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Intaglio printmaking in the secondary schoolWylder, James Lester 01 June 1968 (has links)
There is a wealth of printed material on intaglio printmaking techniques and history, but there is relatively little printed material or work directed towards the inclusion of intaglio printmaking in the secondary school art curriculum. It is my basic assertion in this thesis that intaglio printmaking can be taught with success at the secondary level. The thesis consists of three chapters. The first chapter is concerned with the purpose, value, and application of intaglio printmaking in a secondary school art program. The second chapter identifies the materials, the cost of materials, and the sources of supply. Chapter three deals with the organization of materials in the classroom. Photographs of intaglio prints comprise the visual aspect of the thesis and supplement the text in some instances. I have supplemented the photographs of my own work with original prints by high school students, which should give some idea of the student's competence. Photographs of some of the paintings and drawings that I completed during the Master of Science inTeaching program are in the appendix. This will provide a record or my work for the art department and is intended as a supplement to the thesis.
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Aging and the Semantic Differential: Semantic Stability in the Measurement of Social EvaluationPetersen, Marilyn Diane 30 July 1976 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation was to assess the validity of utilizing the same semantic differential test as a measure of social evaluation for persons of different ages. The semantic differential, a rating technique by which judgments of stimuli are made on seven-interval bipolar descriptive continua called "scales", currently receives widespread usage as a measure of attitudes toward aging and the elderly. However, a lack of semantic stability across stimuli and across subjects, known, respectively, as "concept-scale" and "subject2 scale" interaction, has been found to occur with the technique in various areas of research. That such a lack of stability might occur across stimuli and/or subjects of different ages is suggested by the existence of . di fferences between people of different ages which affect both the appearance and functioning of the individual. These differences derive from the biological aging process, the life cycle process, and the social change process. This study investigated whether such cross-age differences are of sufficient severity to cause people of different ages to be perceived as different classes of stimuli and/or to perceive others as different populations of subjects.
Ratings of eight videotaped stimulus models were made by 60 younger (aged 22 to 32) and 60 older (aged 60 and older ) volunteer subjects on a semantic differential test composed of 38 scales. The stimulus models, consisting of four younger and four older adults, were non-actors, unknown to the rating subjects, and presented for one minute in a standardized visual format and without sound. Of the 38 scales used, seven were selected as reference scales from earlier studies, 30 were suggested by a volunteer "generating" sample of 30 younger and JO older subjects, and one (young/old) was included as a check on the perceived ages of the stimulus models. Scale scores were factor analyzed to establish the underlying factor structure of social evaluation and to ascertain whether it rema1ned stable across stimulus model and subject age levels. Four separate factor analyses were performed -- younger stimulus models/younger subjects, younger stimulus models/older subjects, older stimulus J models/older subjects, and older stimulus models/younger subjects -- permitting comparisons between the factor matrices for concept-scale and subject-scale interaction.
Three factors were defined by each of the four separate factor analyses of the scales. Factors A and B were found by two different methods of assessing factor similarity (inspection and coefficients of congruence) to be highly similar across both stimulus model and subject age levels; Factor C (a weakly defined factor) was found to be similar only for the older stimulus models across subject age levels. An examination of the scales heavily loaded on each factor for all relevant factor matrices resulted in the interpretation of Factors A, B, and C as reflecting Interpersonal Ability, Instrumental Ability, and Propriety, respectively.
This study resulted in findings bearing upon three interrelated areas. First, the data suggest that: 1) older and younger adults constitute qualitatively approximately the same class of stimuli, and 2) older and younger adults constitute qualitatively approximately the same population of subjects. That is, perceptions were based on the same underlying dimensions of meaning regardless of age. Second, the data suggest that two major dimensions of social evaluation are Interpersonal Ability and Instrumental Ability. Comparisons of these two attitudinal dimensions with dimensions from other semantic differential studies revealed striking similarity. Third, the finding of stable scales and replicable dimensions suggests the appropriateness of constructing a cross-age semantic differential for social evaluation. Consequently, a 15-scale Cross-Age Semantic Differential for the measurement of social evaluation was proposed.
