74,712 research outputs found
An experimental study on a motion sensing system for sports training
In sports science, motion data collected from athletes is
used to derive key performance characteristics, such as stride length
and stride frequency, that are vital coaching support information. The
sensors for use must be more accurate, must capture more vigorous
events, and have strict weight and size requirements, since they must
not themselves affect performance. These requirements mean each
wireless sensor device is necessarily resource poor and yet must be
capable of communicating a considerable amount of data, contending
for the bandwidth with other sensors on the body. This paper analyses
the results of a set of network traffic experiments that were designed
to investigate the suitability of conventional wireless motion sensing
system design � which generally assumes in-network processing - as
an efficient and scalable design for use in sports training
Compressing Inertial Motion Data in Wireless Sensing Systems – An Initial Experiment
The use of wireless inertial motion sensors, such as accelerometers, for supporting medical care and sport’s training, has been under investigation in recent years. As the number of sensors (or their sampling rates) increases, compressing data at source(s) (i.e. at the sensors), i.e. reducing the quantity of data that needs to be transmitted between the on-body sensors and the remote repository, would be essential especially in a bandwidth-limited wireless environment. This paper presents a set of compression experiment results on a set of inertial motion data collected during running exercises. As a starting point, we selected a set of common compression algorithms to experiment with. Our results show that, conventional lossy compression algorithms would achieve a desirable compression ratio with an acceptable time delay. The results also show that the quality of the decompressed data is within acceptable range
Implications of Recent Measurements
The recent measurements of the color-suppressed modes imply non-vanishing relative final-state interaction (FSI)
phases among various decay amplitudes. Depending on whether or
not FSIs are implemented in the topological quark-diagram amplitudes, two
solutions for the parameters and are extracted from data using
various form-factor models. It is found that is not universal:
and with a relative phase
of order between and . If FSIs are not included in
quark-diagram amplitudes from the outset, and
will become smaller. The large value of compared to
or naive expectation implies the importance of
long-distance FSI contributions to color-suppressed internal -emission via
final-state rescatterings of the color-allowed tree amplitude.Comment: 17 pages. The Introduction is substantially revised and the order of
the presentation in Sec. 2 is rearranged. To appear in Phys. Re
Dominant moving species in the formation of amorphous NiZr by solid-state reaction
The displacements of W and Hf markers have been monitored by backscattering of MeV He to study the growth of the amorphous NiZr phase by solid-state reaction. We find that the Ni is the dominant moving species in this reaction
Quasiparticle Interference on the Surface of the Topological Insulator BiTe
The quasiparticle interference of the spectroscopic imaging scanning
tunneling microscopy has been investigated for the surface states of the large
gap topological insulator BiTe through the T-matrix formalism. Both the
scalar potential scattering and the spin-orbit scattering on the warped
hexagonal isoenergy contour are considered. While backscatterings are forbidden
by time-reversal symmetry, other scatterings are allowed and exhibit strong
dependence on the spin configurations of the eigenfunctions at k points over
the isoenergy contour. The characteristic scattering wavevectors found in our
analysis agree well with recent experiment results.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Some typos are correcte
- …