12,612 research outputs found
Sensory Changes in Adults with Unilateral Transtibial Amputation
The purpose of this study was to describe the sensory changes in adults with unilateral transtibial amputation
(TTA), as any loss of sensation may have significant impact on the successful use of a prosthesis. Sensory modalities of light touch, deep pressure, vibration, and superficial pain (pinprick) were examined on the residual and contralateral limbs of 16 veterans with TTA. Six subjects demonstrated normal sensation on the contralateral limb and impaired sensation of superficial pain, vibration, and/or light touch on the residual limb. Superficial pain was the most frequently impaired sensation, and vibration and superficial pain sensation appeared to be age-dependent, with increased impairment observed in the elderly. Deep pressure sensation was intact in all subjects. These preliminary data suggest that although neither the amputation nor the prosthetic rehabilitation resulted in impaired deep pressure sensation, these two factors contributed to minimal impairment of light touch and vibration, and significant impairment of the superficial pain sensation
A non-invasive measure of minerals and electrolytes in tissue
A system for collecting epithelial cells from the oral mucosa for the determination of ion concentration is discussed with application to the study of man's adaptation to microgravity. A number of characteristics of these cells influenced the choice for clinical testing. They are non-cornified epithelial cells located on the inferior aspect of the tongue; therefore, they are well protected from trauma. They have the capability of reflecting relatively recent physiologic changes since they are renewed every three days and have aerobic metabolism. Most importantly, they are easily accessible and can be removed by a wooden applicator stick with minimum discomfort. Smears of cells removed in this manner show predominantly individual cells rather than sheets of contiuous cells. This facilitates the visual isolation of single cells with the electron microscope for analysis. NASA's principle effort in the development of a test to measure the ion concentration in sublingual cells has been research by the biomedical program carried out by scientists with expertise in skeletal metabolism. These efforts were directed toward determining the biological meaning and deviations in interacellular ions in nonhuman primates and in male volunteers for experiments in a model for weightlessness. A brief one page summary of the experiments and results are presented
Spectral properties of the 2D Holstein t-J model
Employing the Lanczos algorithm in combination with a kernel polynomial
moment expansion (KPM) and the maximum entropy method (MEM), we show a way of
calculating charge and spin excitations in the Holstein t-J model, including
the full quantum nature of phonons. To analyze polaron band formation we
evaluate the hole spectral function for a wide range of electron-phonon
coupling strengths. For the first time, we present results for the optical
conductivity of the 2D Holstein t-J model.Comment: 2 pages, Latex. Submitted to Physica C, Proc. Int. Conf. on M2HTSC
History of New York State’s “Forever Wild” Forest Preserve and the Agencies Charged with Carrying out Article XIV’s Mandate
Article XIV is probably the most controversial provision of the New York State Constitution adopted in 1894. The provision declares that State-owned land in the Adirondack and Catskill State Parks shall remain “forever wild.” Yet, implementation of this mandate by the State has varied since its inception; actions are dependent on the views and policies of regulating agency. The paper traces the history of Article XIV through judicial interpretation, Attorney General’s opinions, and implementation activities by the agency charged with its enforcement. The purpose of this paper is to prepare the policy-makers who will have a voice at the next Constitutional Convention on the issues pertaining to Article XIV and its future implementation by the Department of Environmental Conservation for the benefit of New York
Studies on Ethylene Oxide-freon 12 Decontamination and Dry-Heat Sterilization Cycles
Ethylene oxide-Freon decontamination and heat sterilization cycle
Recommended from our members
Understanding structure of concurrent actions
Whereas most work in reinforcement learning (RL) ignores the structure or relationships between actions, in this paper we show that exploiting structure in the action space can improve sample efficiency during exploration. To show this we focus on concurrent action spaces where the RL agent selects multiple actions per timestep. Concurrent action spaces are challenging to learn in especially if the number of actions is large as this can lead to a combinatorial explosion of the action space.
This paper proposes two methods: a first approach uses implicit structure to perform high-level action elimination using task-invariant actions; a second approach looks for more explicit structure in the form of action clusters. Both methods are context-free, focusing only on an analysis of the action space and show a significant improvement in policy convergence times
Effects of ethylene oxide-Freon 12 decontamination and dry heat sterilization procedures on polymeric products
Effects of ethylene oxide-Freon 12 decontamination and dry heat sterilization procedures on potential spacecraft polymeric material
- …
