Refine
Year of publication
- 2024 (31)
- 2023 (534)
- 2022 (1394)
- 2021 (1453)
- 2020 (1711)
- 2019 (1687)
- 2018 (1775)
- 2017 (1571)
- 2016 (1449)
- 2015 (1353)
- 2014 (1253)
- 2013 (1336)
- 2012 (1277)
- 2011 (1322)
- 2010 (817)
- 2009 (1113)
- 2008 (644)
- 2007 (681)
- 2006 (1092)
- 2005 (1199)
- 2004 (1285)
- 2003 (932)
- 2002 (804)
- 2001 (889)
- 2000 (1130)
- 1999 (1233)
- 1998 (1133)
- 1997 (1040)
- 1996 (1081)
- 1995 (1061)
- 1994 (704)
- 1993 (246)
- 1992 (132)
- 1991 (87)
- 1982 (1)
Document Type
- Article (35498) (remove)
Language
Keywords
- Germany (94)
- climate change (90)
- Sprachtherapie (58)
- stars: massive (55)
- Patholinguistik (53)
- morphology (53)
- patholinguistics (53)
- Nachhaltigkeit (50)
- sustainability (47)
- German (46)
Institute
- Institut für Physik und Astronomie (4127)
- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (3704)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (2750)
- Institut für Chemie (2391)
- Department Psychologie (1744)
- Institut für Romanistik (1462)
- Historisches Institut (1358)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (1162)
- Institut für Mathematik (1069)
- Sozialwissenschaften (1041)
- Department Linguistik (1030)
- Department Sport- und Gesundheitswissenschaften (994)
- Institut für Umweltwissenschaften und Geographie (994)
- Department Erziehungswissenschaft (934)
- Institut für Germanistik (903)
- MenschenRechtsZentrum (757)
- Institut für Ernährungswissenschaft (756)
- Extern (713)
- Institut für Informatik und Computational Science (677)
- Bürgerliches Recht (640)
- Institut für Jüdische Studien und Religionswissenschaft (583)
- Öffentliches Recht (478)
- Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik (468)
- Department Grundschulpädagogik (451)
- Institut für Slavistik (409)
- Philosophische Fakultät (319)
- Institut für Künste und Medien (238)
- Fachgruppe Politik- & Verwaltungswissenschaft (232)
- Strafrecht (227)
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (221)
- Vereinigung für Jüdische Studien e. V. (204)
- WeltTrends e.V. Potsdam (194)
- Lehreinheit für Wirtschafts-Arbeit-Technik (193)
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (188)
- Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Digital Engineering gGmbH (188)
- Zentrum für Lehrerbildung und Bildungsforschung (ZeLB) (181)
- Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Digital Engineering GmbH (166)
- Department für Inklusionspädagogik (163)
- Department Musik und Kunst (152)
- Kommunalwissenschaftliches Institut (131)
- Zentrum für Umweltwissenschaften (130)
- Fachgruppe Volkswirtschaftslehre (101)
- Fachgruppe Soziologie (92)
- Institut für Philosophie (77)
- Verband für Patholinguistik e. V. (vpl) (74)
- Humanwissenschaftliche Fakultät (68)
- Strukturbereich Bildungswissenschaften (67)
- Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät (67)
- Klassische Philologie (64)
- Zentrum für Gerechtigkeitsforschung (64)
- Zentrum für Sprachen und Schlüsselkompetenzen (Zessko) (62)
- An-Institute (61)
- Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät (56)
- Fakultät für Gesundheitswissenschaften (53)
- Institut für Jüdische Theologie (53)
- Arbeitskreis Militär und Gesellschaft in der Frühen Neuzeit e. V. (50)
- Zentrum für Qualitätsentwicklung in Lehre und Studium (ZfQ) (48)
- Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Dynamik komplexer Systeme (45)
- ZIM - Zentrum für Informationstechnologie und Medienmanagement (33)
- dbs Deutscher Bundesverband für akademische Sprachtherapie und Logopädie e.V. (29)
- Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Dünne Organische und Biochemische Schichten (26)
- Moses Mendelssohn Zentrum für europäisch-jüdische Studien e. V. (26)
- Zentrum für Lern- und Lehrforschung (26)
- Universitätsbibliothek (24)
- Juristische Fakultät (13)
- Potsdam Research Institute for Multilingualism (PRIM) (12)
- Potsdam Transfer - Zentrum für Gründung, Innovation, Wissens- und Technologietransfer (12)
- Universitätsleitung und Verwaltung (12)
- Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Biopolymere (11)
- Sonderforschungsbereich 632 - Informationsstruktur (11)
