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2010

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Articles 3211 - 3240 of 8620

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Exploiting Laboratory And Heliophysics Plasma Synergies, J. Dahlburg, W. Amatucci, Michael R. Brown, V. Chan, J. Chen, C. D. Cothran, D. Chua, R. Dahlburg, G. Doschek, J. Egedal, F. Cary, R. Howard, J. Huba, Y.-K. Ko, J. Krall, J. M. Laming, R. Lin, M. Linton, Vyacheslav S. Lukin , '00, R. Murphy, C. Rakowski, D. Socker, A. Tylka, A. Vourlidas, H. Warren, B. Wood May 2010

Exploiting Laboratory And Heliophysics Plasma Synergies, J. Dahlburg, W. Amatucci, Michael R. Brown, V. Chan, J. Chen, C. D. Cothran, D. Chua, R. Dahlburg, G. Doschek, J. Egedal, F. Cary, R. Howard, J. Huba, Y.-K. Ko, J. Krall, J. M. Laming, R. Lin, M. Linton, Vyacheslav S. Lukin , '00, R. Murphy, C. Rakowski, D. Socker, A. Tylka, A. Vourlidas, H. Warren, B. Wood

Physics & Astronomy Faculty Works

Recent advances in space-based heliospheric observations, laboratory experimentation, and plasma simulation codes are creating an exciting new cross-disciplinary opportunity for understanding fast energy release and transport mechanisms in heliophysics and laboratory plasma dynamics, which had not been previously accessible. This article provides an overview of some new observational, experimental, and computational assets, and discusses current and near-term activities towards exploitation of synergies involving those assets. This overview does not claim to be comprehensive, but instead covers mainly activities closely associated with the authors' interests and reearch. Heliospheric observations reviewed include the Sun Earth Connection Coronal and Heliospheric Investigation (SECCHI) on …


Scalable Object Recognition Using Hierarchical Quantization With A Vocabulary Tree, David Nistér, Henrik Stewénius May 2010

Scalable Object Recognition Using Hierarchical Quantization With A Vocabulary Tree, David Nistér, Henrik Stewénius

Center for Visualization and Virtual Environments Faculty Patents

An image retrieval technique employing a novel hierarchical feature/descriptor vector quantizer tool—‘vocabulary tree’, of sorts comprising hierarchically organized sets of feature vectors—that effectively partitions feature space in a hierarchical manner, creating a quantized space that is mapped to integer encoding. The computerized implementation of the new technique(s) employs subroutine components, such as: A trainer component of the tool generates a hierarchical quantizer, Q, for application/use in novel image-insertion and image-query stages. The hierarchical quantizer, Q, tool is generated by running k-means on the feature (a/k/a descriptor) space, recursively, on each of a plurality of nodes of a resulting quantization level …


Application Of Structured Light Imaging For High Resolution Mapping Of Underwater Archaeological Sites, Chris Roman, Gabrielle Inglis, James Rutter May 2010

Application Of Structured Light Imaging For High Resolution Mapping Of Underwater Archaeological Sites, Chris Roman, Gabrielle Inglis, James Rutter

Graduate School of Oceanography Faculty Publications

This paper presents results from recent work using structured light laser profile imaging to create high resolution bathymetric maps of underwater archaeological sites. Documenting the texture and structure of submerged sites is a difficult task and many applicable acoustic and photographic mapping techniques have recently emerged. This effort was completed to evaluate laser profile imaging in comparison to stereo imaging and high frequency multibeam mapping. A ROV mounted camera and inclined 532 nm sheet laser were used to create profiles of the bottom that were then merged into maps using platform navigation data. These initial results show very promising resolution …


Transformation Learning: Modeling Transferable Transformations In High-Dimensional Data, Christopher R. Wilson May 2010

Transformation Learning: Modeling Transferable Transformations In High-Dimensional Data, Christopher R. Wilson

