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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.
41

Redes Empresariais e Sustentabilidade: modelos baseados em agentes para análise da difusão de estratégias no ambiente competitivo / Business Networks and Sustainability: agent-based models for analysis of strategies diffusion in the competitive environment.

Jorge, Fabricio Gava de Almeida 12 November 2014 (has links)
Com a divulgação dos efeitos antrópicos sobre o clima nos últimos anos, nota-se um adensamento no debate acerca da incorporação da temática socioambiental na agenda corporativa. Embora as externalidades ambientais da atividade produtiva sejam conhecidas desde o início da Revolução Industrial, os processos de elaboração e implementação de estratégias empresariais de sustentabilidade ainda é algo em desenvolvimento. O presente trabalho visa analisar a dinâmica da difusão de estratégias de sustentabilidade em redes empresariais através de modelos de sistemas sociais complexos. Para tanto, são analisados alguns modelos consolidados na literatura, como o modelo de Ising (1925), Barabási-Albert (1999) e Ito e Kaneko (2002). Tal análise subsidia a criação de um modelo específico, cujos resultados de sua simulação são utilizados para gerar hipóteses que alicerceiam a elaboração de cenários prospectivos, pautando-se no referencial de Berger (1959) e Godet (2008). Por fim, tais cenários apresentam possíveis realidades futuras quanto à emergência de um setor produtivo mais sustentável, auxiliando no planejamento de empresas e governos. / With the disclosure of anthropogenic impacts on climate in recent years, there has been a growing debate about the incorporation of environmental issues on the corporate agenda. Although the environmental externalities of productive activity are known since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the processes of development and implementation of corporate sustainability strategies are still under development. The present work analyzes the dynamics of the diffusion of sustainability strategies on enterprise networks through models of complex social systems. Hence, we analyze three well known models: Ising (1925), Barabási-Albert (1999) and Ito and Kaneko (2002). This analysis underpins the creation of a specific model, which results are used to generate hypotheses that support the development of prospective scenarios, based on Berger (1959) and Godet (2008). Finally, these scenarios present possible future realities for the emergence of a sustainable productive sector, assisting in the planning of businesses and governments.
42

Redes Empresariais e Sustentabilidade: modelos baseados em agentes para análise da difusão de estratégias no ambiente competitivo / Business Networks and Sustainability: agent-based models for analysis of strategies diffusion in the competitive environment.

Fabricio Gava de Almeida Jorge 12 November 2014 (has links)
Com a divulgação dos efeitos antrópicos sobre o clima nos últimos anos, nota-se um adensamento no debate acerca da incorporação da temática socioambiental na agenda corporativa. Embora as externalidades ambientais da atividade produtiva sejam conhecidas desde o início da Revolução Industrial, os processos de elaboração e implementação de estratégias empresariais de sustentabilidade ainda é algo em desenvolvimento. O presente trabalho visa analisar a dinâmica da difusão de estratégias de sustentabilidade em redes empresariais através de modelos de sistemas sociais complexos. Para tanto, são analisados alguns modelos consolidados na literatura, como o modelo de Ising (1925), Barabási-Albert (1999) e Ito e Kaneko (2002). Tal análise subsidia a criação de um modelo específico, cujos resultados de sua simulação são utilizados para gerar hipóteses que alicerceiam a elaboração de cenários prospectivos, pautando-se no referencial de Berger (1959) e Godet (2008). Por fim, tais cenários apresentam possíveis realidades futuras quanto à emergência de um setor produtivo mais sustentável, auxiliando no planejamento de empresas e governos. / With the disclosure of anthropogenic impacts on climate in recent years, there has been a growing debate about the incorporation of environmental issues on the corporate agenda. Although the environmental externalities of productive activity are known since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the processes of development and implementation of corporate sustainability strategies are still under development. The present work analyzes the dynamics of the diffusion of sustainability strategies on enterprise networks through models of complex social systems. Hence, we analyze three well known models: Ising (1925), Barabási-Albert (1999) and Ito and Kaneko (2002). This analysis underpins the creation of a specific model, which results are used to generate hypotheses that support the development of prospective scenarios, based on Berger (1959) and Godet (2008). Finally, these scenarios present possible future realities for the emergence of a sustainable productive sector, assisting in the planning of businesses and governments.
43

