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38 pages, 11858 KB  
Article
Adaptive Reuse of Industrial Heritage in Mining Towns Based on Scene Theory: A Case Study of Meitanba Town, China
by Junyang Wu, Guohui Ouyang, Yi Wang, Feixuan He and Ruitao He
Buildings 2026, 16(7), 1317; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16071317 (registering DOI) - 26 Mar 2026
Abstract
Industrial heritage in resource-depleted mining towns faces the dual challenge of physical decay and social severance. To achieve sustainable urban revitalization, adaptive reuse strategies must align with local collective memory and emerging experiential consumption trends. Adopting a Scene Theory perspective, this study constructs [...] Read more.
Industrial heritage in resource-depleted mining towns faces the dual challenge of physical decay and social severance. To achieve sustainable urban revitalization, adaptive reuse strategies must align with local collective memory and emerging experiential consumption trends. Adopting a Scene Theory perspective, this study constructs a multi-level analytical framework using Meitanba Town (Hunan, China) and its power plant as a case study. A mixed-methods approach was employed, combining semantic network analysis of 1582 online user comments with 61 offline questionnaires distributed to local residents to quantitatively diagnose current scene elements, functions, and features. The quantitative results reveal a significant imbalance: while “Functional Media” achieved the highest comprehensive score (10.0) due to strong historical recognition, “Diverse Groups” scored the lowest (3.4), indicating a lack of social inclusivity. Specifically, residents expressed the highest demand for sports facilities (31.2%) and cultural spaces (23.7%), identifying the main workshop (26.4%) and chimney as core carriers of industrial identity. Responding to these findings, the paper proposes three targeted strategies: (1) Activate: creating open-access recreation scenes to satisfy urgent sports demands; (2) Link: constructing immersive cultural scenes to narrate the “coal–electricity–life” history; and (3) Enhance: developing industry-powered commercial scenes to avoid homogenization. This study enriches the localized application of Scene Theory and provides a data-driven, context-adjustable analytical and strategic model that can inform the sustainable renewal of mining towns globally, with its specific implementation requiring adaptation to local social, economic, and cultural characteristics. Full article
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15 pages, 427 KB  
Article
Prevalence of Locomotive Syndrome and Its Association with Physical Activity, Frailty, and Cognitive Status Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Thailand
by Chadapa Rungruangbaiyok, Charupa Lektip, Jiraphat Nawarat, Eiji Miyake, Keiichiro Aoki, Hiroyuki Ohtsuka, Yasuko Inaba, Yoshinori Kagaya and Weeranan Yaemrattanakul
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(4), 414; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040414 (registering DOI) - 25 Mar 2026
Abstract
This cross-sectional study included 112 community-dwelling older adults aged ≥ 60 years residing in Tha Sala District, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province, Thailand, recruited using a community-based quota sampling approach. Locomotive syndrome (LS) was assessed using the two-step test and classified according to the [...] Read more.
This cross-sectional study included 112 community-dwelling older adults aged ≥ 60 years residing in Tha Sala District, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province, Thailand, recruited using a community-based quota sampling approach. Locomotive syndrome (LS) was assessed using the two-step test and classified according to the Japanese Orthopaedic Association criteria. Physical activity was evaluated using the Thai version of the Global Physical Activity Questionnaire across work-related, transportation-related, and recreational domains. Frailty and cognitive status were assessed using the Thai version of the FRAIL questionnaire and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, respectively. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to examine associations. The prevalence of LS was 74.1%, with 37.5%, 33.0%, and 3.6% in participants classified as having LS stages 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Transportation-related physical activity was significantly associated with lower odds of LS. Frailty and mild cognitive impairment frequently coexisted with LS but were not independently associated with LS after adjustment for age and sex. Transportation-related physical activity emerged as a key protective factor, highlighting the importance of habitual mobility in daily life. Our findings suggest that LS overlaps with, but is not identical to, frailty and cognitive decline in relatively robust community settings. Early screening and mobility-related physical activity may be crucial in preventing functional decline in rapidly aging societies. Full article
