Essays about: "composition diary"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 6 essays containing the words composition diary.
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1. Transport mode inference by multimodal map matching and sequence classification
University essay from KTH/GeoinformatikAbstract : Automation of travel diary collection, an essential input for transport planning, has been a fruitful line of research for the last years; in particular, concerning the problem of automatic inference of transport modes. Taking advantage of technological advance, several solutions based on the collection of mobile devices data, such as GPS locations and variables related to movement (such as speed) and motion (e. READ MORE
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2. Bhinneka Tunggal Ika – The importance of art in the sense of belonging.
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Högskolan för scen och musikAbstract : Can the sense of belonging to a culture be strengthened with composing music as a method? Everything we experience are being kept somewhere in our minds. Consciously or subconsciously I believe that life experiences have to be processed in some way. If you're not doing any kind of artistic expression, it might come out as speech. READ MORE
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3. Differences between objective and subjective measurements ofphysical activity with regards to gender and age in obese children
University essay fromAbstract : Background: Overweight and obesity is increasing worldwide and more and more peopleare dying due to their overweight rather than of starvation. Obesity in young children isbecoming more common and the physical activity is decreasing with age. READ MORE
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4. Composition Diary. Song Of Myself.
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Högskolan för scen och musikAbstract : .... READ MORE
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5. Pics or it didn't happen: Instagram in Prosumer Capitalism and Reflexive Modernity
University essay from Lunds universitet/Avdelningen för etnologiAbstract : Drawing on practice centered approaches to consumption, this study situates a cultural analysis of Instagram, a smartphone-‐based image sharing application used by over 80 million people worldwide, within wider discourses on reflexive modernity, critical media studies, prosumption, and late-‐modern consumer culture. A seven-‐day diary study with 25 international participants, supplemented by participant observation, helps tie these theoretical engagements to specific lived experiences illustrating what it means to live with a networked camera almost permanently on-‐hand to record and share images of daily life. READ MORE