823 research outputs found

    Master of Arts

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    thesisThis thesis investigates the predicate cleft (PC) constructions in Mandarin Chinese. Cheng & Vicente conclude that the topicalized verb and the lower verb in bare PC form a long head movement relation, discarding a remnant movement analysis based on vP-external scrambling. However, to be complete, the argument also needs to consider vP-internal scrambling observed by Soh and a selective deletion analysis. I show that vP-internal scrambling cannot serve to derive a plausible remnant movement analysis; nor can a selective deletion analysis be accomplished. Long head movement is necessary to account for Mandarin bare PC. However, although this conclusion converges with cross-linguistic treatment of predicate clefts, I point out the unreliability of idiom interpretation as a diagnostic for long head movement used in several studies. Moreover, I present the puzzling restriction on the types of categories that can undergo pied-piping with the fronted verb. Last, I show that the verb doubling effect, an unresolved issue in Cheng & Vicente, can be accounted for, if the proposal on parallel chains is adopted. The necessity of a long head movement analysis supports bare phrase structure whereby head-to-spec movement is expected. In addition, it constitutes as an empirical argument against eliminating syntactic head movement. The compositionality of idiom interpretation and the restriction on full PC are worth further study

    Evaluating Comparative Effectiveness of Simultaneous Liver and Kidney Transplant versus Liver Transplant Alone using Instrumental Variables

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    Improving the quality of medical care often requires assessment of comparative effectiveness between treatments. Although randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are considered as the gold standard for generating evidence, they may not be feasible or ethical to conduct for some comparisons. Therefore, observational studies are required to address many research questions. However, observational data may lead to a high potential for selection bias because subjects or physicians choose their treatments, which may complicate the estimation of causal effects. As one approach to overcome these issues, instrumental variables (IVs) can be used to potentially estimate unbiased causal effect in the setting of observational comparative effectiveness research. The goal of this thesis is reducing unmeasured confounding in an observational study to compare the effectiveness of simultaneous liver and kidney transplants (SLKT) versus liver-only transplants (LTA) in patients who were on the liver transplant wait list with dialysis. We hypothesize that SLKT could lower mortality by replacing both organs in the same operation. A two-stage least squares (2SLS) was used to estimate causal effects. The first stage was regressing treatment on IV and covariates to determine whether IV met the assumption of strongly predicting treatment. Then, the second stage least squares analysis was performed by regressing outcome on estimated treatment and covariates. This analysis used several strategies for formulating the IV based on geographic region, with similar results. Although our IV met the necessary assumptions, results did not show a significant causal relationship between treatment and mortality. Findings of this thesis are significant to public health because more than ten thousand patients in the US are on the liver transplant waiting list. While performing both a kidney and liver transplant in these patients may save lives, we are not aware of any other studies that evaluated this problem using IVs or other approaches that potentially account for unmeasured confounding. By evaluating the causal effects of the different transplant approaches, physician and patients can make more informed decision. The information may also be important for organ allocation strategies nationally

    A114: Promoting Exercise Behavior for College Students by Compensating Intervention of Beliefs

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    Purpose: Compensatory Health Beliefs (CHBs) are essential to resolving the motivational conflicts between the desired and healthy goal in college students. Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) framework is used to design a multidimensional training model, which compensates belief as a mediator, to research the influence of belief intervention compensation on promoting right exercise cognitive and behavior in college students. The purpose of this study was to discover whether this training model is able to inspire college students to attend exercise more effectively. Methods: A cohort of 218 college students from Guangzhou were involved in the research (20.04±1.5). The objects were divided into two groups. A total of 110 objects in the control group were mentored by professional physical exercise instructor, while for the rest 108 objects in the interventional group who received 45-minute lessons about compensatory beliefs 5 days per week for 12 weeks on top of professional physical exercise instructor. All objects were asked to write a tracker daily for self-monitor daily exercise behavior and mental condition. All objects were asked by the researcher to fill out the Exercise Motivational Conflict Questionnaire and the International Physical Activity Questionnaire one week before and after the intervention. The correlations of compensated beliefs and other two variables were analyzed with descriptive data analysis, independent sample T-test, and multiple regression. Results: The subjects in the intervention group had higher levels of the exercise behavior than those in the control group. Multiple regression analysis indicated that the exercise motivational conflict has significantly positive correlations to exercise behavior (β = 0.47, SE = 0. 41, P \u3c 0. 01). By adding compensated belief in the intervention group, exercise motivational conflict still has significantly positive correlations to exercise behavior(β = 0.47, SE = 0.41, P \u3c 0.01). The compensated belief has a significant effect among exercise motivational conflict and exercise behavior (β=0.26,SE=0.16,95% CI= (0.03 ~ 0.11) indirectly. Therefore, the mediating effect of compensated belief plays a significant role in promoting the effect between exercise motivational conflict and exercise behavior. Conclusion: The study indicated that the training model can positively predict college students’ exercise motivational conflict and exercise behavior and encourage college students to do exercise effectively. Meanwhile, compensated belief is an effective mediator which can reduce the problem of lack of exercise among college students

    Do algorithms and barriers for sparse principal component analysis extend to other structured settings?

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    We study a principal component analysis problem under the spiked Wishart model in which the structure in the signal is captured by a class of union-of-subspace models. This general class includes vanilla sparse PCA as well as its variants with graph sparsity. With the goal of studying these problems under a unified statistical and computational lens, we establish fundamental limits that depend on the geometry of the problem instance, and show that a natural projected power method exhibits local convergence to the statistically near-optimal neighborhood of the solution. We complement these results with end-to-end analyses of two important special cases given by path and tree sparsity in a general basis, showing initialization methods and matching evidence of computational hardness. Overall, our results indicate that several of the phenomena observed for vanilla sparse PCA extend in a natural fashion to its structured counterparts

    Firm-level performance and productivity analysis for software-as-a-service companies

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    Master'sMASTER OF SCIENC
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