• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 118
  • 26
  • 15
  • 14
  • 7
  • 6
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 296
  • 48
  • 28
  • 28
  • 26
  • 25
  • 24
  • 23
  • 23
  • 21
  • 19
  • 18
  • 17
  • 16
  • 16
  • 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.
61

Social Implications of Adolescent Text Messaging

Tulane, Sarah S. 01 May 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to pursue an understanding of social impacts of text messaging on adolescents. Mixed methodologies were used to gain an understanding of the social impacts of text messaging for adolescents. A sample (N = 218) of high school students was used to examine texting behaviors and practices, face-to-face communication preferences, and adolescent opinions about the use of text messaging in common social situations. Texting behaviors and perceptions were related. Adolescents indicated they pretend to text in social situations for various reasons. For some, texting was an avoidance technique of self and others, others pretended to text to maintain a positive appearance in social situations, and for others pretending to text provided a sense of security. Hierarchical multiple regression was used to examine face-to-face communication in relation to texting behaviors and texting perceptions. Overall, texting behaviors and texting perceptions contributed to face-to-face communication. Finally, adolescents explained their perceptions of adult misconceptions of adolescent text messaging. They felt that adults have misconceptions about motivations and practices associated with text messaging, misconceptions concerning message content, and misconceptions about developmental impacts. There were also some participants who felt adults have accurate perceptions of adolescent texting.
62

The Intersection of Multiple Oppressed Identities Implications For Identity Development

Enno, Angela Marie 01 May 2012 (has links)
Multicultural theorists argue that foundational theories of identity development fail to capture the experiences of ethnic and sexual minorities. Likewise, models of ethnic and sexual identity, separately, may not capture experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning (LGBTQ) ethnic minorities. Intersectional models have been proposed that consider the interaction of identity statuses in their real-world context. However, more empirical support for such models is needed. This study represents a preliminary investigation into patterns of identification, values, attitudes, behaviors, and sense of belonging of these LGBTQ ethnic minorities. The patterns that emerged were varied and complex. Demographic questions were structured in a way that allowed participants to describe with complexity their identities, and the intersections among them. Four distinct groups were identified using Q-sort methodology. Both commonalities and important group differences emerged.
63

Economic Implications of Phenologically Timed Irrigation in Corn Production

Gowon, Dawuda Tsalhatu 01 May 1979 (has links)
Corn production data was fitted into a Translog production function. Analysis of the resultant equation was based on what impact irrigation keyed to the crop's phenology would have on yield. A crop product cost function was developed to determine if there is profit (loss) in adapting water application to corn by phenological time period. Reasons for not adapting phenology as a key variable in irrigation include institutional constraints. Without modifying these institutional constrains, adopting the proposed technology may prove prohibitive.
64

Mining Multinode Constraints and Complex Boolean Expressions for Sequential Equivalence Checking

Goel, Neha 13 August 2010 (has links)
Integrated circuit design has progressed significantly over the last few decades. This increasing complexity of hardware systems poses several challenges to the digital hardware verification. Functional verification has become the most expensive and time-consuming task in the overall product development cycle. Almost 70\% of the total verification time is being consumed by design verification and it is projected to worsen further. One of the reasons for this complexity is the synthesis and optimization (automated as well as manual) techniques used to improve performance, area, delay, and other measures have made the final implementation of the design very different from the golden (reference) model. Determining the functional correctness between the reference and implementation using exhaustive simulation can almost always be infeasible. An alternative approach is to prove that the optimized design is functionally equivalent to the reference model, which is known to be functionally correct. The most widely used formal method to perform this process is equivalence checking. The success of combinational equivalence checking (CEC) has contributed to aggressive combinational logic synthesis and optimizations for circuits with millions of logic gates. However, without powerful sequential equivalence checking (SEC) techniques, the potential and extent of sequential optimization is quite limited. In other words, the success of SEC can unleash a plethora of aggressive sequential optimizations that can take circuit design to the next level. Currently, SEC remains extremely difficult compared to CEC, due to the huge search space of the problem. Sequential Equivalence Checking remains a challenging problem, in this thesis we address the problem using efficient learning techniques. The first approach is to mine missing multi-node patterns from the mining database, verify them and add those proved as true during the unbounded SEC framework. The second approach is to mine powerful and generalized Boolean relationships among flip-flops and internal signals in a sequential circuit using a data mining algorithm. In contrast to traditional learning methods, our mining algorithms can extract illegal state cubes and inductive invariants. These invariants can be arbitrary Boolean expressions and can help in pruning a large don't-care space for equivalence checking. The two approaches are complementary to each other in nature. One computes the subset of illegal states that cannot occur in the normal function mode and the other approach mines legal constraints that represent the characteristics of the miter circuit and can never be violated. These powerful relations, when added as new constraint clauses to the original formula, help to significantly increase the deductive power for the SAT engine, thereby pruning a larger portion of the search space. Likewise, the memory required and time taken to solve the SEC problem is alleviated. / Master of Science
65

