7,433 research outputs found
Pulsed Ultrasound Does Not Affect Recovery From Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness
Aim: To investigate the effects of pulsed Ultrasound (US) in recovery from Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS).
Methods: Twelve healthy male athletes (mean age 23.83Ā±1.697 year) performed an eccentric exercise protocol of non-dominant elbow flexors to induce muscle soreness on 2 occasions separated by 3 weeks. Subjects in experimental group received pulsed US (1 MHz, intensity 0.8 W/cm2, mark space ratio 1:10), whereas control group received sham US after 24 h, 48 h and 72 h. Perception of muscle soreness, active ROM and muscle strength were the parameters measured at 0 h, 24 h, 48 h and 72 h with the help of VAS, manual goniometer and JONEX muscles master instrument respectively.
Results: Post hoc t test analysis revealed significant differences (p <0.05) between 0 h and 72 h in the parameter of ROM (t = 6.18) and muscle power (t = 2.54) as well as between 24 h and 48 h in the parameter of muscle soreness (t = 3.13) in control group. Similar differences were also observed in the experimental group. No significant inter-group differences at Ī± level of 0.05 was observed in any parameter at any level.
Conclusion: The pattern of recovery from DOMS was not influenced by the application of pulsed Ultrasound at the parameters discussed here
An Empirical Analysis of the Effects of Plant Variety Protection Legislation on Innovation and Transferability
Under the TRIPs Agreement, all member-countries of the World Trade Organization are required to provide an "effective" system of plant variety protection within a specific time frame. In many developing countries this has led to a divisive debate about the fundamental desirability of extending intellectual property rights to agriculture. But empirical studies on the economic impacts of PVP, especially its ability to generate large private sector investments in plant breeding and facilitate the transfer of technology, have been very limited. This paper examines two aspects of the international experience of PVP legislation thus far (i) The relationship between legislation, R&D expenditures and PVP grants, i.e., the innovation effect, and (ii) The role of PVP in facilitating the flow of varieties across countries, i.e., the transferability effect.Plant variety protection, biotechnology, technology transfer, Crop Production/Industries,
Fermi surfaces in general co-dimension and a new controlled non-trivial fixed point
Traditionally Fermi surfaces for problems in spatial dimensions have
dimensionality , i.e., codimension along which energy varies.
Situations with arise when the gapless fermionic excitations live at
isolated nodal points or lines. For weak short range interactions are
irrelevant at the non-interacting fixed point. Increasing interaction strength
can lead to phase transitions out of this Fermi liquid. We illustrate this by
studying the transition to superconductivity in a controlled
expansion near . The resulting non-trivial fixed point is shown to
describe a scale invariant theory that lives in effective space-time dimension
. Remarkably, the results can be reproduced by the more familiar
Hertz-Millis action for the bosonic superconducting order parameter even though
it lives in different space-time dimensions.Comment: 4 page
Energy Disaggregation via Adaptive Filtering
The energy disaggregation problem is recovering device level power
consumption signals from the aggregate power consumption signal for a building.
We show in this paper how the disaggregation problem can be reformulated as an
adaptive filtering problem. This gives both a novel disaggregation algorithm
and a better theoretical understanding for disaggregation. In particular, we
show how the disaggregation problem can be solved online using a filter bank
and discuss its optimality.Comment: Submitted to 51st Annual Allerton Conference on Communication,
Control, and Computin
Blind Identification via Lifting
Blind system identification is known to be an ill-posed problem and without
further assumptions, no unique solution is at hand. In this contribution, we
are concerned with the task of identifying an ARX model from only output
measurements. We phrase this as a constrained rank minimization problem and
present a relaxed convex formulation to approximate its solution. To make the
problem well posed we assume that the sought input lies in some known linear
subspace.Comment: Submitted to the IFAC World Congress 2014. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1303.671
The Renormalization Group and the Superconducting Susceptibility of a Fermi Liquid
A free Fermi gas has, famously, a superconducting susceptibility that
diverges logarithmically at zero temperature. In this paper we ask whether this
is still true for a Fermi liquid and find that the answer is that it does {\it
not}. From the perspective of the renormalization group for interacting
fermions, the question arises because a repulsive interaction in the Cooper
channel is a marginally irrelevant operator at the Fermi liquid fixed point and
thus is also expected to infect various physical quantities with logarithms.
Somewhat surprisingly, at least from the renormalization group viewpoint, the
result for the superconducting susceptibility is that two logarithms are not
better than one. In the course of this investigation we derive a
Callan-Symanzik equation for the repulsive Fermi liquid using the
momentum-shell renormalization group, and use it to compute the long-wavelength
behavior of the superconducting correlation function in the emergent low-energy
theory. We expect this technique to be of broader interest.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
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