196 research outputs found

    KNEE TORQUE KINETICS DURING HIGHLAND DANCING

    Get PDF
    The purpose of the study is to measure torque variations in the knees of malaligned Highland dancers during the early and late stages of a six step Highland Fling. A secondary objective is to measure variations in knee malalignment at impact, maximum flexion and extension. The most frequently occurring injuries in dance involve the knee (Arnheim, 1980; Schafle, Requa & Garrick, 1990; Solomon & Micheli, 1986). More specifically, knee injuries in dance develop largely from knee malalignrnent (Arnheim, 1980; Clarkson & Skrinar, 1988; Clippinger-Robertson, 1987; Ende & Wickstrom, 1982; Reid, 1988; Solomon & Micheli, 1986; Teitz, 1987; Watkins & Clarkson, 1990). Quantifying knee torque due to malalignment provides a measure to better understand malalignment and the prevention of injury due to incorrect dance technique. Seven subjects, dancing a six step Highland Fling, were video taped from both a frontal and oblique view (45 degrees to the frontal view) while performing on a force platform. Video analysis provided knee displacement measures from both frontal and oblique views. Ground reaction forces (GRF) provided the force component for knee torque calculations. Knee malalignment displacements at impact, maximum flexion and extension were measured from the oblique view. Results were analyzed using a single subject baseline design and indicated mixed trends in knee torque, knee malalignment, and knee flexion from early to late stages of the dance. The decrease in knee torque is explained by a decrease, therefore, malalignment could have increased to aid in the absorption of shock. Maximum knee malalignment occurred at maximum knee flexion in the last step for all subjects and for five subjects in the first step. Increased knee malalignment measures, in the oblique plane, demonstrate potential for injury unless the dancer's technique and lower extremity alignment is corrected. The research utilizes Highland dancers, however the research concentration is on dancing in the turned-out position, a position common to other dance forms, such as ballet, jazz, and modern dance

    Effect of HIV infection and antiretroviral therapy on hepatitis B virus (HBV)-specific T cell responses in patients who have resolved HBV infection

    Get PDF
    Coinfection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a common occurrence in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)–positive patients and an increasing cause of morbidity and mortality. The CD8+ T cell response is critical for long-term control of HBV in patients resolving acute infection. Here, we examine the effect of HIV on HBV-specific CD8+ T cell responses in patients who have resolved HBV infection. A cross-sectional study showed a reduction in HBV-specific CD8+ T cell responses in HIV-positive, HBV-immune patients, compared with those in HIV-negative, HBV-immune patients. A longitudinal study of a subgroup of patients examined whether this attrition could be reversed by effective antiretroviral therapy. The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) resulted in reconstitution of some HBV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses, in association with restoration of CD4+ T cell counts. These data provide a mechanism to account for the observed impairment of control of HBV infection in the setting of HIV infection and support the ability of HAART to reconstitute functionally active T cell responses

    Continuous Truth II: Reflections

    Get PDF
    Abstract. In the late 1960s, Dana Scott first showed how the Stone-Tarski topological interpretation of Heyting’s calculus could be extended to model intuitionistic analysis; in particular Brouwer’s continuity prin-ciple. In the early ’80s we and others outlined a general treatment of non-constructive objects, using sheaf models—constructions from topos theory—to model not only Brouwer’s non-classical conclusions, but also his creation of “new mathematical entities”. These categorical models are intimately related to, but more general than Scott’s topological model. The primary goal of this paper is to consider the question of iterated extensions. Can we derive new insights by repeating the second act? In Continuous Truth I, presented at Logic Colloquium ’82 in Florence, we showed that general principles of continuity, local choice and local com-pactness hold in the gros topos of sheaves over the category of separable locales equipped with the open cover topology. We touched on the question of iteration. Here we develop a more gen-eral analysis of iterated categorical extensions, that leads to a reflection schema for statements of predicative analysis. We also take the opportunity to revisit some aspects of both Continuous Truth I and Formal Spaces (Fourman & Grayson 1982), and correct two long-standing errors therein

