3,582 research outputs found
THE USE OF INERTIAL MEASUREMENT UNITS TO IDENTIFY BIOMECHANICAL FACTORS OF PERFORMANCE IN CRICKET FAST BOWLERS
The role of a cricket bowler is to deliver the ball in such a way as to minimise batsmen scoring runs or get them out. Fast bowlers utilise the pace of delivery as a key tool to achieve this. The purpose of this study was to use inertial measurement units (IMUs) to investigate the relationship between IMU derived spinal kinematics, lower limb accelerations and ball release speed in cricket fast bowlers. Sacral vertical loading rate at back-foot impact and thoracic lateral flexion at front-foot impact displayed significant positive relationships with ball release speed (r=.521 and .629 respectively). Consequently, this study highlights IMUs are able to effectively identify trends in fast bowling performance and hence, larger accelerations at back-foot impact with increased lateral flexion at front-foot impact were effective strategies to increase ball release speed for the bowlers measured in this study
Project HEART – The Benefits of a Heart Health Service-Learning Opportunity Among First-Year Medical Students
Research Statement/Research Question: This study characterized the benefits of providing service-learning opportunities to first-year medical students (MS1s).
Background and relevance of the study: Service-learning across medical school curricula is unstandardized. Experiences students encounter and skills they learn vary based on their school and assigned service projects. At the University of Hawai'i, all MS1s participate in community service but only half are involved in teaching-based activities. Project HEART (PH), a community outreach program focused on teaching cardiovascular health at high schools, was implemented to encourage greater community engagement and equilibrate skill acquisition across different service projects.
Design: MS1s at a single institution were recruited to PH. Following PH sessions, all students completed a retrospective pre/post survey. They provided self-reported scores on a five-point Likert-type scale grading their didactic and communication skills before and after the event. Subjective feelings of community engagement were also queried.
Outcomes: Overall, 30 students were recruited across nine different community health programs. Following participation, significantly increased confidence was seen in performing hands-only CPR (p<0.001), public speaking (p=0.008), teaching effectively (p=0.001), and explaining medical terminology to laypersons (p<0.001). Volunteers also had an increased sense of community engagement and drive for future involvement (p<0.001). Additionally, 17/30 students expressed greater consideration towards specializing in cardiology, primary care, rural medicine, or entering academia after participation in PH.
Innovation's strengths and limitations: The implementation of PH significantly improved key interpersonal, teaching, and professional skills, as well as student perception of impact on their community. Limitations included the small sample size and lack of records on key demographic variables
Natural or Artificial? Habitat-Use by the Bull Shark, Carcharhinus leucas
BACKGROUND: Despite accelerated global population declines due to targeted and illegal fishing pressure for many top-level shark species, the impacts of coastal habitat modification have been largely overlooked. We present the first direct comparison of the use of natural versus artificial habitats for the bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, an IUCN ‘Near-threatened’ species - one of the few truly euryhaline sharks that utilises natural rivers and estuaries as nursery grounds before migrating offshore as adults. Understanding the value of alternate artificial coastal habitats to the lifecycle of the bull shark is crucial for determining the impact of coastal development on this threatened but potentially dangerous species. METHODOLOGY/FINDINGS: We used longline surveys and long-term passive acoustic tracking of neonate and juvenile bull sharks to determine the ontogenetic value of natural and artificial habitats to bull sharks associated with the Nerang River and adjoining canals on the Gold Coast, Australia. Long-term movements of tagged sharks suggested a preference for the natural river over artificial habitat (canals). Neonates and juveniles spent the majority of their time in the upper tidal reaches of the Nerang River and undertook excursions into adjoining canals. Larger bull sharks ranged further and frequented the canals closer to the river mouth. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our work suggests with increased destruction of natural habitats, artificial coastal habitat may become increasingly important to large juvenile bull sharks with associated risk of attack on humans. In this system, neonate and juvenile bull sharks utilised the natural and artificial habitats, but the latter was not the preferred habitat of neonates. The upper reaches of tidal rivers, often under significant modification pressure, serve as nursery sites for neonates. Analogous studies are needed in similar systems elsewhere to assess the spatial and temporal generality of this research
Limits on Radio Continuum Emission from a Sample of Candidate Contracting Starless Cores
We used the NRAO Very Large Array to search for 3.6 cm continuum emission
from embedded protostars in a sample of 8 nearby ``starless'' cores that show
spectroscopic evidence for infalling motions in molecular emission lines. We
