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17 pages, 237 KB  
Review
Positioning Artificial Intelligence Research in East Asia and Latin America: A Comparative Bibliometric Analysis
by Joaquim Jose Carvalho Proença, Nelson Jesús Campos Rosendo and Soratna Veronica Navas Gotopo
Information 2026, 17(5), 503; https://doi.org/10.3390/info17050503 - 20 May 2026
Abstract
This study aims to provide a comprehensive cross-regional bibliometric analysis of artificial intelligence (AI) research in East Asia and Latin America from 2020 to 2025. By quantifying publication trends, authorship, institutional productivity, collaboration networks, and citation impact, the research seeks to identify regional [...] Read more.
This study aims to provide a comprehensive cross-regional bibliometric analysis of artificial intelligence (AI) research in East Asia and Latin America from 2020 to 2025. By quantifying publication trends, authorship, institutional productivity, collaboration networks, and citation impact, the research seeks to identify regional leaders, thematic clusters, and disparities in visibility and impact between these two regions. Design/methodology/approach; Scopus-indexed publications containing the phrases “artificial intelligence research” or “artificial intelligence innovation” in their title, abstract, or keywords were retrieved for the period 2020–2025. Inclusion criteria required at least one author’s affiliation in any of the fourteen specified countries across East Asia or Latin America. All document types (articles, reviews, conference papers, book chapters) were considered. Metadata were manually extracted from Scopus database ranking to identify the top-cited papers, most prolific authors, leading institutions, thematic and subject-area concentrations, and crossnational collaboration patterns. Findings; this bibliometric review clarifies the dynamic trajectory of AI research in East Asia and Latin America, revealing significant disparities in productivity, visibility, and thematic focus. The findings underscore the need for targeted investments in research capacity building, strategic international partnerships, and thematic realignment particularly for Latin America to enhance global visibility and align with emerging AI trends. Originality; by contrasting two understudied regions (East Asia vs. Latin America), we capture shifts in the AI landscape—specifically, the generative AI boom across subfields and regions that no single region or pre 2022 study can. By highlighting structural disparities in productivity, citation impact, and institutional support, it offers policymakers, funding agencies, and academic leaders novel insights. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Information and Communications Technology)
19 pages, 563 KB  
Article
The Moderating Role of Collaboration on Innovation and Eco-Innovation Obstacles: Evidence from Latin American Firms
by Rodrigo Ortiz-Henriquez, Grace Tamayo-Galarza, Katherine Mansilla-Obando and Iván Rueda-Fierro
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5122; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105122 - 19 May 2026
Abstract
The climate emergency in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has transformed sustainability from an aspirational goal into a strategic imperative, particularly in the context of decoupling economic growth from natural capital depletion. This research analyzes eco-innovation within the frameworks of the National [...] Read more.
The climate emergency in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has transformed sustainability from an aspirational goal into a strategic imperative, particularly in the context of decoupling economic growth from natural capital depletion. This research analyzes eco-innovation within the frameworks of the National Innovation System (NIS), open innovation, and absorptive capacity, with the objective of examining the moderating role of collaboration in overcoming financial, knowledge, and market-related obstacles to innovative behavior. Employing a quantitative methodology using firm-level microdata from the Latin American Harmonized Innovation Surveys (LAIS) between 2007 and 2017, this study focuses on eco-innovative outcomes specifically linked to reductions in energy and material consumption. By estimating models that assess the role of technical cooperation and public policy support, this study seeks to determine whether collaborative strategies operate as an effective buffer against uncertainty and the limitations of local innovation systems. Expanding the scope of previous analyses centered on a single country, this work provides a regional perspective that underscores institutional and sectoral disparities in emerging contexts. Ultimately, this research examines how integrating an environmental purpose into corporate strategy and strengthening absorptive capacity enable LAC firms to transform ecological pressures into sustainable competitive advantages, mitigating the barriers that traditionally hinder technological progress in the region. Full article
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27 pages, 3915 KB  
Article
Automation of the Control Process of the Research and Flexible Production Areas of the Technopark
by José Ramón Trillo, Javanshir Mammadov, Yusif Huseynov, Matanat Ahmadova and Aysel Eminova
AI 2026, 7(5), 173; https://doi.org/10.3390/ai7050173 - 19 May 2026
Abstract
In the context of rapid technological evolution and increasing market uncertainty, technoparks have emerged as critical ecosystems for bridging scientific research and high-tech industrial production; however, their effectiveness is often constrained by limited flexibility, fragmented control mechanisms, and delayed decision-making processes. Motivated by [...] Read more.
