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Full-Text Articles in Mathematics

Quantitative Skills And Reasoning (Armstrong), Patricia Brown, Joshua Lambert Jul 2017

Quantitative Skills And Reasoning (Armstrong), Patricia Brown, Joshua Lambert

Mathematics Grants Collections

This Grants Collection for Quantitative Skills and Reasoning was created under a Round Five ALG Textbook Transformation Grant.

Affordable Learning Georgia Grants Collections are intended to provide faculty with the frameworks to quickly implement or revise the same materials as a Textbook Transformation Grants team, along with the aims and lessons learned from project teams during the implementation process.

Documents are in .pdf format, with a separate .docx (Word) version available for download. Each collection contains the following materials:

  • Linked Syllabus
  • Initial Proposal
  • Final Report


A Privacy Preserving Framework For Rfid Based Healthcare Systems, Farzana Rahman, Anwarul A. Bhuiyan, Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed Jul 2017

A Privacy Preserving Framework For Rfid Based Healthcare Systems, Farzana Rahman, Anwarul A. Bhuiyan, Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) is anticipated to be a core technology that will be used in many practical applications of our life in near future. It has received considerable attention within the healthcare for almost a decade now. The technology’s promise to efficiently track hospital supplies, medical equipment, medications and patients is an attractive proposition to the healthcare industry. However, the prospect of wide spread use of RFID tags in the healthcare area has also triggered discussions regarding privacy, particularly because RFID data in transit may easily be intercepted and can be send to track its user (owner). In a …


Failure Of Care Acquisition: Identifying Risk Factors In American Health Disparities, Nicholas Downing, Mamunur Rashid Jul 2017

Failure Of Care Acquisition: Identifying Risk Factors In American Health Disparities, Nicholas Downing, Mamunur Rashid

Student Research

We examined the effects of various demographic and socioeconomic risk factors that influence an adult's decision not to obtain medical care in the United States utilizing data from the 2015 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Bivariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression revealed that family income, insurance status and whether one worries about paying medical bills make individuals nearly 80% less likely to obtain care than their counterparts. This study provides evidence that certain risk factors, especially those directly related to one's socioeconomic status, may put individuals at greater risk for failure to obtain care. Interventions in policy may be needed …


Educational Magic Tricks Based On Error-Detection Schemes, Ronald I. Greenberg Jul 2017

Educational Magic Tricks Based On Error-Detection Schemes, Ronald I. Greenberg

Computer Science: Faculty Publications and Other Works

Magic tricks based on computer science concepts help grab student attention and can motivate them to delve more deeply. Error detection ideas long used by computer scientists provide a rich basis for working magic; probably the most well known trick of this type is one included in the CS Unplugged activities. This paper shows that much more powerful variations of the trick can be performed, some in an unplugged environment and some with computer assistance. Some of the tricks also show off additional concepts in computer science and discrete mathematics.


Cybersecurity: Probabilistic Behavior Of Vulnerability And Life Cycle, Sasith Maduranga Rajasooriya Jun 2017

Cybersecurity: Probabilistic Behavior Of Vulnerability And Life Cycle, Sasith Maduranga Rajasooriya

USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations

Analysis on Vulnerabilities and Vulnerability Life Cycle is at the core of Cybersecurity related studies. Vulnerability Life Cycle discussed by S. Frei and studies by several other scholars have noted the importance of this approach. Application of Statistical Methodologies in Cybersecurity related studies call for a greater deal of new information. Using currently available data from National Vulnerability Database this study develops and presents a set of useful Statistical tools to be applied in Cybersecurity related decision making processes.

In the present study, the concept of Vulnerability Space is defined as a probability space. Relevant theoretical analyses are conducted and …


A Direct D-Bar Method For Partial Boundary Data Electrical Impedance Tomography With A Priori Information, Melody Alsaker, Sarah J. Hamilton, Andreas Hauptmann Jun 2017

A Direct D-Bar Method For Partial Boundary Data Electrical Impedance Tomography With A Priori Information, Melody Alsaker, Sarah J. Hamilton, Andreas Hauptmann

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) is a non-invasive imaging modality that uses surface electrical measurements to determine the internal conductivity of a body. The mathematical formulation of the EIT problem is a nonlinear and severely ill-posed inverse problem for which direct D-bar methods have proved useful in providing noise-robust conductivity reconstructions. Recent advances in D-bar methods allow for conductivity reconstructions using EIT measurement data from only part of the domain (e.g., a patient lying on their back could be imaged using only data gathered on the accessible part of the body). However, D-bar reconstructions suffer from a loss of sharp edges …


