scholarly journals Effects of fasting or a vegetarian diet on subjective ratings of appetite and mood during strenuous physical activity

1999 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-108
Author(s):  
Stephan Rössner ◽  
Britta Hylander ◽  
Anna Hägg ◽  
Louise Dye ◽  
Claire Lawton ◽  
...  
1995 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 347-353 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Mittendorf ◽  
Matthew P. Longnecker ◽  
Polly A. Newcomb ◽  
Amy T. Dietz ◽  
E. Robert Greenberg ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Katie Marie Whitmore ◽  
Michele R. Buzon ◽  
Stuart Tyson Smith

Tombos is located at the Third Cataract of the Nile River in modern-day Sudan and marks an important literal and figurative boundary between Egyptian and Nubian interaction. During the New Kingdom Period (1400–1050 BCE), the cemetery at Tombos in Upper Nubia exhibits the use of Egyptian mortuary practices, including monumental pyramid complexes, likely used by both immigrant Egyptians and local Nubians. Despite the influence of Egyptian culture during this colonial period, there are several public displays of Nubian identity in burial practices found at Tombos. This mixture of Egyptian and Nubian burial practices extends into the postcolonial period at Tombos. Paleopathological analyses indicate that the Nubian and Egyptian individuals living at colonial Tombos enjoyed access to nutritional food resources and displayed low levels of skeletal markers of infection, traumatic injury, and strenuous physical activity. While the Tombos sample is likely not representative of all Egyptian-Nubian interaction during the New Kingdom, the individuals examined appear to have benefited from the relationship. In contrast with many situations of frontier interaction, the bioarchaeological evidence indicates a relatively peaceful coexistence between Egyptians and Nubians at Tombos, and the construction of a new biologically and culturally entangled community.


Author(s):  
Carlton R. Meyers ◽  
William Zimmerli ◽  
S. David Farr ◽  
Norbert A. Baschnagel

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Parent ◽  
Isabela Albuquerque ◽  
Abhishek Tiwari ◽  
Raymundo Cassani ◽  
Jean-François Gagnon ◽  
...  

With the burgeoning of wearable devices and passive body/brain-computer interfaces (B/BCIs), automated stress monitoring in everyday settings has gained significant attention recently, with applications ranging from serious games to clinical monitoring. With mobile users, however, challenges arise due to other overlapping (and potentially confounding) physiological responses (e.g., due to physical activity) that may mask the effects of stress, as well as movement artifacts that can be introduced in the measured signals. For example, the classical increase in heart rate can no longer be attributed solely to stress and could be caused by the activity itself. This makes the development of mobile passive B/BCIs challenging. In this paper, we introduce PASS, a multimodal database of Physical Activity and StresS collected from 48 participants. Participants performed tasks of varying stress levels at three different activity levels and provided quantitative ratings of their perceived stress and fatigue levels. To manipulate stress, two video games (i.e., a calm exploration game and a survival game) were used. Peripheral physical activity (electrocardiography, electrodermal activity, breathing, skin temperature) as well as cerebral activity (electroencephalography) were measured throughout the experiment. A complete description of the experimental protocol is provided and preliminary analyses are performed to investigate the physiological reactions to stress in the presence of physical activity. The PASS database, including raw data and subjective ratings has been made available to the research community at http://musaelab.ca/pass-database/. It is hoped that this database will help advance mobile passive B/BCIs for use in everyday settings.


1981 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 305-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Jack Rejeski

For years, physiologists and psychologists have attempted to elucidate the perceptual foundations of perceived exertion and in the process have identified several psychometric variables that mediate the self-report of this experience. Recently, cognitively oriented psychologists have begun to demonstrate that our social and physical environments play a significant role in the subjective ratings of effort expenditure. Additionally, as an offshoot of attribution theory, we are now aware that perceived exertion is a topic relevant to the domain of interpersonal as well as self-perception. The present paper, then, offers an integrative review on research and theory pertinent to the perception of exertion in sport and physical activity. The framework presented emerges largely at a conceptual rather than empirical level and provides several direct challenges for future study.


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