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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

Alternativní využití Szondiho testu / Alternative use of Szondi test

Vaňková, Martina January 2012 (has links)
The thesis analyzes the Szondi's test and its theory in the light of current knowledge. Its aim is to examine the potential of this diagnostic method and to consider the possibilities of its application. On the basis of the free-association research, the direction of interest has divided into two studies. The first of them verifies the relationship of Szondi's theory with personal characteristics that are attributed to individual photos (stimulus material) on the scale of the semantic differential. In most cases, the results confirm significant differences between the factors. In the second study, the narrative approach is selected, it means "telling stories" method will be used for discover the projective potential. Qualitative analysis indicates that stories have some similarities- in the context of given factors, however, in most cases, they do not follow Szondi's assumptions. In order to confirm the potential of the possibility to know the proband's personality or life, the data obtained has not proved sufficient. The data does suggest, however, that after further research, the benefit of its application could be confirmed. KEY WORDS: Szondi test, projection, semantic differential, stories analysis
22

Steuerverwaltung in Polen : eine europäische Verwaltung? [vollständige Fassung] / Tax administration in Poland : a European administration?

Williges, Esther S. G. January 2008 (has links)
Die Arbeit geht der Frage nach, ob man die Steuerverwaltung in Polen als europäische Verwaltung bezeichnen kann. Es werden drei Aspekte vertiefend untersucht: 1.Verortung der polnischen Steuerverwaltung in der OECD und ausgewählten Nicht-OECD-Ländern mittels einer Clusteranalyse auf Grundlage verschiedener Daten zum Aufbau, Aufgabenprofil und zur Performanz unter gleichzeitiger Beachtung der möglichen Abzeichnung eines europäischen Steuerverwaltungsraums; 2.Verbreitung des CAF in den Steuerverwaltungen der MOE-8, insbesondere in Polen, als vom EUPAN unterstütztes Qualitätsmanagementsystem, das geeignet erscheint, die Entstehung eines gemeinsamen europäischen Qualitätsverständnisses zu fördern; 3.Wahrnehmung der polnischen Steuerverwaltung durch deutsche Finanzbeamte erhoben mit Hilfe eines semantischen Differentials. Die Clusteranalyse ergibt keinen Hinweis auf einen einheitlichen europäischen Steuerverwaltungsraum in Abgrenzung von den übrigen einbezogenen Staaten. Polen fällt nicht als Ausreißer auf und weist Ähnlichkeiten zu anderen europäischen Ländern auf. In Steuerverwaltungen lässt sich das CAF so gut wie gar nicht finden. Polen bildet in der Hinsicht eine Ausnahme. Allerdings befindet sich die polnische Steuerverwaltung auf einem europäischen Weg, den andere Sektoren der Verwaltung (auch in MOE-8) bereits vielfach beschritten haben. Aus der Untersuchung des Images der polnischen Steuerverwaltung bei deutschen Finanzbeamten geht die Abwesenheit starker negativer Stereotype hervor. Die Einschätzungen sind sehr zurückhaltend in der Nähe des Mittelwertes zwischen den beiden Polen des semantischen Differentials. Das vorläufige Ergebnis lautet: Die Steuerverwaltung in Polen ist eine europäische Verwaltung. / This thesis discusses the question, if the Polish tax administration can be called a European administration. Three aspects are analysed: 1.Placement of the Polish tax administration among OECD and selected non-OECD countries by means of a cluster analysis based on various data concerning structure, tasks and performance with special attention to the emergence of a European administrative space of tax administrations; 2.Spread of the CAF among the tax administrations of CEE-8, especially in Poland, as quality management system supported by the EUPAN, that seems suitable to enhance the emergence of a common European unterstanding of quality; 3.Perception of the Polish tax administration by German tax collectors gathered with a semantic differential. The cluster analysis does not hint at a uniform European administrative space of tax administrations separated from the other included countries. Poland does not stand out as an outlier and shows similarities to other European countries. Hardly can the CAF be found in tax administrations. Poland is an exception. But the Polish tax administration is on a European path, which the other sectors of administration (also in CEE-8) have already followed in many cases. The absence of strong negative stereotypes among German tax collectors is a result of the analysis of the image of the Polish tax administration. The assessment is diffident near the mean value between the two poles of the semantic differential. The preliminary result is: The Polish tax administration is a European administration.
23

