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- Title
- Two Essays on Cryptocurrency Markets
- Creator
- Fan, Lei
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Understanding the dependence relationships among cryptocurrencies and equity markets is of interest to both academics and researchers. This...
Show moreUnderstanding the dependence relationships among cryptocurrencies and equity markets is of interest to both academics and researchers. This dissertation is comprised of two essays to add to this understanding. In the first essay, I investigate the interdependencies among the level of informational efficiency of four cryptocurrencies. I examine the correlations between the market efficiencies of cryptocurrencies using the rolling window method. I find that the correlations between those levels of market efficiencies are time-varying and influenced by the market condition and external events. I extend the study by employing Granger causality tests to analyze the causal relationships among these levels of market efficiency. I find that the Granger causalities among the levels of the cryptocurrency market efficiencies are time-varying and impacted by the level of the market efficiencies. In the second essay, I investigate the pairwise dependencies and causalities between the returns of the cryptocurrencies and six equity market indices. I examine the pairwise dependencies between the returns of cryptocurrencies and those of the equity indices by using the DCC-GARCH framework. I find the dynamic conditional correlations between the cryptocurrencies and equity indices are time-varying and generally weak. Furthermore, I study the causal relationship between cryptocurrencies and equity indices by employing the rolling Granger causality test. I find that the Granger causalities between cryptocurrencies and equity indices are time-varying, and more unidirectional Granger causalities are found from cryptocurrencies to equity indices. In addition, I examine the impact of cryptocurrency returns on the correlations between the equity market indices, and likewise, the impact of equity market returns on the correlations between the cryptocurrencies. I find that the cryptocurrency price fluctuations have minimal impact on the correlations between equity indices. Moreover, the dynamic conditional correlation between cryptocurrencies is unaffected by equity price innovations except for some extreme events. These findings could have implications for understanding the relationships among cryptocurrencies and equity markets and for investors wishing to incorporate these relationships in their portfolio choices.
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- Title
- PLAYER MOTIVATION AND TRAINING EFFECTIVENESS: INSIGHTS FROM A STRUCTURAL MODEL OF GAME-BASED LEARNING
- Creator
- Gandara, Daniel A.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Digital game-based learning (DGBL) delivers training through video games. Practitioners are using DGBL in attempts to increase motivation,...
Show moreDigital game-based learning (DGBL) delivers training through video games. Practitioners are using DGBL in attempts to increase motivation, promote learning, and increase transfer in training. Theory and models of DGBL aim to explain how motivation is created to yield these benefits, and studies have compared DGBL to traditional methods, yet the tenets of these theories remain largely unexamined. The present study tested the process-outcome link of Garris et al.’s (2002) input-process-outcome model, examined the effect of positive and negative user judgments on behavior and learning, and expanded the model to include trainee reactions and adaptive transfer. Participants (N = 254) learned about identifying misinformation online by playing Fake It to Make It, a social-impact game that teaches core critical thinking skills. Autoregressive cross-lagged (ARCL) panel analysis was used to analyze and compare models to test the hypothesized relationships among judgments and behavior scores across six game levels in predicting six learning outcomes, including adaptive transfer tasks evaluating online sources. Findings indicated that each judgment was predicted by its own lagged judgment and lagged behavior. Additionally, positive user judgments predicted reactions, post-training self-efficacy, and motivation to transfer, while frustration inhibited declarative knowledge. Results also demonstrated that behavior and declarative knowledge predicted performance on the adaptive transfer tasks. Research recommendations and practice implications are discussed relative to using games to deliver training with emphasis on motivational properties and targeted outcomes.
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- Title
- Child Temperament, Attachment, and Loneliness: The Mediating Effects of Social Competence
- Creator
- Evans, Lindsey M
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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Chronic loneliness is a risk factor associated with adverse psychological, physical, and academic outcomes. Converging evidence suggests that...
Show moreChronic loneliness is a risk factor associated with adverse psychological, physical, and academic outcomes. Converging evidence suggests that young children experience and can reliably report on their own loneliness. Due to the significant negative sequalae associated with childhood loneliness, it is critically important to examine risk factors for child loneliness. The aims of this study were two-fold: (a) to examine if temperament (i.e., negative affect, effortful control, and inhibitory control) and attachment security assessed at 4 years of age predict loneliness at age 6; and (b) to determine if social competence at age 5 mediates the relation between temperament and attachment security at age 4 and loneliness at age 6. Participants included a diverse sample of 796 4-year old children, about half of whom were male. At age 4, temperament was assessed with the Rothbart Child Behavior Questionnaire and three inhibitory control tasks, and attachment security was assessed with the Attachment Q-Sort. At age 5, the Social Skills Rating Scale was used to assess social competence, and, at age 6, loneliness was assessed with the Loneliness and Social Dissatisfaction Questionnaire. Results of hierarchical regression analyses indicated that lower levels of effortful control and inhibitory control at age 4 significantly predicted higher levels of loneliness at age 6. Also, lower levels of negative affect and higher levels of effortful control and attachment security at age 4 significantly predicted higher levels of social competence at age 5. However, social competence at age 5 did not predict loneliness at age 6. There was no evidence that social competence at age 5 mediated the relation between age 4 temperament, attachment security and age 6 loneliness. These findings reveal that early self-regulation is associated with later child-reported loneliness and that intervention for children who struggle with cognitive regulation may be effective in decreasing risk for later loneliness.
