind, and other environmental factors. During field data acquisition, it is important to assess the impact of environmental noise and evaluate data quality. In subsequent seismic data processing, these noise components also need to be eliminated. Accurate identification of noise traces facilitates rapid quality control (QC) during fieldwork and provides a reliable basis for targeted noise attenuation. Conventional environmental noise identification primarily relies on amplitude differences. However, in seismic data, high-amplitude signals are not necessarily caused by environmental noise. For example, surface waves or traces near the shot point may also exhibit high amplitudes. Therefore, relying solely on amplitude-based criteria has certain limitations. To improve noise identification accuracy, we use the Mel-spectrogram to extract features from seismic data and construct the dataset. Compared to raw time-series signals, the Mel-spectrogram more clearly reveals energy variations and frequency differences, helping to identify noise traces more accurately. We then employ a Vision Transformer (ViT) network to train a model for identifying noise in seismic data. Tests on synthetic and field data show that the proposed method performs well in identifying noise. Moreover, a denoising case based on synthetic data further confirms its general applicability, making it a promising tool in seismic data QC and processing workflows. Full article
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28 pages, 2266 KiB  
Review
Uncovering Plastic Pollution: A Scoping Review of Urban Waterways, Technologies, and Interdisciplinary Approaches
by Peter Cleveland, Donna Cleveland, Ann Morrison, Khoi Hoang Dinh, An Nguyen Pham Hai, Luca Freitas Ribeiro and Khanh Tran Duy
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7009; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157009 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Plastic pollution is a growing environmental and social concern, particularly in Southeast Asia, where urban rivers serve as key pathways for transporting waste to marine environments. This scoping review examines 110 peer-reviewed studies to understand how plastic pollution in waterways is being researched, [...] Read more.
Plastic pollution is a growing environmental and social concern, particularly in Southeast Asia, where urban rivers serve as key pathways for transporting waste to marine environments. This scoping review examines 110 peer-reviewed studies to understand how plastic pollution in waterways is being researched, addressed, and reconceptualized. Drawing from the literature across environmental science, technology, and social studies, we identify four interconnected areas of focus: urban pollution pathways, innovations in monitoring and methods, community-based interventions, and interdisciplinary perspectives. Our analysis combines qualitative synthesis with visual mapping techniques, including keyword co-occurrence networks, to explore how real-time tools, such as IoT sensors, multi-sensor systems, and geospatial technologies, are transforming the ways plastic waste is tracked and analyzed. The review also considers the growing use of novel theoretical frameworks, such as post-phenomenology and ecological materialism, to better understand the role of plastics as both pollutants and ecological agents. Despite progress, the literature reveals persistent gaps in longitudinal studies, regional representation, and policy translation, particularly across the Global South. We emphasize the value of participatory models and community-led research in bridging these gaps and advancing more inclusive and responsive solutions. These insights inform the development of plastic tracker technologies currently being piloted in Vietnam and contribute to broader sustainability goals, including SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation), SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production), and SDG 14 (Life Below Water). Full article
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20 pages, 1318 KiB  
Review
A Genetically-Informed Network Model of Myelodysplastic Syndrome: From Splicing Aberrations to Therapeutic Vulnerabilities
by Sanghyeon Yu, Junghyun Kim and Man S. Kim
Genes 2025, 16(8), 928; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes16080928 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is a heterogeneous clonal hematopoietic disorder characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis and leukemic transformation risk. Current therapies show limited efficacy, with ~50% of patients failing hypomethylating agents. This review aims to synthesize recent discoveries through an integrated network model and [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is a heterogeneous clonal hematopoietic disorder characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis and leukemic transformation risk. Current therapies show limited efficacy, with ~50% of patients failing hypomethylating agents. This review aims to synthesize recent discoveries through an integrated network model and examine translation into precision therapeutic approaches. Methods: We reviewed breakthrough discoveries from the past three years, analyzing single-cell multi-omics technologies, epitranscriptomics, stem cell architecture analysis, and precision medicine approaches. We examined cell-type-specific splicing aberrations, distinct stem cell architectures, epitranscriptomic modifications, and microenvironmental alterations in MDS pathogenesis. Results: Four interconnected mechanisms drive MDS: genetic alterations (splicing factor mutations), aberrant stem cell architecture (CMP-pattern vs. GMP-pattern), epitranscriptomic dysregulation involving pseudouridine-modified tRNA-derived fragments, and microenvironmental changes. Splicing aberrations show cell-type specificity, with SF3B1 mutations preferentially affecting erythroid lineages. Stem cell architectures predict therapeutic responses, with CMP-pattern MDS achieving superior venetoclax response rates (>70%) versus GMP-pattern MDS (<30%). Epitranscriptomic alterations provide independent prognostic information, while microenvironmental changes mediate treatment resistance. Conclusions: These advances represent a paradigm shift toward personalized MDS medicine, moving from single-biomarker to comprehensive molecular profiling guiding multi-target strategies. While challenges remain in standardizing molecular profiling and developing clinical decision algorithms, this systems-level understanding provides a foundation for precision oncology implementation and overcoming current therapeutic limitations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Genetics and Genomics)
