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Acoustic particle velocity measurements using laser : principles, signal processing and applications / / Jean-Christophe Valière
Acoustic particle velocity measurements using laser : principles, signal processing and applications / / Jean-Christophe Valière
Autore Valière Jean-Christophe
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : John Wiley & Sons, , 2014
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (157 p.)
Disciplina 534.42
Collana Focus Series
Soggetto topico Sound - Measurement
Electro-acoustics
ISBN 1-118-64933-8
1-118-64934-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Title Page; Contents; Preface; Chapter 1. Summary Of Acoustic Equations; 1.1. Basic equations; 1.1.1. Fluid- and thermodynamics; 1.1.2. Hypothesis of linear acoustics without losses; 1.2. Acoustic equations; 1.2.1. Linear acoustic equations with sources; 1.2.2. Some remarks on acoustic sources; 1.2.3. Without sources; 1.2.4. Acoustic intensity and source power; 1.2.5. Acoustic impedance and border conditions; 1.3. Constants, units and magnitude orders of linear acoustics; 1.4. Acoustic velocity measurement and applications; 1.4.1. Velocity estimation from pressure gradient
1.4.2. Intensity estimation 1.4.3. Application to impedance estimation; 1.5. Beyond linear equations; 1.5.1. Acoustic equations with mean flow; 1.5.2. High acoustic displacement; 1.5.3. Acoustic streaming; 1.6. Bibliography; Chapter 2. Some Topics On Signal Processing; 2.1. Measurement signal; 2.1.1. Random signals; 2.1.2. Statistical averages; 2.1.3. Time averages; 2.1.4. Acoustic signal model; 2.2. Reminder of Fourier analysis tools; 2.2.1. Fourier transform; 2.2.2. Uniform sampling and recovery of signals; 2.2.3. Fourier transform of discrete signals; 2.2.4. Discrete Fourier transform
2.3. Correlations and spectra 2.3.1. Definitions; 2.3.2. Stationary and ergodic process; 2.3.3. Properties of correlation functions and examples; 2.3.4. PSD and cross-spectral density properties; 2.4. Basis of estimation theory; 2.4.1. Definition and properties of an estimation method; 2.4.2. Mean estimator; 2.4.3. Correlation estimators; 2.4.4. Spectrum estimators; 2.4.5. Spectrum estimator by synchronous detection approach; 2.5. Non-uniform sampling; 2.5.1. Poisson processes; 2.5.2. Empirical estimators; 2.5.3. Comparison of spectrum estimation of random sampling sequences; 2.6. Bibliography
2.7. Appendix 2.7.1. Properties of the Fourier transform; 2.7.2. Fourier transforms of typical functions; 2.7.3. Properties of the discrete Fourier transform (DFT); Chapter 3. Ldv For Acoustics; 3.1. Bases of LDV; 3.1.1. Optical principles; 3.1.2. Signal processing of burst analyses in the context of fluid mechanics; 3.2. Models for acoustics; 3.2.1. Model of the Doppler signal; 3.2.2. Model of the sampling in the context of acoustics; 3.2.3. Case of low acoustic displacement with few mean flows; 3.2.4. Case of high acoustic displacement with few mean flows; 3.2.5. Other cases
3.3. Estimation method for low acoustic displacement 3.3.1. Theoretical limitations; 3.3.2. Estimation methods based on IF detection; 3.3.3. Estimation based on parametrical models; 3.3.4. Simultaneous detection of flow velocity and small acoustic velocity; 3.3.5. Comparison between methods for low-level acoustics; 3.4. Estimation method for high displacement; 3.4.1. Experimental condition; 3.4.2. Theoretical limitations; 3.4.3. Estimation for SPP; 3.4.4. Estimation for highly NSPP; 3.5. Bibliography; Chapter 4. Piv For Acoustics; 4.1. Principle of PIV; 4.1.1. Setting up
4.1.2. Model of the 2D signal and image processing
Record Nr. UNINA-9910139118203321
Valière Jean-Christophe  
London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : John Wiley & Sons, , 2014
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Acoustic particle velocity measurements using laser : principles, signal processing and applications / / Jean-Christophe Valière
Acoustic particle velocity measurements using laser : principles, signal processing and applications / / Jean-Christophe Valière
Autore Valière Jean-Christophe
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : John Wiley & Sons, , 2014
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (157 p.)
