Growth and Characterisation of GaAsBi - White Rose eTheses.
A thesis submitted to the University of She eld for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Economics June 2012: To Those Who Love and Take Care of Me ii: Abstract Despite ample research on corporate nancing decisions, there is a growing interest in deepening our understanding of how rms structure their nancing needs. In this dis-sertation, we build upon previous work on.
Thesis submitted for the degree of PhD in Islamic Studies 2013 Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies School of Oriental and African Studies University of London. 2 Declaration for PhD thesisDeclaration for PhD thesis I have read and understood regulation 17.9 of the Regulations for students of the School of Oriental and African Studies concerning plagiarism. I undertake that all the.
PhD Theses in CMP Library Page 1. PhD and MPhil Theses Year Surname Forename Title 2011 Newman Jacob L Language identification using visual features 2011 Shah Said Khalid Non-rigid Medical Image Registration using points, curves, and parameterised surfaces 2011 Smith Lindsey Sediment transport in Seas around Britain. Confidential 09.11-09.14) 2011 Younsi R Investigating randomised sphere.
Islamabad: Naqeeb Hussain Shah has successfully defended his PhD thesis in the Department of Social Work at Peshawar University, says a press release.The scholar has submitted his thesis on.
PhD students who graduated: Ariana Minot (May 2017), Thesis: Distributed Optimization Methods for Monitoring and Operating Electric Power Systems, Next stop: Research scientist in MIT Lincoln Lab Masoud Badiei (June 2018), Thesis: Primal-Dual Methods for Stochastic Optimization on Riemannian Manifolds and Connected Graphs Current PhD students.
In this work we describe a new method to compare solid models based on shape distributions. Shape distribution functions are common in the computer graphics and computer vision communities. The typical use of shape dis-tributions is to compare 2-D objects, such as those obtained from imaging devices (cameras and other computer vision equipment). Recent work has applied shape distribution.
Katina Michael is a professor in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society and School of Computing, Informatics and Decision Systems Engineering at Arizona State University. Previously Michael was associate dean international at the University of Wollongong (UOW), Australia, where she was employed in the School of Computing and Information Technology since 2002. She has held visiting.