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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

Iterative, Interactive Analysis of Agent-goal Models for Early Requirements Engineering

Horkoff, Jennifer 26 March 2012 (has links)
Conceptual modeling allows abstraction, communication and consensus building in system development. It is challenging to expand and improve the accuracy of models in an iterative process, producing models able to facilitate analysis. Modeling and analysis can be especially challenging in early Requirements Engineering (RE), where high-level system requirements are discovered. In this stage, hard-to-measure non-functional requirements are critical; understanding the interactions between systems and stakeholders is a key to system success. Goal models have been introduced as a means to ensure stakeholder needs are met in early RE. Because of the high-level, social nature of early RE models, it is important to provide procedures which prompt stakeholder involvement (interaction) and model improvement (iteration). Most current approaches to goal model analysis require quantitative or formal information that is hard to gather in early RE, or produce analysis results automatically over models. Approaches are needed which balance automated analysis over complex models with the need for interaction and iteration. This work develops a framework for iterative, interactive analysis for early RE using agent-goal models. We survey existing approaches for goal model analysis, providing guidelines using domain characteristics to advise on procedure selection. We define requirements for an agent-goal model framework specific to early RE analysis, using these requirements to evaluate the appropriateness of existing work and to motivate and evaluate the components of our analysis framework. We provide a detailed review of forward satisfaction procedures, exploring how different model interpretations affect analysis results. A survey of agent-goal variations in practice is used to create a formal definition of the i* modeling framework which supports sensible syntax variations. This definition is used to precisely define analysis procedures and concepts throughout the work. The framework consists of analysis procedures, implemented in the OpenOME requirements modeling tool, which allow users to ask “What if?” and “Is this goal achievable, and how?” questions. Visualization techniques are introduced to aid analysis understanding. Consistency checks are defined over the interactive portion of the framework. Implementation, performance and potential optimizations are described. Group and individual case studies help to validate framework effectiveness in practice. Contributions are summarized in light of the requirements for early RE analysis. Finally, limitations and future work are described.
2

Iterative, Interactive Analysis of Agent-goal Models for Early Requirements Engineering

Horkoff, Jennifer 26 March 2012 (has links)
Conceptual modeling allows abstraction, communication and consensus building in system development. It is challenging to expand and improve the accuracy of models in an iterative process, producing models able to facilitate analysis. Modeling and analysis can be especially challenging in early Requirements Engineering (RE), where high-level system requirements are discovered. In this stage, hard-to-measure non-functional requirements are critical; understanding the interactions between systems and stakeholders is a key to system success. Goal models have been introduced as a means to ensure stakeholder needs are met in early RE. Because of the high-level, social nature of early RE models, it is important to provide procedures which prompt stakeholder involvement (interaction) and model improvement (iteration). Most current approaches to goal model analysis require quantitative or formal information that is hard to gather in early RE, or produce analysis results automatically over models. Approaches are needed which balance automated analysis over complex models with the need for interaction and iteration. This work develops a framework for iterative, interactive analysis for early RE using agent-goal models. We survey existing approaches for goal model analysis, providing guidelines using domain characteristics to advise on procedure selection. We define requirements for an agent-goal model framework specific to early RE analysis, using these requirements to evaluate the appropriateness of existing work and to motivate and evaluate the components of our analysis framework. We provide a detailed review of forward satisfaction procedures, exploring how different model interpretations affect analysis results. A survey of agent-goal variations in practice is used to create a formal definition of the i* modeling framework which supports sensible syntax variations. This definition is used to precisely define analysis procedures and concepts throughout the work. The framework consists of analysis procedures, implemented in the OpenOME requirements modeling tool, which allow users to ask “What if?” and “Is this goal achievable, and how?” questions. Visualization techniques are introduced to aid analysis understanding. Consistency checks are defined over the interactive portion of the framework. Implementation, performance and potential optimizations are described. Group and individual case studies help to validate framework effectiveness in practice. Contributions are summarized in light of the requirements for early RE analysis. Finally, limitations and future work are described.
3

