In this article, we analyze the production of inequalities within the centralized water supply network of Lilongwe. We use a process-based analysis to understand how urban infrastructure is made to work and explain the disparity in levels of service by tracing the everyday practices of those who operate the infrastructure. This extends existing analyses of everyday practices in relation to urban water inequalities in African cities by focusing on formal operators, rather than water users, and looking within the networked system, rather than outside it. Our findings show that these practices work to exacerbate existing water stress in poor areas of the city. We conclude with a reflection on how understanding these practices as the product of the perceptions, rationalizations, and interpretations of utility staff who seek to manage the city's (limited) water as best they can offers insight into what is required for a more progressive urban water politics. ; cited By 8
Examines the memory, confrontation, & inhibition of past political traumatic events, & relates it to the current social climate in Mexico, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico, Belgium, & the Spanish Basque Country, drawing on questionnaire data from 520 university students. It is found that the type of trauma differs between Latin America & Europe, & collective trauma is talked about more openly in Latin American countries, all of which have political trauma in their recent past. It is concluded that collective inhibition & silence surrounding political trauma leads to a positive evaluation of the present social climate, while open discussion of trauma leads to a more negative one. 7 Tables, 33 References. Adapted from the source document.
[EN] This work presents a robotic-based solution devised to automate the product packaging in industrial environments. Although the proposed approach is illustrated for the case of the shoe industry, it applies to many other products requiring similar packaging processes. The main advantage obtained with the automated task is that productivity could be significantly increased. The key algorithms for the developed robot system are: object detection using a computer vision system; object grasping; trajectory planning with collision avoidance; and operator interaction using a force/torque sensor. All these algorithms have been experimentally tested in the laboratory to show the effectiveness and applicability of the proposed approach. ; This work has been partly supported by Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of the Spanish Government [Grant No. RTC201654086 and PRI-AIBDE-2011-1219], by the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) of the German Government (Projekt-ID 54368155) and by ROBOFOOT project [Grant No. 260159] of the European Commission. ; Perez-Vidal, C.; Gracia, L.; De Paco, J.; Wirkus, M.; Azorin, J.; De Gea, J. (2018). Automation of product packaging for industrial applications. International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing. 31(2):129-137. https://doi.org/10.1080/0951192X.2017.1369165 ; S ; 129 ; 137 ; 31 ; 2 ; Bay, H., Tuytelaars, T., & Van Gool, L. (2006). SURF: Speeded Up Robust Features. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 404-417. doi:10.1007/11744023_32 ; Bonert, M., Shu, L. H., & Benhabib, B. (2000). Motion planning for multi-robot assembly systems. International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing, 13(4), 301-310. doi:10.1080/095119200407660 ; Davis, S., Tsagarakis, N. G., & Caldwell, D. G. (2008). The initial design and manufacturing process of a low cost hand for the robot iCub. Humanoids 2008 - 8th IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots. doi:10.1109/ichr.2008.4755929 ; DISSANAYAKE, M. W. M. G., & GAL, J. A. (1994). Workstation ...
Abstract. During the GWADASEIS cruise (Lesser Antilles volcanic arc, February–March 2009) a very high resolution (VHR) seismic-reflection survey was performed in order to constrain Late Quaternary to Present faulting. The profiles we obtained evidence frequent "ponding" of reworked sediments in the deepest areas, similar to the deposition of Mediterranean "homogenites". These bodies are acoustically transparent (few ms t.w.t. thick) and are often deposited on the hanging walls of dominantly normal faults, at the base of scarps. Their thickness appears sufficient to compensate (i.e. bury) co-seismic scarps between successive earthquakes, resulting in a flat and horizontal sea floor through time. In a selected area (offshore Montserrat and Nevis islands), piston coring (4 to 7 m long) was dedicated to a sedimentological analysis of the most recent of these particular layers. It corresponds to non-stratified homogenous calcareous silty sand (reworked calcareous plankton and minor volcanoclastics). This layer can be up to 2 m thick, and overlies fine-grained hemipelagites. The upper centimeters of the latter represent the normal RedOx water/sediment interface. 210Pb and 137Cs activities lack in the massive sands, while a normal profile of unsupported 210Pb decrease is observed in the hemipelagite below, together with a 137Cs peak corresponding to the Atmospheric Nuclear Experiments (1962). The RedOx level was thus capped by a recent instantaneous major sedimentary event considered as post-1970 AD; candidate seismic events to explain this sedimentary deposits are either the 16 March 1985 earthquake or the 8 October 1974 one (Mw = 6.3 and Mw = 7.4, respectively). This leads to consider that the syntectonic sedimentation in this area is not continuous but results from accumulation of thick homogenites deposited after the earthquakes (as observed in the following weeks after Haiti January 2010 event, McHugh et al., 2011). The existence of such deposits suggests that, in the area of study, vertical throw likely results from cumulated effects of separated earthquakes rather than from aseismic creep. Examination of VHR profiles shows that all major co-seismic offsets are recorded in the fault growth sequence and that co-seismic offsets can be precisely estimated. By using a sedimentation rate deduced from 210Pb decrease curve (0.5 mm yr−1) and taking into account minor reworking events detected in cores, we show that the Redonda system may have been responsible for five >M6 events during the last 34 000 yr. The approach presented in this work differs from fault activity analyses using displaced sets of isochronous surfaces and postulating co-seismic offsets. Combining VHR seismic imagery and coring we can decipher co-seismic vs. slow continuous displacement, and thus actually estimate the amplitude and the time distribution of major co-seismic offsets.