Theses and Dissertations

The goal of learning transfer is to apply knowledge gained from one problem to a separate related problem. Transformation learning is a proposed approach to computational learning transfer that focuses on modeling high-level transformations that are well suited for transfer. By using a high-level representation of transferable data, transformation learning facilitates both shallow transfer (intra-domain) and deep transfer (inter-domain) scenarios. Transformations can be discovered in data using manifold learning to order data instances according to the transformations they represent. For high-dimensional data representable with coordinate systems, such as images and sounds, data instances can be decomposed into small sub-instances based …


Constrained Stereo Correspondence For 3d Sea-Floor Reconstruction, Gabrielle Inglis, Chris Roman May 2010

Constrained Stereo Correspondence For 3d Sea-Floor Reconstruction, Gabrielle Inglis, Chris Roman

Christopher N. Roman

No abstract provided.


Distantly Labeling Data For Large Scale Cross-Document Coreference, Sameer Singh, Michael Wick, Andrew Mccallum May 2010

Distantly Labeling Data For Large Scale Cross-Document Coreference, Sameer Singh, Michael Wick, Andrew Mccallum

Andrew McCallum

Cross-document coreference, the problem of resolving entity mentions across multi-document collections, is crucial to automated knowledge base construction and data mining tasks. However, the scarcity of large labeled data sets has hindered supervised machine learning research for this task. In this paper we develop and demonstrate an approach based on “distantly-labeling” a data set from which we can train a discriminative cross-document coreference model. In particular we build a dataset of more than a million people mentions extracted from 3:5 years of New York Times articles, leverage Wikipedia for distant labeling with a generative model (and measure the reliability of …


Interview With Stephanie Noll, Bicycle Transportation Alliance, 2010 (Audio), Stephanie Noll May 2010

Interview With Stephanie Noll, Bicycle Transportation Alliance, 2010 (Audio), Stephanie Noll

All Sustainability History Project Oral Histories

Interview of Stephanie Noll by Sean Cochran in NW Portland, Oregon on May 24th, 2010.

The interview index is available for download.


A Lift Of Cohomology Eigenclasses Of Hecke Operators, Brian Francis Hansen May 2010

A Lift Of Cohomology Eigenclasses Of Hecke Operators, Brian Francis Hansen

Theses and Dissertations

A considerable amount of evidence has shown that for every prime p &neq; N observed, a simultaneous eigenvector v_0 of Hecke operators T(l,i), i=1,2, in H^3(Γ_0(N),F(0,0,0)) has a “lift” v in H^3(Γ_0(N),F(p−1,0,0)) — i.e., a simultaneous eigenvector v of Hecke operators having the same system of eigenvalues that v_0 has. For each prime p>3 and N=11 and 17, we construct a vector v that is in the cohomology group H^3(Γ_0(N),F(p−1,0,0)). This is the first construction of an element of infinitely many different cohomology groups, other than modulo p reductions of characteristic zero objects. We proceed to show that v …


Intermode Dephasing In A Superconducting Stripline Resonator, Oren Suchoi, Baleegh Abdo, Eran Segev, Oleg Shtempluck, M. P. Blencowe, Eyal Buks May 2010

Intermode Dephasing In A Superconducting Stripline Resonator, Oren Suchoi, Baleegh Abdo, Eran Segev, Oleg Shtempluck, M. P. Blencowe, Eyal Buks

Dartmouth Scholarship

We study a superconducting stripline resonator (SSR) made of niobium, which is integrated with a superconducting interference device (SQUID). The large nonlinear inductance of the SQUID gives rise to a strong Kerr nonlinearity in the response of the SSR, which in turn results in strong coupling between different modes of the SSR. We experimentally demonstrate that such intermode coupling gives rise to dephasing of microwave photons. The dephasing rate depends periodically on the external magnetic flux applied to the SQUID, where the largest rate is obtained at half integer values (in units of the flux quantum). To account for our …