Self-Organization of Dynein Motors Generates Meiotic Nuclear Oscillations

Tolic-Nørrelykke, Iva M., Vogel, Sven K., Pavin, Nenad, Maghelli, Nicola, Jülicher, Frank 05 November 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Meiotic nuclear oscillations in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe are crucial for proper chromosome pairing and recombination. We report a mechanism of these oscillations on the basis of collective behavior of dynein motors linking the cell cortex and dynamic microtubules that extend from the spindle pole body in opposite directions. By combining quantitative live cell imaging and laser ablation with a theoretical description, we show that dynein dynamically redistributes in the cell in response to load forces, resulting in more dynein attached to the leading than to the trailing microtubules. The redistribution of motors introduces an asymmetry of motor forces pulling in opposite directions, leading to the generation of oscillations. Our work provides the first direct in vivo observation of self-organized dynamic dynein distributions, which, owing to the intrinsic motor properties, generate regular large-scale movements in the cell.
44

Convexity, Concavity, and Human Agency in Large-scale Coastline Evolution

Ells, Kenneth Daniel January 2014 (has links)
<p>Coherent, large-scale shapes and patterns are evident in many landscapes, and evolve according to climate and hydrological forces. For large-scale, sandy coastlines, these shapes depend on wave climate forcing. The wave climate is influenced by storm patterns, which are expected to change with the warming climate, and the associated changes in coastline shape are likely to increase rates of shoreline change in many places. Humans have historically responded to coastline change by manipulating various coastal processes, consequently affecting long-term, large-scale coastline shape change. Especially in the context of changing climate forcing and increasing human presence on the coast, the interaction of the human and climate-driven components of large-scale coastline evolution are becoming increasingly intertwined. </p><p>This dissertation explores how climate shapes coastlines, and how the effects of humans altering the landscape interact with the effects of a changing climate. Because the coastline is a spatially extended, nonlinear system, I use a simple numerical modeling approach to gain a basic theoretical understanding of its dynamics, incorporating simplified representations of the human components of coastline change in a previously developed model for the physical system. </p><p>Chapter 1 addresses how local shoreline stabilization affects the large scale morphology of a cuspate-cape type of coastline, and associated large-scale patterns of shoreline change, in the context of changing wave climate, comparing two fundamentally different approaches to shoreline stabilization: beach nourishment (in which sediment is added to a coastline at a long-term rate that counteracts the background erosion), and hard structures (including seawalls and groynes). The results show that although both approaches have surprisingly long-range effects with spatially heterogeneous distributions, the pattern of shoreline changes attributable to a single local stabilization effort contrast greatly, with nourishment producing less erosion when the stabilization-related shoreline change is summed alongshore. </p><p>Chapter 2 presents new basic understanding of the dynamics that produce a contrasting coastline type: convex headland-spit systems. Results show that the coastline shapes and spatially-uniform erosion rates emerge from two way influences between the headland and spit components, and how these interactions are mediated by wave climate, and the alongshore scale of the system. Chapter 2 also shows that one type of wave-climate change (altering the proportion of `high-angle' waves) leads to changes in coastline shape, while another type (altering wave-climate asymmetry) tends to reorient a coastline while preserving its shape. </p><p>Chapter 3 builds on chapter 2, by adding the effects of human shoreline stabilization along such a convex coastline. Results show that in the context of increasing costs for stabilization, abandonment of shoreline stabilization at one location triggers a cascade of abandonments and associated coastline-shape changes, and that both the qualitative spatial patterns and alongshore speed of the propagating cascades depends on the relationship between patterns of economic heterogeneity and the asymmetry of the wave-climate change--although alterations to the proportion of high-angle waves in the climate only affects the time scales for coupled morphologic/economic cascades.</p> / Dissertation
45

