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32 pages, 6548 KB  
Article
Smart City Ontology Framework for Urban Data Integration and Application
by Xiaolong He, Xi Kuai, Xinyue Li, Zihao Qiu, Biao He and Renzhong Guo
Smart Cities 2025, 8(5), 165; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8050165 - 3 Oct 2025
Viewed by 424
Abstract
Rapid urbanization and the proliferation of heterogeneous urban data have intensified the challenges of semantic interoperability and integrated urban governance. To address this, we propose the Smart City Ontology Framework (SMOF), a standards-driven ontology that unifies Building Information Modeling (BIM), Geographic Information Systems [...] Read more.
Rapid urbanization and the proliferation of heterogeneous urban data have intensified the challenges of semantic interoperability and integrated urban governance. To address this, we propose the Smart City Ontology Framework (SMOF), a standards-driven ontology that unifies Building Information Modeling (BIM), Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Internet of Things (IoT), and relational data. SMOF organizes five core modules and eleven major entity categories, with universal and extensible attributes and relations to support cross-domain data integration. SMOF was developed through competency questions, authoritative knowledge sources, and explicit design principles, ensuring methodological rigor and alignment with real governance needs. Its evaluation combined three complementary approaches against baseline models: quantitative metrics demonstrated higher attribute richness and balanced hierarchy; LLM as judge assessments confirmed conceptual completeness, consistency, and scalability; and expert scoring highlighted superior scenario fitness and clarity. Together, these results indicate that SMOF achieves both structural soundness and practical adaptability. Beyond structural evaluation, SMOF was validated in two representative urban service scenarios, demonstrating its capacity to integrate heterogeneous data, support graph-based querying and enable ontology-driven reasoning. In sum, SMOF offers a robust and scalable solution for semantic data integration, advancing smart city governance and decision-making efficiency. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Breaking Down Silos in Urban Services)
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22 pages, 7309 KB  
Article
Population Genomics and Genetic Diversity of Prosopis cineraria in the United Arab Emirates: Insights for Conservation in Arid Ecosystems
by Anestis Gkanogiannis, Salama Rashed Almansoori, Maher Kabshawi, Mohammad Shahid, Saif Almansoori, Hifzur Rahman and Augusto Becerra Lopez-Lavalle
Plants 2025, 14(19), 2970; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14192970 - 25 Sep 2025
Viewed by 418
Abstract
Prosopis cineraria (L.) Druce is a keystone tree species in the arid and semi-arid regions of West and South Asia, with critical ecological, cultural, and conservation significance. In the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and other regions of the Arabian Peninsula, this beneficial tree [...] Read more.
Prosopis cineraria (L.) Druce is a keystone tree species in the arid and semi-arid regions of West and South Asia, with critical ecological, cultural, and conservation significance. In the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and other regions of the Arabian Peninsula, this beneficial tree is called Ghaf. Despite its importance, genomic resources and population-level diversity data for the tree remain limited. Here, we present the first comprehensive population genomics study of Ghaf based on whole-genome resequencing of 204 individual trees collected across the UAE. Following Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) discovery and stringent filtering, we analyzed 57,183 high-quality LD-pruned SNPs to assess population structure, diversity, and gene flow. Principal component analysis (PCA), sparse non-negative matrix factorization (sNMF), and discriminant analysis of principal components (DAPC) revealed four well-defined genetic clusters, broadly corresponding to geographic origins. The genetic diversity varied significantly among the groups, with observed heterozygosity (Ho), inbreeding coefficients (F), and nucleotide diversity (π) showing strong population-specific trends. Genome-wide fixation index FST scans identified multiple highly differentiated genomic regions, enriched for genes involved in stress response, transport, and signaling. Functional enrichment using Gene Ontology (GO), Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG), and Pfam annotations indicated overrepresentation of protein kinase activity, ATP binding, and hormone signaling pathways. TreeMix analysis revealed gene flow into one of the genetic clusters from both others, suggesting historical admixture and geographic connectivity. This work provides foundational insights into the population genomic profile of P. cineraria, supporting conservation planning, restoration strategies, and long-term genetic monitoring in arid ecosystems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of Plants)
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15 pages, 279 KB  
Article
What’s in a Name?: Mutanchi Clan Narratives and Indigenous Ecospirituality
by Reep Pandi Lepcha
Religions 2025, 16(8), 945; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16080945 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 722
Abstract
The Mutanchis, known by their derogatory exonymic term ‘Lepcha’, are autochthonous to Sikkim, India. The name ‘Mutanchi’ derives from the phrase ‘Mutanchi Rumkup Rongkup’, eliciting the response ‘Achulay’, meaning ‘Beloved children of It-bu-mu, who have come from the snowy peaks’. The nomenclature prompts [...] Read more.
