Hasil untuk "River, lake, and water-supply engineering (General)"

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arXiv Open Access 2026
Future of Software Engineering Research: The SIGSOFT Perspective

Massimiliano Di Penta, Kelly Blincoe, Marsha Chechik et al.

As software engineering conferences grow in size, rising costs and outdated formats are creating barriers to participation for many researchers. These barriers threaten the inclusivity and global diversity that have contributed to the success of the SE community. Based on survey data, we identify concrete actions the ACM Special Interest Group on Software Engineering (SIGSOFT) can take to address these challenges, including improving transparency around conference funding, experimenting with hybrid poster presentations, and expanding outreach to underrepresented regions. By implementing these changes, SIGSOFT can help ensure the software engineering community remains accessible and welcoming.

arXiv Open Access 2026
Towards a Goal-Centric Assessment of Requirements Engineering Methods for Privacy by Design

Oleksandr Kosenkov, Ehsan Zabardast, Jannik Fischbach et al.

Implementing privacy by design (PbD) according to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is met with a growing number of requirements engineering (RE) approaches. However, the question of which RE method for PbD fits best the goals of organisations remains a challenge. We report our endeavor to close this gap by synthesizing a goal-centric approach for PbD methods assessment. We used literature review, interviews, and validation with practitioners to achieve the goal of our study. As practitioners do not approach PbD systematically, we suggest that RE methods for PbD should be assessed against organisational goals, rather than process characteristics only. We hope that, when further developed, the goal-centric approach could support the development, selection, and tailoring of RE practices for PbD.

en cs.SE, cs.CY
arXiv Open Access 2025
RiverEcho: Real-Time Interactive Digital System for Ancient Yellow River Culture

Haofeng Wang, Yilin Guo, Zehao Li et al.

The Yellow River is China's mother river and a cradle of human civilization. The ancient Yellow River culture is, moreover, an indispensable part of human art history. To conserve and inherit the ancient Yellow River culture, we designed RiverEcho, a real-time interactive system that responds to voice queries using a large language model and a cultural knowledge dataset, delivering explanations through a talking-head digital human. Specifically, we built a knowledge database focused on the ancient Yellow River culture, including the collection of historical texts and the processing pipeline. Experimental results demonstrate that leveraging Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) on the proposed dataset enhances the response quality of the Large Language Model(LLM), enabling the system to generate more professional and informative responses. Our work not only diversifies the means of promoting Yellow River culture but also provides users with deeper cultural insights.

en cs.MM, cs.CL
arXiv Open Access 2025
Benchmarking AI Models in Software Engineering: A Review, Search Tool, and Unified Approach for Elevating Benchmark Quality

Roham Koohestani, Philippe de Bekker, Begüm Koç et al.

Benchmarks are essential for unified evaluation and reproducibility. The rapid rise of Artificial Intelligence for Software Engineering (AI4SE) has produced numerous benchmarks for tasks such as code generation and bug repair. However, this proliferation has led to major challenges: (1) fragmented knowledge across tasks, (2) difficulty in selecting contextually relevant benchmarks, (3) lack of standardization in benchmark creation, and (4) flaws that limit utility. Addressing these requires a dual approach: systematically mapping existing benchmarks for informed selection and defining unified guidelines for robust, adaptable benchmark development. We conduct a review of 247 studies, identifying 273 AI4SE benchmarks since 2014. We categorize them, analyze limitations, and expose gaps in current practices. Building on these insights, we introduce BenchScout, an extensible semantic search tool for locating suitable benchmarks. BenchScout employs automated clustering with contextual embeddings of benchmark-related studies, followed by dimensionality reduction. In a user study with 22 participants, BenchScout achieved usability, effectiveness, and intuitiveness scores of 4.5, 4.0, and 4.1 out of 5. To improve benchmarking standards, we propose BenchFrame, a unified framework for enhancing benchmark quality. Applying BenchFrame to HumanEval yielded HumanEvalNext, featuring corrected errors, improved language conversion, higher test coverage, and greater difficulty. Evaluating 10 state-of-the-art code models on HumanEval, HumanEvalPlus, and HumanEvalNext revealed average pass-at-1 drops of 31.22% and 19.94%, respectively, underscoring the need for continuous benchmark refinement. We further examine BenchFrame's scalability through an agentic pipeline and confirm its generalizability on the MBPP dataset. All review data, user study materials, and enhanced benchmarks are publicly released.

en cs.SE, cs.AI
arXiv Open Access 2025
Towards Trustworthy Sentiment Analysis in Software Engineering: Dataset Characteristics and Tool Selection

Martin Obaidi, Marc Herrmann, Jil Klünder et al.

