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Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Spatial Behaviors'

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1

Pyda, Sarada. "Effects of Spatial Accessibility on Preventive Healthcare Behaviors: impacts on screening mammography." The Ohio State University, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1471876065.

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Suzuki, Mariko. "Monitoring behaviors for spatial cohesiveness of a group in wild Japanese Macaques." 京都大学 (Kyoto University), 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/157837.

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3

Smith, Zachary Joseph. "Mapping the Spatial Movements, Behaviors, and Interactions of Captive Orangutans using Terrestrial Laser Scanning and GIS." Scholar Commons, 2014. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5312.

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Five captive Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) were observed in order to better understand their spatial selection, behavior, and interaction with their environment and each other. A newly introduced adult male's interactions with a female group containing two adults, one adolescent, and one juvenile, was documented. Visual observations were performed to document individual behaviors, along with any interactions with silvery langur monkeys, public crowd levels, temperature, and enrichment props. Methods included 15 observation periods, 0.5-3 hours in length each, during which behaviors were verbally and visually confirmed using a HD video camera. Spatial locations of each individual were recorded every three minutes during each observation period. The orangutan enclosure was measured and mapped using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), and observed behaviors and spatial locations were georeferenced to the resulting 3D model depicting the exhibit. Results were summarized as time-activity budgets and were geo-visualized using 3D plots and density maps. This research demonstrated how the application of spatiotemporal and behavioral analysis coupled with TLS and three-dimensional modelling can be used to better study captive primates. These types of studies are important as zoos increasingly become home to great ape species.
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Rogers, Judith Ann. "Understanding spatial intelligence through problem-solving in art: An analysis of behaviors, processes, and products." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186422.

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Gardner (1985) defines intelligence broadly as the ability to solve problems and create products as well as to find or create new problems. He also suggests that every normal individual has the capacity to develop abilities in seven different areas or types of intelligence. Maker (1992, in press) hypothesizes that gifted individuals competently solve problems of all types, that is, problems ranging from well-defined to ill-defined. In this study of spatial intelligence, the theories of both researchers were tested. The primary purpose of the study was to describe behaviors that could be observed, processes subjects reported using, and characteristics of products subjects created as they solved the series of spatial problems. A secondary purpose of the study was to determine if careful observation of processes subjects employed, combined with the subject's report of processes used and an evaluation of products produced could, indeed, paint a clear picture of the subject's spatial abilities. Six research questions guided the study. The three primary areas of investigation were (a) the similarities and/or differences of behaviors observed, processes reported, and characteristics of products across tasks for individual subjects, (b) the similarities and/or differences of behaviors observed, processes reported, and characteristics of products across subjects for each task, and (c) the similarities and/or differences of behaviors observed, processes reported, and characteristics of products to Gardner's description of spatial intelligence. The researcher delineated eight broad categories of observed behaviors, two broad categories of processes reported, and nine characteristics of finished products. She noted both similarities and differences in behaviors, processes, and products across subjects for tasks and across tasks for subjects. Subjects reported that they used processes similar to those described by Gardner (1985); Gardner does not establish behaviors that can be observed as subjects solve spatial problems, nor does he clearly establish characteristics that might be included in products subjects created. Therefore, the behaviors noted and the characteristics of products created by the subjects in this study allowed the researcher to further define spatial intelligence. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
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5

Zhao, Songnian. "Spontaneous changes of human behaviors and intervention strategies: human and animal diseases." Diss., Kansas State University, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35100.

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Doctor of Philosophy
Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Systems Engineering
Chih-Hang Wu
The topic of infectious disease epidemics has recently attracted substantial attentions in research communities and it has been shown that the changes of human behaviors have significant impacts on the dynamics of disease transmission. However, the study and understanding of human reactions into spread of infectious disease are still in the very beginning phase and how human behaviors change during the spread of infectious disease has not been systematically investigated. Moreover, the study of human behaviors includes not only various enforced measures by public authorities such as school closure, quarantine, vaccination, etc, but also the spontaneous self-protective actions which are triggered by risk perception and fear of diseases. Hence, the goal of this research is to study the impacts of human behaviors to the epidemic from these two perspectives: spontaneous behavioral changes and public intervention strategies. For the sake of studying spontaneous changes of human behaviors, this research first time applied evolutionary spatial game into the study of human reactions to the spread of infectious disease. This method integrated contact structures and epidemics information into the individuals’ decision processes, by adding two different types of information into the payoff functions: the local information and global information. The new method would not only advance the field of game theory, but also the field of epidemiology. In addition, this method was also applied to a classic compartmental dynamic system which is a widely used model for studying the disease transmission. With extensive numerical studies, the results first proved the consistency of two models for the sake of validating the effectiveness of the spatial evolutionary game. Then the impacts of changes of human behaviors to the dynamics of disease transmission and how information impacts human behaviors were discussed temporally and spatially. In addition to the spontaneous behavioral changes, the corresponding intervention strategies by policy-makers played the key role in process of mitigating the spread of infectious disease. For the purpose of minimizing the total lost, including the social costs and number of infected individuals, the intervention strategies should be optimized. Sensitivity analysis, stability analysis, bifurcation analysis, and optimal control methods are possible tools to understand the effects of different combination of intervention strategies or even find an appropriate policy to mitigate the disease transmission. One zoonotic disease, named Zoonotic Visceral Leishmaniasis (ZVL), was studied by adopting different methods and assumptions. Particularly, a special case, backward bifurcation, was discussed for the transmission of ZVL. Last but not least, the methodology and modeling framework used in this dissertation can be expanded to other disease situations and intervention applications, and have a broad impact to the research area related to mathematical modeling, epidemiology, decision-making processes, and industrial engineering. The further studies can combine the changes of human behaviors and intervention strategies by policy-makers so as to seek an optimal information dissemination to minimize the social costs and the number of infected individuals. If successful, this research should aid policy-makers by improving communication between them and the public, by directing educational efforts, and by predicting public response to infectious diseases and new risk management strategies (regulations, vaccination, quarantine, etc.).
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6

Li, Jingjing. "Understanding the Effects of Built Environments in Different Spatial Contextual Units on Individuals’ Health-related Behaviors." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin154410042185049.

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7

Watson, Kelley D. "Remote management : traditional leadership behaviors in a contemporary work environment." Diss., Manhattan, Kan. : Kansas State University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/432.

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8

Kamran, Maryam. "Owners Versus Renters: Comparative Homing Behaviors in Primary and Tertiary Burrowing Crayfish." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1466602931.

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9

Verselder, Hélène. "Influence d’activations spatiales et motrices de polarités combinées sur le fonctionnement cognitif : effet de la synchronie-asynchronie temporelle et spatiale sur des combinatoires cognitives de nature mathématique." Thesis, Paris 10, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA100067.