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- Title
- COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS SIMULATION OF CARBON CAPTURE UNIT USING AN AMINE-BASED SOLID SORBENT
- Creator
- Esmaeili Rad, Farnaz
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) is one of the key technologies to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide, including that from exiting...
Show moreCarbon capture and sequestration (CCS) is one of the key technologies to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide, including that from exiting flue gas of fossil fuel-fired power plants. The goal of this project is the development of a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model to predict the extent of CO2 capture in a circulating fluidized bed carbon capture unit using novel amine-based solid sorbents.In this study, first the hydrodynamics of the carbonation section of the carbon capture unit was investigated. Then, the performance of the amine-based solid sorbents toward capturing carbon dioxide from flue gas and the extent of CO2 adsorption in the carbonation section were studied. At the second stage of the study, the regeneration of the sorbents and desorption of carbon dioxide from carbonated solid sorbents in the regeneration section of the carbon capture unit was investigated. At the third stage of the study, the hydrodynamics of the entire loop of the integrated carbonation and regeneration sections were simulated. Two-dimensional non-reactive CFD simulations of the entire loop, including the carbonator, regenerator, and two loop-seal fluidized beds, were performed to study the details of the solid circulation in the system in a stable operational condition. At the fourth stage of the study, the effect of the carbonated solids’ residence time in the regeneration section was investigated by extending the regenerator fluidized bed height and adding to the volume of the system. Heated surfaces, which resembled heating coils in the regenerator cylinder, were also added to the system to investigate the effect of the temperature. The heated surface of the immersed coils in the bed provided sufficient energy for the endothermic regeneration reaction to keep the temperature of the bed at the desired temperature. Finally, the verified models of the carbonation section, the regenerations section, and non-reactive simulation of the CFB loop were used to simulate the entire circulating fluidized bed carbon capture unit, with an integrated carbonator and regenerator system using amine-based solid sorbents. The extent of CO2 capture in the carbonation section and desorption of carbon dioxide in the regeneration section were predicted. Our study showed the potential of continuous carbon capture by amine-based solid sorbents through the circulating fluidized bed CO2 capture unit.
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- Title
- Improvement and Validation of Multiyear Auroral Analysis to Categorize Scintillation Event Layer
- Creator
- English, Breanna R.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Ionospheric irregularities scintillate electromagnetic waves, such as Global Positioning System (GPS) signals, as they pass through the...
Show moreIonospheric irregularities scintillate electromagnetic waves, such as Global Positioning System (GPS) signals, as they pass through the ionosphere, especially in auroral zones. A previous method was developed to determine which layer of the ionosphere these scintillation events occurred in by analyzing optical all sky images (ASI). The results of determining the ionospheric scattering layer using the ratio of 630 nm (red) intensity to 428 nm (blue) intensity were compared to a radar-based method of determining the scintillation layer, and it was found that the results disagreed. In this work, the ASI method is critically analyzed to identify possible errors or sensitivities in the original method that might resolve the discrepancy. This is done by improving and validating the nighttime auroral cloud detection method by comparing to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) satellite cloud data. Then a sensitivity analysis is performed on the ASI method to determine which parameters of the method the results are sensitive to. The keogram cloud detection method is improved by automating the selection of the keogram time points that are used to calculate a flat-field gain correction, and by calculating the flat field gain for each year rather than calculatingit once and using it for all years of the study. Keogram cloud detection using the coefficient of variation is verified by comparing the keogram results to true sky conditions based on NOAA cloud mask data, and using detection theory to determine the optimal coefficient of variation threshold. We find that the ideal keogram threshold was 0.37 producing a disagreement rate of 22.4%. The ASI image analysis criteria tested are: the ASI azimuth and elevation mapping files, the magnetic zenith limit, the number of pixels of the ASI that are being analyzed, the duration of the scintillation event that is analyzed, and the red-to-blue ratio threshold. It is found that only changing the red-to-blue ratio threshold has a significant effect on the ASI method, with the red-to-blue ratio that minimizes the number of misattributed layers found to be 1.43.
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- Title
- Algorithms for Discrete Data in Statistics and Operations Research
- Creator
- Schwartz, William K.
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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This thesis develops mathematical background for the design of algorithms for discrete-data problems, two in statistics and one in operations...