detect a total of 13 compact sources in the eight observed fields to 5 sigma
limiting flux levels of typically 0.09 mJy. None of these sources lie within 1'
of the central positions of the cores, and they are all likely background
objects. Based on an extrapolation of the empirical correlation between the
bolometric luminosity and 3.6 cm luminosity for the youngest protostars, these
null-detections place upper limits of ~0.1 L_sun (d/140pc)^2 on the
luminosities of protostellar sources embedded within these cores. These limits,
together with the extended nature of the inward motions inferred from molecular
line mapping (Lee et al. 2001), are inconsistent with the inside-out collapse
model of singular isothermal spheres and suggest a less centrally condensed
phase of core evolution during the earliest stages of star formation.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal; 12 pages, 1 figur
Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study of Nonconcatenated Ring Polymers in a Melt: I. Statics
Molecular dynamics simulations were conducted to investigate the structural
properties of melts of nonconcatenated ring polymers and compared to melts of
linear polymers. The longest rings were composed of N=1600 monomers per chain
which corresponds to roughly 57 entanglement lengths for comparable linear
polymers. For the rings, the radius of gyration squared was found to scale as N
to the 4/5 power for an intermediate regime and N to the 2/3 power for the
larger rings indicating an overall conformation of a crumpled globule. However,
almost all beads of the rings are "surface beads" interacting with beads of
other rings, a result also in agreement with a primitive path analysis
performed in the following paper (DOI: 10.1063/1.3587138). Details of the
internal conformational properties of the ring and linear polymers as well as
their packing are analyzed and compared to current theoretical models.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure
Single particle characterization using the soot particle aerosol mass spectrometer (SP-AMS)
Understanding the impact of atmospheric black carbon (BC) containing particles on human health and radiative forcing requires knowledge of the mixing state of BC, including the characteristics of the materials with which it is internally mixed. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time the capabilities of the Aerodyne Soot-Particle Aerosol Mass Spectrometer equipped with a light scattering module (LS-SP-AMS) to examine the mixing state of refractory BC (rBC) and other aerosol components in an urban environment (downtown Toronto). K-means clustering analysis was used to classify single particle mass spectra into chemically distinct groups. One resultant cluster is dominated by rBC mass spectral signals (C+1 to C+5) while the organic signals fall into a few major clusters, identified as hydrocarbon-like organic aerosol (HOA), oxygenated organic aerosol (OOA), and cooking emission organic aerosol (COA). A nearly external mixing is observed with small BC particles only thinly coated by HOA ( 28% by mass on average), while over 90% of the HOA-rich particles did not contain detectable amounts of rBC. Most of the particles classified into other inorganic and organic clusters were not significantly associated with BC. The single particle results also suggest that HOA and COA emitted from anthropogenic sources were likely major contributors to organic-rich particles with low to mid-range aerodynamic diameter (dva). The similar temporal profiles and mass spectral features of the organic clusters and the factors from a positive matrix factorization (PMF) analysis of the ensemble aerosol dataset validate the conventional interpretation of the PMF results
Interocular suppression prevents interference in a flanker task
Executive control of attention refers to processes that detect and resolve conflict among competing thoughts and actions. Despite the high-level nature of this faculty, the role of awareness in executive control of attention is not well understood. In this study, we used interocular suppression to mask the flankers in an arrow flanker task, in which the flankers and the target arrow were presented simultaneously in order to elicit executive control of attention. Participants were unable to detect the flanker arrows or to reliably identify their direction when masked. There was a typical conflict effect (prolonged reaction time and increased error rate under flanker-target incongruent condition compared to congruent condition) when the flanker arrows were unmasked, while the conflict effect was absent when the flanker arrows were masked with interocular suppression. These results suggest that blocking awareness of competing stimuli with interocular suppression prevents the involvement of executive control of attention
Framework for Identification of Neutral B Mesons
We introduce a method for the study of CP-violating asymmetries in tagged
states of neutral mesons with arbitrary coherence properties. A set of
time-dependent measurements is identified which completely specifies the
density matrix of the initial state in a two-component space with basis vectors
and , and permits a determination of phases in the
Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix. For a given tagging configuration, the
measurement of decays both to flavor eigenstates and to CP eigenstates provides
the necessary information.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Letters. 8 pages, LaTeX, Technion-PH-93-31 /
EFI 93-3
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