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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

Learning Within a Computer-Assisted Instructional Environment: Effects on Multiplication Math Fact Mastery and Self-Efficacy in Elementary-Age Students

Hanson, Loraine Jones 16 November 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The primary purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of basic multiplication mastery (0-12) and self-efficacy outcomes for elementary age students attempting to master multiplication facts in a Computer-Assisted Instructional (CAI) environment. Timez Attack (TA), a modern Internet based 3-D multiplication video game, was the computer program used in this study. Four third- and four fourth-grade classes of students at a public charter school received either 12 20-minute Teacher-Led Instructional (TLI), or TA multiplication practice sessions. Pre- and post Math Attitude Survey (MAS), timed multiplication tests, observations, and informal interviews were used to assess and compare TA and TLI's learning environments, performance, and self-efficacy outcomes. Both third- and fourth-grade TA students' level of multiplication mastery improved significantly after intervention. Results from the post-MAS also revealed significantly higher self-efficacy beliefs, and reduced nervousness in learning multiplication facts amongst some TA students. Statistical data analysis revealed no significant performance outcome differences between TLI and TA third-grade classes; however, post-test comparisons between fourth-grade TLI and TA students showed TA students significantly outperforming their comparison group counterparts by answering approximately 50% more problems in a given time and feeling significantly less nervous toward learning new multiplication math facts. The TA program's motivational, self-paced, and self-evaluative features seemed to produce a positive learning environment, which encouraged student learning. Educators should consider using CAI with features similar to TA's to improve students' academic performance and self-efficacy.
42

Automatic and Controlled Processing: Implications for Eating Behavior

Fürtjes, Sophia, King, Joseph A., Goeke, Caspar, Seidel, Maria, Goschke, Thomas, Horstmann, Annette, Ehrlich, Stefan 20 April 2023 (has links)
It is a widely held view that humans have control over their food choices and consumption. However, research also suggests that eating behavior is often triggered by contextual cues and guided by automaticities and habits. Interestingly, the dichotomy between automatic and controlled processing has recently been challenged, suggesting that they may be intertwined. In a large female sample (n = 567), we investigated the hypothesis that task-based and self-reported measures of automatic and controlled processing would interact and impact self-reported eating behavior. Results analyzed via structural equation modeling suggest that automatic, but not controlled processing, during a modified flanker task, including a context-specific proportion congruent (CSPC) manipulation, was inversely associated with self-reported self-control. The influence of self-control on unhealthy eating behavior (i.e., uncontrolled and emotional eating, heightened consumption of fat and sugar) was only indirect via habitual behavior, which itself had a strong direct impact. Unhealthy eating was further associated with real-life outcomes (e.g., body mass index (BMI)). Our findings suggest that eating behavior may indeed be guided primarily by automaticities and habits, whereas self-control might facilitate this association. Having self-control over eating might therefore be most effective by avoiding contextual cues eliciting undesired automatic behavior and establishing habits that serve long-term goals.
43

Automaticité dans le coeur ischémique : analyse de bifurcation d’un modèle mathématique de cellule ventriculaire humaine

Bouchard, Sylvain 04 1900 (has links)
L’ischémie aigüe (restriction de la perfusion suite à l’infarctus du myocarde) induit des changements majeurs des propriétés électrophysiologique du tissu ventriculaire. Dans la zone ischémique, on observe une augmentation du potassium extracellulaire qui provoque l’élévation du potentiel membranaire et induit un "courant de lésion" circulant entre la zone affectée et saine. Le manque d’oxygène modifie le métabolisme des cellules et diminue la production d’ATP, ce qui entraîne l’ouverture de canaux potassique ATP-dépendant. La tachycardie, la fibrillation ventriculaire et la mort subite sont des conséquences possibles de l’ischémie. Cependant les mécanismes responsables de ces complications ne sont pas clairement établis. La création de foyer ectopique (automaticité), constitue une hypothèse intéressante expliquant la création de ses arythmies. Nous étudions l’effet de l’ischémie sur l’automaticité à l’aide d’un modèle mathématique de la cellule ventriculaire humaine (Ten Tusscher, 2006) et d’une analyse exhaustive des bifurcations en fonction de trois paramètres : la concentration de potassium extracellulaire, le "courant de lésion" et l’ouverture de canaux potassiques ATP-dépendant. Dans ce modèle, nous trouvons que seule la présence du courant de lésion peut entrainer une activité automatique. Les changements de potassium extracellulaire et du courant potassique ATP-dépendant altèrent toutefois la structure de bifurcation. / Acute ischemia (restriction in blood supply to part of the heart which can result in myocardial infarction) induces major changes in the electrophysiological properties of the ventricular tissue. Extracellular potassium concentration increases in the ischemic zone, leading to an elevation of the resting membrane potential that creates an “injury current” between the infarcted and the healthy zone. In addition, the lack of oxygen impairs the metabolic activity of the myocytes and decreases ATP production, thereby affecting ATP-sensitive potassium channels. A frequent complication of myocardial infarction is tachycardia, fibrillation and sudden cardiac death, but the mechanisms underlying their initiation are still debated. One hypothesis is that these arrhythmias may be triggered by abnormal automaticity. We have investigated the effect of ischemia on myocyte automaticity by performing a comprehensive bifurcation analysi(fixed points, cycles and their stability) of a human ventricular myocyte model (Ten Tusscher, 2006) as a function of three ischemia-relevant parameters: extracellular potassium, injury current, and ATP-sensitive potassium current. In this single-cell model, we found that automatic activity was possible only in the presence of an injury current. Changes in extracellular potassium and ATP-sensitive potassium current significantly altered the bifurcation structure as a function of IS, including the occurrence of early-after-depolarization. The results provide a sound basis for studying higher-dimensional tissue structures representing an ischemic heart.
44

