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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.
121

Roger Reynolds' Variation (1988): New Concepts of Form and Sound

Lee, JooHee 12 1900 (has links)
American composer Roger Reynolds was born on July 18, 1934, in Detroit, Michigan. At age 14, he determined to study piano after hearing a recording of Chopin's Polonaise in A-flat major, Opus 53 played by Vladimir Horowitz. Even though his piano teacher Kenneth Aiken recommended that he continue his study at the Curtis Institute of Music, Reynolds followed the suggestion from his parents that a musical career was not practical. After receiving a bachelor degree of engineering physics at the University of Michigan, he worked in the industry for a short period of time. In 1957, he returned to Michigan and resumed his study of music by taking a class called Composition for Non-Composers under the instruction of Ross Lee Finney. Reynolds continued his compositional study with Finney and Gerhard who were influenced by the Second Viennese School until he finished the master's degree (B.M. 1960, M.M. 1961). Variation was written under the auspices of The Banff Centre for the Arts in 1988. This piece was dedicated to Peter Serkin and premiered by Alec Karis, a faculty member at UCSD, on December 3, 1991 at Merkin Concert Hall, New York. This large-scale set of variations for piano is one of the rare instances in which Reynolds used a conventional genre. What concerned Reynolds most in Variation was "the notion that transformations of meaning could occur entirely as a result of changes in context." He designed this variation as five sections -capriccioso and I, grave and II, III, scorrevole and coda. Capriccioso, grave and scorrevole also refer to the three basic thematic elements of this piece. These three main themes appear throughout the whole piece employing fragmentations or superimpositions. Reynolds used two computer algorithms (SPLITZ and SPIRLZ) to make transformations on these three thematic ideas. He cut the themes up into small fragments, and then recombined these fragments into a kind of altered mosaic. This process resembles his experiments on words: he disassembled words into elementary figures (dots, lines, etc.) and gathered them into new figures, i.e. new words.
122

Actitudes de Alumnos y Profesores chinos ante las Variedades Diatópicas de la Lengua Española y su Variación

January 2019 (has links)
abstract: Spanish is a pluricentric language spoken within the linguistic continuum with high variation. The understanding of the attitudes towards such variation with regard to its geography (diatopic variation) is key to capacitate its students and speakers as a foreign language to successfully communicate in changing and emerging transnational contexts. The research of linguistic attitudes is a topic that has traditionally been approached in Western contexts, with scholars requiring alternative research environments to provide a richer picture of this construct. China, given its steady growth in the number of Spanish as a foreign language students and its current role in the global, transnational arena, becomes a research environment where the study of linguistic attitudes gain even more relevance. Based on this reality, this study seeks to unveil the attitudes towards diatopic variation and towards the five most widely spoken diatopic varieties of Spanish (i.e., Mexico, Argentina, the United States, Spain, and Colombia) in Chinese students of initial level (n = 95) and their professors (n = 16). In doing so, this study collected data through (1) empirically validated questionnaires on attitudes towards diatopic variation, (2) perceptual dialectology tasks and (3) interviews. The main findings of this research showed the presence of positive attitudes towards diatopic variation by students and teachers. Such attitudes can be explained in light of their previous sociolinguistic knowledge and their previous experience as learners of a second pluricentric language. Regarding the attitudes toward the most spoken varieties, this study showed that the variety associated with Spain was the best known by the observed students and teachers, and received the categorization of prestige variety by students. Teachers did not show affective or status assessments toward any of the diatopic varieties. Further analysis of these results, based on ethnolinguistic vitality , and the levels of familiarity of students/teachers with each variety, suggests that teaching expansive proposals from initial levels can provide a more inclusive view of the diatopic variation of the Spanish language in class. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Linguistics and Applied Linguistics 2019
123

Fiabilisation de convertisseurs analogique-numérique à modulation Sigma-Delta / Reliability of analog-to-digital Sigma-Delta converters

