604 research outputs found
Physical activity in daily life is associated with lower adiposity values than doing weekly sports in Lc65+ cohort at baseline.
BACKGROUND: Overweight and obesity prevalence is the highest at age 65-75 years in Lausanne (compared with younger classes). We aimed to describe 1) eating habits, daily physical activity (PA), and sports frequency in community-dwelling adults aged 65-70, 2) the links of these behaviors with socio-economic factors, and 3) with adiposity.
METHODS: Cross-sectional analysis of Lc65+ cohort at baseline, including 1260 adults from the general population of Lausanne aged 65-70 years. Eating habits (8 items from MNA) and PA (sports frequency and daily PA: walking and using stairs) were assessed by questionnaires. Body mass index (BMI), supra-iliac (SISF), triceps skin-folds (TSF), waist circumference (WC), and WHR were measured.
RESULTS: Prevalence of overweight (BMI 25.0-29.9 kg/m2), obesity (BMI ≥ 30.0 kg/m2), and abdominal obesity was 53%, 24%, and 45% in men; 35%, 23%, and 45% in women.Intake of fruits or vegetables (FV) ≥ twice/day was negatively associated with male sex (prevalence 81% versus 90%, chi-square P < 0.001). The proportion avoiding stairs in daily life was higher among women (25%) than among men (20%, chi-square P=0.003).In multivariate analyses among both sexes, eating FV, using stairs in daily life ("stairs"), and doing sports ≥ once/week were significantly negatively associated with financial difficulties (stairs: OR=0.54, 95% CI=0.40-0.72) and positively with educational level (stairs: OR=1.68, 95% CI=1.17-2.43 for high school).For all five log-transformed adiposity indicators in women, and for all indicators except SISF and TSF in men, a gradual decrease in adiposity was observed from category "no stairs, sports < once/week" (reference), to "no stairs, sports ≥ once/week", to "stairs, sports < once/week", and "stairs, sports ≥ once/week" (for example: WC in men, respectively: ß= -0.03, 95% CI= -0.07-0.02; ß= -0.06, 95% CI= -0.09- -0.03; ß= -0.10, 95% CI= -0.12- -0.07).
CONCLUSIONS: In this population with high overweight and obesity prevalence, eating FV and PA were strongly negatively associated with financial difficulties and positively with education. Using stairs in daily life was more strongly negatively associated with adiposity than doing sports ≥ once/week
Traction force microscopy with optimized regularization and automated Bayesian parameter selection for comparing cells
Adherent cells exert traction forces on to their environment, which allows
them to migrate, to maintain tissue integrity, and to form complex
multicellular structures. This traction can be measured in a perturbation-free
manner with traction force microscopy (TFM). In TFM, traction is usually
calculated via the solution of a linear system, which is complicated by
undersampled input data, acquisition noise, and large condition numbers for
some methods. Therefore, standard TFM algorithms either employ data filtering
or regularization. However, these approaches require a manual selection of
filter- or regularization parameters and consequently exhibit a substantial
degree of subjectiveness. This shortcoming is particularly serious when cells
in different conditions are to be compared because optimal noise suppression
needs to be adapted for every situation, which invariably results in systematic
errors. Here, we systematically test the performance of new methods from
computer vision and Bayesian inference for solving the inverse problem in TFM.
We compare two classical schemes, L1- and L2-regularization, with three
previously untested schemes, namely Elastic Net regularization, Proximal
Gradient Lasso, and Proximal Gradient Elastic Net. Overall, we find that
Elastic Net regularization, which combines L1 and L2 regularization,
outperforms all other methods with regard to accuracy of traction
reconstruction. Next, we develop two methods, Bayesian L2 regularization and
Advanced Bayesian L2 regularization, for automatic, optimal L2 regularization.
Using artificial data and experimental data, we show that these methods enable
robust reconstruction of traction without requiring a difficult selection of
regularization parameters specifically for each data set. Thus, Bayesian
methods can mitigate the considerable uncertainty inherent in comparing
cellular traction forces
Association between Adiposity and disability in the Lc65+ Cohort.
To examine the longitudinal association between body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) with mortality and incident disability in Lc65+ cohort.
Population-based cohort of non-institutionalized adults with up to 8.9 years of follow-up.
City of Lausanne, Switzerland.
1,293 individuals aged 65 to 70 at baseline (58% women).
BMI, WC and covariates were measured at baseline in 2004-2005. Vital status was obtained up to the 31st December 2013 and difficulty with basic activities of daily living (BADL) was reported in a self-administered questionnaire sent to participants every year. Main outcomes were total mortality and disability, defined as difficulty with BADL for ≥2 years or institutionalization. Cox regression was used with BMI/WC quintiles 2 as the reference.