Software development relies heavily on text-based communication, making sentiment analysis a valuable tool for understanding team dynamics and supporting trustworthy AI-driven analytics in requirements engineering. However, existing sentiment analysis tools often perform inconsistently across datasets from different platforms, due to variations in communication style and content. In this study, we analyze linguistic and statistical features of 10 developer communication datasets from five platforms and evaluate the performance of 14 sentiment analysis tools. Based on these results, we propose a mapping approach and questionnaire that recommends suitable sentiment analysis tools for new datasets, using their characteristic features as input. Our results show that dataset characteristics can be leveraged to improve tool selection, as platforms differ substantially in both linguistic and statistical properties. While transformer-based models such as SetFit and RoBERTa consistently achieve strong results, tool effectiveness remains context-dependent. Our approach supports researchers and practitioners in selecting trustworthy tools for sentiment analysis in software engineering, while highlighting the need for ongoing evaluation as communication contexts evolve.

en cs.SE
arXiv Open Access 2025
SuperRivolution: Fine-Scale Rivers from Coarse Temporal Satellite Imagery

Rangel Daroya, Subhransu Maji

Satellite missions provide valuable optical data for monitoring rivers at diverse spatial and temporal scales. However, accessibility remains a challenge: high-resolution imagery is ideal for fine-grained monitoring but is typically scarce and expensive compared to low-resolution imagery. To address this gap, we introduce SuperRivolution, a framework that improves river segmentation resolution by leveraging information from time series of low-resolution satellite images. We contribute a new benchmark dataset of 9,810 low-resolution temporal images paired with high-resolution labels from an existing river monitoring dataset. Using this benchmark, we investigate multiple strategies for river segmentation, including ensembling single-image models, applying image super-resolution, and developing end-to-end models trained on temporal sequences. SuperRivolution significantly outperforms single-image methods and baseline temporal approaches, narrowing the gap with supervised high-resolution models. For example, the F1 score for river segmentation improves from 60.9% to 80.5%, while the state-of-the-art model operating on high-resolution images achieves 94.1%. Similar improvements are also observed in river width estimation tasks. Our results highlight the potential of publicly available low-resolution satellite archives for fine-scale river monitoring.

en eess.IV
arXiv Open Access 2025
Engineering Artificial Intelligence: Framework, Challenges, and Future Direction

Jay Lee, Hanqi Su, Dai-Yan Ji et al.

Over the past ten years, the application of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) in engineering domains has gained significant popularity, showcasing their potential in data-driven contexts. However, the complexity and diversity of engineering problems often require the development of domain-specific AI approaches, which are frequently hindered by a lack of systematic methodologies, scalability, and robustness during the development process. To address this gap, this paper introduces the "ABCDE" as the key elements of Engineering AI and proposes a unified, systematic engineering AI ecosystem framework, including eight essential layers, along with attributes, goals, and applications, to guide the development and deployment of AI solutions for specific engineering needs. Additionally, key challenges are examined, and eight future research directions are highlighted. By providing a comprehensive perspective, this paper aims to advance the strategic implementation of AI, fostering the development of next-generation engineering AI solutions.

en cs.AI, cs.LG
S2 Open Access 2020
RETRACTED ARTICLE: Multi-temporal image analysis for LULC classification and change detection

