5,656 research outputs found
Temporal trends in muscular fitness of English 10-year-olds 1998-2014: an allometric approach
Objectives
To identify temporal trends in muscular fitness of English children using allometric scaling for height and weight to adjust for the influence of body size.
Design
Repeated cross-sectional study.
Methods
We measured; height, weight, standing broad-jump, handgrip, sit-ups and bent-arm hang in 10-year-old boys and girls from Chelmsford, England in: 2014 (n = 306), 2008 (n = 304) and 1998 (n = 310). Physical activity was (PAQ-C) was assessed in 2008 and 2014. Muscular fitness was allometrically scaled for height and weight. We assessed temporal trends using General Linear Models (fixed factors: wave and sex) and reported effect sizes using partial eta squared (ηP²). We compared percentage change per year 1998-2008 with 2008-2014.
Results
Ten-year-olds in 2014 were taller and heavier than in 2008 and 1998 but there were no differences in BMI. Compared with 2008, physical activity was lower in boys (ηP² = 0.012) and girls (ηP² = 0.27) assessed in 2014. There were significant main effects of wave for handgrip (ηP² = 0.060), sit-ups (ηP² = 0.120) and bent-arm hang (ηP² = 0.204). Pairwise comparisons showed muscular fitness of both sexes was significantly lower in 2014 than in 1998. From 2008 to 2014 percent change per year in handgrip (1.6%) and sit-ups (3.9%) were greater than for the preceding decade (handgrip 0.6%, sit-ups 2.6%).
Conclusions
Downward temporal trends in muscular fitness appear independent of secular changes in body size. We found a decrease in self-reported physical activity concurrent with the accelerated declines in fitness from 2008 to 2014. These findings suggest the declines in children are not engaging in physical activities which support development of muscular fitness
Body satisfaction and physical appearance in gender dysphoria
Gender dysphoria (GD) is often accompanied by dissatisfaction with physical appearance and body image problems. The aim of this study was to compare body satisfaction with perceived appearance by others in various GD subgroups. Data collection was part of the European Network for the Investigation of Gender Incongruence. Between 2007 and 2012, 660 adults who fulfilled the criteria of the DSM-IV gender identity disorder diagnosis (1.31:1 male-to-female [MtF]:female-to-male [FtM] ratio) were included into the study. Data were collected before the start of clinical gender-confirming interventions. Sexual orientation was measured via a semi-structured interview whereas onset age was based on clinician report. Body satisfaction was assessed using the Body Image Scale. Congruence of appearance with the experienced gender was measured by means of a clinician rating. Overall, FtMs had a more positive body image than MtFs. Besides genital dissatisfaction, problem areas for MtFs included posture, face, and hair, whereas FtMs were mainly dissatisfied with hip and chest regions. Clinicians evaluated the physical appearance to be more congruent with the experienced gender in FtMs than in MtFs. Within the MtF group, those with early onset GD and an androphilic sexual orientation had appearances more in line with their gender identity. In conclusion, body image problems in GD go beyond sex characteristics only. An incongruent physical appearance may result in more difficult psychological adaptation and in more exposure to discrimination and stigmatization
Who is meeting the strengthening physical activity guidelines by definition: A cross-sectional study of 253 423 English adults?