Complexity of the big and small

Cejnarova, Andrea 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (Philosophy))--University of Stellenbosch, 2005. / It seems to be a priori impossible to formulate any general theory or model that encompasses all of the properties of complexity. So, one must make do with partial solutions. A possible approach we propose is to take inspiration from quantum theory, since there seems to be a strong analogy between complex systems and quantum systems. Although we do not propose any literal application of quantum mechanical formalism to complexity, we suggest that the language of quantum mechanics is already so well developed - and for a much wider spectrum of problems than most theories - that it can serve as a model for complexity theory. There are many problems common to both complex systems and quantum systems and we suggest that it might be useful to test the applicability of aspects of the “language” of quantum mechanics to a general complex system. What we suggest here is an interdisciplinary talk led between the natural sciences and philosophy, which we believe is the only way in which to deal with complexity “as such”.
46

Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems

Bottinelli, Arianna January 2016 (has links)
The emergence of collective patterns from repeated local interactions between individuals is a common feature to most living systems, spanning a variety of scales from cells to animals and humans. Subjects of this thesis are two aspects of emergent complexity in living systems: collective movement and transport network formation. For collective movement, this thesis studies the role of movement-mediated information transfer in fish decision-making. The second project on collective movement takes inspiration from granular media and soft mode analysis and develops a new approach to describe the emergence of collective phenomena from physical interactions in extremely dense crowds. As regards transport networks, this thesis proposes a model of network growth to extract simple, biologically plausible rules that reproduce topological properties of empirical ant trail networks.  In the second project on transport networks, this thesis starts from the simple rule of “connecting each new node to the closest one”, that describes ants building behavior, to study how balancing local building costs and global maintenance costs influences the growth and topological properties of transport networks. These projects are addressed through a modeling approach and with the aim of identifying minimal sets of basic mechanisms that are most likely responsible of large-scale complex patterns. Mathematical models are always based on empirical observations and are, when possible, compared to experimental data.
47

Weighted Networks: Applications from Power grid construction to crowd control

McAndrew, Thomas Charles 01 January 2017 (has links)
Since their discovery in the 1950's by Erdos and Renyi, network theory (the study of objects and their associations) has blossomed into a full-fledged branch of mathematics. Due to the network's flexibility, diverse scientific problems can be reformulated as networks and studied using a common set of tools. I define a network G = (V,E) composed of two parts: (i) the set of objects V, called nodes, and (ii) set of relationships (associations) E, called links, that connect objects in V. We can extend the classic network of nodes and links by describing the intensity of these associations with weights. More formally, weighted networks augment the classic network with a function f(e) from links to the real line, uncovering powerful ways to model real-world applications. This thesis studies new ways to construct robust micro powergrids, mine people's perceptions of causality on a social network, and proposes a new way to analyze crowdsourcing all in the context of the weighted network model. The current state of Earth's ecosystem and intensifying climate calls on scientists to find new ways to harvest clean affordable energy. A microgrid, or neighborhood-scale powergrid built using renewable energy sources attached to personal homes, suggest one way to ameliorate this energy crisis. We can study the stability (robustness) of such a small-scale system with weighted networks. A novel use of weighted networks and percolation theory guides the safe and efficient construction of power lines (links, E) connecting a small set of houses (nodes, V) to one another and weights each power line by the distance between houses. This new look at the robustness of microgrid structures calls into question the efficacy of the traditional utility. The next study uses the twitter social network to compare and contrast causal language from everyday conversation. Collecting a set of 1 million tweets, we find a set of words (unigrams), parts of speech, named entities, and sentiment signal the use of informal causal language. Breaking a problem difficult for a computer to solve into many parts and distributing these tasks to a group of humans to solve is called Crowdsourcing. My final project asks volunteers to 'reply' to questions asked of them and 'supply' novel questions for others to answer. I model this 'reply and supply' framework as a dynamic weighted network, proposing new theories about this network's behavior and how to steer it toward worthy goals. This thesis demonstrates novel uses of, enhances the current scientific literature on, and presents novel methodology for, weighted networks.
48

Architecture Agent pour la modélisation et simulation de systèmes complexes multidynamiques : une approche multi-comportementale basée sur le pattern "Agent MVC" / Agent Architecture for modelling and simulation of multidynamical complex systems : a multibehaviors approach based on the "Agent MVC" pattern