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De nombreuses études ont montré qu’une activation d'indices moteurs (mouvement d’approche ou de retrait ; Cretenet et Dru 2004) ou spatiaux (verticale ou horizontale ; Casasanto, 2009) était de nature à influencer un jugement ou des réponses finales. Dans le cadre des théories de la cognition incarnée, ce travail examine l’effet de l’activation synchrone ou asynchrone de ces indices comme étant révélatrice de processus cognitifs. Dans cette perspective, nos travaux, présentés sous la forme de deux articles, ont pour objectif d’analyser l’effet de ces activations, impliquant la théorie de la correspondance de polarité (Proctor et Cho, 2006), sur la résolution d’opérations arithmétiques, comme l’expression d’une combinatoire cognitive particulière. De plus, cette thèse supporte l’idée qu’une analogie entre la PCE et ces résultats peut être faite. En effet, le cœur de notre travail consiste défendre l’idée que quelque soit les indices conceptuels (motivationnel ou émotionnel) activés, de mêmes effets sont observés, traduisant la mise en jeu d’un même système de codage de polarités. Lors de l’activation d’indices de polarité (motivationnelle ou émotionnelle), un phénomène de compatibilité s’opère influençant le raisonnement mathématique.Nous proposons d'étudier l'effet d’un mouvement moteur (effectué) ou spatial (perçu) combinant deux dimensions spatiales (latérale et verticale) simultanément ou non sur la performance numérique. L’objectif est d’analyser l’influence de conditions de congruence ou de non congruence sur la résolution d’opérations arithmétiques. L’idée est de montrer qu’une activation synchrone d’indices moteurs ou spatiaux influencerait une combinatoire cognitive telle que la multiplication (Article 1) ; tandis qu’une activation asynchrone d’indices spatiaux influencerait une combinatoire cognitive telle que l’addition (Article 2).Ces travaux démontrent pour la première fois comment des combinatoires perceptives ou motrices déterminent des combinatoires cognitives
Several studies have shown that an activation of motors (approach-avoidance behaviors, Cretenet & Dru 2004) or spatial cues (vertical or horizontal, Casasanto, 2009) is likely to influence the affective judgment or the final responses. In regards of the theories of embodiment, this studies examine the effect of combined (synchronous or asynchronous) motor and spatial cues on mathematical reasoning as revealing cognitive processes. In this perspective, our work, presented in two articles, with the aim to analyze the effect of these activations, involving the theory of polarity correspondence (Proctor & Cho, 2006), on the resolution of arithmetic operations, as the expression of a particular cognitive functioning. Furthermore, this thesis supports the idea that this operation has some analogy with the polarity correspondence effect (PCE). Indeed, our work supports the idea that whatever the activated conceptual cues are (motivational or emotional), the same effects are observed - a similar system is activated, coded as polarities which might be indicative of the PCE. When the activation of polarity indices (motivational or emotional), a phenomenon of compatibility occurs that also influences mathematical reasoning.We investigate the effect of a motor (performed) or spatial (perceived) movement combining two spatial dimensions (laterality and verticality) simultaneously or not on numerical performance. The objective is to investigate the influence of congruence or noncongruence conditions on the resolution of arithmetic operations. When a synchronous activation of peripheral cues (motor or spatial) is activated, we would observed an effect on mathematical reasoning, such as multiplication (Article 1); while when an asynchronous activation, deferred in time and space, of spatial cues would influence a mathematical reasonning, such as addition (Article 2). For the first time, studies demonstrate how a particular combination of perceptual or motor activations reveals some correspondent cognitive mechanism
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10

Corkill, Gail Waechter. "Understanding spatial intelligence through the problem-solving of young children from culturally different backgrounds: An analysis of behaviors and products." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/284161.

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In this study the behaviors observed and the products created by Hispanic and Navajo children, ages four to five, are described. Each child participated in a performance-based assessment of problem solving designed to identify young children with gifts and talents. The assessment process entails careful observation of children's problem solving and resultant products to determine an individual's abilities and interests in each of the intelligences posited by Gardner (1983). All children were videotaped in the classroom while engaged in solving problems on the spatial activity of the assessment. An embedded, multiple case study design (Yin, 1994) was used as the formal research strategy to address the research questions posed. Case study methods and qualitative techniques were used. Thus, a total of eight single case studies were conducted. The primary purpose of the study was to describe in detail the behaviors that could be observed and the characteristics of the products created by young culturally diverse children on a problem solving task involving spatial abilities. A secondary purpose of the study was to determine if careful observation of the spatial problem solving behaviors exhibited by the children, combined with an evaluation of final products constructed, could clarify and extend the understanding of the spatial area of intelligence. The researcher delineated three broad categories of observed behaviors and three broad categories of characteristics of finished products. No sex-related differences were found between young female and male children. However, clear qualitative differences between young Navajo and Hispanic children were found in the spatial problem solving behaviors and in the ways that spatial representations were characterized. Similarly qualitative differences were found in the eye patterns and solution strategies used by young children who were characterized as highly able problem solvers on the spatial task. The behaviors noted and the characteristics of products created by the children in this study allowed the researchers to further define spatial intelligence children across the core capacities of the spatial domain.
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11

Zhang, Zhu, Xiaolong Zheng, Daniel Dajun Zeng, and Scott J. Leischow. "Tracking Dabbing Using Search Query Surveillance: A Case Study in the United States." JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/621512.

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Background: Dabbing is an emerging method of marijuana ingestion. However, little is known about dabbing owing to limited surveillance data on dabbing. Objective: The aim of the study was to analyze Google search data to assess the scope and breadth of information seeking on dabbing. Methods: Google Trends data about dabbing and related topics (eg, electronic nicotine delivery system [ENDS], also known as e-cigarettes) in the United States between January 2004 and December 2015 were collected by using relevant search terms such as "dab rig." The correlation between dabbing (including topics: dab and hash oil) and ENDS (including topics: vaping and e-cigarette) searches, the regional distribution of dabbing searches, and the impact of cannabis legalization policies on geographical location in 2015 were analyzed. Results: Searches regarding dabbing increased in the United States over time, with 1,526,280 estimated searches during 2015. Searches for dab and vaping have very similar temporal patterns, where the Pearson correlation coefficient (PCC) is .992 (P<.001). Similar phenomena were also obtained in searches for hash oil and e-cigarette, in which the corresponding PCC is .931 (P<.001). Dabbing information was searched more in some western states than other regions. The average dabbing searches were significantly higher in the states with medical and recreational marijuana legalization than in the states with only medical marijuana legalization (P=.02) or the states without medical and recreational marijuana legalization (P=.01). Conclusions: Public interest in dabbing is increasing in the United States. There are close associations between dabbing and ENDS searches. The findings suggest greater popularity of dabs in the states that legalized medical and recreational marijuana use. This study proposes a novel and timely way of cannabis surveillance, and these findings can help enhance the understanding of the popularity of dabbing and provide insights for future research and informed policy making on dabbing.
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Kim, Young Ook. "Spatial configuration, spatial cognition and spatial behaviour : the role of architectural intelligibility in shaping spatial experience." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1999. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1317973/.

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This thesis investigates the role of spatial configuration in shaping resident's experience of their neighbourhood. Studies to date have found that spatial configuration affects spatial behaviour and movement patterns (e.g., Hillier et al, 1993), however there has been little investigation of the cognitive processes that might underlie this relationship. Other research into cognition of the urban environment suggests that local spatial factors may play a role in cognitive processes (e.g., Hart & Moor, 1973), however these studies have not addressed global spatial configuration in quantitative terms. No studies to date have sought to integrate cognitive, behavioural and configurational factors within a single framework. Using Hillier's (1996) definition of intelligibility as the relationship between local and global configurational factors, this thesis investigates the relationship between resident's cognition, observed patterns of movement and the spatial configuration of an area. Two adjacent areas in Hampstead Garden Suburb in North London were investigated in detail. One area is relatively intelligible, the other less so. Structured interview surveys were carried out with local residents to elicit aspects of their cognition of the local area and detailed observations were made of movement patterns in the two neighbourhoods. Analysis of the spatial characteristics of the two areas using 'space syntax' methods provided a common basis for analyses of these data. The findings confirm that spatial configuration, spatial cognition and space use patterns are all related to one another. The main finding is that the degree of intelligibility of the area is the most significant intervening variable in relations between the three variables. The more intelligible area showed more powerful correlations between spatial configuration and patterns of movement, as well as giving rise to perceptions of greater legibility and increased neighbourhood size by local residents. Strong correlations were also identified between residents' cognitive maps and observed patterns of movement in the area. The correlations were again found to be stronger in the intelligible area than the unintelligible area. These findings suggest that spatial configuration may play an important role in determining people's daily spatial experience by increasing or reducing their sense of autonomy. By reducing the ability to predict either one's precise location within his/her global context, or the likely behaviour of others in space, unintelligible urban configurations may result in perceptions of a lesser sense of personal control over one's own actions in the environment. The thesis concludes that 'architectural intelligibility' may be a basic aspect in achieving human spatial needs.
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DESTE, ALEX VACA. "STRUCTURAL BEHAVIOR OF TUBULAR SPATIAL TRUSSES." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 1998. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=1536@1.

