Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2020 (27) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
- Dissertation (27) (entfernen)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (27) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Beziehung (2)
- Emotionales Verhalten (2)
- Erregung (2)
- Gesundheit (2)
- Imagination (2)
- Information (2)
- Interaktion (2)
- Kognitive Psychotherapie (2)
- Maschinelles Lernen (2)
- Motivation (2)
- Patient (2)
- Prüfungsangst (2)
- Psychotherapeut (2)
- Wohlbefinden (2)
- Achievement Motivation, Flow Experience, Subjective Well-Being, Positive Psychology, Schools (1)
- Agency Theory (1)
- Amtliche Statistik (1)
- Angst (1)
- Angststörung (1)
- Antarktis (1)
- App (1)
- Arbeitsplatz (1)
- Arsen (1)
- Auenboden (1)
- Autonomie (1)
- Berufstätigkeit (1)
- Bevölkerungsökonomie (1)
- Bewegungsmangel (1)
- Bewegungsverhalten (1)
- Bewertung (1)
- Bewältigung (1)
- Big Five personality traits (1)
- Bodengüte (1)
- Branching Diffusion (1)
- Brennpunktthemen (1)
- Buddy-System (1)
- Chronische Schmerzen (1)
- Chronischer Schmerz (1)
- Collexeme Analysis (1)
- Common Liability (1)
- Common Noise (1)
- Construction Grammar (1)
- Crowdsourcing (1)
- Datenerhebung (1)
- Density Estimation (1)
- Depression (1)
- Discrete Optimization, Linear Programming, Integer Programming, Extended Formulation, Graph Theory, Branch & Bound (1)
- Discrete-Time Impulse Control (1)
- Einbauwerte (1)
- Einflussgröße (1)
- Einstellung (1)
- Einstellungsänderung (1)
- Elternverhalten (1)
- Emotionsregulation (1)
- Englisch (1)
- Entrepreneurship (1)
- Epistemische Überzeugungen (1)
- Epistemischer Wandel (1)
- Erkenntnistheorie (1)
- Europäische Union (1)
- Exchange Rates (1)
- Expertise (1)
- Fiskalpolitik (1)
- Flussaue (1)
- Forschungsinteressen (1)
- Führung (1)
- Geldpolitik (1)
- Generalized Variance Functions (1)
- Gesellschaftliche Themen (1)
- Grundschule (1)
- Haftung (1)
- Implizites Wissen (1)
- Information Extraction (1)
- Informationsextraktion (1)
- Intention (1)
- Internet (1)
- Interpersonal conflict (1)
- Intervention (1)
- Junge Frau (1)
- Katastrophisieren und Zuwendung (1)
- Kind (1)
- Kinder und Jugendliche (1)
- Kognitive Dissonanz (1)
- Kognitiver Prozess (1)
- Körperliche Aktivität (1)
- Lebensplan (1)
- Leistungsmotivation (1)
- Leistungsmotivation, Flow-Erleben, Subjektives Wohlbefinden, Positive Psychologie, Schule (1)
- Lernen (1)
- Lippe (1)
- Lippetal (1)
- Mean Field Games (1)
- Mechanism Approach (1)
- Meereis (1)
- Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation (1)
- Mixed Local-Nonlocal PDE (1)
- Motiv (1)
- Naturnahe Gestaltung (1)
- Navier-Stokes-Gleichung (1)
- Neuronales Netz (1)
- Nominalphrase (1)
- Nährstoffversorgung (1)
- Optimierung (1)
- Performativität (1)
- Performativität <Kulturwissenschaften> (1)
- Physiologische Psychologie (1)
- Physiologische Psychotherapie (1)
- Principle of Rhythmic Alternation (1)
- Prädetermination <Linguistik> (1)
- Reblaus (1)
- Referenzwert (1)
- Regressionsmodell (1)
- Religion (1)
- Retirement, Fertility, Sexuality (1)
- Robuste Statistik (1)
- Ruhestand (1)
- SSIM (1)
- Salutogene Führung (1)
- Salutogenic Leadership (1)
- Satellitenfernerkundung (1)
- Schwermetallbelastung (1)
- Schwermetalle (1)
- Schätzfunktion (1)
- Schätztheorie (1)
- Schätzung (1)
- Schüler (1)
- Sekundarstufe (1)
- Selbsterfüllende Prophezeiung (1)
- Self-organizing Maps (1)
- Sexualität (1)
- Shareholder Value (1)
- Shareholder-Value-Analyse (1)
- Small area estimation (1)
- Social Entrepreneurship (1)
- Social entrepreneurship (1)
- Socialism, Socialist values and attitudes, Socialist legacy, Literature review, Entrepreneurship intention, Business takeover, Career choice reasons, and TPB model. (1)
- Sozialismus (1)
- Sportliche Intervention (1)
- Staatsanleihe (1)
- Stichprobe (1)
- Structured Eurobonds (1)
- Student (1)
- Subjektive Theorie (1)
- Suche (1)
- Surveys (1)
- Taxonomie (1)
- Teilüberwachtes Lernen (1)
- Test (1)
- Therapieabbruch (1)
- Therapieerfolg (1)