Disciplina 534.42
Collana Focus Series
Soggetto topico Sound - Measurement
Electro-acoustics
ISBN 1-118-64933-8
1-118-64934-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Title Page; Contents; Preface; Chapter 1. Summary Of Acoustic Equations; 1.1. Basic equations; 1.1.1. Fluid- and thermodynamics; 1.1.2. Hypothesis of linear acoustics without losses; 1.2. Acoustic equations; 1.2.1. Linear acoustic equations with sources; 1.2.2. Some remarks on acoustic sources; 1.2.3. Without sources; 1.2.4. Acoustic intensity and source power; 1.2.5. Acoustic impedance and border conditions; 1.3. Constants, units and magnitude orders of linear acoustics; 1.4. Acoustic velocity measurement and applications; 1.4.1. Velocity estimation from pressure gradient
1.4.2. Intensity estimation 1.4.3. Application to impedance estimation; 1.5. Beyond linear equations; 1.5.1. Acoustic equations with mean flow; 1.5.2. High acoustic displacement; 1.5.3. Acoustic streaming; 1.6. Bibliography; Chapter 2. Some Topics On Signal Processing; 2.1. Measurement signal; 2.1.1. Random signals; 2.1.2. Statistical averages; 2.1.3. Time averages; 2.1.4. Acoustic signal model; 2.2. Reminder of Fourier analysis tools; 2.2.1. Fourier transform; 2.2.2. Uniform sampling and recovery of signals; 2.2.3. Fourier transform of discrete signals; 2.2.4. Discrete Fourier transform
2.3. Correlations and spectra 2.3.1. Definitions; 2.3.2. Stationary and ergodic process; 2.3.3. Properties of correlation functions and examples; 2.3.4. PSD and cross-spectral density properties; 2.4. Basis of estimation theory; 2.4.1. Definition and properties of an estimation method; 2.4.2. Mean estimator; 2.4.3. Correlation estimators; 2.4.4. Spectrum estimators; 2.4.5. Spectrum estimator by synchronous detection approach; 2.5. Non-uniform sampling; 2.5.1. Poisson processes; 2.5.2. Empirical estimators; 2.5.3. Comparison of spectrum estimation of random sampling sequences; 2.6. Bibliography
2.7. Appendix 2.7.1. Properties of the Fourier transform; 2.7.2. Fourier transforms of typical functions; 2.7.3. Properties of the discrete Fourier transform (DFT); Chapter 3. Ldv For Acoustics; 3.1. Bases of LDV; 3.1.1. Optical principles; 3.1.2. Signal processing of burst analyses in the context of fluid mechanics; 3.2. Models for acoustics; 3.2.1. Model of the Doppler signal; 3.2.2. Model of the sampling in the context of acoustics; 3.2.3. Case of low acoustic displacement with few mean flows; 3.2.4. Case of high acoustic displacement with few mean flows; 3.2.5. Other cases
3.3. Estimation method for low acoustic displacement 3.3.1. Theoretical limitations; 3.3.2. Estimation methods based on IF detection; 3.3.3. Estimation based on parametrical models; 3.3.4. Simultaneous detection of flow velocity and small acoustic velocity; 3.3.5. Comparison between methods for low-level acoustics; 3.4. Estimation method for high displacement; 3.4.1. Experimental condition; 3.4.2. Theoretical limitations; 3.4.3. Estimation for SPP; 3.4.4. Estimation for highly NSPP; 3.5. Bibliography; Chapter 4. Piv For Acoustics; 4.1. Principle of PIV; 4.1.1. Setting up
4.1.2. Model of the 2D signal and image processing
Record Nr. UNINA-9910819717303321
Valière Jean-Christophe  
London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : John Wiley & Sons, , 2014
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Advanced testing of systems-of-systems : theoretical aspects / / Bernard Homes
Advanced testing of systems-of-systems : theoretical aspects / / Bernard Homes
Autore Homès Bernard
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England : , : ISTE Ltd, , [2022]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (308 pages)
Disciplina 929.605
Collana Computer engineering series
Soggetto topico Computer software - Testing
ISBN 1-394-18845-5
1-394-18843-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830381903321
Homès Bernard  
London, England : , : ISTE Ltd, , [2022]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Advanced testing of systems-of-systems 2 : practical aspects / / Bernard Homes
