Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Out of Body: Depersonalization in Toni Morrison's Novels My thesis will explore how Morrison uses formal techniques to bring the depersonalization many of her characters experience to life for her audience: specifically, nonlinear narrative structure, fragmented sentence structure, and internal dialogue highlight the characters' depersonalization. I will explore this idea through Morrison's novels The Bluest Eye, Beloved, and A Mercy, which feature characters who have experienced extreme traumas and seem to have developed depersonalization as a result. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Topological Obstructions to the Existence of Compact Shrinking Ricci Solitons in Dimension Four This undergraduate thesis is focused on introducing the reader to concepts related to the search for topological obstructions to the existence of compact gradient shrinking Ricci soliton metrics in dimension four. It contains a discussion of the relevant background material for this subject. Furthermore, it introduces the problem of extending the Hitchin-Thorpe inequality to gradient shrinking Ricci soliton metrics and explores the limitations of current results in that direction. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Mê: Room of Fixations and Reinstatement {"value":"The word "Mê" in Vietnamese is attributed to those being enchanted or fixated by specific interests or passions; and often, these interests are rooted in childhood experiences. The concept of my project will revisit my childhood fixations which are clay and sewing crafts, particularly those related to food and toys. The project will also pay homage to how I entered my artistic journey by recreating an installation of a children's play room through a contemporary and psychologically responsive lens. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Paralyzed Changemakers: An Ethnographic Study of Youth Unemployment from Bududa, Uganda and Petra, Jordan Comparative study on youth unemployment in Bududa, Uganda and Petra, Jordan. Analyzing youth unemployment and neoliberalism's effects through a World Systems Theory approach. Bordieau's concept of agency and structure are employed to further assess the youth experience. Topic covered include youth empowerment strategies, the role of government, movement and migration, social and familial networks, guidance and mentorship, tertiary schools and skill building, higher education, sexual transactional economy, and hustle culture. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects The Relationship Between Parental Responsiveness and Infant Social-Cognitive Behaviors in Infancy and Toddlers' Joint Attention Joint attention, also known as joint engagement, is defined as the ability to coordinate attention between a social partner and an object or event of shared interest. Joint attention occupies a central position in children's developmental research and has been shown to be crucial for language development, communication, and other advanced social skills. However, influences on the development of joint attention are not well understood. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Mother Your Monsters Reproductive labor, the work that people put into raising children and keeping households, is one of the most under-appreciated forms of labor. Monster stories, specifically Frankenstein and Dracula, provide a clear representation of the danger of life without reproductive labor and reveal how incredibly important this work really is. By engaging with other scholars who have examined the text in similar ways and using evidence from the novel, I will set up Frankenstein as the framework for how a gothic novel understands reproductive labor. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects The Role of Women in the American Eugenics Movement This thesis examines the role of women in the American eugenics movement from 1900 to 1945, as well as how ideas about motherhood were manipulated to further eugenic ideals about race and hygiene. This paper analyzes primary sources such as propaganda posters about social hygiene, academic articles written by women, advertisements aimed towards women using eugenic ideology, and more in order to determine the prevalence and impact women had on the American eugenics movement. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Gendered Gaps: Landslides in Bududa, Uganda Bududa is a district located in the east of Uganda that frequently suffers from the occurrence of landslides. Based on 22 interviews with community members, I investigated the roles of natural disasters in rural Uganda and the ever-changing social landscape of Bududa. Using the world-systems theory, the theory of ecologically unequal exchange, and ecofeminism, this study examines the changes in gender roles that ensue post-landslides and how this fits the frameworks stated above. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Of Rule, Write, and Right: The Production of Absolutist Political Writings by King James I of England {"value":"The context of the source of The Trew Law of Free Monarchies needs to be examined and critically and thoroughly analyzed in order to answer the research question of "in what methods and ways did King James I of England produce ideas of divine right along with absolutist measures?" The central argument of this paper is to prove the position of the post-revisionist interpretation that James I was indeed an absolutist monarch who utilized and referenced the power of religion to support his political ideologies of the monarchy. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Beyond Gender Stereotypes: A Feminist Analysis of Sarah J. Maas' Throne of Glass This thesis conducts a feminist analysis of Sarah J. Maas' Throne of Glass series, establishing it as a feminist narrative that offers a nuanced representation of women within the fantasy genre. An exploration of Aelin's character reveals how the series dismantles patriarchal stereotypes. Using the work of feminist scholars, it becomes evident that Maas has crafted a female protagonist who disrupts negative portrayals of female characters. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Standard Uncertainty in Socially Responsible Labeling Schemes: A Product Market Experiment This paper investigates standard uncertainty in socially responsible labeling schemes. Admist government incapabilities to alleviate negative externalities, corporate social responsibility has been called upon to assist in this mission. Labeling schemes are meant to allow consumers to identify which products promote social responsibility, but when labels are uncertain in the true amount of negative effect the product's production alleviates, they may perpeturate confusion amongst consumers and lose their effectiveness. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Maternal mental health and child self regulation across ethnicity The study investigates the relationship between maternal mental health, encompassing maternal depression and general distress, and child self-regulation and externalization behaviors at grade 5, across three ethnic groups: European American, African American, and US-Mexican American. The research employs regression models to explore potential cultural differences in this relationship. The findings highlight the importance of considering cultural backgrounds when designing preventions and interventions targeting maternal mental health and its impact on child development. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Living Simultaneously in Two Different Worlds Black students who attend predominantly white institutions before college have a complex educational experience because of the systematically racist practices that are in place within the American school system – students' lives and identities are complicated as they try to get an education. This study focuses on the elite preparatory school environment (places that have been historically for the rich and white), where many Black students integrate into. First, this paper investigates the historical precedents that are the consequence of an unfair and unequal education system. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Overcoming Difficulties in Japanese American Interracial Marriages and Families View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects A Cognitive Approach to Forgetting in Case-Based Reasoning by Combining Cased-Based Reasoning and Artificial Neural Networks Forgetting in knowledge-based systems allows the systems to adapt in dynamic environments by removing irrelevant information. Traditional deletion strategies used in case-based reasoning systems are good at improving system performance while preserving competence. However, these systems have been proven to work rigidly when applied to assistive technologies because they do not possess the same forgetting mechanisms as humans do. View Item
Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects The Influence of Maternal Personality on Adolescent Conversation Involvement via Nonverbal Behaviors View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Polysemy in Spatially Ambiguous Prepositions Human language strongly connects conveyed ideas to the spatial plane. Prepositions are some of the most important pieces in describing how two entities relate in spatial terms. Yet, within a preposition, there are many different variations in meaning that are conveyed. The word under, for example, might refer to a ball sitting under a table or a river flowing under a bridge, two uses which convey very different spatial and temporal information. In addition to differences in spatial senses, prepositions have metaphoric senses. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Robots and Autism: How Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder Perceive Social Robots With the recent boom in artificial intelligence and robotics, social robots are being increasingly used as therapeutic devices for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). These social robots are thought to be effective because of their object-like simplicity combined with human- like social behaviors. Researchers have found that social robots have a multitude of beneficial outcomes for children with ASD, including increased engagement, the emergence of new social behaviors, and reduced social anxiety. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Altering Message Frame and Time Orientation to Promote Change in Health Behavior View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Characterization of Slip Behaviors Observed at the Bulnay Fault System in Mongolia Large intraplate earthquakes faraway from plate boundaries are not well understood. In this study, we conduct a seismicity analysis of the earthquakes nearby one of the most active intraplate strike-slip fault in the world that is capable of producing magnitude-8 earthquakes. 72 seismic stations are deployed between 2012 and 2014 and record seismicity in Central Mongolia. We are able to identify two clusters of larger magnitude events locating near the end of the rupture zones from the 1905 earthquakes suggesting that they are the aftershocks from the 1905 earthquakes. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects COLLECTIVE REMEMBERING, COLLECTIVE FORGETTING: AMERICAN WAR MNEMONICS IN VIETNAM AND KOREA How do nations choose which events to memorialize? In a study of the collective mnemonics of the United States' wars in Vietnam and Korea, I argue that the latter has been disproportionately discounted given its long-lasting and timely impacts. Using concepts such as semiotics, "dominant voices", and habitus, I argue that the intense memorialization of the Vietnam War has been sustained through resources not put towards the Korean War. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects PERPETUATING THE GUN CONTROL PARADOX: A CONTENT ANALYSIS OF FRAMING STRATEGIES USED BY THE NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION This paper explores the social movement framing strategies used by the National Rifle Association (NRA). Through content analysis of the American Rifleman publication, seven framing strategies emerge: frame extension, frame bridging, frame amplification, vilification, frame saving, frame debunking, and normalization. These strategies aid the NRA in maintaining members and mobilizing supporters to work on behalf of the pro-gun movement to limit the passage of gun control legislation. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects THE CULTURAL MODEL OF SUCCESS IN THE COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS AT LEHIGH UNIVERSITY This thesis examines how Lehigh students negotiate the cultural model of success, using a theoretical approach that combines cultural models, success, motivation, emotional well-being, education, and social reproduction. Ten interviews with Lehigh business school seniors were transcribed and imported into NVivo for coding and thematic content analysis where the data revealed a cultural model of success comprised of three features: financial gain, happiness, and personal goals. View Item
Image Undergraduate Theses and Capstone Projects Historical Evolution of Design and Supply of Drinking Water Treatment Plant for the City of Bethlehem, 1741-Present The purpose of this document is to provide a detailed account of the history of the water supply for the city of Bethlehem. This report begins with the settlement of the Moravians in the area, their need for water and the solutions they developed to meet their needs. It explains why Bethlehem water sources were switched, and how contamination, increasing population and water demands affected Bethlehem and its water supply. The document also introduces South Bethlehem and their water system. View Item