scholarly journals Controlled thawing of foods

2000 ◽  
Vol 18 (No. 5) ◽  
pp. 194-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Hoke ◽  
L. Klíma ◽  
R. Grée ◽  
M. Houška

The various ways of thawing of model food made for comparison of these processes from point of view of duration. The experiments were conducted under condition that the surface temperature of the thawed food did not overcome 15°C. Shortest mean time of thawing was achieved for vacuum-steam thawing. Regarding to the regime chosen the time of thawing varied between 18.4–29 min. The similar process of vacuum thawing with steam generated from hot water placed below the food was also successful. For this process the mean time of thawing was predicted between 30.5 and 35 min. If the starting temperature of the water was below the boiling point at vacuum level in the chamber the time of thawing was much longer (about 49 min). For hot air thawing we have tested two regimes with temperature of air 50 and 70°C. For both air temperatures the times of thawing were similar being 52.1 and 53.6 min, respectively. Microwave thawing was depending on the power of microwave oven. The time of thawing was achieved 28.9 min at power level 1, at power level “thawing” the process duration was 34.4 min.

1989 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 23 ◽  
Author(s):  
DL Hopkins

Equations were developed to predict the weight of trimmed retail (bone-in) cuts, trim, fat and bone from 321 lamb carcasses, ranging in carcass weight from 4.8 to 26.8 kg and in fat depth at the GR site (12th rib) from 1 to 31 mm. For commercial application, the equations were developed using a multiple regression program with the predictors carcass weight and GR. All equations explained a large amount of the variation in component weights (r2 = 0.76-0.99). A time and motion study using 172 carcasses showed that the times required to butcher carcasses of low fat (score 1 and 2) were similar. Likewise the mean time taken to butcher score 3 carcasses was similar to that of score 1 carcasses. However, it took significantly longer (P<0.05) to butcher score 3 carcasses than score 2 carcasses, and score 4 and 5 carcasses than score 3 carcasses. In addition, the mean times taken to butcher score 4 and 5 carcasses were significantly different (P< 0.05). By using multiple regression analysis it was shown that carcass weight, fatscore, their interaction and the butcher all significantly affected the butchering time. The findings of this work are discussed as they apply to the commercial development of price schedules and show that, when based on yield, lean heavy carcasses are more profitable for processing.


1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (03) ◽  
pp. 571-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Trajstman

A model is presented for a bounded growth population subjected to random-sized emigrations that occur due to population pressure. The deterministic growth component examined in detail is defined by a Prendiville process. Results are obtained for the times between emigration events and for the population increase between emigrations. Some information is obtained about the mean time to extinction and also for the mean population level when the emigration-size distribution is negative exponential.


2011 ◽  
Vol 255-260 ◽  
pp. 1512-1517
Author(s):  
Gao Min Shi

The design and planning of hotel space should be based on the survival and development of hotels. The designer should try to make his design and planning comprehensive and accurate, highlighting the function and features of the targeted hotel space. In the mean time, the designer, when designing and planning the hotel space, should keep up closely with the times, follow the trend in which traditional culture converges and integrates with modern civilization, insist on people foremost, make scientific analysis and appraisal, integrate various resources, so as to maximize the value of a hotel and enhance its vitality and competitiveness in markets.


1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 571-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Trajstman

A model is presented for a bounded growth population subjected to random-sized emigrations that occur due to population pressure.The deterministic growth component examined in detail is defined by a Prendiville process. Results are obtained for the times between emigration events and for the population increase between emigrations. Some information is obtained about the mean time to extinction and also for the mean population level when the emigration-size distribution is negative exponential.


