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Keywords = embodied co-presence

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21 pages, 1507 KB  
Article
Embodied Co-Creation with Real-Time Generative AI: An Ukiyo-E Interactive Art Installation
by Hisa Nimi, Meizhu Lu and Juan Carlos Chacon
Digital 2025, 5(4), 61; https://doi.org/10.3390/digital5040061 - 7 Nov 2025
Viewed by 581
Abstract
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping creative practices, yet many systems rely on traditional interfaces, limiting intuitive and embodied engagement. This study presents a qualitative observational analysis of participant interactions with a real-time generative AI installation designed to co-create Ukiyo-e-style artwork through embodied [...] Read more.
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping creative practices, yet many systems rely on traditional interfaces, limiting intuitive and embodied engagement. This study presents a qualitative observational analysis of participant interactions with a real-time generative AI installation designed to co-create Ukiyo-e-style artwork through embodied inputs. The system dynamically interprets physical presence, object manipulation, body poses, and gestures to influence AI-generated visuals displayed on a large public screen. Drawing on systematic video analysis and detailed interaction logs across 13 sessions, the research identifies core modalities of interaction, patterns of co-creation, and user responses. Tangible objects with salient visual features such as color and pattern emerged as the primary, most intuitive input method, while bodily poses and hand gestures served as compositional modifiers. The system’s immediate feedback loop enabled rapid learning and iterative exploration and enhanced the user’s feeling of control. Users engaged in collaborative discovery, turn-taking, and shared authorship, frequently expressing a positive effect. The findings highlight how embodied interaction lowers cognitive barriers, enhances engagement, and supports meaningful human–AI collaboration. This study offers design implications for future creative AI systems, emphasizing accessibility, playful exploration, and cultural resonance, with the potential to democratize artistic expression and foster deeper public engagement with digital cultural heritage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Semantic Multimedia and Personalized Digital Content)
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21 pages, 488 KB  
Review
Entangled Autopoiesis: Reframing Psychotherapy and Neuroscience Through Cognitive Science and Systems Engineering
by Dana Rad, Monica Maier, Zorica Triff and Radiana Marcu
Brain Sci. 2025, 15(10), 1032; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci15101032 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1903
Abstract
The increasing intersection of psychotherapy, cognitive science, neuroscience, and systems engineering beckons us to rethink what it means to talk the language of the human mind in the clinical setting. This position paper proposes the idea of entangled autopoiesis, a metatheoretical paradigm that [...] Read more.
The increasing intersection of psychotherapy, cognitive science, neuroscience, and systems engineering beckons us to rethink what it means to talk the language of the human mind in the clinical setting. This position paper proposes the idea of entangled autopoiesis, a metatheoretical paradigm that addresses the mind and therapy not as linear processes but as self-organizing, adaptive processes enfolded across neural, cognitive, relational, and cultural domains. Psychotherapy, from this viewpoint, is less a corrective technique and more a zone of systemic integration, wherein resilience and meaning are co-created in the interaction of embodied brains, lived stories, and relational fields. Neuroscience informs us about plasticity and regulation; cognitive science emphasizes the embodied and extended nature of cognition; and systems engineering sheds light on feedback, emergence, and adaptive dynamics. Artificial intelligence appears as a double presence: as a metaphor for complexity and as a practical tool able to chart patterns below human sensibility. By adopting a complexity-aware epistemology, we advocate a relocation in clinical thinking—one recognizing the psyche as an autopoietic network, entangled with culture and technology and able to renew itself in therapeutic encounters. The implications for clinical methodology, therapist training, and future interdisciplinary research are discussed. Full article
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20 pages, 76650 KB  
Article
Enhancing Cultural Heritage Engagement with Novel Interactive Extended-Reality Multisensory System
by Adolfo Muñoz, Juan José Climent-Ferrer, Ana Martí-Testón, J. Ernesto Solanes and Luis Gracia
Electronics 2025, 14(10), 2039; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14102039 - 16 May 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 4177
Abstract
Extended-reality (XR) tools are increasingly used to revitalise museum experiences, but typical head-mounted or smartphone solutions tend to fragment audiences and suppress the social dialogue that makes cultural heritage memorable. This article addresses that gap on two fronts. First, it proposes a four-phase [...] Read more.
