41 research outputs found
Study Protocol For Clinical Trial of the Fit Families Multicomponent Obesity intervention For african american adolescents and their Caregivers: Next Step From the orbit initiative
INTRODUCTION: This study will test the effectiveness of FIT Families (FIT), a multicomponent family-based behavioural intervention, against a credible attention control condition, Home-Based Family Support (HBFS). This protocol paper describes the design of a randomised clinical trial testing the efficacy of the FIT intervention. The protocol will assess the efficacy of FIT to improve health status in African American adolescents with obesity (AAAO) and their primary caregivers on primary (percent body fat) and secondary (physical activity, metabolic control, weight loss) outcomes and its cost-effectiveness.
METHODS: 180 youth/caregiver dyads are randomised into FIT or HBFS, stratified by age, gender and baseline per cent overweight. The proposed study follows a two condition (FIT, HBFS) by four assessment time points. Tests will be conducted to identify potential relationship of baseline demographic and clinical variables to our dependent variables and see whether they are balanced between groups. It is hypothesised that youth/caregiver dyads randomised to FIT will show significantly greater reductions in percent body fat over a 12-month follow-up period compared with AAAO receiving HBFS. Preliminary findings are expected by November 2023.
ETHICS: This protocol received IRB approval from the Medical University of South Carolina (Pro00106021; see \u27MUSC IRB 106021 Main Approval.doxc\u27 in online supplemental materials).
DISSEMINATION: Dissemination activities will include summary documents designed for distribution to the broader medical community/family audience and submission of manuscripts, based on study results, to relevant peer-reviewed scientific high-impact journals.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04974554
Zipf's Law in Short-Time Timbral Codings of Speech, Music, and Environmental Sound Signals
Timbre is a key perceptual feature that allows discrimination between different sounds. Timbral sensations are highly dependent on the temporal evolution of the power spectrum of an audio signal. In order to quantitatively characterize such sensations, the shape of the power spectrum has to be encoded in a way that preserves certain physical and perceptual properties. Therefore, it is common practice to encode short-time power spectra using psychoacoustical frequency scales. In this paper, we study and characterize the statistical properties of such encodings, here called timbral code-words. In particular, we report on rank-frequency distributions of timbral code-words extracted from 740 hours of audio coming from disparate sources such as speech, music, and environmental sounds. Analogously to text corpora, we find a heavy-tailed Zipfian distribution with exponent close to one. Importantly, this distribution is found independently of different encoding decisions and regardless of the audio source. Further analysis on the intrinsic characteristics of most and least frequent code-words reveals that the most frequent code-words tend to have a more homogeneous structure. We also find that speech and music databases have specific, distinctive code-words while, in the case of the environmental sounds, this database-specific code-words are not present. Finally, we find that a Yule-Simon process with memory provides a reasonable quantitative approximation for our data, suggesting the existence of a common simple generative mechanism for all considered sound sources
PoboljĹĄana elektromagnetska kompatibilnost (EMC) sklopnog energetskog pretvaraÄa sa sluÄajnom modulacijom
This paper surveys some analytical and experimental results concerning different randomized modulation strategies in switched-mode power converters (SMPCs). After a short review of practical experiences within the literature it presents the benefits of several randomized schemes for power converters (i.e. reduced electromagnetic interference - EMI, and lower acoustic noise). It also introduces the mathematical background for dealing with randomized modulation within the medium-frequency range: power spectrum density (PSD). Finally, the EMI measurements confirm the improved EMC performances of the randomized boost rectifier, as also in the DC-DC buck converter.Ovaj Älanak istraĹžuje analitiÄke i eksperimentalne rezultate razliÄitih sluÄajnih strategija modulacije u sklopnim energetskim pretvaraÄima (SMPCs). Nakon kratkog pregleda praktiÄnih iskustava iz literature, predstavljene su prednosti nekoliko sluÄajnih shema za energetske pretvaraÄe (smanjena elektromagnetska interferencija - EMI, i niĹži akustiÄni ĹĄum). TakoÄer, uvedena je matematiÄka podloga za rad sa sluÄajnom modulacijom u podruÄju srednjih frekvencija: spektralna gustoÄa snage (PSD). KonaÄno, EMI mjerenja potvrÄuju poboljĹĄanja EMC performansi sluÄajnih uzlaznih ispravljaÄa, kao i DC-DC silaznih pretvaraÄa
Rapid Prototyping of Application-Specific Signal Processors: Educator/Facilitator Current Practice (1993) Model and Challenges
The Rapid Prototyping of Application-Specific Signal Processors (RASSP) project of the US Department of Defense (ARPA and Tri-Services) targets a 4X improvement in the design, prototyping, manufacturing, and support processes (relative to current practice). The authors present a "current practice (circa 1993)" model for the design and prototyping of application-specific signal processors developed as part of the RASSP Educator/Facilitator (E/F) Program. A number of limitations in current design practice are highlighted together with challenges faced by candidate solutions. The E/F Program proposes that this model be used as a baseline in the evaluation of newer RASSP prototyping methodologies and processes. 1 Introduction In this section we introduce classes of highperformance application-specific parallel processors that are the subject of the Educator/Facilitator current practice (1993) study. In Section 2 we present "current practice (circa 1993)" based on extensive study of indust..
Toward an Easy Programming Environment for Implementing Mobile Applications: A Fleet Application Case Study Using SyD Middleware
This paper describes the advantages of SyD (System on Mobile Devices), a middleware technology for mobile devices and e-services, in terms of technology and programming. Features of SyD are illustrated here through our prototype application, a complex communication system for a trucking fleet that operates an automated package delivery system. The fleet system has been implemented in three ways, with SOAP, with JDBC, and with SyD. Our implementation experience shows that SyD greatly simplifies coding by allowing heterogeneous devices, peer-to-peer communications, group transactions based on triggering events, and mobility support through proxies and directory service