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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.
141

Musikens effekt på motivation : Hur motionärer upplever musiken vid styrketräning och vad som i musiken är motiverande

Gustafsson, Elin January 2013 (has links)
Denna uppsats handlar om hur motionärer upplever musiken under styrketräningspass vid gruppträning och vad i musiken som är motiverande. För att samla in material till uppsatsen har jag använt mig av observation, enkät och analys av musik vid ett och samma styrketräningspass på Olympen Träningscenter. Empirin har utvärderats och tolkats utifrån den motivationsteorin som utarbetats av forskarna Edward L. Deci och Richard M. Ryan från University of Rochester i New York, som kallas för Self-Determination Theory eller SDT. Mina resultat visar att majoriteten av deltagarna tycker det är viktigt med musik vid träning för att känna motivation. Som viktigaste musikaliska faktor upplevs i detta samband musikens tempo. Mina observationer och informanternas enkätsvar tyder också på att musiken hjälper till att öka motionärernas inre motivation som får anses som den mest varaktiga kategorin av motivation.
142

The right to self-determination: an international criminal law perspective

Lee, Joanne Elizabeth 05 1900 (has links)
Recent events in East Timor and other regions have highlighted the dangers of leaving issues of self-determination unresolved for too long. Despite the tact that self-determination is one of the guiding principles of the UN Charter, many controversies over its precise meaning and application continue to preclude a coherent, comprehensive approach to the principle by Stales. This thesis analyses the main controversies over the right of all peoples to self-determination and suggests some conclusions as to the present status of this right under international law. The author also analyses potential approaches to enforcing a legitimate right to self-determination and concludes that there appears to be no effective enforcement mechanism, unless one has the support of a sovereign State in advocating one's cause. Historically, realisation of this right has more often involved a successful campaign of violence or coercion against the party denying the right, and subsequent recognition by the international community of the legitimacy of the campaign. Clearly, this situation is not conducive to international peace and security. The author argues that international criminal law may provide the only effective means of enforcing legitimate rights to self-determination at this time. This conclusion is drawn with reference to Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni's theory of five stages through which a human right evolves, from a mere aspiration, to a right whose breach attracts penal proscriptions. Bassiouni argues that, in international law, a human right becomes a suitable subject for international criminal law when effective enforcement modalities for that right have failed. The thesis concludes with a suggestion that the right to self-determination may be one of the rights protected under the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, within the definition of the crime against humanity of "persecution" (article 7(1)(h) & (2)(g)).
143

Kulonometrinis aukso mikro kiekių nustatymas / Koulonometric determination of mikro-quantum of gold

Dusevičius, Adas 14 June 2005 (has links)
A precise coulonometric titration method to precisely determine gold(III) using both electrogenerated Cu(I) chloride complex KCl-Cu-EDTA in buffer medium and potentiometric fixation of equivalent titration point. The method makes it possible to perform the analysis of small quantities of Au (0,5-2mg) with the precision of 0,1%. The coulonometric analysis may be applied in the precise analysis in order to determine the quantity of Au in gold alloys and jewelry. The coulonometric procedure to prepare standard solutions of gold has also been suggested.
144

The formation of nanosized metallic particles in oxide substrates via ion implantation-induced reduction

Hunt, Eden Meyer 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
145

Market shares of price setting firms and trade unions

Grandner, Thomas January 1998 (has links) (PDF)
In a unionized duopoly with price setting firms market shares in different wage determination settings are analyzed. I compare decentralized, centralized and sequential wage determination. In the decentralized setting the union in the more productive firm can exploit the differences in productivity for rising local wages. The rising wages in the more productive firm result in smaller differences of unit costs, therefore the market shares are split more equally in the decentralized setting than with centralized wage determination. Sequential wage determination results in an asymmetric outcome. Compared with the simultaneous case the market share of the wage-leader firm is smaller, because the competitor is able to undercut the wage. Additionally with sequential wage determination the union representing the workers of the more productive firm cannot exploit the productivity advantage by raising the wage rate by the same extent as in the simultaneous case. (author's abstract) / Series: Department of Economics Working Paper Series
146