Allergic diseases often occur early in life and persist throughout life. This life-course perspective should be considered in allergen immunotherapy. In particular it is essential to understand whether this al treatment may be used in old age adults. The current paper was developed by a working group of AIRWAYS integrated care pathways for airways diseases, the model of chronic respiratory diseases of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing (DG CONNECT and DG Santé). It considered (1) the political background, (2) the rationale for allergen immunotherapy across the life cycle, (3) the unmet needs for the treatment, in particular in preschool children and old age adults, (4) the strategic framework and the practical approach to synergize current initiatives in allergen immunotherapy, its mechanisms and the concept of active and healthy ageing.
Allergic diseases often occur early in life and persist throughout life. This life-course perspective should be considered in allergen immunotherapy. In particular it is essential to understand whether this al treatment may be used in old age adults. The current paper was developed by a working group of AIRWAYS integrated care pathways for airways diseases, the model of chronic respiratory diseases of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing (DG CONNECT and DG Sante). It considered (1) the political background, (2) the rationale for allergen immunotherapy across the life cycle, (3) the unmet needs for the treatment, in particular in preschool children and old age adults, (4) the strategic framework and the practical approach to synergize current initiatives in allergen immunotherapy, its mechanisms and the concept of active and healthy ageing. ; European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing Reference Site MACVIA-France, European Structural and Development Funds of Region Languedoc Roussillon ; Imperial Coll London, Natl Heart & Lung Inst, Royal Brompton Hosp NHS, London, England ; UPMC Paris 06, Sorbonne Univ,Dept Pneumol & Addictol,UMR S 1136, Hop Arnaud de Villeneuve,CHRU Montpellier, IPLESP,Equipe EPAR,Unite Allergol, F-75013 Paris, France ; Univ S Florida, Morsani Coll Med, Tampa, FL USA ; Univ Zurich, Swiss Inst Allergy & Asthma Res SIAF, Christine Kuhne Ctr Allergy Res & Educ CK CARE, Davos, Switzerland ; Univ Hosp Ghent, ENT Dept, Upper Airways Res Lab URL, Ghent, Belgium ; IQ4U Consultants Ltd, London, England ; Osped Riuniti, Univ Hosp, Allergy Unit, Dept Internal Med, Ancona, Italy ; Med Univ Vienna, Dept Pathophysiol & Allergy Res, Ctr Pathophysiol Infectiol & Immunol, Vienna, Austria ; Univ Naples 2, Rome, Italy ; CNR, IFT, Rome, Italy ; Univ Genoa, Allergy & Resp Dis Clin, DIMI, IRCCS AOU San Martino IST, Genoa, Italy ; Hosp Univ Vall dHebron, Allergy Sect, Dept Internal Med, Barcelona, Spain ; Montpellier UPMC Univ Paris 06, Sorbonne Univ,UMRS 1136, Hop Arnaud de Villeneuve,Equipe EPAR IPLESP, Div Allergy,Dept Pulmonol,Univ Hosp Montpellier, Paris, France ; Nova Southeastern Univ, Ft Lauderdale, FL USA ; Univ Hosp Strasbourg, Div Allergy, Chest Dis Dept, Strasbourg, France ; Univ Versailles St Quentin, Suresnes, France ; Foch Hosp, Dept Airway Dis, Clin Pharmacol Unit, UPRES EA 220, Suresnes, France ; Rangueil Larrey Hosp, Dept Resp Dis, Toulouse, France ; Univ Palermo, Di Bi MIS, Palermo, Italy ; Kings Coll London, Guys & St Thomas NHS Trust, London, England ; Imperial Coll London, Natl Heart & Lung Inst, Allergy & Clin Immunol Sect, London, England ; Childrens Hosp, Dept Pediat Pulmonol & Allergy, Aarau, Switzerland ; Bambino Gesu Pediat Hosp, Dept Pediat, Div Allergy, Rome, Italy ; Kings Coll London, Allergy Acad, London, England ; Erasmus MC, Dept Internal Med, Bldg Rochussenstr, Rotterdam, Netherlands ; Hosp San Bernardo, Unidad Alergia & Asma, Salta, Argentina ; Helsinki Univ Hosp, Skin & Allergy Hosp, Helsinki, Finland ; Odense Univ Hosp, Hans Christian Andersen Childrens Hosp, Odense, Denmark ; Katholieke Univ Leuven, Univ Hosp Leuven, Clin Dept Otorhinolaryngol Head & Neck Surg, Louvain, Belgium ; Secretary Immunotherapy Interest Grp EAACI, Allergy Learning & Consulting, Copenhagen, Denmark ; UPMC Univ Paris, Sorbonne Univ,Hop Enfants Armand Trousseau,INSERM, Inst Pierre Louis Epidemiol & Sante Publ,Equipe E, Allergol Dept,Ctr Asthme & Allergies,UMR S 1136, Paris, France ; Hosp Sirio Libanes, Sao Paulo, Brazil ; Univ Hosp Montpellier, Montpellier, France ; UPMC Paris 06, Sorbonne Univ, Equipe EPAR, UMR S 1136,IPLESP, Paris, France ; Ackermann Hanf & Kleine Tebbe, Outpatient Clin & Clin Res Ctr, Allergy & Asthma Ctr Westend, Berlin, Germany ; German Soc Otorhinolaryngol HNS, Ctr Rhinol & Allergol, Wiesbaden, Germany ; Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Immunol & Dermatol Allergol, Utrecht, Netherlands ; Med Univ Lodz, Lodz, Poland ; ARIA, Mexico City, DF, Mexico ; Hosp Med Sur, AAAAI, Mexico City, DF, Mexico ; Capital Reg Denmark, Res Ctr Prevent & Hlth, Copenhagen, Denmark ; Rigshosp, Dept Clin Expt Res, Copenhagen, Denmark ; Univ Copenhagen, Fac Hlth & Med Sci, Dept Clin Med, Copenhagen, Denmark ; Charite Med Univ, Pediat Pneumol & Immunol, Berlin, Germany ; Gentofte Univ Hosp, Allergy Clin, Danish Allergy Ctr, Hellerup, Denmark ; Klinikum Univ Koln AoR, IMSIE, Cologne, Germany ; Hosp Clin Barcelona, Unitat Rinol & Clin Olfacte, ENT Dept, Clin & Expt Resp Immunoallergy,IDIBAPS,CIBERES, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain ; Padua Gen Univ Hosp, Dept Women & Child Hlth, Food Allergy Referral Ctr Veneto Reg, Padua, Italy ; Univ Athens, Allergy Unit, Pediat Clin 2, Athens, Greece ; Univ Genoa, Allergy & Resp Dis, IRCCS San Martino IST, Genoa, Italy ; ASST Grande Osped Metropolitano Niguarda, Pzza Osped Maggiore, Milan, Italy ; Univ Med Mannheim, Dept Otorhinolaryngol Head & Neck Surg, Mannheim, Germany ; Heidelberg Univ, Med Fac Mannheim, Heidelberg, Germany ; Ctr Rhinol & Allergol, Wiesbaden, Germany ; Univ Aberdeen, Acad Primary Care, Div Appl Hlth Sci, Primary Care Resp Med, Aberdeen, Scotland ; RiRL, Cambridge, England ; Optimum Patient Care Ltd, Singapore, Singapore ; Hosp Infantil Univ Nino Jesus, Allergy Sect, Madrid, Spain ; Ludwig Maximillian Univ, Dept Dermatol & Allergol, Munich, Germany ; Med Univ Warsaw, Dept Prevent Environm Hazards & Allergol, Warsaw, Poland ; Royal Natl Throat Nose & Ear Hosp, London, England ; UCL, London, England ; Univ Zurich Hosp, Clin Trials Ctr, Zurich, Switzerland ; Imperial Coll London, Natl Heart & Lung Inst, Allergy & Clin Immunol Inflammat Repair & Dev Sec, Immunomodulat & Tolerance Grp,Fac Med, London, England ; MRC, London, England ; Asthma UK Ctr Allerg Mechanisms Asthma, London, England ; Univ Edinburgh, Usher Inst Populat Hlth Sci & Informat, Asthma UK Ctr Appl Res, Med Informat Ctr, Teviot Pl, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, Midlothian, Scotland ; SLAAI, Asuncion, Paraguay ; Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Programa Posgrad Pediat & Ciencias Aplicadas Pedi, Dept Pediat EPM, Sao Paulo, Brazil ; Med Univ Graz, Dept Dermatol & Venerol, Graz, Austria ; Allergy Outpatient Clin Reumannplatz, Vienna, Austria ; Complejo Hosp Navarra, Serv Alergol, Pamplona, Spain ; Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Dept Expt Immunol, Amsterdam, Netherlands ; Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Dept Otorhinolaryngol, Amsterdam, Netherlands ; Univ Bari, Sch Med, Unit Geriatr Immunoallergol, Interdisciplinary Dept Med, Bari, Italy ; Complejo Hosp Univ Santiago de Compostela, Dept Allergy, Santiago De Compostela, Spain ; Med Univ Graz, Dept Paediat, Resp & Allerg Dis Div, Graz, Austria ; Charite Univ Med Berlin, Klin Dermatol Venerol & Allergol, Allergie Ctr Charite, Berlin, Germany ; European Innovat Partnership Act & Hlth Ageing Re, MAlad Chron Vleillissement Actif Languedoc Roussi, Paris, France ; INSERM, VIMA, Epidemiol & Publ Hlth Approaches, U1168,Ageing & Chron Dis, Paris, France ; Univ Versailles St Quentin En Yvelines, UVSQ, UMR S 1168, Versailles, France ; CHRU, 371 Ave Doyen Gaston Giraud, F-34295 Montpellier 5, France ; Programa de Pòs‑Graduação em Pediatria e Ciências Aplicadas à Pediatria, Departamento de Pediatria EPM, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), São Paulo, Brazil ; Web of Science
In: Calderon , M A , Demoly , P , Casale , T , Akdis , C A , Bachert , C , Bewick , M , Bilò , B M , Bohle , B , Bonini , S , Bush , A , Caimmi , D P , Canonica , G W , Cardona , V , Chiriac , A M , Cox , L , Custovic , A , De Blay , F , Devillier , P , Didier , A , Di Lorenzo , G , Du Toit , G , Durham , S R , Eng , P , Fiocchi , A , Fox , A T , van Wijk , R G , Gomez , R M , Haathela , T , Halken , S , Hellings , P W , Jacobsen , L , Just , J , Tanno , L K , Kleine-Tebbe , J , Klimek , L , Knol , E F , Kuna , P , Larenas-Linnemann , D E , Linneberg , A , Matricardi , M , Malling , H J , Moesges , R , Mullol , J , Muraro , A , Papadopoulos , N , Passalacqua , G , Pastorello , E , Pfaar , O , Price , D , Del Rio , P R , Ruëff , R , Samolinski , B , Scadding , G K , Senti , G , Shamji , M H , Sheikh , A , Sisul , J C , Sole , D , Sturm , G J , Tabar , A , Van Ree , R , Ventura , M T , Vidal , C , Varga , E M , Worm , M , Zuberbier , T & Bousquet , J 2016 , ' Allergy immunotherapy across the life cycle to promote active and healthy ageing : from research to policies: An AIRWAYS Integrated Care Pathways (ICPs) programme item (Action Plan B3 of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing) and the Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD), a World Health Organization GARD research demonstration project ' , Clinical and Translational Allergy , vol. 6 , 41 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s13601-016-0131-x
Allergic diseases often occur early in life and persist throughout life. This life-course perspective should be considered in allergen immunotherapy. In particular it is essential to understand whether this al treatment may be used in old age adults. The current paper was developed by a working group of AIRWAYS integrated care pathways for airways diseases, the model of chronic respiratory diseases of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing (DG CONNECT and DG Santé). It considered (1) the political background, (2) the rationale for allergen immunotherapy across the life cycle, (3) the unmet needs for the treatment, in particular in preschool children and old age adults, (4) the strategic framework and the practical approach to synergize current initiatives in allergen immunotherapy, its mechanisms and the concept of active and healthy ageing.
