Publications by authors named "E FARAGO"

High-density electromyography (HD-EMG) arrays allow for the study of muscle activity in both time and space by recording electrical potentials produced by muscle contractions. HD-EMG array measurements are susceptible to noise and artifacts and frequently contain some poor-quality channels. This paper proposes an interpolation-based method for the detection and reconstruction of poor-quality channels in HD-EMG arrays.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Aelurostrongylosis, a respiratory disease in cats caused by the parasite Aelurostrongylus abstrusus, varies in severity from mild to severe symptoms and is found globally but is often underestimated in terms of its impact.
  • - Research on this parasite in Brazil is limited, particularly in the southern regions, prompting a study conducted in Vilhena, Rondônia, from April 2020 to February 2021.
  • - The study analyzed fecal samples from 101 cats using specific tests, finding only 2 (1.98%) positive cases for A. abstrusus, with no other lungworms detected, leading to discussions on its clinical and epidemiological significance.
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Electromyography (EMG) signals are instrumental in a variety of applications including prosthetic control, muscle health assessment, rehabilitation, and workplace monitoring. Signal contaminants including noise, interference, and artifacts can degrade the quality of the EMG signal, leading to misinterpretation; therefore it is important to ensure that collected EMG signals are of sufficient quality prior to further analysis. A literature search was conducted to identify current approaches for detecting, identifying, and quantifying contaminants within surface EMG signals.

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Activation of CO is the first step towards its reduction to more useful chemicals. Here we systematically investigate the CO activation mechanism on CuX (X is a first-row transition metal atom) using density functional theory computations. The CO adsorption energies and the activation mechanisms depend strongly on the selected dopant.

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A mass spectrometric study of the reactions of vanadium cationic clusters with methanol in a low-pressure collision cell is reported. For comparison, the reaction of methanol with cobalt cationic clusters was studied. For vanadium, the main reaction products are fully dehydrogenated species, and partial dehydrogenation and non-dehydrogenation species are observed as minors, for which the relative intensities increase with cluster size and also at low cluster source temperature cooled by liquid nitrogen; no dehydrogenation products were observed for cobalt clusters.

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