1,334 research outputs found
Factors Affecting the Growth of Food and Beverage Manufacturers in New York State
Community/Rural/Urban Development, Marketing,
Influence of Visual Feedback On Dynamic Balance Control in Chronic Stroke Survivors
Chronic stroke survivors have an increased incidence of falls during walking, suggesting changes in dynamic balance control post-stroke. Despite this increased incidence of falls during walking, balance control is often studied only in standing. The purpose of this study was to quantify deficits in dynamic balance control during walking, and to evaluate the influence of visual feedback on this control in stroke survivors. Ten individuals with chronic stroke, and ten neurologically intact individuals participated in this study. Walking performance was assessed while participants walked on an instrumented split-belt treadmill with different types of visual feedback. Dynamic balance control was quantified using both the extent of center of mass (COM) movement in the frontal plane over a gait cycle (COM sway), and base of support (step width). Stroke survivors walked with larger COM sway and wider step widths compared to controls. Despite these baseline differences, both groups walked with a similar ratio of step width to COM sway (SW/COM). Providing a stationary target with a laser reference of body movement reduced COM sway only in the stroke group, indicating that visual feedback of sway alters dynamic balance control post-stroke. These results demonstrate that stroke survivors attempt to maintain a similar ratio of step width to COM movement, and visual cues can be used to help control COM movement during walking post-stroke
Directional emission of stadium-shaped micro-lasers
The far-field emission of two dimensional (2D) stadium-shaped dielectric
cavities is investigated. Micro-lasers with such shape present a highly
directional emission. We provide experimental evidence of the dependance of the
emission directionality on the shape of the stadium, in good agreement with ray
numerical simulations. We develop a simple geometrical optics model which
permits to explain analytically main observed features. Wave numerical
calculations confirm the results.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figure
Manganese bismuth thin film for large capacity digital memories
Material and system research defines accurate memory characteristics in regard to write, read, erase and data operations of manganese bismuth materials
Influence of analysis and design models on minimum weight design
The results of numerical experiments designed to illustrate how the minimum weight design, accuracy, and cost can be influenced by: (1) refinement of the finite element analysis model and associated load path problems, and (2) refinement of the design variable linking model are examined. The numerical experiments range from simple structures where the modelling decisions are relatively obvious and less costly to the more complex structures where such decisions are less obvious and more costly. All numerical experiments used employ the dual formulation in ACCESS-3 computer program. Guidelines are suggested for creating analysis and design models that predict a minimum weight structure with greater accuracy and less cost. These guidelines can be useful in an interactive optimization environment and in the design of heuristic rules for the development of knowledge-based expert optimization systems
A First Comparison of Millimeter Continuum and Mg II Ultraviolet Line Emission from the Solar Chromosphere
We present joint observations of the Sun by the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Interface Region Imaging
Spectrograph (IRIS). The observations were made of a solar active region on
2015 December 18 as part of the ALMA science verification effort. A map of the
Sun's continuum emission of size was obtained by ALMA at a
wavelength of 1.25 mm (239 GHz) using mosaicing techniques. A contemporaneous
map of size was obtained in the Mg II h doublet line at
2803.5\AA\ by IRIS. Both mm/submm continuum emission and ultraviolet
(UV) line emission are believed to originate from the solar chromosphere and
both have the potential to serve as powerful and complementary diagnostics of
physical conditions in this poorly understood layer of the solar atmosphere.
While a clear correlation between mm- brightness temperature and
the Mg II h line radiation temperature is observed the slope is ,
perhaps as a result of the fact that these diagnostics are sensitive to
different parts of the chromosphere and/or the Mg II h line source function
includes a scattering component. There is a significant offset between the mean
(1.25 mm) and mean (Mg II), the former being
greater than the latter. Partitioning the maps into "sunspot", "quiet regions",
and "plage regions" we find that the slope of the scatter plots between the
IRIS Mg II h line and the ALMA brightness temperature is 0.4
(sunspot), 0.56 (quiet regions), and 0.66 (plage regions). We suggest that this
change may be caused by the regional dependence of the formation heights of the
IRIS and ALMA diagnostics, and/or the increased degree of coupling between the
UV source function and the local gas temperature in the hotter, denser gas in
plage regions.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Conidial germination in scon\u3csup\u3ec\u3c/sup\u3e
Conidial germination in scon
Silicon-on ceramic process: Silicon sheet growth and device development for the large-area silicon sheet task of the low-cost solar array project
The technical feasibility of producing solar-cell-quality sheet silicon to meet the Department of Energy (DOE) 1986 overall price goal of $0.70/watt was investigated. With the silicon-on-ceramic (SOC) approach, a low-cost ceramic substrate is coated with large-grain polycrystalline silicon by unidirectional solidification of molten silicon. This effort was divided into several areas of investigation in order to most efficiently meet the goals of the program. These areas include: (1) dip-coating; (2) continuous coating designated SCIM-coating, and acronym for Silicon Coating by an Inverted Meniscus (SCIM); (3) material characterization; (4) cell fabrication and evaluation; and (5) theoretical analysis. Both coating approaches were successful in producing thin layers of large grain, solar-cell-quality silicon. The dip-coating approach was initially investigated and considerable effort was given to this technique. The SCIM technique was adopted because of its scale-up potential and its capability to produce more conventiently large areas of SOC
Phase 1 Anglo-French report on the IMPRESS Health 2 (Interreg IVA Channel Programme) project 4282: understanding factors behind the late testing and diagnosis of HIV
This report outlines the combined Anglo-French findings and analysis of data from the phase 1 (research) phase of the Interreg IVA Channel Programme funded IMPRESS Health 2 project examining factors behind the late testing and diagnosis of HIV in Kent, Medway, and Picardy (France)
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