1,327 research outputs found

    Apple breeding: the vigor of apple seedlings as affected by parentage

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    Typescript (photocopy) Thesis (M.S.)--Iowa State College, 1927. Includes bibliography

    Holding Off on the Fun Stuff: Academic Media Multitasking and Binge Watching Among College Students

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    College students are often faced with the temptation of engaging in academic media multitasking and binge watching or completing their academic coursework in a timely and effective manner. A quantitative survey (N = 651) explored trait individual differences in self-control and academic delay of gratification and situational individual differences in enjoyment, reward, procrastination, regret, and guilt as predictors of academic media multitasking frequency, binge watching frequency, and binge watching duration. Stepwise regressions reveal that self-control is not a predictor of these media behaviors, while age and greater enjoyment were the only predictors of academic media multitasking and gender and greater enjoyment were the only predictors of binge watching duration. On the other hand, the other five variables provided insight on what predicted binge watching frequency: academic delay of gratification, reward, procrastination, regret, and guilt. Greater self-control also led to greater academic delay of gratification. Lastly, there were small positive correlations between all of the media behaviors except for academic media multitasking and binge watching frequency. Practical and theoretical implications are discussed

    REDUCING CUSTOMER WAIT TIME AND IMPROVING PROCESSES AT ABC’s ATV RENTALS

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    This project serves to explore the system bottlenecks of a small, family owned ATV rental company. The main objective is to reduce the average time a customer spends in the system, focusing on customer wait time as well as other areas that can be improved. This was done by collecting time studies and inputting the values into simulation software, which was run to represent the current system as well as various other possible scenarios encountered by rental companies. While creating the simulation, adaptive techniques were incorporated into the simulation. These techniques aim to increase the durability and reusability of the simulation for future use. An example of incorporating adaptive simulation is through having the simulation software draw values from an Excel spreadsheet. This example of adaptive simulation targets the efficiency of use, as values and formulas are easier to calculate and visualize in Excel than the simulation software. Through the scenarios created in the simulation software, the main system bottleneck was discovered to be the company’s trailer fleet size. Several scenarios were then created to further explore the theory and resulted in confirming it. The results of this analysis conclude that to reduce customer wait time in the system, the company should increase its fleet size by one trailer. A secondary, no cost solution is to eliminate ATV load/unload times by moving ATVs to the dunes prior to customer arrival instead of loading them on a customer by customer basis

    History of North American Trapping: How Fur-Trading Developed Our Continent

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    History of North American Trapping: How Fur-Trading Developed Our Continent by Daniel E. McAllister, Jr. & Shirley A. Merrill Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, Augusta, Maine, 1990.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/me_collection/1122/thumbnail.jp

    A Broader View of Perceived Risk during Internet Transactions

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    Ubiquitous networking facilitates Internet access across multiple network environments, whose value is tied directly to user perceptions of its ability to securely execute transactions. Prior research has cited awareness, trust, and risk as critical determinants of adoption but has failed to examine these factors as they relate to infrastructure and its provider. Because information in transit is at risk from a network environment’s vulnerabilities, we focus on the implications of such risk on Internet activities. We examine the multiple parties that must be trusted to complete and facilitate an online transaction. We propose that the user must trust not only the information recipient to act benevolently but also the technologies and organizations that facilitate the online exchange

    Managing Bitterweed to Reduce Sheep Losses.

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    2 p

    Embracing AI-Based Education: Perceived Social Presence of Human Teachers and Expectations About Machine Teachers in Online Education

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    Technological advancements in education have turned the idea of machines as teachers into a reality. To better understand this phenomenon, the present study explores how college students develop expectations (or anticipations) about a machine teacher, particularly an AI teaching assistant. Specifically, the study examines whether students’ previous experiences with online courses taught by a human teacher would influence their expectations about AI teaching assistants in future online courses. An online survey was conducted to collect data from college students in the United States. Findings indicate that positively experienced social presence of a human teacher helps develop positive expectations about an AI teaching assistant. The study provides meaningful implications and contributions to our understanding of a machine agent in education

    Aquaculture of Triploid Crassostrea ariakensis in the Chesapeake Bay A Symposium Report

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    A Symposium Held at the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia October 18-19, 200

    Deregulatory Takings and Breach of the Regulatory Contract

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    The October 1996 issue of the New York University Law Review includes a work dealing with deregulatory takings and breach of deregulatory contracts. Next October, the N.Y.U. Law Review will contain a rebuttal, a response critiquing work done by J. Gregory Sidak and Daniel Spulber. This critique is coauthored by William J. Baumol and Thomas W. Merrill. We are very fortunate here today to have that same Thomas W. Merrill with us. Our participants this afternoon on the panel will go in that order. Lewis Powell will discuss the propositions that the Telecommunications Act, and perhaps other current proposals for restructuring the electric industry, will constitute either violations of the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment, a deregulatory contract or an implied contract, and perhaps other constitutional provisions such as the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. If he doesn\u27t say that they do, he will probably raise serious questions as to whether or not they might do that
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