Ontological Model for Xhosa Beadwork in Marginalised Rural Communities: A Case of the Eastern Cape
- Authors: Tinarwo, Loyd
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Ontology Beadwork
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/15749 , vital:40516
- Description: In South Africa, computational ontologies have gained traction and are increasingly viewed as one of the viable solutions to address the problem of fragmented and unstructured nature of indigenous knowledge (IK) particularly in the marginalized rural communities. The continual existence of IK in tacit form has impeded the use of IK as a potential resource that can catalyze socio-economic and cultural development in South Africa. This study was, therefore, designed to address part of this challenge by developing a Xhosa Beadwork Ontology (XBO) with the goal of structuring the domain knowledge into a reusable body of knowledge. Such a reusable body of knowledge promotes efficient sharing of a common understanding of Xhosa Beadwork in a computational form. The XBO is in OWL 2 DL. The development of the XBO was informed by the NeOn methodology and the iterativeincremental ontology development life cycle within the ambit of Action Research (AR). The XBO was developed around personal ornamentation Xhosa Beadwork consisting of Necklace, Headband, Armlet, Waistband, Bracelet, and Anklet. In this study, the XBO was evaluated focused on ascertaining that the created ontology is a comprehensive representation of the Xhosa Beadwork and is of the required standard. In addition, the XBO was documented into a human understandable and readable resource and was published. The outcome of the study has indicated that the XBO is an adequate, shareable and reusable semantic artifact that can indeed support the formalization and preservation of IK in the domain of Xhosa Beadwork
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- Date Issued: 2019
Synthesis of indium and lead phthalocyanine as photocatalysts for photodynamic antimicrobial chemotherapy and photo-oxidation of pollutants
- Authors: Oluwole, Oluyinka David
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/5293 , vital:20805
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- Date Issued: 2017
Theories of exchange rates and the methodology of economics
- Authors: Hodge, Duncan
- Date: 1997
- Subjects: Foreign exchange rates Economics -- Methodology
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:1012 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002747
- Description: This thesis is an exercise in applied methodology. Ideas in the history and philosophy of science which have proved to be influential in the methodology of economics, and in shaping economists' self-image in this regard, are selected for closer analysis and criticism. The main ideas that are addressed are those of empiricism, with emphasis on the methodological falsificationism of Karl Popper and Imre Lakatos, and Laudan's problem solving model of scientific progress . The thesis examines the relationship between empirical evidence, in the form of both econometric test results and stylized facts, and the development of theories about exchange rates and the open economy. This analysis begins with Cassel's formulation of purchasing power parity theory in 1916, through the elasticities, absorption, and Mundell-Fleming models of exchange rates and the balance of payments, up to the present day monetary and asset market models. This is done with regard to the broad methodological issues examined earlier in the thesis. Some of the main empirical and methodological difficulties in testing such theories are addressed, with particular reference to the role played by the Duhem-Quine thesis and the ceteris paribus assumption. Although some of these difficulties may be regarded as a matter of degree compared to similar problems in the natural sciences, it is argued that this difference is significant for the workability of falsification in economics . Moreover, the presence of hypotheses about expectations in many economic theories appears to be a substantive difference such that the difficulties posed by the Duhem-Quine thesis apply with much greater force in a social science like economics. The main conclusions are that neither the Popperian nor Lakatosian versions of falsification are seriously practiced in the area of exchange rate economics and that, unlike the position taken by advocates of falsification such as Mark Blaug, it would be inappropriate and misguided to do so. A tentative case is made, with some reference to the theories surveyed in this thesis, for the possibly greater relevance of Laudan' s more pragmatic problem solving model for the methodology of economics, particularly as regards his analysis and emphasis on conceptual problem solving in the progress of knowledge.