Show moreThis thesis develops mathematical background for the design of algorithms for discrete-data problems, two in statistics and one in operations research. Chapter 1 gives some background on what chapters 2 to 4 have in common. It also defines some basic terminology that the other chapters use.Chapter 2 offers a general approach to modeling longitudinal network data, including exponential random graph models (ERGMs), that vary according to certain discrete-time Markov chains (The abstract of chapter 2 borrows heavily from the abstract of Schwartz et al., 2021). It connects conditional and Markovian exponential families, permutation- uniform Markov chains, various (temporal) ERGMs, and statistical considerations such as dyadic independence and exchangeability. Markovian exponential families are explored in depth to prove that they and only they have exponential family finite sample distributions with the same parameter as that of the transition probabilities. Many new statistical and algebraic properties of permutation-uniform Markov chains are derived. We introduce exponential random ?-multigraph models, motivated by our result on replacing ? observations of a permutation-uniform Markov chain of graphs with a single observation of a corresponding multigraph. Our approach simplifies analysis of some network and autoregressive models from the literature. Removing models’ temporal dependence but not interpretability permitted us to offer closed-form expressions for maximum likelihood estimators that previously did not have closed-form expression available. Chapter 3 designs novel, exact, conditional tests of statistical goodness-of-fit for mixed membership stochastic block models (MMSBMs) of networks, both directed and undirected. The tests employ a ?²-like statistic from which we define p-values for the general null hypothesis that the observed network’s distribution is in the MMSBM as well as for the simple null hypothesis that the distribution is in the MMSBM with specified parameters. For both tests the alternative hypothesis is that the distribution is unconstrained, and they both assume we have observed the block assignments. As exact tests that avoid asymptotic arguments, they are suitable for both small and large networks. Further we provide and analyze a Monte Carlo algorithm to compute the p-value for the simple null hypothesis. In addition to our rigorous results, simulations demonstrate the validity of the test and the convergence of the algorithm. As a conditional test, it requires the algorithm sample the fiber of a sufficient statistic. In contrast to the Markov chain Monte Carlo samplers common in the literature, our algorithm is an exact simulation, so it is faster, more accurate, and easier to implement. Computing the p-value for the general null hypothesis remains an open problem because it depends on an intractable optimization problem. We discuss the two schools of thought evident in the literature on how to deal with such problems, and we recommend a future research program to bridge the gap those two schools. Chapter 4 investigates an auctioneer’s revenue maximization problem in combinatorial auctions. In combinatorial auctions bidders express demand for discrete packages of multiple units of multiple, indivisible goods. The auctioneer’s NP-complete winner determination problem (WDP) is to fit these packages together within the available supply to maximize the bids’ sum. To shorten the path practitioners traverse from from legalese auction rules to computer code, we offer a new wdp formalism to reflect how government auctioneers sell billions of dollars of radio-spectrum licenses in combinatorial auctions today. It models common tie-breaking rules by maximizing a sum of bid vectors lexicographically. After a novel pre-solving technique based on package bids’ marginal values, we develop an algorithm for the WDP. In developing the algorithm’s branch-and-bound part adapted to lexicographic maximization, we discover a partial explanation of why classical WDP has been successful in using the linear programming relaxation: it equals the Lagrangian dual. We adapt the relaxation to lexicographic maximization. The algorithm’s dynamic-programming part retrieves already computed partial solutions from a novel data structure suited specifically to our WDP formalism. Finally we show that the data structure can “warm start” a popular algorithm for solving for opportunity-cost prices.
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- Title
- TOPICDP – ENSURING DIFFERENTIAL PRIVACY FOR TOPIC MINING
- Creator
- Sharma, Jayashree
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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Topic mining enables applications to recognize patterns and draw insights from text data, which can be used for applications such as sentiment...
Show moreTopic mining enables applications to recognize patterns and draw insights from text data, which can be used for applications such as sentiment analysis, building of recommender systems and classifiers. The text data can be a set of documents or emails or product feedback and reviews. Each document is analysed using probabilistic models and statistical analysis to discover patterns that reflects underlying topics.TopicDP is a differentially private topic mining technique, which injects well-calibrated Gaussian noise into the matrix output of the topic mining model generated from LDA algorithm. This method ensures differential privacy and good utility of the topic mining model. We derive smooth sensitivity for the Gaussian mechanism via sensitivity sampling, which resses the major challenges of high sensitivity in case of topic mining for differential privacy. Furthermore, we theoretically prove the differential privacy guarantee and utility error bounds of TopicDP. Finally, we conduct extensive experiments on two real-word text datasets (Enron email and Amazon Product Reviews), and the experimental results demonstrate that TopicDP can generate better privacy preserving performance for topic mining as compared against other state-of-the-art differential privacy mechanisms.
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- Title
- PARENTAL RELATIONSHIP FACTORS, ACADEMIC EXPECTATIONS, AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES IN INDIVIDUALS WITH ADHD
- Creator
- Small, Eva E.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Individuals with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are at a higher risk for developing comorbid psychological conditions...
Show moreIndividuals with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are at a higher risk for developing comorbid psychological conditions including depression and anxiety by the time they reach adulthood. While there has been some research on potentially beneficial aspects of parent-child relationships that can help to improve the mental health of pediatric populations with ADHD, less work has been done to assess the long-term influence of the parent -child relationship in adults with ADHD. The purpose of this study was to add to previous research by utilizing the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) to investigate how parenting relationship and family factors (i.e., parental warmth, behavioral autonomy, family cohesion, and parental academic expectations) predict symptoms of stress and depression in adults with ADHD. Using data from Waves I, III, and IV of the Add Health study, analyses examined whether positive parenting relationship factors were related to levels of depression symptoms and stress in a sample of participants with self-reported ADHD (N = 316). Results indicated that higher levels of family cohesion experienced in adolescence were associated with lower depression symptoms reported in adulthood, thus suggesting that family cohesion is a beneficial for individuals with ADHD. Future research should continue to examine the role that child-relationship factors can have on long term mental health outcomes in individuals with ADHD
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- Title
- ORGANOFUNCTIONALIZED OXOMETALATES: SYNTHESIS, STRUCTURE, AND PROPERTIES OF A NEW CLASS OF MIXED-METAL TETRAMETALATE CLUSTERS
- Creator
- Shuaib, Damola Taye
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Oxometalates (OMs) are metal-oxide clusters with addenda mental atom mainly V, Mo, and W and bridged by oxide anions. Prototypical examples...