Vivekananda G N, R. Swathi, Avln Sujith

Statement of Retraction We, the Editor and Publisher of the journal European Journal of Remote Sensing, have retracted the following articles that were published in the Special Issue titled “Remote Sensing in Water Management and Hydrology”: Marimuthu Karuppiah, Xiong Li & Shehzad Ashraf Chaudhry (2021) Guest editorial of the special issue “remote sensing in water management and hydrology”, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 1-5, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2021.1892335 Jian Sheng, Shiyi Jiang, Cunzhu Li, Quanfeng Liu & Hongyan Zhang (2021) Fluid-induced high seismicity in Songliao Basin of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 6-10, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1720525 Guohua Wang, Jun Tan & Lingui Wang (2021) Numerical simulation of temperature field and temperature stress of thermal jet for water measurement, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 11-20, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1743956 Le Wang, Guancheng Jiang & Xianmin Zhang (2021) Modeling and molecular simulation of natural gas hydrate stabilizers, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 21-32, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1738901 Tianyi Chen, Lu Bao, Liu Bao Zhu, Yu Tian, Qing Xu & Yuandong Hu (2021) The diversity of birds in typical urban lake-wetlands and its response to the landscape heterogeneity in the buffer zone based on GIS and field investigation in Daqing, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 33-41, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1738902 Zhiyong Wang (2021) Research on desert water management and desert control, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 42-54, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1736953 Ji-Tao Li & Yong-Quan Liang (2021) Research on mesoscale eddy-tracking algorithm of Kalman filtering under density clustering on time scale, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 55-64, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1740894 Wei Wang, R. Dinesh Jackson Samuel & Ching-Hsien Hsu (2021) Prediction architecture of deep learning assisted short long term neural network for advanced traffic critical prediction system using remote sensing data, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 65-76, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1755998 Yan Chen, Ming Tan, Jiahua Wan, Thomas Weise & Zhize Wu (2021) Effectiveness evaluation of the coupled LIDs from the watershed scale based on remote sensing image processing and SWMM simulation, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 77-91, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1758962 Ke Deng & Ming Chen (2021) Blasting excavation and stability control technology for ultra-high steep rock slope of hydropower engineering in China: a review, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 92-106, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1752811 Yufa He, Xiaoqiang Guo, Jun Liu, Hongliang Zhao, Guorong Wang & Zhao Shu (2021) Dynamic boundary of floating platform and its influence on the deepwater testing tube, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 107-116, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1762246 Kai Peng, Yunfeng Zhang, Wenfeng Gao & Zhen Lu (2021) Evaluation of human activity intensity in geological environment problems of Ji’nan City, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 117-121, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771214 Wei Zhu, XiaoSi Su & Qiang Liu (2021) Analysis of the relationships between the thermophysical properties of rocks in the Dandong Area of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 122-131, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763205 Yu Liu, Wen Hu, Shanwei Wang & Lingyun Sun (2021) Eco-environmental effects of urban expansion in Xinjiang and the corresponding mechanisms, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 132-144, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1803768 Peng Qin & Zhihui Zhang (2021) Evolution of wetland landscape disturbance in Jiaozhou Gulf between 1973 and 2018 based on remote sensing, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 145-154, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1758963 Mingyi Jin & Hongyan Zhang (2021) Investigating urban land dynamic change and its spatial determinants in Harbin city, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 155-166, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1758964 Balaji L. & Muthukannan M. (2021) Investigation into valuation of land using remote sensing and GIS in Madurai, Tamilnadu, India, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 167-175, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1772118 Xiaoyan Shi, Jianghui Song, Haijiang Wang & Xin Lv (2021) Monitoring soil salinization in Manas River Basin, Northwestern China based on multi-spectral index group, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 176-188, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1762247 GN Vivekananda, R Swathi & AVLN Sujith (2021) Multi-temporal image analysis for LULC classification and change detection, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 189-199, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771215 Yiting Wang, Xianghui Liu & Weijie Hu (2021) The research on landscape restoration design of watercourse in mountainous city based on comprehensive management of water environment, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 200-210, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763206 Bao Qian, Cong Tang, Yu Yang & Xiao Xiao (2021) Pollution characteristics and risk assessment of heavy metals in the surface sediments of Dongting Lake water system during normal water period, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 211-221, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763207 Jin Zuo, Lei Meng, Chen Li, Heng Zhang, Yun Zeng & Jing Dong (2021) Construction of community life circle database based on high-resolution remote sensing technology and multi-source data fusion, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 222-237, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763208 Zilong Wang, Lu Yang, Ping Cheng, Youyi Yu, Zhigang Zhang & Hong Li (2021) Adsorption, degradation and leaching migration characteristics of chlorothalonil in different soils, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 238-247, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771216 R. Vijaya Geetha & S. Kalaivani (2021) A feature based change detection approach using multi-scale orientation for multi-temporal SAR images, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 248-264, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1759457 LianJun Chen, BalaAnand Muthu & Sivaparthipan cb (2021) Estimating snow depth Inversion Model Assisted Vector Analysis based on temperature brightness for North Xinjiang region of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 265-274, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771217 Yajuan Zhang, Cuixia Li & Shuai Yao (2021) Spatiotemporal evolution characteristics of China’s cold chain logistics resources and agricultural product using remote sensing perspective, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 275-283, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1765202 Guangping Liu, Jingmei Wei, BalaAnand Muthu & R. Dinesh Jackson Samuel (2021) Chlorophyll-a concentration in the hailing bay using remote sensing assisted sparse statistical modelling, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 284-295, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771774 Yishu Qiu, Zhenmin Zhu, Heping Huang & Zhenhua Bing (2021) Study on the evolution of B&Bs spatial distribution based on exploratory spatial data analysis (ESDA) and its influencing factors—with Yangtze River Delta as an example, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 296-308, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1785950 Liang Li & Kangning Xiong (2021) Study on peak cluster-depression rocky desertification landscape evolution and human activity-influence in South of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 309-317, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1777588 Juan Xu, Mengsheng Yang, Chaoping Hou, Ziliang Lu & Dan Liu (2021) Distribution of rural tourism development in geographical space: a case study of 323 traditional villages in Shaanxi, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 318-333, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1788993 Lin Guo, Xiaojing Guo, Binghua Wu, Po Yang, Yafei Kou, Na Li & Hui Tang (2021) Geo-environmental suitability assessment for tunnel in sub-deep layer in Zhengzhou, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 334-340, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1788994 Hui Zhou, Cheng Zhu, Li Wu, Chaogui Zheng, Xiaoling Sun, Qingchun Guo & Shuguang Lu (2021) Organic carbon isotope record since the Late Glacial period from peat in the North Bank of the Yangtze River, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 341-347, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1795728 Chengyuan Hao, Linlin Song & Wei Zhao (2021) HYSPLIT-based demarcation of regions affected by water vapors from the South China Sea and the Bay of Bengal, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 348-355, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1795730 Wei Chong, Zhang Lin-Jing, Wu Qing, Cao Lian-Hai, Zhang Lu, Yao Lun-Guang, Zhu Yun-Xian & Yang Feng (2021) Estimation of landscape pattern change on stream flow using SWAT-VRR, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 356-362, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1790994 Kepeng Feng & Juncang Tian (2021) Forecasting reference evapotranspiration using data mining and limited climatic data, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 363-371, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1801355 Kepeng Feng, Yang Hong, Juncang Tian, Xiangyu Luo, Guoqiang Tang & Guangyuan Kan (2021) Evaluating applicability of multi-source precipitation datasets for runoff simulation of small watersheds: a case study in the United States, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 372-382, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1819169 Xiaowei Xu, Yinrong Chen, Junfeng Zhang, Yu Chen, Prathik Anandhan & Adhiyaman Manickam (2021) A novel approach for scene classification from remote sensing images using deep learning methods, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 383-395, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1790995 Shanshan Hu, Zhaogang Fu, R. Dinesh Jackson Samuel & Prathik Anandhan (2021) Application of active remote sensing in confirmation rights and identification of mortgage supply-demand subjects of rural land in Guangdong Province, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 396-404, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1790996 Chen Qiwei, Xiong Kangning & Zhao Rong (2021)

