Browsing by Author "Ubilla Sanz, Mario"
Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemCama adaptable de parto para trabajo horizontal, vertical y posiciones intermedias (Chile, concesión n° 52048)Ubilla Sanz, Mario; Uribe Torres, Claudia
- ItemDibujo y enseñanza(Ediciones ARQ, 2020) Hidalgo Hermosilla, Germán; Campino Johnson, Fernando; Espinoza Guerra, Danilo; Villegas V., Ignacio; Hidalgo Hermosilla, Germán; Ubilla Sanz, Mario
- ItemEfectos cognitivos de la estimulación audiovisual en niños con limitaciones severa de la movilidad: La utilidad de las tecnologías de apoyo de bajo costo(2015) Riveros Miranda, Rodrigo Andrés; Barja Y., Salesa; Muñoz, Carolina; Cancino, Natalia; Nuñez Farías, Alicia Carolina; Ubilla Sanz, Mario; Sylleros, Rodrigo; Olguín, Polín; Rosas Díaz, Ricardo
- ItemEstimulación audiovisual en niños con limitación grave de la motricidad(2013) Barja Y., Salesa; Muñoz, Carolina; Cancino, Natalia; Nuñez Farías, Alicia Carolina; Ubilla Sanz, Mario; Sylleros, Rodrigo; Rosas Díaz, Ricardo
- ItemEstimulación audiovisual en niños con limitación grave de la motricidad : ¿mejora su calidad de vida?(2013) Barja Y., Salesa; Muñoz Aravena, Carolina del Pilar; Cancino, Natalia; Nuñez Farías, Alicia Carolina; Ubilla Sanz, Mario; Sylleros Ellmen, Álvaro; Riveros Miranda, Rodrigo Andrés; Rosas Díaz, Ricardo
- ItemSustainability Meets Society: Public Perceptions of Energy-Efficient Timber Construction and Implications for Chile’s Decarbonisation Policies(MDPI, 2025) Encinas Pino, Felipe; Truffello Robledo, Ricardo; Margalet Olguín, Macarena del Pilar; Inostroza Calquín, Bernardita Paz; Aguirre Núñez, Carlos Andrés; Ubilla Sanz, MarioTimber construction is increasingly promoted in Chile as a route to low-carbon, energy-efficient housing, yet public acceptance remains decisive for its diffusion. This study reports the first large-scale perception survey of timber buildings in Greater Concepción (N = 200) and contrasts key results with an earlier identical survey in Valdivia. Concepción residents strongly recognise timber’s thermal comfort attributes and associate wood housing with lower winter heating demand, a perception markedly stronger than in Valdivia. Conversely, 73% of Concepción respondents believe timber homes burn easily, but a majority also accept that modern engineering can mitigate this risk, indicating scope for targeted technical communication. Environmental perceptions are more ambivalent: although respondents value wood’s renewable origin, 42% doubt that timber construction reduces climate change, and many equate it with deforestation, echoing controversies around Chile’s plantation model. Cluster analysis reveals a techno-optimist subgroup coupling enthusiasm for energy savings with confidence in fire-safety innovations, suggesting a strategic constituency for demonstration projects. By situating end-user attitudes within national decarbonisation goals, this paper argues that region-specific outreach—emphasising verified energy-efficiency gains, certified sustainable forestry and visible fire-safety performance—can convert passive approval into active demand and accelerate Chile’s transition to a net-zero housing stock.
