2,821 research outputs found
Promoting physical activity among university students: a systematic review of controlled trials
Objective:
University study is often accompanied by a decline in physical activity (PA) levels but can offer the opportunity to
promote a lifelong active lifestyle. This review aims to summarize controlled trials of interventions promoting PA among uni-
versity students, describing the quality of the evidence, effective strategies, and deficiencies in the interventions employed, to
provide directions for future research and for practical implementations.
Data Source:
PubMed, PsychINFO, Cochrane Library, Education Source, and SPORTDiscus.
Study Inclusion Criteria:
Randomized or nonrandomized controlled trial, describing an intervention to promote PA in uni-
versity students, where PA was one of the outcomes and results were published in English.
Data Extraction:
Country, study design, participants\u2019 inclusion criteria, participation rate and characteristics, randomization,
blinding, theoretical framework, intervention characteristics, participant retention rate and withdrawal reasons, measures
employed, data analysis, PA results, and findings regarding PA correlates.
Data Synthesis:
Data were synthetized considering study characteristics, strategies used, and outcomes.
Results:
Two thousand five hundred eighty-five articles were identified. Twenty-seven studies met the inclusion criteria. Sixteen
studies reported an increase in PA levels.
Conclusion:
Physical Activity promotion interventions should address a range of behavioral determinants. Personalized
approaches and PA sessions should be considered in future studies. The high risk of bias of many studies (mainly due to attrition
and poor reporting) and missing information about intervention components limit the strength of conclusions about the most
effective strategies and the evidence of effectiveness, highlighting the need for further high-quality studies
Domain wall displacement in Py square ring for single nanometric magnetic bead detection
A new approach based on the domain wall displacement in confined
ferromagnetic nanostructures for attracting and sensing a single nanometric
magnetic particles is presented. We modeled and experimentally demonstrated the
viability of the approach using an anisotropic magnetoresistance device made by
a micron-size square ring of Permalloy designed for application in magnetic
storage. This detection concept can be suitable to biomolecular recognition,
and in particular to single molecule detection.Comment: 8pages, 3figure
Preferência de Bemisia tabaci, biótipo B (Hemiptera: aleyrodidae) a genótipos de soja.
O objetivo do trabalho foi avaliar a preferência de B. tabaci a 18 genótipos de soja com chance de escolha, em condições de casa de vegetação. Os genótipos avaliados foram: BRI 04-01668, BRI 04-01685, BRI 04-02770, BRI 04-02855, BRI 04-02935, BRI 04-02983, BRS 7860RR, BRS Barreira, BRS Gisele RR, BRS Juliana, BRS Valiosa RR, BRSGO 7960, BRSGO 8060, CD219, CD 215, Emgopa 302RR, IAC 17 e IAC 19. Os materiais com menores infestações de ovos e ninfas foram: BRI 04-01668, BRI 04-01685, BRI 04-02770 e IAC 17 (padrão de resistência) e os mais infestados foram BRS Juliana RR e Emgopa 302RR Os genótipos BRS 7860RR e BRSGO 8060 apresentaram o mesmo perfil de não preferência que IAC19 (padrão de resistência)
Reduced gait variability and enhanced brain activity in older adults with auditory cues: a functional near-infrared spectroscopy study
BACKGROUND: Aging is associated with declining mobility, which negatively affects quality of life and incurs substantial economic costs. Techniques to maintain safe mobility in older adults are therefore essential. Rhythmic auditory cueing (RAC) can improve walking patterns in older adults. However, the neural correlates associated with RAC, how they are influenced by repeated exposure and their relationships with gait response, cognitive function, and depressive symptoms are unclear.
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to investigate the effects of RAC during walking on cortical activation and the relationship between RAC-related cortical changes and cognitive function, depressive symptoms, and gait response.
METHODS: Seventeen young adults and eighteen older adults walked on a motorized treadmill for 5 minutes (5 trials with alternating 30-second blocks of usual walking and RAC walking). Changes in oxygenated hemoglobin (HbO2) in the frontal cortex were recorded using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Cognitive domains were assessed through validated tests. A triaxial accelerometer measured gait parameters.
