study Amazon rainforest may collapse within decades if critical point is reached: Study By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-03-11T10:57:00+05:30 The scientists noted that the loss of such key stone species may lead to a rapid and dramatic change in the landscape within our lifetime. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Moon’s own ‘big bang’? Study reveals story behind formation of Earth’s moon, mysterious ‘Theia’ role in it By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-03-15T18:35:00+05:30 Have you ever wondered why the moon is always there next to Earth? How did it come into existence and what is its relation to the Earth? Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Paper-based test to detect coronavirus in wastewater: Study By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-03-31T12:13:10+05:30 The study, published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, noted that rapid testing kits using paper-based devices could be used on-site at wastewater treatment plants. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Air pollution linked to higher COVID-19 death rates: US study By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-08T16:09:00+05:30 The yet-to-be-published study looked at more than 3,000 counties across the US, comparing levels of fine particulate air pollution with novel coronavirus death counts for each area. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Presence of ‘bat coronavirus’ found in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, says ICMR study By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-15T12:19:42+05:30 According to the study published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research, there is no evidence or research to claim that these bat coronaviruses can cause disease in humans. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Air pollution linked with higher COVID-19 death rate: Study By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T16:53:22+05:30 The research, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, combined satellite data on air pollution and air currents with confirmed deaths related to COVID-19. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Black hole dancing! Scientists study interaction between massive and small black holes By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-29T14:56:00+05:30 It refers to the difficulty of the direction that takes the small hole around its partner-a difficulty that the research team has now integrated into a highly sophisticated model. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Not just water and sky, dinosaurs also lived in water, a new study has found! By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-05-01T11:29:00+05:30 A dinosaur species, one of the largest carnivorous dinosaurs known to man, had a giant fin tail as well as a centre of gravity which was highly suitable for swimming. Full Article Lifestyle Science
study Study at home: Don’t let Coronavirus pandemic interfere with your kid’s education By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-15T01:15:00+05:30 With millions of children in India unable to attend school right now, edtech players are stepping in with live and interactive classes on their platforms Full Article Education
study Good news on Coronavirus medicine! Study finds this antiviral drug combo promising against COVID-19 By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:20:00+05:30 The researchers believe that a future phase 3 trial will confirm or refute the usefulness of this candidate drug as a backbone treatment for COVID-19. Full Article Health Lifestyle
study Canada Impresses as A Fine Country for Immigration as per A Study By www.visareporter.com Published On :: Sat, 30 Nov 2019 00:00:00 GMT The Anholt-Ipsos Nation Brands Index has a task of ranking the nations and in it, Canada was a leading country for immigration. In it, there are ranks for 50, nations and Canada was also selected as the best destination for investment.Making Great ProgressAdditionally,… Full Article
study Mixing It Up in Hardware (an Advantest Case Study in Faster Full-Chip Simulations) By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 19 Nov 2014 18:27:00 GMT Key Findings: Advantest, in mixed-signal SoC design, sees 50X speedup, 25 day test reduced to 12 hours, dramatic test coverage increase. Trolling through the CDNLive archives, I discovered another gem. At the May 2013 CDNLive in Munich, Thomas Henkel and Henriette Ossoinig of Advantest presented a paper titled “Timing-accurate emulation of a mixed-signal SoC using Palladium XP”. Advantest makes advanced electronics test equipment. Among the semiconductor designs they create for these products is a test processor chip with over 100 million logic transistors, but also with lots of analog functions.They set out to find a way to speed up their full-chip simulations to a point where they could run the system software. To do that, they needed about a 50X speed-up. Well, they did it! Figure 1: Advantest SoC Test Products To skip the commentary, read Advantest's paper here. Problem Statement Software is becoming a bigger part