Advanced testing of systems-of-systems 2 : practical aspects / / Bernard Homes
Autore Homès Bernard
Pubbl/distr/stampa John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (306 pages)
Disciplina 929.605
Collana Computer engineering series
Soggetto topico Computer software
ISBN 1-394-18848-X
1-394-18846-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Dedication and Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Chapter 1. Test Project Management -- 1.1. General principles -- 1.1.1. Quality of requirements -- 1.1.2. Completeness of deliveries -- 1.1.3. Availability of test environments -- 1.1.4. Availability of test data -- 1.1.5. Compliance of deliveries and schedules -- 1.1.6. Coordinating and setting up environments -- 1.1.7. Validation of prerequisites - Test Readiness Review (TRR) -- 1.1.8. Delivery of datasets (TDS) -- 1.1.9. Go-NoGo decision - Test Review Board (TRB) -- 1.1.10. Continuous delivery and deployment -- 1.2. Tracking test projects -- 1.3. Risks and systems-of-systems -- 1.4. Particularities related to SoS -- 1.5. Particularities related to SoS methodologies -- 1.5.1. Components definition -- 1.5.2. Testing and quality assurance activities -- 1.6. Particularities related to teams -- Chapter 2. Testing Process -- 2.1. Organization -- 2.2. Planning -- 2.2.1. Project WBS and planning -- 2.3. Control of test activities -- 2.4. Analyze -- 2.5. Design -- 2.6. Implementation -- 2.7. Test execution -- 2.8. Evaluation -- 2.9. Reporting -- 2.10. Closure -- 2.11. Infrastructure management -- 2.12. Reviews -- 2.13. Adapting processes -- 2.14. RACI matrix -- 2.15. Automation of processes or tests -- 2.15.1. Automate or industrialize? -- 2.15.2. What to automate? -- 2.15.3. Selecting what to automate -- Chapter 3. Continuous Process Improvement -- 3.1. Modeling improvements -- 3.1.1. PDCA and IDEAL -- 3.1.2. CTP -- 3.1.3. SMART -- 3.2. Why and how to improve? -- 3.3. Improvement methods -- 3.3.1. External/internal referential -- 3.4. Process quality -- 3.4.1. Fault seeding -- 3.4.2. Statistics -- 3.4.3. A posteriori -- 3.4.4. Avoiding introduction of defects -- 3.5. Effectiveness of improvement activities.
3.6. Recommendations -- Chapter 4. Test, QA or IV& -- V Teams -- 4.1. Need for a test team -- 4.2. Characteristics of a good test team -- 4.3. Ideal test team profile -- 4.4. Team evaluation -- 4.4.1. Skills assessment table -- 4.4.2. Composition -- 4.4.3. Select, hire and retain -- 4.5. Test manager -- 4.5.1. Lead or direct? -- 4.5.2. Evaluate and measure -- 4.5.3. Recurring questions for test managers -- 4.6. Test analyst -- 4.7. Technical test analyst -- 4.8. Test automator -- 4.9. Test technician -- 4.10. Choose our testers -- 4.11. Training, certification or experience? -- 4.12. Hire or subcontract) -- 4.12.1. Effective subcontracting -- 4.13. Organization of multi-level test teams -- 4.13.1. Compliance, strategy and organization -- 4.13.2. Unit test teams (UT/CT) -- 4.13.3. Integration testing team (IT) -- 4.13.4. System test team (SYST) -- 4.13.5. Acceptance testing team (UAT) -- 4.13.6. Technical test teams (TT) -- 4.14. Insourcing and outsourcing challenges -- 4.14.1. Internalization and collocation -- 4.14.2. Near outsourcing -- 4.14.3. Geographically distant outsourcing -- Chapter 5. Test Workload Estimation -- 5.1. Difficulty to estimate workload -- 5.2. Evaluation techniques -- 5.2.1. Experience-based estimation -- 5.2.2. Based on function points or TPA -- 5.2.3. Requirements scope creep -- 5.2.4. Estimations based on historical data -- 5.2.5. WBS or TBS -- 5.2.6. Agility, estimation and velocity -- 5.2.7. Retroplanning -- 5.2.8. Ratio between developers - testers -- 5.2.9. Elements influencing the estimate -- 5.3. Test workload overview -- 5.3.1. Workload assessment verification and validation -- 5.3.2. Some values -- 5.4. Understanding the test workload -- 5.4.1. Component coverage -- 5.4.2. Feature coverage -- 5.4.3. Technical coverage -- 5.4.4. Test campaign preparation -- 5.4.5. Running test campaigns -- 5.4.6. Defects management.