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20 pages, 417 KB  
Article
Public Knowledge and Perceptions of Fentanyl Test Strips: A National Cross-Sectional Survey Informed by the Health Belief Model
by Lindsey Hohmann, Madelynn Aeilts, Caitlyn Johnson, Gabriela Rajic, Annarose Sorvillo, Brandy Davis and Anne Taylor
Healthcare 2026, 14(7), 833; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14070833 - 24 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Fentanyl test strips (FTS) are a harm reduction tool used to detect fentanyl in illicit substances. However, little is known regarding Americans’ beliefs regarding FTS. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to assess the U.S. general public’s FTS knowledge and [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Fentanyl test strips (FTS) are a harm reduction tool used to detect fentanyl in illicit substances. However, little is known regarding Americans’ beliefs regarding FTS. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to assess the U.S. general public’s FTS knowledge and perceptions. Methods: This study utilized a cross-sectional design. Adults ≥18 residing in the U.S. were recruited to participate in an anonymous online survey via Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk). Participants received $5 upon survey completion. The survey instrument was informed by the Health Belief Model, and primary outcome measures included: (1) FTS knowledge (13-items); (2) perceived susceptibility to fentanyl exposure (8-items); (3) perceived severity of fentanyl exposure (10-items); (4) perceived FTS benefits (9-items); (5) perceived barriers to FTS access (13-items); (6) comfort using and accessing FTS (15-items); (7) confidence using and accessing FTS (11-items); and (8) FTS utilization intentions (6-items). Outcomes were measured via 5-point Likert-type scales (1 = strongly disagree, 5 = strongly agree). Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and Mann–Whitney U tests to compare differences in scale scores across participant sociodemographics. Predictors of FTS utilization intentions were assessed via multiple linear regression, controlling for participant age, race, sex, geographic setting (rural/urban), and recreational drug use history (yes/no) (α = 0.05). Results: Of n = 206 respondents, the majority were male (55.8%) and White (83.0%) with a mean age of 46.4. Approximately 81% resided in urban areas and 58.5% reported a history of recreational drug use. Participants who identified as Black, Asian, Indigenous, Pacific Islander, or Multiracial reported significantly higher mean (SD) perceived susceptibility compared to White participants (2.06 [0.54] vs. 1.91 [0.58]; p = 0.034). Participants residing in urban areas reported significantly higher comfort using and accessing FTS (3.61 [0.86]) than those in rural areas (3.29 [0.92]; p = 0.048), and younger individuals (≤44.5 years) were more confident in their ability to access FTS (3.75 [0.73]) compared to their older counterparts (3.60 [0.64]; p = 0.048). Perceived susceptibility (β = 0.442; p < 0.001), benefits (β = 0.250; p = 0.020), and comfort (β = 0.453; p < 0.001) were positive predictors of FTS utilization intention (R2 = 0.417). Conclusions: Perceptions regarding FTS varied across race, geographic setting, and age. Perceived susceptibility, perceived benefits, and comfort positively predicted the U.S. general public’s FTS utilization intentions. Future interventions may leverage these influential factors to enhance FTS uptake. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Public Health and Preventive Medicine)
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23 pages, 5651 KB  
Article
Sustainable Urban Renewal: Non-Linear Coupling Mechanism Between Green View Index and Thermal Comfort in High-Density Streets of Shenyang, China
by Lei Fan, Yixuan Sha, Zixian Li and Yan Zhou
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3187; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073187 - 24 Mar 2026
Abstract
As urbanization intensifies, improving street thermal comfort has become a critical issue in urban renewal. While existing studies generally assume that increasing the Green View Index (GVI) linearly improves pedestrian thermal comfort, this study identifies a significant “Decoupling Effect” in high-density commercial areas [...] Read more.