Show moreOxometalates (OMs) are metal-oxide clusters with addenda mental atom mainly V, Mo, and W and bridged by oxide anions. Prototypical examples like polyoxometalates (POMs) are completely inorganic. While clusters with nuclearities ranging from 6 to 18 are common for purely inorganic examples, those with less than nuclearity 6 are rare. Therefore, functionalization by covalent interaction with organic moiety via self-assembly has been utilized as a viable route for making compact clusters with nuclearity of 4 and below. These compounds constitute the organo-functionalized examples of the purely inorganic structure ([XMaOb]n-) POM. Reports of organo-functionalized tetrametalates (TMs), ([MxOyLz])n- (where M = metal, x = 4 and L represents an organic ligand) are sparse. Mixed metal species are especially interesting as potential redox active materials as they contain energetically distinct potential redox centers. OMs have ability to accept electrons in a chemically reversible manner through the terminal oxo-ligand (M=Ot) leading to dπ–pπ electron transfer. Considering the rich structural and electronic properties of these complexes, four neutral mixed-metal (M-V) tetrametalate clusters, [(CoIICl)2(VIVO)2{((HOCH2CH2)(H)N(CH2CH2O))(HN(CH2CH2O)2}2] (1), [(ZnIICl)2(VIVO)2{((HOCH2CH2)(H)N(CH2CH2O))(HN(CH2CH2O)2}2] (2), [CoII2(VIVOF)2{((HOCH2CH2)(H)N(CH2CH2O))(HN(CH2CH2O)2)}2] (3), and [ZnII2(VIVOF)2{((HOCH2CH2)(H)N(CH2CH2O))(HN(CH2CH2O)2)}2] (4) containing unprecedented oxometallocyclic {M2V2X2N4O8}(M = Co, Zn; X = F, Cl) frameworks decorated with diethanolamine ligand in bidentate and tridentate manners. The type of halo-ligand has direct influence on the geometry of the metal M and UV-Vis reflectance spectra revealed changes in electronic structure consistent with charge transfer processes expected. Computational and magnetic properties studies revealed that the ground state multiplicity of 1 is confirmed as an open-shell singlet with a prediction of an isotropic exchange coupling of -6.6 cm-1 but less clear for 2. The vanadium centers are best described as a V(IV) center and the cobalt centers are high-spin Co(II) centers. Less orbital destabilization was observed due to weaker interaction of Cl- ligand on Co than what was observed for O2- ligand on V centers. In 2, there are four weakly coupled spin centers, where the isotropic exchange couplings are defined as J1, J2’, and J2’’. These couplings are approximated as J1 = 1.5/+11.7 cm-1, J2’ = -22.1/-14.8 cm-1, and J2’’ = +4.2/+4.8 cm-1. Although J2’’ is predicted to be weakly ferromagnetic in nature, whereas the fit suggested a weak antiferromagnetic interaction for each of the V(IV)-Co(II) couplings. The low-temperature magnetic susceptibility suggests a Type III spin frustration present in the system. However, competing magnetic interactions are known to be operative in tetranuclear system which is even observed to be more prominent in the mixed-metal tetranuclear system considering the edge-sharing consequence on magnetic behavior. A new route to metal complex synthesis via in situ ligand transformation from diethanolamine to bicine by disproportionation and oxidation reactions yielded three isostructural mononuclear clusters Bis[N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)glycinato]-Cobalt(II) 5, Bis[N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)glycinato]-Nickel(II) 6, and Bis[N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)glycinato]-Copper(II) 7. The observed transformation is predicted to proceed through nucleophilic substitution (SN2) as expected for substituted ammines. These metal complexes are characterized by various analytical techniques such as, FT-IR and UV-Vis spectroscopies, single crystal and powdered X-ray diffraction analyses, Energy-Dispersed X-ray spectroscopy, magnetic properties measurements, thermal gravimetric analysis, bond valence sum calculations etc. Based on their features and detailed structure-property-application analyses, the clusters showed great potentials for catalysis, materials for digital tools, chemical sensing, molecular magnets and precursors as molecular building blocks for extended open frameworks.
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- Title
- THE IMPACT OF SHARED RECRUITMENT INFORMATION ON APPLICANT OUTCOMES AND THE INFLUENCE OF MODERATING VARIABLES
- Creator
- Savage, Catherine M.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Organizations are currently experiencing one of the most challenging environments when it comes to recruiting talent. What started in the...