5.5. Defending our test workload estimate -- 5.6. Multi-tasking and crunch -- 5.7. Adapting and tracking the test workload -- Chapter 6. Metrics, KPI and Measurements -- 6.1. Selecting metrics -- 6.2. Metrics precision -- 6.2.1. Special case of the cost of defaults -- 6.2.2. Special case of defects -- 6.2.3. Accuracy or order of magnitude? -- 6.2.4. Measurement frequency -- 6.2.5. Using metrics -- 6.2.6. Continuous improvement of metrics -- 6.3. Product metrics -- 6.3.1. FTR: first time right -- 6.3.2. Coverage rate -- 6.3.3. Code churn -- 6.4. Process metrics -- 6.4.1. Effectiveness metrics -- 6.4.2. Efficiency metrics -- 6.5. Definition of metrics -- 6.5.1. Quality model metrics -- 6.6. Validation of metrics and measures -- 6.6.1. Baseline -- 6.6.2. Historical data -- 6.6.3. Periodic improvements -- 6.7. Measurement reporting -- 6.7.1. Internal test reporting -- 6.7.2. Reporting to the development team -- 6.7.3. Reporting to the management -- 6.7.4. Reporting to the clients or product owners -- 6.7.5. Reporting to the direction and upper management -- Chapter 7. Requirements Management -- 7.1. Requirements documents -- 7.2. Qualities of requirements -- 7.3. Good practices in requirements management -- 7.3.1. Elicitation -- 7.3.2. Analysis -- 7.3.3. Specifications -- 7.3.4. Approval and validation -- 7.3.5. Requirements management -- 7.3.6. Requirements and business knowledge management -- 7.3.7. Requirements and project management -- 7.4. Levels of requirements -- 7.5. Completeness of requirements -- 7.5.1. Management of TBDs and TBCs -- 7.5.2. Avoiding incompleteness -- 7.6. Requirements and agility -- 7.7. Requirements issues -- Chapter 8. Defects Management -- 8.1. Defect management, MOA and MOE -- 8.1.1. What is a defect? -- 8.1.2. Defects and MOA -- 8.1.3. Defects and MOE -- 8.2. Defect management workflow -- 8.2.1. Example -- 8.2.2. Simplify.
8.3. Triage meetings -- 8.3.1. Priority and severity of defects -- 8.3.2. Defect detection -- 8.3.3. Correction and urgency -- 8.3.4. Compliance with processes -- 8.4. Specificities of TDDs, ATDDs and BDDs -- 8.4.1. TDD: test-driven development -- 8.4.2. ATDD and BDD -- 8.5. Defects reporting -- 8.5.1. Defects backlog management -- 8.6. Other useful reporting -- 8.7. Don't forget minor defects -- Chapter 9. Configuration Management -- 9.1. Why manage configuration? -- 9.2. Impact of configuration management -- 9.3. Components -- 9.4. Processes -- 9.5. Organization and standards -- 9.6. Baseline or stages, branches and merges -- 9.6.1. Stages -- 9.6.2. Branches -- 9.6.3. Merge -- 9.7. Change control board (CCB) -- 9.8. Delivery frequencies -- 9.9. Modularity -- 9.10. Version management -- 9.11. Delivery management -- 9.11.1. Preparing for delivery -- 9.11.2. Delivery validation -- 9.12. Configuration management and deployments -- Chapter 10. Test Tools and Test Automation -- 10.1. Objectives of test automation -- 10.1.1. Find more defects -- 10.1.2. Automating dynamic tests -- 10.1.3. Find all regressions -- 10.1.4. Run test campaigns faster -- 10.2. Test tool challenges -- 10.2.1. Positioning test automation -- 10.2.2. Test process analysis -- 10.2.3. Test tool integration -- 10.2.4. Qualification of tools -- 10.2.5. Synchronizing test cases -- 10.2.6. Managing test data -- 10.2.7. Managing reporting (level of trust in test tools) -- 10.3. What to automate? -- 10.4. Test tooling -- 10.4.1. Selecting tools -- 10.4.2. Computing the return on investment (ROI) -- 10.4.3. Avoiding abandonment of tools and automation -- 10.5. Automated testing strategies -- 10.6. Test automation challenge for SoS -- 10.6.1. Mastering test automation -- 10.6.2. Preparing test automation -- 10.6.3. Defect injection/fault seeding.