Carrier Dynamics Of Terahertz Emission Based On Strained Sige/Si Single Quantum Well, K. M. Hung, J.-Y. Kuo, C. C. Hong, Greg Sun, R. A. Soref May 2010

Carrier Dynamics Of Terahertz Emission Based On Strained Sige/Si Single Quantum Well, K. M. Hung, J.-Y. Kuo, C. C. Hong, Greg Sun, R. A. Soref

Physics Faculty Publications

We report analysis of the carrier distribution during terahertz emission process with carrier–phonon interaction based on p-doped strained SiGe/Si single quantum-well. The results of this analysis show that a considerable number of carriers can penetrate the phonon wall to become “hot” carriers on an approximately picosecond timescale. These hot carriers relax after the removal of the applied voltage, generating a “second” emission in the measurement. This investigation provides an understanding of the carrier dynamics of terahertz emission and has an implication for the design of semiconductor terahertz emitters.


Stratigraphy, Sedimentology, And Ichnology Of The Upper Cretaceous Frontier Formation In The Alkali Anticline Region, Bighorn County, Wyoming, Charles K. Clark May 2010

Stratigraphy, Sedimentology, And Ichnology Of The Upper Cretaceous Frontier Formation In The Alkali Anticline Region, Bighorn County, Wyoming, Charles K. Clark

Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

The Upper Cretaceous Frontier Formation was studied along two strike-parallel cliff-lines in the Alkali Anticline region of the northeastern Bighorn Basin, Bighorn County, Wyoming. The unit comprises up to 145 m of mudrock, sandstone, conglomerate, and volcanic fallout sediments deposited along the western margin of the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway (KWIS) in the mid- to late-Cenomanian. Eighteen facies, comprising six facies associations are identified from physical and biogenic sedimentary features. Sediments were deposited in open marine offshore to shoreface and subaqueous deltaic to delta platform environments. The observed trace fossil suites record departures from the archetypal ichnofacies. Such departures record …


President Higdon's 92nd Commencement Address, Leo I. Higdon, Jr. May 2010

President Higdon's 92nd Commencement Address, Leo I. Higdon, Jr.

Commencement Addresses

President Higdon tells graduates they are graduating at a pivotal time in U.S. history – indeed, in the history of the world. In a global economic upheaval, traditional companies and organizations seek to redefine themselves and the work they do. Increasingly, they will look to this generation, and specifically to liberal arts graduates, for answers whose comprehensive education has given them the qualities to succeed in the global arena. They are graduating at an important point in Connecticut College’s history, with a Centennial Celebration ahead that will involve them and all the College community, honoring the College’s legacy of excellence …


Sps Ecloud Instabilities - Analysis Of Machine Studies And Implications For Ecloud Feedback, J.D. Fox, A. Bullitt, T. Mastoridis, G. Ndabashimiye, C. Rivetta, O. Turgut, D. Van Winkle, J. Byrd, M. Furman, J-L. Vay, W. Hofle, G. Rumolo, R. De Maria May 2010

Sps Ecloud Instabilities - Analysis Of Machine Studies And Implications For Ecloud Feedback, J.D. Fox, A. Bullitt, T. Mastoridis, G. Ndabashimiye, C. Rivetta, O. Turgut, D. Van Winkle, J. Byrd, M. Furman, J-L. Vay, W. Hofle, G. Rumolo, R. De Maria

Physics

The SPS at high intensities exhibits transverse singlebunch instabilities with signatures consistent with an Ecloud driven instability.[1] We present recent MD data from the SPS, details of the instrument technique and spectral analysis methods which help reveal complex vertical motion that develops within a subset of the injected bunch trains. The beam motion is detected via wideband exponential taper striplines and delta-sigma hybrids. The raw sum and difference data is sampled at 50 GHz with 1.8 GHz bandwidth. Sliding window FFT techniques and RMS motion techniques show the development of large vertical tune shifts on portions of the bunch of …