of just about every hardware product in every market today, and that includes the semiconductor test market. To achieve high product quality in the shortest amount of time, the hardware and software components need to be verified together as early in the design cycle as possible. However, the throughput of a typical software RTL simulation is not sufficient to run significant amounts of software on a design with hundreds of millions of transistors. Executing software on RTL models of the hardware means long runs (“deep cycles”) that are a great fit for an emulator, but the mixed-signal content posed a new type of challenge for the Advantest team. Emulators are designed to run digital logic. Analog is really outside of the expected use model. The Advantest team examined the pros and cons of various co-simulation and acceleration flows intended for mixed signal and did not feel that they could possibly get the performance they needed to have practical runtimes with software testbenches. They became determined to find a way to apply their Palladium XP platform to the problem. Armed with the knowledge of the essential relationship between the analog operations and the logic and software operations, the team was able to craft models of the analog blocks using reduction techniques that accurately depicted the essence of the analog function required for hardware-software verification without the expense of a continuous time simulation engine. The requirements boiled down to the following: • Generation of digital signals with highly accurate and flexible timing • Complete chip needs to run on Palladium XP platform • Create high-resolution timing (100fs) with reasonable emulation performance, i.e. at least 50X faster than simulation on the fastest workstations Solution Idea The solution approach chosen was to simplify the functional model of the analog elements of the design down to generation of digital signal edges with high timing accuracy. The solution employed a fixed-frequency central clock that was used as a reference.Timing-critical analog signals used to produce accurately placed digital outputs were encoded into multi-bit representations that modeled the transition and timing behavior. A cell library was created that took the encoded signals and converted them to desired “regular signals”. Automation was added to the process by changing the netlisting to widen the analog signals according to user-specified schematic annotations. All of this was done in a fashion that is compatible with debugging in Cadence’s Simvision tool. Details on all of these facets to follow. The Timing Description Unit (TDU) Format The innovative thinking that enabled the use of Palladium XP was the idea of combining a reference clock and quantized signal encoding to create offsets from the reference. The implementation of these ideas was done in a general manner so that different bit widths could easily be used to control the quantization accuracy. Figure 2: Quantization method using signal encoding Timed Cell Modeling You might be thinking – timing and emulation, together..!? Yes, and here’s a method to do it…. The engineering work in realizing the TDU idea involved the creation of a library of cells that could be used to compose the functions that convert the encoded signal into the “real signals” (timing-accurate digital output signals). Beyond some basic logic cells (e.g., INV, AND, OR, MUX, DFF, TFF, LATCH), some special cells such as window-latch, phase-detect, vernier-delay-line, and clock-generator were created. The converter functions were all composed from these basic cells. This approach ensured an easy path from design into emulation. The solution was made parameterizable to handle varying needs for accuracy. Single bit inputs need to be translated into transitions at offset zero or a high or low coding depending on the previous state. Single bit outputs deliver the final state of the high-resolution output either at time zero, the next falling, or the next rising edge of the grid clock, selectable by parameter. Output transitions can optionally be filtered to conform to a configurable minimum pulse width. Timed Cell Structure There are four critical elements to the design of the conversion function blocks (time cells): Input conditioning – convert to zero-offset, optional glitch preservation, and multi-cycle path Transition sorting – sort transitions according to timing offset and specified precedence Function – for each input transition, create appropriate output transition Output filtering – Capability to optionally remove multiple transitions, zero-width, pulses, etc. Timed Cell Caveat All of the cells are combinational and deliver a result in the same cycle of an input transition. This holds for storage elements as well. For example a DFF will have a feedback to hold its state. Because feedback creates combinational loops, the loops need a designation to be broken (using a brk input conditioning function in this case – more on this later). This creates an additional requirement for flip-flop clock signals to be restricted to two edges per reference clock cycle. Note that without minimum width filtering, the number of output