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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.
271

Tsunamin - Krishanteringens beslutsprocesser

Ekbom, Daniel January 2008 (has links)
<p>When the Tsunami occurred on Boxing Day 2004 it caused a major stress upon the governmental agencies in not only the affected areas but also in states that had a large number of citizens in the affected area. The governmental agencies were not prepared for the demands from the citizenry in these countries to deal with rescue and crisis management in areas situated halfway around the globe. This thesis main purpose is to research what the causal mechanisms of Sweden’s and Finland’s crisis management were through the method of process tracing. Taking its theoretical stance in Allison’s & Zelikow’s three models of decision making, the thesis compares the course of events of the first two critical days in Sweden and Finland to establish what mistakes were made during this critical period. The main findings of the essay show that none of the theories is on its own capable of explaining the chain of events, but a combination of the organisational model and the governmental politics model do prove the necessity of trained crisis personnel as decision-makers early on in crisis management as well as the need for an organisational structure with a linear and clear chain of command.</p>
272

Data structures and algorithms for real-time ray tracing at the University of Texas at Austin

Hunt, Warren Andrew, 1983- 27 September 2012 (has links)
Modern rendering systems require fast and efficient acceleration structures in order to compute visibility in real time. I present several novel data structures and algorithms for computing visibility with high performance. In particular, I present two algorithms for improving heuristic based acceleration structure build. These algorithms, when used in a demand driven way, have been shown to improve build performance by up to two orders of magnitude. Additionally, I introduce ray tracing in perspective transformed space. I demonstrate that ray tracing in this space can significantly improve visibility performance for near-common origin rays such as eye and shadow rays. I use these data structures and algorithms to support a key hypothesis of this dissertation: “There is no silver bullet for solving the visibility problem; many different acceleration structures will be required to achieve the highest performance.” Specialized acceleration structures provide significantly better performance than generic ones and building many specialized structures requires high performance build techniques. Additionally, I present an optimization-based taxonomy for classifying acceleration structures and algorithms in order to identify which optimizations provide the largest improvement in performance. This taxonomy also provides context for the algorithms I present. Finally, I present several novel cost metrics (and a correction to an existing cost metric) to improve visibility performance when using metric based acceleration structures. / text
273

Precision pinch isometric force, force variability, accuracy, and task time among the fourth through eighth decades of life

Herring-Marler, Trenah Lannette 13 August 2015 (has links)
This dissertation encompassed three studies involving precision pinch strength and 5% submaximal fine-motor control. One hundred participants (30-79 years old) were divided into 10-year categories, with 10 males and 10 females in each decade. A Manual Force Quantification System containing a platform and force-transducer apparatus, along with a computer and visual monitor, was used. Each subject performed four tasks -- maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC), force-matching, tracing, and tracking -- by applying force on the transducers with the thumb and index finger while attempting to produce a desired force level or task displayed on the computer monitor. The first study measured MVIC, accuracy (rRMSE, Root Mean Square Relative Error), and force variability (Coefficient of Variation, CV) during a 5% MVIC force-matching task. The second study measured accuracy (rRMSE), task time, and group variability during a 5% MVIC tracing task. The third study measured accuracy and group variability during a 5% MVIC tracking task. Tracing and tracking were each divided into six Segments (S1-S6), three of which (S1-S3) required the increasing application of force from 50g up to 5% MVIC and the remaining three (S4-S6) requiring a release of force from MVIC down to 1% MVIC. The force-matching and force-tracking task times were scaled to each participant's MVIC, while the tracing task was performed at the participant's self-selected speed. The participants were encouraged to be accurate but also to trace the target line as quickly as possible. Declines in precision pinch strength and force control began to occur in the 70s for easier force-control tasks and in their 60s for more advanced force-tracking tasks. Men were stronger than women at all age levels. Participants in their 30s were the fastest; those in their 40s, 50s, and 60s slowed down to be accurate; and those in their 70s moved faster but were the least accurate. Three segmental factors affected error and time: low force level, releasing as opposed to applying force, and location along the target line with respect to reversal or ending points. Finally, variables for females were more heterogeneous at earlier decades than for men, and the older the age group was, the greater the variable heterogeneity was.
274

High frequency electromagnetic scattering prediction and scattering feature extraction