- Topic Modeling (1)
- Unternehmen (1)
- Validierung (1)
- Wasserrahmenrichtlinie (1)
- Wechselkurs (1)
- Weighted Regression (1)
- Weinbau (1)
- Wirtschaftstheorie (1)
- Wissen (1)
- Wuchsleistung (1)
- Währungsunion (1)
- Ziel (1)
- Zugang (1)
- adherence (1)
- aktives Lernen (1)
- asymptotic analysis (1)
- complexity reduction (1)
- corpus linguistics (1)
- dilute particle suspension (1)
- dropout (1)
- early change (1)
- incompressible Newtonian fluid (1)
- internet intervention (1)
- maschinelles Lernen (1)
- mean field approximation (1)
- model order reduction (1)
- port-Hamiltonian (1)
- predeterminer adjective phrases (1)
- psychologische Beratung (1)
- stochastic partial differential algebraic equation (1)
- structure-preserving (1)
- teil-überwachtes Lernen (1)
- Ökonometrisches Modell (1)
Institut
- Fachbereich 4 (10)
- Fachbereich 1 (4)
- Fachbereich 6 (2)
- Psychologie (2)
- Ethnologie (1)
- Fachbereich 2 (1)
- Mathematik (1)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (1)
The present thesis is devoted to a construction which defies generalisations about the prototypical English noun phrase (NP) to such an extent that it has been termed the Big Mess Construction (Berman 1974). As illustrated by the examples in (1) and (2), the NPs under study involve premodifying adjective phrases (APs) which precede the determiner (always realised in the form of the indefinite article a(n)) rather than following it.
(1) NoS had not been hijacked – that was too strong a word. (BNC: CHU 1766)
(2) He was prepared for a battle if the porter turned out to be as difficult a customer as his wife. (BNC: CJX 1755)
Previous research on the construction is largely limited to contributions from the realms of theoretical syntax and a number of cursory accounts in reference grammars. No comprehensive investigation of its realisations and uses has as yet been conducted. My thesis fills this gap by means of an exhaustive analysis of the construction on the basis of authentic language data retrieved from the British National Corpus (BNC). The corpus-based approach allows me to examine not only the possible but also the most typical uses of the construction. Moreover, while previous work has almost exclusively focused on the formal realisations of the construction, I investigate both its forms and functions.
It is demonstrated that, while the construction is remarkably flexible as concerns its possible realisations, its use is governed by probabilistic constraints. For example, some items occur much more frequently inside the degree item slot than others (as, too and so stand out for their particularly high frequency). Contrary to what is assumed in most previous descriptions, the slot is not restricted in its realisation to a fixed number of items. Rather than representing a specialised structure, the construction is furthermore shown to be distributed over a wide range of possible text types and syntactic functions. On the other hand, it is found to be much less typical of spontaneous conversation than of written language; Big Mess NPs further display a strong preference for the function of subject complement. Investigations of the internal structural complexity of the construction indicate that its obligatory components can optionally be enriched by a remarkably wide range of optional (if infrequent) elements. In an additional analysis of the realisations of the obligatory but lexically variable slots (head noun and head of AP), the construction is highlighted to represent a productive pattern. With the help of the methods of Collexeme Analysis (Stefanowitsch and Gries 2003) and Co-varying Collexeme Analysis (Gries and Stefanowitsch 2004b, Stefanowitsch and Gries 2005), the two slots are, however, revealed to be strongly associated with general nouns and ‘evaluative’ and ‘dimension’ adjectives, respectively. On the basis of an inspection of the most typical adjective-noun combinations, I identify the prototypical semantics of the Big Mess Construction.