144 sitasi en Environmental Science
DOAJ Open Access 2024
Socioeconomic status, lake knowledge, and community participation in the sustainable Lake Limboto management, Gorontalo Regency

Ramla H. Melo, Moch R. Pambudi, Alim Niode

Lake Limboto, situated in Gorontalo, Indonesia, confronts severe threats jeopardizing its sustainability. Widespread deforestation in the watershed area has led to excessive sedimentation within the lake, consequently diminishing its water storage capacity and compromising its flood control function. This degradation has manifested itself in downstream droughts during the dry season and flooding during the rainy season. Historical data reveals a stark reduction in Lake Limboto’s size, plummeting from approximately 3,644.5 ha in 1991 to around 2,693.9 ha in 2017. This study aims to provide comprehensive examination of the interplay between the socioeconomic status of the local community and their understanding of the lake ecosystem. Furthermore, it delves into how these factors produce synergies that shape and impact community involvement in sustainable lake management initiatives. Hypothesis testing yielded significant results, affirming the existence of a positive correlation between socioeconomic status, knowledge of the lake ecosystem, and active community participation in sustainable lake management efforts. The findings underscore the critical importance of socioeconomic factors that need to be considered when designing strategies for the preservation and sustainable management of Lake Limboto. Integrating the community into conservation initiatives is necessary, given their intrinsic relationship with the lake. By acknowledging and leveraging the nexus between socioeconomic status, ecological knowledge, and active participation, stakeholders can formulate more effective and inclusive strategies for safeguarding Lake Limboto’s ecological integrity. This study contributes valuable insights for policymakers, environmentalists, and local communities alike, emphasizing the necessity of collaborative efforts to ensure the long-term resilience and vitality of Lake Limboto.

River, lake, and water-supply engineering (General), Irrigation engineering. Reclamation of wasteland. Drainage
DOAJ Open Access 2024
Bond Degradation between Deformed Reinforcement and Concrete under Variable Repeated Loads

CHENG Hongyuan, MA Jinyao, ZHENG Dan et al.

The bond-slip constitutive model between reinforcement and concrete under repeated loads is an important basis for the assessment of the overall performance of reinforced concrete structures and reinforcement repair after earthquakes. Since the bond stress is mainly composed of the mechanical occlusion force between deformed reinforcement and concrete, the lateral confinement state in the bond region will affect its bond performance. On this basis, this paper investigated the effect of variable repeated loads under lateral pressure on the bond performance between reinforcement and concrete, quantitatively analyzed the degradation law of bond parameters with variable repeated loads, and studied the bond damage mechanism between reinforcement and concrete by using digital image technology. It is shown that under the condition of sufficiently restrained concrete protective layer, the bond degradation between reinforcement and concrete is mainly related to the displacement controlled by repeated loads, while the effect of lateral pressure on it is negligible.