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CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO
As estruturas espaciais tubulares padronizadas vem sendo cada vez mais utilizadas na construção civil brasileira; observa-se porém, que o tipo das ligações que comumente estão presentes nestas construções são as do tipo excêntrica com ponta amassada, decorrentes do baixo custo econômico que estas oferecem. Pouco se sabe sobre o comportamento estrutural destas ligações, já que as normas que geralmente são adotadas para o cálculo das resistências das barras componentes do reticulado não levam em consideração a redução de inércia que é feita nas extremidades destas para a formação deste tipo de ligação. A não consideração da redução da inércia nas extremidades das barras tem levado à constatação de que é cada vez mais freqüente a presença de problemas de instabilidade estrutural que pode levar ao colapso parcial ou até mesmo total da estrutura. Por outro lado ainda existem estudos que comprovem a veracidade das hipóteses de cálculo que foram assumidas para este tipo de ligação. Com o objetivo de melhor compreender este comportamento, são abordados neste trabalho alguns aspectos estruturais e construtivos das estruturas metálicas espaciais, através de uma série de ensaios experimentais. Inicialmente apresenta-se um breve histórico dos sistemas estruturais. Isto é seguido de informações gerais a respeito da classificação das estruturas espaciais e do tipo de ligação mais usadas. A seguir é feito um estudo dos programas existentes na PUC-RIO e que foram utilizados para à análise estrutural da treliça espacial a ser ensaiada. Apresenta-se também um breve roteiro de cálculo para uma cobertura em treliça espacial. Finalmente são apresentados resultados experimentais de testes em escala real de uma estrutura de 12,0 x 12,0 m, avaliando os modos de ruínas presentes. Estes resultados são confrontados com os valores das resistências nominais de projeto seguindo as recomendações de norma.
This work presents an investigation of the structural behaviour of tubular space trusses composed of continuous end flattened members stacked above each other and joined together by a single bolt. One of the main motivations for this work comes from the fact that this structural solution is very commonly used in Brazil. The main reasons for that are the economy achieved in fabrication and the simplicity of erection associated with that structural solution. This solution also proves to be competitive when compared to other commercial systems. On the other hand, the structural design of these trusses are still subjected to some criticism since the loss of stiffness in the bars´ extremities is not taken into account. To enlighten this problem a full-scale experimental programme was performed in a 12m x 12m space structure. The adopted structure consisted of a diagonal on square mesh with top and bottom chord members of 2000mm and 1414mm and a 1500mm mesh height. The aim of the this programme was to investigate the ultimate compression resistance of the structural members taking into account the effect of the flattened ends and the type of connection used. The experiments ranged from tests where all the structural nodes used a single eccentric bolt to others where plated connectors were used in the supports to eliminate second- order moments. The experimental results demonstrated that the ultimate resistance of the structure with the eccentric connections only presented a small reduction when compared to other non-eccentric systems. The tests also confirmed that the flattened end of the members and the geometric characteristics of plated connectors are very significant parameters in the structure´s ultimate behaviour.
Las extructuras espaciales tubulares padronizadas han ganado mayor espacio en la construcción civil brasilera. No obstante, se observa que en estas construcciones, conmúnmente se utilizan uniones tipo excéntrica con punta suavizada, debido a su bajo costo. Poco se sabe sobre el comportamiento extructural de estas uniones, ya que las normas que generalmente se adoptan para el cálculo de las resistencias de las barras que componen el reticulado no consideran la reducción de inercia en las extremidades de las barras para la formación de este tipo de unión. Se ha constantado que al no considerar la reducción de la inercia en las extremidades de las barras aparecen com mayor frecuencia problemas de inestabilidad extructural que pueden llevar al colapso parcial o incluso total de la extructura. Por otro lado, existen estudios que comprueban la veracidad de las hipótesis de cálculo que fueron asumidas para este tipo de unión. Con el objetivo de comprender mejor este comportamiento, se abordan en este trabajo algunos aspectos extructurales y constructivos de las extructuras metálicas espaciales, a través de una serie de ensayos experimentales. Inicialmente se presenta un breve histórico de los sistemas extructurales, con informaciones generales sobre clasificación de las extructuras espaciales y los tipos de unión más usadas. Seguidamente se presentan los programas existentes en la PUC-RIO que fueron utilizados para el análisis extructural de la celosía espacial que sería ensayada. Se presenta también un breve algoritmo para el cálculo para una cobertura en celosía espacial. Finalmente se presentan los resultados experimentales de pruebas en escala real de una extructura de 12,0 x 12,0 n, evaluando los modos de ruínas presentes. Estes resultados se comparan con los valores de las resistencias nominales del proyecto siguiendo las recomendaciones de la norma.
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Kao, Alexander Peter. "Spatial mechanical behaviour of skin." Thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 2016. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/23192.

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Skin is a complex biological composite system that serves as the outermost barrier to the environment and is mechanically robust. Understanding the mechanical properties of skin is important to improve and compare current in vitro experiments to the physiological conditions as the mechanical properties have a crucial role in determining cell behaviour. The mechanical behaviour of skin at the cellular level is expected to be dominated by the collagen fibre network within the dermis, which displays an anisotropic mechanical response to macroscopic loading. However, the three dimensional mechanical properties of skin at the nanoscale are not well understood. The aim of this work is to examine the mechanical properties of skin at the nanoscale in three dimensions and explore the links between the nanoscale and the macroscopic behaviour. Multiple sample preparation techniques are employed to expose the different layers of skin for mechanical testing and the elastic modulus of skin is evaluated by using atomic force microscopy (AFM) nanoindentation. The effect of freezing skin to cryogenic temperatures on the mechanical properties is evaluated and found to have no impact on the mechanical response of skin, indicating that the composition and structure of skin are robust enough to withstand the cryosectioning sample preparation methods used to expose the transverse layers of skin. AFM indentation was used to evaluate the elastic modulus of the dermis depending on the orientation of the sample and found to have an isotropic mechanical response. This result is opposite to anisotropy observed in macroscopic skin due to small scale mechanical testing ignoring collagen fibril orientation during strain. The variations in the elastic modulus of skin are also evaluated by AFM indentation at high spatial resolution to construct a composite model of the mechanical behaviour of skin at the nanoscale to predict the macroscopic response. The AFM nanoindentation technique was extended to evaluate the mechanical properties of a cell derived matrix deposited on an electrospun nanofibre scaffold, where the results indicate increasing the nanofibre diameter produces a cell derived matrix with an increased elastic modulus for more effective scaffolds. This work highlights the use of AFM mechanical testing to evaluate the nanoscale mechanical behaviour of skin, treated as a composite biological system, and determine the influence of the length scale and sample orientation on the observed mechanical response.
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Tan, Ning. "Posture and Space in Virtual Characters : application to Ambient Interaction and Affective Interaction." Phd thesis, Université Paris Sud - Paris XI, 2012. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00675937.

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Multimodal communication is key to smooth interactions between people. However, multimodality remains limited in current human-computer interfaces. For example, posture is less explored than other modalities, such as speech and facial expressions. The postural expressions of others have a huge impact on how we situate and interpret an interaction. Devices and interfaces for representing full-body interaction are available (e.g., Kinect and full-body avatars), but systems still lack computational models relating these modalities to spatial and emotional communicative functions.The goal of this thesis is to lay the foundation for computational models that enable better use of posture in human-computer interaction. This necessitates addressing several research questions: How can we symbolically represent postures used in interpersonal communication? How can these representations inform the design of virtual characters' postural expressions? What are the requirements of a model of postural interaction for application to interactive virtual characters? How can this model be applied in different spatial and social contexts?In our approach, we start with the manual annotation of video corpora featuring postural expressions. We define a coding scheme for the manual annotation of posture at several levels of abstraction and for different body parts. These representations were used for analyzing the spatial and temporal relations between postures displayed by two human interlocutors during spontaneous conversations.Next, representations were used to inform the design of postural expressions displayed by virtual characters. For studying postural expressions, we selected one promising, relevant component of emotions: the action tendency. Animations were designed featuring action tendencies in a female character. These animations were used as a social context in perception tests.Finally, postural expressions were designed for a virtual character used in an ambient interaction system. These postural and spatial behaviors were used to help users locate real objects in an intelligent room (iRoom). The impact of these bodily expressions on the user¡¯s performance, subjective perception and behavior was evaluated in a user studyFurther studies of bodily interaction are called for involving, for example, motion-capture techniques, integration with other spatial modalities such as gaze, and consideration of individual differences in bodily interaction.
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Thornton, Simon John. "Spatial behaviour in the retail environment." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1991. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12594/.