Extended-reality (XR) tools are increasingly used to revitalise museum experiences, but typical head-mounted or smartphone solutions tend to fragment audiences and suppress the social dialogue that makes cultural heritage memorable. This article addresses that gap on two fronts. First, it proposes a four-phase design methodology—spanning artifact selection, narrative framing, tangible-interface fabrication, spatial installation, software integration, validation, and deployment—that helps curators, designers, and technologists to co-create XR exhibitions in which co-presence, embodied action, and multisensory cues are treated as primary design goals rather than afterthoughts. Second, the paper reports LanternXR, a proof-of-concept built with the methodology: visitors share a 3D-printed replica of the fourteenth-century Virgin of Boixadors while wielding a tracked “camera” and a candle-like lantern that lets them illuminate, photograph, and annotate the sculpture inside a life-sized Gothic nave rendered on large 4K displays with spatial audio and responsive lighting. To validate the approach, the article presents an analytical synthesis of feedback from curators, museologists, and XR technologists, underscoring the system’s capacity to foster collaboration, deepen engagement, and broaden accessibility. The findings show how XR can move museum audiences from isolated immersion to collective, multisensory exploration. Full article
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27 pages, 7465 KB  
Article
The Effects of Construction and Demolition Waste (C&DW) Fine Residues on Landfill Environments: A Column Leaching Experiment
by Adane S. Molla, Waiching Tang, Willy Sher, Md Mezbaul Bahar and Dawit Nega Bekele
Toxics 2025, 13(5), 370; https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13050370 - 2 May 2025
Viewed by 1963
Abstract
The rapid increase in construction and demolition waste (C&DW) has emerged as a significant environmental challenge, particularly due to the hazardous substances embodied within the fine residues destined into landfills. The disposal of C&DW in landfills has been widely recognized as a source [...] Read more.
The rapid increase in construction and demolition waste (C&DW) has emerged as a significant environmental challenge, particularly due to the hazardous substances embodied within the fine residues destined into landfills. The disposal of C&DW in landfills has been widely recognized as a source of leachate, containing toxic contaminants, which pose significant environmental risks. A controlled column leaching experiment was conducted using samples with varying proportions of C&DW, gypsum, and organic content to assess their impact on leachate chemistry. The results indicate that higher C&DW content leads to increased concentrations of heavy metals, such as Pb, Hg, As, Cr, Ni, Cu, Zn, and Co, as well as other metals like Al and Fe, with peak contamination occurring within the first 13–15 weeks. Gypsum presence exacerbates heavy metal solubility by reducing pH, increasing sulfate levels, and promoting metal-sulfate complex formation. Despite remaining within regulatory thresholds, the cumulative concentration of toxic metals over time highlights potential environmental risks, particularly in landfill settings. This study underscores the need for improved C&DW management practices, enhanced waste segregation, and sustainable alternatives to gypsum to mitigate long-term ecological impacts. These findings contribute to a deeper understanding of C&DW leachate dynamics and inform policy recommendations for sustainable waste management in the construction sector. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Environmental Toxicology and Risk Assessment of Priority Substances)
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20 pages, 4055 KB  
Article
An Efficient Gaze Control System for Kiosk-Based Embodied Conversational Agents in Multi-Party Conversations
by Sunghun Jung, Junyeong Kum and Myungho Lee
Electronics 2025, 14(8), 1592; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14081592 - 15 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1187
Abstract
The adoption of kiosks in public spaces is steadily increasing, with a trend toward providing more natural user experiences through embodied conversational agents (ECAs). To achieve human-like interactions, ECAs should be able to appropriately gaze at the speaker. However, kiosks in public spaces [...] Read more.
