Literatura científica selecionada sobre o tema "Communities structuration"
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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Communities structuration"
Rosenbaum, Howard, e Pnina Shachaf. "A structuration approach to online communities of practice: The case of Q&A communities". Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61, n.º 9 (25 de agosto de 2010): 1933–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.21340.
Texto completo da fonteBansemir, Bastian, Anne-Katrin Neyer e Kathrin M. Möslein. "Anchoring Corporate Innovation Communities in Organizations". International Journal of Knowledge-Based Organizations 2, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2012): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijkbo.2012010101.
Texto completo da fonteWidiono, Septri, Ekawati Sri Wahyuni, Lala M. Kolopaking e Arif Satria. "Livelihood Diversity of Rural Communities Without Legal Access to Forest Resources: The Case of Kerinci Seblat National Park in Bengkulu Province". Forest and Society 8, n.º 1 (19 de junho de 2024): 249–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.24259/fs.v8i1.30947.
Texto completo da fonteDiviné, Marc, e Julie Stal Le Cardinal. "How to Manage Virtual Communities and Teams using Adjacencies". International Journal of e-Collaboration 10, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2014): 35–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijec.2014010103.
Texto completo da fonteGarcia, Nathan, Eric Grenier, Alain Buisson e Laurent Folcher. "Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode". PLOS ONE 17, n.º 3 (8 de março de 2022): e0265070. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265070.
Texto completo da fonteRasyid, Erwin, Fitri Maulidah Rahmawati e Hari Akbar Sugiantoro. "Communication Structuring in Aisyiyah’s Empowerment Activities in Isolated Tribal Communities". Komunikator 14, n.º 2 (14 de novembro de 2022): 182–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.18196/jkm.16059.
Texto completo da fonteBruns, Axel. "Towards Distributed Citizen Participation: Lessons from WikiLeaks and the Queensland Floods". JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy and Open Government 4, n.º 2 (19 de dezembro de 2012): 142–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.29379/jedem.v4i2.135.
Texto completo da fonteBlackburn, Natalie A., Willa Dong, Megan Threats, Megan Barry, Sara LeGrand, Lisa B. Hightow-Weidman, Karina Soni, Deren V. Pulley, Jose A. Bauermeister e Kate Muessig. "Building Community in the HIV Online Intervention Space: Lessons From the HealthMPowerment Intervention". Health Education & Behavior 48, n.º 5 (9 de abril de 2021): 604–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10901981211003859.
Texto completo da fonteFuaddah, Zamroatul, Ismi Dwi Astuti e Andre Noevi Rahmanto. "The Process of Dramatizing Messages in The Formation of a Millionaire Village (Study at Sekapuk Tourism Village, Ujung Pangkah Subdistrict, Gresik Regency)". Sodality: Jurnal Sosiologi Pedesaan 11, n.º 1 (29 de maio de 2023): 59–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.22500/11202344145.
Texto completo da fonteZingaretti, Laura M., Gilles Renand, Diego P. Morgavi e Yuliaxis Ramayo-Caldas. "Link-HD: a versatile framework to explore and integrate heterogeneous microbial communities". Bioinformatics 36, n.º 7 (18 de novembro de 2019): 2298–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz862.
Texto completo da fonteTeses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Communities structuration"
Pang, Natalie. "The knowledge commons in Victoria and Singapore: an exploration of community roles in the shaping of cultural institutions". Monash University. Faculty of Information Technology. Caulfield School of Information Technology, 2008. http://arrow.monash.edu.au/hdl/1959.1/68708.
Texto completo da fonteFichaux, Mélanie. "Structuration des communautés de fourmis de la litière en forêt guyanaise". Thesis, Guyane, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018YANE0005/document.
Texto completo da fonteThe overall aim of this thesis is to determine the role of competitive exclusion, environmental filtering and dispersal limitation on the distribution of leaf-litter ant species in French Guianese forest. To this end, we evaluated how the diversity of ant communities varies along environmental and geographic gradients, using the three facets of diversity (i.e. taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional dimensions) at different spatial scales. Observed patterns of functional and phylogenetic structure lower than expected by chance suggest that environmental filtering acts on the distribution of ant species at the scale of sampled site. In contrast, the hypothesis of functional and/or phylogenetic overdispersion between locally co-occurring species resulting from the exclusion of similar species is not supported by our results. At the regional scale, our results show that ant communities are strongly structured by environmental variations. Spatial distance also influences the distribution of ant species throughout the region. Taken together, our results suggest that environmental filtering is the main driver structuring communities of ant species in French Guianese rainforest, both at local and regional scales. Species are distributed in a patchy way throughout the region, in response to environmental variations. Patterns of diversity are also influenced by the spatial distance at the regional scale, leading to a turnover in species composition of ant communities between distant areas
Tignat-Perrier, Romie. "Facteurs de structuration des communautés microbiennes de la couche limite atmosphérique". Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes (ComUE), 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019GREAU034.
