5 research outputs found

    Parametric Study of Changes in Human Balancing Skill by Repeated Balancing Trials on Rolling Balance Board

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    Dynamic balance conditions were realized by asking eight volunteers to stand on uniaxial balance board with adjustable geometry and to carry out 60 s long balancing trials. Four different balance board geometry were used, each associated with different difficulty level. Balancing trials were repeated five times weekly (learning period) in order to test improvement of balancing skill. The measurement was repeated eight weeks after the learning period in order to check the persistence of the balancing skill (confirmation session). Oscillations of ankle angle and hip angle were monitored by OptiTrack motion capture system and four stabilometry parameters were used to characterize improvement in balancing performance, namely, Standard Deviation (STD), Largest Amplitude (LA), Normalized Path Length (NPL) and Mean Power Frequency (MPF). STD and NPL show similar tendency to the preliminary expectations, therefore they can be considered as good measures to describe balancing performance. Results show that subjects used ankle strategy for the less difficult balance board configurations, while for the more difficult tasks, hip strategy was also involved. Changes in STD and NPL during the learning period showed that the improvement and the persistence in balancing skill is more significant for more difficult balancing tasks

    MECHANICAL MODEL FOR HUMAN BALANCING ON ROLLING BALANCE BOARD

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    A two-degree-of-freedom mechanical model was developed to analyze human balancing on rolling balance board in the frontal plane. The human nervous system is modeled as a proportionalderivative controller with constant feedback delay. The radius R of the wheels and the board distance h measured from the center of the wheel are adjustable parameters. Simulation results using the mechanical model were compared with real balancing trials recorded by an OptiTrack motion capture system. The goal of the paper is to investigate whether the two-degree-of-freedom model is accurate enough to model the balancing task and to introduce a stabilometry parameter in order to characterize balancing skill in case of different set of R and h. The conclusion is that the angle of the upper body and the angle of the head also play an important role in the balancing process therefore a three- or four-degree-of-freedom model is more appropriate

    MECHANICAL MODEL FOR HUMAN BALANCING ON ROLLING BALANCE BOARD

    Get PDF
    A two-degree-of-freedom mechanical model was developed to analyze human balancing on rolling balance board in the frontal plane. The human nervous system is modeled as a proportionalderivative controller with constant feedback delay. The radius R of the wheels and the board distance h measured from the center of the wheel are adjustable parameters. Simulation results using the mechanical model were compared with real balancing trials recorded by an OptiTrack motion capture system. The goal of the paper is to investigate whether the two-degree-of-freedom model is accurate enough to model the balancing task and to introduce a stabilometry parameter in order to characterize balancing skill in case of different set of R and h. The conclusion is that the angle of the upper body and the angle of the head also play an important role in the balancing process therefore a three- or four-degree-of-freedom model is more appropriate

    Observation of same-sign WW production from double parton scattering in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceThe first observation of the production of W±^\pmW±^\pm bosons from double parton scattering processes using same-sign electron-muon and dimuon events in proton-proton collisions is reported. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb1^{-1} recorded at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV using the CMS detector at the CERN LHC. Multivariate discriminants are used to distinguish the signal process from the main backgrounds. A binned maximum likelihood fit is performed to extract the signal cross section. The measured cross section for production of same-sign W bosons decaying leptonically is 80.7 ±\pm 11.2 (stat) 8.6+9.5^{+9.5}_{-8.6} (syst) ±\pm 12.1 (model) fb, whereas the measured fiducial cross section is 6.28 ±\pm 0.81 (stat) ±\pm 0.69 (syst) ±\pm 0.37 (model) fb. The observed significance of the signal is 6.2 standard deviations above the background-only hypothesis
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