The adoption of kiosks in public spaces is steadily increasing, with a trend toward providing more natural user experiences through embodied conversational agents (ECAs). To achieve human-like interactions, ECAs should be able to appropriately gaze at the speaker. However, kiosks in public spaces often face challenges, such as ambient noise and overlapping speech from multiple people, making it difficult to accurately identify the speaker and direct the ECA’s gaze accordingly. In this paper, we propose a lightweight gaze control system that is designed to operate effectively within the resource constraints of kiosks and the noisy conditions common in public spaces. We first developed a speaker detection model that identifies the active speaker in challenging noise conditions using only a single camera and microphone. The proposed model achieved a 91.6% mean Average Precision (mAP) in active speaker detection and a 0.6% improvement over the state-of-the-art lightweight model (Light ASD) (as evaluated on the noise-augmented AVA-Speaker Detection dataset), while maintaining real-time performance. Building on this, we developed a gaze control system for ECAs that detects the dominant speaker in a group and directs the ECA’s gaze toward them using an algorithm inspired by real human turn-taking behavior. To evaluate the system’s performance, we conducted a user study with 30 participants, comparing the system to a baseline condition (i.e., a fixed forward gaze) and a human-controlled gaze. The results showed statistically significant improvements in social/co-presence and gaze naturalness compared to the baseline, with no significant difference between the system and human-controlled gazes. This suggests that our system achieves a level of social presence and gaze naturalness comparable to a human-controlled gaze. The participants’ feedback, which indicated no clear distinction between human- and model-controlled conditions, further supports the effectiveness of our approach. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue AI Synergy: Vision, Language, and Modality)
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16 pages, 2837 KB  
Article
Fine Root Traits across Different Root Orders and Their Associations with Leaf Traits in 15 Co-Occurring Plant Species from the Desert–Oasis Transition Zone in the Hexi Corridor, Gansu Province, China
by Yiming Chen, Jing Ma, Hongyong Wang, Tingting Xie, Quangang Li and Lishan Shan
Plants 2024, 13(17), 2472; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13172472 - 4 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1493
Abstract
Fine root traits embody trade-offs between resource acquisition and conservation in plants. Yet, the differentiation of these traits across root orders, the existence of a root economics spectrum (RES) spanning these orders, and their linkage with leaf traits remain underexplored. In this study, [...] Read more.
Fine root traits embody trade-offs between resource acquisition and conservation in plants. Yet, the differentiation of these traits across root orders, the existence of a root economics spectrum (RES) spanning these orders, and their linkage with leaf traits remain underexplored. In this study, we analyzed the first three root orders and leaf traits of 15 co-occurring plant species, including ten herbs and five shrubs, from the desert–oasis transition zone of the Hexi Corridor. We measured twelve morphological and chemical traits to investigate the relationships between root and leaf traits. Our results revealed significant variation in root traits both among species and within species across different root orders. We identified RES that spanned root orders, with higher-order roots exhibiting more conservative traits and lower-order roots displaying traits aligned with resource acquisition. Additionally, leaf and fine root traits showed partially decoupled adaptive strategies, yet evidence also supported the existence of a leaf economics spectrum (LES) and a potentially two-dimensional whole plant economics spectrum (WPES). Our findings suggest synergistic resource allocation strategies between fine roots and the entire plant, emphasizing the importance of root order in understanding fine root structure, function, and their interactions with other plant organs. These insights advance the understanding of fine root traits and their integration within the broader plant economics spectrum. Nevertheless, the differences in fine root traits across root orders, the presence of a root economics spectrum (RES) spanning these orders, and the relationships between fine root and leaf traits remain underexplored. We examined the first three root orders and leaves of 15 co-occurring plant species (ten herbs and five shrubs) from the desert–oasis transition zone in the Hexi Corridor, measured twelve key morphological and chemical traits. We observed substantial variation in root traits among species and root orders within species. The root economics spectrum (RES) spanned across root orders, with higher-order roots positioned at the conservative end and lower-order roots at the acquisitive end of the “investment-return” strategy axis. Leaf and fine root traits of the 15 co-occurring plant species exhibited partially decoupled adaptive strategies. However, there was also evidence for the presence of a leaf economics spectrum (LES) and a whole plant economics spectrum (WPES), with the WPES potentially being two-dimensional. Furthermore, our findings suggest synergistic resource strategies between fine roots and the whole plant. Concurrently, the significant interspecific and intraspecific differences in fine root traits, combined with the presence of a root economics spectrum across root orders, underscore the critical importance of root order in studying fine root structure, function, and their associations with other plant organs. Our findings offer valuable insights for future research on fine root traits, the RES, and their integration with the whole plant economics spectrum. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Plant Ecology)
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17 pages, 9159 KB  
Article
The Effect of Eye Contact in Multi-Party Conversations with Virtual Humans and Mitigating the Mona Lisa Effect
by Junyeong Kum, Sunghun Jung and Myungho Lee
Electronics 2024, 13(2), 430; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13020430 - 19 Jan 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2614
Abstract
The demand for kiosk systems with embodied conversational agents has increased with the development of artificial intelligence. There have been attempts to utilize non-verbal cues, particularly virtual human (VH) eye contact, to enable human-like interaction. Eye contact with VHs can affect satisfaction with [...] Read more.