- Hochschulambulanz (10)
- Institut für Lebensgestaltung-Ethik-Religionskunde (8)
- Referat für Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit (7)
- Institut für Religionswissenschaft (6)
- Abraham Geiger Kolleg gGmbH (5)
- Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) e. V. (4)
- Gesundheitsmanagement (3)
- Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Kognitive Studien (3)
- Multilingualism (3)
- Patholinguistics/Neurocognition of Language (3)
- Projekte (3)
- Theodor-Fontane-Archiv (3)
- eLiS - E-Learning in Studienbereichen (3)
- DV und Statistik Wirtschaftswissenschaften (2)
- Digital Engineering Fakultät (2)
- Forschungsbereich „Politik, Verwaltung und Management“ (2)
- Gleichstellungsbeauftragte (2)
- Institut für angewandte Familien-, Kindheits- und Jugendforschung e.V. (2)
- Kanonistisches Institut e.V. (2)
- UP Transfer (2)
- Zentrum für Australienforschung (2)
- Akademie für Psychotherapie und Interventionsforschung GmbH (1)
- Botanischer Garten (1)
- Career Service (1)
- Chief Information Officer (CIO) (1)
- Geschlechtersoziologie (1)
- Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Massenspektronomie von Biopolymeren (1)
- Kanzler (1)
- Organe und Gremien (1)
- Potsdam Graduate School (1)
- Zentrale und wissenschaftliche Einrichtungen (1)
How related are the ergodic properties of the over- and underdamped Langevin equations driven by fractional Gaussian noise? We here find that for massive particles performing fractional Brownian motion (FBM) inertial effects not only destroy the stylized fact of the equivalence of the ensemble-averaged mean-squared displacement (MSD) to the time-averaged MSD (TAMSD) of overdamped or massless FBM, but also dramatically alter the values of the ergodicity-breaking parameter (EB). Our theoretical results for the behavior of EB for underdamped or massive FBM for varying particle mass m, Hurst exponent H, and trace length T are in excellent agreement with the findings of stochastic computer simulations. The current results can be of interest for the experimental community employing various single-particle-tracking techniques and aiming at assessing the degree of nonergodicity for the recorded time series (studying, e.g., the behavior of EB versus lag time). To infer FBM as a realizable model of anomalous diffusion for a set single-particle-tracking data when massive particles are being tracked, the EBs from the data should be compared to EBs of massive (rather than massless) FBM.
In recent years, there have been a growing number of online and offline attacks linked to a loosely connected network of misogynist and antifeminist online communities called ‘the manosphere’. Since 2016, the ideas spread among and by groups of the manosphere have also become more closely aligned with those of other Far-Right online networks. In this commentary, I explore the role of what I term ‘evidence-based misogyny’ for mobilization and radicalization into the antifeminist and misogynist subcultures of the manosphere. Evidence-based misogyny is a discursive strategy, whereby members of the manosphere refer to (and misinterpret) knowledge in the form of statistics, studies, news items and pop-culture and mimic accepted methods of knowledge presentation to support their essentializing, polarizing views about gender relations in society. Evidence-based misogyny is a core aspect for manosphere-related mobilization as it provides a false sense of authority and forges a collective identity, which is framed as a supposed ‘alternative’ to mainstream gender knowledge. Due to its core function to justify and confirm the misogynist sentiments of users, evidence-based misogyny serves as connector between the manosphere and both mainstream conservative as well as other Far-Right and conspiratorial discourses.
Marine sedimentary archives are routinely used to reconstruct past environmental changes. In many cases, bioturbation and sedimentary mixing affect the proxy time-series and the age-depth relationship. While idealized models of bioturbation exist, they usually assume homogeneous mixing, thus that a single sample is representative for the sediment layer it is sampled from.
