Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • Berlin International  (715)
  • HFS Ernst Busch  (43)
  • Heinrich-Mann-Bibl. Strausberg  (15)
  • SB Ludwigsfelde  (10)
  • SB Velten  (8)
  • GB Fredersdorf-Vogelsdorf  (1)
Type of Medium
Language
Region
Library
Virtual Catalogues
Access
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Iowa City : University of Iowa Press
    UID:
    b3kat_BV035413465
    Format: xix, 362 p. , ill , 25 cm
    Edition: Online_Ausgabe Boulder, Colo NetLibrary 2004 E-Books von NetLibrary Sonstige Standardnummer des Gesamttitels: 22382847
    ISBN: 1587294265
    Series Statement: Studies in theatre history and culture
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , THEORIES OF ORIGINS -- Basic Definitions -- The Ritual Origin of Tragedy -- The Ritual Origin of Comedy -- The Shamanistic Source -- The Recreation of Theatre by Christianity -- The Mummers' Plays -- The Adoption of Theatre by Judaism -- Back to Aristotle -- HEDGES AND BOUNDARIES -- Performance Theory -- The "Drama" of Real Life -- The Spirit of Carnival -- Culture as Play/Game -- A THEORY OF ROOTS -- The "Language" of Dreams -- Playing as Thinking -- Mythical Representation -- Retracing the Steps of History -- Reflections and Conclusions
    Additional Edition: Reproduktion von Roziḳ, Eliyahu, 1932- The roots of theatre c2002
    Language: English
    Keywords: Theater ; Entstehung ; Ritual ; Theater ; Geschichte ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books. ; Electronic book ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Full text  (Click to View (Currently Only Available on Campus))
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602165102882
    Format: 1 online resource (290 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783319583167
    Series Statement: Springer Series on Touch and Haptic Systems Series
    Note: Intro -- Series Editors' Foreword -- Preface -- Contents -- Contributors -- 1 Musical Haptics: Introduction -- 1.1 Scope and Goals -- 1.2 Haptic Cues in Music Practice and Fruition -- 1.3 Musical Devices and Haptic Feedback -- 1.4 Challenges -- 1.5 Outline -- References -- Musical Haptics: Interaction and Perception -- 2 Once More, with Feeling: Revisiting the Role of Touch in Performer-Instrument Interaction -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 A Musician Both Drives and Is Driven by Their Instrument -- 2.3 The Coupled Dynamics: A New Perspective on Control -- 2.4 Inner and Outer Loops in the Interaction Between Player and Instrument -- 2.5 Implications of a Coupled Dynamics Perspective on Learning to Play an Instrument -- 2.6 Conclusions -- References -- 3 A Brief Overview of the Human Somatosensory System -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Biomechanics of the Hand -- 3.2.1 Hand Structural Organisation -- 3.2.2 Hand Mobility -- 3.2.3 The Volar Hand -- 3.2.4 Bulk Mechanics of the Fingertip and the Skin -- 3.3 Sensory Organs -- 3.3.1 Muscles, Tendons and Joints -- 3.3.2 Glabrous, Hairy and Mucosal Skin -- 3.3.3 Electrophysiological Response -- 3.4 Central Organs -- 3.5 Conclusions -- References -- 4 Perception of Vibrotactile Cues in Musical Performance -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 Open-Loop Experimentation -- 4.1.2 Experiments with Musicians -- 4.1.3 Premises to the Present Experiments -- 4.2 Experiment 1: Vibrotactile Sensitivity Thresholds Under Active Touch Conditions -- 4.2.1 Setup -- 4.2.2 Procedure -- 4.2.3 Results -- 4.2.4 Discussion -- 4.3 Experiment 2: Vibration Detection at the Piano Keyboard During Performance -- 4.3.1 Setup -- 4.3.2 Procedure -- 4.3.3 Results -- 4.3.4 Vibration Characterization -- 4.3.5 Discussion -- 4.4 Conclusions -- References -- 5 The Role of Haptic Cues in Musical Instrument Quality Perception -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Violin. , 5.2.1 Touch and the Conceptualization of Violin Quality by Musicians -- 5.2.2 Vibrotactile Feedback at the Left Hand -- 5.3 Piano -- 5.3.1 Piano Touch and Tone Quality -- 5.3.2 Haptic Cues and Instrument Quality -- 5.4 Conclusions -- References -- 6 A Functional Analysis of Haptic Feedback in Digital Musical Instrument Interactions -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Experiment Design -- 6.2.1 Functionality Testing -- 6.2.2 Adapting Fitts' Law -- 6.2.3 Context of Evaluation -- 6.2.4 Device Description: The Bowls -- 6.2.5 Device Feedback Implementation -- 6.2.6 Participants -- 6.2.7 Procedure -- 6.3 Results -- 6.3.1 Functionality Results -- 6.3.2 Usability Results -- 6.3.3 User Experience Results -- 6.3.4 Interview Data -- 6.3.5 Empathy Mapping -- 6.4 Discussion -- 6.5 Conclusions -- References -- 7 Auditory-Tactile Experience of Music -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Experimental Design -- 7.2.1 Stimuli -- 7.2.2 Synchronization -- 7.2.3 Setup -- 7.2.4 Participants -- 7.2.5 Procedure -- 7.3 Vibration Generation: Approaches and Results -- 7.3.1 Low-Pass Filtering -- 7.3.2 Reduction to Fundamental Frequency -- 7.3.3 Octave Shift -- 7.3.4 Substitute Signals -- 7.3.5 Compression of Dynamic Range -- 7.3.6 Summary -- 7.4 Conclusions -- References -- Haptic Musical Interfaces: Design and Applications -- 8 The MSCI Platform: A Framework for the Design and Simulation of Multisensory Virtual Musical Instruments -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 A Physical Approach to Digital Musical Instruments -- 8.2.1 Distributed Approach to Haptic Digital Musical Instruments -- 8.2.2 Unitary Approach to Virtual Musical Instruments -- 8.3 Hardware and Software Solutions for the MSCI Platform -- 8.3.1 The TGR Haptic System -- 8.3.2 The CORDIS-ANIMA Formalism -- 8.3.3 The GENESIS Software Environment -- 8.3.4 Synchronous Real-Time Computing Architecture. , 8.4 Multi-rate Decomposition of the Instrumental Chain -- 8.4.1 Gesture-Sound Dynamics -- 8.4.2 Multi-rate CORDIS-ANIMA Simulations -- 8.5 Virtual Instruments Created with MSCI -- 8.5.1 Workflow and Design Process -- 8.5.2 Specificities of MSCI Haptic Virtual Instruments -- 8.5.3 Real-Time Performance in Hélios -- 8.6 Conclusions -- References -- 9 Force-Feedback Instruments for the Laptop Orchestra of Louisiana -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.1.1 Multisensory Feedback for Musical Instruments -- 9.1.2 Additional Force-Feedback Device Designs from the Haptics Community -- 9.1.3 Open-Source Technology for the Design of Haptic Musical Instruments -- 9.1.4 Laptop Orchestra of Louisiana -- 9.2 Enabling Precise and Physically Intuitive Control of Sound (``Quartet for Strings'') -- 9.2.1 Instrument Design -- 9.2.2 Performance Techniques -- 9.2.3 Compositional Structure -- 9.3 Traditional Controls Can Be Used Alongside Force-Feedback Controls (``Of Grating Impermanence'') -- 9.3.1 Instrument Design -- 9.3.2 Performance Techniques -- 9.3.3 Compositional Structure -- 9.4 Finding Timbres that Sound Uncannily Familiar but Are Nonetheless Novel (``Guest Dimensions'') -- 9.4.1 Instrument Design -- 9.4.2 Performance Techniques -- 9.4.3 Compositional Structure -- 9.5 Conclusions -- References -- 10 Design of Vibrotactile Feedback and Stimulation for Music Performance -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Haptic Feedback in Music Technology -- 10.2.1 Models of Haptic-Enabled Interfaces -- 10.2.2 Haptic-Enabled Interfaces -- 10.3 Development and Evaluation of Tactile Icons for Music Performance -- 10.3.1 Hardware and Software -- 10.3.2 Symbolic and Musical Tactons: Design and Evaluation -- 10.3.3 Implementation into Live Performance -- 10.4 Conclusions -- References -- 11 Haptics for the Development of Fundamental Rhythm Skills, Including Multi-limb Coordination. , 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Motivation and Theoretical Background -- 11.2.1 Dalcroze Eurhythmics -- 11.2.2 Metrical Hierarchies and Polyrhythms -- 11.2.3 Cognitive Science: Entrainment and Neural Resonance -- 11.3 Applications of the Haptic Bracelets -- 11.3.1 The "Haptic IPod" -- 11.3.2 Drum Teaching with Haptic Bracelets -- 11.3.3 Musician Coordination and Synchronisation -- 11.3.4 Teaching Multi-limb Drum Patterns by Multi-limbed Haptic Cueing -- 11.4 Experimental Results -- 11.4.1 Supporting Learning of Rhythm Skills with the Haptic Drum Kit -- 11.4.2 Learning Multi-limb Rhythms with Improved Haptic Drum Kit -- 11.4.3 Passive Learning of Multi-limb Rhythm Skills -- 11.5 Related Work -- 11.6 Conclusions -- References -- 12 Touchscreens and Musical Interaction -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Perceptual Aspects of Auditory and Haptic Modalities for Musical Touchscreen Applications -- 12.2.1 Intensity -- 12.2.2 Frequency -- 12.2.3 Temporal Acuity and Rhythm Perception -- 12.2.4 Synchrony -- 12.3 Experiment 1: Identification of Audio-Driven Tactile Feedback on a Touchscreen -- 12.3.1 Stimuli -- 12.3.2 Set-up -- 12.3.3 Subjects -- 12.3.4 Results and Discussion -- 12.3.5 Usability and Attractiveness -- 12.4 Experiment 2: Effect of Loudness on Perceived Tactile Intensity of Virtual Buttons -- 12.4.1 Stimuli -- 12.4.2 Set-up -- 12.4.3 Subjects -- 12.4.4 Procedure -- 12.4.5 Results and Discussion -- 12.5 Conclusions -- References -- 13 Implementation and Characterization of Vibrotactile Interfaces -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Vibrotactile Actuators' Technology -- 13.3 Interface Examples -- 13.3.1 The Touch-Box -- 13.3.2 The VibroPiano -- 13.3.3 The HSoundplane -- 13.4 Conclusions -- References -- Appendix Glossary and Abbreviations.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Papetti, Stefano Musical Haptics Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2018 ISBN 9783319583150
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books ; Electronic books
    URL: OAPEN
    URL: OAPEN
    URL: OAPEN  (Creative Commons License)
    URL: Image  (Thumbnail cover image)
    URL: Image  (Thumbnail cover image)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: FULL  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    URL: FULL  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949301298002882
