41 research outputs found

    La nuit des idées à l'Institut français de Tétouan

    No full text
    LA NUIT DES IDÉES En partenariat avec la Faculté des lettres et des Sciences humaines de Tétouan et du GRECA Animée par Ilham Berrada Entrée libre « Un monde sans frontières ? » L’origine du mot « frontière » vient de front, un terme militaire, qui désigne la zone de contact avec une armée ennemie. A partir du XVIIème siècle, la frontière devient progressivement une ligne bornée, limite entre deux Etats, qui définit la zone dans laquelle s’exerce sa compétence. La frontière est aussi une lim..

    Planification d'horaires du personnel infirmier dans un établissement hospitalier

    No full text
    Thèse numérisée par la Direction des bibliothèques de l'Université de Montréal

    A BALANCED SCOREBOARD EXPERIMENT FOR BUSINESS PROCESS PERFORMANCE MONITORING: CASE STUDY

    No full text
    ABSTRACT- Our paper presents a multidisciplinary BPI (Business Process Intelligence) experiment about performance monitoring of an important organisation business processes. This experiment proposes a BPI balanced scoreboard architecture using process data warehousing and data mining models and techniques. Balanced scoreboard methodology propose models for choosing, defining, and deploying a set of key performance indicators that measure the performance of an organisation in a transverse vision of its activities trough: financial, customer satisfaction, internal processes, and organisational training axes. This business process performance modelling and analysing experiment highlights an interesting amount on learned lessons about BPI scoreboard architecture and methodology

    Low cost manufacturing of light trapping features on multi-crystalline silicon solar cells : jet etching method and cost analysis

    No full text
    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering; and, (S.M. in Technology and Policy)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Engineering Systems Division, Technology and Policy Program, 2010.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Cataloged from student-submitted PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 127-128).An experimental study was conducted in order to determine low cost methods to improve the light trapping ability of multi-crystalline solar cells. We focused our work on improving current wet etching methods to achieve the desired light trapping features which consists in micro-scale trenches with parabolic cross-sectional profiles with a target aspect ratio of 1.0. The jet etching with a hard mask method, which consists in impinging a liquid mixture of hydrofluoric, nitric and acetic acids through the opening of hard mask, was developed. First, a computational fluid dynamics simulation was conducted to determine the desired jet velocity and angle to be used in our experiments. We find that using a jet velocity of 3 m/s and a jetting angle of 45° yields the necessary flow characteristics for etching high aspect ratio features. Second, we performed experiments to determine the effect of jet etching using a photo-resist mask and thermally grown silicon oxide mask on multiple silicon substrates : , , and multi-crystalline silicon. Compared to a baseline of etching with no jet, we find that the jet etching process can improve the light trapping ability of the baseline features by improving their aspect ratio up to 65.2% and their light trapping ability up to 38.1%. The highest aspect ratio achieved using the jet etching process was 0.62. However, it must be noted that the repeatability of the results was not consistent: significant variations in the results of the same experiment occurred, making the jet etching process promising but difficult to control. Finally, we performed a cost analysis in order to determine the minimum efficiency that a jet etching process would have to achieve to be cost competitive and its corresponding features aspect ratio. We find that a minimum cell efficiency of 16.63% and feature aspect ratios of 0.57 are necessary for cost competitiveness with current solar cell manufacturing technology.by Amine Berrada Sounni.S.M.in Technology and PolicyS.M

    Migrant Necropolitics at the Table: Civilized Cannibalism in Mahi Binebine\u27s \u3cem\u3eCannibales\u3c/em\u3e

    No full text
    In Cannibales, the Maghrebi Francophone author Mahi Binebine revisits the encounter between the so-called “cannibals” and the European colonizer in the context of illegal immigration where bodies become commodities exchangeable for social improvements creating a different form of cannibalism. It is no longer the usual dichotomy between the civilized and the savage that is at work but rather a “civilized” European imperialist who feeds himself on a migrant’s flesh. This article argues that this representation works as a “colonial fragment” from the past but contextualized in today’s globalization. Binebine’s morbid depiction of an ambivalent postcolonial cannibalistic encounter translates as a representation of migrants in terms of cannibalistic necropolitics. The illegal migrant has no choice but to be swallowed by a narcissistic exocannibalism which seeks to incorporate what it feeds on to a total unity suggesting a bleak future not only for illegal migrants but for globalization as possibly devouring itself

    Ligophorus hamzati Hafidi & Diamanka & Rkhami & Pariselle 2013, n. sp.