Automaticity in affective face processing

Rellecke, Julian 19 November 2012 (has links)
Emotionale Gesichtsausdrücke sind hochrelevante Reize für den Menschen. Es wurde daher angenommen, dass sie von evolutionär bedingten Mechanismen automatisch verarbeitet werden. Bis zu welchem Maße diese Verarbeitung tatsächlich automatisch verläuft ist noch immer kontrovers. Die vorliegende Arbeit schließt an diese Debatte an, indem sie eine spontane Tendenz aufzeigt vor allem bedrohlichen Gesichtsaudrücken vermehrt Verarbeitungsressourcen zuzuweisen, auch dann, wenn sie nur oberflächlich enkodiert werden und Emotionalität irrelevant für die gegebene Aufgabe ist (Studie 1 und 2). Diese Tendenz wurde bezüglich zweier Schlüsselkriterien von Automatizität untersucht, nämlich dem Intentionalitäts- (Studie 3) und dem Auslastungskriterium (Studie 4 und 5); diese nehmen an, dass automatische Verarbeitung unabhängig von der gegebenen Intention des Individuums, beziehungsweise konkurrierender Aufgabenanforderungen verläuft. Anhand ereigniskorrelierter Potenziale (EKPs) konnte gezeigt werden, dass verstärkte perzeptuelle Enkodierung emotionaler Gesichtsausdrücke weitgehend unabhängig von Intention auftrat, wohingegen verstärkte höhere kognitive Verarbeitung davon abhing, ob Reize vertieft verarbeitet wurden (Studie 3). Wurde die Kontrolle über die Gesichtsverarbeitung durch eine konkurrierende Aufgabe beeinträchtigt, während Emotionalität relevant war, so verstärkte dies emotionale Effekte auf der perzeptuellen und frühen, höheren kognitiven Ebene (Studie 4). Ähnliches konnte auch für die perzeptuelle Verarbeitung attraktiver Gesichter beobachtet werden (Studie 5). Hingegen war bei verminderter Kontrolle die verstärkte Enkodierung bedrohlicher Ausdrücke in späten kognitiven Verarbeitungsstufen unterdrückt. Die vorliegenden Befunde sprechen gegen eine Automatisierung affektiver Gesichtsverarbeitung und legen stattdessen nahe, dass biologisch vorbereitete Verarbeitungstendenzen durch aufgabenorientierte Kontrollmechanismen und ihr Zusammenspiel mit Intention moduliert werden. / Emotional facial expressions are highly relevant stimuli in humans. It has thus been suggested that they are processed automatically by evolutionarily in-built mechanisms. However, to which extent such processing in fact arises automatically is still controversial. The current work feeds into this debate by showing a tendency to spontaneously allocate increased processing capacity to emotional, especially threat-related expressions, even when processed merely superficially and emotionality is irrelevant to the task at hand (Study 1 and 2). This bias was further tested with regard to key criteria of automaticity; that is the intentionality (Study 3) and the load-insensitivity criterion (Study 4 and 5) assuming automatic processing to arise irrespective of intention of the individual, and concurrent task demands, respectively. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) revealed enhanced perceptual encoding of threat-related expressions to remain largely unaffected by intention. In contrast, at the higher cognitive level, enhanced encoding depended on whether stimuli were voluntarily processed more deeply (Study 3). However, when control over face processing was impaired by a concurrent task, while emotionality was deemed relevant, emotion effects were enhanced at both, the perceptual and early higher cognitive level (Study 4). Similar was observed for perceptual encoding of attractive faces (Study 5). In contrast, during late higher cognitive stages of in-depth face processing, enhanced encoding of threat was eliminated when control was reduced (Study 4). The present results speak against full automaticity in affective face processing but suggest that biologically prepared processing biases are modulated by task-oriented control mechanisms and their interplay with intention.
45