    Format: 1 online resource (430 pages)
    ISBN: 9783030542603
    Series Statement: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry Ser. ; v.90
    Note: Intro -- Series Preface -- Preface -- Contents -- Trajectories of the Seine River Basin -- 1 Introduction: River Systems in the Anthropocene -- 2 Multiple and Heavy Pressures on the Seine River System -- 2.1 The Hydrological Features of the Seine River Basin -- 2.2 Evolution of the Basin Population -- 2.3 The Land Cover -- 2.4 Industries and Navigation -- 3 PIREN-Seine Research on the River Basin Trajectories -- 3.1 Circulation of Material Within the Basin -- 3.2 Multiple Long-Term Trajectories of River Control Factors -- 3.3 Trajectories of River State and Societal Response to River Issues -- 4 Structuration of the Socioecological Research in the Context of the PIREN-Seine -- 4.1 Evolution of Main Research Themes -- 4.2 Present Structuration of the PIREN-Seine Research Programme -- 5 The Spatio-Temporal Scales of the Research Themes Selected in This Publication -- References -- The Evolution of the Seine Basin Water Bodies Through Historical Maps -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Physical Anthropogenic Transformation of the Seine River (1800-2010) -- 2.1 Transformations of Seine Water Bodies in the Early 1800s and Their Drivers -- 2.2 Current State of the Seine River Water Bodies -- 3 Historical Maps: A Tool for Quantifying the Physical Changes of Water Bodies -- 3.1 The Inventory and Critical Analysis of River Maps -- 3.2 General Use of Maps to Document River Environmental Changes -- 4 Historical Trajectories of Selected Water Bodies in the Seine River Basin -- 4.1 Stream Network Modification on the Versailles-Saclay Plateau (1670-1860) -- 4.2 Man-Made Heterogeneity of the Floodplain: Channelisation and Sandpits in the Bassée Floodplain -- 4.3 Simplification of Seine River Channel and Loss of Islands -- 5 Conclusion and Perspectives -- References -- Pluri-annual Water Budget on the Seine Basin: Past, Current and Future Trends -- 1 Introduction. , 2 Historical Records of the Seine River Discharge in Paris -- 3 Development of the Seine Basin Model -- 3.1 CaWaQS Model -- 3.2 Implementation of the Seine Basin Model -- 4 Current State of the Seine Hydrosystem -- 4.1 General Two-Step Calibration Strategy of Hydrosystem Models -- 4.2 Average Water Budget 1993-2010 -- 5 A Two-Century-Long Trajectory of the Seine Basin -- 5.1 Estimating Land Cover Changes -- 5.2 Estimating Anthropogenic Water Uptake -- 5.3 Climate Scenarios -- 5.3.1 Reanalysis of the Past -- 5.3.2 Selecting an Appropriate Climate Product for the Projection -- 5.4 Water Resources Trajectory from the 1900s to the 2100s -- 5.4.1 Water Budget and Recharge Modes -- 5.4.2 Surface Water-Groundwater Exchanges -- 5.4.3 Hydrological Regimes -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- The Seine Watershed Water-Agro-Food System: Long-Term Trajectories of C, N and P Metabolism -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Material and Methods -- 3 Trajectory and Biogeochemical Functioning of the Agricultural System -- 3.1 Long-Term Changes in the Structure of the Northern France Agricultural System -- 3.2 Changes in Land Use and Crop Rotations -- 3.3 Yield-Fertilisation Relationship -- 4 Soil Biogeochemistry Reflects This Trajectory -- 4.1 Soil Organic Carbon Storage -- 4.2 Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- 4.3 Nitrogen Soil Storage and Leaching -- 4.4 Phosphorus Dynamics and Erosion -- 5 Hydrosystem Response to Agricultural Trajectories -- 5.1 Aquifer Storage of Nitrogen -- 5.2 Riparian Processes -- 5.3 Point and Diffuse Sources of Nutrients to the River System -- 5.4 N and P Budget of the Water-Agro-Food System -- 6 Conclusion and Scenarios for the Future -- 6.1 The Importance of Long-Term Storage Processes -- 6.2 The Importance of the Structural Pattern of Agro-Food Systems on the Environmental Imprint -- References. , Past and Future Trajectories of Human Excreta Management Systems: Paris in the Nineteenth to Twenty-First Centuries -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Context -- 1.2 Temporal and Geographical Frame -- 1.3 Methodology -- 2 Resource-Oriented Management Leading to Circularity (1800-1905) -- 2.1 Intention Without Achievement (1800-1868) -- 2.2 Successful Mutualism (1868-1905) -- 3 Waste-Oriented Management Leading to Linearity (1905 to Today) -- 3.1 The Sacrifice of the Seine (1905-1968) -- 3.2 Pollution Treatment by Resource Destruction (1968 to Today) -- 4 Future Human Excreta Management Scenarios -- 4.1 Lock-In and Opportunities -- 4.2 Recovering Circularity Through Source Separation -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- How Should Agricultural Practices Be Integrated to Understand and Simulate Long-Term Pesticide Contamination in the Seine Rive... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Study Sites -- 2.1 Presentation of the Orgeval and Vesle Basins -- 2.2 Data Acquisition -- 3 Quantification of Past Pesticide Use -- 3.1 The Orgeval Case -- 3.2 The Vesle Case -- 4 The Orgeval Catchment Over Time -- 4.1 Long-Term Observed Contamination -- 4.2 Pesticide Fate Modelling with the STICS Crop Model -- 5 The Spatial Approach in the Vesle Catchment -- 6 Pesticides at the Seine River Basin Scale -- 7 Conclusion -- 8 Perspectives -- References -- Mass Balance of PAHs at the Scale of the Seine River Basin -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Material and Methods -- 2.1 Areas Studied -- 2.2 Dual-Scale Mass Balance Approach -- 2.3 Data Selection and Exploration -- 2.4 Flux Estimation Quality -- 3 Results -- 3.1 Urban Fluxes -- 3.1.1 Emissions to the Atmosphere -- 3.1.2 Atmospheric Deposition -- 3.1.3 Runoff -- 3.1.4 Domestic and Industrial Wastewater -- 3.1.5 Discharges from the Sewer System -- 3.1.6 Wastewater Treatment Plants -- 3.2 Rural Fluxes -- 3.2.1 Atmospheric Deposition. , 3.2.2 Road Runoff Outside of Urban Areas -- 3.2.3 Stocks in Soils -- 3.2.4 Soil Erosion -- 3.2.5 Sediment Dredging -- 3.2.6 Storage in Reservoirs and Floodplains -- 3.2.7 Flux Transported by the Seine River -- 3.2.8 Estimation of Urban Fluxes at the Basin Scale -- 4 Discussion -- 5 Conclusions and Perspectives -- References -- Ecological Functioning of the Seine River: From Long-Term Modelling Approaches to High-Frequency Data Analysis -- 1 Introduction -- 2 A Modelling Approach for a Comprehensive Understanding of the Ecological Functioning of the Seine River -- 3 Long-Term Trends in Water Quality -- 3.1 Changes in Organic Pollution from Urban Point Sources -- 3.2 Long-Term Nutrient Contamination and Algal Growth -- 3.3 Modelling Nutrients and Phytoplankton Biomass -- 4 River Metabolisms: Autotrophy, Heterotrophy and CO2 Saturation -- 4.1 High-Frequency Analysis of Oxygen Data Along the Main Seine Stem -- 4.2 CO2 Supersaturation in the Seine River: Carbon Sources, Fate and Budget -- 5 Further Improvement of Water Quality -- 5.1 Progress Made in Wastewater Treatments -- 5.2 Acting on Diffuse Agricultural Sources to Improve Water Quality -- 5.3 Impact of the Seine River Nutrient Fluxes at the Coastal Zone -- 5.4 The Context of Climate Change -- 6 Conclusions and Perspectives -- References -- Aquatic Organic Matter in the Seine Basin: Sources, Spatio-Temporal Variability, Impact of Urban Discharges and Influence on M... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Sources and Variability of Organic Matter in the Seine River Watershed -- 2.1 Context and Objectives -- 2.2 Methods for Characterising Organic Matter in River Water -- 2.3 Sources and Spatio-Temporal Variability of OM in the Seine River Basin -- 2.4 Impact of the Paris Conurbation Discharges on DOM Quantity and Quality in the Seine River. , 3 Influence of Organic Matter on the Fate of Micro-pollutants and the Role Played by Urban Organic Matter -- 3.1 Context -- 3.2 Material and Methods -- 3.2.1 Sampling Points -- 3.2.2 Experimental Procedures -- 3.3 Characterisation of DOM Trace Metal-Binding Ability -- 3.3.1 Binding Site Modal Distribution -- 3.3.2 Me-DOM Stability Constants and Binding Site Density -- 3.4 Contribution of EfDOM from Seine-Aval WWTP to the Copper-Binding Site Flux in the Seine River Downstream of Paris -- 3.5 Modelling of Trace Metal Speciation in the Seine River Upstream and Downstream of the Paris Conurbation -- 3.6 Evaluation of the Role of DOM on Copper Bioavailability Toxicity to Daphnia magna -- 3.7 Effect of EfDOM on Trace Metal Sorption by Mineral Particles in Aquatic Systems Subjected to Strong Urban Pressure -- 3.8 Effect of EfDOM on PAH Adsorption by Mineral Particles in Aquatic Systems Subjected to Strong Urban Pressure -- 4 Conclusions and Perspectives -- References -- Experience Gained from Ecotoxicological Studies in the Seine River and Its Drainage Basin Over the Last Decade: Applicative Ex... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Value of In Vitro Bioassays for an Ex Situ Evaluation of Water Contamination: The Case of Endocrine Disruptors -- 2.1 In Vitro Endocrine Disruptor Bioassays in Water Contamination Monitoring -- 2.2 Comparison of In Vitro Bioassays to Chemical Analysis in Water Contamination Monitoring -- 2.3 In Vitro Bioassays Applied to Sediment Matrix in Aquatic Environment Quality Monitoring -- 2.4 Conclusion -- 3 Biomarkers for the In Situ Biomonitoring of Water Contamination -- 3.1 Presentation of Sentinel Species and Their Advantages in Ecotoxicological Studies -- 3.2 Monitoring of Oxidative Stress in Fish Models -- 3.2.1 Introduction -- 3.2.2 Field Applications. , 3.3 Value of Digestive Activities as Biomarkers in Two Aquatic Invertebrates: Application to the Seine River Basin.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Flipo, Nicolas The Seine River Basin Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2021 ISBN 9783030542597
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books.