However, it is largely unknown to which extent this assumption holds for sediments used for paleoclimate reconstructions.
To shed light on
1) the age-depth relationship and its full uncertainty,
2) the magnitude of mixing processes affecting the downcore proxy variations, and
3) the representativity of the discrete sample for the sediment layer, we designed and performed a case study on South China Sea sediment material which was collected using a box corer and which covers the last glacial cycle.
Using the radiocarbon content of foraminiferal tests as a tracer of time, we characterize the spatial age-heterogeneity of sediments in a three-dimensional setup. In total, 118 radiocarbon measurements were performed on defined small- and large-volume bulk samples ( similar to 200 specimens each) to investigate the horizontal heterogeneity of the sediment. Additionally, replicated measurements on small numbers of specimens (10 x 5 specimens) were performed to assess the heterogeneity within a sample volume. Visual assessment of X-ray images and a quantitative assessment of the mixing strength show typical mixing from bioturbation corresponding to around 10 cm mixing depth.
Notably, our 3D radiocarbon distribution reveals that the horizontal heterogeneity (up to 1,250 years), contributing to the age uncertainty, is several times larger than the typically assumed radiocarbon based age-model error (single errors up to 250 years). Furthermore, the assumption of a perfectly bioturbated layer with no mixing underneath is not met.
Our analysis further demonstrates that the age-heterogeneity might be a function of sample size; smaller samples might contain single features from the incomplete mixing and are thus less representative than larger samples.
We provide suggestions for future studies, optimal sampling strategies for quantitative paleoclimate reconstructions and realistic uncertainty in age models, as well as discuss possible implications for the interpretation of paleoclimate records.
In this study, the kinetics of the adsorption of 2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (F(4)TCNQ) on the surface of Ag nanoparticles (Ag NPs) in chloroform has been intensively investigated, as molecular doping is known to play a crucial role in organic electronic devices. Based on the results obtained from UV-visible (vis)-near-infrared (NIR) absorption spectroscopy, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, scanning nanobeam electron diffraction, and electron energy loss spectroscopy, a two-step interaction kinetics has been proposed for the Ag NPs and F(4)TCNQ molecules, which includes the first step of electron transfer from Ag NPs to F(4)TCNQ indicated by the ionization of F(4)TCNQ and the second step of the formation of a Ag-F(4)TCNQ complex. The whole process has been followed via UV-vis-NIR absorption spectroscopy, which reveals distinct kinetics at two stages: the instantaneous ionization and the long-term complex formation. The kinetics and the influence of the molar ratio of Ag NPs/F(4)TCNQ molecules on the interaction between Ag NPs and F(4)TCNQ molecules in an organic solution are reported herein for the first time. Furthermore, the control experiment with silica-coated Ag NPs manifests that the charge transfer at the surface between Ag NPs and F(4)TCNQ molecules is prohibited by a silica layer of 18 nm.
The within-site variability in site response is the randomness in site response at a given site from different earthquakes and is treated as aleatory variability in current seismic hazard/risk analyses.
In this study, we investigate the single-station variability in linear site response at K-NET and KiK-net stations in Japan using a large number of earthquake recordings.
We found that the standard deviation of the horizontal-to-vertical Fourier spectral ratio at individual sites, that is single-station horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR) sigma sigma(HV,s), approximates the within-site variability in site response quantified using surface-to-borehole spectral ratios (for oscillator frequencies higher than the site fundamental frequency) or empirical ground-motion models.
Based on this finding, we then utilize the single-station HVSR sigma as a convenient tool to study the site-response variability at 697 KiK-net and 1169 K-NET sites.
Our results show that at certain frequencies, stiff, rough and shallow sites, as well as small and local events tend to have a higher sigma(HV,s).
However, when being averaged over different sites, the single-station HVSR sigma, that is sigma(HV), increases gradually with decreasing frequency. In the frequency range of 0.25-25 Hz, sigma(HV) is centred at 0.23-0.43 in ln scales (a linear scale factor of 1.26-1.54) with one standard deviation of less than 0.1. sigma(HV) is quite stable across different tectonic regions, and we present a constant, as well as earthquake magnitude- and distance-dependent sigma(HV) models.
