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18,397
result(s) for
"sensibility"
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Recent Developments for Flexible Pressure Sensors: A Review
2018
Flexible pressure sensors are attracting great interest from researchers and are widely applied in various new electronic equipment because of their distinct characteristics with high flexibility, high sensitivity, and light weight; examples include electronic skin (E-skin) and wearable flexible sensing devices. This review summarizes the research progress of flexible pressure sensors, including three kinds of transduction mechanisms and their respective research developments, and applications in the fields of E-skin and wearable devices. Furthermore, the challenges and development trends of E-skin and wearable flexible sensors are also briefly discussed. Challenges of developing high extensibility, high sensitivity, and flexible multi-function equipment still exist at present. Exploring new sensing mechanisms, seeking new functional materials, and developing novel integration technology of flexible devices will be the key directions in the sensors field in future.
Journal Article
Septum-Based Mammaplasties: Surgical Techniques and Evaluation of Nipple–Areola Sensibility
2020
BackgroundThe aim of the study was to describe details of surgical techniques and objectively evaluate nipple–areola (NAC) sensibility and viability of septum-based mammaplasties compared to not septum-based reduction techniques.MethodsData regarding NAC sensibility for static and moving one- and two-point discrimination were prospectively collected from 63 active group hypertrophic-breasted patients undergoing septum-based reduction mammaplasty preoperatively, at 6 and 12 months postoperatively, and from a control group of 60 patients who underwent not septum-based techniques. Fixed and mixed effect models were used for statistical analysis.ResultsComparison of complications showed no significant differences between groups (p = 0.07). After adjusting the results of the active group according to type of sensory testing, it emerged that the threshold decreases by 10% (p = 0.0003) at 6 months and even reaches 43% (p < 0.0001) at 12 months. The results have been modulated according to age, since the variation is less marked when age increased, by 0.6% at 6 months and 0.8% at 12 months (p = 0.019). The effects of the BMI can only be seen at 12 months, with an increase by 1.3% per year (p = 0.033). Among septum-based techniques, the inferior-central pedicle showed better sensibility outcomes even if not significantly (p = 0.06). Comparison of NAC sensibility outcomes showed that active group had thresholds that were 48% lower when compared to those of the control group at 12 months postoperatively (p < 0.001).ConclusionSeptum-based mammaplasty gives optimal results in terms of NAC viability with a significant improvement of sensibility postoperatively. Comparative outcomes on sensibility were also significantly better than not septum-based techniques.Level of Evidence IIThis journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266.
Journal Article
Improvement of Interoceptive Processes after an 8-Week Body Scan Intervention
2017
Interoceptive processes are defined as ability to detect sensations arising within the body. There is a growing body of research investigating ways of improving interoceptive processes. One promising approach increasing the attention to bodily sensations is the body scan (BS), a method stemming from mindfulness-based stress reduction. Research so far revealed only heterogenous findings of meditational practice and mindfulness-based stress reduction on interoceptive processes. Even more importantly, there is no study considering the effect of an 8-week BS intervention on interoceptive processes and the distinguishable subdomains of interoception. Therefore, the main objective of this research is to examine the effects of a BS intervention on different interoceptive subdomains over 8 weeks of training in two different samples.
In study 1, healthy participants executed a 20 min standardized audiotaped BS in the BS intervention group (
= 25) each day over 8 weeks. The control group (
= 24) listened to an audio book for the same amount of time. In study 2, the BS group (
= 18) was compared to an inactive control group (
= 18). In both studies, three measurement points were realized and interoceptive accuracy (IAc) - using a heartbeat perception task - as well as interoceptive sensibility (IS) - using confidence ratings for the heartbeat perception task and the subscale 'interoceptive awareness' of the Eating Disorder Inventory-2 (EDI-2) - were assessed.
In study 1, we found, as a descriptive trend, IAc and confidence ratings to be increased irrespective of the condition. However,
analysis revealed a significant improvement of IAc between T1 and T3 in the BS intervention only. IS revealed to be unaffected by the interventions. In study 2, we observed a significant positive effect of the BS intervention on IAc and confidence ratings compared to the inactive controls. As in study 1, IS (EDI-2) was unaffected by the intervention.