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_9949602262502882
    Format: 1 online resource (515 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781484228968
    Note: Intro -- Table of Contents -- About the Authors -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Chapter 1: Conceptualizing the Secure Internet of Things -- The BadUSB Thumb Drive -- Air-Gap Security -- Stuxnet -- Designing Safe and Secure Cyber-Physical Systems -- Constrained Computing and Moore's Law -- Trusted IoT Networks and the Network Edge -- Conclusion -- Chapter 2: IoT Frameworks and Complexity -- Introduction -- Historical Background to IoT -- IoT Ecosystem -- Connectivity Technology -- Messaging Technology -- Platform Technology -- Elements of an IoT System -- IoT Device -- IoT Device Architectural Goals -- Interoperability -- Security -- IoT Network -- IoT System Management -- Device Lifecycle -- Manufacturing -- Supply Chain -- Deployment -- Normal Operation and Monitoring -- Manage -- Update -- Decommissioning -- IoT Framework -- IoT Framework Design Goals -- IoT Data Model and System Abstractions -- IoT Node -- IoT Operations Abstraction -- Connectivity Elements -- Manageability Elements -- Security Elements -- Consider the Cost of Cryptography -- Summary IoT Framework Considerations -- IoT Framework Architecture -- Data Object Layer -- Node Interaction Layer -- Platform Abstraction Layer -- Platform Layer -- Security Challenges with IoT Frameworks -- Consumer IoT Framework Standards -- Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) -- OCF Core Framework Layer -- OCF Profiles Framework Layer -- The OCF Device Abstraction -- OCF Security -- AllSeen Alliance/AllJoyn -- AllJoyn Security -- Universal Plug and Play -- UPnP Security -- Lightweight Machine 2 Machine (LWM2M) -- LWM2M Architecture -- LWM2M Device Management -- LWM2M Security -- One Machine to Machine (OneM2M) -- OneM2M Security -- Industrial IoT Framework Standards -- Industrial Internet of Things Consortium (IIC) and OpenFog Consortium. , Open Platform Communications-Unified Architecture (OPC-UA) -- OPC-UA Framework Architecture -- OPC-UA Security -- Data Distribution Service (DDS) -- DDS Framework Architecture -- DDS Security -- Security Enveloping -- Security Tokens -- Security Plugin Modules -- Framework Gateways -- Framework Gateway Architecture -- Type I Framework Gateway -- Type II Framework Gateway -- Type III Framework Gateway -- Type IV Framework Gateway -- Security Considerations for Framework Gateways -- Security Endpoints Within the Gateway -- Security Endpoints in Type I Gateways -- Security Endpoints in Type II Gateways -- Security Endpoints in Type III Gateways -- Security Endpoints in Type IV Gateways -- Security Framework Gateway Architecture -- Summary -- Chapter 3: Base Platform Security Hardware Building Blocks -- Background and Terminology -- Assets, Threats, and Threat Pyramid -- Inverted Threat Pyramid -- Sample IoT Device Lifecycle -- End-to-End (E2E) Security -- Security Essentials -- Device Identity -- Protected Boot -- Protected Storage -- Trusted Execution Environment (TEE) -- Built-In Security -- Base Platform Security Features Overview -- CPU Hosted Crypto Implementations -- Malware Protection (OS Guard) -- OS Guard (SMEP) -- OS Guard (SMAP) -- Encryption/Decryption Using AES-NI -- Sign/Verify Using Intel® SHA Extensions -- Intel® Data Protection Technology with Secure Key (DRNG) -- Converged Security and Manageability Engine (CSME) -- Secure/Verified, Measured Boot and Boot Guard -- Trusted Execution Technology (TXT) -- Platform Trust Technology (PTT) -- Enhanced Privacy ID (EPID) -- Memory Encryption Technologies -- TME -- MKTME -- Dynamic Application Loader (DAL) -- Software Guard Extensions (SGX) - IA CPU Instructions -- Identity Crisis -- Enhanced Privacy Identifier (EPID) -- Anonymity -- PTT/TPM -- Device Boot Integrity - Trust But Verify. , Secure Boot Mechanisms -- Secure Boot Terminology Overview -- Overview of BIOS/UEFI Secure Boot Using Boot Guard Version 1.0 (BtG) -- Data Protection - Securing Keys, Data at Rest and in Transit -- Intel Platform Trust Technology (PTT) -- Windows PTT Architecture -- Linux PTT Software Stack -- Runtime Protection - Ever Vigilant -- Intel Virtualization Technology (Intel VT) -- Software Guard Extensions (SGX) -- Intel CSE/CSME - DAL -- Isolation from Rich Execution Environment -- Authenticity and Security -- Portability -- Intel Trusted Execution Technology (TXT) -- Threats Mitigated -- Zero-Day Attacks -- Other Attacks -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: IoT Software Security Building Blocks -- Understanding the Fundamentals of Our Architectural Model -- Operating Systems -- Threats to Operating Systems -- Zephyr: Real-Time Operating System for Devices -- Zephyr Execution Separation -- Zephyr Memory Separation -- Zephyr Privilege Levels and System Authorization -- Zephyr Programming Error Protections -- Zephyr's Other Security Features -- Zephyr Summary -- Linux Operating Systems -- Pulsar: Wind River Linux -- Ubuntu IoT Core -- Intel® Clear Linux -- Linux Summary -- Hypervisors and Virtualization -- Threats to Hypervisors -- Intel® ACRN -- Real-Time and Power Management Guarantees in ACRN -- ACRN Summary -- Software Separation and Containment -- Containment Security Principles -- Threats to Extended Application Containment -- Containers -- Kata Containers -- Kata Containers Summary -- Trusted Execution Environments -- Software Guard Extensions -- SGX Security Summary -- Android Trusty -- Trusty TEE Security Summary -- Containment Summary -- Network Stack and Security Management -- Intel Data Plane Development Kit -- Security Management -- Secure Device Onboarding -- Platform Integrity -- Network Defense -- Platform Monitoring. , McAfee Embedded Control -- Network Stack and Security Summary -- Device Management -- Mesh Central -- Wind River Helix Device Cloud -- Device Management Summary -- System Firmware and Root-of-Trust Update Service -- Threats to Firmware and RoT Update -- Turtle Creek System Update and Manageability Service -- System Firmware and RoT Summary -- Application-Level Language Frameworks -- JavaScript and Node.js or Sails -- Java and Android -- EdgeX Foundry -- Application-Level Framework Summary -- Message Orchestration -- Message Queuing Telemetry Transport -- OPC Unified Architecture -- Constrained Application Protocol -- Message Orchestration Summary -- Applications -- Summary -- Chapter 5: Connectivity Technologies for IoT -- Ethernet Time-Sensitive Networking -- Legacy Ethernet-Based Connectivity in Industrial Applications -- Key Benefits of TSN -- TSN Standards -- TSN Profiles -- 802.1AS/AS-Rev -- 802.1Qbv -- 802.1Qbu -- 802.1CB -- 802.1Qcc -- 802.1Qci -- 802.1Qch -- 802.1Qcr -- TSN and Security -- OPC-UA Over TSN -- Overview of Wireless Connectivity Technologies -- Considerations for Choosing Wireless Technologies for IoT -- Spectrum -- Range and Capacity -- Network Topology -- Quality of Service -- Network Management -- Security -- Wi-Fi -- Bluetooth -- Zigbee -- NFC -- GPS/GNSS -- Cellular -- 5G Cellular -- Key Standards, Regulatory, and Industry Bodies Involved in 5G -- New Use Cases Enabled by 5G -- Key Technology Enablers for 5G -- LPWAN - Low-Power Wide Area Networks -- LoRa -- Sigfox -- Weightless -- Comparison of Low-Power LTE and Other LPWAN Technologies -- A Case Study - Smart Homes -- Summary -- References -- Chapter 6: IoT Vertical Applications and Associated Security Requirements -- Common Domain Requirements and the Security MVP -- Some Common Threats -- Retail Solutions -- Security Objectives and Requirements -- Threats. , Standards - Regulatory and Industry -- Transportation Solutions14 -- Connected Vehicle Infrastructure -- Security Objectives and Requirements -- Threats -- Mitigations -- Standards - Regulatory and Industry -- Industrial Control System (ICS) and Industrial IoT (IIoT) -- Security Objectives and Requirements -- Threats -- Standards - Regulatory and Industry -- Digital Surveillance System -- Security Objectives and Requirements -- Threats -- Standards - Regulatory and Industry -- Summary -- Appendix: Conclusion -- Economics of Constrained Roots-of-Trust -- IoT Frameworks - Necessary Complexity -- Hardware Security - More Than a Toolbox -- IOT Software - Building Blocks with Glue -- Ethernet TSN - Everybody's Common Choice? -- Security MVP - The Champion Within a Fractured IoT Ecosystem -- The Way Forward -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Cheruvu, Sunil Demystifying Internet of Things Security Berkeley, CA : Apress L. P.,c2019 ISBN 9781484228951
    Language: English
    Subjects: Computer Science , Economics