In the context of rapid technological evolution and increasing market uncertainty, technoparks have emerged as critical ecosystems for bridging scientific research and high-tech industrial production; however, their effectiveness is often constrained by limited flexibility, fragmented control mechanisms, and delayed decision-making processes. Motivated by these challenges, this article investigates the automation of control processes in research-driven and flexible manufacturing environments within technopark infrastructures, positioning automation as a strategic lever for enhancing operational adaptability and innovation throughput. The study conceptualizes control process automation as a multi-stage framework encompassing data acquisition, processing, intelligent analysis, and real-time decision execution and examines the role of enabling technologies such as artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things (IoT), and cyber-physical systems in supporting this paradigm. The analysis demonstrates that the integration of these technologies significantly improves production flexibility, resource optimization, and responsiveness to dynamic conditions, while simultaneously accelerating the transformation of scientific and research outputs into measurable economic value. By combining theoretical foundations with illustrative practical applications, the article substantiates the effectiveness of automated control systems and highlights their strategic relevance for increasing the competitiveness of technoparks, fostering sustainable technological innovation, and shaping resilient long-term development strategies. Full article
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29 pages, 4359 KB  
Article
Assessing Circularity Readiness in Data-Scarce Contexts: A Regional Framework for Environmental Resource Sectors in Vietnam
by Xuan-Nam Bui, Manoj Khandelwal, Nga Nguyen, Diep Anh Vu, Anh Hoa Nguyen and Thi Minh Hoa Le
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5116; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105116 - 19 May 2026
Abstract
Transitioning to a circular economy (CE) is now a strategic priority for countries to decouple economic growth from environmental degradation. However, in developing contexts, the readiness of environmental resource sectors to adopt CE principles is unknown due to a lack of data and [...] Read more.
Transitioning to a circular economy (CE) is now a strategic priority for countries to decouple economic growth from environmental degradation. However, in developing contexts, the readiness of environmental resource sectors to adopt CE principles is unknown due to a lack of data and uneven institutional capacity. This study presents the first regional baseline assessment of circularity readiness in Vietnam’s environmental resource sectors, focusing on land, mining, water and waste. A five-dimensional readiness framework (policy, resource management, innovation, business, awareness) was developed and applied across Vietnam’s six ecological–economic regions. A Delphi process with 12 experts was conducted in three rounds to capture and refine expert judgments, supplemented by triangulated proxy indicators (e.g., plastic recycling rates, wastewater treatment coverage). Readiness scores were aggregated at dimension and regional levels and analyzed using radar charts, heatmaps and hierarchical clustering. Results showed significant regional disparities. The Southeast (SE) and Red River Delta (RRD) have high readiness due to clearer policy frameworks, stronger institutions and more dynamic business ecosystems. The Northern Midlands and Mountains (NMM) and Central Highlands (CH) have low readiness due to infrastructural gaps, weak innovation and limited public engagement. The Mekong Delta (MD) and North Central Coast (NCC) have medium readiness, reflecting partial progress but uneven implementation. The study made three contributions: (1) a new context-specific framework for CE readiness in environmental resource sectors; (2) the value of expert-based, proxy-informed methods in data-scarce contexts; and (3) a policy roadmap for different regional readiness levels. Findings suggest that the CE should be integrated into resource planning, regional observatories should be established and CE-related research and development (R&D) should receive investment. Future research should move towards standardized quantitative indicators and predictive models to track how readiness changes under policy interventions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Sustainability and Applications)
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46 pages, 20242 KB  
Article
Constructing an AI-Driven Meta-Theory of SME Resilience and Strategic Agility: A Computational Synthesis of Global Research
by Efecan Çağdaş Kaya and Haydar Yalçın
Adm. Sci. 2026, 16(5), 236; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci16050236 - 19 May 2026
Abstract
In a global business environment marked by digital disruption, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) must integrate digital transformation with strategic agility and organizational resilience. This study addresses the fragmentation of the current management literature by developing an AI-driven meta-theory through a high-performance computational [...] Read more.