The results highlight the fact that interoception can be improved by long-term interventions focusing on bodily signals. Further studies might focus on clinical samples showing deficits in interoceptive processes and could use other bodily systems for measurement (e.g., respiratory signals) as well methods manipulating body ownership.
Journal Article
Methodology for Sound Quality Analysis of Motors for Automotive Interior Parts through Subjective Evaluation
2022
With the development of autonomous vehicles, activities in the indoor spaces of autonomous vehicles are diversifying. Therefore, as the operating range of the interior parts increases, the occupant becomes sensitive to the operating noise of autonomous vehicles. Therefore, to reduce operating noise, it is necessary to analyze the causal relationship between the mechanical/electrical noise characteristics of the motor and sound quality. In this paper, we propose a methodology to analyze the relationship between the noise frequency components and the sound quality of small motors used in automobile interior parts. Two types of motors were selected for this study, and noise measurements and analyses were performed by applying the design proposed in this study. Subjective sound quality evaluations were conducted using the 12 pairs of adjectives extracted from the survey. The results suggest that subjective sound quality evaluation scores should be converted to Z-scores to ensure the reliability of the statistical analysis. In addition, we present a critical sound quality value that can be used as a criterion for determining whether the sound quality is positive (good quality) or negative (bad quality). Sound quality regression models explain the causal relationship between rotational frequency components of the motor and subjective sound quality characteristics. Thus, a method for analyzing the effect of the rotational frequency component of the motor on the sound quality is presented, which suggests that it can be used as basic research data to improve the noise performance of the motor.
Journal Article
Castes of Mind
2011,2015
When thinking of India, it is hard not to think of caste. In academic and common parlance alike, caste has become a central symbol for India, marking it as fundamentally different from other places while expressing its essence. Nicholas Dirks argues that caste is, in fact, neither an unchanged survival of ancient India nor a single system that reflects a core cultural value. Rather than a basic expression of Indian tradition, caste is a modern phenomenon--the product of a concrete historical encounter between India and British colonial rule. Dirks does not contend that caste was invented by the British. But under British domination caste did become a single term capable of naming and above all subsuming India's diverse forms of social identity and organization. Dirks traces the career of caste from the medieval kingdoms of southern India to the textual traces of early colonial archives; from the commentaries of an eighteenth-century Jesuit to the enumerative obsessions of the late-nineteenth-century census; from the ethnographic writings of colonial administrators to those of twentieth-century Indian scholars seeking to rescue ethnography from its colonial legacy. The book also surveys the rise of caste politics in the twentieth century, focusing in particular on the emergence of caste-based movements that have threatened nationalist consensus. Castes of Mind is an ambitious book, written by an accomplished scholar with a rare mastery of centuries of Indian history and anthropology. It uses the idea of caste as the basis for a magisterial history of modern India. And in making a powerful case that the colonial past continues to haunt the Indian present, it makes an important contribution to current postcolonial theory and scholarship on contemporary Indian politics.
Semantic Segmentation and Analysis on Sensitive Parameters of Forest Fire Smoke Using Smoke-Unet and Landsat-8 Imagery
2022
Forest fire is a ubiquitous disaster which has a long-term impact on the local climate as well as the ecological balance and fire products based on remote sensing satellite data have developed rapidly. However, the early forest fire smoke in remote sensing images is small in area and easily confused by clouds and fog, which makes it difficult to be identified. Too many redundant frequency bands and remote sensing index for remote sensing satellite data will have an interference on wildfire smoke detection, resulting in a decline in detection accuracy and detection efficiency for wildfire smoke. To solve these problems, this study analyzed the sensitivity of remote sensing satellite data and remote sensing index used for wildfire detection. First, a high-resolution remote sensing multispectral image dataset of forest fire smoke, containing different years, seasons, regions and land cover, was established. Then Smoke-Unet, a smoke segmentation network model based on an improved Unet combined with the attention mechanism and residual block, was proposed. Furthermore, in order to reduce data redundancy and improve the recognition accuracy of the algorithm, the conclusion was made by experiments that the RGB, SWIR2 and AOD bands are sensitive to smoke recognition in Landsat-8 images. The experimental results show that the smoke pixel accuracy rate using the proposed Smoke-Unet is 3.1% higher than that of Unet, which could effectively segment the smoke pixels in remote sensing images. This proposed method under the RGB, SWIR2 and AOD bands can help to segment smoke by using high-sensitivity band and remote sensing index and makes an early alarm of forest fire smoke.
