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| refnotes:bib [2023/03/09 15:48] – epsatisep | refnotes:bib [2025/06/15 20:12] (current) – team1 |
|---|
| <code bibtex> | <code bibtex> |
| |
| @InProceedings{REIS2020, | @article{Hamza2023, |
| | title = {BeeLive: The IoT platform of Beemon monitoring and alerting system for beehives}, |
| | journal = {Smart Agricultural Technology}, |
| | volume = {6}, |
| | pages = {100331}, |
| | year = {2023}, |
| | issn = {2772-3755}, |
| | doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atech.2023.100331}, |
| | url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772375523001600}, |
| | author = {Abdelbaset S. Hamza and Rahman Tashakkori and Bejamen Underwood and William O'Brien and Chris Campell}, |
| | keywords = {Beehive, Honey bees, Internet-of-Things (IoT)}, |
| | abstract = {Monitoring honey beehives is mainly done manually by beekeepers to evaluate the health of their hives and determine their growth and yield. With the emergence of Internet of Things (IoT) devices and tools, there have been some efforts in recent years to automate such monitoring. This can significantly benefit beekeepers as they can obtain critical data and insight into their hives' health and performance more regularly. In this paper, we use IoT devices and the Thingsboard dashboard to track the status of 28 honey beehives installed in the Western region of North Carolina as part of the Appalachian Multi-Apiary Informatics System (AppMAIS) project. In order to acquire data from a beehive, humidity and temperature sensors, as well as a microphone, have been placed inside the hives. In addition, a video camera has been placed at the top of the hive's entrance to obtain video recordings of the bees entering and leaving the hives, and a scale is placed under the hive to report the weight. The data collected from the sensors and peripherals installed in each of the AppMAIS hives are sent to the Thingsboard dashboard for management and visualization. In this paper, we report on our success with Thingsboard IoT tool to monitor honey beehives and take advantage of their capabilities to interact with the devices as needed to adjust operational parameters.} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @InProceedings{Reis2020, |
| author="dos Reis, Alexandre Soares | author="dos Reis, Alexandre Soares |
| and Gielen, Elien | and Gielen, Elien |
| } | } |
| |
| @article{LEE2018, | @article{Lee2018, |
| title = "Design and Implementation of Monitoring System Architecture for Smart Bicycle Platform", | title = "Design and Implementation of Monitoring System Architecture for Smart Bicycle Platform", |
| journal = "Procedia Computer Science", | journal = "Procedia Computer Science", |
| } | } |
| |
| @article{RANJITH2020, | @article{Ranjith2020, |
| title = "Prediction of Exhaust Gas Emission characteristics using Neem oil blended bio- diesel in diesel engine", | title = "Prediction of Exhaust Gas Emission characteristics using Neem oil blended bio-diesel in diesel engine", |
| journal = "Materials Today: Proceedings", | journal = "Materials Today: Proceedings", |
| volume = "21", | volume = "21", |
| } | } |
| |
| @article{SOBHANI2018, | @article{Sobhani2018, |
| title = "Impact of smartphone distraction on pedestrians crossing behaviour: An application of head-mounted immersive virtual reality", | title = "Impact of smartphone distraction on pedestrians crossing behaviour: An application of head-mounted immersive virtual reality", |
| journal = "Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour", | journal = "Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour", |
| } | } |
| |
| @article{OBAYASHI2020, | @article{Obayashi2020, |
| title = "Pilot and Feasibility Study on Elderly Support Services Using Communicative Robots and Monitoring Sensors Integrated With Cloud Robotics", | title = "Pilot and Feasibility Study on Elderly Support Services Using Communicative Robots and Monitoring Sensors Integrated With Cloud Robotics", |
| journal = "Clinical Therapeutics", | journal = "Clinical Therapeutics", |
| } | } |
| |
| @article{THAPA2019, | @article{Thapa2019, |
| title = "Study on the wintry thermal improvement of makeshift shelters built after Nepal earthquake 2015", | title = "Study on the wintry thermal improvement of makeshift shelters built after Nepal earthquake 2015", |
| journal = "Energy and Buildings", | journal = "Energy and Buildings", |
| @MISC{android41, | @MISC{android41, |
| author = "{Android Open Source Project}", | author = "{Android Open Source Project}", |
| title = "{Android Developers: Android 4.1 APIs}. January 2015. [Accessed in April, 2017]", | title = "{Android Developers: Android 4.1 APIs}", |
| url = "{http://developer.android.com/about/versions/android-4.1.html}", | url = "{http://developer.android.com/about/versions/android-4.1.html}", |
| urldate = "{May 2014}", | urldate = "{May 2014}", |