We employ Langevin-dynamics simulations to unveil non-Brownian and non-Gaussian center-of-mass self-diffusion of massive flexible dumbbell-shaped particles in crowded two-dimensional solutions. We study the intradumbbell dynamics of the relative motion of the two constituent elastically coupled disks. Our main focus is on effects of the crowding fraction phi and of the particle structure on the diffusion characteristics. We evaluate the time-averaged mean-squared displacement (TAMSD), the displacement probability-density function (PDF), and the displacement autocorrelation function (ACF) of the dimers. For the TAMSD at highly crowded conditions of dumbbells, e.g., we observe a transition from the short-time ballistic behavior, via an intermediate subdiffusive regime, to long-time Brownian-like spreading dynamics. The crowded system of dimers exhibits two distinct diffusion regimes distinguished by the scaling exponent of the TAMSD, the dependence of the diffusivity on phi, and the features of the displacement-ACF. We attribute these regimes to a crowding-induced transition from viscous to viscoelastic diffusion upon growing phi. We also analyze the relative motion in the dimers, finding that larger phi suppress their vibrations and yield strongly non-Gaussian PDFs of rotational displacements. For the diffusion coefficients D(phi) of translational and rotational motion of the dumbbells an exponential decay with phi for weak and a power-law variation D(phi) proportional to (phi - phi(star))(2.4) for strong crowding is found. A comparison of simulation results with theoretical predictions for D(phi) is discussed and some relevant experimental systems are overviewed.
In this study we present a novel method for the automatic detection of minerals and elements using hyperspectral transmittance imaging microscopy measurements of complete thin sections (HyperTIM).
This is accomplished by using a hyperspectral camera system that operates in the visible and near-infrared (VNIR) range with a specifically designed sample holder, scanning setup, and a microscope lens.
We utilize this method on a monazite ore thin section from Steenkampskraal (South Africa), which we analyzed for the rare earth element (REE)-bearing mineral monazite ((Ce,Nd,La)PO4), with high concentrations of Nd. The transmittance analyses with the hyperspectral VNIR camera can be used to identify REE minerals and Nd in thin sections.
We propose a three-point band depth index, the Nd feature depth index (NdFD), and its related product the Nd band depth index (NdBDI), which enables automatic mineral detection and classification for the Nd-bearing monazites in thin sections. In combination with the average concentration of the relative Nd content, it permits a destruction-free, total concentration calculation for Nd across the entire thin section.
We consider the spatiotemporal states of an ensemble of nonlocally coupled nonidentical phase oscillators, which correspond to different regimes of the long-term evolution of such a system. We have obtained homogeneous, twisted, and nonhomogeneous stationary solutions to the Ott-Antonsen equations corresponding to key variants of the realized collective rotational motion of elements of the medium in question with nonzero mesoscopic characteristics determining the degree of coherence of the dynamics of neighboring particles. We have described the procedures of the search for the class of nonhomogeneous solutions as stationary points of the auxiliary point map and of determining the stability based on analysis of the eigenvalue spectrum of the composite operator. Static and breather cluster regimes have been demonstrated and described, as well as the regimes with an irregular behavior of averaged complex fields including, in particular, the local order parameter.
Groundwater recharge (GWR) is one of the most challenging water fluxes to estimate, as it relies on observed data that are often limited in many developing countries.
This study developed an innovative water budget method using satellite products for estimating the spatially distributed GWR at monthly and annual scales in tropical wet sedimentary regions despite cloudy conditions.
The distinctive features proposed in this study include the capacity to address 1) evapotranspiration estimations in tropical wet regions frequently overlaid by substantial cloud cover; and 2) seasonal root-zone water storage estimations in sedimentary regions prone to monthly variations.
The method also utilises satellite-based information of the precipitation and surface runoff. The GWR was estimated and validated for the hydrologically contrasting years 2016 and 2017 over a tropical wet sedimentary region located in North-eastern Brazil, which has substantial potential for groundwater abstraction.
This study showed that applying a cloud-cleaning procedure based on monthly compositions of biophysical data enables the production of a reasonable proxy for evapotranspiration able to estimate groundwater by the water budget method.