As urbanization intensifies, improving street thermal comfort has become a critical issue in urban renewal. While existing studies generally assume that increasing the Green View Index (GVI) linearly improves pedestrian thermal comfort, this study identifies a significant “Decoupling Effect” in high-density commercial areas through field measurements and numerical simulations of three typical street types (commercial–service, ecological–recreational, and historical–cultural) in Shenyang. Integrating DeepLab V3 semantic segmentation with ENVI-met version 5.1.1 microclimate simulation, the results demonstrate a robust monotonic negative correlation between GVI and Physiological Equivalent Temperature (PET) in ecological streets (Spearman’s ρ = −0.692, p < 0.001), confirming the consistent cooling benefit of greenery in nature-dominated environments. However, a distinct “Threshold Effect” was identified in commercial streets using Piecewise Linear Regression (PLR). A critical breakpoint was detected at GVI = 22.08%. Below this threshold, visual greenery effectively contributes to cooling (slope = −0.454); yet, once GVI exceeds 22.08%, the cooling efficacy diminishes significantly (slope = −0.109), marking the onset of a “decoupling” phase. Specifically, despite Wenhua Road achieving a GVI of ~24.5% with a complex “three-board, four-belt” structure, its PET peak reaches 46.15 °C, approximately 5.5 °C higher than ecological streets. Mechanism analysis reveals that under peak thermal stress (Traffic Heat ≈ 75 W/m2), the high-intensity anthropogenic heat and hardscape radiation exceed the evaporative cooling threshold of vegetation. This study reveals the non-linear relationship between visual greenery and the physical thermal environment, suggesting that simply pursuing visual green quantity is ineffective in commercial canyon renewal; instead, a threshold-based synergistic optimization of canopy shading and pavement thermal performance is required. These findings provide a quantitative basis for sustainable street landscape planning and urban climate adaptation strategies in high-density cities. Full article
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21 pages, 3054 KB  
Article
Natural Hydrophobic Deep Eutectic Solvent-Based Enhanced Extraction of Bioactive Compounds from Cannabis sativa L. Leaf for Pharmaceutical Applications
by Serwat Naz, Sumia Akram, Rabia Naeem, Haroon Iftikhar, Rizwan Ashraf, Noor Ul Ain Khalid, Muhammad Shahid, Imad A. Abu-Yousef, Amin F. Majdalawieh and Muhammad Mushtaq
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(7), 2933; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27072933 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 101
Abstract
Cannabis sativa L. leaves (CSL) are a rich in bioactive compounds and known for their medicinal and recreational uses. In this study, a natural hydrophobic deep eutectic solvent (HDES) system composed of menthol and thymol (1:1) was employed for the efficient extraction of [...] Read more.
Cannabis sativa L. leaves (CSL) are a rich in bioactive compounds and known for their medicinal and recreational uses. In this study, a natural hydrophobic deep eutectic solvent (HDES) system composed of menthol and thymol (1:1) was employed for the efficient extraction of bioactive compounds from CSL. Extraction of bioactives was optimized at various conditions involving DES/ethanol ratio, temperature, and extraction time, as well as shaking speed through statistical models including response surface methodology (RSM) and artificial neural network (ANN). The maximum bioactive yield, equal to 70% (w/w) of powdered CSL, was achieved at optimized values of 5.5 mL DES, 4.5 mL ethanol, and 225 rpm shaking speed at 55 °C for 107.5 min. It was observed that slightly adjusting the shaking speed and temperatures customized the nature of bioactives with more antioxidant, antidiabetic, and antimicrobial properties. The extracts of CSL produced while applying natural HDES were found to be non-toxic during hemolytic assay. Overall, HDES when mixed with ethanol in 55:45 ratio produced CSL extracts with an ample level of phenolics (133.75 mg GAE/g) and flavonoids (120.05 mg QE/g). GC-MS analysis of CSL extracts produced by HDES revealed the presence of multiple bioactives like tetrahydrocannabivarin, cannabidiol, cannabinol, cannabidivarol, dl-menthol, levomenthol, and 4-hydroxy-3-methylacetophenone. Based on these findings, it can be concluded that HDES in combination with ethanol may work as an efficient extraction solvent to recover CSL bioactives without compromising their antioxidant features and safety for use in food and pharmaceutical applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Bioactives and Nutraceuticals)
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21 pages, 1203 KB  
Article
Performance in Action and Textual Re-Creation: A Study of the Dual Performativity in Hyakuzahōdan Kikigakishō (百座法談聞書抄)
by Ziqi Zhang, Kehua Liu and Yingbo Zhao
Religions 2026, 17(4), 410; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040410 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 57
Abstract
The Hyakuzahōdan Kikigakishō (百座法談聞書抄, hereafter Hyakuza 百座), compiled in the late Heian period, is an important Buddhist document that records a hundred-day lecture series on the Lotus Sutra (法華経). While previous scholarship has recognized the constructed nature of the text as a kikigaki [...] Read more.