Gangat, Yasine 27 August 2013 (has links)
La co-construction et la réutilisation de modèles font l'objet de plusieurs travaux dans le domaine de la simulation. Cependant, dans le domaine plus spécifique de la Simulation Orientée Agent (SOA), nous pouvons constater un manque sur ces deux points malgré un besoin fort de la part des thématiciens. 
La co-construction est essentielle pour optimiser la mise en commun du savoir de différents experts, mais nous faisons souvent face à des divergences de points de vue. Les méthodologies existantes pour la co-construction en SOA ne permettent qu'un faible niveau de collaboration entre thématiciens durant la phase initiale de modélisation, ainsi qu'entre les des thématiciens avec les modélisateurs ou les modélisateurs-informaticiens... Pour faciliter cette co-construction, nous proposons de suivre une méthodologie de conception favorisant cette collaboration. 
La réutilisation de modèle octroie un gain de temps significatif, une amélioration du modèle et l'apport de nouvelle connaissance. Les méthodologies en SOA dans ce domaine existent. Cependant, dans le spectre de réutilisation, elles sont souvent limitées au niveau du modèle complet ou de l'agent avec l'impossibilité de "descendre" plus bas. 
L'expérience de EDMMAS, un cas concret d'un modèle issu de trois réutilisations successives, nous a permis de constater une nouvelle complexité qui découle de la démultiplication des comportements des agents et crée un décalage conséquent entre le modèle opérationnel et le modèle conceptuel. Notre objectif est de promouvoir la réutilisation aussi bien des modèles, que des agents et de leurs comportements.Pour répondre à ces questionnements, nous proposons dans ce manuscrit une manière de codifier et d'intégrer la connaissance provenant de disciplines différentes dans le modèle, tout en utilisant des modules "composables" qui facilitent la réutilisation. Nous proposons (i) une nouvelle architecture Agent (aMVC), appliquée dans un cadre multidynamique (DOM), avec l'appui (ii) d'une approche méthodologique (MMC) basée sur la décomposition et réutilisation des comportements. 
Cet ensemble de propositions, (i) et (ii), permet de conduire un projet pluridisciplinaire de SOA avec un grand nombre d'acteurs, facilitant la co-construction des modèles grâce à l'instauration de nouvelles synergies entre les différents acteurs participant à la modélisation. Les concepteurs pourront travailler de manière autonome sur leur dynamique et la plateforme fera l'intégration de ces dernières en assurant la cohésion et la robustesse du système. Nos contributions offrent la capacité de créer les briques élémentaires du système de manière indépendante, de les associer et de les combiner pour former des agents, selon des dynamiques conformément à l'approche DOM. Elles permettent ainsi de comparer la logique selon différentes possibilités pour une même dynamique et d'ouvrir la perspective d'étudier un grand nombre d'alternatives de modélisation d'un même système complexe, et de les analyser ensuite à une échelle très fine. / Co-building and reuse of models are at the center of several studies in the field of simulation. However, in the more specific field ofMulti-Agent Based Simulation (MABS), there is a lack of methodology to resolve these two issues, despite a strong need by experts.Model co-building is essential to optimize knowledge sharing amongst different experts, but we often face divergent viewpoints. Existing methodologies for the MABS co-building allow only a low level of collaboration among experts during the initial phase of modeling, and between domain experts with modelers or computer scientists... In order to help this co-building, we propose and follow a methodology to facilitate this collaboration. Model reuse can provide significant time savings, improve models’ quality and offer new knowledge. Some MABS methodologies in this area exist. However, in the spectrum of reuse, they are often limited to a full model’s reuse or agent’s reuse with the impossibility of reusing smaller parts such as behaviors. The EDMMAS experiment was a concrete case of three successive model reuses. It allowed us to observe new complexity arising from the increase of agents’ behaviors. This creates a gap between operational model and conceptual model.Our goal is to promote the reuse of models, agents and their behaviors.To answer these questions, we propose in this thesis a new way to codify and integrate knowledge from different disciplines in the model, while using "composable"modules that facilitate reuse.We propose (i) a new agent architecture (aMVC), applied to a multidynamical approach (DOM), with the support (ii) of a methodology (MMC) based on the decompositionand reuse of behaviors.Proposals (i) and (ii) allow us to lead a multidisciplinary MABS project with a large number of actors, helping the co-building of models through the introduction of synergies among the different actors involved in the modeling. They can work independently on their dynamics and the platformwill integrate those, ensuring cohesion and robustness of the system. Our contributions include the ability to create the building blocks of the system independently, associate and combine them to formagents. This allows us to compare possibilities for the same dynamic and open the prospect of studyingmany alternate models of the same complex system, and then analyze at a very fine scale.
49

