National Repository of Grey Literature 4 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Functions in examples and counterexamples
Janda, David ; Pilous, Derek (advisor) ; Zhouf, Jaroslav (referee)
The aim of my Bachelors thesis is to explicate students coming to the uni- versity the key problems in fundamentals of mathematical analysis. I focus on the most notable terms of continuity and limit, which these secondary students were acquainted with. However, majority of them just intuitively and informaly. I am trying to point out the fact, that the knowledge of many students is distortid and uncomplete. As a result it is necessary to practise and clarify this knowledge so that the intuitive imagination of these terms corresponds to the formal definition. I am trying to get this point by brea- king of intuitive imaginations of students by counterexamples. Important is a chapter named The Construction of Functions, which contains instructi- ons leading to the finding functions with specific features. Not only these features, described in this thesis, but also more complex such as derivation, primitive function or uniform convergence. It is a consequence of the fact, that the principle of examples to practise these terms is in many sights similar and repetitious. In chapters named Continuity and Limit, I am interpreting these terms using the special examples, which are in my opinion optimal for rehearsing. My intention is to help illustrate selected problematical sections of mathematical analysis.
Understanding Information Asymmetries through Mechanism Design
Albert, Branislav ; Červinka, Michal (advisor) ; Adam, Tomáš (referee)
This thesis serves as an introduction and overview of the broad and closely related fields of mechanism design, contract theory, and information economics. Each chapter is intended to provide a self-contained guide to the particular area of application -- examples include adverse selection, moral hazard, and auctions. The reader should benefit from the thesis in two ways: by understanding the general notions of the revelation principle, incentive compatibility, and individual rationality from the mechanism design theory as well as by examining the particular information asymmetry models in the individual areas. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
Functions in examples and counterexamples
Janda, David ; Pilous, Derek (advisor) ; Zhouf, Jaroslav (referee)
The aim of my Bachelors thesis is to explicate students coming to the uni- versity the key problems in fundamentals of mathematical analysis. I focus on the most notable terms of continuity and limit, which these secondary students were acquainted with. However, majority of them just intuitively and informaly. I am trying to point out the fact, that the knowledge of many students is distortid and uncomplete. As a result it is necessary to practise and clarify this knowledge so that the intuitive imagination of these terms corresponds to the formal definition. I am trying to get this point by brea- king of intuitive imaginations of students by counterexamples. Important is a chapter named The Construction of Functions, which contains instructi- ons leading to the finding functions with specific features. Not only these features, described in this thesis, but also more complex such as derivation, primitive function or uniform convergence. It is a consequence of the fact, that the principle of examples to practise these terms is in many sights similar and repetitious. In chapters named Continuity and Limit, I am interpreting these terms using the special examples, which are in my opinion optimal for rehearsing. My intention is to help illustrate selected problematical sections of mathematical analysis.

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