The demand for kiosk systems with embodied conversational agents has increased with the development of artificial intelligence. There have been attempts to utilize non-verbal cues, particularly virtual human (VH) eye contact, to enable human-like interaction. Eye contact with VHs can affect satisfaction with the system and the perception of VHs. However, when rendered in 2D kiosks, the gaze direction of a VH can be incorrectly perceived, due to a lack of stereo cues. A user study was conducted to examine the effects of the gaze behavior of VHs in multi-party conversations in a 2D display setting. The results showed that looking at actual speakers affects the perceived interpersonal skills, social presence, attention, co-presence, and competence in conversations with VHs. In a second study, the gaze perception was further examined with consideration of the Mona Lisa effect, which can lead users to believe that a VH rendered on a 2D display is gazing at them, regardless of the actual direction, within a narrow range. We also proposed the camera rotation angle fine tuning (CRAFT) method to enhance the users’ perceptual accuracy regarding the direction of the VH’s gaze.The results showed that the perceptual accuracy for the VH gaze decreased in a narrow range and that CRAFT could increase the perceptual accuracy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computer Science & Engineering)
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19 pages, 5718 KB  
Article
Stiffness Warming Potential: An Innovative Parameter for Structural and Environmental Assessment of Timber–Concrete Composite Members
by Laura Corti and Giovanni Muciaccia
Sustainability 2023, 15(20), 14857; https://doi.org/10.3390/su152014857 - 13 Oct 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2353
Abstract
Timber hybridization with concrete is a rising widespread strategy to obtain members with a structural performance comparable to traditional ones—e.g., RC members—but characterized by a greater sustainability potential thanks to the presence of timber-based materials; this solution is of great interest due to [...] Read more.
Timber hybridization with concrete is a rising widespread strategy to obtain members with a structural performance comparable to traditional ones—e.g., RC members—but characterized by a greater sustainability potential thanks to the presence of timber-based materials; this solution is of great interest due to its low embodied carbon content, which supports the decarbonization goals set, especially for the building sector. Such systems enhance the concrete and timber favorable properties and ameliorate their detrimental characteristics, both from the structural and environmental perspectives. In general, since these two aspects are generally considered separately, a new parameter is proposed to simultaneously combine a structural performance indicator with a warming potential one. Focusing on composite slabs in bending, the stiffness warming potential (λ) is introduced, which combines the evaluation of effective bending stiffness (according to Eurocode 5 γ-method) with the Global Warming Potential—GWP (on the basis of data from Athena Impact Estimator for Building software and data from an Environmental Product Declaration of a timber panel). The method provides a multi-criteria analysis concerning the slab design accounting for vibration, deflection, and acoustic criteria when optimizing the member span. On the other hand, GWP is assessed according to cradle-to-cradle Life Cycle Assessment analysis, where two scenarios with different sustainability levels are encompassed. Results firstly confirm the viability of the novel methodology, with a different outlook on timber–concrete hybrid members, stressing the importance of maintaining thinness of the concrete layer and clearly bringing out the importance of correct re-use and/or a timber recycling management to guarantee effective reductions in terms of CO2 emissions. Full article
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20 pages, 8887 KB  
Article
Eco-Friendly Blends of Recycled PET Copolymers with PLLA and Their Composites with Chopped Flax Fibres
by Martial Aimé Kuété, Pascal Van Velthem, Wael Ballout, Nathan Klavzer, Bernard Nysten, Maurice Kor Ndikontar, Thomas Pardoen and Christian Bailly
Polymers 2023, 15(14), 3004; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15143004 - 10 Jul 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2543
Abstract
The structure and properties of blends of a novel polyethylene terephthalate copolymer (COPET) obtained by chemical recycling of commercial PET with high-molar-mass poly-L-lactide (PLLA) are investigated and compared to corresponding composites with chopped flax fibres. The focus is on the morphology at nano- [...] Read more.
