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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.
1

Seven aspects of software transactional memory

Hughes, Thomas Francis 13 August 2010 (has links)
This paper explores different aspects of transactional memory to identify general patterns and analyze what direction software transactional memory research may be headed. Hybrid hardware-accelerated transactional memory is shown as a better long-term solution than purely software or hardware transactional memory, based on performance and the fundamental issue of software complexity. The appendix provides a chronologically ordered summary of significant transactional memory implementations and transactional memory specific benchmarks. / text
2

A multivariate analysis of conflict in the franchisee-franchisor relationship

Spinelli, Stephen January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
3

Supply chain management and international marketing problems in transitional economies : evidence from the Bulgarian wine industry

Zaharieva, Elissaveta January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
4

Psycho-dynamics of the Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Relationships in Kate Chopin's The Awakening

Lin, Hui-wei 21 June 2000 (has links)
Abstract This thesis proposes to postulate a pedagogic theory--transactional analysis (TA)--to present the psychological dysfunctions that make up the bulk of disorders for which Edna Pontellier, the protagonist in Kate Chopin
5

The relationship of a life-script to accident frequency: an application of transactional analysis theory

Wehrman, Jean Lenore, 1939- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
6

Understanding the experience of transactional sex among young women in Winnipeg and its implications for health policy

Cheng, Dianne 22 August 2013 (has links)
While there is evidence that young women involved in transactional sex face economical, emotional and health disadvantages, few studies have examined young women’s understanding and knowledge of risky behaviours (e.g., substance abuse, acquiring sexually transmitted infections including HIV/AIDS, domestic violence, etc.) and how these influence their health and well-being. The debate on the definitions, relevance, and causes of transactional sex, as well as on the approaches to address it, is ongoing. There is considerable agreement that sexual exchange needs to be addressed from a variety of contexts to obtain a comprehensive picture of how women understand their experience. This qualitative study used phenomenological techniques (interviews, questionnaires, focus groups, observation, and field notes) to collect data and conduct analysis on 15 young women between the ages of 18 and 27. The focus of the study was to explore issues of health and social services as identified by young women involved in transactional sex. This study enabled them to discuss the struggles they encounter (such as issues related to housing, addictions, employment opportunities, and skills level). Findings from the study identified issues that may help to develop programs and policies to provide better supports to young women involved in transactional sex.
7

Understanding the experience of transactional sex among young women in Winnipeg and its implications for health policy

Cheng, Dianne 22 August 2013 (has links)
While there is evidence that young women involved in transactional sex face economical, emotional and health disadvantages, few studies have examined young women’s understanding and knowledge of risky behaviours (e.g., substance abuse, acquiring sexually transmitted infections including HIV/AIDS, domestic violence, etc.) and how these influence their health and well-being. The debate on the definitions, relevance, and causes of transactional sex, as well as on the approaches to address it, is ongoing. There is considerable agreement that sexual exchange needs to be addressed from a variety of contexts to obtain a comprehensive picture of how women understand their experience. This qualitative study used phenomenological techniques (interviews, questionnaires, focus groups, observation, and field notes) to collect data and conduct analysis on 15 young women between the ages of 18 and 27. The focus of the study was to explore issues of health and social services as identified by young women involved in transactional sex. This study enabled them to discuss the struggles they encounter (such as issues related to housing, addictions, employment opportunities, and skills level). Findings from the study identified issues that may help to develop programs and policies to provide better supports to young women involved in transactional sex.
8

Programming frameworks for performance driven speculative parallelization

Ravichandran, Kaushik 12 January 2015 (has links)
Effectively utilizing available parallelism is becoming harder and harder as systems evolve to many-core processors with many tens of cores per chip. Automatically extracting parallelism has limitations whereas completely redesigning software using traditional parallel constructs is a daunting task that significantly jeopardizes programmer productivity. On the other hand, many studies have shown that a good amount of parallelism indeed exists in sequential software that remains untapped. How to unravel and utilize it successfully remains an open research question. Speculation fortunately provides a potential answer to this question. Speculation provides a golden bridge for a quick expression of "potential" parallelism in a given program. While speculation at extremely fine granularities has been shown to provide good speed-ups, speculation at larger granularities has only been attempted on a very small scale due to the potentially large overheads that render it useless. The transactional construct used by STMs can be used by programmers to express speculation since it provides atomicity and isolation while writing parallel code. However, it was not designed to deal with the semantics of speculation. This thesis contends that by incorporating the semantics of speculation new solutions can be constructed and speculation can provide a powerful means to the hard problem of efficiently utilizing many-cores with very low programmer efforts. This thesis takes a multi-faceted view of the problem of speculation through a combination of programming models, compiler analysis, scheduling and runtime systems and tackles the semantic issues that surround speculation such as determining the right degree of speculation to maximize performance, reuse of state in rollbacks, providing probabilistic guidance for minimizing conflicts, deterministic execution for debugging and development, and providing very large scale speculations across distributed nodes. First, we present F2C2-STM, a high performance flux-based feedback-driven concurrency control technique which automatically selects and adapts the degree of speculation in transactional applications for best performance. Second, we present the Merge framework which is capable of salvaging useful work performed during an incorrect speculation and incorporates it towards the final commit. Third, we present a framework which has the ability to leverage semantics of data structures and algorithmic properties to guide the scheduling of concurrent speculative transactions to minimize conflicts and performance loss. Fourth, we present DeSTM, a deterministic STM designed to aid the development of speculative transactional applications for repeatability without undue performance loss. These contributions significantly enhance the use of transactional memory as a speculative idiom improving the efficiency of speculative execution as well as simplify the development process. Finally, we focus on a performance oriented view of speculation, namely choose one of many speculative semantics, dubbed as algorithmic speculation. We present, the Multiverse framework which scales algorithmic speculation to a large distributed cluster with thousands of cores while maintaining its simplicity and efficiency. To conclude, speculative algorithms are benefited by the contributions of this thesis due to the enhancements to the transactional and the algorithmic speculative paradigms developed in this work, laying the foundation for the development and tuning of new speculative algorithms.
9

Positive stroking and verbal behaviour change in delinquent boys /

Lohyn, Martha Isabella. January 1976 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.A.(Hons.)) -- University of Adelaide, Dept. of Psychology, 1976.
10

The use of transactional analysis in the vocational rehabilitation counseling of psychiatric clients

Darbyshire, Jack. January 1977 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Wisconsin. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 109-114).

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