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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
421

Analysis and design of industrial ground floor slabs using the finite element method

Abbas, Ali Awad January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
422

Exploring elements of the cheese purchase decision process through application of purchasing involvement methodology : the case of cheese products in Athens, Greece

Karathanassi, Vassiliki January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
423

The behaviour of clayey sands under monotonic and cyclic loading

Georgiannou, Vasiliki Nikolaou January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
424

Laboratory investigation of petrophysical properties of sandstone rocks under true triaxial stress

Al-Harthy, Said Salim January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
425

The elastic distortional and local plate buckling of slender web beam

Chung, Kwok Fai January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
426

An investigation into the abilities of adults with learning disabilities to differentiate and connect thoughts, feelings and behaviour

Sams, Kathryn January 2002 (has links)
There is increasing evidence to support the use of cognitive behavioural therapy with adults, for a wide range of psychological disorders. However, the use of cognitive behaviour therapy with adults with learning disabilities is still being questioned as it is thought that they may lack the skills necessary to engage in this treatment method. The current research examines the presence of core cognitive behaviour therapy skills in a non-clinical population of 59 adults with learning disabilities with an IQ of 50-72 points. It examines the abilities of adults with learning disabilities to complete three different types of tasks; a) the ability to identify emotions from facial expressions, using Makaton Symbols; b) the ability to distinguish thoughts from feelings and behaviours and the effect of providing visual cues to assist with this task; and c) the ability to link thoughts to feelings and thoughts to behaviours in the context of prior experience. The results indicated that adults with learning disabilities were able to demonstrate these skills, though not always at the more complex level. Visual cues did not improve performance on the distinguishing thoughts, feelings and behaviour task. Level of intelligence was only related to the distinguishing thoughts, feelings and behaviour task, however level of receptive vocabulary was highly related to all three types of task. It is therefore suggested that cognitive behavioural therapy may be an appropriate form of treatment for adults with learning disabilities, once training has been given on these types of skills and consideration has been taken to level of language ability. The findings are discussed with reference to a range of theoretical and clinical implications and further research has been proposed.
427

Modelling of reinforced concrete beams subject to both static and dynamic loading

Raveendran, Somasundaram January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
428

The challenge of motivation in autism : an investigation utilising the Premack principle

Salzman, Tim January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
429

Investigation of the control of appetite and body weight by the hypothalmic melanocortin and cocaine-and amphetamine-regulated transcript systems

Abbott, Caroline Rachael January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
430

A Comparative study of test procedures and measures of behaviour in the male three-spined stickleback, (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.)

Wootton, Robert John January 1968 (has links)
This study compared three methods used to measure aggression in the male three-spined stickleback. These methods have been used in different studies without the certainty that they measure the same behavioural phenomenon. A number of different measures of aggression must be highly correlated if aggression in the male stickleback is to be regarded as a unitary drive. The methods consisted of recording the behaviour of an experimental male when: (i) a tube containing another male (or a female in some tests) was visible for 5 min; (ii) another male was visible across a glass partition at all times; (iii) a fish-shaped wax model was visible for 2 min. Each method showed that in the 12 days after fertilization of an egg-mass, there was a U-shaped trend in frequency of biting, frequency of charging and the rate of biting per minute spent oriented towards the other fish or the model. In Method (i), total oriented time formed about 70 % of a test period and this measure was not correlated with frequency of biting, nor did it follow a U-shaped trend. In Methods (ii) and (iii), total oriented time formed less than 50 % of a test period, was correlated with frequency of biting, and did follow a U-shaped trend. In Methods (i) and (ii), the measures, frequency of biting and bites per min of oriented time were at a maximum in the first 15 min after fertilization. Method (iii) did not show this maximum in biting. All methods showed that frequency of biting, of charging, and bites per min of oriented time were higher for fish with nests than for fish which had yet to build nests. Gonadectomy of fish with nests reduced all measures to the levels found for intact fish that did not have nests. An experiment using only Method (i) showed that a male with a nest attacked another male more than a non-gravid female. A male without a nest attacked both a male and a non-gravid female equally. The use of more than one measure for a behaviour pattern improved both the comparisons between methods and the analysis of changes in behaviour of the male. Examples of this are given for biting and parental fanning. Results from Method (iii) were not always consistent with those from Methods (i) and (ii). Method (iii) was exceptional in the number of charges the experimental males made with both dorsal and ventral spines erect. A wider range of behaviour patterns were recorded more regularly in Method (ii) than in Method (i). But these two methods consistently showed the same trends in frequency of biting, charging and bites per min of oriented time. In spite of the similarities in the results from the three methods there was not sufficient evidence to conclude that aggression in the male stickleback is a unitary drive and that all potential measures of aggression will be equivalent. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate

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