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This research has focused on the development of techniques for the collection, analysis and presentation of large movement and behavioural data sets. The research has followed three strands: the investigation of pedestrian flow networks in the central business district, the relationship of pedestrian flow and retail turnover, and the study of movement and behaviour of customers in-stores. This thesis reports on the development of a self contained time-lapse camera system. The cameras were used to record flow conditions and people in both the city centre and in-store environments. For each person seen in the films a number of demographic and behavioural variables were extracted. These were then used as the data base for computer modelling systems. The investigation of the potential development of a turnover interface was necessary to test whether the variables extracted from the film were of any predictive value. It was found that it was possible to segregate the shopping from the non-shopping population on the basis of the data collected. Two movement models were developed. The first, an Origin- Destination model called WONKA, was based on the network estimation procedures used in vehicular modelling. WONKA was applied in both environments for the prediction of paths through the studied network. PRETTY, a customer simulation and animation program, recreated the recorded data and allowed the user to select data sets according to any combination of the recorded variables. Subsequently a probable path module was added to PRETTY as it became apparent that the tight theoretical basis of WONKA was not suited to the free layouts of many stores.
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Mitchell, Debora Renee Dehn. "Psychometric evaluation of the three-D test of spatial visualization." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/28786.

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Caldwell, Judy Inez. "Dissociations between conscious and unconscious influences of memory for object location." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/NQ36630.pdf.

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Sturz, Bradley R. Katz Jeffrey S. "Geometric rule learning by pigeons." Auburn, Ala., 2007. http://repo.lib.auburn.edu/2006%20Fall/Dissertations/STURZ_BRADLEY_52.pdf.

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20

Eliker, Michelle Lee. "The use of spatial reference cues and primary cue strategies for maze running by the desert tortoise, Gopherus Agassizii." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1997. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1438.

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21

Robles-Sotelo, Elias. "Some spatial characteristics of behavior: A new technology." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185006.

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A methodology consisting of an experimental chamber, operational definitions of behavior categories, and methods for quantitative analysis of the use of space by small rodents is presented. The chamber consists of a large open box in which the location of the animal was determined by a grid of 24 x 24 infrared beams. Recording was achieved by sampling every 5 seconds, and storing the status of the 48 photosensors in a disk file for later analysis. Each sample produced a binary matrix with 576 cells identifying the location of the animal at that time. From this sequence of matrices a number of behaviors were defined and described. Exploration was measured as the cumulative percentage of unique cells visited by the subject during the observation period. Monotonically decelerating curves were found, with exploration during the first day in the chamber significantly different from that on the following three days, according to the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. Time allocation was measured as the relative frequency of visits to individual cells computed for various time intervals. Three dimensional charts with spatial location along the X and Y axis, and relative frequency in the Z axis were used to represent time allocation to space or "spatial preference". These surfaces were transformed into vectors and compared with the same goodness-of-fit test. The operational definition of time allocation as well as the methods for comparing the surfaces were found adequate to reliably describe nesting and patrolling patterns of Ratus Norvegicus. Finally, activity was defined as the amount of space visited as a function of time. This measure of rat of location change was computed in 15 min. intervals for 15 consecutive nights. A consistent 3-hour cycle of activity was detected using ARIMA methods. The cycle was accurately described and predicted with a model containing one periodic and one nonperiodic components. The usefulness of this nonintrusive technology for digitizing behavior in space is discussed in terms of possible applications to studies on learning, behavioral pharmacology, and ethology.
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Keiser, Jeffrey T. "Homing Success of Migrants Versus Nonmigrants: Do Differences in Spatial Memory Generalize Across Spatial Scales?" W&M ScholarWorks, 2003. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539626402.

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23

Sandin, Johan. "The hippocampal opioid system : role in spatial learning /." Stockholm, 2000. http://diss.kib.ki.se/2000/91-628-4332-x/.

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24

Schultz, Jeffrey T. "Spatial and Behavioral Patterns of Captive Coyotes." DigitalCommons@USU, 2017. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/6341.

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Environmental enrichment is a technique used at many captive animal facilities that can improve the well-being of their animals. It seeks to enhance habitat features and promote natural behavior by providing a variety of practical ways for captive animals to control their environmental settings, especially during stressful circumstances. Enclosure features, such as shelter structures, are one tool that promotes wild behavior by adding complexity to an enclosure’s physical environment. Enrichment efforts for captive wildlife are most effective when they are specialized to the biological needs of the animals. Human activity may alter captive animal behavior and utility of enclosure features, and there is concern that human presence can negatively impact the welfare of some captive animals. Captive coyotes (Canis latrans) at the USDA-National Wildlife Research Center (NWRC) Predator Research Facility in Millville, UT, USA, are maintained for research on biology, ecology, physiology and behavior. Coyotes at the research facility are routinely noticed utilizing shelter structures to hide, rest, and display vigilant behavior. Because they regularly use these simple structures, new and more complex enrichment shelter structures were installed to be evaluated. Specific research objectives aimed to assess (1) coyote enclosure utilization and shelter structure preferences, and (2) coyote spatial and behavioral responses to human activity. Using 32 mated coyote pairs rotated through eight 1.5-acre enclosures for 28-day trials over the winter months (January – March) of 2015 and 2016, spatial and behavioral patterns were monitored via the implementation of GPS-collars and live behavioral observations. Coyotes showed preference for shelter structure designs, but still spent most of their time at the perimeter and open areas of their enclosures. Complex structures were preferred over simple structures. Coyotes most often demonstrated inactive and vigilant behavior without human activity, but showed increased vigilance when there was human activity. Human activity also stimulated coyotes to become more active than inactive and reduce their utilization of enrichment structures. Although there was no clear preference for one specific type of enrichment structure, composite evidence from GPS-collars and behavioral data suggest the ramp may have heightened biological suitability. This study advances the knowledge of captive coyote spatial patterns and helps improve environmental enrichment planning for captive animals by exploring effective methods of adding complexity to animal enclosures.
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25

Reeler, Claire. "Spatial patterns and behaviour at Dunefield Midden." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/21975.

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An analysis of the spatial patterning present in the arrangement of material and features at the site of Dunefield Midden, is presented in this thesis. All items from the site are analysed, except the remains of large fauna. The site of Dunefield Midden is situated about two kilometres north of Eland's Bay on the Cape West coast, South Africa. Radiocarbon dates indicate that the site was occupied about 670 years B.P. The nature of the food remains and artefacts from this site suggests a single occupation, for a limited period, by a group of hunter-gatherers. Features from the site examined in detail include ash features (such as hearths, roasting pits and ash dumps) and dumps (in particular, a feature called the 'main dump'). Comparisons with ethnographic and ethnoarchaeological material are made to aid the process of interpretation. Other features common to ethnographic hunter-gatherer campsites, but for which there is no evidence at Dunefield Midden (such as structures), are discussed. The type of site, possible length of occupation and number of people are discussed from the analysis of features and other material. Suggestions are made that the site was a base camp occupied by between ten and twenty-five people for a month to a month and a half. Finally, conclusions are made about the nature of the behaviours which caused the spatial patterning evident on the site. The level of detail reached in the interpretations of patterning and behaviour is far greater than that possible from more complex, deeply stratified sites. Thus, the value of researching different kinds of sites is shown. The use of a Geographic Information System to analyse information and create distribution maps is unique in spatial archaeological studies. The use of this system shows its value as a new technology of great potential use to all archaeologists. The spatial autocorrelation test of randomness of distributions is also introduced and is compared to other statistical tests used by archaeologists previously. This test is applied to distributions of items from the site, produced with the aid of the Geographic Information System. The use of site indices describes a method of normalising distributions, with the possibility of using satellite technology to analyse these distributions. This thesis, therefore, reaches a deeper level of interpretation of human behaviour at one particular site, than generally has been achieved previously. It also introduces new techniques and technologies particularly suited to this analysis and potentially of use to other archaeologists, even in different fields of study.
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Schweizer, Karin. "Strömt die Welt in unseren Köpfen? : Kontiguität und Abruf in mentalen Karten /." Wiesbaden : Dt. Univ.-Verl, 2004. http://www.gbv.de/dms/bs/toc/393202909.pdf.

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Au, Zher Wen, and 歐哲彣. "Effects of postnatal interference of vestibular GABA transmission on navigation behavior in adult rats." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/206562.