| } | } |
| |
| @BOOK{bandyopadhyay2013, | @BOOK{Bandyopadhyay2013, |
| title={Unsupervised Classification: Similarity Measures, Classical and Metaheuristic Approaches, and Applications}, | title={Unsupervised Classification: Similarity Measures, Classical and Metaheuristic Approaches, and Applications}, |
| author={Bandyopadhyay, Sanghamitra and Saha, Sriparna}, | author={Bandyopadhyay, Sanghamitra and Saha, Sriparna}, |
| |
| |
| @ARTICLE{llorente2009, | @ARTICLE{Llorente2009, |
| author ="{Sotomayor, B. and Montero, Ruben S. and Llorente, I.M. and Foster, I.}", | author ="{Sotomayor, B. and Montero, Ruben S. and Llorente, I.M. and Foster, I.}", |
| journal ="Internet Computing, IEEE", | journal ="Internet Computing, IEEE", |
| @article{Mulder2013, | @article{Mulder2013, |
| title = "Development of a Motion System for an Advanced Sailing Simulator ", | title = "Development of a Motion System for an Advanced Sailing Simulator ", |
| journal = "Procedia Engineering ", | journal = "Procedia Engineering", |
| volume = "60", | volume = "60", |
| number = "0", | number = "0", |
| month={May}, | month={May}, |
| } | } |
| | |
| | @INPROCEEDINGS{Nassiraei2006, |
| | author={Nassiraei, Amir A.F. and Masakado, Seiji and Matsuo, Takayuki and Sonoda, Takashi and Takahira, Isao and Fukushima, Hajime and Murata, Masayuki and Ichikawa, Koudai and Ishii, Kazuo and Miki, Tsutomu}, |
| | booktitle={2006 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems}, |
| | title={Development of an Artistic Robot "Jumping Joe"}, |
| | year={2006}, |
| | volume={}, |
| | number={}, |
| | pages={1720-1725}, |
| | abstract={In this paper, we describe the design, modeling, simulation and implementation of an entertainment robot named "Jumping Joe". Jumping Joe, an artistic and agile robot, can perform several rapid movements such as fast wake up, jumping and somersault. In order to realize acrobatic movements, four different actuators which can create the high-speed movements are developed. Jumping Joe with eight DOF, which are two DOF in each hip joint and one DOF in each knee joint and each foot, can also perform the routine movements of a legged robot such as standing, walking etc. First we describe the principle of the developed actuators. Second we investigate the feasibility of the special movements performed by our artistic robot through simulations using 3D dynamical analysis software. Next we show experimentally that a prototype of our artistic robot "Jumping Joe" can demonstrate all the above rapid movements.}, |
| | keywords={Robots;Actuators;Legged locomotion;Hip;Knee;Foot;Analytical models;Performance analysis;Software performance;Software prototyping;Artistic Robot;Jumping;Somersault;Parallel Mechanism;Jumping Joe}, |
| | doi={10.1109/IROS.2006.282131}, |
| | ISSN={2153-0866}, |
| | month={Oct} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @ARTICLE{Kuo2015, |
| | AUTHOR={Kuo, Ming }, |
| | TITLE={How might contact with nature promote human health? Promising mechanisms and a possible central pathway}, |
| | JOURNAL={Frontiers in Psychology}, |
| | VOLUME={6}, |
| | YEAR={2015}, |
| | URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01093}, |
| | DOI={10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01093}, |
| | ISSN={1664-1078}, |
| | ABSTRACT={<p>How might contact with nature promote human health? Myriad studies have linked the two; at this time the task of identifying the mechanisms underlying this link is paramount. This article offers: (1) a compilation of plausible pathways between nature and health; (2) criteria for identifying a possible central pathway; and (3) one promising candidate for a central pathway. The 21 pathways identified here include environmental factors, physiological and psychological states, and behaviors or conditions, each of which has been empirically tied to nature and has implications for specific physical and mental health outcomes. While each is likely to contribute to nature’s impacts on health to some degree and under some circumstances, this paper explores the possibility of a central pathway by proposing criteria for identifying such a pathway and illustrating their use. A particular pathway is more likely to be central if it can account for the size of nature’s impacts on health, account for nature’s specific health outcomes, and subsume other pathways. By these criteria, <italic>enhanced immune functioning</italic> emerges as one promising candidate for a central pathway between nature and health. There may be others.</p>}} |
| | |
| | @article{Frumkin2017, |
| | author = {Howard Frumkin and Gregory N. Bratman and Sara Jo Breslow and Bobby Cochran and Peter H. Kahn Jr and Joshua J. Lawler and Phillip S. Levin and Pooja S. Tandon and Usha Varanasi and Kathleen L. Wolf and Spencer A. Wood }, |
| | title = {Nature Contact and Human Health: A Research Agenda}, |
| | journal = {Environmental Health Perspectives}, |