The Hyakuzahōdan Kikigakishō (百座法談聞書抄, hereafter Hyakuza 百座), compiled in the late Heian period, is an important Buddhist document that records a hundred-day lecture series on the Lotus Sutra (法華経). While previous scholarship has recognized the constructed nature of the text as a kikigaki (聞書), it has predominantly focused on content analysis, implicitly treating the text as a transparent window into the actual preaching event. To move beyond this limitation, this study proposes the analytical framework of dual performativity and, drawing on Diana Taylor’s theory of the archive and the repertoire, reexamines the text’s generative logic and political implications. This study argues that the Hyakuza embodies two interrelated forms of performance: first, the performativity of the hōdan (法談) as a live ritual, understood as a repertoire performance that constructs immediate authority through body, voice, and situational dynamics; second, the performativity of the kikigaki as textual construction, understood as an archival performance that transforms the ephemeral oral event into an authoritative, transmissible text through formulaic rhetoric, localized adaptation, and systematic arrangement. Integrating methodologies from textual history, rhetorical analysis, ritual theory, and intellectual history, this study demonstrates that the Hyakuza is not a neutral transcript of sermons but a meticulous, intentional act of writing with two fundamental aims: on a cultural level, to hierarchically integrate shinbutsu shūgō (神仏習合) through narrative appropriation; on a social level, to symbolically bind Buddhist merit with the institutional identities of aristocrats such as naishinnō (内親王), ultimately serving the self-affirmation internal cohesion, and cultural demarcation of the elite community from the masses, while simultaneously contributing to the state’s project of constructing a unified ideology in the late Heian period. By examining both cross-civilizational universal logic and specific historical context, this study reveals how the Hyakuza’s dual performativity produces and categorizes knowledge narratives while embedding political power dynamics, offering a critical path for the study of kikigaki-genre literature from discourse analysis to politics of textuality. Full article
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13 pages, 505 KB  
Article
Risk Factors Associated with Systemic Arterial Hypertension in Postmenopausal Women Engaged in Resistance Training: A Cross-Sectional Observational Study
by Renata Corrêa Arruda, Pablo Augusto Garcia Agostinho, Ítalo Santiago Alves Viana, Maria Luíza da Cruz Santos, Marcela Siqueira Benjamim, Paula Janyn Melo-Buitrago, Alice Ribeiro Cutis Vaz, Cláudia Eliza Patrocínio de Oliveira, Édison Andrés Pérez-Bedoya and Osvaldo Costa Moreira
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(3), 408; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23030408 - 23 Mar 2026
Viewed by 178
Abstract
Background: Systemic arterial hypertension (SAH) shows a high prevalence among postmenopausal women and represents an important public health concern. Objective: To evaluate factors associated with SAH in postmenopausal women participating in a resistance training program. Methods: This observational, cross-sectional study included 55 postmenopausal [...] Read more.
Background: Systemic arterial hypertension (SAH) shows a high prevalence among postmenopausal women and represents an important public health concern. Objective: To evaluate factors associated with SAH in postmenopausal women participating in a resistance training program. Methods: This observational, cross-sectional study included 55 postmenopausal women (66.0 ± 4.9 years) recruited from the “More Active Women” research project, an umbrella experimental and longitudinal study involving resistance training interventions. Cross-sectional data were collected during the baseline assessment (April–May 2025). Sociodemographic variables, nutritional status (body mass index and waist circumference), and behavioral and health-related variables obtained through structured interviews and anthropometric assessments were analyzed. Associations were tested using Pearson’s chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test, with effect size estimated by Phi or Cramer’s V when appropriate, and binary logistic regression was performed for adjusted analyses. Results: Significant associations were observed between SAH and elevated BMI (p = 0.03; φ = 0.30), waist circumference > 88 cm (p = 0.006; φ = 0.40), and lower educational level (p = 0.003; V = 0.47). In the adjusted analysis, waist circumference ≤ 88 cm was associated with a lower likelihood of SAH (OR = 5.54; 95% CI: 0.965–31.872; p = 0.007), whereas lower educational level was associated with a higher likelihood of hypertension (OR = 13.98; 95% CI: 1.505–129.833; p = 0.004). Conclusion: Excess central adiposity and lower educational level are associated with SAH in postmenopausal women, highlighting the importance of integrated health promotion strategies that address both cardiometabolic risk factors and social determinants of health during aging. Full article
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23 pages, 699 KB  
Article
Motivation Predicting Satisfaction and Loyalty in Sustainable Coastal Destinations
by Mauricio Carvache-Franco, Lidija Bagarić, Orly Carvache-Franco, Aracelly Núñez-Naranjo and Wilmer Carvache-Franco
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3132; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063132 - 23 Mar 2026
Viewed by 107
Abstract
Sustainable coastal destinations offer a variety of natural and cultural activities that form a construct of motivations that influence tourist behavior regarding their willingness to return to and recommend the destination. In this sense, the present study aimed to achieve the following objectives: [...] Read more.
