583 research outputs found
Classical Solutions of Ghost Condensation Models
Motivated by ideas obtained from both ghost condensation and gravitational
Higgs mechanism, we attempt to find classical solutions in the unitary gauge in
general ghost condensation models. It is shown that depending on the form of
scalar fields in an action, there are three kinds of exact solutions, which are
(anti-) de Sitter space-time, polynomially expanding universes and flat
Minkowski space-time. We briefly comment on gravitational Higgs mechanism in
these models where we have massive gravitons of 5 degrees of freedom and 1
unitary scalar field (Nambu-Goldstone boson) after spontaneous symmetry
breakdown of general coordinate reparametrization invariance. The models at
hand are free from the problem associated with the non-unitary propagating
mode.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Automated eye disease classification method from anterior eye image using anatomical structure focused image classification technique
This paper presents an automated classification method of infective and
non-infective diseases from anterior eye images. Treatments for cases of
infective and non-infective diseases are different. Distinguishing them from
anterior eye images is important to decide a treatment plan. Ophthalmologists
distinguish them empirically. Quantitative classification of them based on
computer assistance is necessary. We propose an automated classification method
of anterior eye images into cases of infective or non-infective disease.
Anterior eye images have large variations of the eye position and brightness of
illumination. This makes the classification difficult. If we focus on the
cornea, positions of opacified areas in the corneas are different between cases
of the infective and non-infective diseases. Therefore, we solve the anterior
eye image classification task by using an object detection approach targeting
the cornea. This approach can be said as "anatomical structure focused image
classification". We use the YOLOv3 object detection method to detect corneas of
infective disease and corneas of non-infective disease. The detection result is
used to define a classification result of a image. In our experiments using
anterior eye images, 88.3% of images were correctly classified by the proposed
method.Comment: Accepted paper as a poster presentation at SPIE Medical Imaging 2020,
Houston, TX, US
TIME TO LIFT LEG DEPENDS ON INITIAL WEIGHT DISTRIBUTION
INTRODUCTION: If you are a defensive player of football or basketball, you must have an experience that you were impotently left behind the offensive player while you certainly knew he/she cut back to left and you should have stepped to left. Why this happen? As a basic research to answer this question, we conducted the lift-one-leg task from quiet standing with and without visual feedback of weight distribution. We hypothesized that the time to lift leg depends on the initial weight distribution. The aim of the present study is to investigate if and how much the initial weight distribution during quiet standing influences the time to lift leg
Anticipatory Postural Adjustments During Lateral Step Motion in Patients With Hip Osteoarthritis
Patients with hip osteoarthritis (OA) have difficulty with mediolateral postural control. Since the symptom of hip OA includes joint pain, which mostly occurs upon initial movement, patients with hip OA might have disabling problems with movement initiation. This study aimed to identify the movement strategy during the anticipatory postural adjustments in the lateral step motion in patients with hip OA. We studied 18 female subjects with unilateral hip OA and 10 healthy subjects, and measured temporal, kinetic, and kinematic variables. Patients with hip OA required a longer duration of anticipation phase than the control subjects, the total duration of lateral stepping was not different between the groups. Displacement of the center of mass to the supporting (affected) side during the anticipation phase was not different between the two groups. These findings suggest that, in patients with hip OA, the center of mass slowly moved to the affected side. Furthermore, patients with hip OA showed greater shift of the trunk to the supporting side than did the control subjects. These movement characteristics might contribute to the achievement of both protection of the affected hip joint and quickness in the subsequent lateral step in patients with hip OA
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