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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.
191

A Secure Gateway Localization and Communication System for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks

Wang, Yan 22 April 2013 (has links)
Intelligent Transport System (ITS) has become a hot research topic over the past decades. ITS is a system that applies the following technologies to the whole transportation management system efficiently, including information technique, wireless communication, sensor networks, control technique, and computer engineering. ITS provides an accurate, real time and synthetically efficient transportation management system. Obviously, Vehicular Ad Hoc NETworks (VANETs) attract growing attention from both the research community and industry all over the world. This is because a large amount of applications are enabled by VANETs, such as safety related applications, traffic management, commercial applications and general applications. When connecting to the internet or communicating with different networks in order to access a variety of services using VANETs, drivers and passengers in different cars need to be able to exchange messages with gateways from their vehicles. A secure gateway discovery process is therefore critical, because vehicles should not be subject to security attacks while they are communicating; however, currently there is no existing protocol focusing on secure gateway discovery. In this thesis, we first analyze and compare current existing secure service discovery protocols and then we propose a Secure Gateway Localization and Communication System for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks (SEGAL), which concentrates on the security issue in gateway discovery. We focus on the authentication aspect by proposing secure cluster based VANETs, that can ensure the gateway discovery messages exchanged through secure clusters. We present the principle and specific process of our SEGAL protocol and analyze its performance to guarantee its outstanding practical applicability.
192

The Role of Colony Size in the Resistance and Tolerance of Scleractinian Corals to Bleaching Caused by Thermal Stress

Charpentier, Bernadette 25 February 2014 (has links)
In 2005 and 2010, high sea surface temperatures caused widespread coral bleaching on Jamaica’s north coast reefs. Three shallow (9m) reef sites were surveyed during each event to quantify the prevalence and intensity of coral bleaching. In October 2005, 29-57% of the colonies surveyed were bleached. By April 2006, 10% of the corals remained pale/partially bleached. Similarly, in October 2010, 23-51% of corals surveyed at the same sites were bleached. By April 2011, 12% of the colonies remained pale/partially bleached. Follow-up surveys revealed low coral mortality following both events, with an overall mean of 4% partial colony mortality across all species and sites observed in April 2006, and 2% in April 2011. Mixed effects models were used to quantify the relationship between colony size and (a) bleaching intensity, and (b) bleaching related mortality among coral species. The bleaching intensity model explained 51% of the variance in the bleaching response observed during the two events. Of this 51%, fixed effects accounted for ~26% of the variance, 17% of which was attributed to species-specific susceptibility to bleaching , 5% to colony size, <1% colony morphology and 4% to the difference in bleaching intensity between the two events. The random factor (site) accounted for the remaining ~25% of the variance. The mortality model explained 16% of the variance in post bleaching mortality with fixed effects, including colony size, morphology and species explaining ~11% of the variance, and the random effect (site) explaining 5%. On average, there was a twofold difference in bleaching intensity between the smallest and the largest size classes. Modelling the relationship between colony level characteristics and site-specific environmental factors on coral species’ susceptibility to thermal stress can shed light on community level responses to future disturbances.
193

DRAP: A Decentralized Public Resourced Cloudlet for Ad-Hoc Networks

Agarwal, Radhika 07 March 2014 (has links)
Handheld devices are becoming increasingly common, and they have varied range of resources. Mobile Cloud Computing (MCC) allows resource constrained devices to offload computation and use storage capacities of more resourceful surrogate machines. This enables creation of new and interesting applications for all devices. We propose a scheme that constructs a high-performance de-centralized system by a group of volunteer mobile devices which come together to form a resourceful unit (cloudlet). The idea is to design a model to operate as a public-resource between mobile devices in close geographical proximity. This cloudlet can provide larger storage capability and can be used as a computational resource by other devices in the network. The system needs to watch the movement of the participating nodes and restructure the topology if some nodes that are providing support to the cloudlet fail or move out of the network. In this work, we discuss the need of the system, our goals and design issues in building a scalable and reconfigurable system. We achieve this by leveraging the concept of virtual dominating set to create an overlay in the broads of the network and distribute the responsibilities in hosting a cloudlet server. We propose an architecture for such a system and develop algorithms that are requited for its operation. We map the resources available in the network by first scoring each device individually, and then gathering these scores to determine suitable candidate cloudlet nodes. We have simulated cloudlet functionalities for several scenarios and show that our approach is viable alternative for many applications such as sharing GPS, crowd sourcing, natural language processing, etc.
194