Show moreOrganizations are currently experiencing one of the most challenging environments when it comes to recruiting talent. What started in the 1990s as the “War for Talent,” in which organizations faced fierce competition when hiring and retaining employees, has persisted, and grown more competitive, post-pandemic. As a result, organizations must re-evaluate their recruitment strategies and find ways to connect with job candidates that will increase the probability that they will pursue open job positions. Thus, we examined how sharing different information regarding pay, diversity statements, and mentoring benefits with 250 potential job applicants, based in the US, may influence their attraction to an organization, perceived person-organization fit, and their intention to pursue the job that was posted. We also examined how ethnicity, gender, and age can influence the job candidates’ perception of the information provided. Results from this research partially supported our hypothesized outcomes. Presenting more information to participants (rather than less) generally had a positive impact on organization attraction and intentions to pursue the position posted in the job advertisement. However, the amount of information shared to participants did not influence perceptions of person-organization fit. Additionally, while ethnicity did not moderate the relationship between amount of information shared and the outcome variables, gender and age were found to influence participants’ reaction to the information provided and their subsequent level of organizational attraction and intention to pursue. Implications and avenues for future research are discussed.
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- Title
- Control and Operation of Microgrids and Networked Microgrids
- Creator
- Sheikholeslami, Mehrdad
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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This dissertation presents the practical operation and control of microgrids and networked microgrids, particularly, the networked IIT Campus...
Show moreThis dissertation presents the practical operation and control of microgrids and networked microgrids, particularly, the networked IIT Campus Microgrid (ICM) and Bronzeville Community Microgrid (BCM). Microgrids (MGs) provide a potential solution to accommodating renewable and distributed energy resources (DERs). MGs and the networked form of MGs, i.e., networked microgrids or NMGs, have received significant attention in the past two decades. However, several details are often neglected in the literature that need to be considered for the practical operations of MGs and NMGs. First, there is a need for a step-by-step sequence of operations (SOO) that clearly defines the procedures for changing the operation modes of MGs and NMGs for their reliable and resilient operation. Second, there is a need to develop new control strategies for the centralized and distributed control of MGs and NMGs that are resilient to extreme events and are also more sustainable than the ones available in the literature. Third, there is a need for developing the model of MGs and NMGs in a real-time simulator to safely evaluate the performance of the control and operation of MGs and NMGs. Finally, to close the engineering loop, there is a need to connect the digital and physical layers which are known as digital twins. This dissertation proposes solutions for these four requirements and presents results to evaluate the performance of the proposed solutions. First, an SOO is proposed to enable the reliable and safe transition between different microgrid operation modes. The proposed SOO is adaptable to any MG and NMG with minor modifications. Second, for the centralized control, a DER control model is proposed that allows for the regulated power exchange between networked MGs to ensure information privacy and respect the electrical boundary of each MG. For the distributed control, two control schemes are proposed that are resilient to extreme cases, allow the integration of renewable energy resources (RES), and require the minimum intervention of the operators. Third, several techniques are proposed that can be adopted for developing the real-time models of MGs and NMGs. Finally, as a proof of concept, a digital twin of a microgrid with connections between the physical and digital layers is implemented and tested. The IIT Campus Microgrid (ICM) and Bronzeville Community Microgrid (BCM), as well as their networked form (networked ICM-BCM), are selected as the practical testbeds and are modeled in Real-time Digital Simulator (RTDS). The RTDS model is interfaced with microgrid master controllers (MMC) for real-time data exchange and the performance of the MMCs and the distributed control strategies are tested to illustrate the importance of adopted methods in the real-time control of MGs and NMGs. Finally, a proof of concept for the digital twin of ICM is presented.
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- Title
- ELECTROSPUN SILKWORM SILK FIBROIN - INDOCYANINE GREEN BIOCOMPOSITE FIBERS: FABRICATION, CHARACTERIZATION AND APPLICATION TOWARDS HEMORRHAGE CONTROL
- Creator
- Siddiqua, Ayesha
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Silk fibroin (SF), a structural protein found in the Bombyx mori cocoons has gained attention in several biomedical applications as tissue...
Show moreSilk fibroin (SF), a structural protein found in the Bombyx mori cocoons has gained attention in several biomedical applications as tissue engineering scaffolds and wound dressings owing to its properties such as biocompatibility, water vapor permeability and biodegradability. Indocyanine Green (ICG) is an FDA approved tricarbocyanine dye used in medical diagnostics due to its unique photothermal and fluorescent properties. Electrospinning is a highly efficient, easy, and inexpensive technique used to generate nanometer to micrometer thick fibers. In this study, SF and ICG were co-spun to generate flexible microfibers with high surface area to volume ratios. Pure silk, SF-ICG (0.1%) and SF-ICG (0.4%) were chosen for the purpose of this study. Since, as-spun fibers are unstable in aqueous solutions, post treatment methods were explored to enhance the durability of the fibers and to minimize ICG leaching. It was found that ethanol vapor treatment (EVT) not only induced β-sheet formation in SF but also improved the SF-ICG interaction thereby reducing ICG leaching from the composite fibers. Ethanol vapor treated SF-ICG fibers showed less ICG leaching than liquid ethanol treated (LET) SF-ICG fibers indicating the efficacy of the EVT. The increase in SF solution viscosity with ICG concentration suggested a strong silk-ICG interaction which was further confirmed by DSC. The 1h water uptake and the three-day mass loss experiments indicated that the fibers are stable and highly absorbent material. Heat evolution was evaluated by measuring the temperature change in water of a fixed volume after irradiation with a 500 mW, 808 nm diode laser. The heat evolved by the flat fiber scaffolds was higher than the 3D fiber balls, indicating improved light penetration in the former. Pure silk produced negligible heat and it was used as a control. With 14.9 W/cm2 irradiation, the post-treated SF-ICG (0.4%) 3D fibrous ball of 2-3 mg dry weight, solidified a drop of bovine blood in 40 s. In contrast, a single layer fiber matrix required 3 min. to achieve the same clotting effect. Fibers folded into flat scaffolds were able to solidify a blood drop in 25 s. Pure silk fibers in all the cases showed negligible change after irradiation. The results suggest that a larger contact area of fibers is desirable for faster blood clotting, and EVT prompted better ICG retention in SF fibers. Based on the above results, SF-ICG (0.4%) fibers were utilized in a device developed to mimic blood flowing at a rate of 0.5 mL/h through a damaged blood vessel. It was found that irradiation of SF-ICG locally placed at the “damage” region effectively stopped “bleeding” whereas irradiated pure silk was unable to control the blood flow, which demonstrated the success of our SF-ICG fibers towards hemorrhage control.