The analyses of the constructional functions centre on two distinct functional areas. First, I investigate Bolinger’s (1972) hypothesis that the construction fulfils functions in line with the Principle of Rhythmic Alternation (e.g. Selkirk 1984: 11, Schlüter 2005). It is established that rhythmic preferences co-determine the use of the construction to some extent, but that they clearly do not suffice to explain the phenomenon under study. In a next step, the discourse-pragmatic functions of the construction are scrutinised. Big Mess NPs are demonstrated to perform distinct information-structural functions in that the non-canonical position of the AP serves to highlight focal information (compare De Mönnink 2000: 134-35). Additionally, the construction is shown to place emphasis on acts of evaluation. I conclude the construction to represent a contrastive focus construction.
My investigations of the formal and functional characteristics of Big Mess NPs each include analyses which compare individual versions of the construction to one another (e.g. the As Big a Mess, Too Big a Mess and So Big a Mess Constructions). It is revealed that the versions are united by a shared core of properties while differing from one another at more abstract levels of description. The question of the status of the constructional versions as separate constructions further receives special emphasis as part of a discussion in which I integrate my results into the framework of usage-based Construction Grammar (e.g. Goldberg 1995, 2006).
This thesis addresses three different topics from the fields of mathematical finance, applied probability and stochastic optimal control. Correspondingly, it is subdivided into three independent main chapters each of which approaches a mathematical problem with a suitable notion of a stochastic particle system.
In Chapter 1, we extend the branching diffusion Monte Carlo method of Henry-Labordère et. al. (2019) to the case of parabolic PDEs with mixed local-nonlocal analytic nonlinearities. We investigate branching diffusion representations of classical solutions, and we provide sufficient conditions under which the branching diffusion representation solves the PDE in the viscosity sense. Our theoretical setup directly leads to a Monte Carlo algorithm, whose applicability is showcased in two stylized high-dimensional examples. As our main application, we demonstrate how our methodology can be used to value financial positions with defaultable, systemically important counterparties.
In Chapter 2, we formulate and analyze a mathematical framework for continuous-time mean field games with finitely many states and common noise, including a rigorous probabilistic construction of the state process. The key insight is that we can circumvent the master equation and reduce the mean field equilibrium to a system of forward-backward systems of (random) ordinary differential equations by conditioning on common noise events. We state and prove a corresponding existence theorem, and we illustrate our results in three stylized application examples. In the absence of common noise, our setup reduces to that of Gomes, Mohr and Souza (2013) and Cecchin and Fischer (2020).
In Chapter 3, we present a heuristic approach to tackle stochastic impulse control problems in discrete time. Based on the work of Bensoussan (2008) we reformulate the classical Bellman equation of stochastic optimal control in terms of a discrete-time QVI, and we prove a corresponding verification theorem. Taking the resulting optimal impulse control as a starting point, we devise a self-learning algorithm that estimates the continuation and intervention region of such a problem. Its key features are that it explores the state space of the underlying problem by itself and successively learns the behavior of the optimally controlled state process. For illustration, we apply our algorithm to a classical example problem, and we give an outlook on open questions to be addressed in future research.
Many NP-hard optimization problems that originate from classical graph theory, such as the maximum stable set problem and the maximum clique problem, have been extensively studied over the past decades and involve the choice of a subset of edges or vertices. There usually exist combinatorial methods that can be applied to solve them directly in the graph.
The most simple method is to enumerate feasible solutions and select the best. It is not surprising that this method is very slow oftentimes, so the task is to cleverly discard fruitless search space during the search. An alternative method to solve graph problems is to formulate integer linear programs, such that their solution yields an optimal solution to the original optimization problem in the graph. In order to solve integer linear programs, one can start with relaxing the integer constraints and then try to find inequalities for cutting off fractional extreme points. In the best case, it would be possible to describe the convex hull of the feasible region of the integer linear program with a set of inequalities. In general, giving a complete description of this convex hull is out of reach, even if it has a polynomial number of facets. Thus, one tries to strengthen the (weak) relaxation of the integer linear program best possible via strong inequalities that are valid for the convex hull of feasible integer points.