RESULTS: Gait variability decreased and prefrontal HbO2 levels increased during cued walking relative to usual walking. Older adults showed greater HbO2 levels in multiple motor regions during cued walking although the response reduced with repeated exposure. In older adults, lower depression scores, higher cognitive functioning, and reduced gait variability were linked with increased HbO2 levels during RAC walking.
CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that walking improves with RAC in older adults and is achieved through increased activity in multiple cortical areas. The cortical response decline with repeated exposure indicates older adults' ability to adapt to a new task
Charged pions from Ni on Ni collisions between 1 and 2 AGeV
Charged pions from Ni + Ni reactions at 1.05, 1.45 and 1.93 AGeV are measured
with the FOPI detector. The mean multiplicities per mean number of
participants increase with beam energy, in accordance with earlier studies of
the Ar + KCl and La + La systems. The pion kinetic energy spectra have concave
shape and are fitted by the superposition of two Boltzmann distributions with
different temperatures. These apparent temperatures depend only weakly on
bombarding energy. The pion angular distributions show a forward/backward
enhancement at all energies, but not the enhancement which was
observed in case of the Au + Au system. These features also determine the
rapidity distributions which are therefore in disagreement with the hypothesis
of one thermal source. The importance of the Coulomb interaction and of the
pion rescattering by spectator matter in producing these phenomena is
discussed.Comment: 22 pages, Latex using documentstyle[12pt,a4,epsfig], to appear in Z.
Phys.
Charged pion production in Ru+Ru collisions at 400A and 1528A MeV
We present transverse momentum and rapidity spectra of charged pions in
central Ru + Ru collisions at 400 and 1528 MeV. The data exhibit enhanced
production at low transverse momenta compared to the expectations from the
thermal model that includes the decay of -resonances and thermal
pions. Modification of the -spectral function and the Coulomb
interaction are necessary to describe the detailed shape of the transverse
momentum spectra. Within the framework of the thermal model, the freeze-out
radii of pions are similar at both beam energies. The IQMD model reproduces the
shapes of the transverse momentum and rapidity spectra of pions, but the
predicted absolute yields are larger than in the measurements, especially at
lower beam energy.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
On the reproducibility and repeatability of laser absorption spectroscopy measurements for δ2H and δ18O isotopic analysis
The aim of this study was to analyse the reproducibility of off-axis integrated cavity output spectroscopy (OA-ICOS)-derived δ2H and δ18O measurements on a set of 35 water samples by comparing the performance of four laser spectroscopes with the performance of a conventional mass spectrometer under typical laboratory conditions. All samples were analysed using three different schemes of standard/sample combinations and related data processing to assess the improvement of results compared with mass spectrometry. The repeatability of the four OA-ICOS instruments was further investigated by multiple analyses of a sample subset to evaluate the stability of δ2H and δ18O measurements.
Results demonstrated an overall agreement between OA-ICOS-based and mass spectrometry-based measurements for the entire dataset. However, a certain degree of variability existed in precision and accuracy between the four instruments. There was no evident bias or systematic deviations from the mass spectrometer values, but random errors, which were apparently not related to external factors, significantly affected the final results. Our investigation revealed that analytical precision ranged ±from ±0.56‰ to ±1.80‰ for δ2H and from ±0.10‰ to ±0.27‰ for δ18O measurements, with a marked variability among the four instruments. The overall capability of laser instruments to reproduce stable results with repeated measurements of the same sample was acceptable, and there were general differences within the range of the analytical precision for each spectroscope. Hence, averaging the measurements of three identical samples led to a higher degree of accuracy and eliminated the potential for random deviations
Discontinuous galerkin spectral/hp element modelling of dispersive shallow water systems
Sideward flow of K+ mesons in Ru+Ru and Ni+Ni reactions near threshold
Experimental data on K+ meson and proton sideward flow measured with the FOPI
detector at SIS/GSI in the reactions Ru+Ru at 1.69 AGeV and Ni+Ni at 1.93 AGeV
are presented. The K+ sideward flow is found to be anti-correlated (correlated)
with the one of protons at low (high) transverse momenta. When compared to the
predictions of a transport model, the data favour the existence of an in-medium
repulsive K+ nucleon potential.Comment: 16 pages Revtex, 3 ps-figures, submitted to Phys. Lett.
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