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Although spatial navigation is predominantly guided by allothetic visual cues, idiothetic cues can obtain control when familiar visual cues are not available. In path integration, the current position and orientation are estimated and continuously updated using idiothetic cues, which are contributed by the vestibular system. Previous studies have revealed that vestibular lesioned rats were significantly impaired in path integration. Rats assessed in the current study received neonatal treatment with either VU0240551 (KCC2 blocker) or muscimol (GABAA receptors agonist) in the vestibular nuclei. Path integration ability appears to be intact in rats receiving either treatment. However, VU0240551-treated rats displayed impairments in their ability to resolve conflicting allothetic and idiothetic cues. Therefore, it is proposed that the ability to properly resolve a cue-conflict requires the normal polarity of GABA and/or glycine action in the vestibular nuclei during the neonatal period.
published_or_final_version
Physiology
Master
Master of Medical Sciences
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Watson, Deborah J. "The neurobiology of spatial reversal learning in weanling rats / an analysis of the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, and striatum." Access to citation, abstract and download form provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company; downloadable PDF file, 219 p, 2009. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1885693191&sid=5&Fmt=2&clientId=8331&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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29

Sosa, Machado Yamaya. "Studies of Visuospatial Attention." Diss., North Dakota State University, 2012. https://hdl.handle.net/10365/26486.

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Pseudoneglect (PN) reveals a contralateral bias in the deployment of visuospatial attention by the dominant (right) hemisphere. The magnitude of PN is phasically modulated by transient exogenous visual cues which automatically recruit attention to cued locations. Optimal cue-line onset asynchrony (SOA), cue-contrast of this cueing effect and the relative effectiveness of cue locations relative to line endpoints are unknown. Similarly, the direction of line scanning modulates the tonic bias, although the origin of this modulation is unknown. The present experiments aim at informing theories about visuospatial attention as well as some neurological conditions such as hemispatial neglect. Four experiments were conducted where observers performed a tachistoscopic visual line bisection task. In experiments 1-3, pretransected lines were preceded by peripheral cues delivered to the left and right line ends at a variety of (1) stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs), (2) contrasts and (3) horizontal positions relative to the line endpoints. Experiment 4 used a tachistoscopic line bisection protocol to manipulate the type (saccadic, smooth pursuit) and direction (leftward, rightward) of attentional scanning, executed with or without eye movements (overt, covert) while performing eye-tracking. Experiment 1 demonstrated early attentional capture with optimal cue-line SOA of 60 ms. Experiment 2 demonstrated that cue contrasts below 12% were ineffective in modulating perceived midpoint and the maximal effect occurred for cues of 100% contrast. Experiment 3 demonstrated modulation of the spatial error resulting from cues at all locations except the one lying completely beyond the line endpoints. Experiment 4 showed that leftward scanning resulted in leftward error and rightward scanning resulted in rightward error. Smooth pursuit scanning was more potent than saccadic scanning. Overt scanning was more potent than covert scanning and overall the strongest effects were found in leftward overt smooth pursuit scanning. Results from the cueing experiments suggest that the mechanisms subserving exogenous attentional capture in line bisection are fast, predominantly parvocellular-mediated and exert their effects at least partially in an object-referenced coordinate system. Experiment 4 suggests attentional magnification of the left line halve where visuospatial attention is deployed asymmetrically ahead of a scanned target.
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Narsilio, Guillermo Andres. "Spatial Variability and Terminal Density -Implications in Soil Behavior-." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/10462.

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Geotechnical engineers often face important discrepancies between the observed and the predicted behavior of geosystems. Two conceptual frameworks are hypothesized as possible causes: the ubiquitous spatial variability in soil properties and process-dependent terminal densities inherent to granular materials. The effects of spatial variability are explored within conduction and diffusion processes. Mixtures, layered systems, inclusions and random fields are considered, using numerical, experimental and analytical methods. Results include effective medium parameters and convenient design and analysis tools for various common engineering cases. In addition, the implications of spatial variability on inverse problems in diffusion are numerically explored for the common case of layered media. The second hypothesis states that there exists a unique terminal density for every granular material and every process. Common geotechnical properties are readily cast in this framework, and new experimental data are presented to further explore its implications. Finally, an unprecedented field study of blast densification is documented. It involves comprehensive laboratory and site characterization programs and an extensive field monitoring component. This full scale test lasts one year and includes four blasting events.
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Yan, Ping. "SPATIAL-TEMPORAL DATA ANALYTICS AND CONSUMER SHOPPING BEHAVIOR MODELING." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195232.

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RFID technologies are being recently adopted in the retail space tracking consumer in-store movements. The RFID-collected data are location sensitive and constantly updated as a consumer moves inside a store. By capturing the entire shopping process including the movement path rather than analyzing merely the shopping basket at check-out, the RFID-collected data provide unique and exciting opportunities to study consumer purchase behavior and thus lead to actionable marketing applications.This dissertation research focuses on (a) advancing the representation and management of the RFID-collected shopping path data; (b) analyzing, modeling and predicting customer shopping activities with a spatial pattern discovery approach and a dynamic probabilistic modeling based methodology to enable advanced spatial business intelligence. The spatial pattern discovery approach identifies similar consumers based on a similarity metric between consumer shopping paths. The direct applications of this approach include a novel consumer segmentation methodology and an in-store real-time product recommendation algorithm. A hierarchical decision-theoretic model based on dynamic Bayesian networks (DBN) is developed to model consumer in-store shopping activities. This model can be used to predict a shopper's purchase goal in real time, infer her shopping actions, and estimate the exact product she is viewing at a time. We develop an approximate inference algorithm based on particle filters and a learning procedure based on the Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm to perform filtering and prediction for the network model. The developed models are tested on a real RFID-collected shopping trip dataset with promising results in terms of prediction accuracies of consumer purchase interests.This dissertation contributes to the marketing and information systems literature in several areas. First, it provides empirical insights about the correlation between spatial movement patterns and consumer purchase interests. Such correlation is demonstrated with in-store shopping data, but can be generalized to other marketing contexts such as store visit decisions by consumers and location and category management decisions by a retailer. Second, our study shows the possibility of utilizing consumer in-store movement to predict consumer purchase. The predictive models we developed have the potential to become the base of an intelligent shopping environment where store managers customize marketing efforts to provide location-aware recommendations to consumers as they travel through the store.
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Kerl, John R. "Critical behavior for the model of random spatial permutations." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/193647.

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We examine a phase transition in a model of random spatial permutations which originates in a study of the interacting Bose gas. Permutations are weighted according to point positions; the low-temperature onset of the appearance of arbitrarily long cycles is connected to the phase transition of Bose-Einstein condensates. In our simplified model, point positions are held fixed on the fully occupied cubic lattice and interactions are expressed as Ewens-type weights on cycle lengths of permutations. The critical temperature of the transition to long cycles depends on an interaction-strength parameter α. For weak interactions, the shift in critical temperature is expected to be linear in α with constant of linearity c. Using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods and finite-size scaling, we find c = 0.618 ± 0.086. This finding matches a similar analytical result of Ueltschi and Betz. We also examine the mean longest cycle length as a fraction of the number of sites in long cycles, recovering an earlier result of Shepp and Lloyd for non-spatial permutations. The plan of this paper is as follows. We begin with a non-technical discussion of the historical context of the project, along with a mention of alternative approaches. Relevant previous works are cited, thus annotating the bibliography. The random-cycle approach to the BEC problem requires a model of spatial permutations. This model it is of its own probabilistic interest; it is developed mathematically, without reference to the Bose gas. Our Markov-chain Monte Carlo algorithms for sampling from the random-cycle distribution - the swap-only, swap-and-reverse, band-update, and worm algorithms - are presented, compared, and contrasted. Finite-size scaling techniques are used to obtain information about infinite-volume quantities from finite-volume computational data.
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Painter, Michael Scott. "Characterizing the Role of Magnetic Cues Underlying Spatial Behavior." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74049.

