Hasil untuk "Europe (General)"

Menampilkan 20 dari ~11381387 hasil · dari CrossRef, DOAJ, arXiv, Semantic Scholar

JSON API
arXiv Open Access 2026
Omega-blocks with spatially compounding extremes over Europe are highly sensitive to remote atmospheric drivers

Magdalena Mittermeier, Christian M. Grams, Urs Beyerle et al.

Omega-blocks can trigger spatially compounding heat-precipitation extremes with severe societal impacts, as seen in September 2023 when a heatwave over France coincided with devastating floods in the Iberian Peninsula and Greece. Although blocking in general has been linked to moist processes in upstream warm conveyor belts (WCBs), it has remained unexplored whether and how upstream WCB activity influences the evolution of omega-blocks and downstream flood-heat-flood impacts. Here, we show that already five days ahead, small differences in the upstream evolution - particularly in WCB outflow regions - distinguish cases that later produce extreme compound events over Europe from weaker ones, even though their large-scale anomalies initially appear similar. We illustrate the distinct evolution in remote locations by analyzing storylines simulated in a fully coupled climate model. Using ensemble boosting, we generate hundreds of physically plausible simulations of omega-prone situations. Lagrangian air parcel tracking reveals that variations in WCB outflow areas can explain differences in upstream precursors and downstream effects over Europe. Our results highlight ensemble boosting as a powerful approach to systematically track dynamical differences along model-based event storylines, important for understanding and anticipating compound extremes striking multiple regions simultaneously.

en physics.ao-ph
DOAJ Open Access 2025
Pneumococcal serotypes and their association with death risk in invasive pneumococcal disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Samuel Darkwah, Namwin S. Somda, Samiratu Mahazu et al.

BackgroundStreptococcus pneumoniae and its infections are a global public health concern. Invasive pneumococcal disease accounts for significant mortality in the aged and immunocompromised. Over 100 unique capsular serotypes have been identified, with 80–90% of invasive disease attributable to about 23 serotypes. Pneumococcal serotype influences invasiveness, virulence, carriage, and IPD outcome. Case fatality rates among different pneumococcal serotypes in IPD have been inconsistently reported, prompting the need for a comprehensive meta-analysis. We hypothesized that specific pneumococcal serotypes would be associated with higher case fatality rates and that non-vaccine serotypes may exhibit increased mortality risks over time.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of serotype-specific risk of death due to invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) in the last decade. We calculated the risk ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for each serotype compared with serotype 14 in each study. Pooled risk ratios were computed using random effects size model analysis. We also conducted heterogeneity testing and meta-regression sub-analysis.ResultsIn total, 45 eligible studies were included, and 16 were selected for meta-analysis. Study distribution showed a global disparity, with Europe as the major data source. Serotype 31 had the highest case fatality rate (31.4%), indicating a concerning mortality risk associated with this serotype, particularly in immunocompromised patients. Overall, IPD patients with serotypes 3, 6A, 11A, 15A, 19F, and 31 were more likely to die. In contrast, serotypes 1, 5, 7F, and 8 IPD isolates recorded a reduced risk ratio compared to serotype 14. Subgroup analysis showed that vaccine serotypes were associated with a greater risk of death than non-vaccine serotypes, but there were no significant differences in risk estimates between population groups.ConclusionThe study confirms the stable role of pneumococcal serotype in determining the clinical outcomes of invasive pneumococcal disease. Our findings underscore the importance of serotype-specific surveillance in IPD and call for the reconsideration of current pneumococcal vaccine formulations to address high-risk non-vaccine serotypes. Efforts to build research capacity, especially in low-resource regions such as Africa and South America, are highly recommended.

Medicine (General)
DOAJ Open Access 2025
Perspectives in the Scientific Literature on the Barriers and Benefits of the Transition to a Plant-Based Diet: A Bibliometric Analysis

Lelia Voinea, Ana-Maria Badea, Răzvan Dina et al.

Plant-based diets are increasingly attracting attention as they play a significant role in human health and environmental sustainability and are believed to be key components of sustainable food systems. In the present study, both pros and cons of the adoption of plant-based diets are analyzed using a bibliometric method integrated with a qualitative examination of the scientific literature. For the bibliometric study, Bibliometrix software was utilized, examining 3245 scientific articles, downloaded from the Scopus database, and printed between the years 1957 and 2025. The analyses were conducted using R software, version 4.4.1, with access to the Bibliometrix package, version 4.1. The results indicate a remarkable rise, in the last two decades, in the scholarly focus on the influence of plant-based diets on the individual’s health condition as well as the environment. Keyword co-occurrence studies and international collaborations demonstrate a dominance of research focus in both the United States and Europe, with significant contributions from the Asia–Pacific region. Furthermore, the current work offers qualitative identification of the benefits of plant diets from various perspectives like nutritional, economic, ecological, and cultural. It also explores the main dissuaders from adhering to these diets, including perceived nutritional hazards, cost perceptions, low availability, and social prohibitions. Findings emphasize that, in spite of all the barriers, plant food-based diets have a wide-ranging ability to provide tangible benefits at both the individual and population levels, and documented in the scientific literature are recommendations of expert-led education programs, economic incentives, and judiciously framed public policies to overcome these barriers and to make this transition possible towards sustainable food choices. Findings provide a comprehensive understanding of the current lines of inquiry and stage the subsequent work on how to motivate sustainability among the general population.