28 pages, 694 KiB  
Article
Artificial Intelligence-Enabled Digital Transformation in Circular Logistics: A Structural Equation Model of Organizational, Technological, and Environmental Drivers
by Ionica Oncioiu, Diana Andreea Mândricel and Mihaela Hortensia Hojda
Logistics 2025, 9(3), 102; https://doi.org/10.3390/logistics9030102 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Background: Digital transformation is increasingly present in modern logistics, especially in the context of sustainability and circularity pressures. The integration of technologies such as Internet of Things (IoT), Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), and automated platforms involves not only infrastructure but also a [...] Read more.
Background: Digital transformation is increasingly present in modern logistics, especially in the context of sustainability and circularity pressures. The integration of technologies such as Internet of Things (IoT), Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), and automated platforms involves not only infrastructure but also a strategic vision, a flexible organizational culture, and the ability to support decisions through artificial intelligence (AI)-based systems. Methods: This study proposes an extended conceptual model using structural equation modelling (SEM) to explore the relationships between five constructs: technological change, strategic and organizational readiness, transformation environment, AI-enabled decision configuration, and operational redesign. The model was validated based on a sample of 217 active logistics specialists, coming from sectors such as road transport, retail, 3PL logistics services, and manufacturing. The participants are involved in the digitization of processes, especially in activities related to operational decisions and sustainability. Results: The findings reveal that the analysis confirms statistically significant relationships between organizational readiness, transformation environment, AI-based decision processes, and operational redesign. Conclusions: The study highlights the importance of an integrated approach in which technology, organizational culture, and advanced decision support collectively contribute to the transition to digital and circular logistics chains. Full article
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20 pages, 4569 KiB  
Article
Lightweight Vision Transformer for Frame-Level Ergonomic Posture Classification in Industrial Workflows
by Luca Cruciata, Salvatore Contino, Marianna Ciccarelli, Roberto Pirrone, Leonardo Mostarda, Alessandra Papetti and Marco Piangerelli
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4750; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154750 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs) are a leading concern in industrial ergonomics, often stemming from sustained non-neutral postures and repetitive tasks. This paper presents a vision-based framework for real-time, frame-level ergonomic risk classification using a lightweight Vision Transformer (ViT). The proposed system operates directly [...] Read more.
Work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs) are a leading concern in industrial ergonomics, often stemming from sustained non-neutral postures and repetitive tasks. This paper presents a vision-based framework for real-time, frame-level ergonomic risk classification using a lightweight Vision Transformer (ViT). The proposed system operates directly on raw RGB images without requiring skeleton reconstruction, joint angle estimation, or image segmentation. A single ViT model simultaneously classifies eight anatomical regions, enabling efficient multi-label posture assessment. Training is supervised using a multimodal dataset acquired from synchronized RGB video and full-body inertial motion capture, with ergonomic risk labels derived from RULA scores computed on joint kinematics. The system is validated on realistic, simulated industrial tasks that include common challenges such as occlusion and posture variability. Experimental results show that the ViT model achieves state-of-the-art performance, with F1-scores exceeding 0.99 and AUC values above 0.996 across all regions. Compared to previous CNN-based system, the proposed model improves classification accuracy and generalizability while reducing complexity and enabling real-time inference on edge devices. These findings demonstrate the model’s potential for unobtrusive, scalable ergonomic risk monitoring in real-world manufacturing environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Secure and Decentralised IoT Systems)
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25 pages, 17212 KiB  
Article
Three-Dimensional Printing of Personalized Carbamazepine Tablets Using Hydrophilic Polymers: An Investigation of Correlation Between Dissolution Kinetics and Printing Parameters
by Lianghao Huang, Xingyue Zhang, Qichen Huang, Minqing Zhu, Tiantian Yang and Jiaxiang Zhang
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2126; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152126 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Background: Precision medicine refers to the formulation of personalized drug regimens according to the individual characteristics of patients to achieve optimal efficacy and minimize adverse reactions. Additive manufacturing (AM), also known as three-dimensional (3D) printing, has emerged as an optimal solution for precision [...] Read more.
