Results 191 to 200 of about 301,081 (273)
Wildlife research has benefitted from the development of new methods that allow data to be collected remotely, with less disturbance to focal animals. The proliferation of livestreaming webcams, for example, those used by nature reserves for public engagement purposes, have offered new possibilities for the study of wildlife behaviour.
Kevin A. Wood +2 more
wiley +1 more source
‘Re-appropriating’ Facebook? Web API mashups as Collective Cultural Practice
Stefan Werning
openalex +2 more sources
DNA metabarcoding reveals wolf dietary patterns in the northern Alps and Jura Mountains
Understanding predator–prey interactions is crucial for wildlife management and human–wildlife coexistence, particularly in multi‐use landscapes such as western Europe. As wolves Canis lupus recolonize their former habitats, knowledge of their diet is essential for conservation, management and public acceptance.
Florin Kunz +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Exploration of new wildlife surveying methodologies that leverage advances in sensor technology and machine learning has led to tentative research into the application of seismology techniques. This, most commonly, involves the deployment of a footfall trap – a seismic sensor and data logger customised for wildlife footfall.
Benjamin J. Blackledge +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Visualisierung und Umsetzung von Web-API Design Patterns [PDF]
Nicolas Dipner, Sebnem Kaslack
openalex
RAGLRO: Retrieval‐Augmented Generation With Large Language Models for Robotic Operations
ABSTRACT To enable autonomous operations in complex industrial environments, this paper proposes retrieval‐augmented generation with large language models for robotic operations (RAGLRO), a robotic framework specifically designed for power switchgear operation tasks.
Wenrui Wang +6 more
wiley +1 more source
LandSin: A differential ML and google API-enabled web server for real-time land insights and beyond
Alauddin Sabari +6 more
openalex +1 more source