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Full-text  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Tokyo :Springer Japan,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602152602882
    Format: 1 online resource (225 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9784431566236
    Series Statement: Science for Sustainable Societies Series
    Note: Intro -- Preface: From "Vision 2050" to "New Vision 2050" -- Preface (1): Turning Point of Human History -- Twenty-First Century Is a Special Era -- Various Issues -- Global Warming and Abnormal Weather -- Is Capitalism Sustainable? -- Preface (2): The Latest Report -- Human Race Is Navigating in the Right Direction (1): SDGs -- Human Race Is Navigating in the Right Direction (2): COP21 -- IEA Report -- Japan's Experiences as a Leading Country in Resolving Societal Problems -- Essence of the Era of Saturation -- Saturation of the Population -- Saturation of Man-Made Objects -- Saturation of Minerals -- World in 2050 -- Preface (3): A Society We Are Aiming At -- Creation of a New Society and Values by Resolving Issues -- "Platinum Society": A Vision in the Twenty-First Century -- Essential Factors for a Platinum Society -- A Vision That Can be Realized -- Preface (4): Image of a Platinum Society Has Begun to Appear -- Creative Demand -- Low-Carbon Society -- Energy-Creating Houses and Zero-Energy Buildings -- From Eco-Cars, Eco-Factories, and Cars to Cars, and Zero CO2 -- Diversifying Means of Transportation -- Energy Conservation Is the Best Policy -- Urban Mines -- Renewable Energy -- Japan Will Become a Resource Self-Sufficient Society -- The World Will Become a Sustainable Recycling-Oriented Society -- Harmony with Nature -- Macro-Level Viewpoint of Harmony with Nature -- Health Support and Self-Reliance Support Are Important Industries -- Participation of Active Seniors Is Indispensable -- Various Options -- Free Participation -- Education of Information Technology Nurtures the Next Generation -- Society with Employment -- Society Where Children Will Be Born -- Knowledge Structuring Will Lead to Solutions -- How to Expand and Develop More Successful Examples -- Challenging the Issue Through Knowledge Structuring and Action. , Innovations from Mega-Cities -- Viable Business Ensures Sustainability -- A Society of Lifelong Learning -- Developed Countries Can Achieve Economic Growth -- GDP and IWI -- Platinum Industry and Economic Growth -- Developing Countries Aim at a Platinum Society Together -- Social Disparity and Social Security, the State and the Market -- A System for Innovations -- Twenty-First Century Is a Turning Point -- Platinum Society Network -- References -- Contents -- Chapter 1: The Message in "Vision 2050" -- 1.1 Behind the Birth of Vision 2050 -- 1.1.1 The Need for a "Macro" Vision -- 1.1.2 An Affluent Lifestyle for All -- 1.1.3 Why a Low-Carbon Society? -- 1.1.4 The Threat of Global Warming -- 1.2 What Is Vision 2050? -- 1.2.1 The Vision for 2050 -- 1.2.2 A Happy Low-Carbon Society Is Achievable -- 1.2.3 Saturation of Man-Made Objects and the Material-­Circulating System -- 1.2.4 Tripling Energy Efficiency -- 1.2.5 Doubling the Amount of Renewable Energy -- 1.2.6 Increases in Both Comfort and Economic Performance -- 1.2.7 Premises Consequent on Being a Realistic Vision -- Chapter 2: Progress on Vision 2050 Since 1995 -- 2.1 Saturation of Man-Made Objects and the Material-­Circulating System -- 2.1.1 Saturation of Population -- 2.1.2 Saturation of Man-Made Objects -- 2.1.3 Saturated Demand for Substances and Materials: Cement -- 2.1.4 Saturated Demand for Substances and Materials: Iron -- 2.1.5 Hope for a Circulating Society -- 2.2 Energy Saving and Renewable Energy -- 2.2.1 Further Development Achieved in Energy Saving -- 2.2.2 Putting Renewable Energy at the Core of Energy Investments -- 2.3 Vision 2050 as a Happy Vision -- 2.3.1 The Industrial Structure of Japan as a "Leading Country in Resolving Societal Problems" and Energy -- 2.3.2 Certainly Japan Led the World -- 2.3.3 The World Is Making Progress toward Achieving Vision 2050 -- Bibliography. , Chapter 3: Technology to Support Low-Carbon Society (Using Energy) -- 3.1 Direction of Improvement in Energy Efficiency -- 3.1.1 "Daily Living" and "Monozukuri" -- 3.2 Low Carbon Technologies in the Transportation Sector -- 3.2.1 Shipment Does Not Consume Energy? -- 3.2.2 Energy-Efficient Cars Appear One after Another -- 3.2.3 Car Energy Efficiency Increases Eightfold -- 3.2.4 A Rich Car Life with Diverse Eco Cars -- 3.2.5 Modal Shift in Movement -- 3.3 Low Carbon Technologies in the Home and Business Sectors -- 3.3.1 Promotion of Energy Saving Is Economically Advantageous -- 3.3.2 Energy Conservation Will Be a Business Opportunity -- 3.3.3 Household Energy Consumption Is Consolidated into Electricity -- 3.3.4 Eco Houses Are Also Friendly to Their Occupants -- 3.3.5 The Latest Heat Pump Situation -- 3.3.6 Domestic Fuel Cells Packed with Japanese Technologies -- 3.3.7 Globalize Japanese Environmental Technologies -- 3.4 Low-Carbon Technologies for Monozukuri -- 3.4.1 Shift from Blast Furnaces to Electric Furnaces -- 3.4.2 Aluminum Is an Excellent Material in Terms of Recycling -- 3.4.3 Achieving Material Cycling of Rare Metals -- 3.4.4 Expectations for Dissemination of Industrial Heat Pumps -- Bibliography -- Chapter 4: Technology to Support Low-Carbon Society (Utilizing Energy) -- 4.1 Future Image of Renewable Energy -- 4.1.1 Rethinking the Value of Renewable Energy -- 4.1.2 The Future Image of Solar Cells and Storage Batteries -- 4.1.3 Importance of Balance Between Future Cost and Investment -- 4.1.4 Which Storage Battery Will Be Playing the Leading Role in 2050? -- 4.1.5 Promising Markets Where Various Uses Can Be Considered -- 4.1.6 Dissemination of Hydropower Generation by Region -- 4.1.7 The Potential of Biomass -- 4.1.8 Hydrogen as a Partner of Renewable Energy -- 4.2 Innovations Emerging from Theory and IT. , 4.2.1 Pursuing Efficiency to the Utmost Limit -- 4.2.2 Enhance Efficiency with an Energy Management System -- 4.2.3 Japan Should Compete with High-Added-Value Items -- 4.2.4 Increased Sophistication of Demand Forecasting by Utilizing Big Data -- 4.2.5 The Possibility of Carbon Pricing -- Bibliography -- Chapter 5: Low-Carbon Society in 2050 -- 5.1 Low Carbon Power Supply Systems in 2050 -- 5.1.1 Means to Achieve Low Carbonization -- 5.1.2 80% Reduction and Power Generation Costs -- 5.1.3 Consideration of the Best Power Supply Configuration -- 5.2 Reducing Carbon in Major Fields -- 5.2.1 Value-Added Industry and Low Carbon -- 5.2.2 The Ideal State of the Steel Industry -- 5.3 Reducing CO2 Emissions by 80% Across Japan -- 5.3.1 Low Carbonization by Sector in 2050 -- 5.3.2 Value-Added by Industry and CO2 Emissions in 2050 -- 5.3.3 Image of CO2 Emissions and Changes in GDP in all Industries -- Chapter 6: Platinum Industry and a New Society -- 6.1 What Is a Platinum Society? -- 6.1.1 Per Capita GDP and Average Life Expectancy -- 6.1.2 From Quantitative Sufficiency to Qualitative Sufficiency -- 6.1.3 An Island (Ama-cho) that Increased the Number of Children Attending School Despite a Declining Birthrate -- 6.1.4 Contributing to Lowering Carbon in Asia from Actual Experiences (Kitakyushu) -- 6.1.5 Leadership that Achieved a Miracle (Yanedan) -- 6.1.6 Realizing a Vision in a Megalopolis (Futakotamagawa) -- 6.2 Towards Becoming a Nation Self-Sufficient in Resources -- 6.2.1 Making a Self-Sufficiency Rate of 70% a Reality with Vision 2050 -- 6.2.2 A Scenario for Reviving Forestry -- 6.3 Coexisting in Harmony with Beautiful Nature -- 6.3.1 A World that Is Comfortable for All Living Things -- 6.3.2 Initiatives by Corporations for Living in Harmony with Nature -- 6.4 Good Health and Self-Reliance for a Fulfilling Life. , 6.4.1 The Wisdom of Seniors Is a Social Resource -- 6.4.2 Making Use of the Knowledge and Experience of Seniors for the Next Generation -- 6.5 Diverse Options and Freedom of Participation -- 6.5.1 Why Are Bonds Being Sought After Now? -- 6.5.2 Freedom of Mobility Induces Changes to Work Styles -- 6.5.3 Spread of Multi-habitation -- 6.5.4 Tokyo Work Styles and Countermeasures for Declining Birthrates -- 6.6 New Industries Created in a Platinum Society -- 6.6.1 Marunouchi Platinum University - Thinking About Regional Issues in a Big City -- 6.6.2 Developing Human Resources for Realizing the Platinum Society -- 6.6.3 Education Changing Through ICT -- 6.6.4 Adult Education as a New Industry -- 6.6.5 Developing Leaders Who can Carve Out a Path to a New Era -- 6.6.6 Questioning Anew the Importance of Education -- 6.7 The Platinum Society Becomes More Visible -- 6.7.1 How to Promote a Platinum Society -- 6.7.2 The Platinum Network Society and the Platinum Vision Award -- 6.7.3 Creating the Platinum Society Handbook -- 6.8 The Platinum Society and Vision 2050 -- Bibliography -- Interview -- Interview 1: Toyota Environmental Challenge 2050 -- Challenges Unachievable Following the Lines Laid Before -- The Impact of Climate Change -- "Let's Do What We Have to Do." -- Parts Manufacturers Have a Major Presence -- Mid-To-Long-Term Targets for Clearing Regulations -- Interview 2: Regional Revitalization and New Work Styles -- Local Activation for Stronger Competitiveness -- Japanese Factories Are Competitive -- Relocation of Some Head Office Functions, 3.2 Times More Children -- Retirees Teaching Science to Young Children -- Interview 3: Considering Ways to Solve Social Problems -- There Is Much Room for Innovation of the Social System -- The Notion that a Decline in the Population Means the Economy will Falter Is Faulty. , It Is Innovation for Being Used at the Site.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Komiyama, Hiroshi New Vision 2050 Tokyo : Springer Japan,c2018 ISBN 9784431566229