Commissioning Of The Lch Low Level Rf System Remote Configuration Tools, D. Van Winkle, C. Rivetta, T. Mastoridis, J. Fox, P. Baudrenghien, A. Butterworth, J. Molendijk May 2010

Commissioning Of The Lch Low Level Rf System Remote Configuration Tools, D. Van Winkle, C. Rivetta, T. Mastoridis, J. Fox, P. Baudrenghien, A. Butterworth, J. Molendijk

Physics

The LHC Low Level RF system (LLRF) is a complex multi-loop system used to regulate the superconductive cavity gap voltage as well as to reduce the impedance presented by RF stations to the beam. The RF system can have a profound impact on the stability of the beam; a mis-configured RF system has the potential of causing longitudinal instabilities, beam diffusion and beam loss. To configure the RF station for operation, a set of parameters in the LLRF multi-loop system have to be defined. Initial system commissioning as well as ongoing operation requires a consistent method of computer based remote …


An Essay On The Nature And Significance Of Deception And Telling Lies, Sudhanshu K. Mishra May 2010

An Essay On The Nature And Significance Of Deception And Telling Lies, Sudhanshu K. Mishra

Sudhanshu K Mishra

A lie is an expression at deviance with the truth known or honestly believed by someone with an intention to deceive others for certain purpose, social or personal. An ability to lie might be evolutionary in nature possibly to help in survival, since it is found in the non-human world also. In the biological perspective, each individual is at war against all others. Thus viewed, lies are the cardinal virtues for survival and, by implication, the carriers of evolution. In the human world, lying is morally blameworthy in a relatively un-obscure way. There may be cases of lying to which …


Wind Energy Workforce Development: A Roadmap To A Sustainable Wind Industry, Ian Baring-Gould, Marguerite Kelly May 2010

Wind Energy Workforce Development: A Roadmap To A Sustainable Wind Industry, Ian Baring-Gould, Marguerite Kelly

Publications (E)

As the United States moves toward greatly expanded wind energy use, the need for skilled workers at all industry levels has been repeatedly identified as a critical issue. Additionally, if the industry and nation wish to capitalize on this rapid industry growth by becoming a major international green technology exporter, reversing current educational trends away from science, engineering, and technical skills must be achieved.

This poster provides an overview of the educational infrastructure and expected industry needs through a discussion of the activities to train workers while addressing issues for each of the education sectors, leading to the development of …


The Curious Timekeeper: Creative Thesis In Interactive Sculpture, Kate I. Schnippering May 2010

The Curious Timekeeper: Creative Thesis In Interactive Sculpture, Kate I. Schnippering

Dartmouth College Undergraduate Theses

When we interact with computers, we have set expectations about our interactive experience, operating a mouse and keyboard to elicit predictable responses on a screen. Intersecting the world of Computing with Fine Art gains us potential to innovate outside these bounds by restricting the expected performance of a computer-- setting it to a particular purpose rather than allowing it to run anyone's software. To challenge standard human-computer interaction, this work set out to create an interesting and unusual interactive experience, fully integrated into a sculpture. The approach was to design a system to form a small environment, having many components …


Lhc Beam Diffusion Dependence On Rf Noise: Models And Measurements, T. Mastoridis, C. Rivetta, J.D. Fox, D. Van Winkle, P. Baudrenghien, A. Butterworth, J. Molendijk May 2010

Lhc Beam Diffusion Dependence On Rf Noise: Models And Measurements, T. Mastoridis, C. Rivetta, J.D. Fox, D. Van Winkle, P. Baudrenghien, A. Butterworth, J. Molendijk

Physics

Radio Frequency (RF) accelerating system noise and non-idealities can have detrimental impact on the LHC performance through longitudinal motion and longitudinal emittance growth. A theoretical formalism has been developed to relate the beam and RF loop dynamics with the bunch length growth [1]. Measurements were conducted at LHC to validate the formalism, determine the performance limiting RF components, and provide the foundation for beam diffusion estimates for higher energies and intensities. A brief summary of these results is presented in this work.


