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Patterned Versus Conventional Object-Oriented Analysis Methods: A Group Project ExperimentKUROKI, Hiroaki, YAMAMOTO, Shuichiro 20 December 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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The Credibility Study of Ocean Ambient Noise Prediction EquationWang, Chien-Jen 09 September 2009 (has links)
Ocean Ambient Noise covers wide range except target signal in the sonar equation and is an influential parameter in sonar performance. Empirical equation obtained from linear regression of wind speed and ambient noise data is a common method to predict the noise level. Both ambient noise and wind speed data collected from experiments in southwest and northeast Taiwan sea were analyzed in statistics and time series. Experiment data was also used for prediction equations and further analysis. Coefficient of determination (r2) and F-test for the slope of the regression line were used to estimate how noise fit with wind speed data and the credibility of the regression. The result of the analysis was that the distribution of r2 changes with regions. The values of r2 calculated from northeast experiment data are higher than southwest because of the high percentage of high wind speed. The data from the northeast experiment is considered more appropriate for the prediction of noise level because the higher value of r2. All results of F-test showed the correlation between wind speed are statistically significant except the winter data in the southwest experiment. By using these two indicators, the credibility of the prediction equation can be realized and the prediction performance of sonar is promoted.
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Domain knowledge, uncertainty, and parameter constraintsMao, Yi 24 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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An empirical approach to automated performance management for elastic n-tier applications in computing cloudsMalkowski, Simon J. 03 April 2012 (has links)
Achieving a high degree of efficiency is non-trivial when managing the performance of large web-facing applications such as e-commerce websites and social networks. While computing clouds have been touted as a good solution for elastic applications, many significant technological challenges still have to be addressed in order to leverage the full potential of this new computing paradigm. In this dissertation I argue that the automation of elastic n-tier application performance management in computing clouds presents novel challenges to classical system performance management methodology that can be successfully addressed through a systematic empirical approach. I present strong evidence in support of my thesis in a framework of three incremental building blocks: Experimental Analysis of Elastic System Scalability and Consolidation, Modeling and Detection of Non-trivial Performance Phenomena in Elastic Systems, and Automated Control and Configuration Planning of Elastic Systems. More concretely, I first provide a proof of concept for the feasibility of large-scale experimental database system performance analyses, and illustrate several complex performance phenomena based on the gathered scalability and consolidation data. Second, I extend these initial results to a proof of concept for automating bottleneck detection based on statistical analysis and an abstract definition of multi-bottlenecks. Third, I build a performance control system that manages elastic n-tier applications efficiently with respect to complex performance phenomena such as multi-bottlenecks. This control system provides a proof of concept for automated online performance management based on empirical data.
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Validity generalization and transportability [electronic resource] : an investigation of random-effects meta-analytic methods / by Jennifer L. Kisamore.Kisamore, Jennifer L. January 2003 (has links)
Includes vita. / Title from PDF of title page. / Document formatted into pages; contains 134 pages. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of South Florida, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. / Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. / ABSTRACT: Validity generalization work over the past 25 years has called into question the veracity of the assumption that validity is situationally specific. Recent theoretical and methodological work has suggested that validity coefficients may be transportable even if true validity is not a constant. Most transportability work is based on the assumption that the distribution of rho ( ) is normal, yet, no empirical evidence exists to support this assumption. The present study used a competing model approach in which a new procedure for assessing transportability was compared with two more commonly used methods. Empirical Bayes estimation (Brannick, 2001; Brannick & Hall, 2003) was evaluated alongside both the Schmidt-Hunter multiplicative model (Hunter & Schmidt, 1990) and a corrected Hedges-Vevea (see Hall & Brannick, 2002; Hedges & Vevea, 1998) model. The purpose of the present study was two-fold. The first part of the study compared the accuracy of estimates of the mean, standard deviation, and the lower bound of 90 and 99 percent credibility intervals computed from the three different methods across 32 simulated conditions. The mean, variance, and shape of the distribution varied across the simulated conditions. The second part of the study involved comparing results of analyses of the three methods based on previously published validity coefficients. The second part of the study was used to show whether choice of method for determining whether transportability is warranted matters in practice. Results of the simulation analyses suggest that the Schmidt-Hunter method is superior to the other methods even when the distribution of true validity parameters violates the assumption of normality. Results of analyses conducted on real data show trends consistent with those evident in the analyses of the simulated data. Conclusions regarding transportability, however, did not change as a function of method used for any of the real data sets. Limitations of the present study as well as recommendations for practice and future research are provided. / System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader. / Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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An Empirical Model of Thermal Updrafts Using Data Obtained From a Manned GliderChildress, Christopher E 01 May 2010 (has links)
Various methods have been used, including airborne radars, LIDAR, observation of flying birds, towers, tethered balloons, and aircraft to gain both a qualitative and quantitative representation of how heat and moisture are transported to higher altitudes and grow the boundary or mixing layer by thermal updrafts. This paper builds upon that research using an instrumented glider to determine the structure and build a mathematical model of thermals in a desert environment. During these flights, it was discovered that the traditional view of a thermal as a singular rising plume of air did not sufficiently explain what was being observed, but rather another phenomenon was occurring. This paper puts forth the argument and a mathematical model to show that thermals actually take the form of a hexagonal convection cell at higher levels in the convective boundary layer when the thermal acts as if unrestrained by borders as in non-linear cases of free convection.