Many classes of valid inequalities are of exponential size. For instance, a graph can have exponentially many odd cycles in general and therefore the number of odd cycle inequalities for the maximum stable set problem is exponential. It is sometimes possible to check in polynomial time if some given point violates any of the exponentially many inequalities. This is indeed the case for the odd cycle inequalities for the maximum stable set problem. If a polynomial time separation algorithm is known, there exists a formulation of polynomial size that contains a given point if and only if it does not violate one of the (potentially exponentially many) inequalities. This thesis can be divided into two parts. The first part is the main part and it contains various new results. We present new extended formulations for several optimization problems, i.e. the maximum stable set problem, the nonconvex quadratic program with box
constraints and the p-median problem. In the second part we modify a very fast algorithm for finding a maximum clique in very large sparse graphs. We suggest and compare three alternative versions of this algorithm to the original version and compare their strengths and weaknesses.
Retirement, fertility and sexuality are three key life stage events that are embedded in the framework of population economics in this dissertation. Each topic implies economic relevance. As retirement entry shifts labour supply of experienced workers to zero, this issue is particularly relevant for employers, retirees themselves as well as policymakers who are in charge of the design of the pension system. Giving birth has comprehensive economic relevance for women. Parental leave and subsequent part-time work lead to a direct loss of income. Lower levels of employment, work experience, training and career opportunities result in indirect income losses. Sexuality has decisive influence on the quality of partnerships, subjective well-being and happiness. Well-being and happiness, in turn, are significant key determinants not only in private life but also in the work domain, for example in the area of job performance. Furthermore, partnership quality determines the duration of a partnership. And in general, partnerships enable the pooling of (financial) resources - compared to being single. The contribution of this dissertation emerges from the integration of social and psychological concepts into economic analysis as well as the application of economic theory in non-standard economic research topics. The results of the three chapters show that the multidisciplinary approach yields better prediction of human behaviour than the single disciplines on their own. The results in the first chapter show that both interpersonal conflict with superiors and the individual’s health status play a significant role in retirement decisions. The chapter further contributes to existing literature by showing the moderating role of health within the retirement decision-making: On the one hand, all employees are more likely to retire when they are having conflicts with their superior. On the other hand, among healthy employees, the same conflict raises retirement intentions even more. That means good health is a necessary, but not a sufficient condition for continued working. It may be that conflicts with superiors raise retirement intentions more if the worker is healthy. The key findings of the second chapter reveal significant influence of religion on contraceptive and fertility-related decisions. A large part of research on religion and fertility is originated in evidence from the US. This chapter contrasts evidence from Germany. Additionally, the chapter contributes by integrating miscarriages and abortions, rather than limiting the analysis to births and it gains from rich prospective data on fertility biography of women. The third chapter provides theoretical insights on how to incorporate psychological variables into an economic framework which aims to analyse sexual well-being. According to this theory, personality may play a dual role by shaping a person’s preferences for sex as well as the person’s behaviour in a sexual relationship. Results of econometric analysis reveal detrimental effects of neuroticism on sexual well-being while conscientiousness seems to create a win-win situation for a couple. Extraversions and Openness have ambiguous effects on romantic relationships by enhancing sexual well-being on the one hand but raising commitment problems on the other. Agreeable persons seem to gain sexual satisfaction even if they perform worse in sexual communication.
This work studies typical mathematical challenges occurring in the modeling and simulation of manufacturing processes of paper or industrial textiles. In particular, we consider three topics: approximate models for the motion of small inertial particles in an incompressible Newtonian fluid, effective macroscopic approximations for a dilute particle suspension contained in a bounded domain accounting for a non-uniform particle distribution and particle inertia, and possibilities for a reduction of computational cost in the simulations of slender elastic fibers moving in a turbulent fluid flow.
We consider the full particle-fluid interface problem given in terms of the Navier-Stokes equations coupled to momentum equations of a small rigid body. By choosing an appropriate asymptotic scaling for the particle-fluid density ratio and using an asymptotic expansion for the solution components, we derive approximations of the original interface problem. The approximate systems differ according to the chosen scaling of the density ratio in their physical behavior allowing the characterization of different inertial regimes.