| | volume = {125}, |
| | number = {7}, |
| | pages = {075001}, |
| | year = {2017}, |
| | doi = {10.1289/EHP1663}, |
| | |
| | URL = {https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/abs/10.1289/EHP1663}, |
| | eprint = {https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/pdf/10.1289/EHP1663} |
| | |
| | } |
| | |
| | @article{Kaplan1995, |
| | title = {The restorative benefits of nature: Toward an integrative framework}, |
| | journal = {Journal of Environmental Psychology}, |
| | volume = {15}, |
| | number = {3}, |
| | pages = {169-182}, |
| | year = {1995}, |
| | note = {Green Psychology}, |
| | issn = {0272-4944}, |
| | doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/0272-4944(95)90001-2}, |
| | url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0272494495900012}, |
| | author = {Stephen Kaplan}, |
| | abstract = {Directed attention plays an important role in human information processing; its fatigue, in turn, has far-reaching consequences. Attention Restoration Theory provides an analysis of the kinds of experiences that lead to recovery from such fatigue. Natural environments turn out to be particularly rich in the characteristics necessary for restorative experiences. An integrative framework is proposed that places both directed attention and stress in the larger context of human-environment relationships.} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @ARTICLE{Stenfors2019, |
| | |
| | AUTHOR={Stenfors, Cecilia U. D. and Van Hedger, Stephen C. and Schertz, Kathryn E. and Meyer, Francisco A. C. and Smith, Karen E. L. and Norman, Greg J. and Bourrier, Stefan C. and Enns, James T. and Kardan, Omid and Jonides, John and Berman, Marc G. }, |
| | |
| | TITLE={Positive Effects of Nature on Cognitive Performance Across Multiple Experiments: Test Order but Not Affect Modulates the Cognitive Effects}, |
| | |
| | JOURNAL={Frontiers in Psychology}, |
| | |
| | VOLUME={10}, |
| | |
| | YEAR={2019}, |
| | |
| | URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01413}, |
| | |
| | DOI={10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01413}, |
| | |
| | ISSN={1664-1078}, |
| | |
| | ABSTRACT={<p>Interactions with natural environments and nature-related stimuli have been found to be beneficial to cognitive performance, in particular on executive cognitive tasks with high demands on directed attention processes. However, results vary across different studies. The aim of the present paper was to evaluate the effects of nature vs. urban environments on cognitive performance across all of our published and new/unpublished studies testing the effects of different interactions with nature vs. urban/built control environments, on an executive-functioning test with high demands on directed attention—the backwards digit span (BDS) task. Specific aims in this study were to: (1) evaluate the effect of nature vs. urban environment interactions on BDS across different exposure types (e.g., real-world vs. artificial environments/stimuli); (2) disentangle the effects of testing order (i.e., effects caused by the order in which experimental conditions are administered) from the effects of the environment interactions, and (3) test the (mediating) role of affective changes on BDS performance. To this end, data from 13 experiments are presented, and pooled data-analyses are performed. Results from the pooled data-analyses (<italic>N</italic> = 528 participants) showed significant time-by-environment interactions with beneficial effects of nature compared to urban environments on BDS performance. There were also clear interactions with the order in which environment conditions were tested. Specifically, there were practice effects across environment conditions in first sessions. Importantly, after parceling out initial practice effects, the positive effects of nature compared to urban interactions on BDS performance were magnified. Changes in positive or negative affect did not mediate the beneficial effects of nature on BDS performance. These results are discussed in relation to the findings of other studies identified in the literature. Uncontrolled and confounding order effects (i.e., effects due to the order of experimental conditions, rather than the treatment conditions) may explain some of the inconsistent findings across studies in the literature on nature effects on cognitive performance. In all, these results highlight the robustness of the effects of natural environments on cognition, particularly when confounding order effects have been considered, and provide a more nuanced account of when a nature intervention will be most effective.</p>}} |
| | |
| | @article{ |
| | Ulrich1984, |
| | author = {Roger S. Ulrich }, |
| | title = {View Through a Window May Influence Recovery from Surgery}, |
| | journal = {Science}, |
| | volume = {224}, |
| | number = {4647}, |
| | pages = {420-421}, |
| | year = {1984}, |
