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CHOICE OF FACTOR ANALYTIC TECHNIQUE AS A FUNCTION OF RESEARCH GOALLenczycki, Frederick James, 1946- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Sampling efficiency evaluation in Emory oak woodlands of southeastern ArizonaZanga, Ambroise, 1956- January 1989 (has links)
A forest inventory was made by a two-man team in the Emory oak (Quercus emoryi) woodlands, near the Huachuca Mountains, in southeastern Arizona. Two plot sizes, 1/10th, and 1/25th hectare, and three basal area factors, 2, 4 and 6 (square meters per hectare) were used. Tree tally time was recorded, but the travelling time between plots was not recorded. Total number of trees, total basal area, and total volume of trees per hectare were measured, summarized, and analyzed. Significant differences were noted between plot sampling and point sampling. Results suggested that with plot sampling, 1/25th hectare plot was more efficient than 1/10th hectare plot for all measures of forest densities. With point sampling, basal area factor 6 had the highest relative sampling efficiency in terms of trees per hectare. Basal area factor 2 had the highest relative sampling efficiency in terms of basal area and volume per hectare. From this information, more efficient forest inventories of the Emory oak woodlands can be designed.
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Use of statistical classifiers in the analysis of fMRI dataAsh, Thomas William John January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Bayes risk analysis of regional regression estimates of floodsMetler, William Arledge, 1944- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Longitudinal analysis of the effect of climatic factors on the wood anatomy of two eucalypt clones.Ayele, Dawit Getnet. 04 February 2014 (has links)
Eucalypt trees are one of tree species used for the manufacturing of papers in
South Africa. The manufacturing of paper consists of cooking the wood with chemicals until
obtaining a pulp. The wood is made of different cells. The shape and structure of these cells, called
wood anatomical characteristics are important for the quality of paper. In addition, the anatomical
characteristics of wood are influenced by environmental factors like climatic factors, soil
compositions etc…. In this study we investigated the effects of the climatic factors (temperature,
rainfall, solar radiation, relative humidity, and wind speed) on wood anatomical characteristics of
two Eucalyptus clones, a GC (Eucalyptus grandis × camuldulensis) and a GU (Eucalyptus grandis ×
urophylla). Nine trees per clone have been selected.
Two sets of data have been collected for this study. The first set of data was eleven anatomical
characteristics of the wood formed daily over a period of five years. The second set of data was the
daily measurement of temperature, rainfall, solar radiation, relative humidity and wind speed in the
experimental area.
Wood is made of two kinds of cell, the fibres and the vessels. The fibres are used for the strength and
support of the tree and the vessels for the nutrition. Eleven characteristics related to those cells have
been measured (diameter, wall thickness, frequency). These characteristics are highly correlated. To
reduce the number of response variables, the principal component analysis was used and the first four
principal components accounts for about 95% of the total variation. Based on the weights associated
with each component the first four principal components were labelled as vessel dimension (VD),
fibre dimension (FD), fibre wall (FW) and vessel frequency (VF).
The longitudinal linear mixed model with age, season, temperature, rainfall, solar radiation, relative
humidity and wind speed as the fixed effects factors and tree as random effect factor was fitted to the
data. From time series modelling result, lagged order of climatic variables were identified and these
lagged climatic variables were included in the model. To account for the physical characteristic of
the trees we included the effect of diameter at breast height, stem radius, daily radial increment, and
the suppression or dominance of the tree in the model. It was found that wood anatomical
characteristics of the two clones were more affected by climatic variables when the tree was on
juvenile stage as compared to mature stage. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2010.
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Essays on strategic trading, asymmetric information, and asset pricingPeterson, David John 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis presents three models of asset pricing involving non-competitive behavior and asymmetric
information. In the first model, a risk averse investor with private information about
dividends trades shares over an infinite time horizon with risk neutral uninformed agents. The
informed investor trades strategically in equilibrium. The second model also involves an infinite
time horizon, but all agents are risk averse and equally informed about dividends. Non-competitive
behavior is exogenously specified; price takers trade shares with a strategic investor
who accounts for the effects of her trades on the stock price. In this case, an endogenous information
asymmetry arises in equilibrium. Closed form equilibria are derived for both models and
implications for price dynamics are explored. While the first model constitutes a new extension
of the multiperiod Kyle model of insider trading, the second model generates more interesting
price dynamics. If the strategic investor manages a large mutual fund, significant risk premia
and price volatility may arise in equilibrium. In fact, if mutual fund participation is sufficiently
widespread, multiple equilibria may exist. The third model extends the multiperiod Kyle model
to a case where the insider observes a noisy signal of the stock's terminal liquidation value. An
equilibrium much like Kyle's is derived. Price tends toward value over time, and stock price
volatility depends on both the drift and volatility of the insider's private signal. Like the Kyle
model, the insider's trading activity leaves no detectable trace in trading volume, expected
returns, or price volatility.
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A mathematical procedure for air monitoring instrumentation locationLee, Thomas Davis 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Use of short-term stations to estimate rainfallVeerasamy, S. (Shyamnath) January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Approximating periodic and non-periodic trends in time-series dataFok, Carlotta Ching Ting, 1973- January 2002 (has links)
Time-series data that reflect a periodic pattern are often used in psychology. In personality psychology, Brown and Moskowitz (1998) used spectral analysis to study whether fluctuations in the expression of four interpersonal behaviors show a cyclical pattern. Spline smoothing had also been used in the past to track the non-periodic trend, but no research has yet been done that combines spectral analysis and spline smoothing. The present thesis describes a new model which combines these two techniques to capture both periodic and non-periodic trends in the data. / The new model is then applied to Brown and Moskowitz's time-series data to investigate the long-term evolution to the four interpersonal behaviors, and to the GDP data to examine the periodic and non-periodic pattern for the GDP values of the 16 countries. Finally, the extent to which the model is accurate is tested using simulated data.
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Structural equation modeling by extended redundancy analysisHwang, Heungsun, 1969- January 2000 (has links)
A new approach to structural equation modeling based on so-called extended redundancy analysis (ERA) is proposed. In ERA, latent variables are obtained as exact linear combinations of observed variables, and model parameters are estimated by consistently minimizing a single criterion. As a result, the method can avoid limitations of covariance structure analysis (e.g., stringent distributional assumptions, improper solutions, and factor score indeterminacy) in addition to those of partial least squares (e.g., the lack of a global optimization procedure). The method is simple yet versatile enough to fit more complex models; e.g., those with higher-order latent variables and direct effects of observed variables. It can also fit a model to more than one sample simultaneously. Other relevant topics are also discussed, including data transformations, missing data, metric matrices, robust estimation, and efficient estimation. Examples are given to illustrate the proposed method.
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