Comparing Grounded Theory And Topic Modeling: Extreme Divergence Or Unlikely Convergence?, Eric P.S. Baumer, David Mimno, Shion Guha, Emily Quan, Geri K. Gay Jun 2017

Comparing Grounded Theory And Topic Modeling: Extreme Divergence Or Unlikely Convergence?, Eric P.S. Baumer, David Mimno, Shion Guha, Emily Quan, Geri K. Gay

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

Researchers in information science and related areas have developed various methods for analyzing textual data, such as survey responses. This article describes the application of analysis methods from two distinct fields, one method from interpretive social science and one method from statistical machine learning, to the same survey data. The results show that the two analyses produce some similar and some complementary insights about the phenomenon of interest, in this case, nonuse of social media. We compare both the processes of conducting these analyses and the results they produce to derive insights about each method's unique advantages and drawbacks, as …


Symptom Levels In Care-Seeking Bangladeshi And Nepalese Adults With Advanced Cancer, Richard Love, Tahmina Ferdousy, Bishnu D. Paudel, Shamsun Nahar, Rumana Dowla, Mohammad Adibuzzaman, Golam Mushih Tanimul Ahsan, Miftah Uddin, Reza Selim, Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed Jun 2017

Symptom Levels In Care-Seeking Bangladeshi And Nepalese Adults With Advanced Cancer, Richard Love, Tahmina Ferdousy, Bishnu D. Paudel, Shamsun Nahar, Rumana Dowla, Mohammad Adibuzzaman, Golam Mushih Tanimul Ahsan, Miftah Uddin, Reza Selim, Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose

Three-fourths of patients with advanced cancer are reported to suffer from pain. A primary barrier to provision of adequate symptom treatment is failure to appreciate the intensity of the symptoms patients are experiencing. Because data on Bangladeshi and Nepalese patients’ perceptions of their symptomatic status are limited, we sought such information using a cell phone questionnaire.

Methods

At tertiary care centers in Dhaka and Kathmandu, we recruited 640 and 383 adult patients, respectively, with incurable malignancy presenting for outpatient visits and instructed them for that single visit on one-time completion of a cell phone platform 15-item survey of questions …


On The Analysis Of The Sir Epidemic Model For Small Networks: An Application In Hospital Settings, Martin Lopez-Garcia May 2017

On The Analysis Of The Sir Epidemic Model For Small Networks: An Application In Hospital Settings, Martin Lopez-Garcia

Biology and Medicine Through Mathematics Conference

No abstract provided.


Physiological Health Parameters Among College Students To Promote Chronic Disease Prevention And Health Promotion, David R. Black, Daniel C. Coster, Samantha R. Paige May 2017

Physiological Health Parameters Among College Students To Promote Chronic Disease Prevention And Health Promotion, David R. Black, Daniel C. Coster, Samantha R. Paige

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications

This study aimed to provide physiologic health risk parameters by gender and age among college students enrolled in a U.S. Midwestern University to promote chronic disease prevention and ameliorate health. A total of 2615 college students between 18 and 25 years old were recruited annually using a series of cross-sectional designs during the spring semester over an 8-year period. Physiologic parameters measured included body mass index (BMI), percentage body fat (%BF), blood serum cholesterol (BSC), and systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure. These measures were compared to data from NHANES to identify differences in physiologic parameters among 18-25 year …


Cox Processes For Visual Object Counting, Yongming Ma May 2017

Cox Processes For Visual Object Counting, Yongming Ma

Student Research Symposium

We present a model that utilizes Cox processes and CNN classifiers in order to count the number of instances of an object in an image. Poisson processes are well suited to events that occur randomly in space, like the location of objects in an image, as well as to the task of counting. Mixed Poisson processes also offer increased flexibility, however they do not easily scale with image size: they typically require O(n3) computation time and O(n2) storage, where n is the number of pixels. To mitigate this problem, we employ Kronecker algebra which takes advantage of the direct product …


Irrational Eigenvalues Of The Discrete Laplacian: A Study Of Simplical Complexes, Brian Bollen May 2017

Irrational Eigenvalues Of The Discrete Laplacian: A Study Of Simplical Complexes, Brian Bollen

Psychology

We study the behavior of eigenvalues of the discrete Laplacian of an abstract simplicial complex K when subdividing a single face of K . We show that if K is a simplex, performing this kind of restricted subdivision twice on a single face produces irrational eigenvalues for the discrete Laplacian.