The structure and properties of blends of a novel polyethylene terephthalate copolymer (COPET) obtained by chemical recycling of commercial PET with high-molar-mass poly-L-lactide (PLLA) are investigated and compared to corresponding composites with chopped flax fibres. The focus is on the morphology at nano- and micro-scales, on the thermal characteristics and on the mechanical behaviour. The blends are immiscible, as evidenced by virtually unchanged glass transition temperatures of the blend components compared to the neat polymers (49 °C for COPET and 63 °C for PLLA by DSC). At low PLLA content, the blends display a sea–island morphology with sub-micron to micron droplet sizes. As the composition approaches 50/50, the morphology transitions to a coarser co-continuous elongated structure. The blends and composites show strongly improved stiffness compared to COPET above its glass transition temperature, e.g., from melt behaviour at 60 °C for COPET alone to almost 600 MPa for the 50/50 blend and 500 MPa for the 20% flax composite of the 80/20 COPET/PLLA blend. The flax fibres increase the crystallisation rate of PLLA in blends with dispersed PLLA morphology. The evidence of cavitation on the fracture surfaces of blends shows that despite the immiscibility of the components, the interfacial adhesion between the phases is excellent. This is attributed to the presence of aliphatic ester spacers in COPET. The tensile strength of the 80/20 blend is around 50 MPa with a Young’s modulus of 2250 MPa. The corresponding 20% flax composite has similar tensile strength but a high Young’s modulus equal to 6400 MPa, which results from the individual dispersion and strong adhesion of the flax fibres and leads close to the maximum possible reinforcement of the composite, as demonstrated by tensile tests and nano-indentation. The Ashby approach to eco-selection relying on the embodied energy (EE) further clarifies the eco-friendliness of the blends and their composites, which are even better positioned than PLLA in a stiffness versus EE chart. Full article
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21 pages, 3876 KB  
Article
Beyond Utterances: Embodied Creativity and Compliance in Dance and Dementia
by An Kosurko and Melisa Stevanovic
Soc. Sci. 2023, 12(5), 304; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050304 - 17 May 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2397
Abstract
Practices of creativity and compliance intersect in interaction when directing local dances remotely for people living with dementia and their carers in institutional settings. This ethnomethodological study focused on how artistic mechanisms are understood and structured by participants in response to on-screen instruction. [...] Read more.
Practices of creativity and compliance intersect in interaction when directing local dances remotely for people living with dementia and their carers in institutional settings. This ethnomethodological study focused on how artistic mechanisms are understood and structured by participants in response to on-screen instruction. Video data were collected from two long-term care facilities in Canada and Finland in a pilot study of a dance program that extended internationally from Canada to Finland at the onset of COVID-19. Fourteen hours of video data were analyzed using multimodal conversation analysis of initiation–response sequences. In this paper, we identify how creative instructed actions are produced in compliance with multimodal directives in interaction when mediated by technology and facilitated by copresent facilitators. We provide examples of how participants’ variably compliant responses in relation to dance instruction, from following a lead to coordinating with others, produce different creative actions from embellishing to improvising. Our findings suggest that cocreativity may be realized at intersections of compliance and creativity toward reciprocity. This research contributes to interdisciplinary discussions about the potential of arts-based practices in social inclusion, health, and well-being by studying how dance instruction is understood and realized remotely and in copresence in embodied instructed action and interaction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Rethinking Artful Politics: Bodies of Difference Remaking Body Worlds)
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31 pages, 1740 KB  
Review
Challenges in Implementing Low-Latency Holographic-Type Communication Systems
by Radostina Petkova, Vladimir Poulkov, Agata Manolova and Krasimir Tonchev
Sensors 2022, 22(24), 9617; https://doi.org/10.3390/s22249617 - 8 Dec 2022
Cited by 23 | Viewed by 7097
Abstract
Holographic-type communication (HTC) permits new levels of engagement between remote users. It is anticipated that it will give a very immersive experience while enhancing the sense of spatial co-presence. In addition to the newly revealed advantages, however, stringent system requirements are imposed, such [...] Read more.