Algorithms and Low Cost Architectures for Trace Buffer-Based Silicon Debug

Prabhakar, Sandesh 17 December 2009 (has links)
An effective silicon debug technique uses a trace buffer to monitor and capture a portion of the circuit response during its functional, post-silicon operation. Due to the limited space of the available trace buffer, selection of the critical trace signals plays an important role in both minimizing the number of signals traced and maximizing the observability/restorability of other untraced signals during post-silicon validation. In this thesis, a new method is proposed for trace buffer signal selection for the purpose of post-silicon debug. The selection is performed by favoring those signals with the most number of implications that are not implied by other signals. Then, based on the values of the traced signals during silicon debug, an algorithm which uses a SAT-based multi-node implication engine is introduced to restore the values of untraced signals across multiple time-frames. A new multiplexer-based trace signal interconnection scheme and a new heuristic for trace signal selection based on implication-based correlation are also described. By this approach, we can effectively trace twice as many signals with the same trace buffer width. A SAT-based greedy heuristic is also proposed to prune the selected trace signal list further to take into account those multi-node implications. A state restoration algorithm is developed for the multiplexer-based trace signal interconnection scheme. Experimental results show that the proposed approaches select the trace signals effectively, giving a high restoration percentage compared with other techniques. We finally propose a lossless compression technique to increase the capacity of the trace buffer. We propose real-time compression of the trace data using Frequency-Directed Run-Length (FDR) code. In addition, we also propose source transformation functions, namely difference vector computation, efficient ordering of trace flip-flops and alternate vector reversal that reduces the entropy of the trace data, making them more amenable for compression. The order of the trace flip-flops is computed off-chip using a probabilistic algorithm. The difference vector computation and alternate vector reversal are implemented on-chip and incurs negligible hardware overhead. Experimental results for sequential benchmark circuits shows that this method gives a better compression percentage compared to dictionary-based techniques and yields up to 3X improvement in the diagnostic capability. We also observe that the area overhead of the proposed approach is less compared to dictionary-based compression techniques. / Master of Science
66

Untestable Fault Identification Using Implications

Syal, Manan 12 December 2002 (has links)
Untestable faults in circuits are defects/faults for which there exists no test pattern that can either excite the fault or propagate the fault effect to an observable point, which could be either a Primary output (PO) or a scan flip-flop. The current state-of-the-art automatic test pattern generators (ATPGs) spend a lot of time in trying to generate a test sequence for the detection of untestable faults, before aborting on them, or identifying them as untestable, given enough time. Thus, it would be beneficial to quickly identify faults that are redundant/untestable, so that tools such as ATPG engines or fault simulators do not waste time targeting these faults. Our work focuses on the identification of untestable faults at low cost in terms of both memory and execution time. A powerful and memory efficient implication engine, which is used to identify the effect(s) of asserting logic values in a circuit, is used as the basic building block of our tool. Using the knowledge provided by this implication engine, we identify untestable faults using a fault independent, conflict based analysis. We evaluated our tool against several benchmark circuits (ISCAS '85, ISCAS '89 and ISCAS '93), and found that we could identify considerably more untestable faults in sequential circuits compared to similar conflict based algorithms which have been proposed earlier. / Master of Science
67

Reprodukční proces obyvatelstva v EU a jeho ekonomické a sociální dopady / Process of demographic reproduction of population in EU and its economical and social impacts