In a global business environment marked by digital disruption, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) must integrate digital transformation with strategic agility and organizational resilience. This study addresses the fragmentation of the current management literature by developing an AI-driven meta-theory through a high-performance computational synthesis of 4811 academic publications from the OpenAlex database. Utilizing a theoretically grounded hybrid framework of lexical filtering (TF-IDF), semantic embedding (SciBERT), and a diverse ensemble of five Large Language Models (LLMs), we move beyond descriptive mapping to identify the ontological and integrative mechanisms of SME adaptation. The methodology is validated through a multi-stage expert audit of model reasoning traces to ensure theoretical alignment. Results reveal a clear dominance of Contingency Theory (20.5%) and Resource-Based View (14.1%), which are re-conceptualized here as Regulatory–Technical Brokerage and Internal Fortification. Through Social Network Analysis (SNA) and Aggregate Constraint metrics, the study identifies Innovation Frontiers that are operationally challenging to synthesize through traditional manual reviews at this scale. The research concludes by formulating four meta-theoretical propositions and an integrative synergetic mechanism, explaining how SME resilience emerges as an emergent property of cross-layer alignment between technical, cognitive, and structural logics. By providing this causal roadmap, the study establishes a robust, AI-augmented blueprint for SMEs to function as intelligent, self-regulating nodes within a Post-Normal digital ecosystem. Full article
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26 pages, 1319 KB  
Review
Intraocular Lens Modifications for Postoperative Complication Prevention: Advances in Surface Engineering, Drug Delivery, and Photo-Responsive Strategies
by Meitong Lin, Wenlu Yu, Ke Zhang, Jiayi Wu, Xingtong Chen, Yuke Pan, Yujie Tian, Liangjia Zeng, Haorui Yuan, Xiaofei Hu and Xuhua Tan
Pharmaceutics 2026, 18(5), 616; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics18050616 (registering DOI) - 18 May 2026
Abstract
Cataract remains the preeminent cause of reversible blindness globally, with cataract extraction and intraocular lens (IOL) implantation serving as the definitive surgical intervention. Nevertheless, its long-term efficacy is undermined by formidable postoperative complications, specifically posterior capsule opacification (PCO) and endophthalmitis, which necessitate effective [...] Read more.
Cataract remains the preeminent cause of reversible blindness globally, with cataract extraction and intraocular lens (IOL) implantation serving as the definitive surgical intervention. Nevertheless, its long-term efficacy is undermined by formidable postoperative complications, specifically posterior capsule opacification (PCO) and endophthalmitis, which necessitate effective prophylactic strategies. IOL modification has emerged as a pivotal paradigm to effectively mitigate these complications. Current approaches encompass surface modification, drug delivery IOLs, and photo-responsive IOLs. Driven by the rapid interdisciplinary convergence of materials science, ophthalmology and pharmacology, the field has also evolved to have combined modification strategies and multifunctional systems. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the recent progress in IOL modification for postoperative complication prophylaxis. By categorizing recent advancements into three major types—surface modification, drug delivery systems, and photo-responsive IOLs—we critically evaluate their mechanisms, advantages, and limitations. Furthermore, we offer strategic insights to accelerate the development of IOL modification and bridge the gap between innovation and clinical translation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pharmaceutical Technology, Manufacturing and Devices)
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32 pages, 2477 KB  
Article
How Can High-Tech Manufacturing Achieve High Total Factor Productivity? A Dynamic QCA Under the TOE Framework
by Juan Lin, Mengchao Sun, Zhen Peng and Jianying Niu
Systems 2026, 14(5), 574; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14050574 (registering DOI) - 18 May 2026
Abstract
High-tech manufacturing is a technology- and knowledge-intensive strategic industry. Its total factor productivity (TFP) directly impacts national competitiveness and economic quality. In China, despite rapid growth, TFP performance varies across sub-sectors and firms. In this study, TFP was adopted as the central outcome [...] Read more.