Sustainable coastal destinations offer a variety of natural and cultural activities that form a construct of motivations that influence tourist behavior regarding their willingness to return to and recommend the destination. In this sense, the present study aimed to achieve the following objectives: to identify the motivations that drive tourist demand in sustainable coastal destinations, to establish which motivations predict tourist satisfaction in coastal destinations, and to determine which motivations predict tourist loyalty in coastal destinations. There are behavioral variables to consider, such as the intention to return, willingness to recommend the destination, and propensity to speak positively about it. The study was carried out in Montañita (Ecuador), a major surfing city in Latin America with extensive potential for water sports. A total of 380 valid surveys were collected on-site for quantitative analysis. Multiple regression and exploratory factor analysis were among the methods used. The final results showed five motivational dimensions linked to tourism in coastal areas, including nature and culture, sun and sea, recreational and sporting activities, novelty, and social interaction. Among all these factors, social interactivity and novelty stood out as the elements that had the greatest impact on visitor loyalty and satisfaction, followed by the sun and beach component. The findings will serve as input for destination managers to develop sustainable management guidelines and are also a contribution to academic literature. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Rural Sustainability: Touristic Consumption and Local Development)
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11 pages, 484 KB  
Article
Patient-Specific Restoration of Constitutional Alignment Within Predefined Safety Boundaries Using Three-Dimensional Navigation in Primary Total Knee Arthroplasty: One-Year Clinical and Radiographic Outcomes
by Maximilian F. Kasparek, Tobias Scheidl, Oliver Haider, Gyula Kiss, Anna Jungwirth-Weinberger, Maximilian Muellner, Valerie Ladstaetter and Thomas Muellner
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(6), 2441; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15062441 - 23 Mar 2026
Viewed by 109
Abstract
Background/Objectives: This study investigates a surgical concept that restores constitutional bony alignment within predefined safety boundaries in primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) using modern 3D navigation. The technique combines a standard knee implant with advanced navigation technology to achieve patient-specific alignment and [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: This study investigates a surgical concept that restores constitutional bony alignment within predefined safety boundaries in primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) using modern 3D navigation. The technique combines a standard knee implant with advanced navigation technology to achieve patient-specific alignment and recreate native joint mechanics. One-year outcome was evaluated to assess first clinical results. Methods: In this retrospective study, a consecutive series of 185 TKAs (171 patients) was analyzed. All patients underwent patient-specific restoration of constitutional alignment within predefined safety boundaries using a 3D navigation system and a standard knee arthroplasty implant. The clinical outcomes were assessed using the 2011 Knee Society Score (KSS), the Forgotten Joint Score (FJS-12), the UCLA Activity Scale, and a five-step Likert scale to evaluate satisfaction. Results: In a total of 87.6% of cases, the patients reported being either satisfied or very satisfied with their TKA. No patients reported strong dissatisfaction. The KSS demonstrated significant improvements in all subcategories (all p < 0.001). The FJS-12 increased significantly from a preoperative average of 32.5 points to 79.3 points postoperatively (p < 0.001). The mean UCLA activity score rose from 4.9 preoperatively to 6.6 postoperatively (p < 0.001). In 97.7% and 90.2% of cases, the femoral mechanical angle (FMA) and tibial mechanical angle (TMA) bone cuts were within ± 1° of the planned angles. A strong correlation was observed between the planned and verified bone cuts for the FMA (ρ = 0.939) and the TMA (ρ = 0.875). Conclusions: Patient-specific restoration of constitutional alignment within predefined safety boundaries in primary TKA using modern 3D navigation is a promising strategy for personalized joint reconstruction using a standard knee arthroplasty implant. It combines precision and reproducibility with high patient satisfaction by respecting each patient’s constitutional alignment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Insights in Joint Arthroplasty—2nd Edition)
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9 pages, 208 KB  
Article
Effect of Acute Caffeine Intake on Maximal Aerobic Speed in University Soccer Players Assessed by the 30–15 Intermittent Fitness Test
by Diego Camilo García-Chaves, Juan Pablo Fernandez Zapata, Tatiana Oyaga Álvarez, Nelson Ortiz Escobar, Alfonso Villegas Mazo and Luisa Fernanda Corredor-Serrano
Sports 2026, 14(3), 123; https://doi.org/10.3390/sports14030123 - 23 Mar 2026
Viewed by 199
Abstract
The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of acute caffeine intake on maximal aerobic speed (MAS) assessed using the 30–15 Intermittent Fitness Test (IFT) in university soccer players. An experimental, randomized, double-blind, crossover design was employed, involving 26 male university [...] Read more.