    On Eigenvalues of the sum of two random projections

    Full text link
    We study the behavior of eigenvalues of matrix P_N + Q_N where P_N and Q_N are two N -by-N random orthogonal projections. We relate the joint eigenvalue distribution of this matrix to the Jacobi matrix ensemble and establish the universal behavior of eigenvalues for large N. The limiting local behavior of eigenvalues is governed by the sine kernel in the bulk and by either the Bessel or the Airy kernel at the edge depending on parameters. We also study an exceptional case when the local behavior of eigenvalues of P_N + Q_N is not universal in the usual sense.Comment: 14 page

    The JCMT Legacy Survey of the Gould Belt: a first look at Orion B with HARP

    Get PDF
    ‘The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com '. Copyright Royal Astronomical Society.The Gould Belt Legacy Survey will survey nearby star-forming regions (within 500 pc), using Heterodyne Array Receiver Programme (HARP), Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array 2 and Polarimeter 2 on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. This paper describes the initial data obtained using HARP to observe 12CO, 13CO and C18O J= 3 → 2 towards two regions in Orion B, NGC 2024 and NGC 2071. We describe the physical characteristics of the two clouds, calculating temperatures and opacities utilizing all the three isotopologues. We find good agreement between temperatures calculated from CO and from dust emission in the dense, energetic regions. We determine the mass and energetics of the clouds, and of the high-velocity material seen in 12CO emission, and compare the relative energetics of the high- and low-velocity material in the two clouds. We present a clumpfind analysis of the 13CO condensations. The slope of the condensation mass functions, at the high-mass ends, is similar to the slope of the initial mass function.Peer reviewe

    The forms of repetition in social and environmental reports: insights from Hume's notion of ?impressions?

    Get PDF
    This paper focuses on the use of repetition, both in narrative and visual forms, in social and environmental reports. It investigates the forms of repetition as a rhetorical device adopted by the preparer of a social and environmental report in helping the process of knowledge acquisition, as outlined by Hume (1739). Drawing from Hume?s (1739) philosophical idea of an ?impression?, and the work of Davison (2014a) we classify repetitions into ?identical?, ?similar? and ?accumulated? forms. It is argued that the rationale for distinguishing between the different forms of repetition can be linked to their different potential or intensity in acting on different stimuli with a view to enhance learning. The empirical element of this study is based on the stand-alone social and environmental reports of a sample of 86 cooperative banks in Northern Italy; the analysis of these reports indicates that repetition is widespread and that cooperative banks use all forms of repetition, albeit to a varying extent within the different reported themes. The paper contributes to the literature by offering an alternative interpretation of repetition using an interdisciplinary perspective and by providing new insights on social and environmental reporting practices in the cooperative banking sector

    Cold Gas in Cluster Cores

    Full text link
    I review the literature's census of the cold gas in clusters of galaxies. Cold gas here is defined as the gas that is cooler than X-ray emitting temperatures (~10^7 K) and is not in stars. I present new Spitzer IRAC and MIPS observations of Abell 2597 (PI: Sparks) that reveal significant amounts of warm dust and star formation at the level of 5 solar masses per year. This rate is inconsistent with the mass cooling rate of 20 +/- 5 solar masses per year inferred from a FUSE [OVI] detection.Comment: 10 pages, conference proceeding

    Model Analysis of Time Reversal Symmetry Test in the Caltech Fe-57 Gamma-Transition Experiment

    Full text link
    The CALTECH gamma-transition experiment testing time reversal symmetry via the E2/M1 mulipole mixing ratio of the 122 keV gamma-line in Fe-57 has already been performed in 1977. Extending an earlier analysis in terms of an effective one-body potential, this experiment is now analyzed in terms of effective one boson exchange T-odd P-even nucleon nucleon potentials. Within the model space considered for the Fe-57 nucleus no contribution from isovector rho-type exchange is possible. The bound on the coupling strength phi_A from effective short range axial-vector type exchange induced by the experimental bound on sin(eta) leads to phi_A < 10^{-2}.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex 3.
    corecore