The Mutanchis, known by their derogatory exonymic term ‘Lepcha’, are autochthonous to Sikkim, India. The name ‘Mutanchi’ derives from the phrase ‘Mutanchi Rumkup Rongkup’, eliciting the response ‘Achulay’, meaning ‘Beloved children of It-bu-mu, who have come from the snowy peaks’. The nomenclature prompts an ontological understanding rooted in the community’s eco-geographical context. Despite possessing a well-developed script categorised within the Tibeto-Burman language family, the Mutanchis remain a largely oral community. Their diminishing, scarcely documented repository of Mutanchi clan narratives underscores this orality. As a Mutanchi, I recognise these narratives as a medium for expressing Indigenous value systems upheld by my community and specific villages. Mutanchi clan narratives embody spiritual and cultural significance, yet their fantastic rationale reveals complex epistemological tensions. Ideally, each Mutanchi clan reveres a chyu (peak), lhep (cave), and doh (lake), which are propitiated annually and on specific occasions. The transmigration of an apil (soul) is tied to these three sacred spatial geographies, unique to each clan. Additionally, clan etiological explanations, situated within natural or supernatural habitats, manifest beliefs, values, and norms rooted in a deep ecology. This article presents an ecosophical study of selected Mutanchi clan narratives from Dzongu, North Sikkim—a region that partially lies within the UNESCO Khangchendzonga Man-Biosphere Reserve. Conducted in close consultation with clan members and in adherence to the ethical protocols, this study examines clans in Dzongu governed by Indigenous knowledge systems embedded in their narratives, highlighting biocentric perspectives that shape Mutanchi lifeways. Full article
29 pages, 9378 KB  
Article
Representing the Spatiotemporal State Evolution of Geographic Entities as a Multi-Level Graph
by Feng Yuan, Penglin Zhang, Qi Zhang, Yu Zhang and Anni Wang
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(7), 252; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14070252 - 28 Jun 2025
Viewed by 712
Abstract
The geographic knowledge graph offers a structured framework for mining and discovering spatiotemporal knowledge, which is of great significance for understanding geographic dynamics. However, existing geographic knowledge graphs still encounter significant challenges in comprehensive expression of spatiotemporal elements and understanding the intricate relationships [...] Read more.
The geographic knowledge graph offers a structured framework for mining and discovering spatiotemporal knowledge, which is of great significance for understanding geographic dynamics. However, existing geographic knowledge graphs still encounter significant challenges in comprehensive expression of spatiotemporal elements and understanding the intricate relationships and dynamic evolution among geographic entities, space, and time. Therefore, a Spatiotemporal Evolution Hierarchical Representation Graph (STEHRG) is proposed, which consists of three layers: a spatiotemporal ontology layer, a spatiotemporal evolution layer, and a feature situation layer. The STEHRG characterizes the multidimensional state transitions of spatiotemporal entities across various scales and abstraction levels, enabling a comprehensive representation of geographic spatiotemporal evolution. Additionally, this paper introduces a graph data structure-based approach for managing the state features of spatiotemporal entities and their lifecycle dependencies. Finally, through comparative experiments with existing knowledge graphs (GeoKG, GEKG, and STOKG), the results indicate that the STEHRG has significant advantages in accuracy, completeness, and reproducibility. Full article
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24 pages, 3000 KB  
Article
Religion, Migration, Mediation: The Transnational Lives of Thai Religious Imaginaries in South Korea
by Seung Soo Kim
Religions 2025, 16(6), 748; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060748 - 10 Jun 2025
Viewed by 857
Abstract
Research on religion and migration has often focused on institutions and belief systems, while overlooking how mediation links migrants, sacred objects, rituals, and religious imaginaries. This study advances mediation as a core analytic in religion–migration studies by examining the practices of ten Thai [...] Read more.
