The visual accessibility of a space refers to the effectiveness with which vision can be used to travel safely through the space. For people with low vision, the detection of steps and ramps is an important component of visual accessibility. We used ramps and steps as visual targets to examine the interacting effects of lighting, object geometry, contrast, viewing distance, and spatial resolution. Wooden staging was used to construct a sidewalk with transitions to ramps or steps. Forty-eight normally sighted subjects viewed the sidewalk monocularly through acuity-reducing goggles and made recognition judgments about the presence of the ramps or steps. The effects of variation in lighting were milder than expected. Performance declined for the largest viewing distance but exhibited a surprising reversal for nearer viewing. Of relevance to pedestrian safety, the step up was more visible than the step down. We developed a probabilistic cue model to explain the pattern of target confusions. Cues determined by discontinuities in the edge contours of the sidewalk at the transition to the targets were vulnerable to changes in viewing conditions. Cues associated with the height in the picture plane of the targets were more robust.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/10.11.8 | DOI Listing |
PeerJ
October 2024
Biomechanics and Movement Analysis Research Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences, CENUR Litoral Norte, Universidad de la República, Paysandú, Paysandú, Uruguay.
Background: Muscular synergies could represent the patterns of muscular activation used by the central nervous system (CNS) to simplify the production of movement. Studies in walking-running transitions described up to nine synergy modules, and an earlier activation of flexor and extension ankle muscular groups compared to running or walking. Our project aims to study the behaviour of muscle synergies in different stance and swing variations of walking-running (WRT) and running-walking (RWT) transitions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Surg Interv Health Technol
October 2024
Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Oswestry, Shropshire, UK.
Objectives: To assess the effect of adjuvant antibiotic-loaded hydrogel application on the primary stability of implanted uncemented hip stems.
Design: Biomechanical study.
Setting: An electro-mechanic material test system (#5866, Instron, Norwood, MA, USA) equipped with a 10-kN load cell was used.
bioRxiv
October 2024
Department of Neuroscience, Brown University.
Humans complete different types of sequences as a part of everyday life. These sequences can be divided into two important categories: those that are abstract, in which the steps unfold according to a rule at super-second to minute time scale, and those that are motor, defined solely by individual movements and their order which unfold at the sub-second to second timescale. For example, the sequence of making spaghetti consists of abstract tasks (preparing the sauce and cooking the noodles) and nested motor actions (stir pasta water).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ AOAC Int
October 2024
Agricultural Research Center, Central Laboratory of residue Analysis of Pesticides and Heavy Metals in Foods (QCAP), Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation, Giza, 12311 Egypt.
Background: Currently, the most popular technique in gas chromatography (GC) is the "temperature programming", where the temperature increases from the start of the injection. This leads to faster elution of analytes compared to isothermal methods. However, isothermal methods are considered optimal for separating compounds with similar retention times.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-5080, United States.
Redox reactions on the surface of transition metal oxides are of broad interest in thermo, photo, and electrocatalysis. H temperature-programmed reduction (H-TPR) is commonly used to probe oxide reducibility by measuring the rate of H consumption during temperature ramps, assuming that this rate is controlled by oxide reduction. However, oxide reduction involves several elementary steps, such as H dissociation and H-spillover, before surface reduction and HO formation occur.
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