High-tech manufacturing is a technology- and knowledge-intensive strategic industry. Its total factor productivity (TFP) directly impacts national competitiveness and economic quality. In China, despite rapid growth, TFP performance varies across sub-sectors and firms. In this study, TFP was adopted as the central outcome variable to capture the comprehensive production and technological efficiency of high-tech manufacturing firms. The Technology–Organization–Environment (TOE) framework was integrated with Dynamic Qualitative Comparative Analysis (Dynamic QCA) to examine the causal complexity, dynamic evolution, and industrial heterogeneity of TFP, using a sample of Chinese A-share-listed companies from 2015 to 2024. The results showed that high TFP depends on configurations rather than on a single factor. Three configurational paths were identified, including “technology–innovation–scale synergy,” “technology–scale dual core,” and “technology-led productivity optimization.” All paths require a strong technological foundation. Conversely, a lack of technology leads to low total factor productivity across all sectors. Moreover, the effectiveness of these pathways evolves over time. The dual-core pathway serves as a stable baseline model. The synergy pathway is reinforced in fast-iteration sectors. Due to weak innovation support, the productivity optimization pathway declined after 2019. Third, different sectors show distinct patterns. Fast-iteration sectors use synergy to handle rapid technical changes. Slow-iteration sectors use the dual-core model to share R&D risks. Productivity-optimized sectors stagnate because they focus on automation instead of innovation. This work reveals deep patterns in TFP growth and provides theoretical support and practical insight for strategic choices of firms, industry resource allocation, and industrial policy optimization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Systems Practice in Social Science)
23 pages, 921 KB  
Article
On the ESG Performance of Drone Logistics: Innovation, Cooperation, and Hybrid Strategies
by Yibo Hu, Mengbi Zeng and Li Hou
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5064; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105064 - 18 May 2026
Abstract
Driven by the rapid growth of the low-altitude economy, drone logistics is emerging as a critical component of modern smart logistics systems. This study aims to examine how heterogeneous logistics service providers (LSPs) select among technological innovation, inter-firm cooperation, and hybrid strategies, as [...] Read more.
Driven by the rapid growth of the low-altitude economy, drone logistics is emerging as a critical component of modern smart logistics systems. This study aims to examine how heterogeneous logistics service providers (LSPs) select among technological innovation, inter-firm cooperation, and hybrid strategies, as well as how these strategic choices affect ESG performance. We develop a two-stage duopoly Cournot game model that accounts for asymmetric logistics capabilities and consumers’ service-quality sensitivity, and compare the three strategic arrangements against a benchmark scenario without innovation or cooperation. Results show that a capability-driven Matthew effect already exists in the benchmark market. Technological innovation may further widen the performance gap between firms, yet it generates the highest social welfare by improving service quality and preserving market competition. Pure cooperation enhances coordination efficiency and environmental performance, but may reduce consumer surplus by weakening competition. The hybrid strategy generally delivers the highest system profit and robust environmental performance, while its advantages depend on market parameters and require sound benefit-sharing governance mechanisms. This study contributes to sustainable drone logistics research by integrating strategic interaction, firm heterogeneity and ESG outcomes into a unified framework, and provides targeted managerial and policy implications for innovation support, alliance governance and competition regulation. Full article
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21 pages, 313 KB  
Article
Government Subsidies, Public Environmental Attention, and Sustainable Innovation Performance of Environmental Protection Enterprises
by Yun Sun, Chenwei Chen and Huiyong Yi
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5057; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105057 - 18 May 2026
Abstract
In the context of the dual-carbon goals and the broader United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, stimulating innovation motivation within environmental protection enterprises holds significant strategic importance for achieving long-term sustainability. Drawing on institutional theory and signaling theory, this study examines how [...] Read more.