Dynamic web service discovery

Pahlevan, Atousa 10 January 2013 (has links)
Existing methods used for service discovery assume that the world is static, con- sidering a predetermined set of attributes. As a result, current discovery techniques return many results that are irrelevant. Our approach to high quality service dis- covery improves the results’ relevancy by considering dynamic attributes with values changing over time. Using this approach, we reveal structure from the data to satisfy the consumers’ experiences. Web service quality is a set of dynamic attributes used to rank services with similar functionalities. When picking a service to execute financial transactions effi- ciently, we might consider availability, reliability, response time, and transaction cost as quality indicators. Supporting dynamic attributes is a feature critical to providing exceptional quality service discovery. In addition, effective service discovery requires detailed context models that describe both static and dynamic features. The context takes into consideration the situation of the service, the operating environment, the users’ circumstances, and their preferences. For instance, latency is an important issue in stock trading services with direct impact on revenue. One of the main challenges in enabling dynamic service discovery is developing techniques and models to handle the novel aspects of the web service paradigm. This challenge leads to a variety of research questions related to measuring, monitoring, or querying of dynamic attributes, while guaranteeing integrity and validity. We outline an architecture framework called Static Discovery Dynamic Selection (SDDS) to gather and manage dynamic attributes considering both context and do- main information at discovery time—augmenting static mechanisms. The architec- ture of SDDS defines individual components that collectively satisfy flexible and ac- curate service selection with a robust resource management approach capable of con- sidering high-frequency data. Moreover, we devised a multi-criteria decision making algorithm that considers the knowledge domain and the user context, and accordingly, the algorithm returns a small set of accurate and reliable results. As part of the SDDS framework, autonomic computing adds self-adaptability by taking highly dynamic context information into account. The impact of our method is demonstrated in an implementation of the model. We demonstrate that increasing the adaptability of the web service discovery by including context information provides a noticeable reduction in the number of results returned compared to static web service discovery methods. We extend the proposed infrastructure to ascertain whether a particular service satisfies, at execution time, specific security properties. We introduce the notion of certified web service assurance, characterizing how consumers of the service can specify the set of security properties that a service should satisfy. In addition, we illustrate a mechanism to re-check security properties when the execution context changes. To this end, we introduce the concept of a context-aware certificate and describe a dynamic, context-aware service discovery environment. / Graduate
195

The Discovery and Exploitation of Opportunities in the Dairy Industry

2015 February 1900 (has links)
The dairy industry has undergone a dynamic phase during the past two decades. Innovations in terms of technologies, processes, and products have changed the way the production of milk is done. This research takes an exploratory approach to look at the process of opportunity discovery within farm businesses and what firms in the dairy industry are doing to become more innovative. In addition, this research looks at the strategies farmers are using to successfully implement those innovations. An important factor that could affect the performance of a firm is the degree of which the firm is able to become aware of and exploit innovations that help bridge productivity and opportunity gaps. Data is collected through qualitative tools, including in-depth interviews of dairy producers from Saskatchewan, Canada and Aguascalientes, Mexico. Such data collection provides this research with specific insights into the process of opportunity discovery. It also indicates which managerial practices moderate the successful discovery and exploitation of business opportunities in the dairy industry. A theoretical framework was developed around four managerial factors; networking, human capital, market orientation and entrepreneurial orientation. Several propositions were built to identify the impact of these factors on the discovery and exploitation of opportunities in the dairy industry in both Canada and Mexico. This research shed more light on why some producers are more productive than others and how this is allowing some dairy producers to be more profitable. In addition, findings compare both industries and the differences and similarities are shown in terms of operations, managerial styles and processes in which the discovery and exploitation of opportunities take place.
196

The Role of the Dopamine D, Receptors in Cue-induced Reinstatement of Nicotine-seeking Behaviour

Khaled, Maram Ahmed Taha Mohamed 25 August 2011 (has links)
Dopamine D3 receptors (DRD3) are implicated in relapse to drugs. The current study investigated the role of DRD3 in cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine-seeking in rats. Rats were trained to lever-press for intravenous infusions of nicotine, associated with the illumination of a cue-light, under a fixed-ratio schedule of reinforcement. Following extinction of the behaviour, where lever pressing had no consequences, reinstatement testing was performed by reintroduction of the cues after systemic or local administration (into discrete brain areas) of the DRD3 selective antagonist SB277011-A. Systemic antagonism of DRD3 significantly attenuated cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine-seeking. The same effect was observed upon infusions of SB277011-A into the basolateral amygdala or the lateral habenula, but not the nucleus accumbens. The current findings implicate DRD3 in cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine, delineate some of the neural substrates underlying this role and support a potential for using selective DRD3 antagonists for the prevention of relapse to smoking.
197