Defensiveness and threat across the continuum of relative autonomy

Giller, Tara M.T. 05 September 2014 (has links)
Relative autonomy describes the degree to which people connect their actions to internal values and goals, rather than external standards and expectations (Deci & Ryan, 2000). The present research examined how relative autonomy moderates defensive responses to psychological threats. The first set of studies compared the effects of negative performance feedback to negative feedback about internal aspects of the self (i.e., motivation). The latter threat was expected to be more self-relevant to higher than lower autonomy individuals, who typically do not react defensively to performance threats. In Study 1 (N = 106), having a more autonomous disposition predicted decreased positive affect in neutral and performance threat conditions, but not under motivation threat. In Study 2 (N = 165), participants having a more autonomous disposition showed a consistent desire to engage in intrinsic pursuits across all conditions, but a decreased interest in extrinsic pursuits when threatened. The second set of studies aimed to expand the spectrum of threat-responses to determine whether autonomy would predict greater commitment toward personal goals upon exposure to universally relevant threats (i.e., mortality salience, relational threat). Results of Study 3 (N =120) suggested that more autonomous participants reacted to the threat of mortality (i.e., thinking about their own demise) by planning for future goals and maintaining positive affect. Study 4 (N = 122) compared positive with negative relationship feedback and revealed that participants higher in autonomy were increasingly likely to agree with positive, and disagree with negative, feedback. Additionally, autonomy predicted consistent positive affect and sustained engagement with intrinsic pursuits. In sum, compared with individuals lower in autonomy, those higher in autonomy displayed more positive affect and eagerness to accept positive feedback under a variety of threats, including threats to motivation, relational need satisfaction, and existence as an individual. More autonomous participants distinguished themselves from less autonomous participants by sustaining their interest in existing pursuits and selectively disengaging from less intrinsic activities. Expanding on existing self-determination theory research, these results suggest that a more autonomous disposition relates to greater positivity overall and to a tendency to react to threat with focus on and discernment among personal goals.
147

Studiemotivation en jämförelse mellan gymnasieelevers egen uppfattning om motivationsnivå och Self-Determination Theory : en jämförelse mellan gymnasieelevers egen uppfattning om motivationsnivå och Self-Determination Theory

Hagdahl, Kristina, Jimmy, Hammarbäck January 2014 (has links)
Studien handlar om svenska gymnasieelevers motivation för att studera matematikämnet. Den teoretiska grunden hämtas ifrån Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). Studiens syfte är att undersöka hur väl gymnasieelevers egen uppfattning om sin motivationsnivå kan prediceras genom de fyra ingående motivationsorienteringarna i Self-Determination Theory: (1) external regulation; (2) introjected regulation; (3) identified regulation; och (4) intrinsic motivation. Deltagarna (n = 132), 44 pojkar, 84 flickor och fyra som valde att inte specificera kön, studerar vid två gymnasieskolor i Falu kommun. Deltagarna fick via en webbsida besvara en enkät som mätte variablerna: upplevd motivationsnivå, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation och intrinsic motivation. Multipel regression användes för att testa om de ingående variablerna i Self-Determination Theory kan predicera deltagarnas upplevda motivationsnivå. Resultatet visar att 69.9% av upplevd motivationsnivå kan förklaras genom de fyra ingående motivationsorienteringarna. De ingående fyra motivationsorienteringarna fanns ordnade enligt teori, vilket innebar att faktorer som upplevs mer autonoma också indikerar på högre motivationsnivå. Studiens resultat visar att gymnasieelevers självupplevda motivationsnivå kan prediceras genom Self-Determination Theory och dess motivationsorienteringar. De deltagare som skattar sin egen motivationsnivå som hög, är också de deltagare som i högst grad drivs av identified regulation och inre motivation, liksom att de deltagare som skattar sin självupplevda motivationsnivå som lägre drivs mer av yttre motivation.
148

Understanding and Implementing Self-Determination for Indigenous Peoples: The case of the Sami in Sweden