The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of acute caffeine intake on maximal aerobic speed (MAS) assessed using the 30–15 Intermittent Fitness Test (IFT) in university soccer players. An experimental, randomized, double-blind, crossover design was employed, involving 26 male university team players (n = 26). Each participant completed the test under two conditions: caffeine supplementation (220 mg; 2.85 ± 0.27 mg/kg, range 2.60–3.16 mg/kg) and placebo, separated by a 72 h washout period. The final running speed achieved (VIFT) was used as an estimator of MAS. Statistical analysis included descriptive statistics, normality testing, and paired Student’s t-test, with a significance level set at p < 0.05. The results revealed a significant improvement in VIFT under the caffeine condition (19.94 ± 1.67 km/h) compared with placebo (18.72 ± 1.50 km/h), with a mean difference of 1.22 km/h (6.5%) and a large effect size (dz = 1.24; p < 0.001). It is concluded that acute caffeine intake was associated with a significant improvement in intermittent aerobic performance in university soccer players under the conditions of the present study, suggesting that caffeine may represent a potentially useful strategy in similar applied contexts. Full article
21 pages, 597 KB  
Article
Visitor Typologies for Micro-Zoning in Forest Recreation Sites
by Eran Ketter, Yaara Spiegel and Noga Collins-Kreiner
Land 2026, 15(3), 506; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15030506 - 21 Mar 2026
Viewed by 125
Abstract
Forest recreation sites provide accessible settings for everyday leisure while accommodating multiple, and often competing, uses, making zoning both a central planning challenge and solution. This study advances micro-zoning as a novel, site-scale extension of established recreation zoning concepts, examining how zoning principles [...] Read more.
Forest recreation sites provide accessible settings for everyday leisure while accommodating multiple, and often competing, uses, making zoning both a central planning challenge and solution. This study advances micro-zoning as a novel, site-scale extension of established recreation zoning concepts, examining how zoning principles can be operationalized within intensively used forest recreation areas. Data were collected from 302 visitors using a structured questionnaire on visit patterns, valued forest attributes, disturbances, and socio-demographic characteristics. Descriptive statistics and tests of association were used to identify needs, disturbances, and recurring combinations of use. The results show that these forests function as everyday recreation spaces for diverse group visits, with high importance placed on peacefulness, shade, cleanliness, natural scenery, and basic infrastructure, alongside frequent reports of disturbance from music, crowding, and litter. Building on these patterns, the study develops a micro-zoning framework that delineates three interpretive planning micro-areas: Drive-in Forest Recreation, representing high-intensity, infrastructure-oriented social use; Low-Intensity Recreation, a moderate-use, low-noise nature-oriented area prioritizing separation from disturbance; and Active Recreation Use, comprising movement-focused routes for walking, running, and cycling. The study illustrates how visitor survey data can guide evidence-based micro-zoning and adapt zoning frameworks to the fine spatial grain of intensively used forest recreation sites. Full article
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19 pages, 12766 KB  
Article
Evaluating the Resilience Gap: What Can Modern Beijing Learn from the Historical Water System of Yuan Dadu (1267–1368 CE)?
by Zi Hui and Jiaping Liu
Water 2026, 18(6), 735; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18060735 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 177
Abstract
Urban flood resilience is an important indicator for measuring a city’s capacity to respond to and recover from flood disasters. However, existing assessments often lack a long-term hydrological baseline. This study establishes the historical water system of Yuan Dadu (1267–1368 CE) as a [...] Read more.