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In the 50+ years since the discovery of magnetic compass orientation by migratory songbirds, evidence for the use of magnetic cues has been obtained for a range of taxonomic groups, including several classes of vertebrate and invertebrate taxa. Surprisingly, however, the biophysical mechanisms and biological substrate that underlie magnetic sensing are still not fully understood. Moreover, while use of magnetic cues for compass orientation is intuitive, the functional significance of other forms of behavioral responses mediated by magnetic cues, such as spontaneous magnetic alignment, is less clear. The following research was carried out to investigate the mechanisms underlying magnetic orientation in vertebrates and invertebrates. This involved the modification of existing experimental systems to characterize responses to magnetic cues in laboratory animals (flies, mice) and the development of novel techniques for studying the role of magnetic cues in the spatial behavior of free-living animals (red foxes). Chapter II examines magnetic orientation in wild-type Drosophila melanogaster larvae. We show that three strains of larvae reared under non-directional ultraviolet (UV) light exhibit quadramodal spontaneous orientation along the anti-cardinal compass directions (i.e. northeast, southeast, southwest, northwest) when tested in a radially symmetrical environment under UV light. Double-blind experiments cancelling the horizontal component of the magnetic field confirmed that the response is dependent on magnetic cues rather non-magnetic features of the test environment. Furthermore, we argue that the larval quadramodal pattern of response is consistent with properties of magnetic compass orientation observed in previous studies of adult Drosophila and laboratory mice, both of which have been proposed to be mediated by a light-dependent magnetic compass mechanism. Chapter III explores the use of novel biologging techniques to collect behavioral and spatial data from free-roaming mammals. Specifically, a previous observational study of free- roaming red foxes found a 4-fold increase in the success of predatory 'mousing' attacks when foxes were facing ~north-northeast, consistent with magnetic alignment responses reported for a range of terrestrial animals. The authors propose that the magnetic field may be used to increase accuracy of mousing attacks. Using tri-axial accelerometer and magnetometer bio-loggers fitted to semi-domesticated red foxes, we created ']magnetic ethograms' from behavioral and magnetic machine learning algorithms 'trained'] to identify three discrete behaviors (i.e. foraging, trotting, and mousing-like jumps) from raw accelerometer signatures and to classify the magnetic headings of mousing-like jumps into 45° sectors from raw magnetometer data. The classifier's ability to accurately identify behaviors from a separate fox not used to train the algorithm suggests that these techniques can be used in future experiments to obtain reliable magnetic ethograms for free-roaming foxes. We also developed the first radio-frequency emitting collar that broadcasts in the low MHz frequency range shown to disrupt magnetic compass responses in a host of animals. The radio-frequency collars coupled with biologgers will provide a powerful tool to characterize magnetic alignment responses in predatory red foxes and can be adapted for use in studies of magnetic alignment and magnetic compass orientation in other free-roaming mammals. Chapter 3 discusses findings from a magnetic nest building assay involving male labratory mice. Mice trained to position nests in one of four directions relative to the magnetic field exhibited both learned magnetic compass responses and fixed magnetic nest positioning orientation consistent with northeast-southwest spontaneous magnetic alignment behavior previously reported for wild mice and bank voles. This is the first mammalian assay in which both learned magnetic compass orientation and spontaneous magnetic alignment were exhibited in the same species, and suggests that the use of magnetic cues in rodents may be more flexible that previously realized.
Ph. D.
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34

Swarlis, Linda L. O'Connor Brian C. "Enhancement of spatial ability in girls in a single-sex environment through spatial experience and the impact on information seeking." [Denton, Tex.] : University of North Texas, 2008. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-9734.

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35

Effenberger, Etienne. "Social structure and spatial-use in a group-living lizard, Cordylus cataphractus." Thesis, Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/16320.

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Thesis (MSc)--University of Stellenbosch, 2004.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: There is overwhelming evidence that the Armadillo Lizard, Cordylus cataphractus, forms permanent aggregations, and that termites are possibly the most important component of the diet of this species. In addition, the spinose morphology and defensive tail-biting behaviour displayed by this lizard species strongly imply that individuals move away from the crevice, where they are more vulnerable to predation. Therefore the aim of this part of the study was to investigate whether C. cataphractus harvest termites at the termite foraging ports and to discuss the likely ecological implications of termitophagy for this species. A quadrate at the Graafwater study site, including several crevices housing C. cataphractus groups, was measured out. All the foraging ports of the subterranean harvester termite (Microhodotermes viator) present in the quadrate, were located and their positions recorded in respect to the distance from the nearest crevice housing lizards. The presence of C. cataphractus tracks at the foraging ports was used to verify whether individuals visited specific termite foraging ports. Tracks were found at foraging ports located at an average distance of 6.1 m, but were also located at foraging ports up to 20 m from the nearest crevice. The results strongly support the hypothesis that C. cataphractus individuals move away from the crevice to feed on termites. Termitophagy and the heavy armature of C. cataphractus appear to be key factors in the group-living behaviour of this species. Termitophagy allows individuals to live in groups as competition for food at the home crevice will be limited. Theheavy armature of C. cataphractus renders it clumsy and slow-moving, compared to other cordylids. Group-living will, however, eliminate juvenile dispersal and mate-searching excursions, activities which, in the light of the heavy morphology of the species, may result in high predation impact. The global objective of the study was to investigate social structure and space-use in Cordylus cataphractus. For the correct interpretation of data on the latter, it was necessary to first establish an ethogram for the study animal. Members of a multi-male group located at the Graafwater site, including all age-sex classes, were observed in the field by telescope, for a total of 102 hours. All individuals were observed to predominantly display maintenance behavioural act systems, however, agonistic act systems were also observed. Aggression levels were determined for the respective agonistic behavioural acts observed. Males were highly aggressive and displayed the most aggression (67.42 %). Females and sub-adults displayed aggression for 34.97 % and 37.75 % of the total observation time, respectively. Juveniles did not display aggression at all. Mating behaviour was also observed and described. An ethogram was thus established for the first time for C. cataphractus, and was compared to the ethograms available for a few other cordylids. The spatial distribution of individuals within a population has an important impact on the social structure that ensues. Living in a group imposes several pressures on the individual and competition for mates is one. The main aim of the study was to determine the space-use of all theindividuals included in a multi-male Cordylus cataphractus group (n = 55), to elaborate on the mating system. Specific focus was on the adult males and females of the multi-male group, because, ultimately, the manner in which individuals, particularly the adult males and females, utilise space, determines the mating system. The mating system is an important aspect of social structure. A two-dimensional grid pattern was delineated at a free-living, multi-male group’s crevice, situated at the Graafwater study site, to be able to plot the position of each individual during observations. All marked individuals, that were visible, were scanned through a telescope and their respective positions were recorded at 30-minute intervals. Arcview 3.2 Geographical Information Software was used to create a computerised model replicate of the two-dimensional grid pattern at the crevice, and to graphically depict the recorded positions for each individual. The space-use of males overlapped greatly with the space-use of females (66.12 ± 31.81 %), but a 0 % overlap in space-use was observed among adult males. The space-use of sub-adults and juveniles overlapped highly among one another, as well as with the space-use of adult males and females. The results showed conclusively that adult male C. cataphractus are territorial, defending specific sites at the crevice. The territory of each male included in the multi-male group incorporated at least one female. The space-use of several females incorporated the space-use of two or more males. Males were observed to mate with one or more females, and one female was observed to mate with two different males on more than one occasion. Thus the evidence strongly suggests that C. cataphractus males display typical territorial polygyny whereas females may be promiscuous.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Daar is oorweldigende bewyse dat die pantsergordelakkedis, Cordylus cataphractus, permanent in groepe bly en dat termiete waarskynlik die belangrikste komponent in die dieet van hierdie spesie is. Die stekelrige morfologie en die stert-byt beskermingsgedrag is verder sterk aanduidings dat hierdie akkedisse tyd weg van hul klipskeure spandeer waar hulle meer gevoelig vir predasie is. Die doelwit van die eerste deel van die studie was om te bepaal of C. cataphractus termiete by die voedingspoorte van die termietneste oes en verder ook om die moontlike ekologiese implikasies wat termitofagie vir die spesie inhou, te bespreek. ‘n Kwadraat was by die Graafwater studielokaliteit uitgemeet om verskeie akkedisgroepe in te sluit. Al die voedingspoorte van die suidelike grasdraer termiet (Microhodotermes viator) binne die kwadraat is gevind en die afstande na die naaste klipskeur wat akkedisse huisves, is vir elke voedingspoort bepaal. Die teenwoordigheid van C. cataphractus spore in die sand by die voedingspoorte was gebruik om besoeke aan spesifieke voedingspoorte te bevestig. Spore is by voedingspoorte gemiddeld 6.1 m vanaf die naaste akkedisgroep gevind, maar tot so ver as 20 m vanaf die naaste akkedisgroep. Die resultate verleen sterk ondersteuning vir die hipotese dat C. cataphractus individue op termiete weg van hul klipskeur af voed. Termitofagie en die swaar pantser van C. cataphractus is waarskynlik sleutelfaktore in die groeplewe-gedrag van die spesie. Termitofagie laat groeplewe toe omdat kompetisie vir voedsel by die klipskeur beperk sal wees. Die swaar pantser van C. cataphractus het tot gevolg dat die spesie lomp en stadig is in vergelyking met ander gordelakkedisse. Groeplewe sal egter natale spreiding en maatsoek-ekskursies, aktiwiteite wat in die lig van die lompheid van die spesie swaar predasie impak tot gevolg kan hê, uitskakel. Die oorhoofse doelwit van die studie was om die sosiale struktuur en spesifiek ruimtebenutting by C. cataphractus te ondersoek. Vir korrekte interpretasie van data oor lg. was dit egter eers nodig om ‘n etogram vir die studiedier saam te stel. Lede van ‘n multi-mannetjie groep, wat alle ouderdomsgrootte klasse ingesluit het, is by die Graafwater studielokaliteit m.b.v. ‘n teleskoop vir ‘n totaal van 102 uur dopgehou. Al die individue in die groep het oorwegend instandhoudingshandelingsisteme vertoon, alhoewel agonistiese handelingsisteme ook vertoon is. Aggressievlakke is vir die verskeie agonistiese gedragshandelings bepaal. Mannetjies was hoogs aggressief en het die meeste aggressie vertoon (67.42 %). Wyfies en subvolwassenes het aggressie vir 34.97 % en 37.75 % van die totale observasietyd respektiewelik getoon. Jong individue het geen aggressie getoon nie. Paringsgedrag was ook waargeneem en beskryf. ‘n Etogram is dus vir die eerste keer vir C. cataphractus opgestel en is ook vergelyk met etogramme van ander gordelakkedisse. Die ruimtelike verspreiding van individue binne ‘n populasie het ‘n belangrike invloed op die sosiale struktuur wat daaruit voortvloei. Om in ‘n groep te lewe, plaas verskeie drukke op die individue binne die groep en kompetisie vir maats is een hiervan. The hoofdoelwit van die studie was om die ruimtebenutting van al die individue binne ‘n multi-mannetjie groep van C. cataphractus (n = 55) te bepaal en om die paringsisteem in so ‘n groep te ondersoek. Die spesifieke fokus was op die volwasse mannetjies en wyfies, omdat die paringsisteem deur die wyse waarop volwasse individue ruimte benut, bepaal word. Die studie is by die Graafwater studielokaliteit gedoen. Die oppervlak buite ‘n klipskeur wat deur ‘n multi-mannetjie groep bewoon word is opgedeel in sektore om die kartering van die posisies van die individue tydens observasietye moontlik te maak. Al die individue is vooraf met verfkodes langs die kant van die kop gemerk en op gegewe observasiedae is individuele posisies elke 30 min aangeteken. Arcview 3.2 Geographical Information Software was gebruik om ‘n tweedimensionele, gerekenariseerde replikaat van die klipskeur en onmiddelike omgewing te skep en om die waargenome posisies van individue grafies voor te stel. Die ruimtebenutting van mannetjies het grootliks met dié van wyfies oorvleuel, terwyl zero oorvleueling tussen mannetjies waargeneem is. Ruimtebenutting van subvolwasse en jong individue het ook grootliks onderling oorvleuel en ook met dié van volwasse mannetjies en wyfies. Die resultate toon duidelik aan dat volwasse mannetjies territoriaal is en dat spesifieke standplase rondom die klipskeur verdedig word. Die territorium van elke volwasse mannetjie het of ‘n gedeelte of die hele ruimtebenutting van ten minste een volwasse wyfie ingesluit. Ruimbenutting van verskeie wyfies het met dié van twee of selfs meer mannetjies oorvleuel. Mannetjies is waargeneem om met meer as een wyfie te paar en ten minste een wyfie het met meer as een mannetjie gepaar. Die resultate dui dus sterk daarop dat C. cataphractus mannetjies tipies terrotoriale poligenie vertoon terwyl wyfies weer promisku is.
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36