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Distinguishing Processes that Induce Temporal Beach Profile Changes Using Principal Component Analysis: A Case Study at Long Key, West-central FloridaDavis, Denise Marie 01 January 2013 (has links)
The heavily developed Long Key is located in Pinellas County in west-central Florida. The structured Blind Pass at the north end of the barrier island interrupts the southward longshore sediment transport, resulting in severe and chronic beach erosion along the northern portion of the island. Frequent beach nourishments were conducted to mitigate the erosion. In this study, the performance of the most recent beach nourishment in 2010 is quantified through time-series beach profile surveys. Over the 34-month period, the nourished northern portion of the island, Upham Beach, lost up to 330 m3/m of sand, with a landward shoreline retreat of up to 100 m. The middle portion of the island gained up to 25 m3/m of sand, benefiting from the sand lost from Upham Beach. The southern portion of Long Key lost a modest amount of sediment, largely due to Tropical Storm Debby, which approached from the south in June 2012.
The severe erosion along Upham Beach is induced by a large negative longshore transport gradient. The beach here has no sand bar and retreated landward persistently over the 34-month study period. In contrast the profiles in the central section of the island generally have a sand bar which moved landward and seaward in response to seasonal and storm-induced wave-energy changes. The sand volume across the entire profile in the central portion of the island is mostly conserved.
Two typical example beach profiles, LK3A and R157, were selected to examine the ability of the commonly used principal component analysis (PCA), also commonly known as empirical orthogonal function analysis (EOF), to identify beach profile
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changes induced by longshore and cross-shore sediment transport gradients. For the longshore-transport driven changes at the non-barred profile LK3A, the principal eigenvector accounted for over 91% of the total variance, with a dominant broad peak in the cross-shore distribution. At the barred R157, the profile changes were caused mainly by cross-shore transport gradients with modest contribution from longshore transport gradient; eigenvalue one only accounted for less than 51% of the total variance, and eigenvalues two and three still contributed considerably to the overall variance.
In order to verify the uniqueness of the PCA results from LK3A and R157, five numerical experiments were conducted, simulating changes at a barred and non-barred beach driven by longshore, cross-shore, and combined sediment transport gradients. Results from LK3A and R157 compare well with simulated beach erosion (or accretion) due to variable longshore sediment transport gradients and due to both cross-shore and longshore sediment transport gradients, respectively. Different PCA results were obtained from different profile change patterns.
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An empirical study of SD signal delay versus temperature in a plenum grade coaxial cableKaur, Sukhdeep 14 February 2012 (has links)
A high resolution speedy delivery time domain reflectometer (SD/TDR) has been developed in the Electrical Engineering department at The University of Texas at Austin. The SD/TDR uses a novel non-sinusoidal signal that does not undergo dispersion during transmission in a lossy media. SD/TDR is used to estimate the length and detect the location of faults in the transmission lines. Time of flight (TOF) is one of the critical parameters of SD/TDR and a function of several temperature dependent factors. Given the TOF and length of a transmission line, signal delay can be computed. This research presents an empirical study of the effect of temperature on the TOF in a plenum grade coaxial cable for temperatures ranging from -3 °C to 60 °C. We also study the effect of temperature on characteristic impedance of the coaxial cable. Finally, a SD double exponential waveform is used to estimate TOF for calibrated short and open terminations. / text
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An empirical study on software quality : developer perception of quality, metrics, and visualizationsWilson, Gary Lynn 09 December 2013 (has links)
