Theses and Dissertations from UMD

Permanent URI for this communityhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/2

New submissions to the thesis/dissertation collections are added automatically as they are received from the Graduate School. Currently, the Graduate School deposits all theses and dissertations from a given semester after the official graduation date. This means that there may be up to a 4 month delay in the appearance of a give thesis/dissertation in DRUM

More information is available at Theses and Dissertations at University of Maryland Libraries.

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
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    QUANTIFYING FIRE-INDUCED SURFACE FORCING IN SIBERIAN LARCH FORESTS
    (2017) Chen, Dong; Loboda, Tatiana V.; Geography; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Wildfires are a common disturbance agent in the global boreal forests. In the North American boreal forests, they have been shown to exert a strong cooling effect through post-fire changes in surface albedo that has a larger overall impact on the climate system than associated carbon emissions. However, these findings are not directly applicable to the Siberian larch forests, a major component of the boreal biome where species composition are dominated by a deciduous needleleaf species and fire regimes are characterized by the common occurrence of both stand-replacing and less-severe surface fires. This dissertation quantifies the post-fire surface forcing imposed by both fire types in these forests over 14 years since fire, and determines that both surface and stand replacing fires impose cooling effects through increased albedo during snow season. The magnitude of the cooling effect from stand replacing fires is much larger than that of surface fires, and this is likely a consequence of higher levels of canopy damage after stand-replacing fires. At its peak (~ year 11 after fire occurrence), the cooling magnitude is similar to that of the North American boreal fires. Strong cooling effect and the wide-spread occurrence of stand-replacing fires lead to a net negative surface forcing over the entire region between 2002 and 2013. Based on the extended albedo trajectory which was made possible by developing a 24-year stand age map, it was shown that the cooling effect of stand-replacing fires lasts for more than 26 years. The overall cooling effect of surface fires is of lower magnitude and is likely indicative of damages not only to the canopies but also the shrubs in the understory. Based on the identified difference in their influences on post-fire energy budget, this dissertation also identified a remote sensing method to separate surface fires from stand-replacing fires in Siberian larch forests with an 88% accuracy. The insights gained from this dissertation will allow for accurate representation of wildfires in the regional or global climate models in the future.
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    Decisions under Uncertainty in Decentralized Online Markets: Empirical Studies of Peer-to-Peer Lending and Outsourcing
    (2010) Lin, Mingfeng; Viswanathan, Siva; Lucas, Hank; Business and Management: Decision & Information Technologies; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Recent developments in information technologies, especially Web 2.0 technologies, have radically transformed many markets through disintermediation and decentralization. Lower barriers of entry in these markets enable small firms and individuals to engage in transactions that were otherwise impossible. Yet, the issues of informational asymmetry that plague traditional markets still arise, only to be exacerbated by the "virtual" nature of these marketplaces. The three essays of my dissertation empirically examine how participants, many of whom are entrepreneurs, tackle the issue of asymmetric information to derive benefits from trade in two different contexts. In Essay 1, I investigate the role of online social networks in mitigating information asymmetry in an online peer-to-peer lending market, and find that the relational dimensions of these networks are especially effective for this purpose. In Essay 2, I exploit a natural experiment in the same marketplace to study the effect of shared geographical ties on investor decisions, and find that "home bias" is not only robust but also has an interesting interaction pattern with rational decision criteria. In Essay 3, I study how the emergence of new contract forms, enabled by new monitoring technologies, changes the effectiveness of traditional signals that affect a buyers' choice of sellers in online outsourcing. Using a matched-sample approach, I show that the effectiveness of online ratings and certifications differs under pay-for-time contracts versus pay-for-deliverable contracts. In all, the three essays of my dissertation present new empirical evidence of how agents leverage various network ties, signals and incentives to facilitate transactions in decentralized online markets, form transactional ties, and reap the benefits enabled by the transformative power of information technologies.
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    A New Geographic Process Data Model
    (2005-03-02) Maxine, Penelope Aurelia Annabell; Albrecht, Jochen; Geography; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Processes, although the subject matter of geography, have not been represented in a manner that aids their querying and analysis. This dissertation develops an appropriate data model that allows for such a process oriented representation, which is built upon a theory of process. The data model, called nen, focuses existing modeling approaches on representing and storing process information. The flux simulation framework was created utilizing the nen data model to represent processes; it extends the RePast agent based modeling environment. This simulator includes basic classes for developing a domain specific simulation and a set of query tools for inquiring after the results of a simulation. The methodology was then prototyped with a watershed runoff simulation. NOTE: The author was formerly called Femke Reitsma.