scholarly journals Automatic Balance Provider

2019 ◽  
Vol 1362 ◽  
pp. 012082
Author(s):  
G Prema ◽  
G Shobana ◽  
N K B Gowtham
Keyword(s):  
1976 ◽  
Vol 125 (5) ◽  
pp. 660-664
Author(s):  
R.M. Abrams ◽  
J.F. Clapp ◽  
D. Caton ◽  
H.T. Hammel

2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 3047-3059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars B. Oude Nijhuis ◽  
Bastiaan R. Bloem ◽  
Mark G. Carpenter ◽  
John H. J. Allum

Knee movements play a critical role in most balance corrections. Loss of knee flexibility may cause postural instability. Conversely, trained voluntary knee flexions executed during balance corrections might help to overcome balance deficits. We examined whether bilateral knee flexion could be added to automatic balance corrections generated by sudden balance perturbations. We investigated how this could be achieved and whether it improved or worsened balance control. Twenty-four healthy subjects participated in three different test conditions, in which they had to flex their knees following an auditory cue (VOLUNTARY condition), had to restore their balance in response to multidirectional rotations of a support surface (REACTIVE condition), or the combination of these two (COMBINED condition). A new variable set (PREDICTED), calculated as the mathematical sum of VOLUNTARY and REACTIVE, was compared with the COMBINED variable set. COMBINED responses following forward rotations were close to PREDICTED, or greater, suggesting adequate integration of knee flexion into the automatic balance reactions. For backward rotations, the COMBINED condition resulted in several near-falls, and this was generally associated with smaller knee flexion and smaller EMG responses. Subjects compensated by using greater trunk flexion and arm movements. Activity in several muscles displayed earlier onsets for the COMBINED condition following backward rotations. We conclude that healthy adults can incorporate voluntary knee flexion into their automatic balance corrections and that this depends on the direction of the postural perturbation. These findings highlight the flexibility of the human balance repertoire and underscore both the advantages and limitations of using trained voluntary movements to aid balance corrections in man.


1969 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hemen Ray

In evaluating Mahatma Gandhi, Soviet scholars have always endeavored to identify him from a class viewpoint even though they frequently disagreed on the definitions of the various classes and on the attitude to be taken toward them. Mahatma Gandhi, although he came from the bourgeois class, always considered himself a socialist and a “true servant of the peasants and of the workers.” He was firmly of the opinion that “even a King can be a socialist by becoming a servant of the people.” He once told Nehru that “even when I die, you will have to admit that Gandhi was a true socialist.” Gandhi was a religious man. He believed not only in the basic philosophy of Hinduism, but also in its social structure. He deprecated the abolition of caste while opposing untouchability. He was unmodern by Western and Communist standards and he wanted India as a confederation of small village communities economically and politically self-sufficient. In the words of Nehru:He looked back with yearning to the days of the old autonomous and more-or-less self-contained village community where there had been an automatic balance between production, distribution and consumption; where political or economic power was spread out and not concentrated as it is today; where a kind of simple democracy prevailed; where the evils of great cities were absent and people lived in contact with the life-giving soil and breathed the pure air of the open spaces.


Author(s):  
ZENGLIN XU ◽  
IRWIN KING ◽  
MICHAEL R. LYU

Feature selection is an important task in pattern recognition. Support Vector Machine (SVM) and Minimax Probability Machine (MPM) have been successfully used as the classification framework for feature selection. However, these paradigms cannot automatically control the balance between prediction accuracy and the number of selected features. In addition, the selected feature subsets are also not stable in different data partitions. Minimum Error Minimax Probability Machine (MEMPM) has been proposed for classification recently. In this paper, we outline MEMPM to select the optimal feature subset with good stability and automatic balance between prediction accuracy and the size of feature subset. The experiments against feature selection with SVM and MPM show the advantages of the proposed MEMPM formulation in stability and automatic balance between the feature subset size and the prediction accuracy.


Author(s):  
Carlos Vidal-Meliá ◽  
María del Carmen Boado-Penas ◽  
Ole Settergren

2012 ◽  
Vol 546-547 ◽  
pp. 784-789
Author(s):  
Ke Liang Zhou ◽  
Yu Lan Jiang ◽  
Jin Lin Huang ◽  
Bin Yan

During the hydrometallurgical production process, there are many towers working at the same time. In order to improve production efficiency, we need to control the level height of every tower. Takes example for 6 towers, do research on the level control system in metal ions production process. According to the theory of materials balance, the mathematic model of the system are established. Programmed the mathematic model by Matlab. In order to make the level of each tower at the same height, work out how many adjust times needed and how much adsorbate every tower inflow and outflow each time. Then analysis the data results of error and variance, which have confirmed the feasibility and rationality of the level automatic balance system model established in this paper.


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