The current UK physical activity guidelines recommend that adults aged 19 to 65 years perform activity to strengthen muscle and bone a minimum of twice weekly. The number of adults meeting strengthening activity guidelines is lower than for aerobic activity, but estimates vary between studies partly due to differences in how muscle-strengthening activity is defined. We aimed to provide estimates for strengthening activity prevalence in English adults based on a nationally representative sample of n = 253,423 18-65-year-olds. We attempted to quantify the variation in estimates attributable to differences in the way strengthening activity is defined. Finally, we aim to provide a brief descriptive epidemiology of the factors associated with strengthening activity. Adults met guidelines for aerobic activity if they reported the activity equivalent to >150 min/week moderate-intensity exercise. Respondents met strengthening guidelines if they reported at least two bouts per week of strengthening activity. We defined strengthening activity, first, according to criteria used in the Health Survey for England (HSE). Second, we counted bouts of strengthening activities for which we could find evidence of health-related benefits (Evidence). Third, we included bouts of strengthening activity as defined in current UK physical activity guidelines (Guideline). Two-thirds (67%) of adults met guidelines for aerobic activity (69% of men, 65% of women). Less than one-third (29% of men and 24% of women) met guidelines for the HSE definition of strengthening activity. Under the Evidence definition, 16% of men and 9% of women met strengthening guidelines. Using the most-stringent definition (Guideline) just 7.3% of men and 4.1% of women achieved the recommendations for strengthening activity. We found females and older adults (50–65 years) were less likely to meet guidelines for aerobic, strengthening, and combined aerobic plus strengthening activity. The prevalence of meeting activity guidelines was lower in adults from more deprived areas (compared with the least deprived); Adults with lower academic qualifications (Level 1) were less likely to meet activity guidelines than those educated to Level 4 (Degree Level) or higher. Having a limiting disability was associated with a lower prevalence of meeting activity guidelines. Associations between socio-demographic measures and the prevalence of adults meeting activity guidelines were stronger for strengthening activity than for aerobic 51(or combined aerobic plus strengthening) activity Compared with aerobic activity, fewer adults engage in strengthening activity regardless of how it is defined. The range in estimates for how many adults meet strengthening activity guidelines can be explained by variations in the definition of ‘strengthening’ that are used and the specific sports or activities identified as strengthening exercise. When strengthening activity is included, the proportion of English adults meeting current physical activity guidelines could be as high as 1 in 3 but possibly as low as just 1 in 20. A harmonized definition of strengthening activity, that is aligned with physical activity guidelines, is required to provide realistic and comparable prevalence estimates
The Relationship between Socioeconomic Status, Family Income, and Measures of Muscular and Cardiorespiratory Fitness in Colombian Schoolchildren
Objective
To determine the associations between socioeconomic status (SES) and physical fitness in a sample of Colombian youth.
Study design
Prueba SER is cross-sectional survey of schoolchildren in Bogota, Colombia. Mass, stature, muscular fitness (standing long-jump, handgrip), and cardiorespiratory fitness (20-m shuttle run) were measured in 52 187 schoolchildren 14-16 years of age. Area-level SES was categorized from 1 (very low) to 4 (high) and parent-reported family income was categorized as low, middle, or high.
Results
Converting measures into z scores showed stature, muscular, and cardiorespiratory fitness were significantly (z = 0.3-0.7) below European values. Children in the mid- and high SES groups jumped significantly further than groups with very low SES. Differences were independent of sex but became nonsignificant when adjusted for anthropometric differences. Participants in the mid-SES and high-SES groups had better handgrip scores when adjusted for body dimension. There were, however, no significant between-group differences in cardiorespiratory fitness, which was strongly clustered by school and significantly greater in students from private schools.
Conclusions
Area-level SES is associated with measures of muscular fitness in Colombian schoolchildren. These associations were largely explained by the large differences in body dimensions observed between SES groups. When area-level SES is considered, there was no evidence that family income influenced fitness. The clustering of outcomes reaffirms the potential importance of schools and area-level factors in promoting fitness through opportunities for physical activity. Interventions implemented in schools, can improve academic attainment; a factor likely to be important in promoting the social mobility of children from poorer families
Mechanical Metamaterials with Negative Compressibility Transitions
When tensioned, ordinary materials expand along the direction of the applied
force. Here, we explore network concepts to design metamaterials exhibiting
negative compressibility transitions, during which a material undergoes
contraction when tensioned (or expansion when pressured). Continuous
contraction of a material in the same direction of an applied tension, and in
response to this tension, is inherently unstable. The conceptually similar
effect we demonstrate can be achieved, however, through destabilisations of
(meta)stable equilibria of the constituents. These destabilisations give rise
to a stress-induced solid-solid phase transition associated with a twisted
hysteresis curve for the stress-strain relationship. The strain-driven
counterpart of negative compressibility transitions is a force amplification
phenomenon, where an increase in deformation induces a discontinuous increase
in response force. We suggest that the proposed materials could be useful for
the design of actuators, force amplifiers, micro-mechanical controls, and
protective devices.Comment: Supplementary information available at
http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v11/n7/abs/nmat3331.htm
Erosion and the sediment conveyor in central Australia
Why are the Neogene sedimentary fills across central Australia generally thin and discontinuous?