Fuchs, Léon January 2014 (has links)
The study focuses on the current status of the Sami indigenous community of Sweden and on the implementation of the concept of self-determination for indigenous peoples, as presented by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) of 2007. Nowadays, even if the Sami community of Sweden can enjoy several political, economic, social and cultural rights, a lot remains to be done concerning the development of their self-determination because several international principles related to indigenous rights have not been implemented so far.   Therefore, the aim of the study is to explore how the Sami people of Sweden define and understand the principle of self-determination for indigenous peoples and how they would like to implement it in the future, while also focusing on what can be learned from their particular situation from a conceptual perspective. To achieve that, the research has been mainly based on a field study carried out at the end of April 2014 and at the beginning of May 2014. Several representatives belonging to different Sami political parties and Sami stakeholder’s organisations have been interviewed on the field. Moreover, two academic researchers and one public relations officer have also been contacted and interviewed afterwards to offer a different perspective on the topic.   The findings of the study indicate that the interviewees have highlighted three main issues while defining the concept of self-determination for indigenous peoples: the importance of recognition and self-identification, the respect of indigenous traditions and the protection of traditional lands. Besides, many ideas mostly based on the development of the Swedish Sami Parliament have also been mentioned while thinking about the future. The study has also shown that the indigenous position in Sweden is quite paradoxical because even if the Sami people have some rights, they do not have self-determination as the current situation is still dominated by the state. Finally, another major aspect of the findings has also indicated that self-determination is mainly about changing attitudes between the states and indigenous peoples.
149

Enhancement of Positioning and Attitude Estimation Using Raw GPS Data in an Extended Kalman Filter

Carlsson, Jesper January 2014 (has links)
A Global Positioning System (GPS) can be used to estimate an objects position,given that the object has a GPS antenna. However, the system requires informationfrom at least four independent satellites in order to be able to give a positionestimate. If two GPS antennas and a carrier-phase GPS measurement unit is usedan estimate of the objects heading can be calculated by determine the baselinebetween the two antennas. The method is called GPS Attitude Determination(GPSAD) and requires that an Integer Ambiguity Problem (IAP) is solved. Thismethod is cheaper than more traditional methods to calculate the heading butis dependent on undisturbed GPS-reception. Through support from an InertialMeasurement Unit (IMU), containing accelerometers and gyroscopes, the systemcan be enhanced. In Thorstenson [2012] data from GPS, GPSAD and IMU wasintegrated in an Extended Kalman Filter (EKF) to enhance the performance. Thisthesis is an extension on Thorstensons work and is divided into two separate problems:enhancement of positioning when less than four satellites are available andthe possibility to integrate the EKF with the search of the correct integers for theIAP in order to enhance the estimation of attitude. For both problems an implementationhas been made and the performance has been enhanced for simulateddata. For the first problem it has been possible to enhance the performance onreal data while that has not been possible for the second problem. A number ofproposals is given on how to enhance the performance for the second problemusing real data.
150

Inuit Self-determination and Postsecondary Education: The Case of Nunavut and Greenland

Gaviria, Olga 26 June 2014 (has links)
With Inuit identifying as a people beyond nation-state boundaries, and Nunavummiut and Greenlanders as citizens of Canada and Denmark, the right to self-determination has followed distinct trajectories in the jurisdictions examined in my thesis. Nunavut has a constitutional mandate to be responsive to the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement, paradoxically intensifying the relationships with the federal government towards further devolution and maintaining an ethnic divide trespassing territorial lines. Envisioning statehood, Greenland has chosen to gradually break economic ties with Denmark and in mainstreaming its governance capacity it appears to be branching off ethnocentric policies. In what seem opposing pathways, autonomous postsecondary education institutions are positioned to mitigate the notional extremes the right to self-determination calls upon. By comparing institutions steering through conflicting missions, this thesis illustrates the ways in which the right to self-determination operates against the backdrop of regained geopolitical prominence of the Arctic Region. Applying a legal theoretical framework to the scholarship of indigenous education this thesis raises a number of issues in carrying forward the right to self-determination once indigenous peoples regain control over their destinies. Issues regarding social stratification challenging the politics of representation indicate that achieving some form of autonomy does not necessarily result in social justice as the indigenous rights advocacy scholarship suggests. Considering the Inuit right to self-determination as a process right rather than an outcome, this finding highlights internal pluralities challenging the reification of Inuit identity on the basis of cultural, political, and socioeconomic difference. This thesis advocates for examining the contingencies that shape Inuit multiple allegiances accounting for peoples vantage geopolitical positioning. As Inuit redefine their position in the local, national, and global spheres, important knowledge is produced overcoming the single overriding of identity politics. Recognizing that Inuit knowledge is knowledge in context, the author contends, may lead to new ways for postsecondary education to uphold the Inuit right to self-determination.

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