We extend the asymptotic approach to the case of many particles suspended in a Newtonian fluid. Under specific assumptions for the combination of particle size and particle number, we derive asymptotic approximations of this system. The approximate systems describe the particle motion which allows to use a mean field approach in order to formulate the continuity equation for the particle probability density function. The coupling of the latter with the approximation for the fluid momentum equation then reveals a macroscopic suspension description which accounts for non-uniform particle distributions in space and for small particle inertia.
A slender fiber in a turbulent air flow can be modeled as a stochastic inextensible one-dimensionally parametrized Kirchhoff beam, i.e., by a stochastic partial differential algebraic equation. Its simulations involve the solution of large non-linear systems of equations by Newton's method. In order to decrease the computational time, we explore different methods for the estimation of the solution. Additionally, we apply smoothing techniques to the Wiener Process in order to regularize the stochastic force driving the fiber, exploring their respective impact on the solution and performance. We also explore the applicability of the Wiener chaos expansion as a solution technique for the simulation of the fiber dynamics.
Chronische primäre Schmerzen im Kindes- und Jugendalter sind weit verbreitet. Das Risiko für die Chronifizierung von kindlichen Schmerzen erhöht sich, wenn die Eltern selbst unter chronischen Schmerzen leiden. Elterliche kognitiv-affektive und verhaltensbezogene Reaktionen auf die kindlichen Schmerzen spielen eine zentrale Rolle in der Chronifizierung und familialen Transmission der Schmerzen. Welche spezifischen Faktoren die elterlichen Reaktionen auf die kindlichen Schmerzen modulieren, ist bis dato allerdings unklar. Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation ist daher die Analyse des elterlichen schmerzbezogenen Verhaltens (maladaptive Reaktionen wie Katastrophisieren und Zuwendung) hinsichtlich möglicher modulierender Faktoren sowohl auf Eltern- (top-down-Variablen) als auch auf Kindebene (bottom-up-Variablen). Dafür wurden differenzierende Stichproben generiert und mit Hilfe von validierten Fragebögen befragt. In Studie 1 wurde eine Stichprobe von N = 105 schmerzfreien Elternteilen aus der Allgemeinbevölkerung und N = 80 Elternteilen aus der Allgemeinbevölkerung mit selbstberichteten chronischen Schmerzen erhoben. Die Stichprobe von Studie 2 umfasste N = 118 Elternteile mit chronischen Schmerzen, Angstsymptomen oder beidem sowie deren N = 190 Kinder, in Studie 3 wurden N = 63 Mütter, Väter und Kinder (Eltern-Kind-Triaden mit jeweils N = 21 Müttern, Vätern und Kindern mit der Diagnose einer chronischen Schmerzstörung) befragt. Nach der Überprüfung der Einsetzbarkeit der zentralen Erhebungsinstrumente auch in nicht-klinischen Samples wurden in Studie 1 die Reaktionen von schmerzfreien Eltern und Eltern mit selbstberichteten chronischen Schmerzen auf die Schmerzen ihrer Kinder mit anderen Stichproben sowie untereinander verglichen. Die Analyse der Einflüsse von top-down- und bottom-up-Variablen (elterliche und kindliche Schmerz- und Angstsymptomatik, elterliche und kindliche Somatisierung bzw. schmerzbezogene Beeinträchtigung sowie Alter und Geschlecht von Eltern und Kindern) auf die elterlichen
maladaptiven Reaktionen wurde in Studie 2 und Studie 3 mit Hilfe von hierarchisch linearen Modellen durchgeführt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Eltern von Kindern mit chronischen
Schmerzen grundsätzlich stärker katastrophisierten als Eltern von gesunden Kindern. Außerdem zeigte sich, dass insbesondere top-down-Variablen wie elterliche Angst das Katastrophisieren und die Zuwendung der Eltern verstärken. Bottom-up-Variablen erwiesen sich ausschließlich in der Interaktion von kindlicher Schmerz- und Angstsymptomatik als verstärkender Faktor für die Katastrophisierungsneigung der Eltern. Demnach scheinen zentrale modulierende Faktoren für kognitiv-affektive und verhaltensbezogene elterliche Reaktionen im Kontext der Chronifizierung von kindlichen chronischen Schmerzen vor allem top-down-Variabeln wie die elterliche Katastrophisierungsneigung und Angstsymptomatik zu sein. Als potentielle Risikogruppen für die Entwicklung von chronischen Schmerzen lassen sich so neben Kindern von Eltern mit eigenen chronischen Schmerzen auch Kinder von Eltern mit Angststörungen und erhöhter Katastrophisierungsneigung benennen. Daher sollte die Elternrolle in Therapien von Erwachsenen eine ausreichende Berücksichtigung finden, um eine Reduktion der maladaptiven Reaktionen auf die Kinder zu erreichen und so einer Entwicklung von chronischen Schmerzen vorzubeugen. Auch die psychoedukative Einbindung der Eltern in die kindliche Schmerztherapie erscheint aufgrund der vorliegenden Ergebnisse unabdingbar, vor allem wenn die Kinder neben den chronischen Schmerzen auch unter komorbiden psychischen Störungen wie beispielsweise Angststörungen leiden.