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- Date Issued: 1997
Dispersal, settlement and recruitment : their influence on the population dynamics of intertidal mussels
- Authors: Phillips, Tracey Elizabeth
- Date: 1995
- Subjects: Perna -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape -- Algoa bay Mytilus galloprovincialis -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape -- Algoa bay Mytilidae -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape -- Algoa bay
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:5663 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005347
- Description: Recruitment of planktonic larvae into sedentary benthic populations regulates the population dynamics of marine invertebrates. The processes controlling recruitment, however, are poorly understood, and recruitment remains largely unpredictable, which complicates management of exploited shellfish resources. The mussels Perna perna, Choromytilus meridionalis and Mytilus galloprovincialis, found on the south coast of southern Africa, have planktonic larvae and sedentary adult stages. This thesis examines dispersal, settlement and early post-settlement growth and mortality, and their effect on recruitment and demography of intertidal mussel populations in the region of Algoa Bay on the south coast of southern Africa. Temporal and spatial variation in the body mass, density and size structure of mussels, the distribution of bivalve larvae on plankton grids in the nearshore zone and the distribution of a recently introduced invasive mussel, Mytilus galloprovincialis, were examined between 1989 and 1992. Furthermore, data on hourly or daily changes in wind strength and direction, air and sea surface temperatures and low and high tide levels in the study region, were obtained. There were 3-4 peaks in spawning (characterised by an abrupt decline in weight) and settlement activity annually. These peaks varied in exact timing, intensity and duration between sites and over time. However, at a site, spawning was followed by settlement 4-8 weeks later, and there was a significant (P < 0.05) direct correlation between spawning intensity prior to the appearance of a new cohort and the cohort density (settlement intensity). The stochastic spatial and temporal variation in breeding activity was superimposed on a more general pattern of a higher intensity of spawning and settlement in Algoa Bay than on the open coast, and a higher settlement intensity on coastal sandstone shores than on dune rock shores. Spawning was more frequent in winter and spring, and the probability of spawning and settlement peaked around the spring and autumn equinox, if temperature and wind conditions were suitable. Larval behaviour had little effect on their dispersal in the well-mixed nearshore region. Larvae were passively dispersed by currents, and their dispersal range and direction depended on prevailing winds and local topography. The sharp decline in density of recruit and adult M. galloprovincialis with increasing distance from the point of introduction, showed that some larvae were carried by wind generated currents over moderately long distances (-100 km). However, since most (76 %) M. galloprovincialis recruited within 4 km of the parent population, it is possible that larvae become trapped in small gullies and crevices around rocky shores, and have a limited dispersal range. This could explain the link between local patterns of spawning and settlement. The distribution and abundance of settlers on the shore was influenced by larval behaviour and the availability of settlement, substrata. Larvae preferred to settle primarily on foliose coralline algae and migrate to the adult mussel bed when they were larger (0.60-7 mm), but larvae also settled directly on adult mussels, possibly because the amount of coralline algae was limited. Both direct and secondary settlement were considered to be important in maintaining mussel populations since the rate of settlement was low(generally < 60 000.m-2). Cohort analyses showed that prior to maturity post-settlement growth (- 30 mm in 10 months) and mortality rates (60-100%) were high, but varied. When settlement intensity was low this variability uncoupled the relationship between spawning and recruitment intensity. Multiple regression analysis showed that together reproductive effort (gamete output), settlement intensity, growth and mortality prior to maturity, accounted for 76 % of the variance in recruitment into mature adult populations. The low settlement rate coupled with the short life span of mussels « 3 years), meant that populations underwent marked spatial and temporal variations in structure and abundance as settlement intensity varied, but there were consistent general differences between mussel populations on dune rock and sandstone shores in Algoa Bay and on the open coast. It was concluded from these results that, spawning intensity and post-settlement growth and mortality, rather than dispersal, regulated recruitment and the structure and abundance of intertidal P. perna and C. meridionalis populations along the south coast of southern Africa. On the basis of these results it is recommended that species with limited dispersal, variable recruitment and high natural mortality, such as P. perna, should be conserved by protecting a small part of the population in reserves, and controlling utilisation outside reserves to minimize disturbance to local brood stocks. Furthermore, since the potential for reseeding adjacent exploited areas is limited, several small reserves placed at regular intervals along the coast would be more effective than a single large reserve.
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- Date Issued: 1995
Stress manipulation in Dunaliella salina and dual-stage [beta]-carotene production
- Authors: Phillips, Trevor David
- Date: 1994
- Subjects: Dunaliella Carotenes Plants -- Effect of stress on
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4037 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004097
