727 research outputs found

    ECCENTRIC HEAD-BOARD IMPACT IN ICE HOCKEY

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    The purpose of this study was to investigate into the physical processes taking place upon impact when a hockey player wearing an approved hockey helmet was forced into an eccentric head impact with the boards

    APPLICATION OF SPORTS BIOMECHANICS FOR LOWER LIMB AMPUTEES

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    Introduction Sports participation and prosthetic design for physically handicapped people are largely influenced by biomechanics research. In fact, the knowledge of mechanical physics and biological material properties gave birth to the sciences of biomechanics and kinesiology. Through these sciences, significant contributions have been made in understanding basic human movements, the goal-oriented movements as well as the a apted human movements (Kreighbaum and Barthels, 1985). Biomechanics research has provided data leading to advancements in equipment and prosth tic design (Becker, 1984; and Burgess, Hittenberger, Forsgren and Lindh, 1983)

    A utilitarian antagonist: the zombie in popular video games

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    This article takes as its starting point the prevalence of the zombie in video games. I argue that, although the zombie games often superficially resemble filmic texts in their use of aesthetic and narrative, they must be understood, less as a set of conventions and thematic metaphors in the way that the zombie text has been read in film and television scholarship, and more as a utilisation of the zombie as a utilitarian antagonist that facilitates and permits the pleasures of violence and fantasy in video game play. Beginning with the Resident Evil and Left 4 Dead series of games I examine the way that games necessarily update the notion zombie as mass antagonist via the need to vary gameplay activity through different styles of adversary for players. At the same time I will demonstrate that, far from simply being the province of the survival horror genre, the zombie appears across an array of game forms, game cultures and game productions. The zombie highlights the participatory nature of game culture in the array of zombie 'mods' that users create to transform existing games into zombie based games, in particular in relation to titles such as the Call of Duty series. At the other end of the production spectrum the zombie features heavily in the little studied area of online flash games where the zombie can be found in a variety of game genres and forms. The zombie here often operates as a pastiche of popular zombie narratives in survival games (The Last Stand), parodic engagements with zombie conventions (Jetpacks and Zombies) or play with the notion of zombie pandemics (the Infectionator games). Here I situate the zombie game as a aesthetic genre that works to provide an easily understandable context for such interactive genres as survival horror, text adventures, shooting games, physics games and driving games, with the popularity of these enough to drive numerous dedicated hosting and link sites such as zombiegames.net. The pastiche element of these games extends into gamers social engagement with games. Online debates over the the appropriate actions or preparation for a zombie holocaust are commonplace on the internet in such spaces as Zombieresearch.net. Whilst many of these sites feature decidedly tongue in cheek engagement with the notion of the zombie apocalypse, the users of fora for games like Left 4 Dead and Dead Island tend to debate this directly in the terms of the games themselves, discussing their relative merits or realism. Some of these games also highlight the specific pleasures of identifying the zombie as protagonist of sorts. In discussing this I will return to online gaming and the Left 4 Dead games in which players may compete online as part of the zombie horde. Such games raise major questions for the issues of identification and immersion that are said to be at the centre of the game experience. I will also explore the parodic pleasures of many flash games that situate the player in the role of spreading zombie infections. Throughout this article I aim to demonstrate that the zombie in game culture is less a cultural metaphor than a combination of utilitarian antagonist and a persistent aesthetic; a means of providing style or pleasure to many games that relies on the intertextual and flexible nature of the zombie as popular cultural phenomenon

    Predation pressure by avian predators suggests summer limitation of small-mammal populations in the Canadian Arctic

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    Predation has been suggested to be especially important in simple food webs and less productive ecosystems such as the arctic tundra, but very few data are available to evaluate this hypothesis. We examined the hypothesis that avian predators could drive the population dynamics of two cyclic lemming species in the Canadian Arctic. A dense and diverse suite of predatory birds, including the Snowy Owl (Bubo scandiacus), the Rough-legged Hawk (Buteo lagopus), and the Long-tailed Jaeger (Stercorarius longicaudus), inhabits the arctic tundra and prey on collared (Dicrostonyx groenlandicus) and brown (Lemmus trimucronatus) lemmings during the snow-free period. We evaluated the predation pressure exerted by these predators by combining their numerical (variation in breeding and fledgling numbers) and functional (variation in diet and daily consumption rates) responses to variations in lemming densities over the 2004-2010 period. Breeding density and number of fledglings produced by the three main avian predators increased sharply without delay in response to increasing lemming densities. The proportion of collared lemmings in the diet of those predators was high at low lemming density (both species) but decreased as lemming density increased. However, we found little evidence that their daily consumption rates vary in relation to changes in lemming density. Total consumption rate by avian predators initially increased more rapidly for collared lemming but eventually leveled off at a much higher value for brown lemmings, the most abundant species at our site. The combined daily predation rate of avian predators exceeded the maximum daily potential growth rates of both lemming species except at the highest recorded densities for brown lemmings. We thus show, for the first time, that predation pressure exerted without delay by avian predators can limit populations of coexisting lemming species during the snow-free period, and thus, that predation could play a role in the cyclic dynamic of these species in the tundra.</p

    The Goldilocks principle in action: synthesis and structural characterization of a novel {Cu4(\u3bc3-OH)4} cubane stabilized by monodentate ligands

