**Proceedings of the Workshop: Technology, Science, and Culture: A Global Vision 2018**

Editors Sergio Picazo-Vela Luis Ricardo Hernández

Knowledge Area Co-editors Ileana Azor Hernández Nelly Ramírez Corona Roberto Rosas Romero Erwin Josuan Pérez Cortés Andrés Alfonso Peña Olarte

The aim of the Workshop: Technology, Science, and Culture: A Global Vision is to create a discussion forum on research related to the fields of Water Science, Food Science, Intelligent Systems, Molecular Biomedicine, and Creation and Theories of Culture. The workshop is intended to discuss research on current problems, relevant methodologies, and future research streams and to create an environment for the exchange of ideas and collaboration among participants.

This first edition of the workshop was held on November 6, 2018, at Universidad de las Americas Puebla. In this edition, we had four keynotes and nine posters presented in the poster session, which aimed to show selected research from doctoral students. At the end of the workshop, the best poster was awarded.

Keynote speakers are researchers with recognized trajectories, who have published in leading academic and scientific journals. In this edition, the invited speakers were: Dr. Horacio Bach, Dr. Andreas Linninger, Dr. Miguel Ángel Rico-Ramírez, and Dr. Theodore Gerard Lynn.

During keynotes, Dr. Horacio Bach discussed the problem of multidrug resistant bacteria and the lack of R&D in the development of new antibiotics in pharmaceutical companies. In his talk, Dr. Andreas Linninger focused on mathematical modeling, and he proposed a definition, explained applications on chemistry and biochemistry, and emphasized the benefits of viewing math as a language for scientific inquiry and math education. In his turn, Dr. Rico-Ramírez explained the importance of measuring and forecasting precipitations; he also discussed latest advances of the measurement and forecasting of precipitations with weather radars. Finally, Dr. Theodore Lynn explained the importance of Intelligent Systems in the Internet of Everything; he explained the building blocks of Intelligent Systems and research opportunities.

In the first edition of this workshop, the best poster was awarded to Omar López Rincón, a student of Intelligent System Doctorate, who presented his work "A 3D Spatial Visualization of Measures in Music Compositions."

The number and impact of water-related natural disasters have increased since the middle of last century. As a result of increased climate variability and the effects of global warming, the hydrometeorological risk has increased and spread, while the resilience of societies, in many cases, is not adequate. Consequently, the risk has increased. Floods and droughts, particularly in a changing climate, require greater understanding to generate better forecasts and proper management of these phenomena. Mexico, like other countries in the world, and of course in Latin America

and the Caribbean region, suffers from both weather extremes, so the study of these phenomena is important in Mexican context.

The UNESCO Chair on Hydrometeorological Risks, held at the Universidad de las Américas Puebla, is devoted to the analysis, measurement, modeling and management of extreme hydrometeorological events in the context of a more urbanized world, climate change, and vulnerable regions. The Chair focuses on the development of basic and applied research for the design of adapting and mitigating measures, and it also focuses on the dissemination of information and training of decision makers as well as the public. In its activities, the Chair keeps a gender focus, targeting to reduce the vulnerability of women to hydrometeorological disasters.

The Chair acts in the following fields:


A detailed description of the UNESCO Chair on Hydrometeorological Risks, members, and publications, can be obtained at its Website https://www.udlap.mx/ catedraunesco/

The Chair publishes a quarterly Newsletter, in Spanish and English, that can be consulted at https://www.udlap.mx/catedraunesco/newsletters.aspx

**V**


**IV**

and the Caribbean region, suffers from both weather extremes, so the study of these

The UNESCO Chair on Hydrometeorological Risks, held at the Universidad de las Américas Puebla, is devoted to the analysis, measurement, modeling and management of extreme hydrometeorological events in the context of a more urbanized world, climate change, and vulnerable regions. The Chair focuses on the development of basic and applied research for the design of adapting and mitigating measures, and it also focuses on the dissemination of information and training of decision makers as well as the public. In its activities, the Chair keeps a gender focus, targeting to reduce the vulnerability of women to hydrometeorological disasters.

A detailed description of the UNESCO Chair on Hydrometeorological Risks, members, and publications, can be obtained at its Website https://www.udlap.mx/

The Chair publishes a quarterly Newsletter, in Spanish and English, that can be

phenomena is important in Mexican context.

The Chair acts in the following fields:

4. Gender and hydrometeorological risks.

catedraunesco/

1. Hydrometeorological risks and climate change.

2. Modeling and forecasting of hydrometeorological risks. 3. Integrated management of hydrometeorological risks.

consulted at https://www.udlap.mx/catedraunesco/newsletters.aspx

**VII**

Contents

*Andreas A. Linninger*

*Miguel A. Rico-Ramirez*

*and Polioptro Martínez-Austria*

*and María Teresa Jiménez-Munguía*

*Luis Daniel Martínez Álvarez*

*Victor Fonseca López*

*and Rogelio Perez-Santiago*

*Omar Lopez-Rincon and Oleg Starostenko*

*Horacio Bach*

A New Era without Antibiotics 1

Machines and How to Teach It 23

Weather Radar for Flood Risk Management 40

Multidisciplinary Challenges in Intelligent Systems Research 52

Hydrological Modeling in the Rio Conchos Basin Using Satellite Information 69

by Emulsification 77

(Pimenta dioica) Essential Oil Applied in Vapor Phase 82

*aureus* ATCC 29413 91

Music as a Medium of Encounter of Otherness in Animated Cinema 96

Revolutionary Veganism 100

Computational Fluid Dynamics Method 105

Comparison of Dispersion Measures for a Territory Design Problem 113

A 3D Spatial Visualization of Measures in Music Compositions 119

Mathematical Modeling: The Art of Translating between Minds and

Advances in the Measurement and Forecasting of Precipitation with

*Paul Hernández-Romero, Carlos Patiño-Gómez, Benito Corona-Vázquez* 

Modeling of the Controlled Release of Essential Oils Encapsulated

*Mónica Dávila-Rodríguez, Aurelio López-Malo, Nelly Ramírez-Corona* 

Extraction, Composition, and Antibacterial Effect of Allspice

*Ana Cecilia Lorenzo-Leal, Enrique Palou and Aurelio López-Malo*

Stability of the Antimicrobial Activity of *Lactobacillus plantarum* NRRL B-4496 Supernatants during Storage against *Staphylococcus* 

*Daniela Arrioja Bretón, Emma Mani-López and Aurelio López-Malo*

Aerodynamic coefficient Calculation of a Sphere using Incompressible

*María Gabriela Sandoval Esquivel, Roger Z. Ríos-Mercado and Juan Díaz*

*Carlos Duran-Hernandez, Rene Ledesma-Alonso, Gibran Etcheverry* 

Toward the Intelligent Internet of Everything: Observations on

*Theo Lynn, Pierangelo Rosati and Patricia Takado Endo*