Zhou, Yong, 1971- 01 February 2011 (has links)
Three related electromagnetic scattering problems, namely, high frequency electromagnetic (EM) ray tracing, scattering feature extraction, and inverse scattering are studied in this dissertation. New approaches are presented to advance the state of the art in each of the areas. The presented study in electromagnetic ray tracing leads to an alternative ray tracing algorithm which can outperform the traditional algorithms for complex targets. The performance of the proposed techniques demonstrates their potential application to the study of high-frequency EM scattering prediction. Second, a genetic algorithm (GA)-based algorithm with an adaptive-feeding technique is developed to simultaneously extract both scattering centers and resonances. Scattering feature extraction algorithms are then developed with the consideration of the visibility of scattering centers. Inverse scattering problems with strong multiple scattering effects are also studied. A GA-based method is presented to invert the shapes with multiple scattering effects. An approach combining hybrid GA with the tabu list idea are then developed to further improve the performance of the GA-based inversion algorithms. / text
275

In vivo 13C stable isotope tracing of single leaf development in the cold

Dethloff, Frederik January 2013 (has links)
Measuring the metabolite profile of plants can be a strong phenotyping tool, but the changes of metabolite pool sizes are often difficult to interpret, not least because metabolite pool sizes may stay constant while carbon flows are altered and vice versa. Hence, measuring the carbon allocation of metabolites enables a better understanding of the metabolic phenotype. The main challenge of such measurements is the in vivo integration of a stable or radioactive label into a plant without perturbation of the system. To follow the carbon flow of a precursor metabolite, a method is developed in this work that is based on metabolite profiling of primary metabolites measured with a mass spectrometer preceded by a gas chromatograph (Wagner et al. 2003; Erban et al. 2007; Dethloff et al. submitted). This method generates stable isotope profiling data, besides conventional metabolite profiling data. In order to allow the feeding of a 13C sucrose solution into the plant, a petiole and a hypocotyl feeding assay are developed. To enable the processing of large numbers of single leaf samples, their preparation and extraction are simplified and optimised. The metabolite profiles of primary metabolites are measured, and a simple relative calculation is done to gain information on carbon allocation from 13C sucrose. This method is tested examining single leaves of one rosette in different developmental stages, both metabolically and regarding carbon allocation from 13C sucrose. It is revealed that some metabolite pool sizes and 13C pools are tightly associated to relative leaf growth, i.e. to the developmental stage of the leaf. Fumaric acid turns out to be the most interesting candidate for further studies because pool size and 13C pool diverge considerably. In addition, the analyses are also performed on plants grown in the cold, and the initial results show a different metabolite pool size pattern across single leaves of one Arabidopsis rosette, compared to the plants grown under normal temperatures. Lastly, in situ expression of REIL genes in the cold is examined using promotor-GUS plants. Initial results suggest that single leaf metabolite profiles of reil2 differ from those of the WT. / Messungen des pflanzlichen Metaboloms können ein hilfreiches Werkzeug sein, um Pflanzen zu phänotypisieren. Jedoch sind die Änderungen der Poolgrößen teilweise schwer zu interpretieren, weil sich nicht nur die Poolgrößen sondern auch die Kohlenstoffflüsse unabhängig voneinander ändern können. Werden nun zusätzlich Informationen über die Flüsse ermittelt, kann der pflanzliche Phänotyp deutlich genauer beschrieben werden. Die größte Herausforderung für diese Messungen ist die In-vivo-Integration einer stabilen oder radioaktiven Markierung in einer Pflanze, ohne das System dabei zu stören. In dieser Arbeit wird ein Verfahren entwickelt, um die Verteilung von Kohlenstoffen aus einer gefütterten Vorstufe zu messen. Die Messung basiert dabei auf einem Primärmetabolitenprofil, das mit Hilfe eines Massenspektrometers mit vorgeschaltetem Gaschromatographen erstellt wird (Wagner et al. 2003; Erban et al. 2007; Dethloff et al. eingereicht). Mit dieser Methode ist es einfach möglich, stabile Isotopenprofildaten neben herkömmlichen Metabolitprofildaten zu erzeugen. Die Vorstufe, in diesem Fall 13C Saccharose, wird dazu mit Hilfe eines neuen Petiolen- und Hypokotyl-Fütterungs-Assay in die Pflanze gefüttert. Um die große Menge an Einzelblattproben aufzuarbeiten, die dabei anfallen, wird eine vereinfachte und optimierte Extraktion angewendet. Mit Hilfe einer einfachen Berechnung kann aus den Messdaten eine relative Verteilung des Kohlenstoffs aus 13C Saccharose bestimmt werden. Die Funktionalität dieses Verfahrens wird an Einzelblättern von Arabidopsis-Rosetten gezeigt, wobei sowohl Primärmetabolitenprofile als auch stabile Isotopenprofile erzeugt und untersucht werden. Es kann hierbei gezeigt werden, dass konventionelle Poolgrößen und 13C Poolgrößen einiger Metaboliten eng mit dem relativen Wachstum einzelner Blattpositionen bzw. mit dem jeweiligen Entwicklungsstadium der Blätter zusammenhängen. Anders als bei den meisten anderen Metaboliten zeigen die konventionellen Poolgrößen und 13C Poolgrößen von Fumarsäure ein unterschiedliches Verhalten in den einzelnen Blättern, was Fumarsäure zum interessantesten Kandidaten für weitere Studien macht. Die beschriebenen Untersuchungen werden weiterhin an in Kälte gewachsenen Pflanzen durchgeführt, wobei erste Ergebnisse ein verändertes Metabolitenprofil in den einzelnen Blättern zeigen. Des Weiteren wird die In-situ-Expression von REIL-Genen mit Hilfe von Promotor-GUS-Reportern untersucht. Erste Ergebnisse von Einzelblatt-Metabolitenprofilen der reil2 zeigen einen deutlichen Unterschied zum WT.
276