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- Title
- WHAT IMPACT DO NUMBER TALKS HAVE ON ELEMENTARY CLASSROOM MATHEMATICAL DISCOURSE AND STUDENT AND TEACHER ATTITUDES TOWARD MATHEMATICS?
- Creator
- Sleezer, Meghan V
- Date
- 2021
- Description
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Number Talks, created in the early 1990s by Ruth Parker and Kathy Richardson, have gained popularity in the mathematics education community...
Show moreNumber Talks, created in the early 1990s by Ruth Parker and Kathy Richardson, have gained popularity in the mathematics education community over the past decade with the publication of the book series Number Talks (Parrish, 2010, 2014), and especially since the publication of Making Number Talks Matter (Humphreys & Parker, 2015). All in all, the authors contend Number Talks can bring joy into the classroom (Humphreys and Parker, 2015, p. 6), improving student attitudes about mathematics and ultimately allowing for a more productive disposition. The characteristic that separates Number Talks from other pedagogical tools is the disconnectedness from the rest of the lesson: Number Talks need not build up to or build upon the day’s objective. Thus, what the authors argue is that the activity of Number Talks itself – albeit disconnected from the day’s objective – improves all of the aforementioned skills, regardless of what occurs during the remainder of each class session.Eight teachers from five different Chicago-area private grade schools implemented Number Talks in their 3rd-5th grade classrooms for four to six weeks in the early part of the year 2020. Student attitudes toward mathematics and toward mathematical discourse were assessed by way of survey and classroom observation before and after implementation. Classroom interactions and levels of mathematical discourse during the normal class time (outside of the Number Talk session) were assessed before and during implementation. No significant changes (positive or negative) relating to any measure were found. Teachers noticed that students who enjoyed math before the implementation also enjoyed Number Talks, while students who struggled with math were mostly disenchanted with Number Talks. Future research includes exploring whether tailoring Number Talks to relate to the upcoming lesson improves the positive effects advertised by the authors. Teacher professional development related to ambitious teaching practices (NCTM, 2017) and growth mindset (Boaler, 2016b) may complement the use of Number Talks to result in improved attitudes and discourse.
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- Title
- Do Numeric Performance Ratings Have Any Merit?
- Creator
- Sanders, Emily Kathleen
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Numeric performance ratings have been a component of performance evaluation for decades (Prowse & Prowse, 2009; Pulakos, Mueller-Hanson & Arad...
Show moreNumeric performance ratings have been a component of performance evaluation for decades (Prowse & Prowse, 2009; Pulakos, Mueller-Hanson & Arad, 2019). Yet, in recent years their necessity has been questioned (Adler, Campion, Colquitt, Grubb, Murphy, Ollander-Krane, & Pulakos, 2016), with some organizations going so far as to remove numeric ratings entirely (Capelli & Tavis, 2016; Rock, Davis & Jones, 2014; Burkus, 2016). Unfortunately, this practice has been largely unexamined in an empirical manner. The present study tested whether the claim – that numeric ratings do not matter – holds up in all cases. This is done by exploring whether the presence or absence of numeric ratings, impacts employee perceptions of fairness associated with the appraisal. As numeric ratings are argued to be a mechanism for communicating a fair, standard, and consistent practice, the study aimed to understand if the mere presence of numeric ratings may offset some of the negative reaction employees have toward performance appraisal when they have poor-quality relationships with their supervisors. Findings indicated that while employee-manager relationship quality (assessed via Leader-Member Exchange) has a direct relationship with perceptions of fairness associated with the appraisal, the presence of numeric ratings did not moderate this relationship. Practical implications and future research recommendations are discussed.
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- Title
- Toward an Extraordinary Ecotourism Destination on The Shoreline of Aseer Region, Kingdom Of Saudi Arabia
- Creator
- Saleh, Abdulmalik Mohammad S.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Since the dawn of the Anthropocene epoch, human activities have been adversely influencing our globe and becoming a controversial phenomenon....