Cai, Hao 09 September 2013 (has links)
Ce travail de thèse a porté sur des problèmes de fiabilité de circuits intégrés en technologie CMOS 65 nm, en particulier sur la conception en vue de la fiabilité, la simulation et l'amélioration de la fiabilité. Les mécanismes dominants de vieillissement HCI et NBTI ainsi que la variation du processus ont été étudiés et évalués quantitativement au niveau du circuit et au niveau du système. Ces méthodes ont été appliquées aux modulateurs Sigma-Delta afin de déterminer la fiabilité de ce type de composant qui est très utilisé. / This thesis concentrates on reliability-aware methodology development, reliability analysis based on simulation as well as failure prediction of CMOS 65nm analog and mixed signal (AMS) ICs. Sigma-Delta modulators are concerned as the object of reliability study at system level. A hierarchical statistical approach for reliability is proposed to analysis the performance of Sigma-Delta modulators under ageing effects and process variations. Statistical methods are combined into this analysis flow.
124

Dialectal variation in Swahili – Based on the data collected in Zanzibar

Miyazaki, Kumiko, Takemura, Keiko 15 June 2020 (has links)
This study examines some lexical and morphosyntactic variation found among the Swahili varieties in Zanzibar, Tanzania. It has been reported that there are three varieties in the island, and the new data collected in the villages inside the island suggest that there is a need for closer investigation and finer categorization of the Zanzibar varieties. Furthermore, there has been little discussion about the relationship between the Standard variety and other varieties or variation in the use of these varieties. In this paper, we report on the use of these Zanzibar varieties, namely, the town variety, Kiunguja-Mjini, the Northern varieties Kichaani, Kikibeni, Kitumbatu-Gomani, Kinungwi and Kimatemwe, and the Southern varieties Kijambiani, Kipaje and Kimakunduchi at the level of the lexicon. In addition, we examine the varieties of the Northern province – Kichaani, Kikibeni, Kitumbatu-Gomani, Kinungwi, and those of the Southern province – Kijambiani, Kipaje at the level of the grammar. In this paper, we concentrate on tense/aspect, the copula sentence, relative clause, and imperative. Among the data on these languages, we investigate, in particular, the variation among these varieties on the one hand, and the variation between these varieties and Standard Swahili on the other.
125

Experimental studies on the fate of diversity in heterogeneous environments

Kassen, Rees M. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
126

Global Interconnects in the Presence of Uncertainty

Benito, Ibis D 01 January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Global interconnect reliability is becoming a bigger issue as we scale down further into the submicron regime. As transistor dimensions get smaller, variations in the manufacturing process, and temperature variations may cause undesired behavior, and as a result, compromise performance. This work makes an effort to characterize the effects of such variations, to provide designers with a guideline for making designs tolerant to these variations while benefiting from tighter design margins. Since interconnects contribute to most of the delay and power on a chip, interconnect performance becomes a primary issue in design. One of the main concerns when considering physical transistor dimension variations is the effect on delay. Due to smaller transistor dimensions, the photolithographic process may produce transistors with significant variations from the ideal physical dimensions. Such variations cause delay uncertainty which can lead to over or underestimation in the design phase. This work examines interconnects to establish a guideline of the effect that process variations have on delay. A repeated interconnect is analyzed and the effects of physical device variations on delay are observed. Given the delay distribution in the presence of Leff variation, a supply voltage assignment technique is proposed to correct the observed deviation from the nominal delay on a long, repeated interconnect. This technique results in a significant reduction of the delay distribution, with a negligible power overhead. After looking at static variation effects on interconnect performance, this thesis addresses thermal variations on global signals, which cause delay degradation and may lead to timing failures. Given the presence of a large thermal gradient along a clock signal in a data path clocked by two leaves of an H-tree, several thermal scenarios which can compromise timing are discussed. A buffer-based skew compensation technique is proposed to correct the effect of thermal and manufacturing variations on this system. Having characterized repeated interconnect performance under process variations, the bandwidth of the line can be more effectively utilized by using a technique called phase coding. Phase coded interconnects are introduced in the context of using them once an interconnect has been adequately modeled in the presence of variations. With guidelines quantifying the effects of process variations on interconnect techniques and careful characterization, designers can factor these considerations into their design process, reducing the variation from the nominal expected behavior and allowing for smaller design margins. This will lead to more reliable products as we advance into future technologies and transistor dimensions get smaller.
127

The Conservation of Variation in Gryllodes sigillatus and Closely Related Cricket Species