transitions of logic gates is the sum of all input transitions (potentially lots of switching activity). Also note that the delay cell has the effect of doubling the number of output transitions per input transition. Figure 3: Edge doubling will increase switching during execution SimVision Debug Support The debug process was set up to revolve around VCD file processing and directed and viewed within the SimVision debug tool. In order to understand what is going on from a functional standpoint, the raw simulation output processes the encoded signals so that they appear as high-precision timing signals in the waveform viewer. The flow is shown in the figure below. Figure 4: Waveform post-processing flow The result is the flow is a functional debug view that includes association across representations of the design and testbench, including those high-precision timing signals. Figure 5: Simvision debug window setup Overview of the Design Under Verification (DUV) Verification has to prove that analog design works correctly together with the digital part. The critical elements to verify include: • Programmable delay lines move data edges with sub-ps resolution • PLL generates clocks with wide range of programmable frequency • High-speed data stream at output of analog is correct These goals can be achieved only if parts of the analog design are represented with fine resolution timing. Figure 6: Mixed-signal design partitioning for verification How to Get to a Verilog Model of the Analog Design There was an existing Verilog cell library with basic building blocks that included: - Gates, flip-flops, muxes, latches - Behavioral models of programmable delay elements, PLL, loop filter, phase detector With a traditional simulation approach, a cell-based netlist of the analog schematic is created. This netlist is integrated with the Verilog description of the digital design and can be simulated with a normal workstation. To use Palladium simulation, the (non-synthesizable) portions of the analog design that require fine resolution timing have to be replaced by digital timing representation. This modeling task is completed by using a combination of the existing Verilog cell library and the newly developed timed cells. Loop Breaking One of the chief characteristics of the timed cells is that they contain only combinational cells that propagate logic from inputs to outputs. Any feedback from a cell’s transitive fanout back to an input creates a combinational loop that must be broken to reach a steady state. Although the Palladium XP loop breaking algorithm works correctly, the timed cells provided a unique challenge that led to unpredictable results. Thus, a process was developed to ensure predictable loop breaking behavior. The user input to the process was to provide a property at the loop origin that the netlister recognized and translated to the appropriate loop breaking directives. Augmented Netlisting Ease of use and flow automation were two primary considerations in creating a solution that could be deployed more broadly. That made creating a one-step netlisting process a high-value item. The signal point annotation and automatic hierarchy expansion of the “digital timing” parameter helped achieve that goal. The netlister was enriched to identify the key schematic annotations at any point in the hierarchy, including bit and bus signals. Consistency checking and annotation reporting created a log useful in debugging and evolving the solution. Wrapper Cell Modeling and Verification The netlister generates a list of schematic instances at the designated “netlister stop level” for each instance the requires a Verilog model with fine resolution timing. For the design in this paper there were 160 such instances. The library of timed cells was created; these cells were actually “wrapper” cells comprised of the primitives for timed cell modeling described above. A new verification flow was created that used the behavior of the primitive cells as a reference for the expected behavior of the composed cells. The testing of the composed cells included had the timing width parameter set to 1 to enable direct comparison to the primitive cells. The Cadence Incisive Enterprise Simullator tool was successfully employed to perform assertion-based verification of the composed cells versus the existing primitive cells. Mapping and Long Paths Initial experiments showed that inclusion of the fine resolution timed cells into the digital emulation environment would about double the required capacity per run. As previously pointed out, the timed cells having only combinational forward paths creates a loop issue. This fact also had the result of creating some such paths that were more than 5,000 steps of logic. A timed cell optimization process helped to solve this problem. The basic idea was to break the path up by adding flip-flops in strategic locations to reduce combinational path length. The reason that this is important is that the maximum achievable emulation speed is related to combinational path length. Results Once the flow was in place, and some realistic test cases were run through it, some further performance tuning opportunities were discovered to