Holographic-type communication (HTC) permits new levels of engagement between remote users. It is anticipated that it will give a very immersive experience while enhancing the sense of spatial co-presence. In addition to the newly revealed advantages, however, stringent system requirements are imposed, such as multi-sensory and multi-dimensional data capture and reproduction, ultra-lightweight processing, ultra-low-latency transmission, realistic avatar embodiment conveying gestures and facial expressions, support for an arbitrary number of participants, etc. In this paper, we review the current limitations to the HTC system implementation and systemize the main challenges into a few major groups. Furthermore, we propose a conceptual framework for the realization of an HTC system that will guarantee the desired low-latency transmission, lightweight processing, and ease of scalability, all accompanied with a higher level of realism in human body appearance and dynamics. Full article
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17 pages, 2606 KB  
Article
Is Natural Necessary? Human Voice versus Synthetic Voice for Intelligent Virtual Agents
by Amal Abdulrahman and Deborah Richards
Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2022, 6(7), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6070051 - 27 Jun 2022
Cited by 25 | Viewed by 8335
Abstract
The use of intelligent virtual agents (IVA) to support humans in social contexts will depend on their social acceptability. Acceptance will be related to the human’s perception of the IVAs as well as the IVAs’ ability to respond and adapt their conversation appropriately [...] Read more.
The use of intelligent virtual agents (IVA) to support humans in social contexts will depend on their social acceptability. Acceptance will be related to the human’s perception of the IVAs as well as the IVAs’ ability to respond and adapt their conversation appropriately to the human. Adaptation implies computer-generated speech (synthetic speech), such as text-to-speech (TTS). In this paper, we present the results of a study to investigate the effect of voice type (human voice vs. synthetic voice) on two aspects: (1) the IVA’s likeability and voice impression in the light of co-presence, and (2) the interaction outcome, including human–agent trust and behavior change intention. The experiment included 118 participants who interacted with either the virtual advisor with TTS or the virtual advisor with human voice to gain tips for reducing their study stress. Participants in this study found the voice of the virtual advisor with TTS to be more eerie, but they rated both agents, with recorded voice and with TTS, similarly in terms of likeability. They further showed a similar attitude towards both agents in terms of co-presence and building trust. These results challenge previous studies that favor human voice over TTS, and suggest that even if human voice is preferred, TTS can deliver equivalent benefits. Full article
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24 pages, 7210 KB  
Article
Assisted Synthesis of Coated Iron Oxide Nanoparticles for Magnetic Hyperthermia
by Liliana P. Ferreira, César P. Reis, Tiago T. Robalo, M. E. Melo Jorge, Paula Ferreira, Joana Gonçalves, Abdollah Hajalilou and Maria Margarida Cruz
Nanomaterials 2022, 12(11), 1870; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12111870 - 30 May 2022
Cited by 40 | Viewed by 4422
Abstract
Magnetite nanoparticles were synthesized by the co-precipitation method with and without the assistance of an additive, namely, gelatin, agar-agar or pectin, using eco-friendly conditions and materials embodying a green synthesis process. X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy were used to analyze the structure [...] Read more.
Magnetite nanoparticles were synthesized by the co-precipitation method with and without the assistance of an additive, namely, gelatin, agar-agar or pectin, using eco-friendly conditions and materials embodying a green synthesis process. X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy were used to analyze the structure and morphology of the nanoparticles. Magnetic properties were investigated by SQUID magnetometry and 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy. The results show that the presence of the additives implies a higher reproducibility of the morphological magnetic nanoparticle characteristics compared with synthesis without any additive, with small differences associated with different additives. To assess their potential for magnetic hyperthermia, water-based suspensions of these nanoparticles were prepared with and without citric acid. The stable solutions obtained were studied for their structural, magnetic and heating efficiency properties. The results indicate that the best additive for the stabilization of a water-based emulsion and better heating efficiency is pectin or a combination of pectin and agar-agar, attaining an intrinsic loss power of 3.6 nWg−1. Full article
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17 pages, 332 KB  
Article
Networking in the Time of COVID
by Jacqueline Militello
Languages 2021, 6(2), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages6020092 - 20 May 2021
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3702
Abstract
This study examines how during COVID professionals in the financial sector in Hong Kong experienced adaptations to previous ways of networking and what the material outcomes were. Becoming acquainted traditionally relies heavily on face-to-face interaction to advance and cement feelings of trust that [...] Read more.