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Effects of vibration forces on maxillary expansion and orthodontic tooth movementAldosari, Mohammad Abdullah M. January 2015 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Vibration forces (VF) have been shown to alter the formative and resorptive activities of bone. Studies have investigated the use of VF in applications such as the treatment of osteoporosis, bone fracture healing and implant osteointegration with favorable results. In dentistry, orthodontic tooth movement and maxillary suture expansion are common procedures typically requiring prolonged treatment durations with high relapse rates. We hypothesized that local, intermittent VF applications can enhance bone formation during rapid maxillary expansion and accelerate orthodontic tooth movement. Moreover, we also investigated expression of periostin/OSF-2, an adhesion molecule implicated in the formation of bone during maxillary suture expansion. Our results showed that intermittent VF significantly increased bone volume density of the expended palatal bone but limited the amount of palatal expansion and mineral apposition rate at the suture margins. Also, intermittent VF forces did not show statistically significant acceleration of orthodontic tooth movement but significantly enhanced bone volume density of the interradicular bone after tooth movement. Maxillary expansion was also shown to induce the expression of periostin which was proportional to the magnitude of the expansion force with increased bone mineral deposition.
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Biochemical and antibiogram characteristics of certain enterobacteriaceaeShaffer, John 01 January 1978 (has links)
This study is a continuation of the investigations of Hall (1976), Storey (1977), and Berkowitz (1978) on antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of bacteria isolated from local hospitals in Stockton, California. It extends the work of Hall (1976) on the K-E-S group to include three species of Proteus and Escherichia coli. New antibiotics (tobramycin, amikacin and cefamandole) are also added to the antibiogram.
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Assessment of agreement between invasive and non-invasive blood pressure measurements in critically ill patientsNinziza, Jadot 27 September 2010 (has links)
MSc (Nursing), Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand / The purpose of the study was to describe and compare the limits of agreement between
invasive blood pressure (IBP) and non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) readings obtained
on patients in the adult critical care units (CCU) of a tertiary health care institution, to
describe the factors that affect accuracy of both techniques, to describe the difference in
terms of accuracy and sensitivity and the reasons given by the clinical practitioners for
their choice of blood pressure measurement technique.
A non-experimental descriptive comparative, prospective design was utilized in this two
part study. The sample comprised of CCU patients (n = 80) in five adult critical care units
over a 3-month period. Non-probability purposive sampling was utilized to obtain the
desired sample in part one of the study. Data collection was via IBP and NIBP
measurements obtained by the researcher and a record review of the patient’s critical care
charts. Part two of the study comprised of clinical practitioners (n=50) and convenience
sampling method was utilized. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyse
data.
At the 95% confidence interval, the limits of agreements were found to be in range of ± 35
mmhg of IBP and NIBP systolic, ± 19.5 mmHg of IBP and NIBP diastolic and ±19.3
mmhg IBP and NIBP of mean arterial pressure. In practical terms this means that IBP and
NIBP can not be used interchangeably in CCUs as the two methods did not consistently
provide similar measurements because there was a high level of disagreement that included
clinically important discrepancy of more than 10 mmhg which is the cut off acceptable
reference in terms of discrepancy between the two BP techniques and add to the growing
literature suggesting that IBP remains the gold standard technique for measuring the blood
pressure in critical care setting. Factors such as Inotropic/ vasopressor support, sedation /
analgesia, mechanical ventilation and severity of illness (APACHE II score) did not show
significant influence on the discrepancy of the two BP techniques.
In the second part of the study, more than 80 % of the sample of clinical practitioners
acknowledged that the IBP technique remains the gold standard.