Spindulių trasavimas ir padalijimo paviršiai / Ray tracing and subdivision surfaces

Kalinka, Tatjana 02 July 2014 (has links)
Spindulių trasavimas ir padalijimo paviršiai yra svarbūs įrankiai realistiškai atrodantiems vaizdams generuoti. Padalijimas – tai algoritmas, leidžiantis gauti glotnius paviršius pakartotinai dalijant gardeles. Spindulių trasavimas yra technologija, kuri remiasi apšvietimo skaičiavimu. Jos dėka galima gauti atspindžius, permatomumą, spindulių lūžimą kertant skaidrius objektus, taipogi realistiškus šešėlius. Mūsų darbo tikslas buvo suderinti šiuos du metodus, kuriant programinę priemonę, kuri leistų gauti sudėtingų objektų idealiai glotnius aukštos kokybės realistiškus vaizdus. Siekdami to, mes pritaikėme ir tokias kompiuterinės grafikos technologijas, kaip dengimas tekstūromis ir tūrių algebra. / Ray tracing and subdivision surfaces are important tools for generating realistic looking images. Subdivision is an algorithmic technique to generate smooth surfaces as a sequence of successively refined polyhedral meshes. Ray tracing is a technique that performs global calculations of lighting and shading, reflection and transmission of light, casting of shadows, and other effects. The basic idea behind ray tracing is to follow the paths of light rays around a 3-D scene. Our goal is generation of a high-quality realistic images by combining these two techniques. We also implemented other computer graphics methods designed to increase image realism (Texture Mapping) and to simplify modeling process (Boolean operations with solids).
277

Contributions to 3D Image Analysis using Discrete Methods and Fuzzy Techniques : With Focus on Images from Cryo-Electron Tomography

Gedda, Magnus January 2010 (has links)
With the emergence of new imaging techniques, researchers are always eager to push the boundaries by examining objects either smaller or further away than what was previously possible. The development of image analysis techniques has greatly helped to introduce objectivity and coherence in measurements and decision making. It has become an essential tool for facilitating both large-scale quantitative studies and qualitative research. In this Thesis, methods were developed for analysis of low-resolution (in respect to the size of the imaged objects) three-dimensional (3D) images with low signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) applied to images from cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) and fluorescence microscopy (FM). The main focus is on methods of low complexity, that take into account both grey-level and shape information, to facilitate large-scale studies. Methods were developed to localise and represent complex macromolecules in images from cryo-ET. The methods were applied to Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies and MET proteins. The low resolution and low SNR required that grey-level information was utilised to create fuzzy representations of the macromolecules. To extract structural properties, a method was developed to use grey-level-based distance measures to facilitate decomposition of the fuzzy representations into sub-domains. The structural properties of the MET protein were analysed by developing a analytical curve representation of its stalk. To facilitate large-scale analysis of structural properties of nerve cells, a method for tracing neurites in FM images using local path-finding was developed. Both theoretical and implementational details of computationally heavy approaches were examined to keep the time complexity low in the developed methods. Grey-weighted distance definitions and various aspects of their implementations were examined in detail to form guidelines on which definition to use in which setting and which implementation is the fastest. Heuristics were developed to speed up computations when calculating grey-weighted distances between two points. The methods were evaluated on both real and synthetic data and the results show that the methods provide a step towards facilitating large-scale studies of images from both cryo-ET and FM.
278