2003 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Livio Garattini ◽  
Emanuela Castelnuovo ◽  
Davide Lanzeni ◽  
Cecilia Viscarra ◽  
DYSCO VISITE Gruppo di studio DYSCO VISITE

In Italy, general practitioners (GPs) operating within the National Health Service (NHS) are paid according to the number of patients followed, without relation to the number of visits performed. This means that, from a theoretical point of view, the marginal cost of an adjunctive medical examination equals to zero. Since this view is clearly little realistic, in this paper we expose a methodological approach to estimate the real cost of a GP visit, starting from data collected in the DYSCO study, a national survey on the medical costs of dystimia in Italy. 46 GPs were asked to record the number and duration of ambulatory and domiciliar visits, along with the time spent in administrative tasks, during 4 weeks, each randomly chosen within a season (spring, summer, autumn, winter). In order to assign a monetary value to each visit, the total fee reimbursed by the NHS to a GP was divided by the total time spent on work, and then again by the number of visits conducted during this time. The calculations performed revealed that the mean duration of a ambulatory visit amounts to about 10 minutes, while a domiciliar visit (including travelling time) lasts almost the double. An interesting result was that summer visits have significantly longer duration than the mean, and consequently cost more. The mean cost of a GP’s ambulatory visit resulted about 12 Euro; a domiciliar visit costs almost 23 Euro. The times and costs calculated in this study are consistent with other calculations performed by other authors in Europe and Italy, confirming the appropriateness of the employed methodology.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 614-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomotaka Ohshima ◽  
Shigeru Miyachi ◽  
Naoki Matsuo ◽  
Reo Kawaguchi ◽  
Aichi Niwa ◽  
...  

Purpose: To report a novel technique (“paper rail”) to facilitate inserting the tail of a microguidewire into the tip of a low-profile device during endovascular procedures. Technique: A sterilized nonwoven fabric tape with a smooth glossy paper backing is used. The tape has several linear folds ideal for a paper rail. Holding each piece of equipment about 5 cm from its respective tip, both the tail of the guidewire and the tip of the catheter are navigated at a 30° angle toward each other in the crease until the guidewire enters the catheter. The paper rail technique was compared with the conventional freehand method under varying luminosities found in an operating room. The paper rail technique was most effective in suboptimal lighting, where the mean time was reduced from 83 seconds with the conventional method to 20 seconds with the paper rail maneuver. The times required to insert the wire with the paper rail method were comparable (~22 seconds) at all light levels. Conclusion: The paper rail method may help improve the speed and accurate insertion of the tail of a microguidewire into the tip of low-profile devices during endovascular procedures. It may be particularly useful for physicians in a low-light environment or trainees.


2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 314-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Ewert ◽  
Felix Berger ◽  
Oliver Kretschmar ◽  
Hashim Abdul-Khaliq ◽  
Brigitte Stiller ◽  
...  

Background: Multiple perforations in the floor of the oval fossa may be an obstacle for transcatheter closure. Thus, we analyzed the interventions in 33 patients with more than one interatrial communication in comparison with 370 procedures with a single defect. Methods and Results: A diagnostic catheterization, which included a balloon-sizing maneuver, was performed. We implanted a total of 46 occluders, made up of 42 Amplatzers and 4 CardioSEALs. In 20 patients, the defects were closed with a single occluder, namely 18 Amplatzer and 2 CardioSEAL devices. Complete closure was achieved in 15 patients, while a tiny residual shunt remained in 5 patients. In 13 patients, two devices were implanted, without any residual shunt being found immediately after implantation. In 3 patients, the occluders did not touch each other. In 10 patients, their rims overlapped. In comparison with the control group, the group with multiple defects did not differ in the distribution of age, gender, and indications for device closure. The mean time of the procedure, and the time required for fluoroscopy, however, were significant longer (P< 0.001). These times ranged from 45 to 250 minutes with a median of 140 minutes, and from 0.0 to 39.2 minutes, with a median of 12.0 minutes, respectively. Also, the association with an atrial septal aneurysm was significantly more frequent 61 vs. 17%; P< 0.001). The times taken during insertion of double devices were also significantly longer than those needed for insertion of a single device (P< 0.001). Conclusions: Transcatheter closure of multiple defects within the oval fossa is feasible with currently available occluders, albeit than, in selected cases it is necessary to implant two devices.


