558 research outputs found
The influence of interest in tasks on the autonomic nervous system
Although prior studies have indicated the relationships among decreased parasympathetic activity, schizophrenia, and depression, the physiological effects of psychiatric occupational therapy tasks have not been adequately explored. Therefore, it is necessary to quantitatively examine the physiological changes in the autonomic nervous system when performing such tasks to devise more individualized therapies. Accordingly, we examined the influence of task interest and its relationship with psychological characteristics. The participants included in this study were 22 healthy individuals. They completed the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, and the Social Phobia Scale. Participants selected the most and least interesting bookmarks from a set of 19 different color options, and indicated their degree of interest on a visual analog scale. An electrocardiogram was used during each task to record participants' cardiac sympathetic index (CSI) and cardiac vagal index (CVI) as they performed two tasks (interesting and uninteresting). The correlations between the degree of interest and CSI/CVI, and between the scores of the questionnaires and CSI/CVI were examined. There was a negative correlation between the degree of interest and CSI during the uninteresting task. Task interest may have contributed to suppressing sympathetic dominance and reducing mental and physiological loads, even if the tasks differed only color-wise. Physiological effects emerged from participants’ degree of task interest. Further identification of objective and therapeutic mechanisms may lead to wider applications of activities in different areas
Development of a Refrigerant Distribution Header Applied to Microchannel Heat Exchangers
A microchannel heat exchanger applied to air conditioners has advantages because of its high heat transfer performance. However, there are some challenges to utilize its maximum performance. One of the most important challenges is refrigerant maldistribution resulting in heat transfer deterioration when it is used as an evaporator. The authors proposed a refrigerant distribution header that can be applied to variable capacity air conditioners, named “Refrigerant loop header.” In this paper, the “Refrigerant loop header”, which enables to equally distribute in a wide range of capacity, is introduced. In addition, high distribution performance is experimentally confirmed at different refrigerant mass flow rates
Antioxidative copper sinter bonding under thermal aging utilizing reduction of cuprous oxide nanoparticles by polyethylene glycol
Durability of sintered Cu joints under thermal aging in the air was investigated for the reduction of Cu₂O using Cu₂O/polyethylene glycol (PEG) mixture. Thermal analysis of the Cu₂O/PEG paste showed that the molecular weight of PEG influences the redox reaction and the subsequent bonding related to the combustion of the reducing organic solvent. Sintered Cu joints using PEG 400 exhibited high joint strength (above 30 MPa) in shear tests, even for the bonding temperature of 280 °C. The sintered Cu joints exhibited slightly increased strength during thermal aging at 250 °C in air, which was also confirmed by the microscale tensile test used for evaluating the fracture behavior of the sintered Cu structure. Microstructural analysis, including the evaluation of the crystal orientation, revealed a small change in the microstructure of sintered joints during aging. Transmission electron microscopy revealed the presence of organic membranes on slightly oxidized sintered Cu grains before thermal aging, and additional oxidation was observed after thermal aging. The progress of sintering during thermal aging in vacuum was different than that in air. It was considered that the formation of a thin Cu₂O layer, controlled by the presence of organic membranes, contributed to the suppression of Cu sintering.The version of record of this article, first published in Journal of Materials Science, is available online at Publisher’s website: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10853-023-08976-
A Keck/DEIMOS Spectroscopy of Lyman Alpha Blobs at Redshift z=3.1
We present the results of an intermediate resolution (~2 angstrom)
spectroscopy of a sample of 37 candidate Lyman alpha blobs and emitters at
redshift z=3.1 using the DEIMOS spectrograph on the 10 m Keck telescope. The
emission lines are detected for all the 37 objects and have variety in their
line profiles. The Lyman alpha velocity widths (FWHM) of the 28 objects with
higher quality spectra, measured by fitting a single Gaussian profile, are in
the range of 150 - 1700 km/s and correlate with the Lyman alpha spatial
extents. All the 12 Lyman alpha blobs (>16 arcsec^2) have large velocity widths
of > 500 km/s. While there are several possible physical interpretations of the
Lyman alpha velocity widths (motion of gravitationally-bound gas clouds,
inflows, merging of clumps, or outflows from superwinds), the large velocity
widths of the Lyman alpha blobs suggest that they are the sites of massive
galaxy formation. If we assume gravitationally-bound gas clouds, the dynamical
masses of the Lyman alpha blobs are estimated to be ~10^12 - 10^13 Msun. Even
for the case of outflows, the outflow velocities are likely to be the same
order of the rotation velocities as inferred from the observational evidence
for local starburst galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Development of a system for the assessment of a dual-task performance based on a motion-capture device
The authors produced a dual task (DT) that provided a dynamic balance task and a cognitive task in a game system using motion sensors and virtual images. There had been no DT where a cognitive task needs a dynamic balance task that requires full-body motions. We developed and evaluated a game system to assess the performance of the DT. The DT was to solve a Sudoku puzzle using full-body motions like Tái Chi. An ability to perform a DT is intimately related to risk of falls. To evaluate the developed system, we compared the performance of elderly people and young people. Generally, elderly people are at a higher risk of falls. Twenty elderly community-dwelling adults (mean age, 73.0±6.2 years) and 16 young adults (mean age, 21.8±1.0 years) participated in this study. To compare the two groups, we applied an independent-samples t-test. The time taken for the elderly people was 60.6±43.2 s, whereas the time taken for the young people was 16.0±4.8 s. The difference is statistically significant (p<0.05). This result suggests that the developed game system is useful for the evaluation of the DT performance
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