The Role of the Dopamine D, Receptors in Cue-induced Reinstatement of Nicotine-seeking Behaviour

Khaled, Maram Ahmed Taha Mohamed 25 August 2011 (has links)
Dopamine D3 receptors (DRD3) are implicated in relapse to drugs. The current study investigated the role of DRD3 in cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine-seeking in rats. Rats were trained to lever-press for intravenous infusions of nicotine, associated with the illumination of a cue-light, under a fixed-ratio schedule of reinforcement. Following extinction of the behaviour, where lever pressing had no consequences, reinstatement testing was performed by reintroduction of the cues after systemic or local administration (into discrete brain areas) of the DRD3 selective antagonist SB277011-A. Systemic antagonism of DRD3 significantly attenuated cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine-seeking. The same effect was observed upon infusions of SB277011-A into the basolateral amygdala or the lateral habenula, but not the nucleus accumbens. The current findings implicate DRD3 in cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine, delineate some of the neural substrates underlying this role and support a potential for using selective DRD3 antagonists for the prevention of relapse to smoking.
198

Validation and Mechanism Studies of Novel Therapeutic Compounds Modulating Angiogenesis

Tat, Jennifer 17 July 2013 (has links)
Discovering novel compounds that stimulate or abrogate angiogenesis can lead to development of new therapeutic agents that may effectively treat diseases with pathological angiogenesis. The zebrafish model allows for a whole-organism approach to drug discovery. Advantages over other animal models include small embryo size, fecundity, rapid embryonic development, optical clarity and easy accessibility of the embryos. My goal is to validate the therapeutic efficacy and identify the molecular mechanisms of action of three compounds identified from our previous chemical genetic screens. Fenretinide promoted angiogenesis in zebrafish embryos but inhibited the angiogenesis-dependent process of fin regeneration. The pro-angiogenic effects of fenretinide appear secondary to the stimulation of somitogenesis. I3M potently inhibited angiogenesis and fin regeneration, and may act partially through the notch pathway. Lastly, I validated the anti-angiogenic effect of a novel compound DHM. Comprehensively, my studies support the utility of zebrafish as a versatile tool for anti-angiogenic drug discovery.
199

Validation and Mechanism Studies of Novel Therapeutic Compounds Modulating Angiogenesis

Tat, Jennifer 17 July 2013 (has links)
Discovering novel compounds that stimulate or abrogate angiogenesis can lead to development of new therapeutic agents that may effectively treat diseases with pathological angiogenesis. The zebrafish model allows for a whole-organism approach to drug discovery. Advantages over other animal models include small embryo size, fecundity, rapid embryonic development, optical clarity and easy accessibility of the embryos. My goal is to validate the therapeutic efficacy and identify the molecular mechanisms of action of three compounds identified from our previous chemical genetic screens. Fenretinide promoted angiogenesis in zebrafish embryos but inhibited the angiogenesis-dependent process of fin regeneration. The pro-angiogenic effects of fenretinide appear secondary to the stimulation of somitogenesis. I3M potently inhibited angiogenesis and fin regeneration, and may act partially through the notch pathway. Lastly, I validated the anti-angiogenic effect of a novel compound DHM. Comprehensively, my studies support the utility of zebrafish as a versatile tool for anti-angiogenic drug discovery.
200

Communication Algorithms for Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

Viqar, Saira 2012 August 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation we present deterministic algorithms for reliable and efficient communication in ad hoc networks. In the first part of this dissertation we give a specification for a reliable neighbor discovery layer for mobile ad hoc networks. We present two different algorithms that implement this layer with varying progress guarantees. In the second part of this dissertation we give an algorithm which allows nodes in a mobile wireless ad hoc network to communicate reliably and at the same time maintain local neighborhood information. In the last part of this dissertation we look at the distributed trigger counting problem in the wireless ad hoc network setting. We present a deterministic algorithm for this problem which is communication efficient in terms of the the maximum number of messages received by any processor in the system.

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