10.7. Typology of test tools and their specific challenges -- 10.7.1. Static test tools versus dynamic test tools -- 10.7.2. Data-driven testing (DDT) -- 10.7.3. Keyword-driven testing (KDT) -- 10.7.4. Model-based testing (MBT) -- 10.8. Automated regression testing -- 10.8.1. Regression tests in builds -- 10.8.2. Regression tests when environments change -- 10.8.3. Prevalidation regression tests, sanity checks and smoke tests -- 10.8.4. What to automate? -- 10.8.5. Test frameworks -- 10.8.6. E2E test cases -- 10.8.7. Automated test case maintenance or not? -- 10.9. Reporting -- 10.9.1. Automated reporting for the test manager -- Chapter 11. Standards and Regulations -- 11.1. Definition of standards -- 11.2. Usefulness and interest -- 11.3. Implementation -- 11.4. Demonstration of compliance - IADT -- 11.5. Pseudo-standards and good practices -- 11.6. Adapting standards to needs -- 11.7. Standards and procedures -- 11.8. Internal and external coherence of standards -- Chapter 12. Case Study -- 12.1. Case study: improvement of an existing complex system -- 12.1.1. Context and organization -- 12.1.2. Risks, characteristics and business domains -- 12.1.3. Approach and environment -- 12.1.4. Resources, tools and personnel -- 12.1.5. Deliverables, reporting and documentation -- 12.1.6. Planning and progress -- 12.1.7. Logistics and campaigns -- 12.1.8. Test techniques -- 12.1.9. Conclusions and return on experience -- Chapter 13. Future Testing Challenges -- 13.1. Technical debt -- 13.1.1. Origin of the technical debt -- 13.1.2. Technical debt elements -- 13.1.3. Measuring technical debt -- 13.1.4. Reducing technical debt -- 13.2. Systems-of-systems specific challenges -- 13.3. Correct project management -- 13.4. DevOps -- 13.4.1. DevOps ideals -- 13.4.2. DevOps-specific challenges -- 13.5. IoT (Internet of Things) -- 13.6. Big Data.
13.7. Services and microservices.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830133203321
Homès Bernard  
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The algorithmic code of ethics : ethics at the bedside of the digital revolution / / Jerome Beranger
The algorithmic code of ethics : ethics at the bedside of the digital revolution / / Jerome Beranger
Autore Béranger Jérôme
Pubbl/distr/stampa London : , : ISTE Ltd
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (285 pages)
Disciplina 174.90904
Collana Technological prospects and social applications set
Soggetto topico Electronic data processing - Moral and ethical aspects
Information technology - Moral and ethical aspects
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-119-54969-8
1-119-50863-0
1-119-54967-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910466901603321
Béranger Jérôme  
London : , : ISTE Ltd
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The algorithmic code of ethics : ethics at the bedside of the digital revolution / / Jerome Beranger
The algorithmic code of ethics : ethics at the bedside of the digital revolution / / Jerome Beranger
Autore Béranger Jérôme
Pubbl/distr/stampa London : , : ISTE Ltd
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (285 pages)
Disciplina 174.90904
Collana Technological prospects and social applications set
Soggetto topico Electronic data processing - Moral and ethical aspects
Information technology - Moral and ethical aspects
ISBN 1-119-54969-8
1-119-50863-0
1-119-54967-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910537882303321
Béranger Jérôme  
London : , : ISTE Ltd
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The algorithmic code of ethics : ethics at the bedside of the digital revolution / / Jerome Beranger
The algorithmic code of ethics : ethics at the bedside of the digital revolution / / Jerome Beranger
Autore Béranger Jérôme
Pubbl/distr/stampa London : , : ISTE Ltd
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (285 pages)
Disciplina 174.90904
Collana Technological prospects and social applications set
Soggetto topico Electronic data processing - Moral and ethical aspects
Information technology - Moral and ethical aspects
ISBN 1-119-54969-8
1-119-50863-0
1-119-54967-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910826594503321
Béranger Jérôme  
London : , : ISTE Ltd
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Analysis, modeling and stability of fractional order differential systems . 1 The infinite state approach / / Jean-Claude Trigeassou, Nezha Maamri
Analysis, modeling and stability of fractional order differential systems . 1 The infinite state approach / / Jean-Claude Trigeassou, Nezha Maamri
Autore Trigeassou Jean-Claude
Edizione [First edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : Wiley, , [2019]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (320 pages)
Disciplina 515.35
Collana Systems and industrial engineering series.
