Titel Deelnemers "Korte inhoud" "Challenging the frame in the news: the role of issue involvement, attitude, and competing frames" "Baldwin Van Gorp, Paul Hendriks Vettehen, Johannes WJ Beentjes" "The present study aims at contributing to the external validity of the framing concept by studying the effects of frames that have actually been utilized in newspaper articles. The study assesses the persuasive influence of such frames on the interpretation of news, and how issue involvement and attitude interfere in this process. A total of 282 participants are presented with one of three experimental versions of a newspaper article about asylum. In the first condition the asylum seekers are implicitly labeled as innocent victims, and in the second as intruders. The third version is a mixed condition in which both competing frames are applied. In all three conditions an identical photograph is inserted. The findings indicate that the frame suggests how the photograph can be interpreted. However, no indications were found for a moderating role of the news readers’ issue involvement or attitude." "Who is to Blame on July 22, 2011? Psychological and Sociological Blame Frames in the Reporting of Anders Breivik in the Dutch Speaking Broadsheet Press" "Stefan Mertens" "On July 22, 2011 Anders Breivik murdered a large amount of people in Norway. In this study we investigate a sample of articles that were published about Breivik and his deeds in the Flemish and Dutch press. We will investigate these articles looking for the so-called “attribution of responsibility frame.” The murders from Breivik could be explained psychologically (“he is insane”) as well as sociologically (far-right political parties are responsible because of having spread hate speech). We present a typology of subtypes of frames. We will furthermore investigate how many times these types of frames occur in different media outlets." "Framed or triangular brace arrangements in tubular arches" "Philippe Van Bogaert, Dries Stael, Bart De Pauw, Hans De Backer" "Framed or triangular brace arrangements in tubular arches" "Philippe Van Bogaert, Dries Stael, Bart De Pauw" "To frame or not to frame? Effects of message framing and risk priming on mouth rinse use and intention in an adult population-based sample" "Gert-Jan de Bruijn" "Good dental hygiene is key to public health. To promote dental hygiene behaviours, persuasive messages are key. Message framing is a popular theory that has seen mixed evidence. In this web-based experimental study, interaction effects of message frame, behavioural function, and risk priming were investigated on mouth rinse use and intentions in a representative sample of Dutch adults. Final included sample contained 549 participants (50.1% male, mean age = 47.4, SD = 16.1) and outcomes were immediate mouth rinse product choice, intentions to use mouth rinse, and mouth rinse behaviour at 2-week follow-up. Results demonstrated a theorized significant interaction between message frame and behavioural function were mouth rinse product choice. Two-week follow-up mouth rinse behaviour was affected by an interaction between message frame and risk prime. Message framing can thus be employed to promote dental health, but it requires attention to moderation effects which are inconsistent across behavioural outcomes." "A 1 bp deletion in the dual reading frame deafness gene **LRTOMT** causes a frameshift from the first into the second reading frame" "Maarten Vanwesemael, Isabelle Schrauwen, Ruben Ceuppens, Fatemeh Alasti, Ellen Jorssen, Effat Farrokhi, Morteza Hashemzadeh Chaleshtori, Guy Van Camp" "The Battle of Frame Building: The Reciprocal Relationship between Journalists and Frame Sponsors" "Laura Jacobs" "Mooring scientific instruments on the seabed – Design, deployment protocol and performance of a recoverable frame for acoustic receivers" "Jolien Goossens, Michiel T'Jampens, Klaas Deneudt, Jan Reubens" "1. Acoustic telemetry is increasingly used to observe and monitor animal movements in aquatic environments. Practical deployment mechanisms are needed to sustain consistent data flows in challenging environments.2. A tripod frame was developed to facilitate the deployment of acoustic receivers on the seabed, allowing for the recovery of all equipment with an acoustic release system.3. The procedures of deployment and recovery proved to be practical and efficient during a field trial in the North Sea. Compared to a common cabled design, the tripod frame realized a significantly higher detection probability and performed consistently better at greater distance and louder ambient noise.4. In the context of ocean observation in challenging environments, the tripod frame is a useful tool for temporary and continuous monitoring of tagged fish presence, potentially fitted with additional instruments." "Injection attacks on 802.11n MAC frame aggregation" "Pieter ROBYNS, Peter QUAX, Wim LAMOTTE" "The ability to inject packets into a network is known to be an important tool for attackers: it allows them to exploit or probe for potential vulnerabilities residing on the connected hosts. In this paper, we present a novel practical methodology for injecting arbitrary frames into wireless networks, by using the Packet-In-Packet (PIP) technique to exploit the frame aggregation mechanism introduced in the 802.11n standard. We show how an attacker can apply this methodology over a WAN -- without physical proximity to the wireless network and without requiring a wireless interface card. The practical feasibility of our injection method is then demonstrated through a number of proof-of-concept attacks. More specifically, in these proof-of-concepts we illustrate how a host scan can be performed on the network, and how beacon frames can be injected from a remote location. We then both analytically and experimentally estimate the success rate of these attacks in a realistic test setup. Finally, we present several defensive measures that network administrators can put in place in order to prevent exploitation of our frame injection methodology." "Frame theory and optimal anchor geometries in wireless localization" "Samuel Van de Velde, Guiseppe Abreu, Heidi Steendam" "We revisit the problem of describing optimal anchor geometries that result in the minimum achievable MSE by employing the Cramer Rao Lower bound. Our main contribution is to show that this problem can be cast onto the whelm of modern Frame Theory, which not only provides new insights, but also allows the straightforward generalization of various classical results for the anchor placement problem. For example, by employing the frame potential for single-target localization, we see that the directions of the anchors, as seen from the target, should optimally be as orthogonal as possible, and that the existence of an optimal geometry for an arbitrary number of anchors is governed by the fundamental inequality in frame theory. Furthermore, the frame-theoretic approach allows for the simple derivation of some properties on optimal anchor placement that prove to be useful in a tractable approach for the more complex, multi-target anchor placement problem. In a more general sense, the paper builds a refreshing bridge between the classical problem of wireless localization and the powerful domain of Frame Theory, with far-reaching potential."