Chroboček, Jakub January 2012 (has links)
The main purpose of this thesis is to reveal the economic and social impacts of demographic development in European union. In chapter one basic demographic terms and theories which are connected to current and future situation in the area of development of natality, mortality and their result natural growth of population are described. In the second part of this thesis basic demographic data in areas of natality, mortality and growth of population are explored. Last chapter contains the information about projections of economic implication on the fiscal stability of government budget, implications for individuals and also social implications of current and future demographic development.
68

Cultural Integration in Organizational Partnership with Statutory and Quasi Implications

Emihe, Adeline Ukachi 01 January 2018 (has links)
The current academic literature is inadequate on the possibility of applying a typological model of effective cultural integration within the context of public-private partnerships, particularly when governments collaborate with multinational corporations. Using Schein's organizational cultural framework as the foundation, the purpose of this case study of a partnership between a West African government and a multinational petroleum corporation is to understand clearly how synergistic cultural integration coupled with statutory requirements could catalyze public-private partnership success. Data for this study came from interviews with American or Nigerian individuals who were familiar with the partnership in the West African country, a review of documents related to the partnership, and observational notes compiled during interviews. The Organizational Cultural Assessment Instrument inspired the interview questions. Data was coded and analyzed using a modification of Strauss and Corbin's 3-tiered analytic procedure. Key findings revealed the need for culturally based positive change dynamics to maximize evolving partnership growth and success. There were also indicators that an effective cultural integration synergistic typology would propel evolving competitive service delivery, efficient policy implementation, workforce motivation, economic and financial profitability, efficient communication channels and technological innovativeness, managerial and administrative expertise. The knowledge of organizational cultural integration dynamics is useful to academicians, public administrators, policy makers, and executives in structuring public and private partnerships in a culturally sensitive way for long-term organizational growth and success.
69

An analysis of financial implications of switching between crop production systems in Middle Swartland

