Search for dissertations about: "observers"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 168 swedish dissertations containing the word observers.
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6. On Cooperative Surveillance, Online Trajectory Planning and Observer Based Control
Abstract : The main body of this thesis consists of six appended papers. In the first two, different cooperative surveillance problems are considered. The second two consider different aspects of the trajectory planning problem, while the last two deal with observer design for mobile robotic and Euler-Lagrange systems respectively. READ MORE
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7. Effective Techniques for Stateless Model Checking
Abstract : Stateless model checking is a technique for testing and verifying concurrent programs, based on exploring the different ways in which operations executed by the processes of a concurrent program can be scheduled. The goal of the technique is to expose all behaviours that can be a result of scheduling non-determinism. READ MORE
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8. On Transnational Actor Participation in Global Environmental Governance
Abstract : The formal access of transnational actors (TNA) to international organizations (IO) has increased steadily over the past five decades, and a growing body of literature is at the moment concerned with the theoretical and normative implications of these developments. However, very little is known as of yet about who the TNAs in global governance are, where they come from, which issue areas they focus on, and when and where they choose to participate. READ MORE
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9. Field Programmable Gate Arrays and Reconfigurable Computing in Automatic Control
Abstract : New combustion engine principles increase the demands on feedback combustion control, at the same time economical considerations currently enforce the usage of low-end control hardware limiting implementation possibilities. Significant development is simultaneously and continuously carried out within the field of Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs). READ MORE
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10. Live and videotaped testimonies: observers´perception, assessment and memory
Abstract : This thesis examines how different presentation modes (live vs. video) affect observers’ perception, veracity assessment and memory of adult (Study Ι) and child witnesses (Study ΙΙ). READ MORE