130 persons died over a median follow-up of 8.47 years (crude mortality rate, men: 16.5/1,000 person-years, women: 9.7/1,000 person-years). In Cox regression adjusted for age, sex, education, financial situation, smoking and involuntary weight loss (IWL) at baseline, mortality was significantly associated with neither BMI nor WC, but there were trends towards non-significant J-curves across both BMI and WC quintiles. Disability (231 cases) tended to increase monotonically across both BMI and WC quintiles and was significantly associated with BMI quintile 5 (HR=2.44, 95% CI [1.65-3.63]), and WC quintiles 4 (HR=1.81 [1.15-2.85]) and 5 (HR=2.58, [1.67-4.00]).
Almost half of the study population had a substantially increased HR of disability, as compared to the reference BMI/WC categories. This observation emphasizes the need for life-long strategies aimed at preventing excess weight, muscle loss and functional decline through adequate nutrition and regular physical activity, starting at early age and extending throughout life
Influence of diffraction on the spectrum and wavefunctions of an open system
In this paper, we demonstrate the existence and significance of diffractive
orbits in an open microwave billiard, both experimentally and theoretically.
Orbits that diffract off of a sharp edge of the system are found to have a
strong influence on the transmission spectrum of the system, especially in the
regime where there are no stable classical orbits. On resonance, the
wavefunctions are influenced by both classical and diffractive orbits. Off
resonance, the wavefunctions are determined by the constructive interference of
multiple transient, nonperiodic orbits. Experimental, numerical, and
semiclassical results are presented.Comment: 27 pages, 29 figures, and 3 tables. Submitted to Physical Review E. A
copy with higher resolution figures is available at
http://monsoon.harvard.edu/~hersch/papers.htm
Maximizing Neumann fundamental tones of triangles
We prove sharp isoperimetric inequalities for Neumann eigenvalues of the
Laplacian on triangular domains.
The first nonzero Neumann eigenvalue is shown to be maximal for the
equilateral triangle among all triangles of given perimeter, and hence among
all triangles of given area. Similar results are proved for the harmonic and
arithmetic means of the first two nonzero eigenvalues
Specifying color differences in a linear color space (LEF)
This work presents a novel way of generating color differences for synthesizing artistically screened color images. A single color is specified by interacting with the mouse alternately on a constant luminance plane and on a constant hue plane within the LEF color space (the orthogonal space formed by the RGB cube's black-white axis (L) and by its E and F chrominance axes). By interactively selecting a second color point, a color difference is specified. We present a method for extrapolating this color difference throughout all colors of the RGB cube so as to generate consistent color differences, i.e. smoothly varying similar color differences for different colors. The produced artistically screened color patches show that significant luminance differences always generate significant visually perceived differences, whereas significant hue and/or saturation differences do not always generate significant visually perceived differences
An interface for the interactive design of artistic screens
The article presents the concepts and the tools involved in the interactive design of artistic screens. The screen elements are derived from a small set of analytical contours provided by the screen designer. We present the requirements that these contours must satisfy in order to generate consistent screens. Software tools have been developed which provide automatic means for verifying and enforcing these constraints. They include a way of specifying the periodicity of the screen dot and a graphical interface offering a convenient way of specifying and tuning the growth of the screen do
Legibility of perceptually-tuned grayscale fonts
Perceptually-tuned grayscale fonts are generated from character outline descriptions by applying to them a set of modifications specifically conceived for strengthening thin character parts, obtaining well-contrasted bars and preserving important relationships between character shape parts. The present study aims at comparing the legibility of perceptually-tuned grayscale and bilevel display fonts at small and very small sizes (6, 8 and 10 pt) The study confirms the results of previous studies indicating that reading speed is to a large extent independent of the typography (bilevel or grayscale) and the font size. However, perceptually-tuned grayscale characters perform better than bilevel characters for an italic string search task in a meaningless text. Regarding the subjective preferences of the test subjects, perceptually-tuned grayscale fonts at 8 and 10 point sizes received a superior rating than bilevel fonts at the same size
Dithering algorithms for variable dot size printers
Dither-based methods for the halftoning of images on multi-level printing devices such as multi-level inkjet printers are presented. Due to the relatively large size of single droplets, halftoning algorithms are still needed. However, since halftoning occurs between the basic levels attainable by printing one, two or several droplets at the same position, artefacts are less visible than in equal resolution bilevel printers. When dithering algorithms are used for the halftoning task, the dither threshold tiles should have oblique orientations so as to make the halftoning artifacts less visible. They should be designed so as to break up the inherent artifacts of variable dot size printers, such as for example continuous lines made up of elongated elliptic dots. The resulting visual effects are shown by simulating the printed dots of a multilevel inkjet printe
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