THEi Wiley ebooks.
Soggetto topico Fractional differential equations
ISBN 1-119-64881-5
1-119-47691-7
1-119-64884-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910555192703321
Trigeassou Jean-Claude  
London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : Wiley, , [2019]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Analysis, modeling and stability of fractional order differential systems . 1 The infinite state approach / / Jean-Claude Trigeassou, Nezha Maamri
Analysis, modeling and stability of fractional order differential systems . 1 The infinite state approach / / Jean-Claude Trigeassou, Nezha Maamri
Autore Trigeassou Jean-Claude
Edizione [First edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : Wiley, , [2019]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (320 pages)
Disciplina 515.35
Collana Systems and industrial engineering series.
THEi Wiley ebooks.
Soggetto topico Fractional differential equations
ISBN 1-119-64881-5
1-119-47691-7
1-119-64884-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910819008403321
Trigeassou Jean-Claude  
London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE Ltd : , : Wiley, , [2019]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Animal suffering : The Ethics and Politics of Animal Lives / / coordinated by Florence Burgat and Emilie Dardenne
Animal suffering : The Ethics and Politics of Animal Lives / / coordinated by Florence Burgat and Emilie Dardenne
Edizione [First edition.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England : , : ISTE Ltd, , [2023]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (260 pages)
Disciplina 179.3
Soggetto topico Animal welfare
Animal rights
ISBN 1-394-22893-7
1-394-22891-0
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Extraction and Captive Management of Wild Animals, 18th Century to Present Day -- 1.1. Preamble: ancient practices -- 1.2. Birth of the modern zoo: new forms of animal captivity -- 1.3. The rise of the animal trade -- 1.4. A collective appropriation of wildlife -- 1.5. The confinement of wild animals -- 1.6. Zoo ethics -- 1.7. Captive breeding -- 1.8. Capture and conservation -- 1.9. References -- Chapter 2. Pig Welfare in China -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Pig farming: an overview -- 2.2.1. History -- 2.2.2. Contemporary China -- 2.2.3. The reform era (1978-the present) -- 2.2.4. Pig farming with Chinese characteristics -- 2.3. Animal welfare -- 2.3.1. A new challenge -- 2.3.2. Breeding sow welfare -- 2.3.3. Live transport -- 2.3.4. Culling and slaughter -- 2.4. Conclusion -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. Dogs "Outside the Law": An Ethnographic Look at Animal Lives in South Korea -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Talking about South Korean dogs in order to talk about animal lives -- 3.2.1. The socio-cultural context of dog meat consumption -- 3.2.2. "Animal welfare" in Korean legislation -- 3.3. Animal lives in markets -- 3.3.1. Introducing Moran Market -- 3.3.2. Ethnographic overview -- 3.4. On the condition of the dogs -- 3.5. Conclusion -- 3.6. References -- Chapter 4. The Legal Status of Animals in European Law -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.1.1. Emergence of a legal protection of the animal by the European Union -- 4.1.2. Realization of the legal protection of animals by the European Union: the concept of welfare -- 4.2. Institutionalized suffering -- 4.2.1. Inevitable suffering -- 4.2.2. Justifiable suffering -- 4.3. Normalized suffering -- 4.3.1. Living conditions -- 4.3.2. Mutilation -- 4.4. List of abbreviations -- 4.5. References.
