214 research outputs found
Response Patterns in Finger and Central Body Skin Temperatures Under Mild Whole Body Cooling
INTRODUCTION The actual heat loss may be underestimated especially in studies employing mild whole-body cooling, if AVA-rich distal areas are not taken into account. In the present report, we illustrate the skin temperature response pattern in fingers (rich in AVAs) to transient whole-body cooling as compared to non-acral body sites (without AVAs). METHODS Eight men participated in the study. During the test the subjects were dressed in shorts, socks and shoes and stayed seated with the arms on insulated supports at heart level. The air temperature of 32 °C was after 25 minutes gradually reduced to 13 °C (0.2 °C/min). Core, finger (sulcus lateral to the nailbed) and non-acral skin (8 points) temperatures were measured. RESULTS During cooling the mean skin temperature in all subjects decreased at a similar rate. Higher variation in the end of the cooling could be explained by differences in body fat (R2=0.902). Simultaneously, the finger cooling could start with up to about 1 hour difference in different subjects. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION Mean skin temperature did not give any idea on when the subjects left thermal neutrality. It is strongly recommended to measure finger (or toe) temperatures when maintaining the thermal comfort of the subjects in dynamic conditions is important
The METAFRONT System: Extensible Parsing and Transformation
We present the metafront tool for specifying flexible, safe, and efficient syntactic transformations between languages defined by context-free grammars. The transformations are guaranteed to terminate and to map grammatically legal input to grammatically legal output. We rely on a novel parser algorithm that is designed to support gradual extensions of a grammar by allowing productions to remain in a natural style and by statically reporting ambiguities and errors in terms of individual productions as they are being added. Our tool may be used as a parser generator in which the resulting parser automatically supports a flexible, safe, and efficient macro processor, or as an extensible lightweight compiler generator for domain-specific languages. We show substantial examples of both kinds
Effects of Cooling During Exercise on Thermoregulatory Responses of Men With Paraplegia.
BACKGROUND: People with spinal cord injury (SCI) have an altered afferent input to the thermoregulatory center, resulting in a reduced efferent response (vasomotor control and sweating capacity) below the level of the lesion. Consequently, core body temperature rises more rapidly during exercise in individuals with SCI compared with people who are able-bodied. Cooling strategies may reduce the thermophysiological strain in SCI. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the effects of a cooling vest on the core body temperature response of people with a thoracic SCI during submaximal exercise. METHODS: Ten men (mean age=44 years, SD=11) with a thoracic lesion (T4-T5 or below) participated in this randomized crossover study. Participants performed two 45-minute exercise bouts at 50% maximal workload (ambient temperature 25°C), with participants randomized to a group wearing a cooling vest or a group wearing no vest (separate days). Core body temperature and skin temperature were continuously measured, and thermal sensation was assessed every 3 minutes. RESULTS: Exercise resulted in an increased core body temperature, skin temperature, and thermal sensation, whereas cooling did not affect core body temperature. The cooling vest effectively decreased skin temperature, increased the core-to-trunk skin temperature gradient, and tended to lower thermal sensation compared with the control condition. LIMITATIONS: The lack of differences in core body temperature among conditions may be a result of the relative moderate ambient temperature in which the exercise was performed. CONCLUSIONS: Despite effectively lowering skin temperature and increasing the core-to-trunk skin temperature gradient, there was no impact of the cooling vest on the exercise-induced increase in core body temperature in men with low thoracic SCI
The interacting nature of dwarf galaxies hosting superluminous supernovae
(Abridged) Type I superluminous supernovae (SLSNe I) are rare, powerful
explosions whose mechanism and progenitors remain elusive. SLSNe I show a
preference for low-metallicity, actively star-forming dwarf galaxies. We
investigate whether the hosts of SLSNe I show increased evidence for
interaction. We use a sample of 42 SLSN I images obtained with
and measure the number of companion galaxies by counting the objects detected
within a given radius from the host. As a comparison, we used two Monte
Carlo-based methods to estimate the expected average number of companion
objects in the same images, as well as a sample of 32 galaxies that have hosted
long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). About 50% of SLSN I hosts have at least one major
companion (within a flux ratio of 1:4) within 5 kpc. The average number of
major companions per SLSN I host galaxy is . Our Monte
Carlo comparison methods yield a lower number of companions for random objects
of similar brightness in the same image or for the SLSN host after randomly
redistributing the sources in the same image. The Anderson-Darling test shows
that this difference is statistically significant independent of the redshift
range. The same is true for the projected distance distribution of the
companions. The SLSN I hosts are, thus, found in areas of their images, where
the object number density is greater than average. SLSN I hosts have more
companions than GRB hosts ( companions per host
distributed over 25% of the hosts) but the difference is not statistically
significant. The difference between their separations is, however, marginally
significant. The dwarf galaxies hosting SLSNe I are often part of interacting
systems. This suggests that SLSNe I progenitors are formed after a recent burst
of star formation. Low metallicity alone cannot explain this tendency.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. In v2 replaced graphs with higher
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