| | doi = {10.1126/science.6143402}, |
| | URL = {https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/science.6143402}, |
| | eprint = {https://www.science.org/doi/pdf/10.1126/science.6143402}, |
| | abstract = {Records on recovery after cholecystectomy of patients in a suburban Pennsylvania hospital between 1972 and 1981 were examined to determine whether assignment to a room with a window view of a natural setting might have restorative influences. Twenty-three surgical patients assigned to rooms with windows looking out on a natural scene had shorter postoperative hospital stays, received fewer negative evaluative comments in nurses' notes, and took fewer potent analgesics than 23 matched patients in similar rooms with windows facing a brick building wall.}} |
| | |
| | @article{McMahan2015, |
| | author = {Ethan A. McMahan and David Estes and}, |
| | title = {The effect of contact with natural environments on positive and negative affect: A meta-analysis}, |
| | journal = {The Journal of Positive Psychology}, |
| | volume = {10}, |
| | number = {6}, |
| | pages = {507--519}, |
| | year = {2015}, |
| | publisher = {Routledge}, |
| | doi = {10.1080/17439760.2014.994224}, |
| | |
| | |
| | URL = { |
| | |
| | https://doi.org/10.1080/17439760.2014.994224 |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | }, |
| | eprint = { |
| | |
| | https://doi.org/10.1080/17439760.2014.994224 |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | } |
| | , |
| | abstract = { A growing body of empirical research suggests that brief contact with natural environments improves emotional well-being. The current study synthesizes this body of research using meta-analytic techniques and assesses the mean effect size of exposure to natural environments on both positive and negative affect. Thirty-two studies with a total of 2356 participants were included. Across these studies, exposure to natural environments was associated with a moderate increase in positive affect and a smaller, yet consistent, decrease in negative affect relative to comparison conditions. Significant heterogeneity was found for the effect of nature on positive affect, and type of emotion assessment, type of exposure to nature, location of study, and mean age of sample were found to moderate this effect. The implications of these findings for existing theory and research are discussed, with particular emphasis placed on potential avenues for fruitful future research examining the effects of nature on well-being. } |
| | } |
| | |
| | @article{Lisberg2009, |
| | author = {Lisberg Jensen, Ebba}, |
| | institution = {Malmö högskola, Department of Urban Studies (US)}, |
| | journal = {Our schools, our selves}, |
| | number = {1}, |
| | pages = {129--134}, |
| | publisher = {The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives}, |
| | title = {To Know is to Cherish? Learning from Swedish Environmental Education}, |
| | volume = {19}, |
| | keywords = {environmental education, species, Linneaus, Sweden, environment}, |
| | abstract = {I denna artikel diskuteras den svenska utomhuspedagogiska traditionen, Linnés arv av att artbestämma, samla in och katalogisera växter och dessa företeelsers eventuella betydelse för ungdomars miljöengagemang och känsla för den hållbara utvecklingen. }, |
| | URL = {http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_7688/is_200910/ai_n42854669/?tag=content;col1}, |
| | year = {2009} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @ARTICLE{Kuo2019, |
| | |
| | AUTHOR={Kuo, Ming and Barnes, Michael and Jordan, Catherine }, |
| | |
| | TITLE={Do Experiences With Nature Promote Learning? Converging Evidence of a Cause-and-Effect Relationship}, |
| | |
| | JOURNAL={Frontiers in Psychology}, |
| | |
| | VOLUME={10}, |
| | |
| | YEAR={2019}, |
| | |
| | URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00305}, |
| | |
| | DOI={10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00305}, |
| | |
| | ISSN={1664-1078}, |
| | |
| | ABSTRACT={<p>Do experiences with nature – from wilderness backpacking to plants in a preschool, to a wetland lesson on frogs—promote learning? Until recently, claims outstripped evidence on this question. But the field has matured, not only substantiating previously unwarranted claims but deepening our understanding of the cause-and-effect relationship between nature and learning. Hundreds of studies now bear on this question, and converging evidence strongly suggests that experiences of nature boost academic learning, personal development, and environmental stewardship. This brief integrative review summarizes recent advances and the current state of our understanding. The research on personal development and environmental stewardship is compelling although not quantitative. Report after report – from independent observers as well as participants themselves – indicate shifts in perseverance, problem solving, critical