Chapter 5. How Do the Regulations and the Various Stakeholders Take the Pain of Animals Subjected to Experimental Procedures into Account? -- 5.1. Animal experimentation: figures and regulatory approach to animal pain -- 5.1.1. European Commission reports -- 5.1.2. Global data on animal experimentation -- 5.1.3. Data on the suffering of animals subjected to experimentation -- 5.1.4. Assessment of pain in animals and practices that are ethically acceptable according to the Directive -- 5.1.5. Silenced pain and suffering -- 5.2. How are the regulations regarding the assessment of pain in animals used for scientific or educational purposes applied? -- 5.2.1. Upstream of the project -- 5.2.2. At the time of project design -- 5.2.3. Before the start of the project -- 5.2.4. During and after the project -- 5.3. The obstacles to taking animal interests into account -- 5.3.1. Market law and globalization -- 5.3.2. The power of lobbyists -- 5.3.3. Intentions but a lack of voluntarism -- 5.3.4. A biased and uninformed evaluation of projects -- 5.3.5. Lack of qualifications of personnel using animals -- 5.4. Conclusion -- 5.5. References -- Chapter 6. Altruism Towards Animals and the Economy -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Methods for assessing altruism towards animals -- 6.2.1. Utility, social welfare and willingness to pay -- 6.2.2. Measuring willingness to pay for animal welfare -- 6.3. Main results -- 6.3.1. Examples of spontaneous market developments and altruism for animals -- 6.3.2. Examples of legislative developments and altruism for animals -- 6.3.3. Meta-analyses of the willingness to pay for animals -- 6.3.4. Is willingness to pay the result of altruism? -- 6.3.5. Does social pressure affect our altruism towards animals? -- 6.4. Limitations and perspectives -- 6.5. References -- Chapter 7. Causing Pain versus Killing -- 7.1. Introduction.
7.2. Animals and the harm of death -- 7.2.1. Frustration of wants -- 7.2.2. Deprivation of value/life comparative view -- 7.3. Population ethics -- 7.4. Metaethics -- 7.5. Conclusion -- 7.6. References -- Chapter 8. Wild Animal Suffering -- 8.1. What does the term "wild animal suffering" mean? -- 8.1.1. The harms we are talking about when we speak of wild animal suffering -- 8.1.2. The animals we are talking about when we speak of wild animal suffering -- 8.1.3. Other related terms -- 8.2. What the lives of wild animals are like -- 8.2.1. Factors causing wild animals to suffer -- 8.2.2. The extent of the harms wild animals suffer -- 8.2.3. Some promising ways of helping animals in the wild -- 8.2.4. Vaccination -- 8.2.5. Rescuing animals affected by weather events -- 8.2.6. Helping animals living in urban, suburban, industrial and agricultural areas -- 8.2.7. Contraception -- 8.2.8. Reducing overall wild animal suffering in different ecosystems -- 8.3. The ethical case for helping wild animals, summarized -- 8.4. Epistemic objections -- 8.5. Promoting scientific work in welfare biology -- 8.5.1. How previous work can be very useful -- 8.5.2. Why cross-disciplinary work is needed -- 8.5.3. Benefits for the consideration of the problem and for policymaking -- 8.6. Conclusion -- 8.7. References -- Chapter 9. Reflections on the Ethics of Veterinary Medicine -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. Is medical practice ethical? -- 9.2.1. Veterinary medicine is the result of a scientific practice... -- 9.2.2. … which establishes deontic actions qualified as irreproachable... -- 9.2.3. … while science cannot be the guardian of morality -- 9.3. What kind of ethics? -- 9.3.1. From Principles to casuistry -- 9.3.2. Intermediate versions between the great principles and casuistry -- 9.3.3. A profession subject to the economics of its business -- 9.4. Another view.
9.4.1. Breaking out of the circle of ethical justifications... -- 9.4.2. … to improvise relationships to other animals... -- 9.4.3. … in a singular relationship of humanity -- 9.5. Conclusion -- 9.6. References -- Chapter 10. Pain and Fear in Fishes: Implications for the Humane Use of Fishes -- 10.1. The use of fishes -- 10.2. Pain in fish -- 10.2.1. Whole animal responses to pain -- 10.2.2. Motivational alterations -- 10.3. Fear in fish -- 10.3.1. Neural substrate of fear -- 10.3.2. Consistent suite of fear responses -- 10.3.3. Impact of anti-anxiety drugs -- 10.4. Implications in the use of fishes -- 10.5. Conclusion -- 10.6. References -- Chapter 11. Welfare, Sentience and Pain: Concepts, Ethics and Attitudes -- 11.1. Welfare -- 11.2. One health, one welfare, one biology -- 11.3. Sentience -- 11.4. Pain -- 11.5. Welfare and moral actions -- 11.6. References -- Conclusion -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830744403321
London, England : , : ISTE Ltd, , [2023]
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