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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.
101

A Novel Catadioptric Ray-Pixel Camera Model and its Application to 3D Reconstruction / 反射屈折撮像系の新たなカメラモデルと3次元形状復元への応用

Kawahara, Ryo 25 March 2019 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(情報学) / 甲第21910号 / 情博第693号 / 新制||情||119(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院情報学研究科知能情報学専攻 / (主査)講師 延原 章平, 教授 西野 恒, 准教授 飯山 将晃 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Informatics / Kyoto University / DFAM
102

iTry : Hållbarhet inom e-handel / iTry : Sustainability in e-commerce

Långström, Nina January 2022 (has links)
I rapporten presenteras designkonceptet iTry. Genom intervjuer, möten, research och workshops undersöks e-handlens problematik med returer. Att få rätt storlek och att produkten ska leva upp till kunders förväntan när vi handlar online har synliggjorts vara omfattande problemområden. Därför utformas en designlösning med fokus påatt minimera returer orsakade av fel passform. Projektet klargör fördelarna med en app för kunder och smartspegel i butik för minskat antal returer. Konceptet är tillgängligt för kunder som handlar kläder online och i butik. Arbetet synliggör designprocessen från research, idégenerering och visualisering. / The report presents the design concept iTry. Through interviews, meetings, research and workshops, the problems of e-commerce with returns are investigated. Getting the right size and that the product should live up to customers' expectations when shopping online has been shown to be extensive problem areas. Therefore, a design solution is designed with a focus on minimizing returns caused by the wrong fit. The project clarifies the benefits of an app for customers and a smart mirror in the store for a reduced number of returns. The concept is available to customers who shop for clothes online and in stores. The work makes the design process visible from research, idea generation and visualization.
103

A Mirror to the Future

Hyslop, Jonathan Pierce 10 May 2013 (has links)
No description available.
104

A Maple Program for Computing Landau-Ginzburg A- and B-Models and an Exploration of Mirror Symmetry

Merrell, Evan D. 05 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Mirror symmetry has been a significant area of research for geometry and physics for over two decades. Berglund and Hubsch proposed that for a certain family of singularities W, the so called "transposed" singularity WT should be the mirror partner of W. cite{BH} The techniques for constructing the orbifold LG models to test this conjecture were developed by FJR in cite{FJR} with a cohomological field theory generalized from the study of r-spin curves. The duality of LG A- and B-models became more elaborate when Krawitz cite{Krawitz} generalized the Intriligator-Vafa orbifold B-model to include contributions from more than one sector.This thesis presents a program written in Maple for explicitly computing bases for both LG A- and B-model rings, as well as the correlators for A-models to the extent of current knowledge. Included is a list of observations and conjectures drawn from computations done in the program.
105

Far-infrared/millimeter Wave Source And Component Development For Imaging And Spectroscopy

Du Bosq, Todd 01 January 2007 (has links)
The far-infrared and millimeter wave (FIR/mmW) (wavelength 75 micrometer to 10 mm) portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is fairly underdeveloped technologically, owing to the large amount of atmospheric attenuation in that range. At present, the FIR/mmW region is lacking in compact, high-brightness radiation sources and practical imaging systems. This dissertation focuses on development of two complementary technologies in this area - an active mmW imaging system and high-reflectivity Bragg mirrors for the FIR p-Ge laser. The imaging system uses a vector network analyzer in the frequency range of 90-140 GHz as the radiation source and receiver. Raster scanning is used to map a two-dimensional field of view, demonstrating the detection and imaging of buried plastic landmines. Principal components analysis is used for hyperspectral signal processing, where a series of images is taken at discrete frequencies. Results are obtained as a function of depth and disturbance of the soil surface. In support of this study, various types of soils were characterized for scattering loss across the mmW/FIR region, with measured results compared to theory. This mmW imaging system was also used to demonstrate imaging through walls and other obscuring materials, as well as for imaging of rocks beneath volcanic sand, simulating the conditions encountered by an imaging system on a Mars rover vehicle. Furthermore, a high-reflectivity Si-etalon FIR mirror design was developed and demonstrated as a cavity mirror for the p-Ge laser. These components stand to have a number of systems-level impacts on FIR imagers. In the context of an active illuminator, they may allow narrowband selection from the broad emission spectrum of the p-Ge laser source. These mirrors can also be used in a Fabry-Perot FIR scanning spectrometer, where the resulting high finesse would give discrimination advantages in chemical sensing and astrophysical spectroscopy applications.
106