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Les Cenci d'Antonin Artaud, un théậtre cruel? : suivi de Le Foyer - texte dramatiqueDuval, Laurent January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Algorithmic Approaches for Solving the Euclidean Distance Location and Location-Allocation ProblemsAl-Loughani, Intesar Mansour 06 August 1997 (has links)
This dissertation is concerned with the development of algorithmic approaches for solving the minisum location and location-allocation problems in which the Euclidean metric is used to measure distances. To overcome the nondifferentiability difficulty associated with the Euclidean norm function, specialized solution procedures are developed for both the location and the location-allocation problems. For the multifacility location problem (EMFLP), two equivalent convex differentiable reformulations are proposed. The first of these is formulated directly in the primal space, and relationships between its Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) conditions and the necessary and sufficient optimality conditions for EMFLP are established in order to explore the use of standard convex differentiable nonlinear programming algorithms that are guaranteed to converge to KKT solutions. The second equivalent differentiable formulation is derived via a Lagrangian dual approach based on the optimum of a linear function over a unit ball (circle). For this dual approach, which recovers Francis and Cabot's (1972) dual problem, we also characterize the recovery of primal location decisions, hence settling an issue that has remained open since 1972. In another approach for solving EMFLP, conjugate or deflected subgradient based algorithms along with suitable line-search strategies are proposed. The subgradient deflection method considered is the Average Direction Strategy (ADS) imbedded within the Variable Target Value Method (VTVM). The generation of two types of subgradients that are employed in conjunction with ADS are investigated. The first type is a simple valid subgradient that assigns zero components corresponding to the nondifferentiable terms in the objective function. The second type expends more effort to derive a low-norm member of the subdifferential in order to enhance the prospect of obtaining a descent direction. Furthermore, a Newton-based line-search is also designed and implemented in order to enhance the convergence behavior of the developed algorithm. Various combinations of the above strategies are composed and evaluated on a set of test problems. Computational results for all the proposed algorithmic approaches are presented, using a set of test problems that include some standard problems from the literature. These results exhibit the relative advantages of employing the new proposed procedures.
Finally, we study the capacitated Euclidean distance location-allocation problem. There exists no global optimization algorithm that has been developed and tested for this class of problems, aside from a total enumeration approach. We develop a branch-and-bound algorithm that implicitly/partially enumerates the vertices of the feasible region of the transportation constraints in order to determine a global optimum for this nonconvex problem. For deriving lower bounds on node subproblems, a specialized variant of the Reformulation-Linearization Technique (RLT) is suitably designed which transforms the representation of this nonconvex problem from the original defining space into a higher dimensional space associated with a lower bounding (largely linear) convex program. The maximum of the RLT relaxation based lower bound that is obtained via a deflected subgradient strategy applied to a Lagrangian dual formulation of this problem, and another readily computed lower bound in the projected location space is considered at each node of the branch-and-bound tree for fathoming purposes. In addition, certain cut-set inequalities in the allocation space, and objective function based cuts in the location space are generated to further tighten the lower bounding relaxation. Computational experience is provided on a set of randomly generated test problems to investigate both the RLT-based and the projected location- space lower bounding schemes. The results indicate that the proposed global optimization approach for this class of problem offers a promising viable solution procedure. In fact, for two instances available available in the in the literature, we report significantly improved solutions. The dissertation concludes with recommendations for further research for this challenging class of problems. Data for the collection of test problems is provided in the Appendix to facilitate further testing in this area. / Ph. D.
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Recovery After Disasters: Improving the Patterns of Sheltering and Housing for Impacted VictimsFrimpong, Agyemang 06 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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The Utilization in Sculpture of Ceramic Shell Piece Molds for Specific Nonexpendable MaterialsGarcia, Ronnie J. 05 1900 (has links)
This investigation was concerned with developing a procedure for using nonexpendable pattern materials in ceramic shell piece molds. Literature relating to this study indicated that nonexpendable materials, used in whole ceramic shell molds, had been limited to frozen mercury.
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The Feasibility of Casting Aluminum Relief Sculptures with Controlled, Diversified Textual PropertiesWilliams, Glenn Bill 12 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study is twofold: casting aluminum relief sculptures which have controlled diversified textural properties, and the development of a technical teaching process in the form of a pictorial documentation.
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