additionally reduce runtimes (e.g., Palladium XP tbrun mode was used to gain speed). The reference used for overall speed gains on this solution was versus a purely software-based solution on the highest performance workstation available. The findings of the performance comparison were startlingly good: • On Palladium XP, the simulation speed is 50X faster than on Advantest’s fastest workstation • Software simulation running 25 days can now be run in 12 hours -> realistic runtime enables long-running tests that were not feasible before • Now have 500 tests that execute once in more than 48 hours • They can be run much more frequently using randomization and this will increase test coverage dramatically Steve Carlson Full Article Advantest Palladium Mixed Signal Verification Emulation mixed signal
study Study: Hack Attack Aimed At ISIS' Opposition By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 15:56:54 GMT Full Article headline cyberwar iraq terror syria
study Music Sales Are Not Affected By Web Piracy, Study Finds By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Mar 2013 01:34:47 GMT Full Article headline riaa mpaa pirate
study The US Army Just Contracted With A UFO Group To Study Alien Alloys By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Sat, 19 Oct 2019 15:37:02 GMT Full Article headline government usa space science military
study Iowa officials consider energy storage tax credit, ‘value of storage’ study By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-06-14T07:21:00Z Iowa economic development officials are tentatively endorsing a tax credit for battery storage to complement the state’s wind and solar generation. Full Article News Wind Power Storage Solar Grid Scale
study Study: Fossil fuels are far less efficient than previously thought By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-07-22T10:53:00Z Fossil fuels, long regarded for their high-energy return on investment, are not as efficient as once thought. In fact, their final yields are not much better than those of renewable options, according to a new study. Full Article News Hydropower Storage Energy Efficiency Wind Power Solar Geothermal
study New study shows benefits of local renewable energy marketplaces By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-08-19T15:24:36Z The financial benefits of buying and selling locally produced energy from rooftop solar, wind turbines and batteries within communities have been revealed in a test case run by energy tech firm LO3 Energy. Full Article DER Microgrids Microgrids Rooftop News
study Study shows rooftop solar could power 25 percent of Europe By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-09-03T13:24:11Z Europeans can massively expand low-cost solar generation just by tapping the space over their heads. Full Article Rooftop News C&I Utility Integration
study Iowa officials consider energy storage tax credit, ‘value of storage’ study By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-06-14T07:21:00Z Iowa economic development officials are tentatively endorsing a tax credit for battery storage to complement the state’s wind and solar generation. Full Article News Wind Power Storage Solar Grid Scale
study Study: Fossil fuels are far less efficient than previously thought By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-07-22T10:53:00Z Fossil fuels, long regarded for their high-energy return on investment, are not as efficient as once thought. In fact, their final yields are not much better than those of renewable options, according to a new study. Full Article News Hydropower Storage Energy Efficiency Wind Power Solar Geothermal
study California ‘Smart Home Study’ Underway By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2018-11-15T13:48:52Z The California Energy Commission (CEC) is funding a study that it hopes will result in lower utility bills for customers and more control over electricity load for utilities. The project will involve 100 homeowners in Southern California who will install various types of distributed energy resources (DER) such as thermostats, load control switches, batteries, water heaters and eventually electric vehicle chargers. Full Article Microgrids Energy Efficiency News DER Utility Integration
study A Study in Emissionality: Why Boston University Looked Beyond New England for Its First Wind Power Purchase By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-01-14T16:22:33Z While it’s well known that corporations were some of the earliest trailblazers of large-scale renewable energy purchasing — they’ve closed over 14 gigawatts of deals in the past six years, according to tracking by Rocky Mountain Institute’s Business Renewables Center — higher education has also made impressive strides. In fact, a report released last fall showed that the top 30 renewable energy-buying universities are using around 3 billion kilowatt-hours of green power annually. That’s enough to power 276,000 homes. Full Article Energy Efficiency Onshore Wind Power Opinion & Commentary
