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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.
21

The Least preferred co-worker scale as a predictor of leadership behavior in work settings

Streeter, Jenell Arlene 01 January 1990 (has links)
This study evaluates the construct validity of the Least Preferred Co-worker (LPC) Scale by testing the predictions made by the motivational hierarchy hypothesis. The respondents were one hundred fifty-nine supervisors and managers. The LPC determined leadership style as either relationship-oriented or task-oriented. Situational control was measured by the Leader-Member Relations scale, Task Structure scale, and Position Power scale. Consideration behavior, measured by the adapted LBDQ, reflected a need for interpersonal success. Initiation of structure behaviors, measured by the adapted LBDQ, reflected a need for task success. Two hypotheses were tested: (1) High LPC leaders in high control situations engage in more task-oriented behaviors than high LPC leaders in low control situations. Low LPC leaders' task-oriented behaviors are consistent across situational control. (2) Low LPC leaders in high control situations engage in more consideration behaviors than low LPC leaders in low control situations. High LPC leaders' consideration behaviors are consistent across situational control. The results of this study supplements previous research (Green, Nebeker & Boni, 1976; Michaelson, 1973) supportive of the motivational hierarchy inteipretation of the LPC. Hypothesis 1 was not supported. However, a significant interaction effect supported Hypothesis 2. Criticisms concerning the construct validity of the LPC, the motivational hierarchy inteipretation of the LPC, and the Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness are discussed. Several recommendations for future research are suggested.
22

March-type models for the description of texture in granular materials.

Sitepu, Husinsyah January 1998 (has links)
Texture in crystalline materials, i.e. preferred orientation (PO), is of interest in terms of texture-property relationships and also in X-ray diffraction science because PO can cause serious systematic errors in quantitative phase analysis using diffraction data. The single- parameter, pole-density distribution function (PDDF), proposed by March (1932) to represent PO in diffraction analysis, is used widely it Rietveld pattern-fitting following a suggestion by Dollase (1986). While the March model is an excellent descriptor of PO for gibbsite [AI(OH)3] x-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) data (O'Connor, Li and Sitepu, 1991), the model has proved to be deficient for Rietveld modelling with molybdite [Mo03], calcite [CaCO3] and kaolinite [A12O3.2SiO2.2H2O] XRPD data (Sitepu, 1991; O'Connor, Li and Sitepu, 1992; and Sitepu, O'Connor and Li, 1996). Therefore, the March model should not be regarded as a general-purpose PDDF descriptor.This study has examined the validity of the March model using XRPD and neutron powder diffraction (NPD) instruments operated, respectively, by the Curtin Materials Research Group in Perth and by the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation at the HIFAR reactor facility at Lucas Heights near Sydney. Extensive suites of XRPD and NPD data were measured for uniaxially-pressed powders of molybdite and calcite, for which the compression was systematically varied. It is clear from the various Rietveld refinements that the March model becomes increasingly unsatisfactory as the uniaxial pressure (and, therefore, the level of PO) increases.The March model has been tested with a physical relationship developed by the author which links the March r-parameter to the uniaxial pressure via the powder bulk modulus, B. The agreement between the results obtained from directly measured values of B and from Rietveld analysis with the March model are ++ / promising in terms of deducing the powder bulk modulus from the March r-parameter.An additional test of the March model was made with NPD data for specimens mounted, first, parallel to the instrument rotation axis and, then, normal to the axis. The results have provided some further indication that the March model is deficient for the materials considered in the study.During the course of the study, it was found that there are distinct differences between the direction of the near-surface texture in calcite, as measured by XRPD, and bulk texture characterised by NPD. The NPD-derived textures appear to be correct descriptions for the bulk material in uniaxially-pressed powders, whereas the XRPD textures are heavily influenced by the pressing procedure.An additional outcome of the NPD work has been the discovery, made jointly with Dr Brett Hunter of ANSTO, that the popular LHPM Rietveld code did not allow for inclusion of PO contributions from symmetry-equivalent reflections. Revision of the code by Dr Hunter showed that there is substantial bias in Rietveld-March r-parameters if these reflections are not factored correctly into the calculations.Finally, examination of pole-figure data has underlined the extent to which the March model oversimplifies the true distributions. It is concluded that spherical harmonics modelling should be used rather than the March model as a general PO modelling tool.
23