Research on religion and migration has often focused on institutions and belief systems, while overlooking how mediation links migrants, sacred objects, rituals, and religious imaginaries. This study advances mediation as a core analytic in religion–migration studies by examining the practices of ten Thai migrant students in South Korea through semi-structured interviews on Buddhist amulets, Hindu deity pendants, Catholic rosaries, merit-making, and the elevation of sacred objects. Guided by Meyer’s religion-as-mediation framework and Taylor’s concept of the social imaginary, the analysis shows that quotidian, embodied engagements with sacred objects mediate and materialize Thai Buddhist–Animist imaginaries in Korean settings, expanding, transnationalizing, and hybridizing them through encounters with the host environment. These practices not only sustain spiritual continuity, but also generate sacred transnational social spaces that bridge both the ontological divide between the human and the transcendent and the geographical divide between Thailand and Korea. Rather than being preserved through institutional affiliation, migrant religiosity is continually reconstituted through everyday embodied practices of mediation that render the sacred experientially real in the host society. By foregrounding mediation, this study offers a reconceptualization of migrant religion as an embodied, material, and world-making process—one through which migrants actively reimagine and inhabit sacred spaces across borders. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion, Liberalism and the Nation in East Asia)
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15 pages, 4485 KB  
Article
Pathogenomic Insights into Piscirickettsia salmonis with a Focus on Virulence Factors, Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Identification, and Resistance Dynamics
by Sk Injamamul Islam, Khandker Shahed, Md Imtiaz Ahamed, Luu Tang Phuc Khang, Won-Kyo Jung, Papungkorn Sangsawad, Nguyen Dinh-Hung, Patima Permpoonpattana and Nguyen Vu Linh
Animals 2025, 15(8), 1176; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15081176 - 20 Apr 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3033
Abstract
Effective control of bacterial infections remains a significant challenge in aquaculture. The marine bacterium Piscirickettsia salmonis (P. salmonis), responsible for piscirickettsiosis, causes widespread infections in various salmon species, leading to substantial mortality and economic losses. Despite efforts to genetically characterize P. [...] Read more.
Effective control of bacterial infections remains a significant challenge in aquaculture. The marine bacterium Piscirickettsia salmonis (P. salmonis), responsible for piscirickettsiosis, causes widespread infections in various salmon species, leading to substantial mortality and economic losses. Despite efforts to genetically characterize P. salmonis, critical gaps persist in understanding its virulence factors, antimicrobial resistance genes, and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). This study addresses these gaps through a comparative analysis of the pan-genome and core genomes of 80 P. salmonis strains from different geographical regions and genogroups. P. salmonis had an open pan-genome consisting of 14,564 genes, with a core genome of 1257 conserved genes. Eleven virulence-related genes were identified in the pan-genome, categorized into five functional groups, providing new insights into the pathogenicity of P. salmonis. Unique SNPs were detected in four key genes (gyrA, dnaK, rpoB, and ftsZ), serving as robust molecular markers for distinguishing the LF and EM genogroups. Notably, AMR genes identified in four LF strains suggest evolutionary adaptations under selective pressure. Functional annotation of the core genomes using the gene ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) databases demonstrated conserved gene clusters linked to essential intracellular survival mechanisms and bacterial pathogenicity. These findings suggest a direct association between core genome features and variations in pathogenesis and host–pathogen interactions across genogroups. Phylogenetic reconstruction further highlighted the influence of AMR genes on strain divergence. Collectively, this study enhances the genomic understanding of P. salmonis and lays the groundwork for improved diagnostic tools and targeted therapeutics to manage piscirickettsiosis in aquaculture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Aquatic Animals)
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22 pages, 8647 KB  
Article
Genomic Signatures of Environmental Adaptation in Castanopsis hainanensis (Fagaceae)
by Sha Li, Xing Chen, Yang Wu and Ye Sun
Plants 2025, 14(7), 1128; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14071128 - 5 Apr 2025
Viewed by 733
Abstract
As an endemic Castanopsis species on Hainan Island, Castanopsis hainanensis Merr. is uniquely adapted to tropical climatic conditions and occupies a relatively narrow habitat range. Given its long generation times, limited dispersal capacity, and ecological and economic importance, understanding the genomic processes shaping [...] Read more.