The resulting GWR rates were 219 (2016) and 302 (2017) mm yr(-1), showing good correlations (CC = 0.68 to 0.83) and slight underestimations (PBIAS =-13 to-9%) when compared with the referenced estimates obtained by the water table fluctuation method for 23 monitoring wells. Sensitivity analysis shows that water storage changes account for +19% to-22% of our monthly evaluation.
The satellite-based approach consistently demonstrated that the consideration of cloud-cleaned evapotranspiration and root-zone soil water storage changes are essential for a proper estimation of spatially distributed GWR in tropical wet sedimentary regions because of their weather seasonality and cloudy conditions.
The Levenberg–Marquardt regularization for the backward heat equation with fractional derivative
(2022)
The backward heat problem with time-fractional derivative in Caputo's sense is studied. The inverse problem is severely ill-posed in the case when the fractional order is close to unity. A Levenberg-Marquardt method with a new a posteriori stopping rule is investigated. We show that optimal order can be obtained for the proposed method under a Hölder-type source condition. Numerical examples for one and two dimensions are provided.
Bewertung ausgewählter Aspekte des neuen „Gesetzes zum Schutz von Geschäftsgeheimnissen“ (GeschGehG)
(2021)
Durch die steigende Bedeutung von grenzüberschreitendem Unternehmensverkehr, Globalisierung und Outsourcing sowie dem Einsatz von Telekommunikationsmitteln ist eine effektive und einheitliche Regelung zum Schutz von Geschäftsgeheimnissen unentbehrlich, da infolge einer Zunahme von Praktiken, wie Wirtschaftsspionage und Verletzungen von Geheimhaltungspflichten, welche eine rechtswidrige Aneignung von
Geschäftsgeheimnissen bezwecken, eine verstärkte Gefährdungslage für die Geheimhaltung von Geschäftsgeheimnissen besteht. Insbesondere deshalb soll dieser Beitrag die Frage beantworten, ob die Richtlinie (EU) 2016/943 (Geheimnisschutzrichtlinie) europarechtskonform in das Gesetz zum Schutz von Geschäftsgeheimnissen (GeschGehG) umgesetzt worden ist (zur Historie I.). Der Schwerpunkt liegt hierbei auf dem Schutzbereich (II.) und vornehmlich auf der Frage, wie das Merkmal des kommerziellen Wertes zu verstehen ist, ob jegliche Geheimnisse eines Unternehmens geschützt sind und inwiefern sich der Geheimnisschutz durch die geforderten angemessenen Geheimhaltungsmaßnahmen für Geheimnisinhaber verändert. Betrachtet wird ebenfalls, ob der deutsche Gesetzgeber befugt ist, ein berechtigtes Interesse an der Geheimhaltung zu fordern. Spätestens seit Snowdens Enthüllungen genießt die Aufdeckung von unethischen oder illegalen Verhaltensweisen
gesteigerte Aufmerksamkeit in der Bevölkerung und Rechtswissenschaft. Für den Hinweisgeberschutz ergeben sich durch das GeschGehG Neuerungen. Hinsichtlich des umfassenden Schutzbereiches des GeschGehG wird betrachtet, ob und wann eine unternehmensexterne Offenlegung von Geschäftsgeheimnissen zulässig ist (III.). Hierzu wird beantwortet, ob die bisherige Rechtsprechung zum sog. Eskalationsmodell
weiterhin angewandt werden muss und wie sich das Verhältnis zur allgemeinen arbeitsvertraglichen Verschwiegenheitspflicht aus § 241 Abs. 2 BGB, sowohl aus dem laufenden als auch dem beendeten Arbeitsverhältnis, darstellt. Eine abschließende Bewertung (IV.) vervollständigt den Beitrag.
Never again?
(2023)
The Holocaust was the most terrible atrocity of the 20th century. In many ways, it was also unprecedented in the history of atrocities: for its comprehensiveness and systematic nature; for the fanaticism with which its perpetrators scoured an entire continent in their pursuit of Jews; for the awful potency of the Nazis’ insinuation that the victims represented a pernicious and existential threat. Collectively, we have spent decades—and published millions of words—trying to understand what happened and why.