River, lake, and water-supply engineering (General)
DOAJ Open Access 2024
Optimising the grey water footprint of crops to enhance the environmental integrity in the Gaza Strip, Palestine

Amjad Mizyed, Yunes Mogheir, Mazen Hamada

Water pollution and scarcity are amongst the most pressing challenges affecting the water environment in the Gaza Strip. Agricultural activities play an important role in this issue, consuming more than 50% of the extracted water, while contributing to environmental degradation through the excessive use of pesticides and fertilisers. The grey water footprint (GWF) was quantified to evaluate pollution from crops using the Hoekstra methodology. The grey water totalled 30.63 mln m3 , with 51% attributed to vegetables, 44.5% to horticultural trees, and 4.5% to field crops between 2018 and 2022. An evaluation of the sustainability of the water footprint revealed that the assimilation capacity of water resources has been completely consumed. As a result, the Gaza Strip is classified as an unsustainable area, which is a serious violation of globally approved water quality standards. To optimise the grey water footprint, the nitrogen balance, N-leakage rate, and associated uncertainties were analysed using fractional programming, leading to the development of a model aimed at achieving optimal results. The findings show the importance of implementing this approach in the Gaza Strip, enabling policymakers and local authorities to develop a promising strategy for agricultural practices. This would promote sustainable and effective management of water resources and a safe and productive agricultural environment.

River, lake, and water-supply engineering (General), Irrigation engineering. Reclamation of wasteland. Drainage
S2 Open Access 2024
Naegleria fowleri in 2023: A rising threat to Pakistan.

Dev Kumar

Madam, Naegleria fowleri, i.e., brain-eating amoeba, is a single-cell, free-living parasite that resides in soil and warm freshwater bodies such as lakes, rivers, and hot springs. It enters the nasal cavity from contaminated water, uses the olfactory nerve to reach the brain, and causes a deadly infection called primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM), with a mortality rate higher than 97% even with treatment. (1,2) It causes symptoms similar to those of other bacterial and viral meningitis, such as fever, headache, vomiting, altered level of consciousness and coma, followed by death in the span of a week to 10 days. (1)  There are 20 strains of Naegleria world worldwide, but only N. fowleri is dangerous to humans. (1) In 2008, the first case was reported from Karachi, Pakistan. (2) By 2019, the number had reached 146, (2) and the cases have been increasing until now. In 2023, eight cases have been reported from May to August, among which seven are from the province of Sindh and one from Punjab. (3, 4, 6) The available data shows that two deaths were due to recreational water activities and others because of contaminated tap water.(3,4) This pathogenic amoeba commonly infects men, and the majority of cases were in people aged 26 to 45 years.(1) Of all the reported cases this year, one was a 32-year-old female, and seven were males in the aged  19-45 years.(3,4, 6) The increasing global warming and higher authorities’ negligence towards WHO recommended chlorination (0.1-10 mg/L) of domestic water supply are contributing factors to the higher burden of Naegleria fowleri cases in Karachi, the largest metropolitan city of Pakistan .(5) The new lethal strain of N. fowleri, named as Karachi-NF001, has been found in one patient who traveled from Saudi Arabia to Karachi in 2019. (2) These emerging cases concern strict actions against this problem and the need to alert the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board (KWSB) regarding consistent chlorination from April to October. (5) The monsoon season (May to September) is the best time to spread awareness regarding its prevention and update the current status of N. fowleri in our country. The general public should be encouraged to use boiled or sterilised water for ablution and avoid aquatic activities in non-chlorinated water during the summer season. (3) Besides that, all underground and overhead water tanks in homes, hospitals, shopping malls, schools, offices, etc. should be cleaned once a year. (3)

en Medicine
arXiv Open Access 2023
Mean-Field Limit of Point Vortices for the Lake Equations

Matthieu Ménard

In this paper we study the mean-field limit of a system of point vortices for the lake equations. These equations model the evolution of the horizontal component of the velocity field of a fluid in a lake of non-constant depth, when its vertical component can be neglected. As for the axisymmetric Euler equations there are non-trivial self interactions of the vortices consisting in the leading order of a transport term along the level sets of the depth function. If the self-interactions are negligible, we show that the system of point vortices converges to the lake equations as the number of points becomes very large. If the self-interactions are of order one, we show that it converges to a forced lake equations and if the self-interactions are predominant, then up to time rescaling we show that it converges to a transport equation.The proof is based on a modulated energy approach introduced by Duerinckx and Serfaty in (Duke Math. J., 2020) that we adapt to deal with the heterogeneity of the lake kernel.