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Full-text  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    UID:
    almahu_9949301325402882
    Format: 1 online resource (205 pages)
    ISBN: 9783319452647
    Note: Intro -- The Restless Compendium -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 Introduction -- Part I Minds -- 2 Altered States: Resting State and Default Mode as Psychopathology -- Notes -- 3 The Quest for quies mentis -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 4 Writing and Daydreaming -- Multiplicity of the Self and the Fragility of Self-Representation -- Creativity, Self and Sublimation: 'The Mark on the Wall' -- Fragmentation -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 5 Daydream Archive -- Rummaging Through the Archive -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 6 Descriptive Experience Sampling as a Psychological Method -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 7 The Poetics of Descriptive Experience Sampling -- Further Reading -- 8 The Rest Test: Preliminary Findings from a Large-Scale International Survey on Rest -- What Is Rest and How Do People like to Do It? -- How Does the Modern World of Work Aff ect Our Ability to Rest? -- Notes -- Further Reading -- Part II Bodies -- 9 From Therapeutic Relaxation to Mindfulness in the Twentieth Century -- Notes -- 10 So Even the Tree has its Yolk -- Afterword -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 11 Cartographies of Rest: The Spectral Envelope of Vigilance -- Vigilance -- 'Near Sensing' and a Perspectival View of Urban Space -- Notes -- 12 Getting the Measure of the Restless City -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 13 Drawing Attention: Ways of Knowing Derived in the Movement of the Pencil -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 14 Songs of Rest: An Intervention in the Complex Genre of the Lullaby -- Note -- Further Reading -- 15 Could Insomnia Be Relieved with a YouTube Video? The Relaxation and Calm of ASMR -- The Unexplained Feeling: What Is ASMR ? -- The Rise of ASMR -- The Science of ASMR -- Tasting Words: Is ASMR a Synaesthetic Experience? -- People Find it Hard to Believe Things That They Do Not Experience -- Notes. , Further Resources -- 16 Relief from a Certain Kind of Personhood in ASMR Role-Play Videos -- Notes -- Part III Practices -- 17 R-E-S-T and Composition: Silence, Breath and aah . . . [Gap] Musical Rest -- Intro -- Compositional Process (and Themes of Rest) -- Breath: A Solo Alto Flute Piece -- None sitting resting: A Piece for String Quartet -- Outro -- Notes -- 18 Metrics of Unrest: Building Social and Technical Networks for Heathrow Noise -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 19 This Is an Experiment: Capturing the Everyday Dynamics of Collaboration in The Diary Room -- Notes -- 20 Greasing the Wheels: Invisible Labour in Interdisciplinary Environments -- The Participating Non-Academic -- Institutional Rhythms and Arrhythmias -- Performing Research and the Visibility of Labour -- What Now? -- Further reading -- 21 Rest Denied, Rest Reclaimed -- Notes -- Further Resources -- 22 Laziness: A Literary-Historical Perspective -- Notes -- Further Reading -- 23 Day of Restlessness -- Further Reading -- 24 Erratum to: "The Restless Compendium" -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Callard, Felicity The Restless Compendium Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2016 ISBN 9783319452630
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Essay ; Fulltext. ; Internet Resources. ; Electronic books. ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    UID:
    almahu_9949301196202882
    Format: 1 online resource (176 pages)
    ISBN: 9781484218426
    Note: Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- About the Authors -- Acknowledgments -- Part I: DevOps: Conflict to Collaboration -- Chapter 1: DevOps in the Ascendency -- Accelerating Agile Practices in Today's Software Factory -- Embracing DevOps in the Application Economy -- DevOps as a Critical Requirement -- Banking on DevOps Practices -- DevOps: A Key Component of Business Agility -- DevOps: A Practice for Champions -- Summary -- Chapter 2: IT Impasse -- A World of 'Wicked' Business Problems -- The Emergence of Agile Development -- Agile Empowerment Challenges -- Modern Application Architectures -- Microservices: Small Isn't Always Beautiful -- Ending the Technical Impasse -- Summary -- Chapter 3: DevOps Foundations -- What Characterizes DevOps Culture? -- Focusing on Products over Politics -- Building Trust and Respect -- Increase Empathy Everywhere -- Open Communication Channels -- Additional Factors -- Lean Thinking to Reduce Waste -- Lean and Value Creation -- Eight Elements of Waste -- Waste Removal Strategies -- Prevent Defects by Removing Constraints -- Focus on Value to Prevent Overproduction -- Smoothing Flow to Reduce Wait Times -- Limit Non-Value Added Processing Through Data-Driven Insights -- Reduce Transportation Cost by Automating Deployments -- Eliminate Excess Inventory Across the Software Factory -- Prevent Unnecessary Motion with Parallel Development -- Incorporate Employee Knowledge Using Feedback Loops -- DevOps Metrics -- Anti-Pattern Metrics -- Suitability Checklist -- Metrics that Matter -- Culture, Collaboration, and Sharing -- Efficiency and Effectiveness -- Quality and Velocity -- Customer and Business Value -- Additional Methods and Techniques -- Summary -- Part II: Essential DevOps Tooling -- Chapter 4: Build -- Case Study: IceMobile -- From Little API Acorns Big Things Grow -- API Management: Stakeholders and Requirements. , APIs Are Products -- Managing the API Lifecycle -- Essential API Management Plays -- Create and Integrate APIs -- Secure the Open Enterprise -- Unlock the Business Value of Data -- Accelerate Mobile and IoT Development -- API Management: Essential Integrations -- API Performance Monitoring -- API Development and Testing -- Taking a Strategic Approach -- Building an API Future, Faster -- Summary -- Chapter 5: Test -- Case Study: AutoTrader.com -- Testing Times -- Agile Testing Trifecta -- Test Automation -- Incomplete Requirements Equals Faulty Software -- An Automated and Agile Approach -- Achieving Complete Test Coverage -- Case in Point: Mobile Testing -- Test Data Management -- Facets of a Gold Standard Solution -- Combining with Test Automation -- Test Constraint Removal -- Summary -- Chapter 6: Deploy -- Case Study: Citrix -- Obstacles to Continuous Delivery -- Development Challenges -- Operations Challenges -- Finding Common Ground -- Continuous Delivery Maturity -- Level 1: (Manual) -- Level 2: (Scripting) -- Level 3: (Automated) -- Level 4: (Continuous) -- Level 5: (Optimized) -- Accelerating Maturity: Three Ways -- The First Way: Connect End-to-End Release Management -- The Second Way: Operationalize Feedback Loops -- The Third Way: Optimize the Continuous Delivery Pipeline -- Essential Toolchain Integrations -- Release Automation: Capability Checklist -- Dependency Management -- Pipeline Visibility with Notifications -- Flexible Approval Processes -- Recommendations and Action Plan -- Demonstrate Business Benefits and ROI -- Execute Tactically, Grow Strategically -- Summary -- Chapter 7: Manage -- Case Study: ANZ Bank -- More Change, More Complexity -- New IT Operations Imperatives -- Proactive Engagement -- Designing for Failure -- Moving Beyond Resilience -- Making Support a Top Design Issue -- Active Monitoring. , Toward Agile Operations -- Shift-Left Monitoring -- Continuous High-Quality Feedback -- Intelligence