Color-Weakness Compensation using Riemann Normal Coordinates

Oshima, Satoshi, Mochizuki, Rika, Lenz, Reiner, Chao, Jinhui January 2012 (has links)
We introduce normal coordinates in Riemannspaces as a tool to construct color-weak compensation methods.We use them to compute color stimuli for a color weakobservers that result in the same color perception as theoriginal image presented to a color normal observer in the sensethat perceived color-differences are identical for both. Thecompensation is obtained through a color-difference-preservingmap, i.e. an isometry between the 3D color spaces of a colornormaland any given color-weak observer. This approach usesdiscrimination threshold data and is free from approximationerrors due to local linearization. The performance is evaluatedwith the help of semantic differential (SD) tests. / Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research through grant IIS11-0081. / European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 - Challenge 2 Cognitive Systems, Interaction, Robotics - under grant agreement No 247947 - GARNICS.
24

An Exploration of Differences in Response to Music Related to Levels of Psychological Health in Adolescents

Walker Kennedy, Susan 01 September 2010 (has links)
Popular music plays a significant role in the lives of most adolescents. The central question explored is whether three groups of adolescents (psychiatrically ill, depressed, and non-clinical adolescents) differed on self-reported data on: (a) the role of popular music in their lives, and (b) in their emotional reactions to music. The next question is whether the developmental issues of gender and personality consolidation, age, and school commitment simultaneously influence how the three groups of adolescents use music in their lives and in their emotional reactions to music. The last question is whether the three groups have significantly different music preferences in the five genres of popular (rap, pop/dance, heavy metal/hard rock, classic rock, and alternative). There were 126 subjects employed in this research. I created the Walker Music Questionnaire (WMQ) to explore the role and importance that music plays in the lives of the adolescents. A factor analysis found five factors (Introspection, Identity-Music, Discerning Music Identity, Fantasy-Rebellion, and Identity-Self). The Adolescent Semantic Differential Scales (ASDS) measured the adolescents’ emotional responses to 10 pieces of popular music representing the five genres described above. These scales are well known measures of emotional response and I added eight adjectives that represented adolescent issues. This measure was also factor analyzed and the three factors of Evaluation, Romance, and Potency emerged. Preference for the five genres was determined from the Adolescent Semantic Differential Scales. MANOVAS were done with both sets of factors derived from the WMQ and ASDS simultaneously using the developmental variables of age group, gender, personality, and school commitment. Psychological health was found to be a significant variable. Specifically, the role of music for the depressed group was significantly different from the other two groups of adolescents. The developmental issues that remained significant were personality and school commitment. Furthermore, the psychiatrically ill group reacted more emotionally to the music than the other two groups and this remained significant even when the developmental variable of personality was considered. The three groups were not differentiated by their preference ratings on the ASDS.
25

A comparison between the Semantic Differential Scale for Assessing Patient Feelings and the Tennessee Self Concept Scale

Hadley, Sue A. 03 June 2011 (has links)
Ball State University LibrariesLibrary services and resources for knowledge buildingMasters ThesesThere is no abstract available for this thesis.
26

An Exploration of Differences in Response to Music Related to Levels of Psychological Health in Adolescents

Walker Kennedy, Susan 01 September 2010 (has links)
Popular music plays a significant role in the lives of most adolescents. The central question explored is whether three groups of adolescents (psychiatrically ill, depressed, and non-clinical adolescents) differed on self-reported data on: (a) the role of popular music in their lives, and (b) in their emotional reactions to music. The next question is whether the developmental issues of gender and personality consolidation, age, and school commitment simultaneously influence how the three groups of adolescents use music in their lives and in their emotional reactions to music. The last question is whether the three groups have significantly different music preferences in the five genres of popular (rap, pop/dance, heavy metal/hard rock, classic rock, and alternative). There were 126 subjects employed in this research. I created the Walker Music Questionnaire (WMQ) to explore the role and importance that music plays in the lives of the adolescents. A factor analysis found five factors (Introspection, Identity-Music, Discerning Music Identity, Fantasy-Rebellion, and Identity-Self). The Adolescent Semantic Differential Scales (ASDS) measured the adolescents’ emotional responses to 10 pieces of popular music representing the five genres described above. These scales are well known measures of emotional response and I added eight adjectives that represented adolescent issues. This measure was also factor analyzed and the three factors of Evaluation, Romance, and Potency emerged. Preference for the five genres was determined from the Adolescent Semantic Differential Scales. MANOVAS were done with both sets of factors derived from the WMQ and ASDS simultaneously using the developmental variables of age group, gender, personality, and school commitment. Psychological health was found to be a significant variable. Specifically, the role of music for the depressed group was significantly different from the other two groups of adolescents. The developmental issues that remained significant were personality and school commitment. Furthermore, the psychiatrically ill group reacted more emotionally to the music than the other two groups and this remained significant even when the developmental variable of personality was considered. The three groups were not differentiated by their preference ratings on the ASDS.
27