Automaticité dans le coeur ischémique : analyse de bifurcation d’un modèle mathématique de cellule ventriculaire humaine

Bouchard, Sylvain 04 1900 (has links)
L’ischémie aigüe (restriction de la perfusion suite à l’infarctus du myocarde) induit des changements majeurs des propriétés électrophysiologique du tissu ventriculaire. Dans la zone ischémique, on observe une augmentation du potassium extracellulaire qui provoque l’élévation du potentiel membranaire et induit un "courant de lésion" circulant entre la zone affectée et saine. Le manque d’oxygène modifie le métabolisme des cellules et diminue la production d’ATP, ce qui entraîne l’ouverture de canaux potassique ATP-dépendant. La tachycardie, la fibrillation ventriculaire et la mort subite sont des conséquences possibles de l’ischémie. Cependant les mécanismes responsables de ces complications ne sont pas clairement établis. La création de foyer ectopique (automaticité), constitue une hypothèse intéressante expliquant la création de ses arythmies. Nous étudions l’effet de l’ischémie sur l’automaticité à l’aide d’un modèle mathématique de la cellule ventriculaire humaine (Ten Tusscher, 2006) et d’une analyse exhaustive des bifurcations en fonction de trois paramètres : la concentration de potassium extracellulaire, le "courant de lésion" et l’ouverture de canaux potassiques ATP-dépendant. Dans ce modèle, nous trouvons que seule la présence du courant de lésion peut entrainer une activité automatique. Les changements de potassium extracellulaire et du courant potassique ATP-dépendant altèrent toutefois la structure de bifurcation. / Acute ischemia (restriction in blood supply to part of the heart which can result in myocardial infarction) induces major changes in the electrophysiological properties of the ventricular tissue. Extracellular potassium concentration increases in the ischemic zone, leading to an elevation of the resting membrane potential that creates an “injury current” between the infarcted and the healthy zone. In addition, the lack of oxygen impairs the metabolic activity of the myocytes and decreases ATP production, thereby affecting ATP-sensitive potassium channels. A frequent complication of myocardial infarction is tachycardia, fibrillation and sudden cardiac death, but the mechanisms underlying their initiation are still debated. One hypothesis is that these arrhythmias may be triggered by abnormal automaticity. We have investigated the effect of ischemia on myocyte automaticity by performing a comprehensive bifurcation analysi(fixed points, cycles and their stability) of a human ventricular myocyte model (Ten Tusscher, 2006) as a function of three ischemia-relevant parameters: extracellular potassium, injury current, and ATP-sensitive potassium current. In this single-cell model, we found that automatic activity was possible only in the presence of an injury current. Changes in extracellular potassium and ATP-sensitive potassium current significantly altered the bifurcation structure as a function of IS, including the occurrence of early-after-depolarization. The results provide a sound basis for studying higher-dimensional tissue structures representing an ischemic heart.
46

Automaticity in L2 learning: Correlation between vocabulary proficiency and response time in word recognition

Jonsson, Signe January 2016 (has links)
Automaticity (in this essay defined as short response time) and fluency in language use are closely connected to each other and some research has been conducted regarding some of the aspects involved. In fact, the notion of automaticity is still debated and many definitions and opinions on what automaticity is have been suggested (Andersson,1987, 1992, 1993, Logan, 1988, Segalowitz, 2010). One aspect that still needs more research is the correlation between vocabulary proficiency (a person’s knowledge about words and ability to use them correctly) and response time in word recognition. Therefore, the aim of this study has been to investigate this correlation using two different tests; one vocabulary size test (Paul Nation) and one lexical decision task (SuperLab) that measures both response time and accuracy. 23 Swedish students partaking in the English 7 course in upper secondary Swedish school were tested. The data were analyzed using a quantitative method where the average values and correlations from the test were used to compare the results. The correlations were calculated using Pearson’s Coefficient Correlations Calculator. The empirical study indicates that vocabulary proficiency is not strongly correlated with shorter response times in word recognition. Rather, the data indicate that L2 learners instead are sensitive to the frequency levels of the vocabulary. The accuracy (number of correct recognized words) and response times correlate with the frequency level of the tested words. This indicates that factors other than vocabulary proficiency are important for the ability to recognize words quickly.
47

Effects of conventionality and proficiency in metaphor processing : A response time study