en math.AP
S2 Open Access 2022
Producing information from airborne LiDAR data for peatland forest management

Mikko T. Niemi

In Finland, peatland forests are significant for wood supply, although simultaneously, they are also important for biodiversity, carbon sequestration, water conservation, and recreation. In the 1960s and 1970s, peatland forests in Finland were extensively drained to increase tree growth and fulfil the needs of the forest sector. However, this extensive drainage has negatively impacted on the biodiversity of peatland ecosystems, and substantially increased nutrient and sediment emissions to lakes and rivers resulting in eutrophication, turbidity, and brownification of these water bodies. This dissertation presents a number of approaches to move peatland forest management in a more environmentally sound direction, which may increase the general acceptability of peatland forestry. Airborne LiDAR (Light detection and ranging, i.e., laser scanning) derived 3D point cloud provides useful data, for example, to estimate forest biomass, to identify low-productive peatland forests, to model overland water flows, and to identify wet areas. The strength of airborne LiDAR is the ability of laser pulses to pass through tree canopies and obtain accurate observations from the ground level. The information derived from airborne LiDAR can enhance the planning of peatland forest management, as much of the planning can be done remotely, and supplementary field work can be implemented in areas of strategic need. This study presented the novel idea of applying local binary patterns for the prediction of terrain trafficability, which should be considered in further studies and practice. The moisture index derived from the local neighborhood can reveal the small-scale variations in terrain moisture. This study also presented the novel idea to create spatial models to identify suitable locations for water protection structures, which may help forest managers to plan water protection of ditch network maintenance or peatland restoration operations. Overall, the utilization of airborne LiDAR-derived information for the development of peatland forestry practices shows great potential.

S2 Open Access 2021
RETRACTED ARTICLE: Guest editorial of the special issue “remote sensing in water management and hydrology”