In the context of the dual-carbon goals and the broader United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, stimulating innovation motivation within environmental protection enterprises holds significant strategic importance for achieving long-term sustainability. Drawing on institutional theory and signaling theory, this study examines how government subsidies influence the sustainable innovation performance in China’s environmental protection industry and investigates the boundary conditions and mechanisms of this relationship from a socio-economic and integrated policy perspective. Using a sample of 121 listed environmental protection enterprises in China from 2016 to 2025, this paper empirically analyzes the impact of government subsidies on both the quantity and quality of innovation output. It innovatively incorporates the market-driven factor of public environmental attention into the analytical framework to test its moderating effect and examines the mediating role of corporate social responsibility. The findings indicate that government subsidies significantly enhance both the quantity and quality of innovation output from environmental protection enterprises, thereby contributing to their sustainability transition. Public environmental attention positively moderates the innovation-incentivizing effect of government subsidies, with a stronger moderating effect on innovation quality than on quantity. Heterogeneity analysis reveals that the incentive effect of government subsidies on innovation quantity is significant only in the eastern and western regions of China, while the effect on innovation quality is more pronounced in state-owned enterprises and the western region, offering insights for region-specific and ownership-specific sustainable policy designs. Mechanism analysis indicates that government subsidies promote innovation performance by encouraging firms to fulfill corporate social responsibilities, with CSR serving as a partial mediator. These findings extend institutional and signaling theories to the context of environmental protection enterprises and provide a framework for quantifying and monitoring the effectiveness of sustainability policies. Based on the conclusions, relevant policy optimization suggestions are proposed to align industrial innovation with the principles of sustainable development. Full article
13 pages, 419 KB  
Article
Validation of the Questionnaire to Measure Social Entrepreneurship in a Sample of Mexican Health Sciences Students
by Francisco Javier Turrubiates-Hernández, José Francisco Muñoz-Valle, Guillermo González-Estevez, Jorge Hernández-Bello, Alexis Missael Vizcaíno-Quirarte, Cristian Oswaldo Hernández-Ramírez, Beatriz Verónica Panduro-Espinoza and Norma Alicia Ruvalcaba-Romero
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5051; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105051 - 18 May 2026
Abstract
Social entrepreneurship has emerged as a strategic approach to addressing collective needs through innovative and sustainable solutions. While many instruments have traditionally focused on business and organizational metrics, a significant gap remains in tools specifically validated for the professional and cultural context of [...] Read more.
Social entrepreneurship has emerged as a strategic approach to addressing collective needs through innovative and sustainable solutions. While many instruments have traditionally focused on business and organizational metrics, a significant gap remains in tools specifically validated for the professional and cultural context of health sciences in Latin America. Grounded in a multidimensional theoretical framework of social entrepreneurship traits, this study aimed to validate a questionnaire designed to measure social entrepreneurship among 1129 Mexican health science students. Following exploratory factor analysis using principal axis factoring and confirmatory factor analysis, a refined 17-item three-dimensional structure was identified, comprising innovative, execution, and social traits. The model demonstrated moderate fit (χ2 = 580.468, p <0.001; CFI = 0.831; RMSEA = 0.084) and preliminary internal consistency. Measurement invariance across sex and semester was also supported. These findings provide a context-specific tool for exploring initial entrepreneurial potential, enabling higher education institutions to design targeted programs that foster proactive innovation and social commitment toward sustainable development. Full article
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12 pages, 1348 KB  
Article
Resilience and Humanity: A Framework for Thriving Through Disruptions
by John Camillus, Kim Abel, Bopaya Bidanda, Kristy Bronder, Chris Gassman, Adrian Lam, Ravi Madhavan and Prakash Mirchandani
Adm. Sci. 2026, 16(5), 235; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci16050235 - 18 May 2026
Abstract
The accelerating convergence of geopolitical volatility, technological disruption, environmental stress, and societal transformation has rendered traditional strategic management frameworks insufficient. Organizations now operate in environments defined not only by disruptions with existential implications but by wickedness—conditions in which problems are ambiguous, stakeholders disagree, [...] Read more.