SHETTEL-NEUBER, MARY JOYCE. "ZOO EXHIBIT DESIGN: A POST-OCCUPANCY EVALUATION AND COMPARISON OF ANIMAL ENCLOSURES." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/188163.

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The present study, in contrast with previous work that has isolated one or two important factors influencing the status of the zoo, considered the three important zoo reference groups--animals, visitors, and staff members--and their interrelationships within the zoo environment. Two approaches were used to investigate the system of interactions within the zoo. First, an in-depth examination of a new set of naturalistic exhibits was performed. Second, a comparison of two of these naturalistic exhibits with two older, sterile exhibits which housed the same species at the same zoo was made. Multiple methods were used in the present study and included behavior mapping of visitors, staff, and animals, timing of visitor stays at exhibits, tracking of visitors through the exhibits, a visitor questionnaire, and interviews with staff members. One major finding was the lack of correspondence among the major groups as to the acceptability of exhibits. For example, one exhibit which was considered beneficial to the enclosed animals and was well utilized and positively evaluated by visitors presented staff members with great difficulties in animal containment and exhibit maintenance. Comparisons of naturalistic enclosures and sterile cement enclosures housing the same species revealed no consistent, clear-cut differences in animal and visitor behavior, however, attitudinal differences were found for staff members and visitors. Visitors and staff members preferred the naturalistic exhibits and perceived them as more beneficial to animals and visitors. These findings were discussed in terms of theoretical and applied issues relevant to zoo design and management and to research in zoos.
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37

Wolff, Vincent James. "Spatial manipulation as a covariant of mental practice." PDXScholar, 1990. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4112.

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This experiment examined the relationship between a subject's ability to manipulate spatial relationships and utilize mental practice in the mirror drawing ability of 45 naive volunteer college students, using a six-pointed star track. The spatial manipulation abilities of all subjects were assessed with the Minnesota Paper Form Board Test, after which the subjects were divided into three treatment groups (no practice, mental practice, and physical practice) of 15 subjects using a blocked random design based upon their MPFBT scores. All three groups were trained in the mirror drawing task and given three physical practice pre-trials for familiarization. The physical practice group (PP) was given six, 80-second physical practice trials with a 40-second interpolated rest/reading period during which they read from a standardized poetry text. The mental practice group (MP) was given six, 80-second mental practice trials with the same 40- second interpolated rest/reading period, and the no practice group (NP) was allowed to read from the standardized text for an equal amount of time. Following administration of the treatment conditions, all subjects were given three physical practice post-trials in the mirror drawing task. The mean of pre-trials two and three were subtracted from the mean of the three post-trials to obtain an improvement score. The subjects' scores on the MPFBT were compared to their improvement scores using the Spearman Rank-Order Correlation (rho) test, but there was no significant correlation between the two abilities.
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38

Maurin, Tiphaine. "Occupations humaines de l’Oldowayen ancien et facteurs en-vironnementaux : interrelations et évolutions à partir des en-sembles archéologiques de la Formation de Shungura (Basse Vallée de l'Omo, Éthiopie)." Thesis, Bordeaux, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017BORD0891/document.