SAC Attack: Assessing the Role of Recollection in the Mirror Effect

Pazzaglia, Angela M. 01 September 2012 (has links)
Low-frequency (LF) words have higher hit rates (HRs) and lower false alarm rates (FARs) than high-frequency (HF) words in recognition memory, a phenomenon termed the mirror effect by Glanzer and Adams (1985). The primary mechanism for producing the mirror effect varies substantially across models of recognition memory, with some models localizing the effects during encoding and others during retrieval. The current experiments contrast two retrieval-stage models, the Source of Activation Confusion (SAC; Reder, Nhouyvanisvong, Schunn, Ayers, Angstadt, & Hiraki, 2000) model and the unequal variance signal detection theory (UVSDT) criterion shift model (e.g., DeCarlo, 2002). The SAC model proposes that two distinct processes underlie the HR and FAR effects, with a familiarity process driving the FAR effect and a recollective process driving the HR effect. The UVSDT criterion shift model assumes that subjects use different criteria when making recognition judgments for HF and LF words, with this single process driving both the HR and FAR effects. Experiment 1 incorporated divided attention and speeded responding manipulations designed to remove the contribution of recollection in the SAC model, thereby eliminating the LF HR advantage. Experiment 2 manipulated the salience of the frequency classes, as the UVSDT criterion shift model requires that subjects are aware of the distinct frequency classes in order to shift their criteria. Across both experiments, model simulations and direct fits of the SAC model demonstrated systematic errors in prediction. While the UVSDT model struggled in fits to Experiment 1 data, the model provided acceptable fits to Experiment 2 data and accurately predicted the general pattern of effects in all cases. Furthermore, state-trace analyses provided compelling evidence in favor of single-process rather than dual-process models of recognition memory, casting serious doubt on the validity of the dual-process SAC model. Finally, the current experiments highlight the importance of obtaining model-based estimates of sensitivity and bias across frequency classes, as the standard practice of conducting direct comparisons of HRs and FARs for HF and LF words confounds bias and sensitivity differences.
107

Mirror Symmetry for Non-Abelian Landau-Ginzburg Models

Williams, Matthew Michael 01 June 2019 (has links)
We consider Landau-Ginzburg models stemming from non-abelian groups comprised of non-diagonal symmetries, and we describe a rule for the mirror LG model. In particular, we present the non-abelian dual group G*, which serves as the appropriate choice of group for the mirror LG model. We also describe an explicit mirror map between the A-model and the B-model state spaces for two examples. Further, we prove that this mirror map is an isomorphism between the untwisted broad sectors and the narrow diagonal sectors in general.
108

Observation inflation and self-action inflation. Investigation of source memory errors as a result of action observation and action performance

Mitrenga, Kaja Julia January 2015 (has links)
This thesis investigates two source memory errors: observation inflation, where observed actions are misremembered as being performed; and self-action inflation in which self-performed actions are misremembered as having been performed by somebody else. It has been proposed that these inflations occur because of overlapping brain activity during observation and performance. This has been attributed to mirror neurone activity. To test this, observation and self-action inflations are investigated for different types of actions (meaningful, meaningless and communicative) known to evoke different mirror neurone activity. Different age groups (young adult, and elderly) were studied as were the effects of relative ethnicity between observer and performer. The Remember-Know-Guess paradigm was used. This showed that people make inflations with high qualitative details and confidence. As anticipated, elderly participants made significantly more observation inflations than young adults. Across both age groups, significantly more inflations occurred for communicative and meaningful actions than for meaningless actions supporting the idea that mirror neurones may be involved in formation of inflations. However when the effects of relative ethnicity were included in the paradigm it was found that significantly more observation inflations were formed after observing different ethnicity actors. It has been hypothesised that if mirror neurone involvement is involved in observation inflations then the highest number of inflations are expected for the same ethnicity condition because of the overlap between participant and performer. This thesis therefore suggests a less simplistic explanation of the underlying mechanisms responsible for these types of memory error.
109

INTEGRATING BEHAVIORAL MODELING AND SIMULATION FOR MEMS COMPONENTS INTO CAD FOR VLSI

GIBSON, DENNIS 16 September 2002 (has links)
No description available.
110

THREE-DIMENSIONAL DISPLAY SYSTEMS IMPLEMENTED WITH A MICROMIRROR ARRAY

YAN, JUN 11 October 2001 (has links)
No description available.

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