As an endemic Castanopsis species on Hainan Island, Castanopsis hainanensis Merr. is uniquely adapted to tropical climatic conditions and occupies a relatively narrow habitat range. Given its long generation times, limited dispersal capacity, and ecological and economic importance, understanding the genomic processes shaping this dominant tree species is critical for conservation. Its adaptation to specialized habitats and distinct geographical distribution provide valuable insights into biodiversity challenges in island ecosystems. This study employs genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers to investigate genetic structure, population dynamics, and adaptive variation. Analyses revealed weak genetic divergence among populations, suggesting high gene flow. Demographic reconstruction indicated a historical population bottleneck, consistent with MaxEnt modeling projections of future range contraction under climate change. Selective sweep and genotype–environment association (GEA) analyses identified SNPs strongly correlated with environmental variables, particularly moisture and temperature. Using these SNPs, we quantified the risk of non-adaptedness (RONA) across climate scenarios, pinpointing regions at heightened vulnerability. Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment highlighted the key genes involved in plant growth and stress adaptation. By integrating genomic and environmental data, this study establishes a framework for deciphering adaptive mechanisms of C. hainanensis and offers actionable insights for informed conservation strategies to mitigate climate-driven biodiversity loss. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Plant Phylogeny, Taxonomy and Evolution)
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23 pages, 3699 KB  
Article
Transcriptome Analysis Reveals the Pivotal Genes and Regulation Pathways Under Cold Stress and Identifies SbERF027, an AP2/ERF Gene That Confers Cold Tolerance in Sorghum
by Qijin Lou, Peifeng Wang, Miao Yu, Zhigan Xie, Chen Xu, Shengyu Chen, Hao Yu, Rui Zhang, Guangling Tian, Di Hao, Xianshi Ke, Shuai Yu, Jiajia Zhou, Yao Zhao, Chao Ye, Jiyuan Guo, Haiyan Zhang, Mo Chen and Xingbei Liu
Plants 2025, 14(6), 879; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14060879 - 11 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1275
Abstract
Low temperature at the seedling stage adversely affects sorghum growth and development and limits its geographical distribution. APETALA2/Ethylene-Responsive transcription factors (AP2/ERFs), one of the largest transcription factor families in plants, play essential roles in growth, development, and responses to abiotic stresses. However, the [...] Read more.
Low temperature at the seedling stage adversely affects sorghum growth and development and limits its geographical distribution. APETALA2/Ethylene-Responsive transcription factors (AP2/ERFs), one of the largest transcription factor families in plants, play essential roles in growth, development, and responses to abiotic stresses. However, the roles of AP2/ERF genes in cold tolerance in sorghum and the mechanisms underlying their effects remain largely unknown. Here, transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) was performed on the leaves of sorghum seedlings before and after cold treatment. Several candidate genes for cold tolerance and regulation pathways involved in “photosynthesis” under cold stress were identified via Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment. Additionally, the AP2/ERF family gene SbERF027, a novel regulator of cold tolerance, was functionally identified through a comprehensive analysis. The expression of SbERF027 was high in seedlings and panicles, and its expression was induced by low temperature; the cold-induced expression level of SbERF027 was markedly higher in cold-tolerant accession SZ7 than in cold-sensitive accession Z-5. SbERF027 was detected in the nucleus under both normal and cold stress conditions. In addition, the cold tolerance of SbERF027-overexpressing lines was higher than that of wild-type plants; while the cold tolerance of lines with SbERF027 silenced via virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) was significantly lower than that of wild-type plants. Further research demonstrated that SNP-911 of the promoter was essential for enhancing cold tolerance by mediating SbERF027 expression. This study lays a theoretical foundation for dissecting the mechanism of cold tolerance in sorghum and has implications for the breeding and genetic improvement of cold-tolerant sorghum. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Crop Germplasm Resources, Genomics, and Molecular Breeding)
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34 pages, 37538 KB  
Article
Beyond Correlation to Causation in Hunter–Gatherer Ritual Landscapes: Testing an Ontological Model of Site Locations in the Mojave Desert, California
by David S. Whitley, JD Lancaster and Andrea Catacora
Arts 2025, 14(1), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14010020 - 18 Feb 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2203
Abstract
Why are rock art sites found in certain places and not others? Can locational or environmental variables inform an understanding of the function and meaning of the art? How can we move beyond observed patterning in spatial associations to a credible explanation of [...] Read more.