Eit Imaging Of Admittivities With A D-Bar Method And Spatial Prior: Experimental Results For Absolute And Difference Imaging, Sarah J. Hamilton May 2017

Eit Imaging Of Admittivities With A D-Bar Method And Spatial Prior: Experimental Results For Absolute And Difference Imaging, Sarah J. Hamilton

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an emerging imaging modality that uses harmless electrical measurements taken on electrodes at a body's surface to recover information about the internal electrical conductivity and or permittivity. The image reconstruction task of EIT is a highly nonlinear inverse problem that is sensitive to noise and modeling errors making the image reconstruction task challenging. D-bar methods solve the nonlinear problem directly, bypassing the need for detailed and time-intensive forward models, to provide absolute (static) as well as time-difference EIT images. Coupling the D-bar methodology with the inclusion of high confidence a priori data results in a …


Weighted Distributions: A Brief Review, Perspective And Characterizations, Aamir Saghir, Gholamhossein G. Hamedani, Sadaf Tazeem, Aneeqa Khadim May 2017

Weighted Distributions: A Brief Review, Perspective And Characterizations, Aamir Saghir, Gholamhossein G. Hamedani, Sadaf Tazeem, Aneeqa Khadim

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

The weighted distributions are widely used in many fields such as medicine, ecology and reliability, to name a few, for the development of proper statistical models. Weighted distributions are milestone for efficient modeling of statistical data and prediction when the standard distributions are not appropriate. A good deal of studies related to the weight distributions have been published in the literature. In this article, a brief review of these distributions is carried out. Implications of the differing weight models for future research as well as some possible strategies are discussed. Finally, characterizations of these distributions based on a simple relationship …


Infinite-Dimensional Traits: Estimation Of Mean, Covariance, And Selection Gradient Of Tribolium Castaneum Growth Curves, Ly Viet Hoang May 2017

Infinite-Dimensional Traits: Estimation Of Mean, Covariance, And Selection Gradient Of Tribolium Castaneum Growth Curves, Ly Viet Hoang

Theses and Dissertations

In evolutionary biology, traits like growth curves, reaction norms or morphological shapes cannot be described by a finite vector of components alone. Instead, continuous functions represent a more useful structure. Such traits are called function-valued or infinite-dimensional traits. Kirkpatrick and Heckmann outlined the first quantitative genetic model for these traits. Beder and Gomulkiewicz extended the theory on the selection gradient and the evolutionary response from finite- to infinite-dimensional traits.

Rigorous methods for the estimation of these quantities were developed throughout the years. In his dissertation, Baur defines estimators for the mean and covariance function, as well as for the selection …


Oscillation Criteria For Third-Order Nonlinear Functional Difference Equations With Damping, Martin Bohner, C. Dharuman, R. Srinivasan, Ethiraju Thandapani May 2017

Oscillation Criteria For Third-Order Nonlinear Functional Difference Equations With Damping, Martin Bohner, C. Dharuman, R. Srinivasan, Ethiraju Thandapani

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Research & Creative Works

In this paper, we obtain some new criteria for the oscillation of certain third-order difference equations using comparison principles with a suitable couple of first-order difference equations. The presented results improve and extend the earlier ones. Examples are provided to illustrate the main results.


Robust And Computationally Efficient Methods For Fitting Loss Models And Pricing Insurance Risks, Qian Zhao May 2017

Robust And Computationally Efficient Methods For Fitting Loss Models And Pricing Insurance Risks, Qian Zhao

Theses and Dissertations

Continuous parametric distributions are useful tools for modeling and pricing insurance risks, measuring income inequality in economics, investigating reliability of engineering systems, and in many other areas of application. In this dissertation, we propose and develop a new method for estimation of their parameters—the method of Winsorized moments (MWM)—which is conceptually similar to the method of trimmed moments (MTM) and thus is robust and computationally efficient. Both approaches yield explicit formulas of parameter estimators for location-scale and log-location-scale families, which are commonly used to model claim severity. Large-sample properties of the new estimators are provided and corroborated through simulations. Their …


Associated Hypothesis In Linear Models With Unbalanced Data, Rica Katharina Wedowski May 2017

Associated Hypothesis In Linear Models With Unbalanced Data, Rica Katharina Wedowski

Theses and Dissertations

In a two-way linear model one can test six different hypotheses regarding the effects in this model. Those hypotheses can be ranked from less specific to more specific. Therefore the more specific hypotheses are nested in the less specific ones. To test those nested hypotheses sequential sums of squares are used. Searle sees a problem with these since they test an associated hypothesis that has the same sums of squares but involve the sample sizes. Hypotheses should be generic and not dependent on the data. The proof he uses in his book Linear Models for Unbalanced Data is not easy …


