• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 112
  • 20
  • 18
  • 17
  • 15
  • 9
  • 7
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 249
  • 52
  • 48
  • 40
  • 26
  • 20
  • 19
  • 18
  • 16
  • 16
  • 15
  • 15
  • 15
  • 14
  • 13
  • 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.
31

Keeping in Touch or Keeping Score? Social Comparisons on Facebook

Midgley, Claire Elizabeth 05 December 2013 (has links)
In face-to-face contexts, individuals typically make one social comparison per day and make more self-enhancing downward comparisons (to worse-off others) than potentially threatening upward comparisons (to better-off others). However, online social networks such as Facebook may be radically altering these standards. In two studies, I examined the frequency, direction, and impact of social comparisons on Facebook, and investigated potential moderating factors, including self-esteem. Participants reported making more upward than downward Facebook comparisons (Studies 1 and 2) and made an average of four comparisons in a 20-minute Facebook session (Study 2). Both low self-esteem and being motivated to log onto Facebook to get information with others predict making more comparisons on Facebook (Study 1) and participants with lower self-esteem may feel worse about themselves after making both upward and downward Facebook comparisons compared to their higher self-esteem peers (Study 2).
32

GENERATING RANDOM SHAPES FOR MONTE CARLO ACCURACY TESTING OF PAIRWISE COMPARISONS

Almowanes, Abdullah 08 October 2013 (has links)
This thesis shows highly encouraging results as the gain of accuracy reached 18.4% when the pairwise comparisons method was used instead of the direct method for comparing random shapes. The thesis describes a heuristic for generating random but nice shapes, called placated shapes. Random, but visually nice shapes, are often needed for cognitive experiments and processes. These shapes are produced by applying the Gaussian blur to randomly generated polygons. Afterwards, the threshold is set to transform pixels to black and white from di erent shades of gray. This transformation produces placated shapes for easier estimation of areas. Randomly generated placated shapes are used to perform the Monte Carlo method to test the accuracy of cognitive processes by using pairwise comparisons. An on-line questionnaire has been implemented and participants were asked to estimate the areas of ve shapes using a provided unit of measure. They were also asked to compare the shapes in pairs. Such Monte Carlo experiment has never been conducted for 2D case. The received results are of considerable importance.
33

Keeping in Touch or Keeping Score? Social Comparisons on Facebook

Midgley, Claire Elizabeth 05 December 2013 (has links)
In face-to-face contexts, individuals typically make one social comparison per day and make more self-enhancing downward comparisons (to worse-off others) than potentially threatening upward comparisons (to better-off others). However, online social networks such as Facebook may be radically altering these standards. In two studies, I examined the frequency, direction, and impact of social comparisons on Facebook, and investigated potential moderating factors, including self-esteem. Participants reported making more upward than downward Facebook comparisons (Studies 1 and 2) and made an average of four comparisons in a 20-minute Facebook session (Study 2). Both low self-esteem and being motivated to log onto Facebook to get information with others predict making more comparisons on Facebook (Study 1) and participants with lower self-esteem may feel worse about themselves after making both upward and downward Facebook comparisons compared to their higher self-esteem peers (Study 2).
34

Differences in behaviour and in forelimb cortical neurons of two rat strains following reach-training

McVagh, John R. 14 September 2006 (has links)
The brain undergoes structural changes in response to new experiences like learning a new skill. Skilled motor movements depend greatly on the primary motor cortex for their execution. Recent studies describe rat strain differences in motor performance related to differential synaptic efficacy in the motor cortex of rats. Previous studies identified differences in motor performance related to differential dendritic morphology and strain related differences in synaptic function in the motor cortex. Strain differences are one way of investigating anatomical organization and behaviour of the motor system. The object of this research was to examine strain related differences in dendritic morphology in layer II / III pyramidal cells of the forelimb area of the sensory motor cortex in both Long-Evans and Fischer 344 rats after reach training. This research also examined whether changes in reaching behaviour could be attributed to changes in dendritic morphology. Rats were trained once a day for 30 days to reach for a food pellet through a slot in a reaching box. Pyramidal cells in the motor sensory forelimb (MSF) cortex were stained with the Golgi Cox method. Subsequent analysis of Sholl and branch order data of cell drawings determined that there were no significant differences in any measure of dendritic length or dendritic length at branch order 3, 4, 5 of pyramidal cells in layer II/III of the MSF cortex between the Long Evans and Fischer 344 rat strain. The only significant strain related difference was that the Fischer 344 strain exhibited fewer reaches for each food pellet obtained, demonstrating greater reaching proficiency than similarly trained Long-Evans rats. These findings suggest that further research examining strain comparisons is required to understand the neural mechanisms underlying the differences in motor behaviour observed in these rat strains.
35

Differences in behaviour and in forelimb cortical neurons of two rat strains following reach-training

