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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.
131

Sexual dimorphism, resource partitioning and intraspecific aggression in Caprella californica Stimpson

Campbell, Ian D. 01 January 1979 (has links)
The Caprellidae are a specialized suborder of Amphipoda, which are highly modified for a semisessile life. Caprellids exhibit direct development and brood their young. The suborder is exclusively marine and commonly found on filamentous algae, sea grasses and fouling communities. Most published works on caprellids have been primarily concern~d with systematics (Caine, 1974; Dougherty, 1943; Laubitz, 1970, 1972; McCain, 1968, 1975), although a few recent studies have dealt with ecology and ethology (Bynum, 1978; Caine, 1977; Keith, 1969, 1971; Lewbel, 1978; Saunders, 1966). This study examines·spatial and temporal variations in distribution, abundance and population structure as well as describing intraspecific aggressive behavior of Caprella californica Stimpson. ~- californica is dioecious and has marked sexual dimorphism in both its size and secondary sex characteristics. It is found from San Diego to the South China Sea (Laubitz, 1970), and is the dominant caprellid in the Zostera marina beds of the local bays and is a major diet item for many of the eel grass associated fishes. There is a preponderance of females in the population as well as a size-specific distribution of the proportion of the sexes.
132

Quantifying competition in two co-occurring southern African psammophiinae snakes: Psammophis crucifer and psammophylax r. Rhombeatus

Tokota, Silindokuhle January 2020 (has links)
Magister Scientiae (Biodiversity and Conservation Biology) - MSc (Biodiv and Cons Biol) / Studies on snake competitive interactions have relatively been well documented globally, however, those examples tend to be dominated by non-African examples. Africa has a large and spectacular reptile diversity and yet robust and empirical studies on snake population ecology remain poorly understood or documented. Given the close phylogenetic relationship between the two species, as well as the remarkable similarities in overall appearance, morphology, reproductive biology, and most importantly geographic distribution, Psammophis crucifer and Psammophylax rhombeatus offered an ideal study system in which to ask questions related to interspecific competition and niche partitioning.
133

Partitioning oracle attacks against variants of AES-GCM and ChaCha20-Poly1305

Tordsson, Pontus January 2021 (has links)
We investigate so-called partitioning oracle attacks against AES-GCM and ChaCha20-Poly1305 along with some improvements. Such attacks against these two cryptosystems are efficient because they can be reduced to solving linear systems of equations over finite fields. We show, with some randomness assumptions, that such linear systems must have at least as many columns as rows. We have also chosen two finite (non-field) rings, as replacement for the respective fields used by AES-GCM and ChaCha20-Poly1305 for message authentication. These rings make the problem of linear system arrangement in a partitioning oracle attack extremely hard for large linear system dimensions.
134

Efficient Multi-Hop Connectivity Analysis in Urban Vehicular Networks

Hoque, Mohammad A., Hong, Xiaoyan, Dixon, Brandon 01 January 2014 (has links)
Vehicle to Vehicle (V2V) communication provides a flexible and real-time information dissemination mechanism through various applications of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS). Achieving seamless connectivity through multi-hop vehicular communication with sparse network is a challenging issue. In this paper, we have studied this multi-hop vehicular connectivity in an urban scenario using GPS traces obtained from San Francisco Yellow cabs. Our current work describes a new algorithm for the analysis of topological properties like connectivity and partitions for any kind of vehicular or mobile computing environment. The novel approach uses bitwise manipulation of sparse matrix with an efficient storage technique for determining multi-hop connectivity. The computation mechanism can be further scaled to parallel processing environment. The main contribution of this research is threefold. First, developing an efficient algorithm to quantify multi-hop connectivity with the aid of bitwise manipulation of sparse matrix. Second, investigating the time varying nature of multi-hop vehicular connectivity and dynamic network partitioning of the topology. Third, deriving a mathematical model for calculating message propagation rate in an urban environment.
135

Locomotory Adaptations in Entoptychine Gophers (Rodentia: Geomyidae) and the Mosaic Evolution of Fossoriality

Calede, Jonathan J.M., Samuels, Joshua X., Chen, Meng 01 June 2019 (has links)
Pocket gophers (family Geomyidae) are the dominant burrowing rodents in North America today. Their fossil record is also incredibly rich; in particular, entoptychine gophers, a diverse extinct subfamily of the Geomyidae, are known from countless teeth and jaws from Oligocene and Miocene-aged deposits of the western United States and Mexico. Their postcranial remains, however, are much rarer and little studied. Yet, they offer the opportunity to investigate the locomotion of fossil gophers, shed light on the evolution of fossoriality, and enable ecomorphological comparisons with contemporaneous rodents. We present herein a quantitative study of the cranial and postcranial remains of eight different species of entoptychine gophers as well as many contemporary rodent species. We find a range of burrowing capabilities within Entoptychinae, including semifossorial scratch-digging animals and fossorial taxa with cranial adaptations to burrowing. Our results suggest the repeated evolution of chisel-tooth digging across genera. Comparisons between entoptychine gophers and contemporaneous rodent taxa show little ecomorphological overlap and suggest that the succession of burrowing rodent taxa on the landscape may have had more to do with habitat partitioning than competition.
136

