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Institution

University of Almería

EducationAlmería, Spain
About: University of Almería is a education organization based out in Almería, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 4674 authors who have published 10905 publications receiving 233036 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Almeria & Universidad de Almería.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the acquisition of action-contingent events (action effects) and found that action effects are acquired and integrated with the accompanying action automatically, so that perceiving the effect le...
Abstract: Three experiments studied the acquisition of action-contingent events (action effects). In a first, acquisition phase participants performed free-choice reactions with each keypress leading to the presentation of either a particular category word (e.g., animal or furniture) or an exemplar word (e.g., dog or chair). In the test phase, choice responses were made to category or exemplar words by using a word-key mapping that was either compatible or incompatible with the key-word mapping during acquisition. Compatible mapping produced better performance than incompatible mapping if the words in the practice and the test phase were the same (e.g., animal M animal), if they had a subordinate-superordinate relationship (e.g., dog M animal), belonged to the same category (e.g., dog M cat), or referred to visually related concepts (e.g., orange M circle). The findings support the assumption that action effects are acquired and integrated with the accompanying action automatically, so that perceiving the effect le...

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of areas where the arto (Maytenus senegalensis subsp europaeus) and the sabina (Juniperus phoenicea subsp. turbinata) have long been dominant species, although the presence of the former is nowadays notoriously diminished.
Abstract: The development of a greenhouse agriculture in the traditionally impoverished region of Poniente de Almeria, on the Mediterranean coast of Spain, has caused an enormous rise in living standards. However, the environmental impact of this badly-planned growth threatens the every dynamics of the exploitation system. A special examination must be made of the use of the three major resources responsible for the functioning of greenhouse production and its impact on the ecosystems and particularly on the vegetation. These resources are: clayey soils, sand from fossil dunes and ground water. While the use of the clayey soils and sand have negative effects on the conservation of ecologically valuable communities found nowhere else in Europe, ground water overexploitation has produced an increase in salinity in most of the aquifers. Of these, sand has been by far the best monitored resource and restoration programmes have been implemented in the extraction zones. This survey deals with the recent evolution of areas where the arto (Maytenus senegalensis subsp. europaeus) and the sabina (Juniperus phoenicea subsp. turbinata) have long been the dominant species, although the presence of the former is nowadays notoriously diminished. The study is based on aerial photographs taken in 1957, 1977 and 1985, together with our own field work. Curiously enough, all this man-made process of degradation has stimulated ornithological diversity. Finally, we propose here some measures which aim to preserve the most important enclaves of these Mediterranean shrub formations, specially those of the arto, since sabina-dominated communities already belong to existing conservation areas.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the main impacts of irrigation practices on groundwater salinity are summarized and illustrated through paradigmatic case studies, showing that the existing paradigm for irrigated agriculture of focusing mainly on crop production increases has contributed to widespread salinization of groundwater resources.
Abstract: Agricultural irrigation represents the main use of global water resources. Irrigation has an impact on the environment, and scientific evidence suggests that it inevitably leads to salinization of both soil and aquifers. The effects are most pronounced under arid and semi-arid conditions. In considering the varied impacts of irrigation practices on groundwater quality, these can be classed as either direct—the direct result of applying water and accompanying agrochemicals to cropland—or indirect—the effects of irrigation abstractions on groundwater hydrogeochemistry. This paper summarizes and illustrates through paradigmatic case studies the main impacts of irrigation practices on groundwater salinity. Typically, a diverse range of groundwater salinization processes operating concomitantly at different time scales (from days to hundreds of years) is involved in agricultural irrigation. Case studies suggest that the existing paradigm for irrigated agriculture of focusing mainly on crop production increases has contributed to widespread salinization of groundwater resources.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the relationship between the NAO and the temperatures in southern Europe, using NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data to study the synoptic situations associated with different phases and intensities of NAO as well as with different temperature anomalies.
Abstract: [1] Here we explore the relationship between the NAO and the temperatures in southern Europe, using NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data to study the synoptic situations associated with different phases and intensities of the NAO as well as with different temperature anomalies. The results show that temperatures in southern Europe are sensitive not only to the phase of the NAO, but also to the exact location of the NAO centers of action. Opposite temperature anomalies are found to be associated with similar NAO index values, leading to linear correlation coefficients between the index and the temperature series close to zero. This does not necessarily imply a negligible influence of NAO on southern European temperatures, but it may indicate a complex and non-linear relationship, not adequately represented by a simple NAO index. We conclude that the association between the NAO variability and the temperatures in southern Europe substantially differs with respect to central and northern Europe, where no such sensitivity regarding the location of the NAO action centers is found.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the treatment of contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) in a systematic study in different municipal wastewater treatment plants (MWWTPs) of the Mediterranean area, more than 1000 km away, was presented for the first time.

72 citations


Authors

Showing all 4758 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Amadeo R. Fernández-Alba8331821458
Sixto Malato8031524216
Francisco Rodríguez7974824992
Yusuf Chisti7634733979
José Luis García7345317504
Anne-Marie Caminade6958015814
Elias Fereres6823618751
David Mecerreyes6632416822
Berta Martín-López6417716136
Ana Agüera6316812280
Alberto Fernández-Gutiérrez6231213557
Mary F. Mahon5953914258
José María Carazo5930912499
Claudio Bianchini5736813412
Manuel Marquez5512612237
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202345
2022127
2021881
2020892
2019729
2018647