The accelerating convergence of geopolitical volatility, technological disruption, environmental stress, and societal transformation has rendered traditional strategic management frameworks insufficient. Organizations now operate in environments defined not only by disruptions with existential implications but by wickedness—conditions in which problems are ambiguous, stakeholders disagree, and solutions reshape the challenge itself. Building on the premise that strategy itself is a wicked problem, this article advances a central claim: organizational resilience is best understood as an architectural capability largely grounded in humanity-based identity. Unlike organizational structure, mission, or even current strategy, each of which may be transient in turbulent environments, organizational identity, which is a construct that derives from individuals and humanity, provides an enduring basis for harmonizing the organization and its environment. Utilizing the lens of “humanity”—in its two dimensions of humankind and humaneness—we synthesize research on wicked problems, organizational identity, dynamic capabilities, modular design, alliances and smart power, and hybrid intelligence. We then propose an integrative model linking humanity-driven identity to resilience through three vectors—Inspirational Transformative Ambition, Innovative Value Networks, and Hybrid Intelligence Ecosystems—operationalized via a recently developed diagnostic tool. Finally, we offer corroborative evidence for the “Business of Humanity” logic, arguing that aligning humankind (opportunity across the full market spectrum) with humaneness (values-based evaluation) strengthens resilience by expanding opportunity sets while enhancing legitimacy, trust, and stakeholder alignment. Full article
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20 pages, 3879 KB  
Article
Multi-Criteria Risk Assessment Framework for Associated Petroleum Gas Utilization Projects in BRICS Countries: Evidence from Russia, China, and India
by Andrey Alexandrovich Zaytsev, Dmitry Grigorievich Rodionov, Evgeniy Alexandrovich Konnikov, Nikolay Dmitrievich Dmitriev, Alina Sergeevna Furtatova and Zengwei Yuan
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5043; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105043 - 17 May 2026
Viewed by 264
Abstract
The efficient use of associated petroleum gas (APG) is one of the key challenges facing the oil and gas sector because it is directly related to reducing hydrocarbon losses, lowering emissions, and improving the sustainability of energy systems. The aim of the study [...] Read more.
The efficient use of associated petroleum gas (APG) is one of the key challenges facing the oil and gas sector because it is directly related to reducing hydrocarbon losses, lowering emissions, and improving the sustainability of energy systems. The aim of the study is to develop a multi-criteria risk assessment system for APG utilization projects in three BRICS countries, using Russia, China, and India as examples. Methodologically, the study combines expert risk ranking based on the Fishburn method, spatial aggregation across 16 oil and gas clusters, and hierarchical graph modeling, which makes it possible to trace the transition from local technological constraints to the level of architectural strategies. As a result, a unified risk matrix was constructed, including risks of leaks, fluctuations in gas composition, raw material quality requirements, infrastructure constraints, and the energy intensity of processes. The resulting assessments showed that the risk profiles of clusters differ significantly both between countries and within them. For Russian clusters, leaks and infrastructure constraints proved to be more significant; for some Chinese clusters, gas composition and quality were more critical; whereas Indian clusters are characterized by a mixed profile of constraints. It was concluded that projects involving the use of APG require a cluster-oriented approach, and that universal technological solutions that do not account for the territorial structure of risks have limited applicability. Full article
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17 pages, 2078 KB  
Review
Prospects of Riserless Mud Recovery (RMR) Technology for Offshore Carbon Sequestration (OCS)
by Xingchen Li, Yanjiang Yu, Wenwei Xie, Jing Zeng, Qiuping Lu, Haoxian Shi, Kewei Zhang and Haoyu Yu
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2026, 14(10), 922; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse14100922 (registering DOI) - 17 May 2026
Viewed by 138
Abstract
With the steady progress of the global energy transition and the pursuit of “dual carbon” goals, Offshore Carbon Sequestration (OCS) has emerged as a pivotal strategic pathway within Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) initiatives aimed at mitigating climate warming. Nevertheless, the drilling of [...] Read more.
With the steady progress of the global energy transition and the pursuit of “dual carbon” goals, Offshore Carbon Sequestration (OCS) has emerged as a pivotal strategic pathway within Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) initiatives aimed at mitigating climate warming. Nevertheless, the drilling of OCS injection wells faces severe challenges, including narrow geological pressure windows, high risks of shallow geohazards, stringent environmental protection standards, and prohibitive construction costs. Riserless Mud Recovery (RMR) technology, as a novel and eco-friendly deepwater drilling technique, provides innovative technical support for OCS by establishing a closed-loop seafloor circulation system that achieves dual-gradient pressure control and “near-zero discharge” of drilling fluids. This paper systematically reviews the development history and technical principles of RMR. By integrating the specific requirements of OCS injection well drilling—such as wellbore integrity, environmental protection, and shallow hazard mitigation—the study provides an in-depth analysis of the application potential of RMR in drilling CO2 injection wells within shallow formations. Furthermore, it demonstrates the engineering feasibility of RMR across technical, environmental, and economic dimensions. Building on this analysis, the paper discusses current technical challenges regarding key equipment research and development, adaptability to complex operating conditions, enhancement of intelligent control systems, and the establishment of technical standards. It also outlines the prospects for the integrated development of RMR with emerging fields, including hydrate-based carbon sequestration, intelligent drilling and completion, and carbon sequestration in far-reaching deep-sea areas. The research indicates that RMR technology can effectively resolve the dual constraints of cost control and environmental protection in OCS drilling. With breakthroughs in critical hardware, such as high-displacement subsea lift pumps, and the deepening of cross-disciplinary integration, RMR is poised to become an essential technical pillar in the field of offshore carbon sequestration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Offshore Oil and Gas Drilling Equipment and Technology)
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25 pages, 1089 KB  
Article
Territorial and Intergenerational Strategies for Social Sustainability in Aging Rural Communities: The Case of Pescueza (Spain)
by Felipe Leco-Berrocal, José Manuel Sánchez-Martín, Ana Beatriz Mateos-Rodríguez and Juan Ignacio Rengifo-Gallego
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(5), 327; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15050327 - 16 May 2026
Viewed by 77
Abstract
Depopulation and structural demographic challenges affect social and territorial cohesion in Europe, a phenomenon that is particularly evident in rural municipalities in Spain, where the loss of the working-age population and the concentration of older adults threaten sustainability. This study analyzes the case [...] Read more.