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    A {Cu4(\u3bc3-OH)4} compound, where four copper(II) and four \u3bc3-bridging oxygen atoms occupy alternate corners of a slightly distorted cube, has been prepared and structurally characterized. This species, formulated as [Cu4(\u3bc3-OH)4(Htmpz)8](ClO4)4\ub71.5Et2O (Htmpz = 3,4,5-1H-trimethyl pyrazole), can be classified as belonging to type I Cu4O4 cubane complexes, and is better described as two CuII\u2013(\u3bc-OH)2\u2013CuII units held together by four long Cu\u2013O bonds. The central distorted cubane core is stabilized by neutral monodentate ligands (Htmpz) and perchlorate anions, as demonstrated by single-crystal X-ray structure analysis. The title compound was obtained by hydrolysis of a dinuclear methoxo-bridged species, [Cu(\u3bc-OCH3)(Htmpz)2]2(ClO4)2, which was prepared by reaction of [Cu(Htmpz)4(ClO4)2] with methanol. All these reactions represent a nice example of the Goldilocks principle in action in coordination chemistry, since each single actor (solvent, counteranion, and ligand) has the \u201cjust right\u201d electronic, steric or coordinative properties which determine the fate of the final products

    Simulating Fully‐Integrated Hydrological Dynamics in Complex Alpine Headwaters: Potential and Challenges

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    Highly simplified approaches continue to underpin hydrological climate change impact assessments across the Earth's mountainous regions. Fully-integrated surface-subsurface models may hold far greater potential to represent the distinctive regimes of steep, geologically-complex headwater catchments. However, their utility has not yet been tested across a wide range of mountainous settings. Here, an integrated model of two adjacent calcareous Alpine headwaters that accounts for two-dimensional surface flow, three-dimensional (3D) variably-saturated groundwater flow, and evapotranspiration is presented. An energy balance-based representation of snow dynamics contributed to the model's high-resolution forcing data, and a sophisticated 3D geological model helped to define and parameterize its subsurface structure. In the first known attempt to calibrate a catchment-scale integrated model of a mountainous region automatically, numerous uncertain model parameters were estimated. The salient features of the hydrological regime could ultimately be satisfactorily reproduced – over an 11-month evaluation period, the Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency of simulated streamflow at the main gauging station was 0.76. Spatio-temporal visualization of the forcing data and simulated responses further confirmed the model's broad coherence. Presumably due to unresolved local subsurface heterogeneity, closely replicating the somewhat contrasting groundwater level signals observed near to one another proved more elusive. Finally, we assessed the impacts of various simplifications and assumptions that are commonly employed in physically-based modeling – including the use of spatially uniform forcings, a vertically limited model domain, and global geological data products – on key simulated outputs, finding strongly affected model performance in many cases. Although certain outstanding challenges must be overcome if the uptake of integrated models in mountain regions around the world is to increase, our work demonstrates the feasibility and benefits of their application in such complex systems

    Luminescent blue emissive bis(alkynyl) borane compounds with a N,O-coordinated ligand

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    Five bis(alkynyl)boranes with a (imidazo[1,5-a]pyridin-3-yl)phenolate ligand have been synthesized and characterized both in solution (1H, 13C, 11B, 19F NMR) and in the solid state (X-ray). All derivatives, differing for the substituent R (H, Me, OMe, CF3, NMe2) in the para position of the phenylacetylene moieties, displayed blue fluorescence emission in solution, linearly correlated to the electronic properties of the substituent R (i.e., its σp Hammett constant). High Stokes shifts and good quantum yields were recorded. Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory (TD-DFT) calculations were performed to describe the percentage contribution of each fragment of the molecule to the frontier orbitals. Electron Density Difference Maps (EDDMs) calculated for all derivatives allowed to explain the emissive properties of the studied compounds

    Blue-Emissive Fluorescent Zinc(II) Complexes with Bis(imidazo[1,5-a]pyridine)methane Ligands

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    Three bis(imidazo[1,5-a]pyridine)methane derivatives (bis(1-methylimidazo[1,5-a]pyridin-3-yl)methane, LH; 3,3’-(ethane-1,1-diyl)bis(1-methylimidazo[1,5-a]pyridine) LMe; 3,3’-(2-phenylethane-1,1-diyl)bis(1-methylimidazo[1,5-a]pyridine), LBz) have been synthesized, and fully characterized in solution (1H and 13C NMR spectra) and in the solid state (X-ray). In particular, LH has been prepared in high yield (75 %) under very mild conditions (water, 60 °C), offering an alternative route to those reported in the literature. LMe and LBz have been obtained from LH by functionalization of the methylene bridge. The bis(imidazo[1,5-a]pyridine)methane compounds have been coordinated to a zinc(II) center, leading to tetrahedral complexes of general formula [Zn(LR)2](ClO4)2 (R=H, Me, Bz), which showed a bright fluorescent emission with (x,y) color coordinates very close to standard blue. TD-DFT have been employed to describe the Frontier Molecular Orbitals (FMOs) participating in electronic transitions, highlighting the main transition as 1(π-π*) transition in the bis(imidazo[1,5-a]pyridine)methane and a mixed intra-ligand (1ILT) and ligand-to-ligand (1LLT) transition in the complexes
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