Software tends to decline in quality over time, causing development and maintenance costs to rise. However, by measuring, tracking, and controlling quality during the lifetime of a software product, its technical debt can be held in check, reducing total cost of ownership. The measurement of quality faces challenges due to disagreement in the meaning of software quality, the inability to directly measure quality factors, and the lack of measurement practice in the software industry. This report addresses these challenges through both a literature survey, a metrics derivation process, and a survey of professional software developers. Definitions of software quality from the literature are presented and evaluated with responses from software professionals. A goal, question, metric process is used to derive quality-targeted metrics tracing back to a set of seven code-quality subgoals, while a survey to software professionals shows that despite agreement that metrics and metric visualizations would be useful for improving software quality, the techniques are underutilized in practice. / text
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Μελέτη των οπτικών και ηλεκτρονιακών ιδιοτήτων νανονημάτων οξειδίου του ψευδαργύρου (ZnO) με την εμπειρική μέθοδο ψευδοδυναμικώνΠετώνη, Αλέξια 04 October 2014 (has links)
Το οξείδιο του ψευδαργύρου είναι ένας ημιαγωγός της ομάδας II-VI και έχει μεγάλη ποικιλία σε τεχνολογικές εφαρμογές όπως οι αισθητήρες διαφόρων χημικών αερίων, τα lasers, οι δίοδοι εκπομπής φωτός, οι νανο-γεννήτριες, τα ηλιακά κύτταρα και πολλές άλλες. Το ευρύ του ενεργειακό κενό (3.445 eV) το καθιστά ένα πολλά υποσχόμενο υλικό για φωτονικές εφαρμογές στην περιοχή του UV ή του ιώδους, ενώ ταυτόχρονα η υψηλή ενέργεια συνοχής του εξιτονίου που το χαρακτηρίζει (περίπου στα 60 meV) επιτρέπει την αποτελεσματική εξιτονική εκπομπή σε θερμοκρασία δωματίου. Οι πιο πρόσφατες εξελίξεις στον τομέα του νανοδομημένου ZnO είναι οι νανοδρόμοι, οι νανογέφυρες, οι νανοπροπέλες, οι νανοδακτύλιοι, τα νανονήματα κ.α.
Στην παρούσα διπλωματική εργασία μελετώνται οι ηλεκτρονιακές και οπτικές ιδιότητες νανονημάτων οξειδίου του ψευδαργύρου (ZnO) για ένα εύρος διαμέτρων από 2 έως 6 nm και με την βοήθεια της εμπειρικής μεθόδου των ψευδοδυναμικών και της Configuration Interaction (CI). Μια ανασκόπηση των ιδιοτήτων και χαρακτηριστικών του bulk ZnO, όπως η κρυσταλλική και η ενεργειακή του δομή, κάποιες τεχνολογικές εφαρμογές και μέθοδοι ανάπτυξης δίνονται στο πρώτο κεφάλαιο. Το δεύτερο κεφάλαιο περιέχει την περιγραφή διαφόρων υπολογιστικών μεθόδων όπως της προσέγγισης ενεργούς μάζας ( Effective Mass Approximation), της θεωρίας του συναρτησιακού της πυκνότητας (Density Functional Theory) και τέλος, της εμπειρικής μεθόδου των ψευδοδυναμικών που χρησιμοποιείται στους υπολογισμούς των ηλεκτρονιακών και οπτικών ιδιοτήτων των νανοδομών που μελετάμε. Στο τρίτο και τελευταίο κεφάλαιο, παρατίθενται τα αριθμητικά αποτελέσματα . Αυτά, αφορούν στο εξαρτώμενο από το μέγεθος, οπτικό ενεργειακό κενό, το Stokes shift, και το φάσμα φωτοφωταύγειας. Στο τέλος του κεφαλαίου περιγράφονται τα συμπεράσματα. / Zinc oxide (ZnO), a typical group II-VI compound, has a great variety of device applications, such as chemical sensors, lasers, light-emitting diodes, nanogenerators, solar cells and so forth. The wide band gap (3.445 eV) makes it a promising material for photonic applications in the UV or the blue range, while the high exciton binding energy (around 60 meV at room temperature) allows efficient excitonic emission at room temperature. The most recent developments are towards the nanostructured ZnO, such as nanorods, nanobridges, nanopropellers, nanorings, nanowires, et al.
In the present master thesis, the electronic and optical properties of ZnO nanowires within the range of 2-6 nm in diameter are studied by means of atomistic empirical pseudopotential method and configuration interaction. A review of the bulk ZnO, such as the crystal and band structures, technological applications and synthesis methods, is presented in chapter one. The second chapter is devoted to the discussion of various types of methods, e.g., effective-mass approximation, density-functional theory (DFT), and especially the empirical pseudopotential method used herein, for the calculations of the electronic and optical properties of nanostructured ZnO. The numerical results, based on the empirical pseudopotential methods and configuration interaction approach, are present in the following chapter. These results cover the size-dependent optical band gap, Stokes shift and photoluminescence spectrum. A summarization of the results is given in the last chapter.
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