Search for dissertations about: "supercomputing"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 9 swedish dissertations containing the word supercomputing.
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1. HPC scheduling in a brave new world
Abstract : Many breakthroughs in scientific and industrial research are supported by simulations and calculations performed on high performance computing (HPC) systems. These systems typically consist of uniform, largely parallel compute resources and high bandwidth concurrent file systems interconnected by low latency synchronous networks. READ MORE
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2. REMAP-γ: A Scalable SIMD VLSI Architecture with Hierarchical Control
Abstract : While the clock speed of general purpose (uni-)processors has risen dramatically during recent years, this is not true for SIMD (Single Instruction stream Multiple Data streams) parallel processors. The reason is to be found in the structure of this type of architecture: long-range broadcasting of data, clock and control signals. READ MORE
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3. Mining for Meaning : using computational text analysis for social inquiry
Abstract : People interpret their surroundings through associations, determining what they perceive as belonging or not belonging together. For instance, one individual may view immigrants as a beneficial addition to the domestic labor market, while another may perceive them as a threat to job opportunities for native citizens. READ MORE
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4. Venturing Further into the Field of 2D Materials and their Laminated Parent Phases
Abstract : The field of 2D materials is a relatively young and rapidly growing area within materials science, which is concerned with atomically thin states of matter. Because of their intrinsic 2D morphology, 2D materials have exceptionally high surface to weight or surface to volume ratio. READ MORE
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5. The Urban Tapestry : Essays on the Relationship Between Social Networks and Residential Segregation
Abstract : Dominant explanations of segregation argue that patterns of spatial residential sorting are shaped by the aggregation of individual residential choices, guided by discrimination, differences in resources, and preference-based explanations of neighborhood ethnic composition. However, research on social networks indicates that social influence can serve as a driver of collective outcomes that result in social organization. READ MORE