Show moreSince the dawn of the Anthropocene epoch, human activities have been adversely influencing our globe and becoming a controversial phenomenon. However, as a counterforce, multiple adoptions of sustainable green movements worldwide are continually attempting alternate resolutions to preserve nature. As the tourism industry grows, ecotourism, for instance, is a specific eco-friendly approach that asserts minimizing human impacts and conserving captivating nature, improving the livelihood of local communities, and involving interpretation and education. A demi-decade ago, Saudi Arabia’s 2030 vision (the post-oil plan) was launched to diversify its GDP and develop public service sectors such as tourism. This thesis investigates the relationship between architecture and the possibilities of ecotourism principles, besides the governmental program, under multiple tourism indicators along the untouched Aseer shoreline, which has valuable attractions and amenities; it is faced with several issues, including informal planning, limited infrastructure, and low-income community. We built a suggested project based on a collection of written materials on the area’s environmental and culturally diverse aspects and case studies; architecture-to-ecotourism is thriving, but there is still potential for methodological development. The thesis findings demonstrate that architecture can immensely contribute to sustainable development through the ecotourism concept and can have a tangible impact on the project. Simultaneously, architecture, through ecotourism, is successful by improving the economic aspect of the host societies, reducing environmental consequences, and strengthening heritage identity. This research needs further studies on the correlation, which remains highly debated, between architecture and ecotourism norms to sustain nature.
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- Title
- Stimulation-Responsive Materials for the Treatment of Disordered Tissues
- Creator
- Clutter II, Elwin Dean
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Microenvironments offer physical and chemical cues to cells that affect their behavior. These cues can be bioactive chemicals such as drugs...
Show moreMicroenvironments offer physical and chemical cues to cells that affect their behavior. These cues can be bioactive chemicals such as drugs and cytokines, matrix cues like stiffness and composition, and electrical signals as seen in membrane potentials and epithelial wound healing. Controlling these cues can drive cell behavior toward apoptosis, proliferation, or changes in protein expression. In this thesis research, three components were used to model changes in cell behavior: the near infrared dye indocyanine green (ICG), silk fibroin (SF) from Bombyx mori silkworm cocoons, and carbon nanotubes (CNT). The mechanism of ICG photobleaching was studied for the efficacy to kill neuroblastoma cancer cells. ICG was twice as effective at killing neuroblastoma than fibroblast cells. Albumin stabilized monomeric ICG to enhance photobleaching by improving light interaction, and photodegradation of ICG into α,β-unsaturated aldehydes led to significant reduction of proliferation in neuroblastoma cells by targeting cell signaling components such as protein transcription factors. SF-ICG composite materials were developed into films and electrospun fibers. These composite materials were examined as light-activated wound coverings to control bleeding in hemorrhage, using ICG’s photothermal effect. ICG added an absorbance peak to SF at 805 nm. Irradiation decreased this peak, produced a new absorbance peak at 352 nm, and an increased fluorescence peak around 490 nm, showing photochemical changes that may be useful in sensor design. Increased heat production from irradiation of SF-ICG occurred in the films with 0.2% w/w ICG in SF during 1 min irradiation, whereas SF-ICG fibers required improvement of processing by ethanol vapor treatment (EVT) to reduce loss of ICG during preparation. EVT improved ICG retention in SF fibers during sterilization with 70% ethanol solution thus improving heat generation in the SF-ICG fibers. Heat evolved from SF-ICG 0.2% film solidified bovine blood within 42 s, with visible changes after the first 6 s. SF electrospun fibers were investigated to optimize silk preparation to reduce diameters and increase alignment to mimic local native cell environments with and without CNT to add conductivity for enhancement of electrical stimulation. CNT reduced SF fiber diameters below 1% and effected alignment differently as the concentration increased. Longer degumming times decreased SF fiber diameters and alignment of the same concentration. The optimized conditions were 1 h degumming time with 1.5 ml/h flow rate at a concentration of 100 mg/ml spinning solution with 0.25% CNT to form fibers with 1.36 (± 0.09) µm diameter and 0.31 (± 0.01) a.u. alignment. Additionally, SF fibers were used as a long-term cell growth scaffold to compare with decellularized native tissue. Decellularized tissue decreased fibroblast mRNA expression of collagen type 1, lysyl oxidase-like 1 and matrix metalloproteinase 9, while all other genes expression was the same as cells on plastic. The SF fiber scaffold reduced fibroblast expression of collagen type 3 compared to growth on plastic, and both collagen types 1 and 3 increased over growth time on SF. Immunofluorescence staining showed both collagens newly deposited on the SF scaffold and improved over time. In conclusion, proteins stabilized ICG monomers to improve light interaction, efficacy of photobleaching, and heat evolution to induce apoptosis in neuroblastoma and agglutination of blood in SF composites. Irradiation of ICG enhanced changes in optical properties and may have sensor applications. The decrease of genes may be due to each scaffold having lower stiffness compared to plastic. ICG and SF are both materials with applications as biological scaffolds in pelvic organ prolapse and treatment of neuroblastoma and hemorrhage.
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- Title
- SOLID-STATE SMART PLUG DEVICE
- Creator
- Deng, Zhixi
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Electrical faults are a leading cause of residential fire, and flexible power cords are particularly susceptible to metal or insulation...