Urban flood resilience is an important indicator for measuring a city’s capacity to respond to and recover from flood disasters. However, existing assessments often lack a long-term hydrological baseline. This study establishes the historical water system of Yuan Dadu (1267–1368 CE) as a control scenario to benchmark the flood resilience of modern Beijing. By integrating a historical geographic reconstruction with a hydrological–hydrodynamic simulation and the fuzzy analytic hierarchy process (FAHP), the research quantifies structural differences in resilience profiles between the nature-adapted historical system and the modern engineering-dominated system. The results indicate that Yuan Dadu’s urban flood resilience index (UFRI) is 3.44 and modern Beijing’s is 3.28. Despite modern Beijing’s significant advantage in drainage facility density (0.61 km/km2) and emergency management, the system exhibits a functional substitution failure, where gray infrastructure has failed to fully compensate for a 26% reduction in the unit area storage capacity (from 6.4 to 4.7 × 104 m3/km2) and a 48.4% decline in the water system structural complexity. The findings indicate that, in rapidly urbanized cities on alluvial plains with high impervious coverage, expanding drainage networks alone may be insufficient to offset losses in a natural hydraulic buffering capacity. Accordingly, planning strategies are proposed that integrate distributed micro-storage and restore topological connectivity to recreate system-level hydraulic buffering functions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Drainage Systems and Stormwater Management, 2nd Edition)
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21 pages, 500 KB  
Article
Somatometric, Training, and Behavioral Profiles of Resistance Training Practitioners and Recreational Exercisers in Greece: A Multivariate Comparative Study
by Ioannis Tsartsapakis, Aglaia Zafeiroudi, Athanasia Chatzipanteli and Maria Gerou
Sports 2026, 14(3), 120; https://doi.org/10.3390/sports14030120 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 140
Abstract
This cross-sectional study compared somatometric, training, and behavioral characteristics of adult exercisers in Greece, contrasting self-identified resistance-training practitioners with recreational exercisers. A total of 1187 adults completed a structured questionnaire capturing demographics, self-reported height and weight (BMI), weekly training frequency, session duration, competition [...] Read more.
This cross-sectional study compared somatometric, training, and behavioral characteristics of adult exercisers in Greece, contrasting self-identified resistance-training practitioners with recreational exercisers. A total of 1187 adults completed a structured questionnaire capturing demographics, self-reported height and weight (BMI), weekly training frequency, session duration, competition participation, and self-reported use of performance-enhancing substances. Given non-normal distributions, analyses used nonparametric tests, binary logistic regression, and two-step cluster analysis based on the elbow method. Resistance-training practitioners reported higher BMI, greater weekly training frequency, and longer session duration than recreational exercisers (all p < 0.001). Substance use was more prevalent among resistance-training practitioners and exhibited a marked gender asymmetry, with anabolic-agent use concentrated among men. A logistic regression predicting competition participation identified age, BMI, gender, and education as significant predictors; the model explained a modest proportion of variance (Nagelkerke R2 = 0.10). Cluster analysis produced four distinct participant profiles differing in BMI, training intensity, and behavioral orientation. These results indicate systematic somatometric and behavioral differences between exercise orientations and demonstrate the utility of multivariate profiling for characterizing heterogeneity in exercise engagement. Findings should be interpreted cautiously because all anthropometric and substance-use measures were self-reported, and BMI cannot distinguish lean from fat mass in resistance-trained populations; future research should prioritize representative sampling and objective somatometric assessment. Full article
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35 pages, 59977 KB  
Article
Post-Occupancy Evaluation and Evidence-Based Retrofitting of Outdoor Spaces in Old Residential Communities: An Intergenerational-Friendly Perspective from Xingshe Community, Dalian, China
by Jiarun Li, Zhubin Li and Kun Wang
Buildings 2026, 16(6), 1219; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16061219 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 127
Abstract
In China’s stock-based renewal agenda, many old residential communities display pronounced intergenerational overlap, in which grandparental childcare becomes a dominant pattern of outdoor-space use. Against the backdrop of age-structure shifts, population ageing, and persistently low fertility, community-level outdoor-space supply, distributive equity, and environmental [...] Read more.