Marimuthu Karuppiah, Xiong Li, Shehzad Ashraf Chaudhry

Statement of Retraction We, the Editor and Publisher of the journal European Journal of Remote Sensing, have retracted the following articles that were published in the Special Issue titled “Remote Sensing in Water Management and Hydrology”: Marimuthu Karuppiah, Xiong Li & Shehzad Ashraf Chaudhry (2021) Guest editorial of the special issue “remote sensing in water management and hydrology”, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 1-5, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2021.1892335 Jian Sheng, Shiyi Jiang, Cunzhu Li, Quanfeng Liu & Hongyan Zhang (2021) Fluid-induced high seismicity in Songliao Basin of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 6-10, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1720525 Guohua Wang, Jun Tan & Lingui Wang (2021) Numerical simulation of temperature field and temperature stress of thermal jet for water measurement, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 11-20, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1743956 Le Wang, Guancheng Jiang & Xianmin Zhang (2021) Modeling and molecular simulation of natural gas hydrate stabilizers, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 21-32, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1738901 Tianyi Chen, Lu Bao, Liu Bao Zhu, Yu Tian, Qing Xu & Yuandong Hu (2021) The diversity of birds in typical urban lake-wetlands and its response to the landscape heterogeneity in the buffer zone based on GIS and field investigation in Daqing, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 33-41, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1738902 Zhiyong Wang (2021) Research on desert water management and desert control, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 42-54, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1736953 Ji-Tao Li & Yong-Quan Liang (2021) Research on mesoscale eddy-tracking algorithm of Kalman filtering under density clustering on time scale, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 55-64, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1740894 Wei Wang, R. Dinesh Jackson Samuel & Ching-Hsien Hsu (2021) Prediction architecture of deep learning assisted short long term neural network for advanced traffic critical prediction system using remote sensing data, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 65-76, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1755998 Yan Chen, Ming Tan, Jiahua Wan, Thomas Weise & Zhize Wu (2021) Effectiveness evaluation of the coupled LIDs from the watershed scale based on remote sensing image processing and SWMM simulation, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 77-91, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1758962 Ke Deng & Ming Chen (2021) Blasting excavation and stability control technology for ultra-high steep rock slope of hydropower engineering in China: a review, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 92-106, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1752811 Yufa He, Xiaoqiang Guo, Jun Liu, Hongliang Zhao, Guorong Wang & Zhao Shu (2021) Dynamic boundary of floating platform and its influence on the deepwater testing tube, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 107-116, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1762246 Kai Peng, Yunfeng Zhang, Wenfeng Gao & Zhen Lu (2021) Evaluation of human activity intensity in geological environment problems of Ji’nan City, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 117-121, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771214 Wei Zhu, XiaoSi Su & Qiang Liu (2021) Analysis of the relationships between the thermophysical properties of rocks in the Dandong Area of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 122-131, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763205 Yu Liu, Wen Hu, Shanwei Wang & Lingyun Sun (2021) Eco-environmental effects of urban expansion in Xinjiang and the corresponding mechanisms, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 132-144, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1803768 Peng Qin & Zhihui Zhang (2021) Evolution of wetland landscape disturbance in Jiaozhou Gulf between 1973 and 2018 based on remote sensing, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 145-154, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1758963 Mingyi Jin & Hongyan Zhang (2021) Investigating urban land dynamic change and its spatial determinants in Harbin city, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 155-166, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1758964 Balaji L. & Muthukannan M. (2021) Investigation into valuation of land using remote sensing and GIS in Madurai, Tamilnadu, India, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 167-175, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1772118 Xiaoyan Shi, Jianghui Song, Haijiang Wang & Xin Lv (2021) Monitoring soil salinization in Manas River Basin, Northwestern China based on multi-spectral index group, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 176-188, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1762247 GN Vivekananda, R Swathi & AVLN Sujith (2021) Multi-temporal image analysis for LULC classification and change detection, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 189-199, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771215 Yiting Wang, Xianghui Liu & Weijie Hu (2021) The research on landscape restoration design of watercourse in mountainous city based on comprehensive management of water environment, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 200-210, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763206 Bao Qian, Cong Tang, Yu Yang & Xiao Xiao (2021) Pollution characteristics and risk assessment of heavy metals in the surface sediments of Dongting Lake water system during normal water period, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 211-221, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763207 Jin Zuo, Lei Meng, Chen Li, Heng Zhang, Yun Zeng & Jing Dong (2021) Construction of community life circle database based on high-resolution remote sensing technology and multi-source data fusion, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 222-237, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1763208 Zilong Wang, Lu Yang, Ping Cheng, Youyi Yu, Zhigang Zhang & Hong Li (2021) Adsorption, degradation and leaching migration characteristics of chlorothalonil in different soils, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 238-247, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771216 R. Vijaya Geetha & S. Kalaivani (2021) A feature based change detection approach using multi-scale orientation for multi-temporal SAR images, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 248-264, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1759457 LianJun Chen, BalaAnand Muthu & Sivaparthipan cb (2021) Estimating snow depth Inversion Model Assisted Vector Analysis based on temperature brightness for North Xinjiang region of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 265-274, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771217 Yajuan Zhang, Cuixia Li & Shuai Yao (2021) Spatiotemporal evolution characteristics of China’s cold chain logistics resources and agricultural product using remote sensing perspective, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 275-283, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1765202 Guangping Liu, Jingmei Wei, BalaAnand Muthu & R. Dinesh Jackson Samuel (2021) Chlorophyll-a concentration in the hailing bay using remote sensing assisted sparse statistical modelling, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 284-295, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1771774 Yishu Qiu, Zhenmin Zhu, Heping Huang & Zhenhua Bing (2021) Study on the evolution of B&Bs spatial distribution based on exploratory spatial data analysis (ESDA) and its influencing factors—with Yangtze River Delta as an example, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 296-308, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1785950 Liang Li & Kangning Xiong (2021) Study on peak cluster-depression rocky desertification landscape evolution and human activity-influence in South of China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 309-317, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1777588 Juan Xu, Mengsheng Yang, Chaoping Hou, Ziliang Lu & Dan Liu (2021) Distribution of rural tourism development in geographical space: a case study of 323 traditional villages in Shaanxi, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 318-333, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1788993 Lin Guo, Xiaojing Guo, Binghua Wu, Po Yang, Yafei Kou, Na Li & Hui Tang (2021) Geo-environmental suitability assessment for tunnel in sub-deep layer in Zhengzhou, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 334-340, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1788994 Hui Zhou, Cheng Zhu, Li Wu, Chaogui Zheng, Xiaoling Sun, Qingchun Guo & Shuguang Lu (2021) Organic carbon isotope record since the Late Glacial period from peat in the North Bank of the Yangtze River, China, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 341-347, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1795728 Chengyuan Hao, Linlin Song & Wei Zhao (2021) HYSPLIT-based demarcation of regions affected by water vapors from the South China Sea and the Bay of Bengal, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 348-355, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1795730 Wei Chong, Zhang Lin-Jing, Wu Qing, Cao Lian-Hai, Zhang Lu, Yao Lun-Guang, Zhu Yun-Xian & Yang Feng (2021) Estimation of landscape pattern change on stream flow using SWAT-VRR, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 356-362, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1790994 Kepeng Feng & Juncang Tian (2021) Forecasting reference evapotranspiration using data mining and limited climatic data, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 363-371, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1801355 Kepeng Feng, Yang Hong, Juncang Tian, Xiangyu Luo, Guoqiang Tang & Guangyuan Kan (2021) Evaluating applicability of multi-source precipitation datasets for runoff simulation of small watersheds: a case study in the United States, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 372-382, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1819169 Xiaowei Xu, Yinrong Chen, Junfeng Zhang, Yu Chen, Prathik Anandhan & Adhiyaman Manickam (2021) A novel approach for scene classification from remote sensing images using deep learning methods, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 383-395, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1790995 Shanshan Hu, Zhaogang Fu, R. Dinesh Jackson Samuel & Prathik Anandhan (2021) Application of active remote sensing in confirmation rights and identification of mortgage supply-demand subjects of rural land in Guangdong Province, European Journal of Remote Sensing, 54:sup2, 396-404, DOI: 10.1080/22797254.2020.1790996 Chen Qiwei, Xiong Kangning & Zhao Rong (2021)