Why are rock art sites found in certain places and not others? Can locational or environmental variables inform an understanding of the function and meaning of the art? How can we move beyond observed patterning in spatial associations to a credible explanation of such meanings and ensure that we are not confusing correlation with causation? And what variables were most relevant in influencing site locational choices? These and related problems, whether recognized or not, are the subtext of the last three decades of rock art site distributional and landscape studies. They are now especially important to resolve given the need for accurate predictive modeling due to the rapid transformation of certain regions from undeveloped rural areas into rural industrial landscapes. Partly with this problem in mind, Whitley developed a descriptive model that provides an explanation for the location of Native Californian rock art in the Mojave Desert. It identifies the variables most relevant to site locations based on ethnographic Indigenous ontological beliefs about the landscape. These concern the geographical distribution of supernatural power and its association with certain landforms, natural phenomena and cultural features. His analysis further demonstrated that this model can account for two unusually large concentrations of sites and motifs: the Coso Range petroglyphs and the Carrizo Plain pictographs. But unanswered was the question of whether the model is applicable more widely, especially to smaller sites and localities made by different cultural groups. We documented and analyzed three petroglyph localities with seven small petroglyph sites in the southern Mojave Desert, California, to test this model. These sites are attributed to the Takic-speaking Cahuilla and Serrano tribes. Our study revealed a good fit between the expected natural and cultural variables associated with rock art site locations, with the number of such variables present at any given locale potentially correlated with the size of the individual sites. In addition to the research value of these results, this suggests that the model may be useful in the predictive modeling of rock art site locations for heritage management purposes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Rock Art Studies)
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37 pages, 13139 KB  
Article
Digital Humanities for Increasing Disaster Resilience in Art Nouveau and Modernist Buildings
by Maria Bostenaru Dan and Adrian Ibric
Sustainability 2025, 17(3), 1328; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17031328 - 6 Feb 2025
Viewed by 2242
Abstract
The paper will focus on the topic of adapting digital humanities methods from architectural history to technical history, considering mapping and image analysis for increasing disaster resilience in Art Nouveau and Modernist buildings in different geographical areas—including lessons from Europe to the USA. [...] Read more.
The paper will focus on the topic of adapting digital humanities methods from architectural history to technical history, considering mapping and image analysis for increasing disaster resilience in Art Nouveau and Modernist buildings in different geographical areas—including lessons from Europe to the USA. The project proposes the transformation of the collection of photographs of early 20th-century architecture gathered by the applicant over about 30 years of travel into a database by answering the research question on how threats from the hazards of earthquakes, floods, and fires can be answered by taking into account the local culture in the European countries covered, for buildings from a period when the architecture styles were already global at that time. For this purpose, digital humanities methods of image annotation (including architectural volumetric analysis) and mapping are employed. From the knowledge gathered and the resulting database, a prototyping ontology and taxonomy is derived. This outcome can be further developed into a set of evaluation criteria, considering the decisions that can be taken to prioritize the retrofit interventions depending on the geographic positions of the buildings. Full article
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19 pages, 286 KB  
Article
Memory as Part of an Event, and Events as Signification of Memories: Focusing on Philippe Claudel’s Brodeck’s Report
by Yongtaek Jeong
Religions 2025, 16(2), 185; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020185 - 5 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1398
Abstract
This paper attempts to reconceptualize memory as an event from a theological perspective, drawing on the recent dialog between memory studies and Critical Event Studies. To this end, it analyzes the narrative and themes of the 2007 novel Brodeck’s Report by Philippe Claudel, [...] Read more.