study Study: Fossil fuels are far less efficient than previously thought By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-07-22T10:53:00Z Fossil fuels, long regarded for their high-energy return on investment, are not as efficient as once thought. In fact, their final yields are not much better than those of renewable options, according to a new study. Full Article News Hydropower Storage Energy Efficiency Wind Power Solar Geothermal
study Studying the potential to improve performance of the Brazeau plant through turbine upgrades By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2015-01-05T21:36:00Z One or two new runners for the units at the 355-MW Brazeau Power Station in Alberta, Canada, would allow owner TransAlta Corp. to better optimize revenue and provide valuable ancillary services. Modeling of the various upgrade options allowed the utility to arrive at the most valuable solution. Full Article Hydropower
study ORPC Ireland receives funding for marine hydrokinetic feasibility study By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2015-08-26T20:33:00Z The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) is funding the Ireland division of U.S.-based Ocean Renewable Power Co. (ORPC) to identify feasible tidal energy sites in the coastal waters of County Donegal. Full Article Energy Efficiency
study OEE 2015 builds on 2014 market study to commercialize MHK energy sectors By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2015-11-16T21:37:00Z During the Ocean Energy Europe 2015 conference held in Dublin, Ireland, in late October, about 500 high-level delegates, which included European Union and Member States business leaders and energy ministers, were presented a draft of the “strategic roadmap” for developing the European marine hydrokinetics (MHK) energy sector. Full Article
study Presidential order reinstates study for proposed 6,000-MW Myitsone hydroelectric project in Myanmar By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2016-08-16T18:09:00Z According to a presidential order issued Aug. 12 by the Myanmar government, a commission will form to examine the 6,000-MW Myitsone hydropower project proposed for Kachin, Mynamar. Locally published reports indicate when complete, Yunnan China would receive much of the energy from the facility under the project’s original agreement. Full Article Baseload
study Iowa officials consider energy storage tax credit, ‘value of storage’ study By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-06-14T07:21:00Z Iowa economic development officials are tentatively endorsing a tax credit for battery storage to complement the state’s wind and solar generation. Full Article News Wind Power Storage Solar Grid Scale
study Study: Fossil fuels are far less efficient than previously thought By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-07-22T10:53:00Z Fossil fuels, long regarded for their high-energy return on investment, are not as efficient as once thought. In fact, their final yields are not much better than those of renewable options, according to a new study. Full Article News Hydropower Storage Energy Efficiency Wind Power Solar Geothermal
study New study shows benefits of local renewable energy marketplaces By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-08-19T15:24:36Z The financial benefits of buying and selling locally produced energy from rooftop solar, wind turbines and batteries within communities have been revealed in a test case run by energy tech firm LO3 Energy. Full Article DER Microgrids Microgrids Rooftop News
study Study of Tin Whisker Inhibiting Systems, Controlling the Copper Substrate Roughness and Controlling the Tin Deposit Crystal Structure By www.ipc.org Published On :: Presentation by George Milad of Uyemura International Corporation Full Article
study A Study in Emissionality: Why Boston University Looked Beyond New England for Its First Wind Power Purchase By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-01-14T16:22:33Z While it’s well known that corporations were some of the earliest trailblazers of large-scale renewable energy purchasing — they’ve closed over 14 gigawatts of deals in the past six years, according to tracking by Rocky Mountain Institute’s Business Renewables Center — higher education has also made impressive strides. In fact, a report released last fall showed that the top 30 renewable energy-buying universities are using around 3 billion kilowatt-hours of green power annually. That’s enough to power 276,000 homes. Full Article Energy Efficiency Onshore Wind Power Opinion & Commentary
study Iowa officials consider energy storage tax credit, ‘value of storage’ study By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-06-14T07:21:00Z Iowa economic development officials are tentatively endorsing a tax credit for battery storage to complement the state’s wind and solar generation. Full Article News Wind Power Storage Solar Grid Scale
study Study: Fossil fuels are far less efficient than previously thought By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-07-22T10:53:00Z Fossil fuels, long regarded for their high-energy return on investment, are not as efficient as once thought. In fact, their final yields are not much better than those of renewable options, according to a new study. Full Article News Hydropower Storage Energy Efficiency Wind Power Solar Geothermal
