63 research outputs found

    Biomechanics and Energetics of Bipedal Locomotion on Uneven Terrain.

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    Humans navigate uneven terrain in their everyday lives. From trails, grass, and uneven sidewalks, we constantly adapt to various surfaces in our environment. Past research has shown that walking on natural terrain, compared to walking on smooth flat surfaces, results in increased energy expenditure during locomotion. However, the biomechanical adaptations responsible for this energetic increase are unclear, since locomotion research is often conducted either on short walkways or in an outdoor setting, thus limiting data collections. To further our understanding of human locomotion on uneven terrain, I focused on quantifying the biomechanical and energetic changes due to increased terrain variability during walking and running. First, this thesis presents modifications to a regular exercise treadmill to allow for attachment of a separate uneven surface. Using this treadmill, I collected kinetic, kinematic, electromyographic, and energy expenditure data during continuous human walking and running. I showed that humans walking at 1.0m/s on an uneven surface, with a 2.5cm height variability, increased energy expenditure by 0.73W/kg (approx. 28%) compared to walking on smooth terrain. Greater energy expenditure was primarily caused by increased positive work at the hip and knee, with minor contributions from increased muscle activity and step parameter adaptations. I then showed that running at 2.3m/s on the same surface resulted in an energetic increase of 0.48W/kg (approx. 5%) compared to running on even terrain. In contrast to walking, humans compensated for uneven terrain during running by reducing positive work produced by the ankle and adapting a more crouched leg posture. The similar absolute increases in energetic cost between walking and running implied that much of this increase is likely due to surface height variability and changes in mechanical work. Finally, this work presents analytical and simulated analyses for the rimless wheel and simplest walker models. These analyses explored the relationship between gait dynamics, energy input strategies, surface unevenness and the energetic cost of walking. Together, these studies advance our understanding of the relationship between mechanics and energetics of human walking on uneven surfaces and could potentially lead to more robust and energetically efficient legged robots, prostheses and more effective clinical rehabilitation interventions.PhDKinesiology and Mechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111616/1/voloshis_1.pd

    Synthesis and diverse biological activity profile of triethyl-ammonium isatin-3-hydrazones

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    A series of biorelevant triethylammonium isatin hydrazones containing various substituents in the aromatic fragment have been synthesized. Their structure and composition were confirmed by NMR- and IR-spectroscopies, mass-spectrometry and elemental analysis. It was found that some representatives show activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus cereus higher or at the level of norfloxacin, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strains. The study also showed low hemo- and cytotoxicity (Chang Liver) and high antiaggregatory and anticoagulant activity of these compounds. The high potential of new ammonium isatin-3-acylhydrazones in the search for antimicrobial activity against phytopathogens of bacterial and fungal nature has been shown for the first time

    MN Dra - In-the-Gap Dwarf Nova With Negative Superhumps

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    The multi-site photometric observations of MN Dra were made over 77 nights in August-November, 2009. The total exposure was 433 hours. During this time the binary underwent two superoutbursts and five normal outbursts. During the course of first superoutburst period of positive superhumps decreased with extremely large P˙=1.5×1.04\dot P = -1.5 \times 1.0^{-4} for SU UMa-like dwarf novae, confirming known behavior of MN Dra [1]. Between the superoutbursts MN Dra displayed negative superhumps. Their period changed cyclically around 0.096-day value.Comment: 17TH European White Dwarf Workshop. AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 1273, pp. 320-323 (2010

    Survey of Period Variations of Superhumps in SU UMa-Type Dwarf Novae. VIII: The Eighth Year (2015-2016)

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    Continuing the project described by Kato et al. (2009, arXiv:0905.1757), we collected times of superhump maxima for 128 SU UMa-type dwarf novae observed mainly during the 2015-2016 season and characterized these objects. The data have improved the distribution of orbital periods, the relation between the orbital period and the variation of superhumps, the relation between period variations and the rebrightening type in WZ Sge-type objects. Coupled with new measurements of mass ratios using growing stages of superhumps, we now have a clearer and statistically greatly improved evolutionary path near the terminal stage of evolution of cataclysmic variables. Three objects (V452 Cas, KK Tel, ASASSN-15cl) appear to have slowly growing superhumps, which is proposed to reflect the slow growth of the 3:1 resonance near the stability border. ASASSN-15sl, ASASSN-15ux, SDSS J074859.55+312512.6 and CRTS J200331.3-284941 are newly identified eclipsing SU UMa-type (or WZ Sge-type) dwarf novae. ASASSN-15cy has a short (~0.050 d) superhump period and appears to belong to EI Psc-type objects with compact secondaries having an evolved core. ASASSN-15gn, ASASSN-15hn, ASASSN-15kh and ASASSN-16bu are candidate period bouncers with superhump periods longer than 0.06 d. We have newly obtained superhump periods for 79 objects and 13 orbital periods, including periods from early superhumps. In order that the future observations will be more astrophysically beneficial and rewarding to observers, we propose guidelines how to organize observations of various superoutbursts.Comment: 123 pages, 162 figures, 119 tables, accepted for publication in PASJ (including supplementary information

    BLOOM: A 176B-Parameter Open-Access Multilingual Language Model

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    Large language models (LLMs) have been shown to be able to perform new tasks based on a few demonstrations or natural language instructions. While these capabilities have led to widespread adoption, most LLMs are developed by resource-rich organizations and are frequently kept from the public. As a step towards democratizing this powerful technology, we present BLOOM, a 176B-parameter open-access language model designed and built thanks to a collaboration of hundreds of researchers. BLOOM is a decoder-only Transformer language model that was trained on the ROOTS corpus, a dataset comprising hundreds of sources in 46 natural and 13 programming languages (59 in total). We find that BLOOM achieves competitive performance on a wide variety of benchmarks, with stronger results after undergoing multitask prompted finetuning. To facilitate future research and applications using LLMs, we publicly release our models and code under the Responsible AI License

    Shortcomings of human-in-the-loop optimization of an ankle-foot prosthesis emulator: a case series

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    Human-in-the-loop optimization allows for individualized device control based on measured human performance. This technique has been used to produce large reductions in energy expenditure during walking with exoskeletons but has not yet been applied to prosthetic devices. In this series of case studies, we applied human-in-the-loop optimization to the control of an active ankle-foot prosthesis used by participants with unilateral transtibial amputation. We optimized the parameters of five control architectures that captured aspects of successful exoskeletons and commercial prostheses, but none resulted in significantly lower metabolic rate than generic control. In one control architecture, we increased the exposure time per condition by a factor of five, but the optimized controller still resulted in higher metabolic rate. Finally, we optimized for self-reported comfort instead of metabolic rate, but the resulting controller was not preferred. There are several reasons why human-in-the-loop optimization may have failed for people with amputation. Control architecture is an unlikely cause given the variety of controllers tested. The lack of effect likely relates to changes in motor adaptation, learning, or objectives in people with amputation. Future work should investigate these potential causes to determine whether human-in-the-loop optimization for prostheses could be successful
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