Depopulation and structural demographic challenges affect social and territorial cohesion in Europe, a phenomenon that is particularly evident in rural municipalities in Spain, where the loss of the working-age population and the concentration of older adults threaten sustainability. This study analyzes the case of Pescueza (Cáceres, Spain) using a mixed-methods design that combines longitudinal demographic analysis (2000–2024) with a qualitative evaluation of the community project “Quédate con nosotr@s,” which focuses on comprehensive care and intergenerational participation. The results are critical regarding the demographic structure, with an aging index of 500% and dependency levels three times higher than the national average, although a slight demographic recovery linked to local initiatives is observed. This project has positive effects on social cohesion, community capital, and resilience in the face of demographic challenges, establishing itself as a replicable model for rural micro-territories. The study proposes a strategic framework based on the SWOT-CAME matrix and social sustainability indicators, aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals and European territorial cohesion policies. It concludes that social innovation, collaborative governance, and multilevel cooperation are key elements for addressing rural aging, and recommends public policies aimed at stable funding, inclusive digitalization, attracting young people, specialized training, and the creation of adapted infrastructure. Full article
32 pages, 1540 KB  
Article
Multi-Agent Interaction and Stability Conditions of Disruptive Innovation by AI Firms in Innovation Ecosystems
by Han Zhang, Hua Zou and Xin Wen
Systems 2026, 14(5), 568; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14050568 (registering DOI) - 16 May 2026
Viewed by 88
Abstract
Technology enterprises are leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to foster disruptive innovation, aiming to seize first-mover advantages in technological catch-up and strategic transformation. Most existing studies adopt static research methods such as empirical analysis to explore corporate disruptive innovation from the dimensions of technology, [...] Read more.
Technology enterprises are leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to foster disruptive innovation, aiming to seize first-mover advantages in technological catch-up and strategic transformation. Most existing studies adopt static research methods such as empirical analysis to explore corporate disruptive innovation from the dimensions of technology, market, organization and value creation. However, few scholars dynamically investigate the impacts of multi-stakeholder interactions on the disruptive innovation of AI enterprises from the perspective of innovation ecosystem by employing evolutionary game theory. Against this backdrop, this paper adopts the evolutionary game approach to explore how the bounded rational strategic interactions among AI enterprises, incumbent enterprises and governments in the innovation ecosystem affect the evolutionary dynamics of AI enterprises’ disruptive innovation behaviors. It also examines under what conditions of benefits, costs, risks and policies the system can evolve toward a stable strategic equilibrium. The findings reveal that the sustainable advancement of disruptive innovation by AI enterprises is not merely driven by the unilateral willingness of individual firms. Instead, it is jointly shaped by the innovation investment of AI enterprises, cooperative responses of incumbent enterprises, and regulatory and supportive policies of governments, as well as comprehensively influenced by base benefits, R&D investment pressure, technology spillover effects and niche competition risks. This research provides theoretical references for improving the innovation governance and policy support system of the AI industry. Future research can further analyze the influence of strategic interactions among more heterogeneous stakeholders on the evolutionary process of disruptive innovation of AI enterprises. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Artificial Intelligence and Digital Systems Engineering)
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