Texto completo da fonteUp to 106 microbial cells per cubic meter are found in suspension in the planetary boundary layer, the lowest part of the atmosphere. Direct influences of the planetary boundary layer on humans, crops and diverse ecosystems like soils and oceans make the full understanding of its composition, both chemical and microbiological, of utmost importance. While microbial communities of the planetary boundary layer vary significantly at different temporal and spatial scales, they remain largely unexplored. The main goal of this thesis was to understand how airborne microbial communities are structured in the troposphere with special emphasis on the planetary boundary layer and to identify their main controlling factors. We investigated both the taxonomic and functional composition of airborne microbial communities in the dry phase (i.e. not cloud-associated) over time at nine different geographical sites around the world using high throughput sequencing technologies.Our investigation that focused on microbial taxonomy showed that local landscapes were the main contributors to the global distribution of airborne microbial communities despite the potential occurrence of long-range transport of airborne microorganisms. We also observed that meteorology and the diversity of the surrounding landscapes played major roles in the temporal variation of the microbial community structure in the planetary boundary layer. We further explored the temporal variation of airborne microbial communities at a continental and mountainous site in France (1465 m above sea level) over a full-year. This study demonstrated the importance of the surface conditions (i.e. vegetation, snow cover etc.) of the surrounding landscapes on the taxonomic composition of airborne microorganisms. The seasonal changes in agricultural and vegetated areas, which represented a significant part of the site’s surrounding landscape, were correlated to the shifts in the taxonomic composition of airborne microbial communities during the year. Finally, we investigated the functional composition of microbial communities of the planetary boundary layer to identify whether the physical and chemical conditions of the atmosphere played a role in selection or microbial adaptation of airborne microorganisms. The comparative metagenomic analysis did not show a specific atmospheric signature in the functional potential of airborne microbial communities. To the contrary, their functional composition was mainly correlated to the underlying ecosystems. However, we also showed that fungi were more dominant relatively to bacteria in air as compared to other (planetary bound) ecosystems. This result suggested a selective process for fungi during aerosolization and/or aerial transport and that fungi might likely survive aerosolization and/or aerial transport better than bacteria due to their innate resistance to stressful physical conditions (i.e. UV radiation, desiccation etc.). Our results provide a clearer understanding of the factors (i.e. surrounding landscapes, distant sources, local meteorology, and stressful physical atmospheric conditions) that control the distribution of microbial communities in the atmospheric boundary layer. Our investigations provide a basis for further studies on the prediction and even control of airborne microbial communities that would be of interest for public health and agriculture
Baujeu, Marine. "Succès d'invasion et écologie des communautés des espèces de Coccinellidae introduites pour la lutte biologique en milieu insulaire tropical". Electronic Thesis or Diss., La Réunion, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024LARE0003.