The Defiance College Undergraduate Major In Digital Forensic Science: Setting The Bar Higher, Gregg H. Gunsch May 2010

The Defiance College Undergraduate Major In Digital Forensic Science: Setting The Bar Higher, Gregg H. Gunsch

Annual ADFSL Conference on Digital Forensics, Security and Law

This paper provides background information to accompany the panel discussion on Curriculum Design and Implementation in Computer Forensics Education. It is specifically focused on the content and delivery of Defiance College’s undergraduate (B.S.) program majoring in Digital Forensic Science (DFS). The genesis and evolution of the Defiance College DFS program are described, along with its successes, challenges and known opportunities for improvement. The desired outcomes of the panel discussion include articulating the necessary components of an undergraduate program, refining expectations of knowledge and skills required of students upon graduation, and suggesting strategies for achieving those expectations despite inevitable resource limitations …


Computer Forensics For Graduate Accountants: A Motivational Curriculum Design Approach, Grover S. Kearns May 2010

Computer Forensics For Graduate Accountants: A Motivational Curriculum Design Approach, Grover S. Kearns

Annual ADFSL Conference on Digital Forensics, Security and Law

Computer forensics involves the investigation of digital sources to acquire evidence that can be used in a court of law. It can also be used to identify and respond to threats to hosts and systems. Accountants use computer forensics to investigate computer crime or misuse, theft of trade secrets, theft of or destruction of intellectual property, and fraud. Education of accountants to use forensic tools is a goal of the AICPA (American Institute of Certified Public Accountants). Accounting students, however, may not view information technology as vital to their career paths and need motivation to acquire forensic knowledge and skills. …


Digital Records Forensics: A New Science And Academic Program For Forensic Readiness, Luciana Duranti, Barbara Endicott-Popovsky May 2010

Digital Records Forensics: A New Science And Academic Program For Forensic Readiness, Luciana Duranti, Barbara Endicott-Popovsky

Annual ADFSL Conference on Digital Forensics, Security and Law

This paper introduces the Digital Records Forensics project, a research endeavour located at the University of British Columbia in Canada and aimed at the development of a new science resulting from the integration of digital forensics with diplomatics, archival science, information science and the law of evidence, and of an interdisciplinary graduate degree program, called Digital Records Forensics Studies, directed to professionals working for law enforcement agencies, legal firms, courts, and all kind of institutions and business that require their services. The program anticipates the need for organizations to become “forensically ready,” defined by John Tan as “maximizing the ability …


Enhanced Oxygen Activation Over Supported Bimetallic Au-Ni Catalysts, Bert D. Chandler, Cormac G. Long, John D. Gilbertson, Christopher J. Pursell, G. Vijayaraghavan, K. J. Stevenson May 2010

Enhanced Oxygen Activation Over Supported Bimetallic Au-Ni Catalysts, Bert D. Chandler, Cormac G. Long, John D. Gilbertson, Christopher J. Pursell, G. Vijayaraghavan, K. J. Stevenson

Chemistry Faculty Research

New bimetallic Ni-Au supported nanoparticle catalysts were prepared by using dendrimer templated nanoparticles. Amine-terminated generation 5 polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers were anchored to a commercial silica with a siloxane linked anhydride. The dendrimer was then alkylated and used to template Ni-Au nanoparticles, which were subsequently extracted into organic solution as thiol monolayer protected clusters (MPCs). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) indicated bimetallic nanoparticles of about 2 nm in size. Nanoparticles were deposited onto P-25 TiO2, and the capping thiol ligands were removed under flowing H2. DRIFTS infrared spectra of adsorbed CO showed only Au on the catalyst …


Doubly Differential Spectra Of Scattered Protons In Ionization Of Atomic Hydrogen, Michael Schulz, A. C. Laforge, K. N. Egodapitiya, J. S. Alexander, A. Hasan, M. F. Ciappina, A. C. Roy, R. Dey, A. Samolov, A. L. Godunov May 2010

