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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.
151

Restructuring Islamic law| The opinions of the 'ulama' towards codification of personal status law in Egypt

Elgawhary, Tarek A. 30 December 2014 (has links)
<p> This dissertation explores the process, effects, and results of codification of Egyptian personal status laws as seen through the eyes of the <i> 'ulam&amacr;'.</i> The codification process began in the mid-1800s and continued until the abolishment of the Shar&imacr;'a courts in 1955 with the absorption of personal status statutes into the newly drafted civil code and the national courts that administered them. Throughout this time period the codification process entailed finding appropriate rulings from the annals of Islamic law and structuring these rulings using the model and language of European legal codes, usually the French code. </p><p> Prior to the abolition of the Shar&imacr;'a courts in 1955 the area of personal status law was the exclusive domain of the <i>'ulam&amacr;' </i> and the Shar&imacr;'a. In Egypt, personal status laws were exclusively based on H&dotbelow;anaf&imacr; law, and issues of consolidation and codification of these laws first took place <i>within</i> the framework of classical Islamic law, not outside of it. To understand the significance of the process of codification of personal status law, therefore, one must examine the attitudes of the <i>'ulam&amacr;'</i> regarding it and consider its place within the edifice of Islamic law. </p><p> From a prima facie reading it would seem that a codification of Islamic law is something that the <i>'ulam&amacr;'</i> would consider an anathema. There were those, however, who supported it. In fact early drafts of codified personal status and civil laws were written and compiled by certain <i> 'ulam&amacr;'.</i> There were also others who had mixed feelings about it. The purpose of this study is to acknowledge and understand these various positions since they have been largely ignored throughout the secondary literature, and when they have been considered, have been viewed as uniform and singular. </p><p> Ultimately this dissertation seeks to draw out these nuances and to draw conclusions as to why the codification of Islamic law is today a forgone conclusion amongst the <i>'ulam&amacr;'.</i></p>
152

Above and below the Wannier threshold

Loughan, Arlene M. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
153

Organizational Learning From Near Misses in Health Care

Jeffs, Lianne Patricia 13 August 2010 (has links)
How clinicians detect and differentiate near misses from adverse events in health care is poorly understood. This study adopted a constructivist grounded theory approach and utilized document analysis and semi-structured interviews with 24 managers (middle and senior) and clinicians to examine the processes and factors associated with recognizing and recovering and learning from near misses in daily clinical practice. While safety science suggests that near misses are sources of learning to guide improvement efforts, the study identified how clinicians and managers cognitively downgrade and accept near misses as a routine part of daily practice. Such downgrading reduces the visibility of near misses and creates a paradoxical effect of promoting collective vigilance and increased safety while also encouraging violations in clinical practice. Three approaches to correcting and/or learning from near misses emerged: “doing a quick fix,” “going into the black hole,” and “closing off the swiss-cheese holes”; however, minimal organizational learning occurs. From these findings, two key paradoxes that undermine organization-level learning require further attention: (a) near misses are pervasive in everyday practice but many remain undetected and are missed learning opportunities, and (b) collective vigilance serves as both safety net and safety threat. Study findings suggest that organizational efforts are required to determine which near misses need to be reported. Organizations need to shift the culture from one of “doing a quick fix” to one that learns from near misses in daily practice; they should reinforce the benefits and reduce the risks of collective vigilance, and further encourage learning at the clinical microsystem level. Future research is required to provide insight into how individual, social, and organizational factors influence the recognition, recovery, and instructional value of near misses and safety threats in health care organizations’ daily practice.
154

The Impact of Near-Duplicate Documents on Information Retrieval Evaluation

Khoshdel Nikkhoo, Hani 18 January 2011 (has links)
Near-duplicate documents can adversely affect the efficiency and effectiveness of search engines. Due to the pairwise nature of the comparisons required for near-duplicate detection, this process is extremely costly in terms of the time and processing power it requires. Despite the ubiquitous presence of near-duplicate detection algorithms in commercial search engines, their application and impact in research environments is not fully explored. The implementation of near-duplicate detection algorithms forces trade-offs between efficiency and effectiveness, entailing careful testing and measurement to ensure acceptable performance. In this thesis, we describe and evaluate a scalable implementation of a near-duplicate detection algorithm, based on standard shingling techniques, running under a MapReduce framework. We explore two different shingle sampling techniques and analyze their impact on the near-duplicate document detection process. In addition, we investigate the prevalence of near-duplicate documents in the runs submitted to the adhoc task of TREC 2009 web track.
155

The synthesis and application of near infrared absorbing dyes in photoelectrochemical cells