Allergic diseases often occur early in life and persist throughout life. This life-course perspective should be considered in allergen immunotherapy. In particular it is essential to understand whether this al treatment may be used in old age adults. The current paper was developed by a working group of AIRWAYS integrated care pathways for airways diseases, the model of chronic respiratory diseases of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing (DG CONNECT and DG Sante). It considered (1) the political background, (2) the rationale for allergen immunotherapy across the life cycle, (3) the unmet needs for the treatment, in particular in preschool children and old age adults, (4) the strategic framework and the practical approach to synergize current initiatives in allergen immunotherapy, its mechanisms and the concept of active and healthy ageing. ; Peer reviewed
In: Calderon, M. A., Demoly, P., Casale, T., Akdis, C. A., Bachert, C., Bewick, M., Bilo, B. M., Bohle, B., Bonini, S., Bush, A., Caimmi, D. P., Canonica, G. W., Cardona, V., Chiriac, A. M., Cox, L., Custovic, A., De Blay, F., Devillier, P., Didier, A., Di Lorenzo, G., Du Toit, G., Durham, S. R., Eng, P., Fiocchi, A., Fox, A. T., van Wijk, R. Gerth, Gomez, R. M., Haathela, T., Halken, S., Hellings, P. W., Jacobsen, L., Just, J., Tanno, L. K., Kleine-Tebbe, J., Klimek, L., Knol, E. F., Kuna, P., Larenas-Linnemann, D. E., Linneberg, A., Matricardi, M., Malling, H. J., Moesges, R., Mullol, J., Muraro, A., Papadopoulos, N., Passalacqua, G., Pastorello, E., Pfaar, O., Price, D., Rodriguez del Rio, P., Rueff, R., Samolinski, B., Scadding, G. K., Senti, G., Shamji, M. H., Sheikh, A., Sisul, J. C., Sole, D., Sturm, G. J., Tabar, A., Van Ree, R., Ventura, M. T., Vidal, C., Varga, E. M., Worm, M., Zuberbier, T. and Bousquet, J. (2016). Allergy immunotherapy across the life cycle to promote active and healthy ageing: from research to policies. Clin. Transl. Allergy, 6. LONDON: BMC. ISSN 2045-7022
Allergic diseases often occur early in life and persist throughout life. This life-course perspective should be considered in allergen immunotherapy. In particular it is essential to understand whether this al treatment may be used in old age adults. The current paper was developed by a working group of AIRWAYS integrated care pathways for airways diseases, the model of chronic respiratory diseases of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing (DG CONNECT and DG Sante). It considered (1) the political background, (2) the rationale for allergen immunotherapy across the life cycle, (3) the unmet needs for the treatment, in particular in preschool children and old age adults, (4) the strategic framework and the practical approach to synergize current initiatives in allergen immunotherapy, its mechanisms and the concept of active and healthy ageing.
In: Calderon , M A , Demoly , P , Casale , T , Akdis , C A , Bachert , C , Bewick , M , Bilò , B M , Bohle , B , Bonini , S , Bush , A , Caimmi , D P , Canonica , G W , Cardona , V , Chiriac , A M , Cox , L , Custovic , A , De Blay , F , Devillier , P , Didier , A , Di Lorenzo , G , Du Toit , G , Durham , S R , Eng , P , Fiocchi , A , Fox , A T , van Wijk , R G , Gomez , R M , Haathela , T , Halken , S , Hellings , P W , Jacobsen , L , Just , J , Tanno , L K , Kleine-Tebbe , J , Klimek , L , Knol , E F , Kuna , P , Larenas-Linnemann , D E , Linneberg , A , Matricardi , M , Malling , H J , Moesges , R , Mullol , J , Muraro , A , Papadopoulos , N , Passalacqua , G , Pastorello , E , Pfaar , O , Price , D , del Rio , P R , Ruëff , R , Samolinski , B , Scadding , G K , Senti , G , Shamji , M H , Sheikh , A , Sisul , J C , Sole , D , Sturm , G J , Tabar , A , van Ree , R , Ventura , M T , Vidal , C , Varga , E M , Worm , M , Zuberbier , T & Bousquet , J 2016 , ' Allergy immunotherapy across the life cycle to promote active and healthy ageing : From research to policies ' , Clinical and Translational Allergy , vol. 6 , 41 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s13601-016-0131-x
Allergic diseases often occur early in life and persist throughout life. This life-course perspective should be considered in allergen immunotherapy. In particular it is essential to understand whether this al treatment may be used in old age adults. The current paper was developed by a working group of AIRWAYS integrated care pathways for airways diseases, the model of chronic respiratory diseases of the European Innovation Partnership on active and healthy ageing (DG CONNECT and DG Santé). It considered (1) the political background, (2) the rationale for allergen immunotherapy across the life cycle, (3) the unmet needs for the treatment, in particular in preschool children and old age adults, (4) the strategic framework and the practical approach to synergize current initiatives in allergen immunotherapy, its mechanisms and the concept of active and healthy ageing.