• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3878
  • 1081
  • 635
  • 517
  • 289
  • 174
  • 59
  • 58
  • 47
  • 46
  • 41
  • 39
  • 36
  • 32
  • 32
  • Tagged with
  • 8371
  • 2111
  • 1162
  • 1160
  • 1113
  • 923
  • 879
  • 723
  • 707
  • 646
  • 597
  • 468
  • 437
  • 432
  • 385
  • 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.
241

How's My Network - Incentives and Impediments of Home Network Measurements

Ritacco, Alan W. 17 December 2019 (has links)
Gathering meaningful information from Home Networking (HN) environments has presented researchers with measurement strategy challenges. A measurement platform is typically designed around the process of gathering data from a range of devices or usage statistics in a network that are specifically behind the HN firewall. HN studies require a fine balance between incentives and impediments to promote usage and minimize efforts for user participation with the focus on gathering robust datasets and results. In this dissertation we explore how to gather data from the HN Ecosystem (e.g. devices, apps, permissions, configurations) and feedback from HN users across a multitude of HN infrastructures, leveraging low impediment and low/high incentive methods to entice user participation. We look to understand the trade-offs of using a variety of approach types (e.g. Java Applet, Mobile app, survey) for data collections, user preferences, and how HN users react and make changes to the HN environment when presented with privacy/security concerns, norms of comparisons (e.g. comparisons to the local environment and to other HNs) and other HN results. We view that the HN Ecosystem is more than just “the network” as it also includes devices and apps within the HN. We have broken this dissertation down into the following three pillars of work to understand incentives and impediments of user participation and data collections. These pillars include: 1) preliminary work, as part of the How's My Network (HMN) measurement platform, a deployed signed Java applet that provided a user-centered network measurement platform to minimize user impediments for data collection, 2) a HN user survey on preference, comfort, and usability of HNs to understand incentives, and 3) the creation and deployment of a multi-faceted How's My Network Mobile app tool to gather and compare attributes and feedback with high incentives for user participation; as part of this flow we also include related approaches and background work. The HMN Java applet work demonstrated the viability of using a Web browser to obtain network performance data from HNs via a user-centric network measurement platform that minimizes impediments for user participation. The HMN HN survey work found that users prefer to leverage a Mobile app for HN data collections, and can be incentivized to participate in a HN study by providing attributes and characteristics of the HN Ecosystem. The HMN Mobile app was found to provide high incentives, with minimal impediments, for participation with focus on user Privacy and Security concerns. The HMN Mobile app work found that 84\% of users reported a change in perception of privacy and security, 32\% of users uninstalled apps, and 24\% revoked permissions in their HN. As a by-product of this work we found it was possible to gather sensitive information such as previously attached networks, installed apps and devices on the network. This information exposure to any installed app with minimal or no granted permissions is a potential privacy concern.
242

How's My Network - Incentives and Impediments of Home Network Measurements

Ritacco, Alan W 06 December 2019 (has links)
Gathering meaningful information from Home Networking (HN) environments has presented researchers with measurement strategy challenges. A measurement platform is typically designed around the process of gathering data from a range of devices or usage statistics in a network that are specifically behind the HN firewall. HN studies require a fine balance between incentives and impediments to promote usage and minimize efforts for user participation with the focus on gathering robust datasets and results. In this dissertation we explore how to gather data from the HN Ecosystem (e.g. devices, apps, permissions, configurations) and feedback from HN users across a multitude of HN infrastructures, leveraging low impediment and low/high incentive methods to entice user participation. We look to understand the trade-offs of using a variety of approach types (e.g. Java Applet, Mobile app, survey) for data collections, user preferences, and how HN users react and make changes to the HN environment when presented with privacy/security concerns, norms of comparisons (e.g. comparisons to the local environment and to other HNs) and other HN results. We view that the HN Ecosystem is more than just “the network” as it also includes devices and apps within the HN. We have broken this dissertation down into the following three pillars of work to understand incentives and impediments of user participation and data collections. These pillars include: 1) preliminary work, as part of the How's My Network (HMN) measurement platform, a deployed signed Java applet that provided a user-centered network measurement platform to minimize user impediments for data collection, 2) a HN user survey on preference, comfort, and usability of HNs to understand incentives, and 3) the creation and deployment of a multi-faceted How's My Network Mobile app tool to gather and compare attributes and feedback with high incentives for user participation; as part of this flow we also include related approaches and background work. The HMN Java applet work demonstrated the viability of using a Web browser to obtain network performance data from HNs via a user-centric network measurement platform that minimizes impediments for user participation. The HMN HN survey work found that users prefer to leverage a Mobile app for HN data collections, and can be incentivized to participate in a HN study by providing attributes and characteristics of the HN Ecosystem. The HMN Mobile app was found to provide high incentives, with minimal impediments, for participation with focus on user Privacy and Security concerns. The HMN Mobile app work found that 84\% of users reported a change in perception of privacy and security, 32\% of users uninstalled apps, and 24\% revoked permissions in their HN. As a by-product of this work we found it was possible to gather sensitive information such as previously attached networks, installed apps and devices on the network. This information exposure to any installed app with minimal or no granted permissions is a potential privacy concern.
243

Eating Patterns and Food Energy and Nutrient Intake of Old Order Amish in Holmes County, Ohio

Weale, Virginia W. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
244

Expectations regarding Marriage/Relationship, Children, and Work of Male and Female College Seniors

Cibrowski, Leona Mae January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
245

Flame-Retardant Sleepwear Fabric: Effect of Washer Type and Fabric Softener

Hutson, Patricie Marchelle January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
246

The Effect of the Internet Shopping Environment on Pleasure and Approach Responses of Apparel Shoppers

Kim, Hye-Jeong January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
247

Clothing conformity and fraternity men's attitudes toward current male fashion trends

Roth, R. Jane Rudy January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
248

Putting your best face forward: relationships between cosmetics use, self-esteem, body image, and self-perceived attractiveness

Keil, Lesley Claire January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
249

Evaluation of adolescent attitudes and knowledge toward nutrition, physical activity, self esteem, and body image

Kendle, Christine Burky January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
250

Sensory and objective evaluation of pancakes fortified with unfractionated distiller's spent grain

Matteson, Francine Jane January 1983 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0366 seconds