Spectral and wave function statistics in quantum digraphs

Megaides, Rodrigo January 2012 (has links)
Spectral and wave function statistics of the quantum directed graph, QdG, are studied. The crucial feature of this model is that the direction of a bond (arc) corresponds to the direction of the waves propagating along it. We pay special attention to the full Neumann digraph, FNdG, which consists of pairs of antiparallel arcs between every node, and differs from the full Neumann graph, FNG, in that the two arcs have two incommensurate lengths. The spectral statistics of the FNG (with incommensurate bond lengths) is believed to be universal, i.e. to agree with that of the random matrix theory, RMT, in the limit of large graph size. However, the standard perturbative treatment of the field theoretical representation of the 2-point correlation function [1, 2] for a FNG, does not account for this behaviour. The nearest-neighbor spacing distribution of the closely related FNdG is studied numerically. An original, efficient algorithm for the generation of the spectrum of large graphs allows for the observation that the distribution approaches indeed universality at increasing graph size (although the convergence cannot be ascertained), in particular "level repulsion" is confirmed. The numerical technique employs a new secular equation which generalizes the analogous object known for undirected graphs [3, 4], and is based on an adaptation to digraphs of the idea of wave function continuity. In view of the contradiction between the field theory [2] and the strong indications of universality, a non-perturbative approach to analysing the universal limit is presented. The substitution of the FNG by the FNdG results in a field theory with fewer degrees of freedom. Despite this simplification, the attempt is inconclusive. Possible applications of this approach are suggested. Regarding the wave function statistics, a field theoretical representation for the spectral average of the wave intensity on an fixed arc is derived and studied in the universal limit. The procedure originates from the study of wave function statistics on disordered metallic grains [5] and is used in conjunction with the field theory approach pioneered in [2].
50

Leis de escala aplicadas para os municípios brasileiros. / Scaling laws applied to brazilian municipalities.

Daniel, Marcelo Nakano 14 February 2019 (has links)
Leis de escala aplicadas a cidades ja foram identificadas para diversos contextos ao redor do mundo e sua validade defendida por diversos autores. A invariância em escala e as relações de crescimento superlinear, linear e sublinear foram observadas considerando-se a relac~ao entre diversos indicadores (sociais, econômicos, infraestrutura) e o tamanho das cidades. Nesta pesquisa foi avaliada a aplicação das leis de escala para as cidades brasileiras em relação a 14 indicadores dos Censos do Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE) que se alinham com indicadores da Norma ISO 37120:2017. As leis de escala foram avaliadas para esses indicadores em relac~ao ao tamanho populacional das cidades brasileiras por meio do levantamento e processamento dos dados disponíveis. Não foi possível confirmar a generalidade da aplicação dessas leis, sendo apontadas as suas limitações. / Scaling laws applied to cities have already been identied for diverse contexts around the world and their validity defended by several authors. The scale invariance and the superlinear, linear and sublinear growth behaviors were observed considering the relationship between several indicators (social, economic, infrastructure) and the size of the cities. This research evaluated the applicability of the scaling laws for Brazilian cities relative to 14 indicators from Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE) Censuses that are aligned with indicators proposed by ISO 37120: 2017 norm. The scaling laws were evaluated for these indicators in relation to the population size of Brazilian cities through the collection and processing of available data. It was not possible to conrm the generality of the application of these laws, and their limitations were pointed out.

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