One long-standing explanation is that sluggish tectonism and intensified aridity have combined to
suppress rates of erosion and sediment production yielding a landscape crowded with inherited, preMiocene forms. Quantifying rates of sediment production, residence time and transport is possible
with numerous methods, but the recent growth of cosmogenic nuclide (CN) analysis has provided
unprecedented quantitative insights to rates of landscape evolution. Measurements of in situ
produced cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al integrate rates of surface processes over million-year
timescales—the last part of the Neogene in which aridity has strengthened across the continental
interior. We present a compilation of ~600 published and unpublished 10Be and 26Al measurements
from central Australia with a focus on the Neogene Eyre Basin and its periphery.
Outlying and inlying bedrock uplands serve as engines of sediment production via erosion of bedrock.
Surrounding the bedrock outcrops are vast sediment conveyors of varying efficiency and tempo:
hillslopes, pediments, and alluvial fans are interim storage/burial zones for sediment in transit to the
network of low-gradient rivers, dunes, and playas towards base level. Interactions between fluvial and
aeolian processes are especially pertinent to sediment flux in the Eyre Basin. Major rivers such as the
Cooper and Finke traverse dunefields in their lower reaches where quantities of alluvia are
recirculated into dunes and vice versa. Tracking the trajectories of sediment from source-to-sink
(including aeolian recirculation) remains a major challenge, but is central to unravelling the
sedimentary dynamics of central Australia's Neogene basins. Based on the CN compilation we
estimate 1) spatially averaged erosion rates at the scale of a hillslope or river catchment; 2) pointbased erosion rates on bedrock surfaces; 3) residence time of sediment in hillslope regolith and
alluvial fans; and 4) cumulative burial history of sediments in transit.
Catchment-scale erosion rates (n~100) are consistently low (<10 m/Myr) and include some of the
lowest rates ever measured (~0.3 m/Myr); however, a small group of catchments in the Flinders Ras
yield higher erosion rates (~30–60 m/Myr). Bedrock hillslopes (n~200) tend to erode even slower (<5
m/Myr), with a subset of Flinders Ras sites again being the exception (~10–30 m/Myr) and suggesting
the influence of recent tectonism. Several CN depth-profiles measured on hillslopes and alluvial fans
indicate sediment residence times >0.5 Myr, and high-resolution sampling along three hillslopes with
differing morphology (linear, convex, and concave) reveals major variations in sediment production
and transport rates that hint at the long-term evolution. In the rivers, fluvial sediments show a weak
tendency to increase cumulative burial history downstream (1–2 Myr), consistent with the expanding
accommodation space for storage and burial. Dune sediments sampled in the Simpson and Tirari
dunefields (n~16) contain cumulative burial histories (up to 1.5 Myr) similar to that of the intersecting
rivers. This points to an intimate mix of fluvial and aeolian processes in areas approaching base level.
Curiously, these sediments occur in the lowest part of the continent and contain the longest histories
of cumulative burial, yet do not form part of the thickest sedimentary fills in the Eyre Basin
Patients with schizophrenia show raised serum levels of the pro-inflammatory chemokine CCL2: Association with the metabolic syndrome in patients?
Stability study of a model for the Klein-Gordon equation in Kerr spacetime
The current early stage in the investigation of the stability of the Kerr
metric is characterized by the study of appropriate model problems.
Particularly interesting is the problem of the stability of the solutions of
the Klein-Gordon equation, describing the propagation of a scalar field of mass
in the background of a rotating black hole. Rigorous results proof the
stability of the reduced, by separation in the azimuth angle in Boyer-Lindquist
coordinates, field for sufficiently large masses. Some, but not all, numerical
investigations find instability of the reduced field for rotational parameters
extremely close to 1. Among others, the paper derives a model problem for
the equation which supports the instability of the field down to .Comment: Updated version, after minor change
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