This paper attempts to reconceptualize memory as an event from a theological perspective, drawing on the recent dialog between memory studies and Critical Event Studies. To this end, it analyzes the narrative and themes of the 2007 novel Brodeck’s Report by Philippe Claudel, classified as a third-generation Holocaust (narrative) writer in France, within the framework of event studies. The novel has been praised for successfully depicting the tragedy as a universal event transcending spatial–temporal specificity by utilizing the genre of allegory while minimizing references to the historical and geographical specificity of the Holocaust. Extending this evaluation, this paper particularly focuses from a theological perspective on how the protagonist and narrator, Brodeck, simply names the subject of his report—a past event that happened to an unidentified other (Autre) called the ‘Anderer’—as ‘Ereignis’ (event). This is noteworthy because Ereignis is not only the most famous concept representing late Heideggerian philosophy but also holds significant importance in post-Heideggerian modern philosophy as the speculative source of the ‘evental turn’, which, along with the ‘material turn’, constitutes one axis of the ‘ontological turn’ in contemporary humanities and social sciences. In this regard, this work, which narrativizes the universality of the Holocaust, provides interesting implications for the possibility of a disjunctive synthesis between memory studies in the humanities and social sciences and theological event studies. Above all, it stimulates a reconsideration of the conventional dichotomy between memory and event—namely, the commonplace premise of “events that occurred in the past” and “present memories of past events”—as revealed in the definition of memory studies as “naming pasts, transforming futures”. Thus, this paper explores the possibility of reconceptualizing the moment of memory as part of the ongoing event itself from past to present, and the event as a process of symbolic construction of meaning through memory. Full article
17 pages, 1878 KB  
Article
Mapping Gamification for Sustainable Urban Development: Generating New Insights for Tourism Education
by Carla Fraga, Lucília Cardoso, Ercília de Stefano, Luís Lima Santos and Natália Motta
Tour. Hosp. 2025, 6(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6010017 - 29 Jan 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2652
Abstract
Although scientific literature already shows the connections between gamification, tourism and sustainability, there is still a gap in research into how gamification can transform cities into more playful, sustainable and intelligent tourism destinations. Gamification in tourism promotes engagement, education and innovation, enriching experiences [...] Read more.
Although scientific literature already shows the connections between gamification, tourism and sustainability, there is still a gap in research into how gamification can transform cities into more playful, sustainable and intelligent tourism destinations. Gamification in tourism promotes engagement, education and innovation, enriching experiences and driving the development of smart destinations. This study advances this debate by employing a mixed methodology, combining a systematic review (supported by Rayyan, an artificial intelligence) and content analysis (supported by Iramuteq, a textual software, version 0.7 Alpha 2). Additionally, we used Dreamscape by Voyant Tools online for a geographical analysis of the textual corpus formed by n = 61 abstracts. The intersection of main findings from the techniques applied provides eight new insights on urban tourism education through gamification, which are as follows: (1) exchange between the Global North and South; (2) local and global participation; (3) collaborations to achieve the 17 SDGs; (4) improve urban destination marketing by ethics principles; (5) deepening disruption technology and ethics studies; (6) the transformation of reality by sciences; (7) gamification on interdisciplinary perspectives; and (8) the role of gamification on the tourism and hospitality industry. The results suggest that gamification in tourism can offer a new ontological approach to addressing sustainable urban development, highlighting both theoretical and practical challenges. This research has both theoretical and practical implications, advancing the concept of ecogaming by integrating technology, entertainment and sustainability, and reinforces its potential to educate and engage in sustainable urban tourism practices. Full article
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19 pages, 522 KB  
Article
Cultural Studies with Communities in South Africa: Implications for Participatory Development Communication and Social Change Research
by Lauren Dyll and Keyan G. Tomaselli
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(11), 614; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13110614 - 13 Nov 2024
Viewed by 3673
Abstract
This article theorizes the role of local and indigenous culture in its intersection with development initiatives. It argues that Communication for Development and Social Change (CDSC), through a cultural studies framework, strengthens the potentiality of democratization and participation within community-based development and social [...] Read more.