2 sitasi en
arXiv Open Access 2021
Data Quality in Empirical Software Engineering: A Targeted Review

Michael Franklin Bosu, Stephen G. MacDonell

Context: The utility of prediction models in empirical software engineering (ESE) is heavily reliant on the quality of the data used in building those models. Several data quality challenges such as noise, incompleteness, outliers and duplicate data points may be relevant in this regard. Objective: We investigate the reporting of three potentially influential elements of data quality in ESE studies: data collection, data pre-processing, and the identification of data quality issues. This enables us to establish how researchers view the topic of data quality and the mechanisms that are being used to address it. Greater awareness of data quality should inform both the sound conduct of ESE research and the robust practice of ESE data collection and processing. Method: We performed a targeted literature review of empirical software engineering studies covering the period January 2007 to September 2012. A total of 221 relevant studies met our inclusion criteria and were characterized in terms of their consideration and treatment of data quality. Results: We obtained useful insights as to how the ESE community considers these three elements of data quality. Only 23 of these 221 studies reported on all three elements of data quality considered in this paper. Conclusion: The reporting of data collection procedures is not documented consistently in ESE studies. It will be useful if data collection challenges are reported in order to improve our understanding of why there are problems with software engineering data sets and the models developed from them. More generally, data quality should be given far greater attention by the community. The improvement of data sets through enhanced data collection, pre-processing and quality assessment should lead to more reliable prediction models, thus improving the practice of software engineering.

arXiv Open Access 2021
Benchmarking Data Lakes Featuring Structured and Unstructured Data with DLBench

Pegdwendé Sawadogo, Jérôme Darmont

In the last few years, the concept of data lake has become trendy for data storage and analysis. Thus, several design alternatives have been proposed to build data lake systems. However, these proposals are difficult to evaluate as there are no commonly shared criteria for comparing data lake systems. Thus, we introduce DLBench, a benchmark to evaluate and compare data lake implementations that support textual and/or tabular contents. More concretely, we propose a data model made of both textual and raw tabular documents, a workload model composed of a set of various tasks, as well as a set of performance-based metrics, all relevant to the context of data lakes. As a proof of concept, we use DLBench to evaluate an open source data lake system we previously developed.

arXiv Open Access 2021
Bayesian propensity score matching in automotive embedded software engineering

Yuchu Liu, David Issa Mattos, Jan Bosch et al.

Randomised field experiments, such as A/B testing, have long been the gold standard for evaluating the value that new software brings to customers. However, running randomised field experiments is not always desired, possible or even ethical in the development of automotive embedded software. In the face of such restrictions, we propose the use of the Bayesian propensity score matching technique for causal inference of observational studies in the automotive domain. In this paper, we present a method based on the Bayesian propensity score matching framework, applied in the unique setting of automotive software engineering. This method is used to generate balanced control and treatment groups from an observational online evaluation and estimate causal treatment effects from the software changes, even with limited samples in the treatment group. We exemplify the method with a proof-of-concept in the automotive domain. In the example, we have a larger control ($N_c=1100$) fleet of cars using the current software and a small treatment fleet ($N_t=38$), in which we introduce a new software variant. We demonstrate a scenario that shipping of a new software to all users is restricted, as a result, a fully randomised experiment could not be conducted. Therefore, we utilised the Bayesian propensity score matching method with 14 observed covariates as inputs. The results show more balanced groups, suitable for estimating causal treatment effects from the collected observational data. We describe the method in detail and share our configuration. Furthermore, we discuss how can such a method be used for online evaluation of new software utilising small groups of samples.

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