scholarly journals Plantar Pressure Evaluation during the Season in Five Basketball Movements

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8691
Author(s):  
Catarina M. Amaro ◽  
Maria A. Castro ◽  
Luis Roseiro ◽  
Maria A. Neto ◽  
Ana M. Amaro

Sports activity is extremely important in the health context, with a clear motivation for its practice. One of the sports that involve more athletes is basketball, where the human body undergoes rapid reactions, emphasizing the contact of the foot with the ground. The main goal of the present study is to evaluate the distribution of plantar pressure in five different basketball movements. Supported by a group of nine volunteer female athletes from a senior basketball team, a data acquisition protocol was defined to identify the changes that occur throughout the sports season. In this study, the maximum values of plantar pressure were evaluated for both feet. The five movements that were defined and studied are all movements that might be performed during the basketball practice period. To guarantee the necessary conditions of data reliability and repeatability, at least seven repetitions were performed for each movement, which occurred at two different moments of the sports season: at the beginning of the competition in November, and at season peak, four months later, in March. Overall, the results obtained did not present statistically significant changes between the two seasons in this study. However, a slight decrease was observed throughout the sporting season for all movements, except for the rebound, where there was a contrary evaluation. Additionally, athletes with a higher level of experience show higher values of plantar pressure than less experienced athletes.

Author(s):  
Kota Yamamoto ◽  
Hisashi Asanuma ◽  
Hiroaki Takahashi ◽  
Takafumi Hirata

New data reduction method for isotopic measurements using high-gain Faraday amplifiers enables precise uranium isotopic analysis even from transient signals.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1357034X2091916
Author(s):  
Rafaela Granja ◽  
Helena Machado ◽  
Filipa Queirós

Forensic DNA phenotyping is a genetic technology that might be used in criminal investigations. Based on DNA samples of the human body found at crime scenes, it allows to infer externally visible characteristics (such as eye, hair and skin colour) and continental-based biogeographical ancestry. By indicating the probable visible appearance of a criminal suspect, forensic DNA phenotyping allows to narrow down the focus of a criminal investigation. In this article, drawing on interviews with forensic geneticists, we explore how their narratives translate contemporary focus on criminal molecularized bodies. We propose the concept of (de)materialization to approach three aspects of the forensic geneticists’ views. The first regards considering bodies as mutable entities. The second relates to socially contingent meanings attributed to bodies. The third regards to controversies surrounding data reliability. By reflecting upon the (de)materialization of criminal bodies, forensic geneticists juxtapose the defence and unsettling of forensic DNA phenotyping claims.


Author(s):  
Xiaoqiang Liu ◽  
Henk Koppelaar ◽  
Ronald Hamers ◽  
Nico Bruining

Buried within the human body, the heart prohibits direct inspection, so most knowledge about heart failure is obtained by autopsy (in hindsight). Live immersive inspection within the human heart requires advanced data acquisition, image mining and virtual reality techniques. Computational sciences are being exploited as means to investigate biomedical processes in cardiology.


2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 325-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroyoshi Fukukita ◽  
Michio Senda ◽  
Takashi Terauchi ◽  
Kazufumi Suzuki ◽  
Hiromitsu Daisaki ◽  
...  

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