Black-Scholes Model: An Analysis Of The Influence Of Volatility, Cornelia Krome May 2017

Black-Scholes Model: An Analysis Of The Influence Of Volatility, Cornelia Krome

Theses and Dissertations

In this thesis the influence of volatility in the Black-Scholes model is analyzed. The deduced Black-Scholes formula estimates the price of European options. Contrary to the other parameters of the formula, the future volatility of the underlying asset cannot be observed in the market. The parameter needs to be assumed in order to calculate the option price. An inaccurate assumption may lead to an erroneous volatility. It is studied how a falsely assumed volatility impacts on the option price. Empirical simulations will be carried out to get an impression of possible errors in the computations. Afterwards, those results will be …


Joint Modelling Of Longitudinal Measurements And Time-To-Event Data : Application To Hiv Study, Mirna Walid Halawani May 2017

Joint Modelling Of Longitudinal Measurements And Time-To-Event Data : Application To Hiv Study, Mirna Walid Halawani

Theses, Dissertations and Culminating Projects

Longitudinal and survival data are frequently collected in biomedical studies. The research questions of interest in these studies often require separate analysis of the outcomes. But in many occasions interest also lies in studying their association structures, such as in biomarker research, where the clinical studies are designed to identify biomarkers with strong prognostic capabilities for event time outcomes. In the separate analyses, a linear mixed-effects model is used for modeling the longitudinal data to study the changing trend of the response overtime when controlling some covariates and a survival model is used to model the time-to-event data. A common …


Peptide Identification: Refining A Bayesian Stochastic Model, Theophilus Barnabas Kobina Acquah May 2017

Peptide Identification: Refining A Bayesian Stochastic Model, Theophilus Barnabas Kobina Acquah

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Notwithstanding the challenges associated with different methods of peptide identification, other methods have been explored over the years. The complexity, size and computational challenges of peptide-based data sets calls for more intrusion into this sphere. By relying on the prior information about the average relative abundances of bond cleavages and the prior probability of any specific amino acid sequence, we refine an already developed Bayesian approach in identifying peptides. The likelihood function is improved by adding additional ions to the model and its size is driven by two overall goodness of fit measures. In the face of the complexities associated …


Combinatorial Games On Graphs, Trevor K. Williams May 2017

Combinatorial Games On Graphs, Trevor K. Williams

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

Combinatorial Games are intriguing and have a tendency to engross students and lead them into a serious study of mathematics. The engaging nature of games is the basis for this thesis. Two combinatorial games and some educational tools are presented which were developed by the author in the pursuit of the solution of these games.


Optimal Experimental Design To Characterize A Wave Source Using Dosimeter Measurements, Renee L. Gooding Apr 2017

Optimal Experimental Design To Characterize A Wave Source Using Dosimeter Measurements, Renee L. Gooding

Mathematics & Statistics ETDs

When modeling physical phenomena we want to solve the inverse problem by estimating the parameters that characterize the source model that we are interested in. In this thesis, we focus on the optimal placement of a finite number of individual sensors, called dosimeters, in two and three dimensions with a time dependent Gaussian wave source. Using a computational model along with experimental data, we design an iterative process to determine the optimal placement of an additional sensor such that the noise in the measurements has a minimal effect on the parameter estimation. First, we estimate the parameters that characterize the …


Deterministic And Probabilistic Methods For Seismic Source Inversion, Juan Pablo Madrigal Cianci Apr 2017

Deterministic And Probabilistic Methods For Seismic Source Inversion, Juan Pablo Madrigal Cianci

Mathematics & Statistics ETDs

The national Earthquake Information Center (NEIC) reports an occurrence of about 13,000 earthquakes every year, spanning different values on the Richter scale from very mild (2) to "giant earthquakes'' (8 and above). Being able to study these earthquakes provides useful information for a wide range of applications in geophysics. In the present work we study the characteristics of an earthquake by performing seismic source inversion; a mathematical problem that, given some recorded data, produces a set of parameters that when used as input in a mathematical model for the earthquake generates synthetic data that closely resembles the measured data. There …


Cancer Modeling: From Optimal Cell Renewal To Immunotherapy, Cesar L. Alvarado Apr 2017

