Essays about: "The Canonical Model"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 28 essays containing the words The Canonical Model.
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1. Evolving Community Detection in Dynamic Networks using Nonnegative Tensor Decomposition : An Approach Toward Green Networking
University essay from Luleå tekniska universitet/DatavetenskapAbstract : Around 1.8–2.8% of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions are contributed by the ICT sector, with telecommunications networks accounting for 26.4% of this total ICT share. READ MORE
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2. Between Normal and Abnormal Personality – Examining the Joint Structure of the IPIP-NEO-120 and the PID-5
University essay from Lunds universitet/Institutionen för psykologiAbstract : Objective: The overlap of normal and abnormal personality and personality disorders was found on facet and domain level, but only a few studies assessed the higher order joint structure. In this study, the Personality Inventory for the DSM-5 (PID-5-100 item form) and the IPIP-NEO-120 are assessed in their internal consistency, convergent and discriminant validity and their joint structure, modelled as the overlap of the General Factor of Personality (GFP) and p-factor. READ MORE
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3. How to Rise from Ashes : A Comprehensive Guide to Finally Understand Canonical Quantization and Build Quantum Mechanics from Scratch
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Materialteori; Uppsala universitet/Avdelningen för teoretisk filosofiAbstract : In this review essay, we account for the historical development of canonical quantization. By a detailed review of The Ultraviolet Catastrophe, The Photoelectric Effect, Compton Scattering, Matter Waves and Bohr's Atomic Model we learn about Old Quantum Theory. READ MORE
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4. Apollonian and Dionysian Psychology in The Age of Innocence : A Psychoanalytical Essay
University essay from Högskolan i Gävle/Avdelningen för humanioraAbstract : The dichotomous concepts of order and chaos represented by the mythological Greek gods Apollo and Dionysus, as outlined by Friedrich Nietzsche in his controversial 1872 book on dramatic theory, The Birth of Tragedy, will in this essay serve as the primary literary concepts utilized in a psychoanalysis of the main character and his struggles in the American realist novel The Age of Innocence published in 1920. The social tragedy at the center of the novel written by the now canonical author Edith Wharton pits the protagonist, Newland Archer, against his own morality, in a battle between duty and passion, and conflicting personality traits. READ MORE
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5. Skill-biased agglomeration economies: a spatial perspective on demand for college graduates, Sweden 2000-2019
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för nationalekonomiAbstract : Several recent studies document that relative demand for skilled workers is becoming increasingly biased toward large cities and metropolitan regions. This development has been interpreted as suggestive evidence of increasing complementarity between skills and agglomerations of economy. READ MORE