and Analytics -- Agile Operations Tooling -- Early Warning for Business and Development -- Early Guidance on Operational Impact -- Prioritize by Business Impact and Customer Experience -- Feedback at Key Moments of Truth -- Summary -- Part III: Tuning and Continuous Improvement -- Chapter 8: Practical DevOps -- DevOps and Enterprise Architecture -- Without Good Architecture IT Builds Software Slums -- Enterprise Architecture Must Adapt to the Times -- New Fluid Guidelines and Principles -- Actions to Establish EA in DevOps Programs -- DevOps and Information Security -- Rethinking Security Practices for DevOps -- Essential Characteristics of Security-Minded DevOps -- DevOps and IT Service Management -- DevOps and ITIL -- Overcoming Resistance -- DevOps and Lean Startup -- Summary -- Chapter 9: DevOps and Real World ROI -- Quality Is Everyone's Responsibility -- Making a Case for DevOps ROI -- The Challenge of Measuring DevOps Success -- A Real-World Model for DevOps ROI -- Measuring the Impact of DevOps Automation -- The Whole Is Greater than the Sum of its Parts -- Step 1: Application Experience Analytics -- Step 2: Requirements and Test Case Design -- Summary -- Chapter 10: DevOps Finetuning -- Cultural Recalibration -- The Normalization of Deviance -- Combatting Sub-Optimal Behaviors -- DevOps and Talent Management -- So You Think You Can DevOps? -- Various Talent Management Hacks -- IT Apprenticeship and Graduate Intake Programs -- DevOps Hackathons and Coding Days -- DevOps and the Internet of Things -- DevOps for the Public Sector -- DevOps and Lean to Improve Government IT Outcomes -- Summary: The Seven Point Action Plan -- Understand the Business Goal -- Cultivate Senior Level Sponsors -- Select Your Pit-Crew. , Choose an Immediate Deliverable -- Build a Comprehensive Metrics Program -- Integrate DevOps with Existing Practices -- Automate the Pipeline -- Strengthen the Toolchain -- In Salute of DevOps -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Ravichandran, Aruna DevOps for Digital Leaders Berkeley, CA : Apress L. P.,c2016 ISBN 9781484218419
    Language: English
    Subjects: Computer Science
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Full-text  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    University Park :Amsterdam University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9949516227702882
    Format: 1 online resource (328 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789048555789
    Series Statement: Visual and Material Culture, 1300-1700 Ser.
    Note: Cover -- Table of Contents -- Introduction: Embodying Value -- Power and Authority in the Mint -- 1. Weighing Things Up in Maarten de Vos's Tribunal of the Brabant Mint 1594 -- Joanna Woodall -- 2. Scaling the World: Allegory of Coinage and Monetary Governance in the Dutch Republic -- Sebastian Felten and Jessica Stevenson Stewart -- Currency and the Anxieties of Global Trade -- 3. Market Stall in Batavia: Money, Value, and Uncertainty in the Age of Global Trade -- Angela Ho -- 4. Beyond the Mint: Picturing Gold on the Rijksmuseum's Box of the Dutch West India Company -- Carrie Anderson -- Coins and Persons -- 5. The Heft of Truth: Inwardness and Debased Coinage in Shakespeare's Plays -- Rana Choi -- 6. Identity, Agency, Motion: Taylor's Twelvepence and the Poetry of Commodity -- Heather G.S. Johnson -- Coins in and out of Circulation -- 7. Margarethe Butzbach and the Florin Extorted by Blows -- Coins Securing Social Bonds in Fifteenth-Century Germany* -- Allison Stielau -- 8. Centring the Coin in Jacob Backer's Woman with a Coin* -- Natasha Seaman -- Credit and Risk -- 9. Accounting Faith and Seeing 'Ghost Money' in Masaccio's Tribute Money* -- Roger J. Crum -- 10. Monetary Transactions and Pictorial Gambles in Georges de La Tour -- Dalia Judovitz -- Afterword -- The Work of Art: The Installations of Kelli Rae Adams -- Natasha Seaman -- Index -- List of Illustrations -- I Leonhard Beck, The Young Emperor Maximilian Visiting a Mint, c. 1514-1516, woodcut, dimensions unknown, for Marx Treitzsauerwein, Der Weißkunig, privately circulated, 1526. Illustration from the edition commercially published by Joseph Kurzboeck, Vienna. , II Jost Amman (designer), Hartman Schopper (author), Monetarius, 1568, woodcut and letterpress, 148 × 79 mm (print 90 × 61), from Panoplia Omnium Illiberalium Mechanicarum (The Book of Trades), Frankfurt: Sigmund Feierabend, 1568. © Lebrecht Music & -- Arts -- III Unknown artist, Group Portrait of Mintmaster Clemens van Eembrugge and His Companions, 1581, oil on panel, dimensions unknown. 's-Heerenberg, Netherlands, Huis Bergh Castle. -- IV Unknown Indo-Christian artist, The Virgin of Mount Potosí, c. 1740, oil on canvas, dimensions unknown. Potosí, Museo de la Casa Nacional de Moneda. Photo © Julie Laurent/Julyinireland (Flickr). -- V Jacob Jonghelinck, medal of Philip II of Spain to commemorate the victory of Saint Quentin. Obverse: Philip II laureate, reverse: Saint Quentin with commemorative inscription, 1557, silver, 35 mm diameter. Location unknown. © Artokoloro/ Alamy Stock Ph -- VI Frans Francken the Younger, The Cabinet of a Collector with Paintings, Shells, Coins, Fossils and Flowers, 1619, oil on panel, 85 × 56 cm. Antwerp, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten. Photo: Hugo Maertens, Collection KMSKA - Flemish Community (CC0). -- 1.1 Maarten de Vos, The Tribunal of the Brabant Mint, datable to 1594, oil on panel, 142.5 × 187.5 cm. Antwerp, Museum Snijders Rockoxhuis (KBC Bank). Image © Museum Snijders& -- Rockoxhuis / KBC, Erwin Donvil. -- 1.2 List of the Officers depicted in Maarten de Vos, The Tribunal of the Brabant Mint. Original lost, formatted as transcribed by the antiquarian Jan Baptist van der Straelen (1761-1847). From Beatrijs Wolters van der Wey, "Munters", Document 1. -- 1.3 Maarten de Vos, drawing for The Tribunal of the Brabant Mint, datable to c. 1594, pen and brown ink and wash over black chalk within brown-ink framing lines, 29.5 × 39.8 cm. Antwerp, Museum Snijders Rockoxhuis (KBC Bank). Image © Museum Snijders&. , Rocko -- 1.4 Unknown designer, real of Philip II, Mint of the Duchy of Brabant, Antwerp, 1555-1576. Obverse and reverse, gold, dimensions unknown. Amsterdam, The National Numismatic Collection, managed by De Nederlandsche Bank, Inventory number NM-09654. -- 1.5 Pieter Paul Rubens, sketch for The Arch of the Mint (front with Moneta), datable to c. 1635, oil on panel, 104 × 71 cm. Antwerp, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten. . Photo: Rik Klein Gotink. -- 1.6 Pieter van der Borcht, Public Stage on the Market Place, 1594-1595, etching, 32.5 × 20.4 cm, from Joannes Bochius, Descriptio Publicae Gratulationis, Spectaculorum et Ludorum, in Adventu Sereniss. Principis Ernesti Archiducis Austriae, Antwerp: Ex Off -- 1.7 Ioan Wouters, apprentice proof of competence. Obverse: Saint John the Baptist, reverse: moneyer's balance, April 1614, silver, 25 mm diameter. Antwerp, Museum aan de Stroom. Photo: Tom van Ghent. -- 1.8 Detail from Joost Amman (designer), Michael Manger (printmaker), Aigentliche Abbildung deß Gantzen Gewerbs der Löblichen Kauffmanschafft und Fürnehmsten Handelstadt (Allegory of Commerce, the Glory of Antwerp), 1585, woodcut and letterpress, 108.5 × 8 -- 1.9 Guillaum de Neve, boxed coin weights and hand balance for weighing silver coins, c. 1644, various media, dimensions unknown. Amsterdam, The National Numismatic Collection, managed by De Nederlandsche Bank. -- 2.1 Romeyn de Hooghe (attributed), Allegory of Coinage, after 1681, oil on canvas, 135 × 178 × 8.3 cm, Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, Object No. SK-A-833. -- 2.2 Unknown designer, duit, c. 1590-1596. Reverse, copper, 24 mm diameter. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, Object No. NG-NM-7747-3. -- 2.3 Unknown designer, guilder of the Dutch Republic, Mint of Holland, Dordrecht, 1682. Obverse, silver, 33 mm diameter. Object No. KOG-MP-1-1561B. , 2.4 Theodor de Bry, "Nigritae in Scrutandis Venis Metallicis/ ab Hispanis in Insulas" (Blacks Examining Metallic Veins/ from Spaniards on the Islands), Part 5 of Americae, Frankfurt am Main, 1595, engraving, image 15.9 × 19.5 cm (overall 34.5 × 23.5 cm). -- 2.5 Romeyn de Hooghe, "Vastgestelde Geloof" (Established Faith), Chapter 36 of his Hieroglyphica oft Merkbeelden der Oude Volkeren, Amsterdam, 1735, etching, overall 26 × 19.2 cm. Courtesy of The Rare Book & -- Manuscript Library, University of Illinois at U -- 2.6 Romeyn de Hooghe, "Van de Joodsche Stand by Christus Tyden" (On the Position of the Jews at the Time of Christ), Chapter 30 of his Hieroglyphica oft Merkbeelden der Oude Volkeren, Amsterdam, 1735, etching, overall 26 × 19.2 cm. Courtesy of The Rare Bo -- 2.7 Jan Luyken, "De Munter" (The Coiner), from Casper Luyken and Jan Luyken, Spiegel van het Menselyk Bedryf, Amsterdam, 1704, etching, 14.3 ×  8.1 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, Object No. RP-P-OB-44.532. -- 2.8 Romeyn de Hooghe, "Peace before the Invasion of France," Schouwburg der Nederlandse Verandering, Amsterdam, 1674, etching, 23.2 × 35 cm. Courtesy of The Trustees of the British Museum, London, Inv. No. Y,1.80 -- 2.9 Simon Fokke, Willem V Neemt Zitting als Bewindhebber bij de VOC (Willem V Sits as Director of the VOC), 1768, etching, 29.7 × 40.4 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. Object No. RP-P-OB-84.691. -- 3.1 Andries Beeckman (attributed), A Market Stall in Batavia, c. 1650s-1660s, oil on canvas, 106 × 174.5 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. -- 3.2 Julius Milheuser after Johannes Vinckboons, View of Batavia, 1619 - 1680, etching, 42.7 cm × 95.1 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. -- 3.3 Andries Beeckman, The Castle of Batavia, 1661, oil on canvas, 108 × 151.5 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. , 3.4 Gabriel Metsu, A Woman Selling Poultry and Fish, 1656-1658, oil on canvas, 40.8 x 35.3 cm. Kassel, Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister. Bpk Bildagentur/ Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Kassel/Art Resource, NY. -- 3.5 Joachim Beuckelaer, Vegetable Seller, 1563, oil on panel, 112.2 × 163.5 cm. Valenciennes, Musée des Beaux-Arts. Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY. -- 3.6 Gabriel Metsu, Vegetable Market in Amsterdam, c. 1660, oil on canvas, 97 × 83 cm. Paris, Musée du Louvre. Scala/Art Resource, NY. -- 3.7 Marinus van Reymerswaele, Moneychanger and his Wife, 1538, oil on panel, 79 × 107 cm. Madrid, Museo del Prado. © Museo Nacional del Prado/Art Resource, NY. -- 3.8 Quentin Metsys, Money Changer and his Wife, 1514, oil on panel, 74 × 68 cm. Paris, Musée du Louvre. Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY. -- 4.1 Jean Saint and François Thuret, box of the Dutch West India Company, 1749, gold, tortoiseshell, velvet, 5.8 × 18 × 11.9 cm (h/l/w). Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. -- 4.2 Jean Saint and François Thuret, box of the Dutch West India Company (detail, lid), 1749, gold, tortoiseshell, velvet, 5.8 × 18 × 11.9 cm (h/l/w). Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. -- 4.3 Jean Saint and François Thuret, box of the Dutch West India Company (detail, "Curaçao"), 1749, gold, tortoiseshell, velvet, 5.8 × 18 × 11.9 cm (h/l/w). Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. -- 4.4 Jean Saint and François Thuret, box of the Dutch West India Company (detail, "St. George Delmina"), 1749, gold, tortoiseshell, velvet, 5.8 × 18 × 11.9 cm (h/l/w). Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. -- 4.5 Jean Saint and François Thuret, box of the Dutch West India Company (detail, base), 1749, gold, tortoiseshell, velvet, 5.8 × 18 × 11.9 cm (h/l/w). Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. , 4.6 Pieter Jannsen Bas, 12-guilder emergency coin issued by the Dutch West India Company during the Portuguese siege of Pernambuco. Obverse and reverse, 1645-1646, gold, 18 × 18 mm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Seaman, Natasha Money Matters in European Artworks and Literature, C. 1400-1750 University Park : Amsterdam University Press,c2022
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books ; Electronic books
    URL: FULL  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    URL: FULL  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    UID:
    almahu_9949301320902882
    Format: 1 online resource (717 pages)
    ISBN: 9783319586892
    Series Statement: Methodology of Educational Measurement and Assessment Ser.
    Note: Intro -- Foreword -- Preface -- References -- Contents -- About the Editors -- Chapter 1: What Does It Mean to Be a Nonprofit Educational Measurement Organization in the Twenty-First Century? -- 1.1 What Is an Educational Nonprofit? -- 1.2 Where Did ETS Come From? -- 1.3 What Does the Past Imply for the Future? -- 1.4 Summary -- References -- Part I: ETS Contributions to Developing Analytic Tools for Educational Measurement -- Chapter 2: A Review of Developments and Applications in Item Analysis -- 2.1 Item Analysis Indices -- 2.1.1 Item Difficulty Indices -- 2.1.2 Item Discrimination Indices -- 2.2 Item and Test Score Relationships -- 2.2.1 Relating Item Indices to Test Score Characteristics -- 2.2.2 Conditional Average Item Scores -- 2.3 Visual Displays of Item Analysis Results -- 2.4 Roles of Item Analysis in Psychometric Contexts -- 2.4.1 Differential Item Functioning, Item Response Theory, and Conditions of Administration -- 2.4.2 Subgroup Comparisons in Differential Item Functioning -- 2.4.3 Comparisons and Uses of Item Analysis and Item Response Theory -- 2.4.3.1 Similarities of Item Response Theory and Item Analysis -- 2.4.3.2 Comparisons and Contrasts in Assumptions of Invariance -- 2.4.3.3 Uses of Item Analysis Fit Evaluations of Item Response Theory Models -- 2.4.4 Item Context and Order Effects -- 2.4.5 Analyses of Alternate Item Types and Scores -- References -- Chapter 3: Psychometric Contributions: Focus on Test Scores -- 3.1 Test Scores as Measurements -- 3.1.1 Foundational Developments for the Use of Test Scores as Measurements, Pre-ETS -- 3.1.2 Overview of ETS Contributions -- 3.1.3 ETS Contributions About -- 3.1.4 Intervals for True Score Inference -- 3.1.5 Studying Test Score Measurement Properties With Respect to Multiple Test Forms and Measures -- 3.1.5.1 Alternative Classical Test Theory Models. , 3.1.5.2 Reliability Estimation -- 3.1.5.3 Factor Analysis -- 3.1.6 Applications to Psychometric Test Assembly and Interpretation -- 3.2 Test Scores as Predictors in Correlational and Regression Relationships -- 3.2.1 Foundational Developments for the Use of Test Scores as Predictors, Pre-ETS -- 3.2.2 ETS Contributions to the Methodology of Correlations and Regressions and Their Application to the Study of Test Scores as Predictors -- 3.2.2.1 Relationships of Tests in a Population's Subsamples With Partially Missing Data -- 3.2.2.2 Using Test Scores to Adjust Groups for Preexisting Differences -- 3.2.2.3 Detecting Group Differences in Test and Criterion Regressions -- 3.2.2.4 Using Test Correlations and Regressions as Bases for Test Construction -- 3.3 Integrating Developments About Test Scores as Measurements and Test Scores as Predictors -- 3.4 Discussion -- References -- Chapter 4: Contributions to Score Linking Theory and Practice -- 4.1 Why Score Linking Is Important -- 4.2 Conceptual Frameworks for Score Linking -- 4.2.1 Score Linking Frameworks -- 4.2.2 Equating Frameworks -- 4.3 Data Collection Designs and Data Preparation -- 4.3.1 Data Collection -- 4.3.2 Data Preparation Activities -- 4.3.2.1 Sample Selection -- 4.3.2.2 Weighted Samples -- 4.3.2.3 Smoothing -- 4.3.2.4 Small Samples and Smoothing -- 4.4 Score Equating and Score Linking Procedures -- 4.4.1 Early Equating Procedures -- 4.4.2 True-Score Linking -- 4.4.3 Kernel Equating and Linking With Continuous Exponential Families -- 4.4.4 Preequating -- 4.4.5 Small-Sample Procedures -- 4.5 Evaluating Equatings -- 4.5.1 Sampling Stability of Linking Functions -- 4.5.1.1 The Standard Error of Equating -- 4.5.1.2 The Standard Error of Equating Difference Between Two Linking Functions -- 4.5.2 Measures of the Subpopulation Sensitivity of Score Linking Functions. , 4.5.3 Consistency of Scale Score Meaning -- 4.6 Comparative Studies -- 4.6.1 Different Data Collection Designs and Different Methods -- 4.6.2 The Role of the Anchor -- 4.6.3 Matched-Sample Equating -- 4.6.4 Item Response Theory True-Score Linking -- 4.6.5 Item Response Theory Preequating Research -- 4.6.6 Equating Tests With Constructed-Response Items -- 4.6.7 Subscores -- 4.6.8 Multidimensionality and Equating -- 4.6.9 A Caveat on Comparative Studies -- 4.7 The Ebb and Flow of Equating Research at ETS -- 4.7.1 Prior to 1970 -- 4.7.2 The Year 1970 to the Mid-1980s -- 4.7.3 The Mid-1980s to 2000 -- 4.7.4 The Years 2002-2015 -- 4.8 Books and Chapters -- 4.9 Concluding Comment -- References -- Chapter 5: Item Response Theory -- 5.1 Some Early Work Leading up to IRT (1940s and 1950s) -- 5.2 More Complete Development of IRT (1960s and 1970s) -- 5.3 Broadening the Research and Application of IRT (the 1980s) -- 5.3.1 Further Developments and Evaluation of IRT Models -- 5.3.2 IRT Software Development and Evaluation -- 5.3.3 Explanation, Evaluation, and Application of IRT Models -- 5.4 Advanced Item