Now showing items 2540-2559 of 6509

    • Habitual voting : origins and consequences 

      Górecki, Maciej A. (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Political Science, 2011)
      The thesis studies the phenomenon and the concept of habitual voting. It focuses on the phenomenon of habitual turnout, the tendency for a stable propensity to vote (or abstain) to form during the period of a few initial ...
    • Hadron Scattering Amplitudes from Lattice QCD 

      Lang, Nicolas (Trinity College Dublin. School of Mathematics. Discipline of Pure & Applied Mathematics, 2023)
      In this thesis we compute hadron scattering amplitudes within the framework of lattice quantum chromodynamics. Finite-volume spectra are computed using distillation and the variational method. These spectra constrain ...
    • Haemodynamic stroke and transient ischaemic attack secondary to neurocardiovascular instability 

      Ryan, Daniel J. (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Medical Gerontology, 2014)
      Introduction: Presyncope or syncope are regarded as benign conditions. In patients with severe large artery disease, hypotension may potentiate infarction, specifically in low-flow vulnerable, borderzone regions of the ...
    • The Halogen Composition of the Proto-Iceland Plume Source Mantle 

      O'FARRELL, DÓNAL JAMES (Trinity College Dublin. School of Natural Sciences. Discipline of Geology, 2018)
      The study of halogens in mantle-derived melts is allowing for new and unique insights into mantle geodynamics (e.g. Kendrick et al., 2017). The current dataset of mantle halogens record the compositions of both the depleted ...
    • HAMLET and synthetic derivatives as pre-operative agents in the treatment of oral and oesophageal cancer 

      Ghanim, Magda (Trinity College Dublin. School of Biochemistry & Immunology. Discipline of Biochemistry, 2020)
      Oral and oesophageal cancers are aggressive tumours that are frequently diagnosed late, with high morbidity, mortality, and difficulties in surgical and therapeutic intervention. Novel imaging probes could assist in early ...
    • Handling transparency in digital video 

      Elgharib, Mohamed A. (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Electronic & Electrical Engineering, 2011)
    • Hannah Arendt's Unwritten Theory of Political Judgment 

      Fazekas, Samantha (Trinity College Dublin. School of Social Sciences & Philosophy. Discipline of Philosophy, 2023)
      This project develops a new reading of Hannah Arendt’s interpretation of Immanuel Kant’s aesthetic reflective judgment. The aim of this project is to justify Arendt’s claim that she brings Kant’s unwritten political ...
    • Hard real-time communication for mobile ad hoc networks 

      Hughes, Barbara (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Computer Science & Statistics, 2007)
      The increasing availability of wireless local area networking, particularly ad hoc networking, has lead to the evolution of new application domains, such as inter-vehicle communication and communication between autonomous ...
    • Hard Spheres, Soap Bubbles, and Hydrogels in Research and Education 

      Irannezhad, Ali (Trinity College Dublin. School of Physics. Discipline of Physics, 2023)
      This thesis concerns various experiments using hard spheres, soap bubbles, hydrogel spheres, and soap films in which we will show these are suitable candidates for research and can be easily performed in universities, ...
    • Hardware support for power and area efficient construction of high-quality bounding volume hierarchies 

      Doyle, Michael J. (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Computer Science & Statistics, 2014)
      Rendering methods basal on ray-tracing hold the promise of great realism for interactive applications. However, these algorithms still involve a considerable computational cost relative to the capabilities of today�۪s ...
    • Harmonic and superparamagnetic nanoparticles for biomedical imaging and diagnostic applications 

      CLARKE, GARETH (Trinity College Dublin. School of Medicine. Discipline of Clinical Medicine, 2020)
      Diagnosing certain diseases and tracking their progression requires the ability to 'see' into the body. This is typically achieved by taking advantage of intrinsic contrast in biological tissues (such as in X-ray or magnetic ...
    • Harmony, modesty, dialogue : a Moravian contribution towards the development of Christian theologies of religious pluralism 

      Thompson, Livingstone Anthony (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Religions and Theology, 2003)
      Despite the multiplicity of religions, religious aspirations and religious goals, Christians have generally maintained that in Jesus Christ God has been revealed in an unsurpassable way. In modem times, however, Christians ...
    • Harnessing natural killer cell-mediated immune responses in obesity-associated cancer 

      Mylod, Eimear (Trinity College Dublin. School of Medicine. Discipline of Surgery, 2023)
      Oesophagogastric adenocarcinomas (OAC) encompass a group of inflammation-driven and obesity-associated cancers. Poor 5-year survival rates of less than 20% and treatment response rates of less than 30% place these as poor ...
    • Harnessing the therapeutic properties of the Heme Oxygenase system 

      CAMPBELL, NICOLE KAREN (Trinity College Dublin. School of Biochemistry & Immunology. Discipline of Biochemistry, 2018)
      The stress response enzyme, Heme Oxygenase 1 (HO-1), has been identified as an important immunomodulator which is highly upregulated in response to cellular stress and inflammation. HO-1 catalyses the conversion of free ...
    • Harry Potter and the Invisible Hand: The Notion of Inevitable Inequality, and 'Niceness' as Moral Action in J.K. Rowling's Neoliberal Fantasy 

      Chattopadhyay, Kabir (Trinity College Dublin. School of English. Discipline of English, 2021)
      My thesis explores contemporary children's fantasy literature, and the changing popular perceptions of fundamental moral concepts disseminated for young readerships in such texts. I have chosen as my primary text of survey ...
    • Harry Potter and the Unconscious Dimension 

      Pyle, Mary Jerram (Trinity College Dublin. School of English. Discipline of English, 2022)
      In this thesis I explore the extent to which an unconscious response on the part of the reader may contribute to the extraordinary popularity among both children adults of J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series (1997—2007). ...
    • Hastings Rashdall : revelaton for the modern world 

      Goldrick, Michael Stephen (Irish School of Ecumenics, 2013)
      Hastings Rashdall will be placed in context and a crucial aspect of his theology, his theology of revelation or revelatory theology, will be examined, establishing the centrality and significance of revelatory theology for ...
    • Hauntologies of Domestic Space in Contemporary Women's Writing, 1985-2015: Alice Munro, Lorrie Moore, and Anne Enright. 

      Houston, Dearbhaile Sophie (Trinity College Dublin. School of English. Discipline of English, 2022)
      This dissertation utilises a hauntological understanding of domestic space in order to examine spectral presences in the fiction of three contemporary women writers, Alice Munro, Lorrie Moore, and Anne Enright, focusing ...
    • HCV evasion of IFN-alpha signalling : implications for therapy 

      Bourke, Nollaig (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Biochemistry and Immunology, 2012)
      Successful anti-viral immunity is dependent on effective activation of the innate immune response. The majority of individuals infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) fail to eliminate the virus and progress to chronic ...
    • Health care delivery, access and utilisation in emerging communities and urban slums of south west Nigeria 

      Lawal, Saheed Akinmayọwa (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Public Health and Primary Care, 2014)
      In Nigeria, over 60 percent of the population lack access to modern health care facilities. Low access and effective utilisation even where available, are affected by inadequate health workforce, low quality of care, ...