study Coronavirus cases would dwindle if 80% of Americans wore masks, says study By feeds.mashable.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:59:11 +0000 Americans have been receiving contradictory information about the coronavirus pandemic, so much so that it's become a joke. One example is face masks: In March, the World Health Organization advised people to not wear masks if they aren't sick or caretakers of the sick. But given that some coronavirus patients are asymptomatic, opinions of masks from top officials have shifted. The CDC and the media now advise you to wear a damn mask. And a new study may provide more evidence that masks can help beat the outbreak. SEE ALSO: Where to buy reusable face masks right now According to this study, if 80 percent of Americans wore masks, coronavirus infections would plummet, Vanity Fair reports. The title of the study makes the researchers' view clear: Universal Masking is Urgent in the COVID-19 Pandemic. Read more...More about Health, Study, Masks, Coronavirus, and Covid 19 Full Article Health Study Masks Coronavirus Covid 19
study ‘Study with Australia’ to open doors to education globally By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 03:36:00 GMT The Australian Trade and Investment Commission (Austrade) has partnered with social learning platform, FutureLearn.com to provide free online courses and help students stay ahead of the learning curve. Full Article 2020 Media releases
study [Coronavirus] Study: Green post-virus stimulus is 'life or death' By euobserver.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 07:14:30 +0200 Oxford University study says fiscal stimulus for green projects offer higher returns on government spending in the short and long term than traditional incentives on fossil fuels. Full Article
study Unique study of net evaporation at a hydroelectric facility in Canada By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2014-06-18T20:49:00Z A first-of-its-kind study of net evaporation at a hydroelectric facility reveals that the project has very little effect on the loss of water to the atmosphere as compared with pre-impoundment conditions. Full Article Hydropower
study Young Environmental Leaders from Asia To Study Sustainability on Big Island By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:32:11 +0000 Young Environmental Leaders from Asia To Study Sustainability on Big Island HONOLULU (June 1, 2010) -- A group of 20 undergraduate scholars from Burma, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand will be visiting the Big Island June 2-8 as part of an innovative environmental leadership program designed to foster a greater understanding of sustainability in the U.S. and aid in the development of more resilient communities in their home countries. Full Article
study Young Environmental Leaders from Asia Study Sustainability in the U.S. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:32:12 +0000 Young Environmental Leaders from Asia Study Sustainability in the U.S. HONOLULU (May 25, 2010) -- A group of 20 undergraduate scholars from Burma, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand are currently at the East-West Center in Honolulu participating in an innovative environmental leadership program designed to foster a greater understanding of sustainability in the U.S. and aid in the development of more resilient communities in their home countries. Full Article
study NSF Awards East-West Center $1.4 Million to Study Development’s Role in Avian Flu Transmission By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:32:22 +0000 NSF Awards East-West Center $1.4 Million to Study Development’s Role in Avian Flu Transmission HONOLULU (Sep. 1) – The East-West Center (EWC) was awarded a three-year grant for $1,398,380 from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to investigate the impact of development-based environmental change on avian flu transmission. The project, “CNH: Coupled Natural-Human Systems and Emerging Infectious Diseases," will examine the interaction of urbanization, agricultural change, and habitat alteration with outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in poultry in Vietnam. Full Article
study Young Environmental Leaders from SE Asia Study U.S. Environmental Movement By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:32:27 +0000 Young Environmental Leaders from SE Asia Study U.S. Environmental Movement HONOLULU (May 29) - A group of 20 undergraduate scholars from Malaysia, Singapore, Fiji and Papua New Guinea are currently in Hawai‘i participating in an innovative environmental leadership development program. The program is designed to foster a greater understanding of the U.S. environmental movement and aid in the development of sustainable pathways to environmental stewardship. Full Article