Texto completo da fonteThe Coccinellidae, whose polyphagous diet includes preying on phytophagous Hemiptera insects, have prompted numerous attempts at acclimatization to regulate various pests. Psyllids, though serving as alternative or essential prey, represent a much rarer diet and thus are less studied; Obrycki & Kring (1998) reported that only 10% of intentional introductions led to successful invasions. This low acclimatization rate, coupled with the ecological risks associated with the introduction of exotic species, underscores the necessity for a rigorous evaluation before any planned introduction for biological control.The objective of this thesis is to examine the acclimatization process of ladybugs on tropical islands, focusing specifically on psyllid-eating species.The first part is dedicated to a meta-analysis of historical data related to ladybug species in tropical island environments. This study aims to delineate the specific traits of the species and the characteristics of the islands that influence the presence and establishment of both indigenous and introduced ladybug species in the context of biological control. An analysis of presence data from 86 tropical islands across 11 archipelagos, as well as morphological and ecological data from 250 ladybug species, revealed that native island species are mainly aphidophagous and coccidophagous but small in size. This often necessitates the deliberate introduction of larger, more voracious species for biological control. However, smaller species show a significantly higher establishment success rate.The second part focuses on the composition and structure of psyllid-eating ladybug communities in a tropical island environment, Réunion Island. It seeks to identify the species that cluster around psyllids and those that use these insects as a primary food resource. This section helps determine the landscape, climatic, and prey availability factors influencing these assemblies. Sampling at 11 sites, involving two host plants, Leucaena leucocephala and Acacia heterophylla, and two psyllid species, respectively Heteropsylla cubana and Acizzia uncatoides, was conducted over two summer seasons. On Réunion Island, 14 out of 28 ladybug species exploit the psyllid resource, but only three use it as an essential or alternative resource: a native polyphage, Exochomus laeviusculus; an exotic aphidophagous, Coccinella septempunctata; and an exotic psyllidophagous, Olla v-nigrum.The third part analyzes the intraguild predation interactions within the psyllid-eating ladybug communities, with a focus on Harmonia conformis and the three other species determined in the second part that use psyllids as an essential or alternative resource. This study aims to characterize the symmetry, direction, and intensity of intraguild predation interactions among these taxa. Adults of Harmonia conformis were confronted with eggs from the three present psyllid-eating species on Réunion Island, and adults from these three species were confronted with eggs of Harmonia conformis. The four species are intraguild predators; only species of equivalent size have a symmetric relationship of moderate intensity. Harmonia conformis shows an asymmetric intraguild predation relationship towards Exochomus laeviusculus.The conclusions drawn from these three research areas on evaluating invasive potential and intraguild interactions within psyllidophagous communities will provide key indicators for assessing the feasibility of biological control by ladybugs in a tropical island environment
Mangeot-Peter, Lauralie. "Étude des facteurs biotiques et abiotiques influant sur la structuration et la composition du microbiote racinaire du Peuplier". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lorraine, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020LORR0018.
Texto completo da fonteMicroorganisms play an essential role in the functioning of forest ecosystems. The pool of the root- associated microorganisms is called “root microbiome” and is known to promote tree growth, improve tree resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses and participate in nutrient cycling. Studying the factors that structure and regulate the root microbiome is essential to better understand the mechanisms involved in tree-microorganism interactions and the role of the tree root microbiome in response to current and future environmental constraints. During my thesis, I studied the colonization dynamic of grey poplar roots by bacterial and fungal communities in the soil by combining metagenomic and microscopic approaches. In parallel, a mesocosm study was carried out to determine the impact of the host genotype and environmental factors such as climate and soil type on the root microbiome of black poplar, a species that colonizes riparian ecosystems and is particularly affected by climate change. Finally, through metagenomic and metabolomic approaches, I studied, on the one hand, the impact of soil microbiome variations and, on the other hand, the signalling pathway of jasmonic acid, a phytohormone involved in defence, on the metabolome and communities of the root microbiome of grey poplar. The results of my thesis highlight the significant impact of the tree and environmental factors on the composition and taxonomic and functional structure of the root microbiome as well as the need to consider the tree and its microbiota as a "meta-organism" in its own right
Capderrey, Cécile. "Effets de la géomorphologie des rivières en tresses sur les communautés d’invertébrés aquatiques et sur la structuration génétique des populations du crustacé isopode souterrain Proasellus walteri". Thesis, Lyon 1, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013LYO10124/document.
Texto completo da fonteBraided rivers are large alluvial rivers found in piedmont mountainous areas. These rivers are very dynamic systems in space and time and exhibit particular geomorphology. The river flows alternatively into large alluvial plains or narrowing parts (also defined as canyons). This geomorphology impacts groundwater-surface water exchanges and sedimentary thickness. Groundwater-surface water exchanges occur at different scales, then interacting to shape biotic and abiotic filters for invertebrate communities. Canyons can reduce sedimentary continuity or interrupt it and may represent strong barriers to dispersal for sedimentary-dwelling organisms. This present work aimed at evaluating the effects of geomorphology in invertebrate community structure and as a potential barrier to dispersal in the subterranean organism Proasellus walteri. The different results obtained have shown that geomorphology structured invertebrate communities, highlighting a strong response in groundwater communities but not in surface communities and have shown that downstream parts of alluvial plains were hotspots of biodiversity. The results of this study also concluded on a positive effect of geomorphology in braided rivers on the genetic structure of P. walteri and underlined large effective population size and high dispersal ability, then removing some misconceptions about subterranean environment
Rezki, Samir. "Structuration, dynamique et réponse des communautés microbiennes associées aux graines lors de la transmission d'agents phytopathogènes Assembly of seed-associated microbial communities within and across successive plant generations Differences in stability of seed-associated microbial assemblages in response to invasion by phytopathogenic microorganisms". Thesis, Angers, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017ANGE0092.