Doubly Differential Spectra Of Scattered Protons In Ionization Of Atomic Hydrogen, Michael Schulz, A. C. Laforge, K. N. Egodapitiya, J. S. Alexander, A. Hasan, M. F. Ciappina, A. C. Roy, R. Dey, A. Samolov, A. L. Godunov

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

We have measured and calculated doubly differential cross sections for ionization of atomic hydrogen using 75-keV proton impact for fixed projectile energy losses as a function of scattering angle. This collision system represents a pure three-body system and thus offers an accurate test of the theoretical description of the few-body dynamics without any complications presented by electron correlation in many-electron targets. Comparison between experiment and several theoretical models reveals that the projectile-target nucleus interaction is best described by the operator of a second-order term of the transition amplitude. Higher-order contributions in the projectile-electron interaction, on the other hand, are more …


A Qcd Analysis Of Zeus Diffractive Data, S. Chekanov, M. Derrick, S. Magill, B. Musgrave, D. Nicholass, J. Repond, R. Yoshida, Margarita C. K. Mattingly, P. Antonioli, G. Bari, L. Bellagamba, D. Boscherini, A. Bruni, G. Bruni, F. Cindolo, M. Corradi, G. Iacobucci, A. Margotti, R. Nania, A. Polini, S. Antonelli, M. Basile, M. Bindi, L. Cifarelli, A. Contin, S. De Pasquale, G. Sartorelli, A. Zichichi, D. Bartsch, I. Brock, H. Hartmann May 2010

A Qcd Analysis Of Zeus Diffractive Data, S. Chekanov, M. Derrick, S. Magill, B. Musgrave, D. Nicholass, J. Repond, R. Yoshida, Margarita C. K. Mattingly, P. Antonioli, G. Bari, L. Bellagamba, D. Boscherini, A. Bruni, G. Bruni, F. Cindolo, M. Corradi, G. Iacobucci, A. Margotti, R. Nania, A. Polini, S. Antonelli, M. Basile, M. Bindi, L. Cifarelli, A. Contin, S. De Pasquale, G. Sartorelli, A. Zichichi, D. Bartsch, I. Brock, H. Hartmann

Faculty Publications

ZEUS inclusive diffractive-cross-section measurements have been used in a DGLAP next-to-leading-order QCD analysis to extract the diffractive parton distribution functions. Data on diffractive dijet production in deep inelastic scattering have also been included to constrain the gluon density. Predictions based on the extracted parton densities are compared to diffractive charm and dijet photoproduction data. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.


Core-Shell Magnetic Morphology Of Structurally Uniform Magnetite Nanoparticles, Kathryn L. Krycka, R.A. Booth, C.R. Hogg, Y. Ijiri, Julie A. Borchers, W.C. Chen, S.M. Watson, M. Laver, T.R. Gentile, Liv R. Dedon May 2010

Core-Shell Magnetic Morphology Of Structurally Uniform Magnetite Nanoparticles, Kathryn L. Krycka, R.A. Booth, C.R. Hogg, Y. Ijiri, Julie A. Borchers, W.C. Chen, S.M. Watson, M. Laver, T.R. Gentile, Liv R. Dedon

Faculty & Staff Scholarship

A new development in small-angle neutron scattering with polarization analysis allows us to directly extract the average spatial distributions of magnetic moments and their correlations with three-dimensional directional sensitivity in any magnetic field. Applied to a collection of spherical magnetite nanoparticles 9.0 nm in diameter, this enhanced method reveals uniformly canted, magnetically active shells in a nominally saturating field of 1.2 T. The shell thickness depends on temperature, and it disappears altogether when the external field is removed, confirming that these canted nanoparticle shells are magnetic, rather than structural, in origin.


