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Three-dimensional solution of electrostatic fields within a particular system of annular cylindersWagenaar, Loren B. January 1973 (has links)
A mathematical method is developed for the analysis of the electrostatic fields existing within finite, three-dimensional, cylindrically shaped regions which do not contain the axis of revolution. The derived method defines the potential field within such a region provided that the potentials are known at the boundaries, that the insulating media has homogeneous, linear, and isotropic characteristics, and that the region is charge free. The general solution for the potential field involves forms of both the Fourier and the Fourier Bessel series, and the resulting series solution is shown to be uniformly convergent . It is also shoran that this potential field series solution can be integrated and differentiated to yield series solutions for electric fiend and capacitance and that these solutions are also uniformly convergent.
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Entropy measures in dynamical systems and their viability in characterizing bipedal walking gait dynamicsLeverick, Graham 11 September 2013 (has links)
Entropy measures have been widely used to quantify the complexity of theoretical and experimental dynamical systems. In this thesis, two novel entropy measures are developed based on using coarse quantization to classify and compare dynamical features within a time series; quantized dynamical entropy (QDE) and a quantized approximation of sample entropy (QASE). Following this, comprehensive guidelines for the quantification of complexity are presented based on a detailed investigation of the performance characteristics of the two developed measures and three existing measures; permutation entropy, sample entropy and fuzzy entropy. The sensitivity of the considered entropy measures to changes in dynamics was assessed using the case study of characterizing bipedal walking gait dynamics. Based on the analysis conducted, it was found that sample entropy and fuzzy entropy, while computationally inefficient, provide the best overall performance. In instances where computational efficiency is vital, QDE and QASE serve as viable alternatives to existing methods.
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An empirical analysis of South Africa's financial rand exchange rate system, 1985-95Farrell, Gregory Noel January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Stochastic modelling and forecasting of solar radiationConway, Eunan Martin January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Finding Correlation and Predicting System Behavior in Large IT InfrastructureHussain, Shahbaz January 2014 (has links)
Modern IT development infrastructure has a large number of components that must be monitored, for instance servers and network components. Various system-metrics (build time, CPU utilization, queries time etc.) are gathered to monitor system performance. In practice, it is extremely difficult for a system administrator to observe a correlation between several systemmetrics and predict a target system-metric based on highly correlated system-metrics without machine learning support. The experiments were performed on development logs at Ericsson. There were many system-metrics available in the system. Our goal is use machine learning techniques to find correlation between buildtime and other system-metrics and predict its trends in the future.
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Neural networks for machine fault diagnosis and life span predictionTse, Peter W. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Preliminary estimation of transfer function weights : a two-step regression approachEdlund, Per-Olov January 1989 (has links)
In economic time series modelling, dynamic relationships frequently have to be modelled where the explanatory variables influence the dependent variable over more than one period. Such dynamic relationships are found in business cycle forecasting with leading indicators, in marketing models describing the relationship between advertising and sales, and in many traditional econometric models. In this dissertation the transfer function model proposed by Box and Jenkins is used to describe the dynamic structure. There are several approaches that could be used to specify the model. A two-step regression approach is proposed by the author and tested by three simulation studies. Finally, the regression approach and two other approaches are used to identify transfer function models for the Swedish Index of Industrial Production using financial variables as leading indicators. / Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögsk. S. 1-22: sammanfattning, s. 23-162: 4 uppsatser
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Problem frames approach to strategic requirements for web servicesJha, Anju, Computer Science & Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Web Services can be seen from two views ? one that it is a purely technological advance and the other that it is a capability that an organisation can deploy to meet a business objective. Much has been said about the first view but not much has been said about the second view. The underlying premise of this research is that in the context of an ever-increasing competitive environment, an organisation needs to take into account these important aspects: What is the business strategy of the organisation, which adopts Web Services? Does the IT align with the business strategy of the organisation? The aim of this research is to capture and describe business-IT problems in the context of strategic requirements and Web Services. As a means to align a Web Services initiative with business strategy, we propose a Requirements Engineering framework to capture the business objectives of an organisation from strategy to implementation. The methodology that we propose provides a roadmap from business strategy, to the strategic objectives to implementation in four dimensions: innovation, customer relationship management, infrastructure management and financials. The proposed framework extends the e-Business Modelling Ontology (eBMO) of Pigneur and Osterwalder by applying Bleistein et al?s Progression of Problems to understand the strategic objectives and the business context. We have presented 2 examples as proof of concept. We have experimented with our methodology on Amazon.com and Dell.com ?cases developed from the literature? as these organisations are aggressively pursuing Web Services as a part of their IT and business strategy. We use the Problem Frames approach to capture the business objectives and the problem context of an organisation deploying Web Services and to create a strategic alignment between the business strategy and the information technology. The approach presented in this thesis is used to understand Amazon and Dell?s strategy and strategic objectives. It was possible to capture strategic objectives and the strategic context through combination of the eBMO and Progression of Problems. It was also possible to trace this to Web Services requirement description through application of Problem Frames. The framework combines with Bleistein et al?s Progression of Problems at the strategic level and applies Problem Frames at the operational level. It takes the problem-oriented view of the whole process, but does not apply Problem Frames throughout, at least not in their original formulation by Jackson.