The Six Identities of Marketing: A Vector Quantization of Research Approaches

Franke, Nikolaus, Mazanec, Josef January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Purpose: This article provides an empirical identification of groups of marketing scholars who share common beliefs about the role of science and the logic of scientific discovery. Design: We use Topology Representing Network quantization to empirically identify classes of marketing researchers within a representative sample of marketing professors. Findings: We find six distinct classes of marketing scholars. They differ with regard to popularity (size) and productivity (levels of publication output). Comparing the sub-samples of German-speaking and US respondents shows cross-cultural differences. Value: The study enhances our understanding of the current scientific orientation(s) of marketing. It may help to motivate marketing scholars to ponder on their own positions and assist them in judging where they may belong. Future comparisons over time would give us indication about the future of the academic discipline of marketing.(author's abstract)
137

Environmental and Growth Rate Effects on Trace Element Incorporation to Calcite and Aragonite: An Experimental Study

Weremeichik, Jeremy M 07 May 2016 (has links)
The subsumed work of this dissertation is comprised of three independent but interrelated studies which seek to further the understanding of processes which govern the coprecipitation of trace elements with calcite and aragonite minerals. These studies investigate the effects of: 1) pressure on crystal morphology and trace element incorporation to aragonite; 2) growth rate on uranium partitioning between calcite and fluid; 3) aqueous Mg/Ca on the magnesium partitioning to low-magnesium calcite. The importance of this work is to determine how the environment of formation and growth rate influences the geochemistry of CaCO3 in order to improve existing paleoproxies and develop new ones. In the first study a series of experiments were conducted at 1, 25, 75, 100, and 345 bars of nitrogen – this range covers pressures at the oceanic floor. Aragonite precipitation was induced by the one-time addition of a Na2CO3 solution to an artificial seawater. Results suggest that oceanic floor pressures could affect the crystallization of CaCO3 by altering mineralogical composition and aragonite crystal size. In the second study calcite crystallized from NH4Cl-CaCl2-U solution by diffusion of CO2. The calcite growth rate was monitored by sequential spiking of the calcite-precipitating fluids with REE dopants. The resulting crystals were analyzed using Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS). Results showed that the partitioning of uranium increases with increasing growth rate. Growth entrapment model (GEM) and unified uptake kinetics model (UUKM) explain the obtained data.In the third study CaCO3 precipitated in NaCl solution by continuous addition of CaCl2, MgCl2, and either Na2CO3 or NaHCO3. The Mg/Ca of the fluid was adjusted in an attempt to produce calcite where Mg/Ca would match Mg/Ca in foraminifera shells. It was observed that multiple CaCO3 polymorphs precipitated from fluids at high pH (Na2CO3 doping experiments). This result underscores the potential control of pH and/or supersaturation state on CaCO3 polymorph precipitated from low Mg/Ca solutions. Calcite was the only mineral crystallized at low pH (NaHCO3 doping experiments). It was determined that Mg partition coefficient between calcite and fluid (KMg) negatively correlates with Mg/Ca(Fluid) when it exceeds 0.5 mol/mol; no systematic correlation was observed when 0.05< Mg/Ca(Fluid)<0.5 mol/mol.
138

Adaptive radiation and the evolution of resource specialization in experimental populations of Pseudomonas fluorescens

MacLean, Roderick Craig January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
139

Optimizing E-commerce Logistics: A Multi-Metric Approach to the Bin Packing Problem / Optimering av e-handelslogistik: Ett flermetriskt tillvägagångssätt till lådpackningsproblemet

Melkstam, Vilhelm, Magnusson, Anton January 2023 (has links)
The optimization of package selection in logistics, particularly within the realm of e-commerce, offers numerous potential advantages, such as a reduction in environmental impact and decreased costs. This thesis addresses the problem of allocating items to the minimum number of packages, known as the bin packing problem, by proposing various heuristics. We develop and assess heuristics for assigning products to groups, while heuristics for accommodating these groups within packages are derived from previous research. These heuristics are evaluated within a commercial context, taking into account factors such as delivery cost, environmental impact, and their applicability in real-time systems. Our findings indicate that optimal solutions for smaller orders can be ascertained within a reasonable timeframe, while even rudimentary heuristics yield satisfactory results. It was determined that a key attribute of an effective solution was lowering the number of packages used, as this correlates with reduced shipping costs and environmental impact.
140

Application of Convex Methods to Identification of Fuzzy Subpopulations

Eliason, Ryan Lee 10 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In large observational studies, data are often highly multivariate with many discrete and continuous variables measured on each observational unit. One often derives subpopulations to facilitate analysis. Traditional approaches suggest modeling such subpopulations with a compilation of interaction effects. However, when many interaction effects define each subpopulation, it becomes easier to model membership in a subpopulation rather than numerous interactions. In many cases, subjects are not complete members of a subpopulation but rather partial members of multiple subpopulations. Grade of Membership scores preserve the integrity of this partial membership. By generalizing an analytic chemistry concept related to chromatography-mass spectrometry, we obtain a method that can identify latent subpopulations and corresponding Grade of Membership scores for each observational unit.

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