McVagh, John R. 14 September 2006 (has links)
The brain undergoes structural changes in response to new experiences like learning a new skill. Skilled motor movements depend greatly on the primary motor cortex for their execution. Recent studies describe rat strain differences in motor performance related to differential synaptic efficacy in the motor cortex of rats. Previous studies identified differences in motor performance related to differential dendritic morphology and strain related differences in synaptic function in the motor cortex. Strain differences are one way of investigating anatomical organization and behaviour of the motor system. The object of this research was to examine strain related differences in dendritic morphology in layer II / III pyramidal cells of the forelimb area of the sensory motor cortex in both Long-Evans and Fischer 344 rats after reach training. This research also examined whether changes in reaching behaviour could be attributed to changes in dendritic morphology. Rats were trained once a day for 30 days to reach for a food pellet through a slot in a reaching box. Pyramidal cells in the motor sensory forelimb (MSF) cortex were stained with the Golgi Cox method. Subsequent analysis of Sholl and branch order data of cell drawings determined that there were no significant differences in any measure of dendritic length or dendritic length at branch order 3, 4, 5 of pyramidal cells in layer II/III of the MSF cortex between the Long Evans and Fischer 344 rat strain. The only significant strain related difference was that the Fischer 344 strain exhibited fewer reaches for each food pellet obtained, demonstrating greater reaching proficiency than similarly trained Long-Evans rats. These findings suggest that further research examining strain comparisons is required to understand the neural mechanisms underlying the differences in motor behaviour observed in these rat strains.
36

The algebraic foundations of ranking theory

Wei, Teh-Hsing January 1952 (has links)
No description available.
37

Decrescendo Vocalizations Of Female Mallards And Mimicry By Duck Callers

Callicutt, James Thomas 01 May 2010 (has links)
Female mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) exhibit diverse vocalizations. Duck hunters mimic these vocalizations using artificial calls made from hardwoods or plastics. Hardness of these calls and extent to which humans can mimic live mallards using an artificial call were unknown before this study. I compared hardness of 7 species of hardwoods and cast acrylic and found acrylic, cocobolo (Dalbergia retusa), bocote (Cordia alliodora), osage orange (Maclura pomifera), and pecan (Carya sp.) were the hardest materials tested. I also compared acoustic metrics of field recordings of vocalizing female mallards to those of experienced duck callers using calls of these materials equipped with single or double reeds. I found that cocobolo, osage orange, pecan, acrylic, and bocote calls with double reeds were acoustically most similar to female mallards. I recommend that duck call manufacturers use acrylics and harder wood species with single or double reeds, recognizing that double reed calls generally performed superior in this study.
38

Development of a Standardized Method for Comparing Biomechanical Properties of Various Sternal Closure Techniques

Hawit, Ramzi P 01 March 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Background: 33.6% of all deaths in America are caused by cardiovascular disease. An estimated 82.6 million adults (>1 in 3) in America have some form of cardiovascular disease. There were over 400,000 bypass surgeries requiring open-heart surgery. Sternal dehiscence is associated with a morbidity rate of over 47% if mediastinitis supervenes. A rigid closure is required to avoid healing complications, and wire, plates, and bands are all used in an attempt to make a better closure. The purpose of this study it to compare multiple closures and validate a new testing method. Methods: Polyurethane foam blocks will be used, as an alternative to cadavers, to provide homogeneous samples to test and compare multiple closure techniques. Each closure was performed by an engineer after instruction from a cardiothoracic surgeon and the SternaLock plate manufacturers. Seven different closure techniques (single suture, double suture, figure-eight suture, Robicsek weave, Sternalock Silver, Sternalock Blu, and Sternalock Wide Ladder) were compared in both lateral distraction and longitudinal shear. Statistical analysis was used to show the differences in stiffness, yield force, failure force, and yield displacement of each closure method. Results: Under lateral distraction, double wire closure showed the greatest stiffness followed by the Sternalock plates. The Sternalock plates had the greatest failure and yield forces, whereas the double wire performed significantly poorer. The longitudinal testing revealed that the wires provide no resistance to the shearing forces on the sternum, but the screws for plates can allow for multidirectional loading. Conclusions: Overall Sternalock plates are less likely to fail in all directions compared to wired closures. Even though double wire closures displayed a higher average lateral stiffness, the high stress concentrations created by wires allowed for easy foam cutting and much lower yield force and failure force. Testing using foam blocks as sternal analogues produces highly reproducible results, with less variance than cadaveric tests.
39

Estimating the Proportion of True Null Hypotheses in Multiple Testing Problems

Oyeniran, Oluyemi 18 July 2016 (has links)
No description available.
40

Regulatory Fit of Social Comparison Information: Similarity versus Dissimilarity to Health Role Models

Aspiras, Olivia G. January 2016 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0608 seconds