Eriksson, Peter January 2013 (has links)
Some researchers that work with metaphor theory claim that metaphors and figurative language are understood and processed just as easily as literal language. However, as this thesis will explore in detail, other research indicates that such is not always the case. That is, if the category of metaphor is further subcategorized into conventional and non-conventional metaphor, the scope will change because of the fact that it is possible to argue that non-conventionalized metaphors require a more conscious path of processing. In order to explain this alternative path, there are two primary approaches to language processing worth introducing: implicit and explicit. These approaches vary in required attention and speed of processing. With regards to conscious effort, these approaches are rather similar to the way in which we process conventionalized and non-conventionalized metaphors. Conventional metaphors are processed more quickly and easily than non-conventional ones. Hence, the claim that all metaphors are similarly processed may not always be true. Furthermore, an individual’s level of proficiency presumably correlates with speed in language processing. However, if non-conventional metaphor requires a more deliberate path of processing, this thesis assumes that the processing of this type of metaphor will be relatively unaffected by proficiency level, thus causing informants to process them in similar manners. In this thesis, 24 non-native speakers (NNS), categorized into intermediate proficient and advanced proficient, and seven native speakers (NS) were tested with an RT-test on subjective metaphor comprehension. Results were compared using mean response times and standard deviations, as well as looking at correlations and coefficient of variation. The results showed a distinct difference in processing speed with conventional metaphors being processed significantly faster. Moreover, the findings indicate that conventional metaphor processing speed seems to be predicted by proficiency, whilst non-conventional processing speed is not. The RT differences remained relatively consistent in both conventional and non-conventional metaphor processing, but when taking correlations, variance and coefficient of variation into consideration, the findings indicate that these other factors help level out the differences in non-conventional metaphor processing in more subtle ways than simply by RT’s.
48

Proactive Mitigation of Deprecated API Version Usage : Utilizing continuous integration to automatically and proactively detect deprecated API version usage in microservice ecosystems

Nilsson, Eric January 2021 (has links)
The notion of change is one of the more pronounced challenges API developers face, since a change to published APIs means a change for its’ consumers. API Versioning is a commonly used strategy to mitigate the risks of changing APIs, however, the strategy introduces a possibility of having practically innumerable number of API versions published at once, all possibly used by different consumers, creating considerable overhead for API developers to manage. API Versioning and API version management are well-researched disciplines. Nevertheless, Yasmin et al. (2020) have identified a research gap in the support for API consumers to made aware of API deprecations in a proactive and automatic fashion. API Versioning in the context of microservices– which the literature seldom addresses– may serve as an interesting solution space for answering the call of Yasmin et al. (2020), due to the architecture’s strong ties to continuous integration– a practice concerned with automatically and proactively ensuring software quality. Concisely, this thesis is set out to answer Yasmin et al.’s (2020) call for research by utilizing the underexplored contextualization of microservices and continuous integration. Using a Design Science Research strategy, this thesis proposes a model detailing how deprecated RESTful web API version usage can be automatically and proactively detected in microservices using continuous integration. The model is subsequently proven to be instantiable via a proof of concept, designed for and situated at a national Swedish bank. Through a series of in-vitro simulations at the bank, the proof of concept is demonstrated to successfully being able to automatically and proactively detect deprecated RESTful web API version usage. An evaluation of the solution shows that the proof of concept– and by extent the model– fulfills the demarcated research objectives of automaticity, proactivity, generality, and autonomy. Thus, the proposed solution is determined to be both novel and useful, successfully answering the call of Yasmin et al. (2020) in the context of microservices and continuous integration.
49

Allowing Students to Have VOICES (Voluntary Options in Chemical Education Schedules) in General Chemistry I

Ford, Robyn Lynn 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation (a quasi-experimental design called a non-equivalent design group (NEDG)) was to determine if allowing students in a science majors general Chemistry I course the choice in establishing the due dates that their homework was due to the instructor would improve course averages. This study covered two semesters with a total of 288 students participating with n = 158 in the fall and n = 130 in the spring. The students self-selected the homework group, VOICES, that best fit his/her needs which included (1) the instructor's homework schedule, (2) a student-customized schedule or a schedule that followed the exam schedule, or (3) all homework due by the last class day prior to the final exam. Online homework was assigned and graded with individual assignment and homework average grades collected and analyzed. No statistically significant differences were found among the VOICES groups with respect to final course average. Other results of this study replicated findings in the literature; namely, that there is a higher correlation between mathematics skills and course success. Course averages of students who had completed Calculus I or higher were statistically significantly higher than students with less completed mathematics coursework in all VOICES groups. Also, the percentage of successful students in the on-sequence semester (fall) was higher than the percentage of students in the off-sequence semester (spring). No differences were seen in any VOICES group's student demographics or high school chemistry preparation.
50

Factors influencing generalization and maintenance of cross-category imitation of Mandarin regional variants

Yan, Qingyang January 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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