This article theorizes the role of local and indigenous culture in its intersection with development initiatives. It argues that Communication for Development and Social Change (CDSC), through a cultural studies framework, strengthens the potentiality of democratization and participation within community-based development and social change settings. We advocate that applied cultural studies can facilitate agency (through voice and self-representation) in social interventions. This is a cultural studies approach that has been recontextualised from the Birmingham origin as read through Marxist development studies, first adapted and mobilized during the anti-apartheid struggle in developing cultural strategy, and more recently with efforts to indigenise research practices with research participants in the southern Kalahari. We draw on an example of the community-owned, state-funded, and privately operated !Xaus Lodge cultural tourism asset. We illustrate how CDSC strategies, influenced by applied cultural studies, can work with an agentic imperative to effect development and mutual understanding in a defined geographical area, where multiple stakeholder agendas, cultural backgrounds, and ontologies are to be negotiated. Full article
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19 pages, 4333 KB  
Article
Transcriptome Analysis Reveals Genes Responsive to Three Low-Temperature Treatments in Arabidopsis thaliana
by Bricia Ruiz-Aguilar, Natalia B. Torres-Serrallonga, María Azucena Ortega-Amaro, Arianna Duque-Ortiz, Cesaré Ovando-Vázquez and Juan Francisco Jiménez-Bremont
Plants 2024, 13(22), 3127; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13223127 - 6 Nov 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2359
Abstract
Cold stress impedes the growth and development of plants, restricts the geographical distribution of plant species, and impacts crop productivity. In this study, we analyzed the Arabidopsis thaliana transcriptome to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in 14-day-old plantlets exposed to temperatures of 0 [...] Read more.
Cold stress impedes the growth and development of plants, restricts the geographical distribution of plant species, and impacts crop productivity. In this study, we analyzed the Arabidopsis thaliana transcriptome to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in 14-day-old plantlets exposed to temperatures of 0 °C, 4 °C, and 10 °C for 24 h, compared to the 22 °C control group. Among the top 50 cold-induced genes at each temperature, we identified 31 genes that were common across all three low temperatures, with nine genes common to 0–4 °C, eight genes to 4–10 °C, and two genes to 0–10 °C. Using q-RTPCR, we analyzed selected genes at 24, 48, and 72 h under the three low temperatures. Our data revealed that genes, such as galactinol synthase 3 (Gols3, At1g09350), CIR1 (At5g37260), DnaJ (At1g71000), and At5g05220 (unknown function), exhibited the highest expressions at 0 °C and 4 °C throughout all time points. We also studied genes from the UDP-glycosyltransferase (UGT78) family, including At5g17030 (D3), At5g17040 (D4), At5g17050 (D2), and At1g30530 (D1), which showed increased expression at low temperatures compared to plantlets at 22 °C for 24 h. Gene ontology analysis revealed that DEGs highly enriched were found in biological processes such as “RNA secondary structure unwinding” and “rRNA processing” induced at the three low temperatures, whereas processes related to photosynthesis were repressed. Our findings indicated upregulation in the expression of four RNA helicases (RH13, RH48, RH32, and RH29), belonging to the “RNA secondary structure unwinding” category, mainly at 0 °C and 4 °C. This study provides valuable information on the molecular mechanisms that activate Arabidopsis thaliana in its early response to these three low temperatures. Full article
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24 pages, 12316 KB  
Article
A Method for Constructing an Urban Waterlogging Emergency Knowledge Graph Based on Spatiotemporal Processes
by Wei Mao, Jie Shen, Qian Su, Sihu Liu, Saied Pirasteh and Kunihiro Ishii
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(10), 349; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13100349 - 3 Oct 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1678
Abstract
Urban waterlogging is one of the major “diseases” faced by cities, posing a great challenge to the healthy and sustainable development of cities. The traditional geographic knowledge graph struggles to capture dynamic changes in urban waterlogging over time. Therefore, the objective of this [...] Read more.
Urban waterlogging is one of the major “diseases” faced by cities, posing a great challenge to the healthy and sustainable development of cities. The traditional geographic knowledge graph struggles to capture dynamic changes in urban waterlogging over time. Therefore, the objective of this study is to analyze the time, events, properties, geographic objects, and activities associated with urban waterlogging emergency responses from the geographic spatial and temporal processes perspective and to construct an urban waterlogging emergency knowledge graph by combining top-down and bottom-up approaches. We propose a conceptual model of urban waterlogging emergency response ontology based on spatiotemporal processes by analyzing the basic laws and influencing factors of urban waterlogging occurrence and development. Secondly, we describe the construction process of the urban waterlogging emergency response knowledge graph from knowledge extraction, knowledge fusion, and knowledge storage. Finally, the knowledge graph was visualized using 159 urban waterlogging events in China from 2020–2022, with a quality assessment indicating 81% correctness, 65.5% completeness, and 95% data conciseness. The results show that this method can effectively express the spatiotemporal process of an urban waterlogging emergency response and can provide a reference for the spatiotemporal modeling of the knowledge graph. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Geospatial Knowledge Graph)
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