study EWC Awarded $414,952 from National Institutes of Health to Study Family Change in Japan By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:32:33 +0000 East-West Center Awarded $414,952 from National Institutes of Health to Study Family Change in Japan HONOLULU (Dec. 11, 2008) – The East-West Center (EWC) received a grant of $414,952 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development to support on-going research in Japan on family change. The multi-year study, “Innovations in Early Life Course Transitions,” focuses on the interplay of structural societal change, individual behavior and attitudes, and the emergence of an altered family institution in Japanese society. Full Article
study East-West Center Announces Journalism Travel-Study Fellowships on U.S. Election, Beijing Olympics Aftermath By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:32:46 +0000 East-West Center Announces Journalism Travel-Study Fellowships on U.S. Election, Beijing Olympics Aftermath Contacts: Jefferson Fellowships: Ann Hartman, Jefferson Fellowships Coordinator Tel: (808) 944-7600 Email: jefferson@eastwestcenter.org Hong Kong Fellowships: Marilyn Li, Seminars Specialist Tel: (808) 944-7258 Email: seminars@eastwestcenter.org Full Article
study East-West Center Awarded $173,000 to Study Communication of Climate Information in the Pacific By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 12 Oct 2012 01:01:27 +0000 HONOLULU (Oct. 11, 2012) -- The East-West Center has been awarded $173,000 in funding to study how key climate information spreads across different sectors and countries in the Pacific islands region.With $148,000 in funding from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and $25,000 from the Department of Interior’s Pacific Islands Climate Science Center, researchers will use the upcoming release of a major Pacific Islands Regional Climate Assessment report as springboard for collecting data to analyze the flow of climate and fresh water information in Hawai‘i and the U.S.-affiliated Pacific islands.By tracking information flows, key hubs and isolated groups using network analysis and statistical methods, the researchers plan to map out gaps in the communication and flow of climate information, allowing future projects to focus on areas with less active research and outreach. Full Article
study Young Leaders from Nine Countries Embark on East-West Center Study Tour By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 26 Oct 2012 01:29:48 +0000 Two-week New Generation Seminar for rising young leaders from the U.S. and Asia Pacific will focus on middle class issues HONOLULU (Oct. 25, 2012) -- Eleven young leaders from nine countries have arrived at the East-West Center to begin this year’s New Generation Seminar. The group will travel together to four different U.S. cities to meet with experts on the seminar theme: “The Making of the Middle Class: Successes of the Past, Challenges for the Future.” After gathering at the EWC in Honolulu for briefings and discussions, the group will travel to Madison and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Washington, DC for field study. The program is supported by funding from the Freeman Foundation. Participants in this year’s New Generation Seminar include: Full Article
study East-West Center Receives $750,000 NASA Grant to Study Changes in Mountain Forests of Nepal By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 16 Jan 2015 23:27:31 +0000 HONOLULU (Jan. 15, 2015) -- The East-West Center has received a $750,000 grant from the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to study changes in the mountain forests of Nepal over the past 25 years. Led by EWC Senior Fellow Jefferson Fox, the project will chart the previously unmapped mountain forests of Nepal’s Middle Hill region using data drawn from Landsat satellite imagery between 2000 and the present. Investigators seek to document a suspected “forest transition” in Nepal, a country whose mountain forests have sustained the lives of much of its population for centuries. The forest transition refers to the recovery of trees and other plant growth in a previously deforested area. Full Article
study EWC to Oversee Close to $500,000 in NOAA Funding to Study Climate, Health, and Migration in Pacific Islands By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 26 Oct 2018 00:10:34 +0000 King tide in Majuro, Marshall Islands. Photo: Pacific RISAHONOLULU (Oct 25, 2018) -- The East-West Center has been awarded funding from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to support the International Research and Applications Project (IRAP), which is designed to support international, decision-based research on climate-sensitive health risks in partnership with the Pacific Regional Integrated Science and Assessment (RISA) program. Full Article
study EWC Researchers Contribute to New Study That Reveals the Increasing Threat from Cumulative Climate Hazards By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 17 Nov 2018 00:21:10 +0000 HONOLULU (Nov. 19, 2018) -- East-West Center researchers Abby Frazier and Keith Bettinger are among the authors of a new study published today in Nature Climate Change that provides one of the most comprehensive assessments yet of how humanity is being impacted by the simultaneous occurrence of multiple climate hazards strengthened by increasing greenhouse gas emissions. This research reveals that society faces a much larger threat from climate change than previous studies have suggested. Full Article