PC2P
(2021)
Motivation:
Prediction of protein complexes from protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks is an important problem in systems biology, as they control different cellular functions. The existing solutions employ algorithms for network community detection that identify dense subgraphs in PPI networks. However, gold standards in yeast and human indicate that protein complexes can also induce sparse subgraphs, introducing further challenges in protein complex prediction.
Results:
To address this issue, we formalize protein complexes as biclique spanned subgraphs, which include both sparse and dense subgraphs. We then cast the problem of protein complex prediction as a network partitioning into biclique spanned subgraphs with removal of minimum number of edges, called coherent partition. Since finding a coherent partition is a computationally intractable problem, we devise a parameter-free greedy approximation algorithm, termed Protein Complexes from Coherent Partition (PC2P), based on key properties of biclique spanned subgraphs. Through comparison with nine contenders, we demonstrate that PC2P: (i) successfully identifies modular structure in networks, as a prerequisite for protein complex prediction, (ii) outperforms the existing solutions with respect to a composite score of five performance measures on 75% and 100% of the analyzed PPI networks and gold standards in yeast and human, respectively, and (iii,iv) does not compromise GO semantic similarity and enrichment score of the predicted protein complexes. Therefore, our study demonstrates that clustering of networks in terms of biclique spanned subgraphs is a promising framework for detection of complexes in PPI networks.
In recent years, many efforts have been made to apply image processing techniques for plant leaf identification. However, categorizing leaf images at the cultivar/variety level, because of the very low inter-class variability, is still a challenging task. In this research, we propose an automatic discriminative method based on convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for classifying 12 different cultivars of common beans that belong to three various species. We show that employing advanced loss functions, such as Additive Angular Margin Loss and Large Margin Cosine Loss, instead of the standard softmax loss function for the classification can yield better discrimination between classes and thereby mitigate the problem of low inter-class variability. The method was evaluated by classifying species (level I), cultivars from the same species (level II), and cultivars from different species (level III), based on images from the leaf foreside and backside. The results indicate that the performance of the classification algorithm on the leaf backside image dataset is superior. The maximum mean classification accuracies of 95.86, 91.37 and 86.87% were obtained at the levels I, II and III, respectively. The proposed method outperforms the previous relevant works and provides a reliable approach for plant cultivars identification.
Carbonate minerals are common in both marine and lacustrine records, and are frequently used for paleoenvironmental reconstructions. The sedimentary sequence of the endorheic Dead Sea and its precursors contain aragonite laminae that provide a detailed sedimentary archive of climatic, hydrologic, limnologic and environmental conditions since the Pleistocene. However, the interpretation of these archives requires a detailed understanding of the constraints and mechanisms affecting CaCO3 precipitation, which are still debated. The implications of aragonite precipitation in the Dead Sea and in its late Pleistocene predecessor (Lake Lisan) were investigated in this study by mixing natural and synthetic brines with a synthetic bicarbonate solution that mimics flash-floods composition, with and without the addition of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). Aragonite precipitation was monitored, and precipitation rates and carbonate yields were calculated and are discussed with respect to modern aquatic environments. The experimental insights on aragonite precipitation are then integrated with microfacies analyses in order to reconstruct and constrain prevailing limnogeological processes and their hydroclimatic drivers under low (interglacial) and high (glacial) lake level stands. Aragonite precipitation took place within days to several weeks after the mixing of the brines with a synthetic bicarbonate solution. Incubation time was proportional to bicarbonate concentration, and precipitation rates were partially influenced by ionic strength. Additionally, extracellular polymeric substances inhibited aragonite precipitation for several months. As for the lake's water budget, our calculations suggest that the precipitation of a typical aragonite lamina (0.5 mm thick) during high lake stand requires unreasonable freshwater inflow from either surface or subsurface sources. This discrepancy can be resolved by considering one or a combination of the following scenarios; (1) discontinuous aragonite deposition over parts of the lake floor; (2) supply of additional carbonate flux (or fluxes) to the lake from aeolian dust and the remobilization and dissolution of dust deposits at the watershed; (3) carbonate production via oxidation of organic carbon by sulfate-reducing bacteria. Altogether, it is suggested that aragonite laminae thickness cannot be directly interpreted for quantitatively reconstructing the hydrological balance for the entire lake, they may still prove valuable for identifying inherent hydroclimatic periodicities at a single site.