Goddard, Victoria H. M. January 2006 (has links)
Research into dye sensitised solar cells has increased in recent years as the search for a viable low cost, renewable energy source continues. The synthesis and characterisation of an array of symmetrical and asymmetrical zinc and ruthenium centred phthalocyanines and naphthalocyanines are presented in this work. Certain compounds were designed so that they would possess a carboxylic acid group which could be utilised to chemisorb the compound to a titanium dioxide surface. The dye sensitised titania electrodes were studied as potential photoanodes in dye sensitised solar cells. The use of symmetrical and asymmetrical compounds in the solar cells enabled conclusions to be drawn about the effects on electron injection of the HOMO energy level and the number and position of binding groups. The highest incident photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE) of 4 % and overall conversion efficiency (η) of 0.09 % were obtained when 2,3:9,10-(22,92-carboxyl)benzo(b,k)-15,18,22,25-tetrakis(octyl)phthalocyaninatozinc(II) (63) was utilised as a sensitiser. This response was concluded to be due to the molecule possessing two binding groups and phthalocyanine like energy levels. When the ruthenium centred and zinc centred compounds were compared as sensitisers in DSCs, an increase in photovoltage and photocurrent was observed with the use of the ruthenium centred compounds. This is due to the binding group being attached to the axial ligand and therefore being situated closer to the LUMO electron density which is found at the centre of the molecule. As the binding group is closer there is less hindrance to electron injection into the TiO2 conduction band. Aggregation studies were also conducted on the acid and ester substituted zinc naphthalocyanine with and without the use of additives. It was found that the ester existed primarily as a dimer whose formation is concentration dependent. The acid also existed as a dimer but produced a "fake" monomer peak due to the formation of J aggregates. It was found that upon dilution the angle of the J aggregates shifted so that they formed face-to-face aggregates. It was found that the peripherally binding additive cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) prevented aggregation at a concentration 20 times that of the compound but upon dilution rearranged itself so that aggregation was no longer inhibited.
156

Near-infrared spectroscopic studies of human scalp hair in a forensic context

Brandes, Sarina January 2009 (has links)
Human hair is a relatively inert biopolymer and can survive through natural disasters. It is also found as trace evidence at crime scenes. Previous studies by FTIRMicrospectroscopy and – Attenuated Total Reflectance (ATR) successfully showed that hairs can be matched and discriminated on the basis of gender, race and hair treatment, when interpreted by chemometrics. However, these spectroscopic techniques are difficult to operate at- or on-field. On the other hand, some near infrared spectroscopic (NIRS) instruments equipped with an optical probe, are portable and thus, facilitate the on- or at –field measurements for potential application directly at a crime or disaster scene. This thesis is focused on bulk hair samples, which are free of their roots, and thus, independent of potential DNA contribution for identification. It explores the building of a profile of an individual with the use of the NIRS technique on the basis of information on gender, race and treated hair, i.e. variables which can match and discriminate individuals. The complex spectra collected may be compared and interpreted with the use of chemometrics. These methods can then be used as protocol for further investigations. Water is a common substance present at forensic scenes e.g. at home in a bath, in the swimming pool; it is also common outdoors in the sea, river, dam, puddles and especially during DVI incidents at the seashore after a tsunami. For this reason, the matching and discrimination of bulk hair samples after the water immersion treatment was also explored. Through this research, it was found that Near Infrared Spectroscopy, with the use of an optical probe, has successfully matched and discriminated bulk hair samples to build a profile for the possible application to a crime or disaster scene. Through the interpretation of Chemometrics, such characteristics included Gender and Race. A novel approach was to measure the spectra not only in the usual NIR range (4000 – 7500 cm-1) but also in the Visible NIR (7500 – 12800 cm-1). This proved to be particularly useful in exploring the discrimination of differently coloured hair, e.g. naturally coloured, bleached or dyed. The NIR region is sensitive to molecular vibrations of the hair fibre structure as well as that of the dyes and damage from bleaching. But the Visible NIR region preferentially responds to the natural colourants, the melanin, which involves electronic transitions. This approach was shown to provide improved discrimination between dyed and untreated hair. This thesis is an extensive study of the application of NIRS with the aid of chemometrics, for matching and discrimination of bulk human scalp hair. The work not only indicates the strong potential of this technique in this field but also breaks new ground with the exploration of the use of the NIR and Visible NIR ranges for spectral sampling. It also develops methods for measuring spectra from hair which has been immersed in different water media (sea, river and dam)
157

Near field microwave imaging techniques for embedded object detection and shape reconstruction

Tantong, Somsak. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2007. / The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on January 11, 2008) Includes bibliographical references.
158

Optical properties of zinc oxide nanostructure materials using near-field scanning optical microscopy /

Xiao, Zhizhao. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 41-42). Also available in electronic version.
159

Neural correlates of cognitive workload and anesthetic depth : fNIR spectroscopy investigation in humans /

Izzetoglu, Kurtulus. Onaral, Banu. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Drexel University, 2008. / Includes abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 60-65).
160

Characterisation of near-field optical trapping and biological applications

Varghese, Smitha. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (PhD) - Swinburne University of Technology, Faculty of Engineering and Industrial Sciences, Centre for Micro-Photonics, 2007. / A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Centre for Micro-Photonics, Faculty of Engineering and Industrial Sciences, Swinburne University of Technology, 2007. Typescript. Bibliography: p. 135-153.

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