This study examines how during COVID professionals in the financial sector in Hong Kong experienced adaptations to previous ways of networking and what the material outcomes were. Becoming acquainted traditionally relies heavily on face-to-face interaction to advance and cement feelings of trust that eventually lead to successfully concluded transactions. Using linguistic ethnography, I interviewed 36 professionals about networking during COVID. For all three aspects of networking (creating, cultivating, and utilizing relationships for attaining professional goals), participants indicated significant changes as embodied co-present interactions all but ceased and were replaced by computer-mediated communication, including video platforms such as Zoom. Many, but not all, participants indicated that they had made either no new, or a greatly decreased number of new professional acquaintances, compared to pre-COVID times. The cues that would be present in face-to-face interaction were largely viewed as essential for establishing trust in deepening relationships and achieving professional goals such as concluding transactions. There were some compensatory affordances such as more ‘objective’ evaluations and equalization for those in more peripheral geographic locations. The material outcomes were that, for most, new relationships were significantly handicapped, resulting in networks in a state of stasis, a situation that privileged extant connections and those with strong professional networks. Full article
16 pages, 689 KB  
Article
Trade Openness and Carbon Leakage: Empirical Evidence from China’s Industrial Sector
by Bin Fan, Yun Zhang, Xiuzhen Li and Xiao Miao
Energies 2019, 12(6), 1101; https://doi.org/10.3390/en12061101 - 21 Mar 2019
Cited by 23 | Viewed by 3930
Abstract
China is a large import and export economy in global terms, and the carbon dioxide emissions and carbon leakage arising from trade have great significance for China’s foreign trade and its economy. On the basis of trade data for China’s 20 industrial sectors, [...] Read more.
China is a large import and export economy in global terms, and the carbon dioxide emissions and carbon leakage arising from trade have great significance for China’s foreign trade and its economy. On the basis of trade data for China’s 20 industrial sectors, we first built a panel data model to test the effect of trade on carbon dioxide emissions and the presence of carbon leakage for all industrial sectors. Second, we derived a single-region input–output model for open economies based on the industrial sectors’ diversity and carbon dioxide emissions, and performed an empirical test. We estimated the net carbon intensity embodied in export, which is 0.237tCO2/ten thousand RMB, to divide all sectors (ACSs) into high-carbon sectors (HCSs) and low-carbon sectors (LCSs). The results show that higher trade openness leads to a reduction in the intensity of CO2 emissions and gross emissions and that there are obvious structural differences in different sectors with different carbon emission intensity. The coefficient of trade openness for LCSs is −0.073 and is statistically significant at the 1% level, so higher trade openness for LCSs leads to a reduction in the CO2 emissions intensity. However, the coefficient for HCSs is 0.117 and is statistically significant at the 10% level, indicating that higher trade openness increases the CO2 emissions’ intensity for HCSs. The difference is that higher trade openness in LCSs can help reduce the CO2 emissions’ intensity without the problem of carbon leakage and with the existence of the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC), whereas there is no EKC for HCSs and carbon leakage may happen. We introduced dummy variables and found that a “pollution haven” effect exists in HCSs. The test results in HCSs and LCSs are exactly the opposite of each other, which shows that the carbon leakage of ACSs cannot be determined. The message that can be drawn for policy makers is that China does not need to worry about the adverse impact on the environment of trade opening up and should, in fact, increase the opening up of trade, while becoming acclimatized to environmental regulation of a new trade mode and new standards. This will help amplify the favorable impact of trade opening up on the environment and improve China’s international reputation. The policies related to trade should encourage structural adjustment between the sectors via the formulation of differential policies and impose a restraint on sectors that have high levels of CO2 emissions embodied in export. Full article
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