Perceived Brand Age and Its Influence on Choice

Guillory, Monica D. 20 December 2012 (has links)
Understanding brand age is potentially critical to a brand management program. When a brand begins to be perceived as older, even with the positive attributes aligned with the idea of traditional and established brands, consumers may begin to move away from the brand. This study defines the concepts of both perceived and preferred brand age. We look at how perceived brand age fits in with our current perspective on branding and can enrich our understanding of consumers’ personal preferences. As there is very little published work in the area of brand age three distinct set of studies were conducted in order to fully understand the meaning of brand age, explicate the construct and understand the antecedents and consequences. The first study involved a group of exploratory studies. The purpose of this initial group of conceptual studies was to explore current consumer understanding and interpretation of the concept of perceived brand age. These studies were used to inform and direct our subsequent research. Our second set of studies explicated the brand age concept. In the first project, we used a Likert scale designed to understand what cues consumers use to understand the age of a brand. The second project was a semantic differential research study to examine what specific characteristics are associated with younger brands, older brands or are neutral between the two. We also develop and test a model of consumer choice through the exploration of the relationship between perceived brand age and preferred brand age.
24

The Analysis of Ti Nano-Films Prepared by Ion Beam Deposition

Chang, Han-yun 21 July 2005 (has links)
Ti nano-films are deposited on a NaCl(001) single crystal substrate by ion beam sputtering from a Ti target, and then annealed. Ti crystallites on a NaCl(001) substrate with increase in the substrate temperature and annealing have the preferred orientation (1-101) and (0001).
25

A Study of the AlN Thin Film by Ion Beam Sputtering

Wu, Meng-feng 08 August 2005 (has links)
none
26

The Preparation and Phase Transformation of Nanometer Zirconia Thin Film by Ion Beam Sputtering Method

Yeh, Sung-wei 30 June 2006 (has links)
Nanocrystalline £\-Zr condensates deposited by ion beam sputtering on the NaCl (100) surfaces and then annealed at 100 ¢J to 750 ¢J in air. The phases present were identified by transmission electron microscopy to be nanometer-size £\-Zr+ZrO¡B£\-Zr+ZrO+c-ZrO2¡Bc-ZrO2¡Bc-+t-ZrO2¡Bt-ZrO2¡Band t-+m-ZrO2 phase assemblages with increasing annealing temperature. The zirconia showed strong {100} preferred orientation due to parallel epitaxy with NaCl (100) when annealed between 150 ¢J and 500 ¢J in air. The c- and t-zirconia condensates also showed (111)-specific coalescence among themselves. The c- and/or t-ZrO2 formation can be accounted for by the small grain size, the presence of low-valence Zr cation and the lateral constraint of the neighboring grains. (Part 1) Nanocrystalline £\-Zr condensates were deposited on the NaCl (100) plane at 25 to 450 ¢J by radio frequency ion beam sputtering from a pure 99.9¢H Zr disk. The nano condensates were identified by transmission electron microscopy to be quasiamorphous, £\-Zr, £\-Zr+ZrO and £\-Zr+ZrO+c-ZrO2 phase assemblages with increasing substrate temperature. At 400 ¢J and under 1-20 sccm oxygen, c- and t-ZrO2 nanocondensates were assembled on NaCl (100) as monolayer nanocrystalline material and showed strong preferred orientation. The c- and/or t-ZrO2 were retained by small grain size, low-valence Zr cation and 2-D matrix constraint of the film. (Part 2) Nanosized c- and t-ZrO2 were formed as monolayer nanocrystalline film on NaCl (100) plane by radio frequency ion beam sputtering. The microstructure and the epitaxy relationship with the NaCl (100) plane were studied by a high resolution transmission electron microscope. The epitaxy orientation was found to be [001]Z//[001]N, [100]Z//[1 0]N (group A), and [011]Z//[001]N, [100]Z//[100]N (group B) between zirconia (Z) and NaCl (N). Group B has two variants and is the dominant type. The possible causes for the epitaxy relationship are discussed. Crystallites within the same group can merge by rotation and coalesce into a single crystal, whereas crystallites in different groups can form high-angle grain boundaries. (Part 3) Special interfaces were formed for the c- and/or t-ZrO2 (Z) nano-crystals when deposited on the NaCl (N) (100) cleavage plane by ion beam sputtering to follow the epitaxy relationships of [001]Z//[001]N, (100)Z//(1 0)N (group A); and [011]Z//[001]N, (100)Z//(100)N (group B1) or (100)Z//(010)N (group B2). The nanoparticles in group A and B were impinged and coalesced to form {220}A/{200}B and {200}A/{111}B interfaces; with anchored dislocation whereas those in group B1 and B2 form {220}B1/{200}B2 interface. The {220}A/{200}B interface is found to be of especially low energy due to good match O2¡V lattice sites, and smoothly joints {200} and {220} planes across the interfaces without mismatch strain and dislocations. The special interfaces may shed light on the epitaxial mechanism of nanocrystalline materials in general. (Part 4)
27

