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Most research on urban avian ecology has focused on population- and community-level phenomena, whereas fewer studies have examined how urbanization affects individual behavioral responses to a sudden and novel stimulus, and how those translate to fitness. We measured between-individual variation in provisioning latency in two urban adapters - great tits and blue tits - in response to an infrared camera installed in the nestbox, encountered when offspring in the nest were at the peak of food demand (9-10-days old). For each nestbox, we quantified urbanization as intensity in human activity, distance to road and proportion of impervious surface area. In both species, provisioning latency increased closer to roads. Moreover, increased provisioning latency when exposed to a novel object was associated with higher reproductive success in great tits whose nestboxes were surrounded by high amounts of impervious surface. In contrast, increased provisioning latency was consistently associated with lower reproductive success in blue tits. Our results suggest that provisioning latency changes in relation to the environment surrounding the nest, and may be context- and species-specific when exposed to a novel stimulus, such as a novel object in the nest. To better understand the role of initial behavioral responses towards novelty across an individual's lifetime and, ultimately, its impact on fitness in the urban mosaic, further research explicitly testing different behavioral responses across the entire breeding cycle in wild model systems is needed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157450 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
September 2025
Department of Computer Science and Technology (DTIC), University of Alicante, 03690, San Vicente del Raspeig, Spain.
This paper investigates a serverless edge-cloud architecture to support knowledge management processes within smart cities, which align with the goals of Society 5.0 to create human-centered, data-driven urban environments. The proposed architecture leverages cloud computing for scalability and on-demand resource provisioning, and edge computing for cost-efficiency and data processing closer to data sources, while also supporting serverless computing for simplified application development.
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July 2025
Physics Department, Science College, Princess Nourahbint Abdulrahman University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
The emerging density in today's urban environments requires a strong multi-camera architecture for real-time abnormality detection and behavior analysis. Most of the existing methods tend to fail in detecting unusual behaviors due to occlusion, dynamic scene changes and high computational inefficiency. These failures often result in high rates of false positives and poor generalization for unseen anomalies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Neurol
July 2025
Department of Neurology, Department of Neurology and Neuroscience Center, The First Hospital of JiLin University, 71-XinminStreet, Changchun, Jilin, China.
Background: Insomnia population have a number of negative daytime consequences and experience fatigue and irritability. CES or Music has been reported as a self-help tool to improve insomnia with few data support. Thus, a systematic randomized controlled trial study is needed to establish the efficacy of CES integrated with music for insomnia as an alternative strategy.
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July 2025
Computer Engineering Department, Amirkabir University of Technology (Tehran Polytechnic), Tehran, Iran.
Next-generation networks must address challenges such as exponential user growth, escalating traffic demands, and the proliferation of diverse services requiring both high data rates and ultra-low latency. Network slicing has emerged as a critical solution, enabling resource isolation to improve service efficiency. While traditional hard slicing ensures strict resource partitioning, it often results in significant underutilization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Brain Res
March 2025
Department of Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Alberta, 2-64 Corbett Hall, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G4, Canada.
Previous work has clearly demonstrated that visual feedback is integrated into the control of postural alignment and orientation, and is suggested to contribute to corrections for unexpected self-motion. Experimentally-generated visual stimuli have typically been oscillating or long duration and analysis has focused on averaged responses. The present study investigated whether a small, rapid unexpected displacement of a visual surround was sufficient to evoke a postural correction and whether the false stimulus was disambiguated on subsequent exposures.
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