thinking, leadership, teamwork, and resilience. Similarly, over fifty studies point to nature playing a key role in the development of pro-environmental behavior, particularly by fostering an emotional connection to nature. In academic contexts, nature-based instruction outperforms traditional instruction. The evidence here is particularly strong, including experimental evidence; evidence across a wide range of samples and instructional approaches; outcomes such as standardized test scores and graduation rates; and evidence for specific explanatory mechanisms and active ingredients. Nature may promote learning by improving learners’ attention, levels of stress, self-discipline, interest and enjoyment in learning, and physical activity and fitness. Nature also appears to provide a calmer, quieter, safer context for learning; a warmer, more cooperative context for learning; and a combination of “loose parts” and autonomy that fosters developmentally beneficial forms of play. It is time to take nature seriously as a resource for learning – particularly for students not effectively reached by traditional instruction.</p>}} |
| | |
| | @Article{Kompier2006, |
| | author = "Kompier, Michiel AJ", |
| | title = "New systems of work organization and workers’ health", |
| | journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health", |
| | year = "2006", |
| | month = "Dec", |
| | day = "32", |
| | number = "6", |
| | pages = "421--430", |
| | keywords = "changing world of work; new organizational practice; new system; review; work characteristic; work organization; workers’ health", |
| | abstract = "<p>This paper aims at identifying major changes in and around work organizations, their effects upon job characteristics and the health and well-being of today’s employees, and related research challenges. Increased internationalization and competition, increased utilization of information and communication technology, the changing workforce configuration, and flexibility and new organizational practices are considered. As work has changed from physical to mental in nature, job characteristics have changed significantly. Meanwhile work and family life have blended. New systems of work organization have become more prevalent, but they do not represent a radical change across the whole economy. New practices may have an adverse impact upon job characteristics, but their effects depend on their design, implementation, and management. Research recommendations include improved monitoring of changes in work organization and studies into their health and safety consequences, intervention studies, studies into the motivating potential of modern work practices, studies of marginalized workers and workers in less developed countries, and “mechanism studies”.</p>", |
| | issn = "0355-3140", |
| | doi = "10.5271/sjweh.1048", |
| | url = "https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=1048", |
| | url = "https://doi.org/10.5271/sjweh.1048" |
| | } |
| | |
| | @ARTICLE{Peterson2021, |
| | |
| | AUTHOR={Petersson Troije, Charlotte and Lisberg Jensen, Ebba and Stenfors, Cecilia and Bodin Danielsson, Christina and Hoff, Eva and Mårtensson, Fredrika and Toivanen, Susanna }, |
| | |
| | TITLE={Outdoor Office Work – An Interactive Research Project Showing the Way Out}, |
| | |
| | JOURNAL={Frontiers in Psychology}, |
| | |
| | VOLUME={12}, |
| | |
| | YEAR={2021}, |
| | |
| | URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.636091}, |
| | |
| | DOI={10.3389/fpsyg.2021.636091}, |
| | |
| | ISSN={1664-1078}, |
| | |
| | ABSTRACT={<p>The physical boundaries of office work have become increasingly flexible. Work is conducted at multiple locations outside the office, such as at clients’ premises, at home, in cafés, or when traveling. However, the boundary between indoor and outdoor environment seems to be strong and normative regarding how office work is performed. The aim of this study was to explore how office work may be conducted outdoors, understanding how it is being experienced by office employees and identifying its contextual preconditions. Based on a two-year interactive research project, the study was conducted together with a Swedish municipality. Fifty-eight participants engaged in the collaborative learning process, including 40 half-day workshops and reflective group discussions, co-interviews, and participants’ independent experimentation of bringing work activities outdoors. Data was collected via interviews, group discussions and a custom-made mobile application. The results showed that a wide range of work activities could be done outdoors, both individually and in collaboration with others. Outdoor work activities were associated with many positive experiences by contributing to a sense of well-being, recovery, autonomy, enhanced cognition, better communication, and social relations, but also with feelings of guilt and illegitimacy. Conditions of importance for outdoor office work to happen and function well were found in the physical environment, where proximity to urban greenspaces stood out as important, but also in the sociocultural and organizational domains. Of crucial importance was managers’ attitudes, as well as the overall organizational culture on this idea of bringing office work outdoors. To conclude, if working life is to benefit from outdoor office work, leaders, urban planners and policymakers need to collaborate and show the way out.</p>}} |
