Search for dissertations about: "Moving target"
Showing result 11 - 15 of 85 swedish dissertations containing the words Moving target.
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11. Bridging the past to the present: investigating species boundaries with herbarium specimens and next-generation-sequencing. A case study of circumpolar Silene sect. Physolychnis
Abstract : During the recent decades, genetic information enclosed in herbarium collections have been partly revealed, largely due to the fast-moving high-throughput sequencing technologies. However, the genetic outcome from herbarium material is limited by its degradation over time, often worsened by certain preservation methods. READ MORE
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12. Chartist trading in exchange rate theory
Abstract : This thesis consists of four papers, of which paper 1 and 4 are co-written with Mikael Bask. Paper [1] implements chartists trading in a sticky-price monetary model for determining the exchange rate. It is demonstrated that chartists cause the exchange rate to "overshoot the overshooting equilibrium" of a sticky-price monetary model. READ MORE
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13. Passive Acoustic Monitoring of Moving Targets by Sparse Underwater Sensor Network
Abstract : Surveillance of sound activities in the sea is of great importance for many applications. A common way to monitor the sea is to register sound with the help of a group of closely placed sensors that form a one-dimensional or two-dimensional array. READ MORE
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14. Multi-target Tracking Using on-line Viterbi Optimisation and Stochastic Modelling
Abstract : To study and compare the safety of intersection, traffic scientists today typically manually monitor the intersection during several days and count how often certain events such as evasive manoeuvres occur. This is a laboursome and costly procedure. READ MORE
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15. Brain glycine receptors as a common target for alcohol and the relapse-preventing drug acamprosate - a preclinical study
Abstract : Alcohol abuse and dependence make up the most prevalent categories of substance use disorders in the world. Converging evidence from the current research group has identified two receptor populations, the glycine (GlyRs) and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in the mesolimbic dopamine system, as two potentially important targets for the development of new medication to treat alcohol dependence. READ MORE