Search for dissertations about: "Eva Olsson"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 20 swedish dissertations containing the words Eva Olsson.
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1. Jet Impingement and Infrared Heating of Cylindrical Foods. Flow and Heat Transfer Studies
Abstract : Rapid heat transfer methods such as jet impingement and infrared radiation can be used to speed up thermal processing in the food industry. The heating rate affects important food characteristics, such as colour. READ MORE
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2. Modelling of Jet impingement Heat Transfer for Cooling of Cylindrical Foods
Abstract : Cooling is an energy consuming operation in the food industry. Rapid cooling reduces the risk of growth of micro-organisms, improves the quality of the food product and increase the production rate... READ MORE
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3. Designing Work Support Systems – For and With Skilled Users
Abstract : Computer users often suffer from poorly designed support systems that hinder them from performing their work efficiently and with satisfaction. The evidence is found in observations of users at work, interviews, evaluations of systems, and numerous reports of systems with poor usability that fail from start. READ MORE
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4. On the impact of extramural English and CLIL on productive vocabulary
Abstract : In this thesis, the possible impact of English encountered and used in two different contexts – in content and language integrated learning (CLIL) and through extramural English (EE) – on students’ writing proficiency is investigated. More specifically, students’ vocabulary use when writing different text types is explored; in particular, attention is drawn to progress in productive academic vocabulary. READ MORE
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5. Media Crisis Decision Making : A Case Study of SR (Swedish Radio), SVT (Swedish Television) and TV4
Abstract : The study takes as its starting point that news organizations’ actions during crises vary more than one can expect based on previous research on news work. Accordingly, the dissertation aims to move beyond the notion of news organizations as homogenous and attempts to open the ‘black box’ of news organizations’ decision making. READ MORE