Show moreElectrical faults are a leading cause of residential fire, and flexible power cords are particularly susceptible to metal or insulation degradation that may lead to a variety of electrical faults. Smart Plugs are a type of plug-in device controlling electrical loads via wireless communication for consumer market. However, there is lack of circuit protection features in existing Smart Plug products. Moreover, there is no previous product or research on Smart Plug with circuit protection features. This thesis introduces a new Smart Plug 2.0 concept which offers all-in-one protection against over-current, arc, and ground faults in addition to the smart features in Smart Plug products. It aims at preventing fire and shock hazards caused by degraded or damaged power cords and electrical connections in homes and offices. It offers microsecond-scale time resolution to detect and respond to a fault condition, and significantly reduces the electrothermal stress on household electrical wires and loads. A new arc fault detection method is developed using machine learning models based on load current di/dt events. The Smart Plug 2.0 concept has been validated experimentally. A 120V/10A solid-state Smart Plug 2.0 prototype using power MOSEFTs is designed and tested. It has experimentally demonstrated the comprehensive protection features against all types of electrical faults.
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- Title
- Fatigue Life Prediction for Structures with Interval Uncertainty
- Creator
- Desch, Michael R.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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A new method for reliable fatigue life prediction in metal structural components is developed where uncertainties are quantified using...
Show moreA new method for reliable fatigue life prediction in metal structural components is developed where uncertainties are quantified using interval variables. Using this crack-initiation-based method, first, the uncertainties in laboratory test data for the fatigue failure of a structural detail are enumerated. This uncertainty quantification is performed through an interval-based enveloping procedure that relates the interval stress ranges to the number of cycles to failure, leading to the construction of an interval S-N relationship. Next, the uncertainties in field test data are enumerated in the extremum values of each stress range, as intervals, leading to the construction of interval stress ranges. For both the laboratory and field data uncertainty analyses, the mean stress effects are considered. Next, the interval damage accumulated over the duration of the field data is determined using the constructed interval S-N relationship and the obtained interval stress ranges. Then, the interval existing damage and interval remaining life are determined. Finally, as a conservative measure, the minimum remaining fatigue life is obtained in which all uncertainties are considered. Three numerical examples illustrating the developed method are presented, and the results are compared with results obtained by both Monte Carlo simulation and optimization. Using this method, for the numerical examples considered, it is shown that the results for bounds on the existing damage and the remaining fatigue life are sharp. Moreover, due to its set-based approach, the method is significantly more computationally efficient when compared with iterative procedures.
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- Title
- Stress-Induced Habitual Responding as a Maintenance Factor in Bulimia Nervosa Spectrum Disorders
- Creator
- Dougherty, Elizabeth Nash
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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Individuals with bulimia nervosa spectrum disorders often compulsively engage in binge eating and purging, despite life threatening...
Show moreIndividuals with bulimia nervosa spectrum disorders often compulsively engage in binge eating and purging, despite life threatening consequences. Little is known about factors that contribute to compulsivity in these conditions. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether stress and habitual control over bulimic behaviors play a role in maintaining symptoms in these disorders, using ecological momentary assessment. Women with bulimia nervosa spectrum disorders (N = 81) completed self-report baseline questionnaires and a 14-day EMA protocol which involved daily assessments of stress, negative affect, bulimic behaviors, and contextual antecedents to bulimic behaviors. The results indicated that baseline habitual control over binge eating and purging were not associated with global eating pathology or eating disorder-related clinical impairment. However, exploratory analyses revealed that habitual control over binge eating and purging were associated with more frequent engagement in these behaviors during the previous four weeks. Neither stress appraisal nor stressor frequency were associated with habitual control over bulimic behavior during the EMA period. In terms of affect trajectories surrounding bulimic behaviors, negative affect increased in the hours leading up to these behaviors, decreased in the hours following these behaviors, and was higher immediately after these behaviors compared to before. Habitual control over binge eating and purging did not moderate temporal relations between negative affect and bulimic behaviors during the EMA period. Overall, the findings suggest that habit may play a role in maintaining binge eating and purging.
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- Title
- ENGAGEMENT FRAMEWORK FOR SERIOUS THERAPEUTIC GAMES FOR HEALTH
- Creator
- Damarjian, Alex G.
- Date
- 2022
- Description
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The conventional treatment of amblyopia in pediatric patients routinely experience low patient compliance due toits limitations. Therapeutic...
Show moreThe conventional treatment of amblyopia in pediatric patients routinely experience low patient compliance due toits limitations. Therapeutic games that utilize VR technology have the potential to open new avenues of medical research and treatment. A review of the prevailing literature shows the effectiveness of VR based games for therapeutic applications and the potential for increased patient compliance. A strong component of the literature is grounded in the medical humanities, specifically the way in which thought patterns, cognitive development, and perceived social rejection affect patient engagement and treatment efficacy. In order to increase the effectiveness of therapeutic games and streamline their development, a new framework has been created using existing research into therapeutic games. This framework ensures that all therapeutic games meet certain criteria within ethics, immersion, active learning, universal accessibility, aesthetics, and medicine. When applied to game development, specifically virtual and extended reality games, it can be used to transform existing therapeutic or diagnostic models into games operating as health care tools. The result is a more effective, lower cost, more accessible treatment option with increased patient compliance and greater overall outcomes.
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