Chemical technology
arXiv Open Access 2025
NAVER LABS Europe Submission to the Instruction-following Track

Beomseok Lee, Marcely Zanon Boito, Laurent Besacier et al.

In this paper we describe NAVER LABS Europe submission to the instruction-following speech processing short track at IWSLT 2025. We participate in the constrained settings, developing systems that can simultaneously perform ASR, ST, and SQA tasks from English speech input into the following target languages: Chinese, Italian, and German. Our solution leverages two pretrained modules: (1) a speech-to-LLM embedding projector trained using representations from the SeamlessM4T-v2-large speech encoder; and (2) LoRA adapters trained on text data on top of a Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct. These modules are jointly loaded and further instruction-tuned for 1K steps on multilingual and multimodal data to form our final system submitted for evaluation.

en cs.CL
arXiv Open Access 2024
Women in Science: Measuring Participation in Europe Across Disciplines, Generations and Over Time

Marek Kwiek, Lukasz Szymula

In this research, we quantify an inflow of women into science in the past three decades. Structured Big Data allow us to estimate the contribution of women scientists to the growth of science by disciplines (N = STEMM 14 disciplines) and over time (1990-2023). A monolithic segment of STEMM science emerges from this research as divided between the disciplines in which the growth was powerfully driven by women - and the disciplines in which the role of women was marginal. There are four disciplines in which 50% of currently publishing scientists are women; and five disciplines in which more than 50% of currently young scientists are women. But there is also a cluster of four highly mathematized disciplines (MATH, COMP, PHYS, and ENG) in which the growth of science is only marginally driven by women. Digital traces left by scientists in their publications indexed in global datasets open two new dimensions in large-scale academic profession studies: time and gender. The growth of science in Europe was accompanied by growth in the number of women scientists, but with powerful cross-disciplinary and cross-generational differentiations. We examined the share of women scientists coming from ten different age cohorts for 32 European and four comparator countries (the USA, Canada, Australia, and Japan). Our study sample was N = 1,740,985 scientists (including 39.40% women scientists). Three critical methodological challenges of using structured Big Data of the bibliometric type were discussed: gender determination, academic age determination, and discipline determination.

en physics.soc-ph, cs.DL
arXiv Open Access 2024
Intelligence Education made in Europe

Lars Berger, Uwe M. Borghoff, Gerhard Conrad et al.

Global conflicts and trouble spots have thrown the world into turmoil. Intelligence services have never been as necessary as they are today when it comes to providing political decision-makers with concrete, accurate, and up-to-date decision-making knowledge. This requires a common co-operation, a common working language and a common understanding of each other. The best way to create this "intelligence community" is through a harmonized intelligence education. In this paper, we show how joint intelligence education can succeed. We draw on the experience of Germany, where all intelligence services and the Bundeswehr are academically educated together in a single degree program that lays the foundations for a common working language. We also show how these experiences have been successfully transferred to a European level, namely to ICE, the Intelligence College in Europe. Our experience has shown that three aspects are particularly important: firstly, interdisciplinarity or better, transdisciplinarity, secondly, the integration of IT knowhow and thirdly, the development and learning of methodological skills. Using the example of the cyber intelligence module with a special focus on data-driven decision support, additionally with its many points of reference to numerous other academic modules, we show how the specific analytic methodology presented is embedded in our specific European teaching context.

en cs.CY, cs.AI
CrossRef Open Access 2023
Mimicking of Mesoamerican Culture in Europe Through Chocolate

Nicholas Rowdon

The consumption of chocolate in Europe serves as a way to observe the flow of Mesoamerican culture into Europe. Cacao and chocolate played a central role in Mesoamerican society as it was used for rituals, tribute, and consumption. The interest in consuming chocolate gained a foothold only after a significant population within Spain had experienced chocolate in Mesoamerica, but then quickly spread through the rest of Europe. The diffusion of chocolate consumption across Europe retained elements of Mesoamerican culture that left a lasting impact. Cacao and chocolate ultimately remain products of Mesoamerican culture, while European contact leveraged the mystical properties, mimicking and hijacking indigenous beliefs and manifesting in different shapes within European society.

Halaman 9 dari 569070