24,254 research outputs found
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The role of the scale and the frequency bandwidth of steering wheel vibration on road surface recognition
Automobile drivers are regularly exposed to vibrational stimuli in their vehicle. Of the automobile
subsystems, the steering wheel is one of the most important due to its role in controlling the vehicle. In
particular, the steering wheel plays an important role in transmitting information about the road and about
the vehicle to the driver. This paper investigates the effect of steering system feedback gain and steering
system feedback bandwidth on the human interpretation of the driving information transmitted by the
steering wheel. Human recognition of road surface type was found to be highly dependent on the feedback
gain and the feedback bandwidth of the steering wheel vibration. The results provide some basic guidelines for designing the control logic of steer by wire systems
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A study of the human ability to detect road surface type based on steering wheel vibration feedback
A study was performed to investigate the human ability to detect road surface type based on the
associated steering wheel vibration feedback. Tangential direction acceleration time histories
measured during road testing of a single mid-sized European automobile were used as the basis
for the study. Scaled and frequency filtered copies of two base stimuli were presented to test
subjects in a laboratory setting during two experiments which each involved 25 participants. Theory
of signal detection (TSD) was adopted as the analytical framework and the results were
summarised by means of the detectability index d’ and as receiver operating curve (ROC) points.
The results of the experiment to investigate the effect of scaling suggested monotonic relationships
between stimulus level and detection for both road surfaces. Detection of the tarmac surface
improved with reductions in acceleration level while the opposite was true of the cobblestone
surface. The ROC points for both surfaces were characterised by gradual increases in detection as
a function of acceleration level, obtaining hit rates of nearly 100% at optimum. The results of the
experiment to investigate the effect of frequency bandwidth suggested a monotonically increasing
relationship between detectability and the bandwi\dth of the vibration stimuli. Detection of both road
surfaces improved with increases in bandwidth. Average hit rates exceeded 80% for stimuli
covering the frequency range from 0 to 80 Hz. Human detection of road surface type appears to
depend on the long term memory model, or cognitive interpretation mechanism, associated with
each surface. The complexity of the measured response suggests the need to categorise and
classify incoming data before an optimal choice of feedback stimuli can be made in automotive
steering systems
Electromagnetic scattering and radiation from microstrip patch antennas and spirals residing in a cavity
A new hybrid method is presented for the analysis of the scattering and radiation by conformal antennas and arrays comprised of circular or rectangular elements. In addition, calculations for cavity-backed spiral antennas are given. The method employs a finite element formulation within the cavity and the boundary integral (exact boundary condition) for terminating the mesh. By virtue of the finite element discretization, the method has no restrictions on the geometry and composition of the cavity or its termination. Furthermore, because of the convolutional nature of the boundary integral and the inherent sparseness of the finite element matrix, the storage requirement is kept very low at O(n). These unique features of the method have already been exploited in other scattering applications and have permitted the analysis of large-size structures with remarkable efficiency. In this report, we describe the method's formulation and implementation for circular and rectangular patch antennas in different superstrate and substrate configurations which may also include the presence of lumped loads and resistive sheets/cards. Also, various modelling approaches are investigated and implemented for characterizing a variety of feed structures to permit the computation of the input impedance and radiation pattern. Many computational examples for rectangular and circular patch configurations are presented which demonstrate the method's versatility, modeling capability and accuracy
Nonlinear optimal guidance algorithms Interim report
Nonlinear optimal guidance algorithms for space mission
Population Genetics and Economic Growth
This paper builds an age-structural model of human population genetics in which agents are endowed with a high-dimensional genome that determines their cognitive and physical characteristics. Young adults optimally search for a marriage partner, work for firms, consume goods, save for old age and, if married, decide how many children to have. Applying the fundamental genetic operations, children receive genetic material from their parents. An agent's human capital (productivity) is an aggregate of the received genetic endowment and environmental influences. Thus, the population of agents and the economy co-evolve. The model examines the impact of social and economic institutions on economic performance, including inequality in income and genetic attributes, the transition to an information economy, population bottlenecks, matchmaking, and love. We find that institutional factors significantly impact economic performance by affecting marriage, family size, and the intergenerational transmission of genes.growth; population biology; psychology; fertility; marriage; genetics; evolution
Tree-level electron-photon interactions in graphene
Graphene's low-energy electronic excitations obey a 2+1 dimensional Dirac
Hamiltonian. After extending this Hamiltonian to include interactions with a
quantized electromagnetic field, we calculate the amplitude associated with the
simplest, tree-level Feynman diagram: the vertex connecting a photon with two
electrons. This amplitude leads to analytic expressions for the 3D angular
dependence of photon emission, the photon-mediated electron-hole recombination
rate, and corrections to graphene's opacity and dynamic
conductivity for situations away from thermal equilibrium, as
would occur in a graphene laser. We find that Ohmic dissipation in perfect
graphene can be attributed to spontaneous emission.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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