A Distributed Interactive Cube Exploration System

Jayachandran, Prasanth 06 August 2013 (has links)
No description available.
4

Hive, Spark, Presto for Interactive Queries on Big Data

Gureev, Nikita January 2018 (has links)
Traditional relational database systems can not be efficiently used to analyze data with large volume and different formats, i.e. big data. Apache Hadoop is one of the first open-source tools that provides a distributed data storage system and resource manager. The space of big data processing has been growing fast over the past years and many technologies have been introduced in the big data ecosystem to address the problem of processing large volumes of data, and some of the early tools have become widely adopted, with Apache Hive being one of them. However,with the recent advances in technology, there are other tools better suited for interactive analytics of big data, such as Apache Spark and Presto. In this thesis these technologies are examined and benchmarked in order to determine their performance for the task of interactive business intelligence queries. The benchmark is representative of interactive business intelligence queries, and uses a star-shaped schema. The performance HiveTez, Hive LLAP, Spark SQL, and Presto is examined with text, ORC, Parquet data on different volume and concurrency. A short analysis and conclusions are presented with the reasoning about the choice of framework and data format for a system that would run interactive queries on bigdata. / Traditionella relationella databassystem kan inte användas effektivt för att analysera stora datavolymer och filformat, såsom big data. Apache Hadoop är en av de första open-source verktyg som tillhandahåller ett distribuerat datalagring och resurshanteringssystem. Området för big data processing har växt fort de senaste åren och många teknologier har introducerats inom ekosystemet för big data för att hantera problemet med processering av stora datavolymer, och vissa tidiga verktyg har blivit vanligt förekommande, där Apache Hive är en av de. Med nya framsteg inom området finns det nu bättre verktyg som är bättre anpassade för interaktiva analyser av big data, som till exempel Apache Spark och Presto. I denna uppsats är dessa teknologier analyserade med benchmarks för att fastställa deras prestanda för uppgiften av interaktiva business intelligence queries. Dessa benchmarks är representative för interaktiva business intelligence queries och använder stjärnformade scheman. Prestandan är undersökt för Hive Tex, Hive LLAP, Spark SQL och Presto med text, ORC Parquet data för olika volymer och parallelism. En kort analys och sammanfattning är presenterad med ett resonemang om valet av framework och dataformat för ett system som exekverar interaktiva queries på big data.
5

Efficient Information Visualization of Multivariate and Time-Varying Data

Johansson, Jimmy January 2008 (has links)
Data can be found everywhere, for example in the form of price, size, weight and colour of all products sold by a company, or as time series of daily observations of temperature, precipitation, wind and visibility from thousands of stations. Due to their size and complexity it is intrinsically hard to form a global overview and understanding of them. Information visualization aims at overcoming these difficulties by transforming data into representations that can be more easily interpreted. This thesis presents work on the development of methods to enable efficient information visualization of multivariate and time-varying data sets by conveying information in a clear and interpretable way, and in a reasonable time. The work presented is primarily based on a popular multivariate visualization technique called parallel coordinates but many of the methods can be generalized to apply to other information visualization techniques. A three-dimensional, multi-relational version of parallel coordinates is presented that enables a simultaneous analysis of all pairwise relationships between a single focus variable and all other variables included in the display. This approach permits a more rapid analysis of highly multivariate data sets. Through a number of user studies the multi-relational parallel coordinates technique has been evaluated against standard, two-dimensional parallel coordinates and been found to better support a number of different types of task. High precision density maps and transfer functions are presented as a means to reveal structure in large data displayed in parallel coordinates. These two approaches make it possible to interactively analyse arbitrary regions in a parallel coordinates display without risking the loss of significant structure. Another focus of this thesis relates to the visualization of time-varying, multivariate data. This has been studied both in the specific application area of system identification using volumetric representations, as well as in the general case by the introduction of temporal parallel coordinates. The methods described in this thesis have all been implemented using modern computer graphics hardware which enables the display and manipulation of very large data sets in real time. A wide range of data sets, both synthetically generated and taken from real applications, have been used to test these methods. It is expected that, as long as the data have multivariate properties, they could be employed efficiently.
6

Optimization-based User Group Management : Discovery, Analysis, Recommendation / Optimization-based User Group Management : Discovery, Analysis, Recommendation