The study of reproduction and temperature tolerance of Pomacea canaliculata and P. scalaris

Wu, Yu-ting 13 September 2006 (has links)
The distribution of apple snail Pomacea canaliculata are island-wide but Pomacea scalaris is only found in southern Taiwan. In order to gain more information on the not well-known alien invasive species, comparative studies on the reproduction and thermal tolerance of P. canaliculata and P. scalaris were conducted. Sexual dimorphism in shell morphology has been found in both species, with wider operculum in males. Positive correlation between shell length and penis sheath length or penis length has been observed in male P. canaliculata and P. scalaris, based on the samples collected during the period of December 2004 and March 2006, The width of penis sheath in P. canaliculata was greater than in P. scalaris. Positive correlation between shell length and the height and width of vestigial penis in female P. canaliculata and P. scalaris was also found. The width of vestigial penis in P. scalaris was greater than in P. canaliculata. Gonadosomatic index (GSI) in male P. canaliculata and P. scalaris was 68 and 60% and 31 and 33% in females. Their reproductive cycle was annual without seasonal peaks. Significant difference in thermopreferrenda was found between P. canaliculata and P. scalaris. The 24, 48 and 72-h lethal thermal minima temperatures in P. canaliculata and P. scalaris were similar, i.e. 9.8¡V11.8¢J. And, the 24, 48 and 72-h lethal thermal maxima temperatures were 33.1¡V35.9¢J. Based on the results, it is known that P. canaliculata and P. scalaris reproduce year-round and temperature is not a major factor in shaping the species distribution pattern in Taiwan.
28

Emergence and multiplication of a new organizational form : a study of the population of PPOs in the U.S., 1954-1998 /

Bueno, Dulce Pugliese de Godoy, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 579-596). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
29

Gravitation with a flat background metric

Pitts, James Brian 13 May 2015 (has links)
Although relativistic physics tend to omit nondynamical "absolute objects" such as a flat metric tensor or a preferred time foliation, there exist interesting questions related to such entities, such as worries about the "flow" of time in special relativity, and the apparent disappearance of time altogether in canonical general relativity. This latter problem is related to the lack of a fixed causal structure with repect to which one might posit "equal-time" commutation relations, for example. In view of these issues, we consider whether including a flat background metric, and perhaps a preferred foliation, is physically worthwhile. We show how a derivation of Einstein's equations from flat spacetime can be generalized to include a preferred foliation, the possible significance of which we discuss, though ultimately we suggest why such a foliation might be present in metaphysics and yet absent from physics. We also derive a new "slightly bimetric" class of theories using the flat spacetime approach. However, such derivations are only formally special relativistic, because they give no heed to the flat metric's causal structure, which the curved effective metric might well violate. After reviewing the history of this problem, we introduce new variables to give a kinematic description of the relation between the two null cones. Then we propose a method to enforce special relativistic causality by using the guage freedom to restrict the configuration space suitably. Consequences for exact solutions, such as the Schwarzschild solution and its 'singularity,' are discussed. Advantages and difficulties regarding adding a mass term to the theory are discussed briefly. / text
30

A Novel Progressive Lossy-to-Lossless Coding Method for Mesh Models of Images

Feng, Xiao 29 July 2015 (has links)
A novel progressive lossy-to-lossless coding method is proposed for mesh models of images whose underlying triangulations have arbitrary connectivity. For a triangulation T of a set P of points, our proposed method represents the connectivity of T as a sequence of edge flips that maps a uniquely-determined Delaunay triangulation (i.e., preferred-directions Delaunay triangulation) of P to T. The coding efficiency of our method is highest when the underlying triangulation connectivity is close to Delaunay, and slowly degrades as connectivity moves away from being Delaunay. Through experimental results, we show that our proposed coding method is able to significantly outperform a simple baseline coding scheme. Furthermore, our proposed method can outperform traditional connectivity coding methods for meshes that do not deviate too far from Delaunay connectivity. This result is of practical significance since, in many applications, mesh connectivity is often not so far from being Delaunay, due to the good approximation properties of Delaunay triangulations. / Graduate

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