The Visual Perception Of Automobile Seat Comfort

Erol, Tugra 01 October 2006 (has links) (PDF)
The visual domain design constitutes the general designers communication basis for communicating messages of product attributes. In the design of an automobile seat where mainly the accommodating functions remain constant, an automobile seat&rsquo / s &ldquo / style&rdquo / affords the ability to provide certain meanings with affective connotations. Treating style aesthetics as a source of information, the communication of &ldquo / comfort&rdquo / can be provided via forms and other attributes. The literature provides strong evidence that comfort is related with aesthetics of any object in use, especially creating expectations towards the product. The &ldquo / Aesthetics of comfort&rdquo / can be explained as a variable intensity &ldquo / feeling&rdquo / or &ldquo / attitude&rdquo / regarding an entity of factors or characteristics of a multidimensional construct. Implemented by different layouts and cues, the consumer should be assisted in understanding the qualities of an automobile seat, such as comfort. As a result of the field study conducted, significant difference was found to exist in between the perception of visual comfort three production seat designs. A positive attitude about comfort towards an automobile seat was found to be influential in positively effecting the perception of seated comfort.
28

Vnímání a hodnocení značky vybrané společnosti / Perception and evaluation of a chosen brand

FACKENBERGOVÁ, Lucie January 2010 (has links)
The goal of this thesis was to analyze the perception of a selected brand and to evaluate from the perspective of the public and of company Vodafone Czech Republic a. s..
29

A Factor Analytic Study of the Epic Self-Assessment Scales

Walters, Robert Henry 08 1900 (has links)
The purposes of this study were: 1) to determine the measurement dimensions assayed by the EPIC Self-Assessment Scales; 2) to provide information necessary to'determine whether revision of the EPIC Self-Assessment Scales would be desirable, and if so, what items need revision or deletion to obtain optimum dimensional structure; and 3) to provide information relevant to possible further research using the EPIC Self-Assessment Scales. On the basis of the results, four dominant and two subsidiary factors were concluded to be the measurement dimensions assayed by the EPIC Scales. Those were identified as Self-Assurance, Physical Appearance/Physical Shape, Emotional Lability, and Verbal Competence; subsidiary factors were Social/Interpersonal Attitude and Social Behavior/Sociability. It was also concluded that revision of the Scales be undertaken, deleting the 29 bipolar scale items which did not exhibit loadings of .500 or higher on any of the six factors. It was recommended that the revised Scales include additional bipolar scale items taken from the semantic differential literature, and that the instructions to subjects be revised. Further research to establish the reliability and validity of the revised instrument was also recommended.
30

Semantic Components: A Model for Enhancing Retrieval of Domain- Specific Information

Price, Susan Loucette 01 March 2008 (has links)
Despite the success of general Internet search engines, information retrieval remains an incompletely solved problem. Our research focuses on supporting domain experts when they search domain-specific libraries to satisfy targeted information needs. The semantic components model introduces a schema specific to a particular document collection. A semantic component schema consists of a two-level hierarchy, document classes and semantic components. A document class represents a document grouping, such as topic type or document purpose. A semantic component is a characteristic type of information that occurs in a particular document class and represents an important aspect of the document’s main topic. Semantic component indexing identifies the location and extent of semantic component instances within a document and can supplement traditional full text and keyword indexing techniques. Semantic component searching allows a user to refine a topical search by indicating a preference for documents containing specific semantic components or by indicating terms that should appear in specific semantic components. We investigate four aspects of semantic components in this research. First, we describe lessons learned from using two methods for developing schemas in two domains. Second, we demonstrate use of semantic components to express domainspecific concepts and relationships by mapping a published taxonomy of questions asked by family practice physicians to the semantic component schemas for two document collections about medical care. Third, we report the results of a user study, showing that manual semantic component indexing is comparable to manual keyword indexing with respect to time and perceived difficulty and suggesting that semantic component indexing may be more accurate and consistent than manual keyword indexing. Fourth, we report the results of an interactive searching study, demonstrating the ability of semantic components to enhance search results compared to a baseline system without semantic components. In addition, we contribute a formal description of the semantic components model, a prototype implementation of semantic component indexing software, and a prototype implementation adding semantic components to an existing commercial search engine. Finally, we analyze metrics for evaluating instances of semantic component indexing and keyword indexing and illustrate use of a session-based metric for evaluating multiple-query search sessions.

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