Omidvar Tehrani, Behrooz 06 November 2015 (has links)
Les donn ́ees utilisateurs sont devenue de plus en plus disponibles dans plusieurs do- maines tels que les traces d'usage des smartphones et le Web social. Les donn ́ees util- isateurs, sont un type particulier de donn ́ees qui sont d ́ecrites par des informations socio-d ́emographiques (ex., ˆage, sexe, m ́etier, etc.) et leurs activit ́es (ex., donner un avis sur un restaurant, voter, critiquer un film, etc.). L'analyse des donn ́ees utilisa- teurs int ́eresse beaucoup les scientifiques qui travaillent sur les ́etudes de la population, le marketing en-ligne, les recommandations et l'analyse des donn ́ees `a grande ́echelle. Cependant, les outils d'analyse des donn ́ees utilisateurs sont encore tr`es limit ́es.Dans cette th`ese, nous exploitons cette opportunit ́e et proposons d'analyser les donn ́ees utilisateurs en formant des groupes d'utilisateurs. Cela diff`ere de l'analyse des util- isateurs individuels et aussi des analyses statistiques sur une population enti`ere. Un groupe utilisateur est d ́efini par un ensemble des utilisateurs dont les membres parta- gent des donn ́ees socio-d ́emographiques et ont des activit ́es en commun. L'analyse au niveau d'un groupe a pour objectif de mieux g ́erer les donn ́ees creuses et le bruit dans les donn ́ees. Dans cette th`ese, nous proposons un cadre de gestion de groupes d'utilisateurs qui contient les composantes suivantes: d ́ecouverte de groupes, analyse de groupes, et recommandation aux groupes.La premi`ere composante concerne la d ́ecouverte des groupes d'utilisateurs, c.- `a-d., compte tenu des donn ́ees utilisateurs brutes, obtenir les groupes d'utilisateurs en op- timisantuneouplusieursdimensionsdequalit ́e. Ledeuxi`emecomposant(c.-`a-d., l'analyse) est n ́ecessaire pour aborder le probl`eme de la surcharge de l'information: le r ́esultat d'une ́etape d ́ecouverte des groupes d'utilisateurs peut contenir des millions de groupes. C'est une tache fastidieuse pour un analyste `a ́ecumer tous les groupes trouv ́es. Nous proposons une approche interactive pour faciliter cette analyse. La question finale est comment utiliser les groupes trouv ́es. Dans cette th`ese, nous ́etudions une applica- tion particuli`ere qui est la recommandation aux groupes d'utilisateurs, en consid ́erant les affinit ́es entre les membres du groupe et son ́evolution dans le temps.Toutes nos contributions sont ́evalu ́ees au travers d'un grand nombre d'exp ́erimentations `a la fois pour tester la qualit ́e et la performance (le temps de r ́eponse). / User data is becoming increasingly available in multiple domains ranging from phone usage traces to data on the social Web. User data is a special type of data that is described by user demographics (e.g., age, gender, occupation, etc.) and user activities (e.g., rating, voting, watching a movie, etc.) The analysis of user data is appealing to scientists who work on population studies, online marketing, recommendations, and large-scale data analytics. However, analysis tools for user data is still lacking.In this thesis, we believe there exists a unique opportunity to analyze user data in the form of user groups. This is in contrast with individual user analysis and also statistical analysis on the whole population. A group is defined as set of users whose members have either common demographics or common activities. Group-level analysis reduces the amount of sparsity and noise in data and leads to new insights. In this thesis, we propose a user group management framework consisting of following components: user group discovery, analysis and recommendation.The very first step in our framework is group discovery, i.e., given raw user data, obtain user groups by optimizing one or more quality dimensions. The second component (i.e., analysis) is necessary to tackle the problem of information overload: the output of a user group discovery step often contains millions of user groups. It is a tedious task for an analyst to skim over all produced groups. Thus we need analysis tools to provide valuable insights in this huge space of user groups. The final question in the framework is how to use the found groups. In this thesis, we investigate one of these applications, i.e., user group recommendation, by considering affinities between group members.All our contributions of the proposed framework are evaluated using an extensive set of experiments both for quality and performance.
7

Discipline: An interpersonal approach for elementary school teachers in Ghana

Amponsah-Amfo, Daniel 01 January 1997 (has links)
No description available.

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