Dalos, Jeremy David January 2020 (has links)
The ability to adjust behaviors to a particular environment has been well documented across taxa. Our understanding of behavioral plasticity is largely based on experiments in which individuals have a single exposure to an environment. Observed behavioral changes are then traditionally measured in small windows of responsiveness in a single population or species. In this project I investigated the effects of prolonged exposure to predator cues in Gryllodes sigillatus and also tested for the presence of trans-generational effects of this prolonged exposure. I found there were no differences in anti-predator behaviors when measured in subsequent assays compared to control individuals. These results were paired with a comparison of differences in average expressions of behaviors, differences in variances, and behavioral correlations of five closely related cricket species, including G. sigillatus. Our results showed that species differ in average behaviors and plasticity but did not significantly differ in behavioral correlations.
128

Exploring Multi-isotopic Intra- and Inter-individual Skeletal Variation within Single Interred and Commingled Contexts in Geographically Distinct Populations

Fuehr, Stephanie 01 January 2024 (has links) (PDF)
The focus of this research was to determine the intra- and inter-individual isotopic variation in individuals from the Meroitic cemetery 8-B-5.A (350 BC–350 AD) at Sai Island, Sudan and from individuals at Lamanai, Marco Gonzalez, and San Pedro from Postclassic Maya, Belize (1000–1544 AD) to assess usefulness in sorting archaeological and forensic commingled remains. Stable carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen isotope analyses of collagen and carbonate were conducted for all individuals, in addition to radiogenic strontium isotope analysis for individuals from 8-B-5.A. Seven different skeletal elements were sampled from 24 individuals, totaling 170 samples. Ten human and five faunal teeth from Sai Island were sampled for strontium analysis. Carbon isotopes are consistent with previous studies indicating a mixed C3/C4 diet at Sai Island and a predominantly C4 diet at the Maya sites. Strontium analysis indicates that the individuals from cemetery 8-B-5.A were local to the region of Sai Island. Coefficient of variance analysis demonstrated that intra-individual variation of δ13Ccoll and δ15N values at all four sites is dependent on the individual. A MANOVA demonstrated statistically significant differences and discriminant function analysis identified geographic location/diet as the main driver of inter-individual variation. When assessing inter-individual δ13Ccoll and δ15N variation between bone types, the humerus and femur provided the greatest range of isotope variation, suggesting that these two elements may be the best sampling options for commingled remains assessments. While this research assesses the isotopic variation in these populations, this variation may not be consistent across other populations, and the variation for δ13Ccarb and δ18O values is too large to be useful for anthropological applications. Further assessment is needed in skeletal assemblages from different regions, with different diets, between sexes, and varying ages to understand and identify the driving forces of isotopic intra-individual variation.
129

Variation in repetitive DNA in African Trypanosomes

Hide, Geoffrey January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
130

Spoken word recognition : a combined computational and experimental approach

Gaskell, Mark Gareth January 1994 (has links)
The research reported in this thesis examines issues of word recognition in human speech perception. The main aim of the research is to assess the effect of regular variation in speech on lexical access. In particular, the effect of a type of neutralising phonological variation, assimilation of place of articulation, is examined. This variation occurs regressively across word boundaries in connected speech, altering the sUlface phonetic form of the underlying words. Two methods of investigation are used to explore this issue. Firstly, experiments using cross-modal priming and phoneme monitOling techniques are used to examine the effect of variation on the matching process between speech input and lexical form. Secondly, simulated experiments are performed using two computational models of speech recognition: TRACE (McClelland & Elman, 1986) and a simple recun-ent network. The priming experiments show that the mismatching effects of a phonological change on the word-recognition process depend on their viability, as defmed by phonological constraints. This implies that speech perception involves a process of contextdependent inference, that recovers the abstract underlying representation of speech. Simulations of these and other experiments are then reported using a simple recurrent network model of speech perception. The model accommodates the results of the priming studies and predicts that similar phonological context effects will occur in nonwords. Two phoneme monitOling studies support this prediction, but also show interaction between lexical status and viability, implying that phonological inference relies on both lexical and phonological constraints. A revision of the network model is proposed which leams the mapping from the surface form of speech to semantic and phonological representations.

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