In China’s stock-based renewal agenda, many old residential communities display pronounced intergenerational overlap, in which grandparental childcare becomes a dominant pattern of outdoor-space use. Against the backdrop of age-structure shifts, population ageing, and persistently low fertility, community-level outdoor-space supply, distributive equity, and environmental adaptability have become key concerns in renewal practice. Yet, practitioners still lack a rankable, low-cost, and implementable evaluation-to-decision workflow. Using Xingshe Community in Dalian, China as an empirical case, this study establishes and tests an integrated “NLP–AHP–GBDT” assessment framework. Guided by policy discourse and planning theory, over 50 semi-structured interviews were processed via NLP-based semantic analysis and keyword mining to derive a two-tier indicator set (criterion and indicator layers). Seven specialists then applied the analytic hierarchy process to elicit indicator weights, and a resident survey was administered to generate weighted performance scores for diagnosing deficiencies. In the feedback-validation stage, we adopted both a qualitative Framework Method and a quantitative GBDT approach, first using the Framework Method to conduct feedback validation based on community residents’ open-ended evaluations. Subsequently, gradient boosting decision trees were used for supervised verification with renewal-scenario data, providing empirical backing for the weighting scheme and the resulting priority order for interventions. The findings suggest that outdoor spaces are broadly serviceable but fall short in intergenerational friendliness, reflecting a structural misalignment between intergenerational activity patterns and spatial provision. Based on the validated priorities, the study proposes modular, incremental micro-renewal measures focusing on safety and emergency accessibility, environmental comfort and caregiving–recreation coupling, and place identity with community organizational mobilization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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15 pages, 251 KB  
Article
Menstrual Cycle Characteristics and Injury History in Adult Amateur Female Football Players: A Cross-Sectional Study Using Selected LEAF-Q Items
by Joanna Witkoś, Joanna Kubik and Magdalena Hartman-Petrycka
Healthcare 2026, 14(6), 773; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14060773 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 137
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Increasing training demands in women’s football have heightened interest in female-specific health characteristics, including menstrual health. The aim of this study was to describe menstrual-cycle characteristics and injury history in adult amateur female football players using selected items of the Low [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Increasing training demands in women’s football have heightened interest in female-specific health characteristics, including menstrual health. The aim of this study was to describe menstrual-cycle characteristics and injury history in adult amateur female football players using selected items of the Low Energy Availability in Females Questionnaire (LEAF-Q), with particular focus on prolonged absence of menstrual bleeding and training-associated menstrual changes. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 118 adult amateur (non-elite) female football players (mean age 24.41 ± 4.50 years). Participants reported mean weekly training hours of 4.88 ± 2.45, consistent with amateur-level competitive and recreational participation. Selected items of the LEAF-Q were used, rather than the complete questionnaire; therefore, findings should be interpreted as descriptive indicators of menstrual health and injury history rather than a comprehensive LEA screening. Results: Most participants reported normal menstruation (95.76%), and menarche most commonly occurred between 12 and 14 years of age (92.37%). A history of ≥3 consecutive months without menstrual bleeding (clinically meaningful amenorrhea) was reported by 12.71% of players, while 4.24% reported such an episode at the time of the survey. Training-associated changes in menstrual bleeding were reported by 52.54% of participants, most commonly shorter and lighter bleeding; less frequently, cessation of bleeding (8.93%) or heavier and prolonged bleeding (1.79%) was reported. Injuries in the preceding 12 months were common, with 71.19% reporting one or two injuries and 28.81% reporting three or four injuries. Conclusions: Despite a high prevalence of self-reported regular menstrual cycles, a notable proportion of adult amateur female football players reported episodes of prolonged absence of menstrual bleeding and training-associated changes in bleeding characteristics. These findings highlight the variability of menstrual-cycle characteristics in the context of football training and support the inclusion of routine, confidential menstrual-health monitoring as part of broader athlete health management in women’s football. Football-related injuries were common over the preceding 12 months, reflecting the substantial musculoskeletal demands of the sport. Full article
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