1835 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 83-90 ◽  

In the conclusion of “An Essay towards a first Approximation to a Map of Cotidal Lines," published in the Philosophical Transactions for 1833, I stated my opinion that simultaneous tide observations, made at the stations of the Preventive Service, and continued for a fortnight, would give us a clearer view of the progress of the tide along the coasts of this country than we could acquire from any records then extant. A representation to this effect being made to Captain Bowles, the Chief Commis­sioner of that Service, and to Captain Beaufort, the Hydrographer of the Admiralty, those gentlemen entered with great interest and activity into the proposal for promoting this branch of science by such a series of observations; and they undertook to give orders for carrying the plan into effect, and directions for its execution. Such observations were accordingly made at all the Preventive Service stations on the coasts of England, Ireland, and Scotland, from June 7 to June 22 inclusive, and the registers of the observations were sent to the Admiralty, where they now are. I expected to be able to deduce from these returns the solution of several curious and important questions respecting the tides, and probably to obtain some new laws of their phenomena. For this purpose, however, it was necessary to perform a pre­vious reduction of the registered observations, correcting the times as far as the methods employed would allow, and subtracting from each time of tide the time of the previous transit of the moon, in order to obtain the interval. Though this opera­tion was very simple, the performance of it in so many cases (above 12,000) required more time than I could devote to it. Captain Beaufort kindly allowed it to be exe­cuted by Mr. Dessiou, of the Hydrographer’s Office ; and it was my intention to defer laying the account of the observations before the Society till the whole of them had been reduced, and their results investigated. But Mr. Dessiou, having executed this reduction for the whole of the south coast of England, has been prevented by illness and by more pressing employments, from proceeding to the remaining coasts. In the mean time, having examined the reduced observations, I have been led to some conclusions which appear to me interesting and important ; and which, I think, con­sidering the delay which may attend the reduction of the remaining returns, and the intention which is entertained of repeating the observations in the ensuing June, it may be worth while very briefly to announce. I shall defer the communication of the details by which these results are established till I am able to include in them the east coast of England and the coasts of Ireland and Scotland.


i-Perception ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 204166951769418 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claus-Christian Carbon

Aesthetics research aiming at understanding art experience is an emerging field; however, most research is conducted in labs without access to real artworks, without the social context of a museum and without the presence of other persons. The present article replicates and complements key findings of art perception in museum contexts. When observing museum visitors ( N = 225; 126 female, M(age) = 43.3 years) while perceiving a series of six Gerhard Richter paintings of various sizes (0.26–3.20 sq. m) in a temporary art exhibition in January and February 2015 showing 28 paintings in total, we revealed patterns compatible to previous research. The mean time taken in viewing artworks was much longer than was mostly realized in lab contexts, here 32.9 s ( Mdn = 25.4 s). We were also able to replicate visitors spending more time on viewing artworks when attending in groups of people. Additionally, we uncovered a close positive relationship ( r2 = .929) between canvas size and viewing distance, ranging on average between 1.49 and 2.12 m ( M = 1.72 m). We also found that more than half of the visitors returned to paintings, especially those people who had not previously paid too much attention at the initial viewing. After adding the times of returning viewers, each picture was viewed longer than had been estimated in previous research ( M = 50.5 s, Mdn = 43.0 s). Results are discussed in the context of current art perception theories, focusing on the need for the ecologically valid testing of artworks in aesthetics research.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin N. Thompson

The outbreak of pneumonia originating in Wuhan, China, has generated 24,500 confirmed cases, including 492 deaths, as of 5 February 2020. The virus (2019-nCoV) has spread elsewhere in China and to 24 countries, including South Korea, Thailand, Japan and USA. Fortunately, there has only been limited human-to-human transmission outside of China. Here, we assess the risk of sustained transmission whenever the coronavirus arrives in other countries. Data describing the times from symptom onset to hospitalisation for 47 patients infected early in the current outbreak are used to generate an estimate for the probability that an imported case is followed by sustained human-to-human transmission. Under the assumptions that the imported case is representative of the patients in China, and that the 2019-nCoV is similarly transmissible to the SARS coronavirus, the probability that an imported case is followed by sustained human-to-human transmission is 0.41 (credible interval [0.27, 0.55]). However, if the mean time from symptom onset to hospitalisation can be halved by intense surveillance, then the probability that an imported case leads to sustained transmission is only 0.012 (credible interval [0, 0.099]). This emphasises the importance of current surveillance efforts in countries around the world, to ensure that the ongoing outbreak will not become a global pandemic.


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