Cancer Modeling: From Optimal Cell Renewal To Immunotherapy, Cesar L. Alvarado

Mathematics & Statistics ETDs

Cancer is a disease caused by mutations in normal cells. According to the National Cancer Institute, in 2016, an estimated 1.6 million people were diagnosed and approximately 0.5 million people died from the disease in the United States. There are many factors that shape cancer at the cellular and organismal level, including genetic, immunological, and environmental components. In this thesis, we show how mathematical modeling can be used to provide insight into some of the key mechanisms underlying cancer dynamics. First, we use mathematical modeling to investigate optimal homeostatic cell renewal in tissues such as the small intestine with an …


Modeling Trait Evolutionary Processes With More Than One Gene, Huan Jiang Apr 2017

Modeling Trait Evolutionary Processes With More Than One Gene, Huan Jiang

Mathematics & Statistics ETDs

Phylogenetic comparative methods have been used to test evolutionary signals through trait evolutionary processes. Traditionally, biologists use one phylogenetic tree as a tool to handle dependent data for the traits of interest and hence utilize one gene only. However, it is more informative if the evolutionary processes of a trait are presented by phylogenetic trees reconstructed by the DNA alignments from more than one gene. In this work, we explain and develop two methods involving modeling the trait evolutionary processes: (a) two gene trees via the Brownian motion (BM) model; and (b) two gene trees via the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck (OU) model. …


Does Logic Help Us Beat Monty Hall?, Adam J. Hammett, Nathan A. Harold, Tucker R. Rhodes Apr 2017

Does Logic Help Us Beat Monty Hall?, Adam J. Hammett, Nathan A. Harold, Tucker R. Rhodes

The Research and Scholarship Symposium (2013-2019)

The classical Monty Hall problem entails that a hypothetical game show contestant be presented three doors and told that behind one door is a car and behind the other two are far less appealing prizes, like goats. The contestant then picks a door, and the host (Monty) is to open a different door which contains one of the bad prizes. At this point in the game, the contestant is given the option of keeping the door she chose or changing her selection to the remaining door (since one has already been opened by Monty), after which Monty opens the chosen …


The Value Of A Win: Analysis Of Playoff Structures, Matthew Orsi Apr 2017

The Value Of A Win: Analysis Of Playoff Structures, Matthew Orsi

Honors Projects in Mathematics

The purpose of this Senior Capstone project is to analyze the distinctions between existing playoff systems. In particular, we are looking to analyze the differences between the standard single-elimination tournament (which the NCAA has used since the inception of the tournament) and other potential options: double-elimination and multiple game series. Popular sports such as Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association all use multiple game series for their playoffs. This project will use probability theory and simulation to determine the likelihood of different seeds winning a championship as well as the expected number of victories by seed in each …


Stationary Acceleration Of Frenet Curves, Nemat Abazari, Martin Bohner, Ilgin Sager, Yusuf Yayli Apr 2017

Stationary Acceleration Of Frenet Curves, Nemat Abazari, Martin Bohner, Ilgin Sager, Yusuf Yayli

Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Research & Creative Works

In this paper, the stationary acceleration of the spherical general helix in a 3-dimensional Lie group is studied by using a bi-invariant metric. The relationship between the Frenet elements of the stationary acceleration curve in 4-dimensional Euclidean space and the intrinsic Frenet elements of the Lie group is outlined. As a consequence, the corresponding curvature and torsion of these curves are computed. In Minkowski space, for the curves on a timelike surface to have a stationary acceleration, a necessary and sufficient condition is refined.


Deriving A Provisional Tolerable Intake For Intravenous Exposure To Silver Nanoparticles Released From Medical Devices, Laura C. Savery, Rene Vinas, Amber M. Nagy, Prachi Pradeep, Stephen Merrill, Subhas G. Malghan, Peter L. Goering, Ronald P. Brown Apr 2017

Deriving A Provisional Tolerable Intake For Intravenous Exposure To Silver Nanoparticles Released From Medical Devices, Laura C. Savery, Rene Vinas, Amber M. Nagy, Prachi Pradeep, Stephen Merrill, Subhas G. Malghan, Peter L. Goering, Ronald P. Brown

Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Faculty Research and Publications

Silver nanoparticles (AgNP) are incorporated into medical devices for their anti-microbial characteristics. The potential exposure and toxicity of AgNPs is unknown due to varying physicochemical particle properties and lack of toxicological data. The aim of this safety assessment is to derive a provisional tolerable intake (pTI) value for AgNPs released from blood-contacting medical devices. A literature review of in vivo studies investigating critical health effects induced from intravenous (i. v.) exposure to AgNPs was evaluated by the Annapolis Accords principles and Toxicological Data Reliability Assessment Tool (ToxRTool). The point of departure (POD) was based on an i. v. 28-day …