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Dans la Formation de Shungura l’apparition du comportement de taille de la pierre coïncide avec l’apparition de l’Oldowayen ancien et se concentre sur un laps de temps relativement resserré (Membre F et partie inférieure du Membre G ; 2,32 Ma à 2 Ma), bien que les hominidés fossiles soient présents tout au long de la séquence (3,6 à 1 Ma). Afin de questionner les interrelations et l’évolution entre les occupations humaines de l’Oldowayen ancien et les facteurs environnementaux, une approche multi-scalaire a été développée. Elle permet d’intégrer les très nombreuses données archéologiques (une centaine d’occurrences dans le Membre F et une cinquantaine dans la partie inférieure du Membre G) et paléoenvironnementales (incluant plusieurs milliers de spécimens pa-léontologiques des Membres E et F et les données géologiques de terrain). Selon le degré de préci-sion spatio-temporelle de ces différents registres de données, trois échelles d’analyse ont été rete-nues (complexe archéologique, zone d’étude, formation). L’analyse spatiale et taphonomique des données archéologiques couplée à l’analyse des cortèges fauniques a permis de démontrer que seul un petit nombre d’occurrences correspond à des occupations initiales dans le Membre F. Elles sont localisées à la base du Membre F, à proximité du paléo-fleuve Omo, dans un contexte général d’ouverture et d’aridification croissantes du milieu. À cela s’ajoute une répartition spatiale différen-tielle de certains taxons entre la partie nord et la partie sud de l’aire Type, qui pourrait être le mar-queur d’une plus grande emprise des zones humides dans le paysage de la partie sud de la Formation de Shungura
The appearance of stone tool making behavior In the Shungura Formation coincides with the appearance of the early Oldowan. It lasts over a limited time period (Member F and the lower part of Member G: 2.32 Ma to 2 Ma), while hominid fossils are present in all members, from 3.6 Ma to 1 Ma. A multi-scalar approach was developed for assessing potential interrelations and co-evolution be-tween Early Oldowan human occupations and environmental factors. This approach has allowed to include an extensive set of archaeological and paleoenvironmental data (a hundred of occurrences in Member F and ca. fifty occurrences in the lower part of Member G, thousands of faunal remains from Members E and F, and field geological data). Depending on the spatial and temporal resolution of these different records, I have defined three scales of analysis, from archeological complex scale, to study area and formation scales. The combination of spatial and taphonomical analyses of archeo-logical data, coupled with the analysis of faunal assemblages, suggest that only few archeological occurrences correspond to primary occupations in Member F. They are all located in the lower part of Member F, in the vicinity of the Omo paleoriver, in a global context of opening up and drying of the environment. Additionally, the differential spatial distribution of several faunal taxa between the northern and southern parts of the Type area could mark a greater extension of wet areas in the southern part of the Shungura Formation
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39

Wilmshurst, John F. "Foraging behaviour and spatial dynamics of Serengeti herbivores." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ35816.pdf.

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40

Lupoli, Christopher. "Some problems of spatial behaviour in continuum mechanics." Thesis, Heriot-Watt University, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10399/759.

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41

Farnsworth, S. C. "Rural services : spatial theory and patterns of behaviour." Thesis, Nottingham Trent University, 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.233582.

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42

James, Ryan Douglas. "Modeling Riverboat Casino Customer Behavior in the Cincinnati Market." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1186079482.

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43

Bondugula, Rajkumar. "Capturing the user's perception of directional spatial relations /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 2003. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p1418006.

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44

Pasley, James. "Spatial Vision: Age and Practice." TopSCHOLAR®, 1988. http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/1816.

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Previous studies have shown that practice can improve adults’ ability to discriminate between two similar high frequency spatial patterns. Adults trained on this task also demonstrated significant improvement on a standard acuity test which is dependent on high frequency information. The aim of this study was to extend the range of training patterns to low (1.7 c/deg) and middle (4.0 c/deg.) spatial frequencies, and to determine if practice in a similar spatial frequency discrimination task would transfer to other spatial tasks dependent on low frequency information. Fourteen subjects in three age groups (young, middle and old) were tested before and after training on four spatial tasks: grating discrimination, grating detection, bisection thresholds and Vernier acuity. Adults trained on 1.7 c/deg showed significant improvement on the discriminability task, while those trained on 4.0 c/deg did not. It was found that improvement on the low spatial frequency discrimination task did not transfer to any of the other tasks. However, it was shown that the degree of improvement was similar for all age groups. This suggests that plasticity in the human visual system remains relatively constant throughout adulthood.
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45

Hernandez, Michelle Katz Jeffrey S. "Factors in two-dimensional maze navigation by pigeons." Auburn, Ala, 2008. http://repo.lib.auburn.edu/EtdRoot/2008/SPRING/Psychology/Dissertation/Hernandez_Michelle_24.pdf.

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46

Kan, Kwok-chee Joshua. "Cognitive distance scaling methodologies : a comparative study /." [Hong Kong] : University of Hong Kong, 1987. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B12434401.

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47

Wells, Cathy Clarke. "The complex spatial topography of visual attention : behavior and physiology /." View online version; access limited to Brown University users, 2005. http://wwwlib.umi.com/dissertations/fullcit/3174692.

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48

Harker, Kenneth Troy, and University of Lethbridge Faculty of Arts and Science. "A re-examination of the retrosplenial contribution to place navigation in the rat." Thesis, Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Faculty of Arts and Science, 2002, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10133/178.

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Behavioural, electrophysiological, and anatomical evidence suggests that retrosplenial (RS) cortex (areas RSA and RSG) plays a role in spatial navigation. It has been recently suggested that it is damage to the underlying cingulum bundle (CG) (areas CG and IG), and not RS, tht disrupts spatial place learning. I revisited this issue by comparing the rat strains and lesions used in studies that typically report RS deficits, to those used in studies in which no RS deficit is reported. I found both selective RS damage and selective CG damage to disrupt spatial behaviour, suggesting independent contributions to spatial learning and memory from both of these structures. Further, previous failures to find RS deficits are shown to be the result of an inappropriate choice of rat strain for studying normal brain-behaviour relationships combined with a failure to use appropriate testing methods for assessing spatial behaviour.
x, 134 leaves : ill. ; 28 cm.
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49

Jongen, Ellen Mathea Maria. "Spatial attention in neutral and negative affect behavior and electrophysiology /." [Maastricht] : Maastricht : Universitaire Pers Maastricht ; University Library, Universiteit Maastricht [host], 2007. http://arno.unimaas.nl/show.cgi?fid=8420.

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50

LEANZA, FEDERICA. "CONSUMER SPATIAL BEHAVIOR: L'INFLUENZA DELLO STORE LAYOUT SUL DECISION-MAKING." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/39112.

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Oggi le aziende riconoscono come i comportamenti d’acquisto del cliente siano influenzati dall’atmosfera del mondo retail. Le caratteristiche del punto vendita e le sue potenzialità multisensoriali rappresentano una componente fondamentale capace di influenzare il processo di scelta del consumatore da un punto di vista cognitivo ma soprattutto emotivo. Il presente lavoro di tesi propone un’indagine interdisciplinare con l’intenzione di analizzare la figura del consumatore in diversi contesti d’acquisto. Il macro-obiettivo è verificare l’impatto percettivo, cognitivo ed emotivo per comprendere come lo spazio influenzi i processi decisionali di acquisto e come gli elementi contestuali e architettonici ne favoriscano la fruizione. Gli store non sono più considerati semplici luoghi dove acquistare un prodotto ma ambienti in grado di regalare un’esperienza emozionante. L’uso di differenti strumenti d’indagine ha permesso di analizzare le risposte implicite (con l’utilizzo di strumenti neuroscientifici) ed esplicite (grazie all’uso di strumenti tradizionali di psicologia quali questionari e interviste) per avere una visione globale della percezione e delle emozioni del consumatore all’interno di un contesto d’acquisto. Diversamente delle altre ricerche di Consumer Neuroscience fino ad ora esistenti, il lavoro proposto si discosta dalle dinamiche puramente di laboratorio per studiare il cliente all’interno del punto vendita preservando così un ambiente ecologico.
Nowadays the companies are aware that the consumer’s buying behavior is influenced by the atmosphere of the retail world. The features of point of sale and its multi-sensory potential are important components which influence cognitively and emotively the consumer choice process. The present thesis aims to present an interdisciplinary research with the intention to analyze the consumer in different sales contexts. The macro-objective is to verify the perceptive, cognitive and emotional impact to understand how the space influences decision-making process and how the contextual and architectural elements encourage its fruition. Stores are no longer considered as simple places to buy a product but environments able to give an emotional experience. The use of different tools allowed us to analyze implicit responses (with neuroscientific tools) and explicit responses (thanks to the use of traditional tools of psychology such as questionnaires and interviews) to have a global view of consumer perception and emotion within the sales context. Unlike other consumer neuroscience research, this work was done outside of laboratory to study the consumer in point of sale and preserving an ecological environment.
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