Makhuvha, Mmbengeni Constance 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MScAgric)--Stellenbosch University, 2015. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Sustainability issues and the structural over-supply of wheat in the Western Cape since the middle 1990‟s have caused the introduction of alternative crop rotation systems in the Middle Swartland, a dry-land winter cereal production area of the Western Cape. Crop rotation systems typically consist of cereals and oilseed crops and pastures. Alternative crop rotations systems are currently scientifically evaluated at the Langgewens Experimental farm. Currently more than half the cultivated area in the Swartland is still under wheat production, a third of which is wheat monoculture. An issue regarding the adoption of such a crop rotation system is the cash flow and affordability of implementing such an alternative system. The goal of this study is to determine the cash-flow implications of a shift from wheat monoculture to a crop rotation system. Typical strategies available to producers to support such a shift are investigated. The complexity of farm systems as well as the interrelationships between crops within such a crop rotation system necessitates the implementation of a systems approach. A multi-period, whole-farm budget model was constructed to capture the interrelationships of the farm system and to express the financial performance thereof in standard profitability criteria. The farm model is based on a typical farm for the Middle Swartland. The model was used to determine the expected profitability of various crop rotation systems and to evaluate alternative strategies to accommodate the shift to alternative systems. The Langgewens crop rotation trial results are used to determine expected profitability of various crop rotation systems. A wheat-monoculture system serves as basis for the shift to alternative systems with the focus on the practical implications of such as shift. The profitability calculations show that various crop rotation systems are expected to be more profitable than wheat monoculture. The most profitable system is one year canola followed by three years of wheat, followed by a wheat/medic system with Dohne Merino sheep on the medic pastures. The shift from wheat monoculture is simulated by four scenarios. The first evaluated the financial implications of a shift form monoculture to the three year wheat and one year canola system. The second simulates a shift from monoculture to a wheat/medic system within two years and using own funds. The third scenario simulate the same shift with own funding, but over a ten year period. The fourth is similar to the second, but borrowed money is used to fund the shift.Lower input costs and consistently higher yields results in higher expected gross margins for the crop rotation systems, especially with nitrogen fixing plants. The inclusion of medic and medic/clover pastures and alternative cash crops such as canola and lupins show a higher yield on investment than wheat monoculture. Insight into the factors that producers should consider was also generated by this study, concerning changes to crop rotation systems. These factors include; time period over which a shift is planned and the availability of financing options. It seems that a quicker shift, using borrowed funds, is more profitable over the longer term. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Volhoubaarheidskwessies, en die strukturele ooraanbod van koring in die Wes-Kaap, het sedert die middel 1990‟s, gelei tot alternatiewe gewasproduksiestelsels in die Swartland, ʼn droëland wintergraanproduserende area van die Wes-Kaap. Gewasproduksiestelsels bestaan tipies uit graan- en oliesaad- en weidings gewasse. Alternatiewe gewas-wisselboustelsels word wetenskaplik gevalueer op die Langgewens proefplaas. Tans is meer as die helfte van die area in die Swartland steeds onder koring produksie, ʼn derde daarvan is koring monokultuur. ʼn Bekommernis rakende die aanneem van wisselboustelsels is die kontantvloei en bekostigbaarheid van die implementering van so ʼn alternatiewe stelsel. Die doel van hierdie studie is om te bepaal wat die kontantvloei implikasies van ʼn skuif van ʼn koringmonokultuurstelsel na ʼn wisselboustelsel is. Tipiese strategieë beskikbaar aan produsente om so skuif te finansier is ook ondersoek. Die kompleksiteit van boerderystelsels en die interverwantskap tussen gewasse in ʼn wisselboustelsel noodsaak die insluiting van ʼn stelselsbenadering. ʼn Multi-periode, geheelplaasbegrotingsmodel is ontwikkel om die interverwantskap van die boerdery te verenig en finansiële prestasie uit te druk in erkende winsgewendheid kriteria. Die boerderymodel is gebaseer op ʼn tipiese plaas vir die Middel-Swartland. Die model is gebruik om die winsgewendheid van verskillende wisselboustelsels te bepaal en om verskillende strategieë te assesseer wat die oorgang van wisselboustelsel kan akkommodeer. Die Langgewens wisselbouproefdata is gebruik om die winsgewendheid van verskillende wisselboustelsels te bepaal. „n Koringmonokultuurstelsel dien as basis vir die oorskakeling na alternatiewe wisselboustelsels, met die fokus op die praktiese implikasies van so ʼn skuif. Die winsgewendheid bepaling wys dat verskeie wisselboustelsels meer winsgewend is as koring monokultuur. Die mees belowende stelsels is een jaar canola gevolg deur drie jaar koring en ʼn koring/medic stelsel met Dohne Merino skape op die medic weidings. Die oorskakeling vanaf koring monokultuur is gesimuleer deur vier scenario‟s. Die eerste scenario evalueer die finansiële implikasie van ʼn skuif van koringmonokultuur na ʼn wisselboustelsel met een jaar canola. Die tweede scenario evalueer ʼn skuif na ʼn koring medic stelsel binne twee jaar met eie fondse. Die derde scenario simuleer dieselfde skuif maar oor ʼn tien jaar tydperk, met eie fondse. Die vierde scenario simuleer dieselfde skuif na koring/medics maar oor ʼn twee jaar periode met geleende fondse. Laer insetkoste en konstante hoër opbrengste lewer hoër brutomarges vir die wisselboustelsels, veral die met stikstofbindende weidingsgewasse. Die insluiting van medic en medic/klawer weidings en alternatiewe kontantgewasse soos canola en lupiene wys ʼn beter opbrengs op kapitaal investering in vergelyking met koringmonokultuur. Bykomende daartoe verskaf die resultate van die studie insig in die faktore wat graanprodusente behoort te oorweeg wanneer ʼn oorskakeling na alternatiewe wisselboustelsels oorweeg word. Die faktore sluit in, die tydperk waaroor die oorskakeling beoog word en die beskikbare finansieringsopsies. Dit blyk dat ʼn vinniger oorskakeling, selfs teen die koste van finansiering, oor die langtermyn meer winsgewend is.
70

Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma : analysis of the relationship between morphology and clinical features, based on a survey of 302 cases

Lenner, Per January 1980 (has links)
<p>Diss. (sammanfattning) Umeå : Umeå universitet, 1980 härtill 4 uppsatser</p> / digitalisering@umu

Page generated in 0.0834 seconds