Texto completo da fonteSeed represents the initial step of the plant life cycle and harbors diverse microorganisms that can have detrimental or beneficial impacts on plant fitness. Moreover, seed represents an important means of pathogen dispersion and survival during intercrop periods. For those reasons, the aims of this work were to (i) unveil the ecological processes involved in the acquisition of the seedmicrobiota, (ii) to analyze its response against plant pathogens invasion and (iii) to monitor its dynamics during the first plant developmental stages, namely germination and emergence. First, we assessed the structure of the radish seed microbiota (Raphanus sativus) in the same experimental site across three successive plant generations. These analyses revealed a low heritability of the seed microbiota with few dominant taxa transmitted across generations. Neutral-based processes seem to be important in assembly of the seed microbiota. Second, we monitored the response of the seed microbiota to invasions by Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Xcc) and Alternaria brassicicola (Ab), two seed-transmitted pathogens. While Xcc seed transmission do not change the composition of microbial communities, Ab transmission modified the structure of seed-associated fungal communities. This differences in response could be partly explained by competition for space and nutrients between the pathogenic agents and the members of the seed microbiota. Finally, composition and structure of microbial communities associated to germinating seed and seedling revealed transmission of most seed-borne microorganisms including Xcc and Ab from seed to seedling. Altogether, the results of this thesis could be helpful for designing future biocontrol strategies based on seed microbiota modulation
McPherson, Toni Susan. "Beyond structure: an investigation of agency within Aboriginal communities in the case of child removals". Thesis, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1432906.
Texto completo da fonteIn the post-Apology era, Aboriginal communities and governments struggle to mitigate Aboriginal child removals. Despite concerted efforts, Aboriginal children are, at escalating rates, overrepresented at all stages of the child removal continuum. Government documents suggest implementing an integrated governance model as a solution, but no alternative to integrating Aboriginal families into the child protection system currently exists. To fill this gap, this thesis examines Aboriginal child removals from Aboriginal family perspectives, that is, the views of those with experience of the system, in order to understand the potential role of an alternative to removals. To do so, this thesis explores Australian child removals and sociologically analyses the actions and agency of Aboriginal groups interacting with statutory child protection systems. This topic is sensitive, complex, and longstanding, and thus required an Indigenist theoretical framework in order to articulate a perspective inclusive of the experiences of those most affected by child removal practices. Thus, undertaking an ethnography was critical to gaining an understanding of the perspectives of Aboriginal families on child removals, their relationships with child safety departments and how Aboriginal people raise children and support families, particularly those dealing with child protection matters. Examining different cases of child removals, this thesis analyses policy and literature sources and in-depth interviews with participants. The major finding is that the dominant and historical structures underpinning the child protection system produce and reproduce the system’s structural features and problems across time and space, limiting the part that models of Aboriginal family support could play in mitigating removals.
Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Communities structuration"
Lee, Jinyoul, e Bandula Jayatilaka. "Virtual Organization". In Managing IT in Government, Business & Communities, 207–15. IGI Global, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-93177-740-7.ch015.
Texto completo da fonteMkhomazi, Sharol. "The Interplay of Agents in Improvising Telecommunication Infrastructures' Services to Rural Community of South Africa". In Advances in Human Resources Management and Organizational Development, 208–25. IGI Global, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8524-6.ch011.
Texto completo da fontePathak, Shubham. "Disaster Crisis Communication Innovations". In Research Anthology on Managing Crisis and Risk Communications, 66–82. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-7145-6.ch005.
Texto completo da fontePang, Natalie. "Seeking Utopia". In Information and Communication Technologies, Society and Human Beings, 386–98. IGI Global, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-057-0.ch031.
Texto completo da fonteReimers, Kai, Robert B. Johnston e Stefan Klein. "Evolution of Inter-Organizational Information Systems on Long Timescales". In Inter-Organizational Information Systems and Business Management, 1–17. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-768-5.ch001.
Texto completo da fonteTrabalhos de conferências sobre o assunto "Communities structuration"
Stuart, L. M., e M. J. Dark. "Pseudonymity and structuration: Identity, interaction, and structure in online communities". In 2014 IEEE International Symposium on Ethics in Engineering, Science, and Technology (ETHICS). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ethics.2014.6893399.
Texto completo da fonte