In this introductory article to the special issue, we ask what role sexuality plays in the reproduction and contestation of border regimes and think sexuality towards its various entanglements with border control. As borders have been understood as a method for reproducing racialized distinctions, we argue that sexuality is also a method of bordering and illustrate how sexuality works as a key strategy for the capture, containment and regulation of mobility and movement. Taking a transnational approach, we bring together queer scholarship on borders and migration with the rich archive of feminist, Black, Indigenous and critical border perspectives to suggest that these strategies need to be understood in close relation to the (I) intersecting dynamics of colonial histories of racialization, (II) national regimes of reproductive control and (III) the containment of contagion, disease and sexual deviance.
Background
Fetuin-A is a hepatokine which has the capacity to prevent vascular calcification. Moreover, it is linked to the induction of metabolic dysfunction, insulin resistance and associated with increased risk of diabetes.
It has not been clarified whether fetuin-A associates with risk of vascular, specifically microvascular, complications in patients with diabetes.
We aimed to investigate whether pre-diagnostic plasma fetuin-A is associated with risk of complications once diabetes develops.
Methods
Participants with incident type 2 diabetes and free of micro- and macrovascular disease from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)-Potsdam cohort (n = 587) were followed for microvascular and macrovascular complications (n = 203 and n = 60, respectively, median follow-up: 13 years).
Plasma fetuin-A was measured approximately 4 years prior to diabetes diagnosis. Prospective associations between baseline fetuin-A and risk of complications were assessed with Cox regression.
Results
In multivariable models, fetuin-A was linearly inversely associated with incident total and microvascular complications, hazard ratio (HR, 95% CI) per standard deviation (SD) increase: 0.86 (0.74; 0.99) for total, 0.84 (0.71; 0.98) for microvascular and 0.92 (0.68; 1.24) for macrovascular complications. After additional adjustment for cardiometabolic plasma biomarkers, including triglycerides and high-density lipoprotein, the associations were slightly attenuated: 0.88 (0.75; 1.02) for total, 0.85 (0.72; 1.01) for microvascular and 0.95 (0.67; 1.34) for macrovascular complications. No interaction by sex could be observed (p > 0.10 for all endpoints).
Conclusions
Our data show that lower plasma fetuin-A levels measured prior to the diagnosis of diabetes may be etiologically implicated in the development of diabetes-associated microvascular disease.
Over the past decades, the growing proliferation of international institutions governing the global environment has impelled institutional interplay as a result of functional and normative overlap across multiple regimes.
This article synthesizes primary contributions made in research on institutional interplay over the past twenty years, with particular focus on publications with International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics. Broadening our understanding about the different types, dimensions, pathways, and effects of institutional interplay, scholars have produced key insights into the ways and means by which international institutions cooperate, manage discord, engage in problem solving, and capture synergies across levels and scales.
As global environmental governance has become increasingly fragmented and complex, we recognize that recent studies have highlighted the growing interactions between transnationally operating institutions in the wake of polycentric governance and hybrid institutional complexes.
However, our findings reveal that there is insufficient empirical and conceptual research to fully understand the relationship, causes, and consequences of interplay between intergovernmental and transnational institutions. Reflecting on the challenges of addressing regulatory gaps and mitigating the crisis of multilateralism, we expound the present research frontier for further advancing research on institutional interplay and provide recommendations to support policy-making.
The field of movement ecology has seen a rapid increase in high-resolution data in recent years, leading to the development of numerous statistical and numerical methods to analyse relocation trajectories. Data are often collected at the level of the individual and for long periods that may encompass a range of behaviours.
Here, we use the power spectral density (PSD) to characterise the random movement patterns of a black-winged kite (Elanus caeruleus) and a white stork (Ciconia ciconia). The tracks are first segmented and clustered into different behaviours (movement modes), and for each mode we measure the PSD and the ageing properties of the process.
For the foraging kite we find 1/f noise, previously reported in ecological systems mainly in the context of population dynamics, but not for movement data. We further suggest plausible models for each of the behavioural modes by comparing both the measured PSD exponents and the distribution of the single-trajectory PSD to known theoretical results and simulations.