    No full text
    Ligophorus hamzati n. sp. (Fig. 5) TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype MNHN HEL315; paratypes MNHN (9) HEL316, BMNH (10) 2012.12.17.4. MATERIAL EXAMINED. — 30 specimens mounted in ammonium picrate-glycerol. TYPE HOST. — Liza grandisquamis (Mugilidae). SITE OF INFECTION. — Gills, between secondary gill lamellae. TYPE LOCALITY. — Grand Lahou Lagoon, Ivory Coast (5°08’11”N, 5°01’33”E). ETYMOLOGY. — Hamzati is given for Hamzat, name of the son of the first author of this article. FIG. 5. – Ligophorus hamzati n. sp.: morphological structures as in Fig. 1. Abbreviations: see Material & Methods. Scale bar: 30 µm. DESCRIPTION Flattened adult, 580 ± 33 (410-537) [30] long and 80 ± 10 (65-116) [30] wide at gonad level, pharynx: 26 (20-33) [28] larger diameter. Haptor well demarcated with 14 marginal hooks: 13 ± 0.9 (8-17) [360] long. Dorsal anchor with guard two time longer than shaft: a = 43 ± 4 (34-50) [60]; b = 34 ± 3 (28-39) [60]; c = 6 ± 0.7 (4-7) [60]; d = 13 ± 1.5 (9-16) [60]; e = 7 ± 0.8 (6-9) [60]. Dorsal bar V-shaped: 20 ± 2 (17-24) [30] long, 4 ± 0.7 (3-6) [30] wide and 7 ± 1.1 (5-10) [30] high. Ventral anchor: a = 42 ± 2 (36-45) [60]; b = 34 ± 2 (31-37) [60]; c = 7 ± 0.8 (5-10) [60]; d = 11 ± 1.3 (8-14) [60]; e = 7 ± 0.6 (6-9) [60]. Ventral bar, 39 ± 3 (32-47) [30] long and 9 ± 2 (6-13) [30] wide, with small antero-median protuberance and two lateral and symmetrical expansions: 10 ± 3 (4-18) [30] apart. MCO as copulatory tube: 92 ± 6 (81-100) [30] long, passes through a tubular accessory piece, 48 ± 7 (38-59) [30] long, with bifurcated distal extremity, each branches bifurcated also. Vagina: 51 ± 10 (21-67) [30] long. REMARKS This species is distinguished from all Ligophorus species by the shape of the accessory piece of the copulatory organ, which is bifurcated two times at its distal extremities. DISCUSSION The co-existence of fish hosts with a great difference in Ligophorus species richness is not exceptional. Euzet & Suriano (1977) observed only one species (Lig. angustus Euzet & Suriano, 1977) from Chelon labrosus (Risso, 1827) in the Mediterranean Sea, whereas the other mullet species may be parasitized by at least two species. Six species were reported from Liza carinata by Dmitrieva et al. (2012) and from Liza subviridis by Soo and Lim (2012), and at least 14 species were reported from M. cephalus by Dmitrieva et al. (2012). Similar differences in monogenean species richness were reported from cichlid hosts in West Africa by Pariselle et al. (2003). These authors drew a parallel between parasite species richness and host genetic diversity, which were both shaped by fluctuations of host populations through bottleneck or vicariant events. Therefore, in the case of Ligophorus from studied African mugilids, only the population of Liza bandialensis, which is endemic to a very limited area in Senegal, may have suffered numerous bottleneck events, leading to reductions in its size, and in turn to the loss of all its monogenean parasites. Among the three other widely distributed Liza species in Africa, Liza falcipinnis, which was infected by only one Ligophorus species, may have had a more stable history (and thus, a lower genetic and parasitic diversity) when compared to Liza grandisquamis, which was infected by three Ligophorus species and Liza dumerili, which according to Berrada Rkhami et al. (1993) was infected by over ten Ligophorus species.Published as part of Hafidi, Fouzia El, Diamanka, Arfang, Rkhami, Ouafae Berrada & Pariselle, Antoine, 2013, New species of Ligophorus (Monogenea, Ancyrocephalidae), parasite of Liza spp. (Teleostei, Mugilidae) off the Northwestern African coast, pp. 215-225 in Zoosystema 35 (2) on pages 222-224, DOI: 10.5252/z2013n2a6, http://zenodo.org/record/516044

    Discovering Patterns in Order to Detect Weak Signals and Define New Strategies

    No full text
    Competitive intelligence activities rely on collecting and analyzing data in order to discover patterns from data using sequence data mining. The discovered patterns are used to help decision-makers considering innovation and defining the strategy for their business. In this chapter we present four methods for discovering patterns in the competitive intelligence process: “correspondence analysis,” “multiple correspondence analysis,” “evolutionary graph,” and “multi-term method.”</jats:p
    corecore