| | |
| | @MISC{Crook2020, |
| | author = "{Crook}", |
| | title = "{Powerhouse Company reveals floating off-grid office in Rotterdam}", |
| | url = "{https://www.dezeen.com/2020/02/04/powerhouse-company-sustainable-floating-office-rotterdam/}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2020}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{soofa2024, |
| | author = "{Changing Environments, Inc.}", |
| | title = "{Soofa}", |
| | url = "{https://soofadigital.com/}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2024}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{strawberrye2025, |
| | author = "{Strawberry Energy}", |
| | title = "{Smart Bench 1 symbolises the flow and transformation from solar to electrical energy.}", |
| | url = "{https://strawberrye.com/smart-bench-1/}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2025}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{kubee2024, |
| | author = "{Kubee}", |
| | title = "{Phone charging and free wifi |
| | on the solar powered smartbenches}", |
| | url = "{https://kuube.hu/en/}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2024}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{amai2021, |
| | author = "{Dirk Wynants for Extremis}", |
| | title = "{AMAi}", |
| | url = "{https://www.extremis.com/en/collections/amai/amai}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2021}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{eps2023_t1, |
| | author = "{EPS 2023 - Amplea}", |
| | title = "{Ergonomic Adjustable Furniture}", |
| | url = "{https://www.eps2023-wiki1.dee.isep.ipp.pt/doku.php?id=report}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2023}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{eps2021_t3, |
| | author = "{EPS 2021 - FreeDesk}", |
| | title = "{Ergonomic Reconfigurable Home-Desk}", |
| | url = "{https://www.eps2021-wiki3.dee.isep.ipp.pt/doku.php?id=report}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2021}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{Guevara2024, |
| | author = "{Patricia Guevara}", |
| | title = "{A Guide to Understanding 5x5 Risk Assessment Matrix}", |
| | url = "{https://safetyculture.com/topics/risk-assessment/5x5-risk-matrix/}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2024}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{sixsigma2024, |
| | author = "{SixSigma.us}", |
| | title = "{Your Guide to Stakeholder Analysis Matrix: Master Project Management}", |
| | url = "{https://www.6sigma.us/project-management/stakeholder-analysis-matrix/}", |
| | urldate = "{}", |
| | year = "{2024}", |
| | address = "{}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{EU2014_35, |
| | title = {Directive 2014/35/EU on Low Voltage}, |
| | howpublished = {Official Journal of the European Union L96}, |
| | year = {2014}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{EU2014_30, |
| | title = {Directive 2014/30/EU on Electromagnetic Compatibility}, |
| | howpublished = {Official Journal of the European Union L96}, |
| | year = {2014}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{EU2014_53, |
| | title = {Directive 2014/53/EU on Radio Equipment}, |
| | howpublished = {Official Journal of the European Union L153}, |
| | year = {2014}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{EU2011_65, |
| | title = {Directive 2011/65/EU (RoHS II)}, |
| | howpublished = {Official Journal of the European Union L174}, |
| | year = {2011}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{EU2001_95, |
| | title = {Directive 2001/95/EC on General Product Safety}, |
| | howpublished = {Official Journal of the European Union L11}, |
| | year = {2001}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{EU2019_771, |
| | title = {Directive (EU) 2019/771 on the Sale of Goods}, |
| | howpublished = {Official Journal of the European Union L136}, |
| | year = {2019}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @misc{ETSI303645, |
| | title = {{ETSI EN 303 645}: Cybersecurity for Consumer IoT}, |
| | howpublished = {European Telecommunications Standards Institute}, |
| | year = {2024}, |
| | note = {Accessed 5 June 2025} |
| | } |
| | |
| | @MISC{ShinrinYoku, |
| | title = "{Shinrin-yoku --- {Wikipedia}{,} The Free Encyclopedia}", |
| | url = "{https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shinrin-yoku&oldid=1295177120}", |
| | year = "{2025}", |
| | } |
| | |
| | |
| |
| </code> | </code> |