Response Modeling: The 1990s -- 5.4.1 IRT Software Development and Evaluation -- 5.4.2 Explanation, Evaluation, and Application of IRT Models -- 5.5 IRT Contributions in the Twenty-First Century -- 5.5.1 Advances in the Development of Explanatory and Multidimensional IRT Models -- 5.6 IRT Software Development and Evaluation -- 5.6.1 Explanation, Evaluation, and Application of IRT Models -- 5.6.2 The Signs of (IRT) Things to Come -- 5.7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Research on Statistics -- 6.1 Linear Models -- 6.1.1 Computation -- 6.1.2 Inference -- 6.1.3 Prediction -- 6.1.4 Latent Regression -- 6.2 Bayesian Methods -- 6.2.1 Bayes for Classical Models -- 6.2.2 Later Bayes -- 6.2.3 Empirical Bayes -- 6.3 Causal Inference -- 6.4 Missing Data. , 6.5 Complex Samples -- 6.6 Data Displays -- 6.7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: Contributions to the Quantitative Assessment of Item, Test, and Score Fairness -- 7.1 Fair Prediction of a Criterion -- 7.2 Differential Item Functioning (DIF) -- 7.2.1 Differential Item Functioning (DIF) Methods -- 7.2.1.1 Early Developments: The Years Before Differential Item Functioning (DIF) Was Defined at ETS -- 7.2.1.2 Mantel-Haenszel (MH): Original Implementation at ETS -- 7.2.1.3 Subsequent Developments With the Mantel-Haenszel (MH) Approach -- 7.2.1.4 Standardization (STAND) -- Standardization's (STAND's) Definition of Differential Item Functioning (DIF) -- Standardization's (STAND's) Primary Differential Item Functioning (DIF) Index -- Extensions to Standardization (STAND) -- 7.2.1.5 Item Response Theory (IRT) -- 7.2.1.6 SIBTEST -- 7.2.2 Matching Variable Issues -- 7.2.3 Study Group Definition -- 7.2.4 Sample Size and Power Issues -- 7.3 Fair Linking of Test Scores -- 7.4 Limitations of Quantitative Fairness Assessment Procedures -- References -- Part II: ETS Contributions to Education Policy and Evaluation -- Chapter 8: Large-Scale Group-Score Assessment -- 8.1 Organization of This Chapter -- 8.2 Overview of Technological Contributions -- 8.2.1 Early Group Assessments -- 8.2.2 NAEP's Conception -- 8.2.3 Educational Opportunities Survey (EOS) -- 8.2.4 NAEP'S Early Assessments -- 8.2.5 Longitudinal Studies -- 8.2.6 Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) Score Decline -- 8.2.7 Calls for Change -- 8.2.7.1 The Wall Charts -- 8.2.8 NAEP's New Design -- 8.2.9 NAEP's Technical Dissemination -- 8.2.10 National Assessment Governing Board -- 8.2.11 NAEP's International Effects -- 8.2.12 Other ETS Technical Contributions -- 8.3 ETS and Large-Scale Assessment -- 8.3.1 Early Group Assessments -- 8.3.1.1 Project Talent -- 8.3.1.2 First International Mathematics Study (FIMS). , 8.3.2 NAEP's Conception -- 8.3.3 Educational Opportunities Survey -- 8.3.4 NAEP's Early Assessments -- 8.3.5 Longitudinal Studies -- 8.3.6 SAT Score Decline -- 8.3.6.1 Improvisation of Linking Methods -- 8.3.6.2 Partitioning Analysis -- 8.3.7 Call for Change -- 8.3.8 NAEP's New Design -- 8.3.9 NAEP's Technical Dissemination -- 8.3.9.1 Documentation of NAEP Procedures and Results -- 8.3.9.2 NAEP's Secondary-Use Data and Web Tools -- 8.3.10 National Assessment Governing Board -- 8.3.10.1 Comparability of State and National Estimate -- 8.3.10.2 Full Population Estimation -- 8.3.11 Mapping State Standards Onto NAEP -- 8.3.11.1 Testing Model Fit -- 8.3.11.2 Aspirational Performance Standards -- 8.3.12 Other ETS Contributions -- 8.3.12.1 Rater Reliability in NAEP -- 8.3.12.2 Computer-Based Assessment in NAEP -- 8.3.12.3 International Effects -- 8.3.12.4 ETS Contributions to International Assessments -- 8.3.13 NAEP ETS Contributions -- 8.3.13.1 The FORTRAN IV Statistical System (F4STAT) -- 8.3.13.2 Fitting Robust Regressions Using Power Series -- 8.3.13.3 Computational Error in Regression Analysis -- 8.3.13.4 Interpreting Least Squares -- 8.3.14 Impact on Policy-Publications Based on Large-Scale Assessment Findings -- Appendix: NAEP Estimation Procedures -- The Early NAEP Estimation Process -- Scaling -- Conditioning -- Variance Estimation -- Sampling Error -- Measurement Error -- Alternative Psychometric Approaches -- Possible Future Innovations -- Random Effects Model -- Adaptive Numerical Quadrature -- Using Hierarchical Models -- References -- Chapter 9: Large-Scale Assessments of Adult Literacy -- 9.1 Expanding the Construct of Literacy -- 9.2 Developing a Model for Building Construct-Based Assessments -- 9.3 Expanding and Implementing Large-Scale Assessment Methodology. , 9.3.1 Models Allowing the Derivation of Comparable Measures and Comparisons Across Literacy Assessments.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Bennett, Randy E. Advancing Human Assessment Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2017 ISBN 9783319586878
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Full-text  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    UID:
    almahu_9948265245102882
    Format: 1 online resource (424 p.) ; , cm.
    ISBN: 9781783470464 (e-book)
    Series Statement: Research handbooks in business and management
    Content: Employment relations, much discussed in other industries, has often been neglected in professional sports despite its unique characteristics. The book aims to explore in detail the unique nature of the employment relationship in professional sports and the sport industry. In four parts the book examines, firstly the regulation of sporting competition both within and across sporting codes; secondly a range of employment law issues such as how contracting and negotiation are handled, how disputes are resolved, and the role of sporting representatives such as player associations. The third section discusses the economic issues related to employment such as transfers, drafts and efforts to achieve "competitive balance". The final section of the book explores contemporary issues in sports management and governance, including anti-discrimination and anti-doping policy. Through this analysis the book identifies the complex and unique issues surrounding employment relations within professional sports and the sport industry.
    Note: Contributors include: J. Anderson, M. Barry, P. Bouris, C. Coupland, C. Depken III, J.B. Dworkin, T. Engelberg, S. Gardiner, R. Gomez, B. Keller, L. Masteralexis, G. Maynes, H. Mitchell, S. Moston, J.A.R. Nafziger, M. Nichol, R. Paul, P. Schuwalow, J. Skinner, J. Solow, M. Stewart, K. Vieweg, P. Von Allmen, A. Weinbach, R. Welch. , 1. Sidelined: employment relations in professional sports / Michael Barry, James Skinner and Terry Engelberg -- Part I the regulation of professional sports -- 2. The regulation of professional football at the European Union level. Towards supranational employment relations in the football industry? / Berndt Keller -- 3. Performance expectations, contracts and job security / Peter Von Allmen and John Solow -- 4. Making sense of labour regulation in Major League Baseball: some insights from regulatory theory / Matt Nichol -- 5. Regulating player agents / Lisa Masteralexis -- Part II the employment relations of professional sports -- 6. The evolution of collective bargaining in sports / James B. Dworkin -- 7. Arbitration, negotiation and contracts in sport / Jack Anderson -- 8. Industrial action in professional sport: strikes and lockouts / Craig Depken III -- 9. Power games: understanding the true nature of season ending labour disputes in Major League Baseball and the National Hockey League / Peter Bouris and Rafael Gomez -- Part III the management of professional sports and sporting careers -- 10. The game of (your) life: professional sports careers / Christine Coupland -- 11. If you want to play sport professionally, which sport should you choose? / Greg Maynes, Heather Mitchell, Peter Schuwalow and Mark Stewart -- 12. Discrimination issues and related law / Klaus Vieweg and James A.R. Nafziger -- 13. Hiding in plain sight: sexual harassment in sport / Terry Engelberg and Stephen Moston -- 14. The evolution of anti-doping policy: workplace implications for athletes / James Skinner, Terry Engelberg and Stephen Moston -- Part IV the economics of professional sports -- 15. Player trades, free agents and transfer polices in professional sport / Simon Gardiner and Roger Welch -- 16. Similarities and differences between competitive balance and uncertainty of outcome: a simple comparison of recent history in the NBA and NFL / Rodney Paul and Andrew Weinbach -- 17. Playing quotas / Simon Gardiner and Roger Welch.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781783470457 (hardback)
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; Electronic books.
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages