Publications by authors named "Scott Dutrisac"

Despite the broad use of helmets, incidence of concussion remains high. Current methods for helmet evaluation focus on the measurement of head kinematics as the primary tool for quantifying risk of brain injury. Though the primary cause of mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) is thought to be intracranial strain, helmet testing methodologies are not able to directly resolve these parameters.

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Finite element models of thoracic injury often treat the lung as a bulk homogeneous and isotropic material, which reduces the computational costs associated with such investigations. Ignoring the heterogeneous structure of the lung may be computationally expedient, but this simplification may inadvertently fail to capture the true lung strain dynamics. In the present work, a series of direct impact experiments were performed on porcine lungs, inflated to a relevant expiratory pressure, and monitored using high-speed X-ray imaging.

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The dynamic response of the human brain subjected to impulsive loading conditions is of fundamental importance to the understanding of traumatic brain injuries. Due to the complexity of such measurements, the existing experimental datasets available to researchers are sparse. However, these measurements are used extensively in the validation of complex finite element models used in the design of protective equipment and the development of injury mitigation strategies.

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Datasets obtained from cadaveric experimentation are broadly used in validating finite element models of head injury. Due to the complexity of such measurements in soft tissues, experimentalists have relied on tissue-embedded radiographic or sonomicrometry tracking markers to resolve tissue motion caused by impulsive loads. Dynamic coupling of markers with the surrounding tissue has been a previous concern, yet a thorough sensitivity investigation of marker influences on tissue deformation has not been broadly discussed.

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