Die Relevanz epistemischer (individueller wissensbezogener) Überzeugungen in unserer modernen Wissensgesellschaft ist nahezu unbestritten. Trotzdem ist vergleichsweise wenig dazu bekannt, wie die Entwicklung hin zu fortgeschrittenen epistemischen Überzeugungen – welche zum Beispiel die Kontextspezifität von Wissensansprüchen (d. h. Behauptungen) anerkennen – gefördert werden kann. Erschwerend hinzu kommt, dass aktuelle theoretische Modelle, welche Forschende in diesem Unterfangen unterstützen könnten, bislang nur unzureichend empirisch validiert sind. Die Arbeiten der vorliegenden Dissertation widmeten sich aus diesem Grund der Erforschung der Mechanismen epistemischen Wandels und unterzogen das derzeit wohl prominenteste Prozessmodell epistemischen Wandels von Bendixen und Rule (2004) einer empirischen Prüfung. Diese Prüfung fand in drei paradigmatisch aufeinander aufbauenden Forschungsartikeln statt. Zentrale Forschungsfragen, die in diesen Artikeln adressiert wurden, betrafen die Rolle der zentralen Prozesskomponenten des Bendixen und Rule (2004) Modells – epistemischer Zweifel, epistemischer Volition und Lösungsstrategien – sowie Rahmenbedingungen epistemischen Wandels. Spezifisch betrachtete Rahmenbedingungen waren hierbei die (Un)Auflösbarkeit divergierender (d. h. widersprüchlicher) Evidenz, welche zur Initiation des Prozesses des epistemischen Wandels genutzt wurde, epistemische Ausgangsüberzeugungen sowie die Domänenspezifität epistemischer Überzeugungen. In den drei Forschungsartikeln konnte die zentrale Rolle epistemischer Zweifel bestätigt werden. Überraschenderweise hatte die Auflösbarkeit widersprüchlicher Evidenz allerdings keinen nachweisbaren Einfluss auf epistemischen Wandel. Hinsichtlich der Rolle epistemischer Ausgangsüberzeugungen zeigte sich, dass naive Ausgangsüberzeugungen, welche mit einem stärkeren Erleben kognitiver Dissonanz in Verbindung stehen sollten, epistemischen Wandel begünstigten. Auch die Domänenspezifität epistemischen Wandels konnte als wesentliche Rahmenbedingung des Wandels bestätigt werden. Für epistemische Volition und Lösungsstrategien zeigte sich allerdings kein eindeutiges Ergebnismuster. In konfirmativen Analysen wurden hier nicht die erwarteten Effekte gefunden, während explorative Analysen teilweise doch modellkonforme Evidenz zu liefern schienen. Insgesamt leistet die vorliegende Dissertationsschrift damit einen wesentlichen Beitrag zur Klärung der Mechanismen epistemischen Wandels und erlaubt eine Ausdifferenzierung des Bendixen und Rule (2004) Modells. Darüber hinaus erweitert diese Dissertationsschrift auch das Methodenrepertoire der Erforschung epistemischen Wandels durch die Übertragung bestehender Interventionsansätze auf Online-Formate und illustriert die praktische Relevanz dieses Forschungsstrangs durch den Nachweis von Interventionseffekten auf Verhaltensmaßen.