Background: Precision medicine refers to the formulation of personalized drug regimens according to the individual characteristics of patients to achieve optimal efficacy and minimize adverse reactions. Additive manufacturing (AM), also known as three-dimensional (3D) printing, has emerged as an optimal solution for precision drug delivery, enabling customizable and the fabrication of multifunctional structures with precise control over morphology and release behavior in pharmaceutics. However, the influence of 3D printing parameters on the printed tablets, especially regarding in vitro and in vivo performance, remains poorly understood, limiting the optimization of manufacturing processes for controlled-release profiles. Objective: To establish the fabrication process of 3D-printed controlled-release tablets via comprehensively understanding the printing parameters using fused deposition modeling (FDM) combined with hot-melt extrusion (HME) technologies. HPMC-AS/HPC-EF was used as the drug delivery matrix and carbamazepine (CBZ) was used as a model drug to investigate the in vitro drug delivery performance of the printed tablets. Methodology: Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) was employed to assess the thermal compatibility of CBZ with HPMC-AS/HPC-EF excipients up to 230 °C, surpassing typical processing temperatures (160–200 °C). The formation of stable amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs) was validated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), hot-stage polarized light microscopy (PLM), and powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD). A 15-group full factorial design was then used to evaluate the effects of the fan speed (20–100%), platform temperature (40–80 °C), and printing speed (20–100 mm/s) on the tablet properties. Response surface modeling (RSM) with inverse square-root transformation was applied to analyze the dissolution kinetics, specifically t50% (time for 50% drug release) and Q4h (drug released at 4 h). Results: TGA confirmed the thermal compatibility of CBZ with HPMC-AS/HPC-EF, enabling stable ASD formation validated by DSC, PLM, and PXRD. The full factorial design revealed that printing speed was the dominant parameter governing dissolution behavior, with high speeds accelerating release and low speeds prolonging release through porosity-modulated diffusion control. RSM quadratic models showed optimal fits for t50% (R2 = 0.9936) and Q4h (R2 = 0.9019), highlighting the predictability of release kinetics via process parameter tuning. This work demonstrates the adaptability of polymer composite AM for tailoring drug release profiles, balancing mechanical integrity, release kinetics, and manufacturing scalability to advance multifunctional 3D-printed drug delivery devices in pharmaceutics. Full article
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26 pages, 1033 KiB  
Article
Internet of Things Platform for Assessment and Research on Cybersecurity of Smart Rural Environments
by Daniel Sernández-Iglesias, Llanos Tobarra, Rafael Pastor-Vargas, Antonio Robles-Gómez, Pedro Vidal-Balboa and João Sarraipa
Future Internet 2025, 17(8), 351; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi17080351 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Rural regions face significant barriers to adopting IoT technologies, due to limited connectivity, energy constraints, and poor technical infrastructure. While urban environments benefit from advanced digital systems and cloud services, rural areas often lack the necessary conditions to deploy and evaluate secure and [...] Read more.
Rural regions face significant barriers to adopting IoT technologies, due to limited connectivity, energy constraints, and poor technical infrastructure. While urban environments benefit from advanced digital systems and cloud services, rural areas often lack the necessary conditions to deploy and evaluate secure and autonomous IoT solutions. To help overcome this gap, this paper presents the Smart Rural IoT Lab, a modular and reproducible testbed designed to replicate the deployment conditions in rural areas using open-source tools and affordable hardware. The laboratory integrates long-range and short-range communication technologies in six experimental scenarios, implementing protocols such as MQTT, HTTP, UDP, and CoAP. These scenarios simulate realistic rural use cases, including environmental monitoring, livestock tracking, infrastructure access control, and heritage site protection. Local data processing is achieved through containerized services like Node-RED, InfluxDB, MongoDB, and Grafana, ensuring complete autonomy, without dependence on cloud services. A key contribution of the laboratory is the generation of structured datasets from real network traffic captured with Tcpdump and preprocessed using Zeek. Unlike simulated datasets, the collected data reflect communication patterns generated from real devices. Although the current dataset only includes benign traffic, the platform is prepared for future incorporation of adversarial scenarios (spoofing, DoS) to support AI-based cybersecurity research. While experiments were conducted in an indoor controlled environment, the testbed architecture is portable and suitable for future outdoor deployment. The Smart Rural IoT Lab addresses a critical gap in current research infrastructure, providing a realistic and flexible foundation for developing secure, cloud-independent IoT solutions, contributing to the digital transformation of rural regions. Full article
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23 pages, 2888 KiB  
Review
Machine Learning in Flocculant Research and Application: Toward Smart and Sustainable Water Treatment
by Caichang Ding, Ling Shen, Qiyang Liang and Lixin Li
Separations 2025, 12(8), 203; https://doi.org/10.3390/separations12080203 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Flocculants are indispensable in water and wastewater treatment, enabling the aggregation and removal of suspended particles, colloids, and emulsions. However, the conventional development and application of flocculants rely heavily on empirical methods, which are time-consuming, resource-intensive, and environmentally problematic due to issues such [...] Read more.
Flocculants are indispensable in water and wastewater treatment, enabling the aggregation and removal of suspended particles, colloids, and emulsions. However, the conventional development and application of flocculants rely heavily on empirical methods, which are time-consuming, resource-intensive, and environmentally problematic due to issues such as sludge production and chemical residues. Recent advances in machine learning (ML) have opened transformative avenues for the design, optimization, and intelligent application of flocculants. This review systematically examines the integration of ML into flocculant research, covering algorithmic approaches, data-driven structure–property modeling, high-throughput formulation screening, and smart process control. ML models—including random forests, neural networks, and Gaussian processes—have successfully predicted flocculation performance, guided synthesis optimization, and enabled real-time dosing control. Applications extend to both synthetic and bioflocculants, with ML facilitating strain engineering, fermentation yield prediction, and polymer degradability assessments. Furthermore, the convergence of ML with IoT, digital twins, and life cycle assessment tools has accelerated the transition toward sustainable, adaptive, and low-impact treatment technologies. Despite its potential, challenges remain in data standardization, model interpretability, and real-world implementation. This review concludes by outlining strategic pathways for future research, including the development of open datasets, hybrid physics–ML frameworks, and interdisciplinary collaborations. By leveraging ML, the next generation of flocculant systems can be more effective, environmentally benign, and intelligently controlled, contributing to global water sustainability goals. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Separations)
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16 pages, 1651 KiB  
Article
Modular Pipeline for Text Recognition in Early Printed Books Using Kraken and ByT5
by Yahya Momtaz, Lorenza Laccetti and Guido Russo
Electronics 2025, 14(15), 3083; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14153083 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Early printed books, particularly incunabula, are invaluable archives of the beginnings of modern educational systems. However, their complex layouts, antique typefaces, and page degradation caused by bleed-through and ink fading pose significant challenges for automatic transcription. In this work, we present a modular [...] Read more.
Early printed books, particularly incunabula, are invaluable archives of the beginnings of modern educational systems. However, their complex layouts, antique typefaces, and page degradation caused by bleed-through and ink fading pose significant challenges for automatic transcription. In this work, we present a modular pipeline that addresses these problems by combining modern layout analysis and language modeling techniques. The pipeline begins with historical layout-aware text segmentation using Kraken, a neural network-based tool tailored for early typographic structures. Initial optical character recognition (OCR) is then performed with Kraken’s recognition engine, followed by post-correction using a fine-tuned ByT5 transformer model trained on manually aligned line-level data. By learning to map noisy OCR outputs to verified transcriptions, the model substantially improves recognition quality. The pipeline also integrates a preprocessing stage based on our previous work on bleed-through removal using robust statistical filters, including non-local means, Gaussian mixtures, biweight estimation, and Gaussian blur. This step enhances the legibility of degraded pages prior to OCR. The entire solution is open, modular, and scalable, supporting long-term preservation and improved accessibility of cultural heritage materials. Experimental results on 15th-century incunabula show a reduction in the Character Error Rate (CER) from around 38% to around 15% and an increase in the Bilingual Evaluation Understudy (BLEU) score from 22 to 44, confirming the effectiveness of our approach. This work demonstrates the potential of integrating transformer-based correction with layout-aware segmentation to enhance OCR accuracy in digital humanities applications. Full article
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