Journal Article
Disentangling the role of interoceptive sensibility in alexithymia, emotion dysregulation, and depression in healthy individuals
by
Llorens, Roberto
,
Desdentado, Lorena
,
Miragall, Marta
in
Alexithymia
,
Behavioral Science and Psychology
,
Depression, Mental
2023
Interoception, a multifaceted concept defined as the perception of internal bodily signals, is crucially involved in mental health in general and in emotion regulation in particular, being interoceptive sensibility (IS) one of the most studied interoceptive processes. The main objective of this study was to explore the relationships between IS and emotion regulation processes, analyzing the role of the eight IS dimensions assessed by the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness-2 (MAIA-2) in alexithymia, emotion dysregulation, and depression. Additionally, this study also aimed to validate the MAIA-2 in a Spanish sample. To do so, 391 healthy adults, native Peninsular Spanish speakers (61.0% women,
M
age
= 29.00,
SD
age
= 11.40), completed the MAIA-2 and other self-reported questionnaires to measure alexithymia, emotion dysregulation, and depressive symptoms. Results showed that lower scores on the IS dimensions that involve an accepting attitude toward the bodily signals (e.g., not-worrying) were related to alexithymia and emotion dysregulation, which, in turn, predicted depression. Moreover, the eight-factor structure of the MAIA-2 was confirmed with acceptable fit indices. This study highlights the multidimensional nature of the IS and the relevance of IS dimensions that involve a positive appraisal of the body in regulating emotions.
Journal Article
Model-based fault detection filter for Markovian jump linear systems applied to a control moment gyroscope
by
Carvalho, Leonardo de Paula
,
Costa, Oswaldo Luiz do Valle
,
Toriumi, Fabio Yukio
in
[formula omitted] norm
,
[formula omitted] sensibility index
,
Actuators
2021
We study a fault detection problem in the context of Markovian Jump Linear Systems (MJLS). The major contribution of this paper is the design of a mode-dependent mixed H∞/H− Fault Detection Filter (FDF) under the MJLS formulation, which is obtained by solving a Linear and Bilinear Matrices Inequalities (LMI / BMI) optimization problem. As a secondary contribution, we present a simulation of the theoretical results using a Control Moment Gyroscope unit, which is extensively used as an actuator for attitude control of spacecraft and satellites. The attitude control of satellites is a class of problem that is within the framework of MJLS, since it allows us to model the loss of communication between the various components of the network system. Therefore, designing Fault Detection Filters under this framework provides reliable solutions. From the simulations results, it is possible to observe that the proposed mixed H∞/H− fault detection solution outperformed the approach using only the H∞ norm, showing that it could be a valuable alternative for the fault detection problem.
Journal Article
Alexithymia mediates the relationship between interoceptive sensibility and anxiety
2018
A number of empirical and theoretical reports link altered interoceptive processing to anxiety. However, the mechanistic understanding of the relationship between the two remains poor. We propose that a heightened sensibility for interoceptive signals, combined with a difficulty in attributing these sensations to emotions, increases an individual's vulnerability to anxiety. In order to investigate this, a large sample of general population adults were recruited and completed self-report measures of interoceptive sensibility, trait anxiety and alexithymia. Results confirmed that the positive association between interoceptive sensibility and trait anxiety was partially mediated by alexithymia, such that those most at risk for clinically significant levels of trait anxiety have both significantly higher levels of interoceptive sensibility and alexithymia. A subsequent factor analysis confirmed the independence of the three measures. Altered interoceptive processing in combination with alexithymia, increased the risk for anxiety above and beyond altered interoceptive processing alone. We suggest that a heightened sensibility for interoceptive signals, combined with a difficulty in attributing these sensations to emotions, leaves these sensations vulnerable to catastrophizing interpretation. Interventions that target the attribution of bodily sensations may prove valuable in reducing anxiety.
Journal Article