Geometry, Greed, Games, And 'Roids, James Oxley May 2010

Geometry, Greed, Games, And 'Roids, James Oxley

Dalrymple Lecture Series

A three-legged stool doesn’t wobble. But four-legged stools often teeter because the tips of their legs don’t lie in the same plane.

This phenomenon of dependent sets, first theorized 75 years ago, is the focus of the 16th Dalrymple Lecture in Mathematics, set for 5:30 p.m. Friday (May 21) at the University of Mississippi. James Oxley, who holds an alumni professorship at Louisiana State University, is to deliver the address, which is free and open to the public in the Student Union Ballroom.

“There is some beautiful and intriguing mathematics that arises from some natural problems in geometry and network …


An Exponentially Convergent Nonpolynomial Finite Element Method For Time-Harmonic Scattering From Polygons, A. H. Barnett, T. Betcke May 2010

An Exponentially Convergent Nonpolynomial Finite Element Method For Time-Harmonic Scattering From Polygons, A. H. Barnett, T. Betcke

Dartmouth Scholarship

In recent years nonpolynomial finite element methods have received increasing attention for the efficient solution of wave problems. As with their close cousin the method of particular solutions, high efficiency comes from using solutions to the Helmholtz equation as basis functions. We present and analyze such a method for the scattering of two-dimensional scalar waves from a polygonal domain that achieves exponential convergence purely by increasing the number of basis functions in each element. Key ingredients are the use of basis functions that capture the singularities at corners and the representation of the scattered field towards infinity by a combination …


Examining The Effects Of Climate Change And Urban Development On Water Demand: A Multi-Scale Analysis Of Future Water Demand In Hillsboro, Oregon, Lily Arielle House-Peters May 2010

Examining The Effects Of Climate Change And Urban Development On Water Demand: A Multi-Scale Analysis Of Future Water Demand In Hillsboro, Oregon, Lily Arielle House-Peters

Dissertations and Theses

In the Portland, Oregon, metropolitan area, suburban cities such as Hillsboro are projected to grow as people seek affordable housing near a rapidly growing metropolis. This thesis examines the combined impact of climate change and urban development on both neighborhood and municipal scale residential water demand in Hillsboro, Oregon. I use two models, a surface energy balance model, Local-scale Urban Meteorological Parameterization Scheme (LUMPS), and a system dynamics model, CCDomestic, to investigate changes in residential water demand in the 2040s at two distinct spatial scales, the neighborhood and the municipality. I calibrate and validate each model to the reference period …


A Layered Framework Approach To Mitigate Crimeware, Mathew Nyamagwa May 2010

A Layered Framework Approach To Mitigate Crimeware, Mathew Nyamagwa

Annual ADFSL Conference on Digital Forensics, Security and Law

Crimeware attacks are growing at such an alarming rate and are becoming so prevalent that the FBI now rank cybercrime among its top priorities after terrorism and espionage. New studies estimate cyber crimes cost firms an astounding $1 trillion annually. But the good news? Over 80% of them are preventable. Crimeware is not a purely technical threat but more or a socio-technical affair. This clearly brings out the fact that computers do not commit a crime, but we (humans) do! In this paper I propose a layered approach that involves all stakeholders from end-users to service-providers and law enforcement to …


Canvass - A Steganalysis Forensic Tool For Jpeg Images, Jennifer L. Davidson, Jaikishan Jalan May 2010

Canvass - A Steganalysis Forensic Tool For Jpeg Images, Jennifer L. Davidson, Jaikishan Jalan

Annual ADFSL Conference on Digital Forensics, Security and Law

Steganography is a way to communicate a message such that no one except the sender and recipient suspects the existence of the message. This type of covert communication lends itself to a variety of different purposes such as spy-to-spy communication, exchange of pornographic material hidden in innocuous image files, and other illicit acts. Computer forensic personnel have an interest in testing for possible steganographic files, but often do not have access to the technical and financial resources required to perform steganalysis in an effective manner. This paper describes the results of a funded effort by a grant from the National …