Underwater acoustic localization and tracking of Pacific walruses in the northeastern Chukchi Sea

Rideout, Brendan Pearce 10 January 2012 (has links)
This thesis develops and demonstrates an approach for estimating the three-dimensional (3D) location of a vocalizing underwater marine mammal using acoustic arrival time measurements at three spatially separated receivers while providing rigorous location uncertainties. To properly account for uncertainty in the measurements of receiver parameters (e.g., 3D receiver locations and synchronization times) and environmental parameters (water depth and sound speed correction), these quantities are treated as unknowns constrained with prior estimates and prior uncertainties. While previous localization algorithms have solved for an unknown scaling factor on the prior uncertainties as part of the inversion, in this work unknown scaling factors on both the prior and arrival time uncertainties are estimated. Maximum a posteriori estimates for sound source locations and times, receiver parameters, and environmental parameters are calculated simultaneously. Posterior uncertainties for all unknowns are calculated and incorporate both arrival time and prior uncertainties. Simulation results demonstrated that, for the case considered here, linearization errors are generally small and that the lack of an accurate sound speed profile does not necessarily cause large uncertainties or biases in the estimated positions. The primary motivation for this work was to develop an algorithm for locating underwater Pacific walruses in the coastal waters around Alaska. In 2009, an array of approximately 40 underwater acoustic receivers was deployed in the northeastern Chukchi Sea (northwest of Alaska) from August to October to record the vocalizations of marine mammals including Pacific walruses and bowhead whales. Three of these receivers were placed in a triangular arrangement approximately 400 m apart near the Hanna Shoal (northwest of Wainwright, Alaska). A sequence of walrus knock vocalizations from this data set was processed using the localization algorithm developed in this thesis, yielding a track whose estimated swim speed is consistent with current knowledge of normal walrus swim speed. An examination of absolute and relative walrus location uncertainties demonstrated the usefulness of considering relative uncertainties for applications where the precise location of the mammal is not important (e.g., estimating swim speed). / Graduate
279

Oxygen Transport Measured by Isotope Tracing through Solid Oxides

Wood, Thomas 31 May 2011 (has links)
The following thesis demonstrates two isotope tracing experiments that measure oxygen transport through electrochemically polarized solid oxides. Cathode-symmetric ‘button’ cells with yttria stabilized zirconia(YSZ) electrolytes and either strontium doped lanthanum manganate(LSM) or composite LSM/YSZ cathodes were studied. The first experiment measured the residence time distributions(RTD) of 34O2. The measured RTDs were compared at different temperatures(700-800°C) and applied potentials(-2 to -8V). Comparisons with simulated RTDs revealed that oxygen transport was laterally heterogeneous. Delamination of the counter electrode is likely the source of the heterogeneity. The second experiment measured a wave of 18O by exposing an interior cross section and applying ToF-SIMS analysis. A depth profile was produced that spans the cathode and electrolyte interface. The depth profile was compared with a variety of limiting oxygen activation scenarios predicted by a simple 1-D model. Comparisons demonstrated that oxygen activation is likely not restricted to the cathode and electrolyte interface.
280

Oxygen Transport Measured by Isotope Tracing through Solid Oxides

Wood, Thomas 31 May 2011 (has links)
The following thesis demonstrates two isotope tracing experiments that measure oxygen transport through electrochemically polarized solid oxides. Cathode-symmetric ‘button’ cells with yttria stabilized zirconia(YSZ) electrolytes and either strontium doped lanthanum manganate(LSM) or composite LSM/YSZ cathodes were studied. The first experiment measured the residence time distributions(RTD) of 34O2. The measured RTDs were compared at different temperatures(700-800°C) and applied potentials(-2 to -8V). Comparisons with simulated RTDs revealed that oxygen transport was laterally heterogeneous. Delamination of the counter electrode is likely the source of the heterogeneity. The second experiment measured a wave of 18O by exposing an interior cross section and applying ToF-SIMS analysis. A depth profile was produced that spans the cathode and electrolyte interface. The depth profile was compared with a variety of limiting oxygen activation scenarios predicted by a simple 1-D model. Comparisons demonstrated that oxygen activation is likely not restricted to the cathode and electrolyte interface.

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