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Problem frames approach to strategic requirements for web servicesJha, Anju, Computer Science & Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Web Services can be seen from two views ? one that it is a purely technological advance and the other that it is a capability that an organisation can deploy to meet a business objective. Much has been said about the first view but not much has been said about the second view. The underlying premise of this research is that in the context of an ever-increasing competitive environment, an organisation needs to take into account these important aspects: What is the business strategy of the organisation, which adopts Web Services? Does the IT align with the business strategy of the organisation? The aim of this research is to capture and describe business-IT problems in the context of strategic requirements and Web Services. As a means to align a Web Services initiative with business strategy, we propose a Requirements Engineering framework to capture the business objectives of an organisation from strategy to implementation. The methodology that we propose provides a roadmap from business strategy, to the strategic objectives to implementation in four dimensions: innovation, customer relationship management, infrastructure management and financials. The proposed framework extends the e-Business Modelling Ontology (eBMO) of Pigneur and Osterwalder by applying Bleistein et al?s Progression of Problems to understand the strategic objectives and the business context. We have presented 2 examples as proof of concept. We have experimented with our methodology on Amazon.com and Dell.com ?cases developed from the literature? as these organisations are aggressively pursuing Web Services as a part of their IT and business strategy. We use the Problem Frames approach to capture the business objectives and the problem context of an organisation deploying Web Services and to create a strategic alignment between the business strategy and the information technology. The approach presented in this thesis is used to understand Amazon and Dell?s strategy and strategic objectives. It was possible to capture strategic objectives and the strategic context through combination of the eBMO and Progression of Problems. It was also possible to trace this to Web Services requirement description through application of Problem Frames. The framework combines with Bleistein et al?s Progression of Problems at the strategic level and applies Problem Frames at the operational level. It takes the problem-oriented view of the whole process, but does not apply Problem Frames throughout, at least not in their original formulation by Jackson.
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Problem frames approach to strategic requirements for web servicesJha, Anju, Computer Science & Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Web Services can be seen from two views ? one that it is a purely technological advance and the other that it is a capability that an organisation can deploy to meet a business objective. Much has been said about the first view but not much has been said about the second view. The underlying premise of this research is that in the context of an ever-increasing competitive environment, an organisation needs to take into account these important aspects: What is the business strategy of the organisation, which adopts Web Services? Does the IT align with the business strategy of the organisation? The aim of this research is to capture and describe business-IT problems in the context of strategic requirements and Web Services. As a means to align a Web Services initiative with business strategy, we propose a Requirements Engineering framework to capture the business objectives of an organisation from strategy to implementation. The methodology that we propose provides a roadmap from business strategy, to the strategic objectives to implementation in four dimensions: innovation, customer relationship management, infrastructure management and financials. The proposed framework extends the e-Business Modelling Ontology (eBMO) of Pigneur and Osterwalder by applying Bleistein et al?s Progression of Problems to understand the strategic objectives and the business context. We have presented 2 examples as proof of concept. We have experimented with our methodology on Amazon.com and Dell.com ?cases developed from the literature? as these organisations are aggressively pursuing Web Services as a part of their IT and business strategy. We use the Problem Frames approach to capture the business objectives and the problem context of an organisation deploying Web Services and to create a strategic alignment between the business strategy and the information technology. The approach presented in this thesis is used to understand Amazon and Dell?s strategy and strategic objectives. It was possible to capture strategic objectives and the strategic context through combination of the eBMO and Progression of Problems. It was also possible to trace this to Web Services requirement description through application of Problem Frames. The framework combines with Bleistein et al?s Progression of Problems at the strategic level and applies Problem Frames at the operational level. It takes the problem-oriented view of the whole process, but does not apply Problem Frames throughout, at least not in their original formulation by Jackson.
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