- Description: The alga Dunaliella salina accumulates large quantities of β-carotene in response to certain environmental and physiological stresses. This hyper-accumulation process has been commercially exploited. However, the currently employed averaging or single-stage process produces β-carotene yields well below the genetic potential of the organism due to the inverse relationship between growth and secondary metabolite production. A dual-stage process, which separates the distinctive growth and secondary metabolite production stages of the alga, has been proposed. The broad aim of the research programme was to evaluate the practicality, scale-up and economic viability of a dual-stage β-carotene production process from D. salina. Preliminary laboratory studies showed that although stress factors such as high salinity and a range of nutrient limitations enhance β-carotene accumulation in D. salina, high light intensity is the single most important factor inducing β-carotene hyper-accumulation in the alga. Furthermore, the preliminary studies indicated that 6-carotene production could be successfully manipulated by the imposition of stress. The stress response of D. salina to high light stress was examined at a fundamental level. The relative partitioning of β-carotene between thylakoid membrane and interthylakoid globular β-carotene has revealed two responses to high light stress. The first is a response in which the alga adapts to the photoinhibitory effects of high light stress by the rapid accumulation and the peripheral localisation of Jl-carotene to the outer extremities of the chloroplast. This is followed by a maintenance response which is characterised by the recovery of the photosynthetic rate and cell growth. A possible interrelationship between the extent of the photo inhibitory response and the amount of β-carotene hyper-accumulation has been noted. An outdoor evaluation of the growth stage of the dual-stage system has demonstrated that D. salina can be grown in a relatively low salinity, nutrient sufficient medium for extended periods without overgrowth by small non-carotenogenic Dunaliella species. In addition, biomass productivities of three times greater than those obtained in the currently employed averaging system were achieved. The role of high light intensity in β-carotene hyper-accumulation was confirmed in outdoor scale-up stress pond studies. The studies demonstrated the feasibility of stress induced ll-carotene production in outdoor cultures of D. salina and β-carotene yields three times greater than those obtained in the currently employed averaging process were achieved. The dual-stage process imposes the specific requirement of viable cell separation on the harvesting system employed. A flocculation-flotation process and an air-displacement crossflow ultrafiltration system were developed and successfully evaluated for the separation of D. salina from the brine solution in a viable form. The extraction of β-carotene from D. salina was evaluated. Supercritical fluid extraction studies showed that the use of a co-solvent mixture of carbon dioxide and propane could effectively reduce the high extraction pressures associated with supercritical carbon dioxide extraction. In addition, a novel hydrophobic membrane assisted hot oil extraction process was developed which separates the complex oil-water emulsions produced during hot oil extraction of 6-carotene from wet D. salina biomass. Process design and economic evaluation studies were undertaken and showed that the economics of the dual-stage process offer significant advantages over the currently employed averaging process.
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- Date Issued: 1994
An investigation of the romantic ballet in its sociocultural context in Paris and London, 1830 to 1850
- Authors: Osborne, Jane
- Date: 1991
- Subjects: Ballet -- France -- Paris , Ballet -- England -- London , Ballet -- History -- 19th century , Ballet -- Sociological aspects
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:2126 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002028
- Description: Historians have made a considerable contribution to the study of the Romantic ballet in terms of chronological development, the Romantic movement in the arts and the contribution of specific dancers and choreographers; very little research has been attempted to date on the interrelationship between the dance form and the wide range of human experience of the period. This holistic approach provides insight into form, content and stagecraft; political, economic and social influences; the prevailing artistic aesthetic and cultural climate; sex, gender and class issues; and the priorities, value system and nuances of the times. Recent work by historians and social scientists (eg Brinson 1981, Adshead 1983, Spencer 1985, Hanna 1988, Garafola 1989) advocates a recognition of the role of social and cultural systems in the evaluation of dance. This approach further ackowledges the equal status of all cultures, and has opened up areas of African performing dance in cultural systems outside the west. My parallel investigation of the gumboot dance in its South African context, which appears in Appendix B, provides an example. The first half of the nineteenth century was characterized by the disruptive beginnings of the emergent industrial world, centred in Paris and London; and the Romantic ballet tradition reached its greatest heights at this time. Chapter one establishes the political, economic, social and artistic environment, and identifies middle class dominance as a key factor. Chapters two and three focus primarily on the three great ballets of the age, La Sylphide, 1832, Giselie, 1841, and Pas de Quatre, 1845, as expressions of the essential duality of the times, and of Romantic synaesthesia in the arts, which enabled them to transcend the pedestrian bourgeois materialism of faciliatators and audience. Chapter four examines the images of the idealized ballerina and the 'Victorian' middle class woman in relation to bourgeois male attitudes to female sexuality, gender and class. The conclusion sums up the themes of duality, middle class influence, and the Romantic aesthetic, and discusses the prevalent notion that this period was identified as a 'golden age' of the Romantic ballet.
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- Date Issued: 1991
Part four of the Rhodes University Skymap Program
- Authors: Wright, Michael Robert
- Date: 1989
- Subjects: Southern sky (Astronomy) Radio astronomy
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:5435 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001988
- Description: The results of the fourth part of the Rhodes University Skymap Program are presented. The observations cover the area of sky between right ascension 14h00m and 02h30m and declination -26⁰ and + 13⁰ at a frequency of 2.3 GHz. Contour maps of this region, with a resolution of 0.38⁰, are presented. Various methods of reducing the effect of the Galactic disc emission are analyzed. The results demonstrate the effectiveness of one of these methods in the production of a flat base level. The filamentary structure of the North Polar Spur is enhanced and results are obtained which support current theories of the origin of this object. The HII region surrounding Ophiuchi is examined in detail. A number of parameters are derived for the HII region. The spur associated with the HII region S54 is also examined. A listing of 1105 point sources appearing in the maps is presented. The limiting flux density of this listing is 0.5 Jy
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- Date Issued: 1989