surface stability
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2022 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Ward ◽  
Alekya Menta ◽  
Virginia Ulichney ◽  
Cristiana Raileanu ◽  
Thomas Wooten ◽  
...  

Standing upright on stable and unstable surfaces requires postural control. Postural control declines as humans age, presenting greater risk of fall-related injury and other negative health outcomes. Secondary cognitive tasks can further impact balance, which highlights the importance of coordination between cognitive and motor processes. Past research indicates that this coordination relies on executive function (EF; the ability to control, maintain, and flexibly direct attention to achieve goals), which coincidentally declines as humans age. This suggests that secondary cognitive tasks requiring EF may exert a greater influence on balance compared to non-EF secondary tasks, and this interaction could be exaggerated among older adults. In the current study, we had younger and older adults complete two Surface Stability conditions (standing upright on stable vs. unstable surfaces) under varying Cognitive Load; participants completed EF (Shifting, Inhibiting, Updating) and non-EF (Processing Speed) secondary cognitive tasks on tablets, as well as a single task control scenario with no secondary cognitive task. Our primary balance measure of interest was sway area, which was measured with an array of wearable inertial measurement unit sensors. Replicating prior work, we found a main effect of Surface Stability with less sway on stable surfaces compared to unstable surfaces, and we found an interaction between Age and Surface Stability with older adults exhibiting significantly greater sway selectively on unstable surfaces compared to younger adults. New findings revealed a main effect of Cognitive Load on sway, with the single task condition having significantly less sway than two of the EF conditions (Updating and Shifting) and the non-EF condition (Processing Speed). We also found an interaction of Cognitive Load and Surface Stability on postural control, where Surface Stability impacted sway the most for the single task and two of the executive function conditions (Inhibition and Shifting). Interestingly, Age did not interact with Cognitive Load, suggesting that both age groups were equally impacted by secondary cognitive tasks, regardless the presence or type of secondary cognitive task. Taken together, these patterns suggest that cognitive demands vary in their impact on posture control across stable vs. unstable surfaces, and that EF involvement may not be the driving mechanism explaining cognitive-motor dual-task interference on balance.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiyu Liu ◽  
Matthew J Colloff ◽  
David Freudenberger

Abstract There is global interest in enhancing the ecosystem services provided by landscapes and catchments dominated by plantation (monoculture) forestry. Partial reversion of plantations to locally native species (reforestation) is one option. However, the ecological outcomes of this kind of plantation reversion are poorly known. The partial reforestation of a pine plantation (Pinus radiata D. Don 1836) in the Australian Capital Territory with native species following a wildfire provides a rare case study of the environmental consequences of such a reversion. We estimated changes in landscape functionality by measuring indices of water infiltration, nutrient cycling, and soil surface stability across five landscape-scale treatments after the 2003 Lower Cotter Catchment bushfire: (1) natural regeneration of a native forest burned in 2003, (2) burned pine plantation replanted to pines, (3) burned plantation replanted to native trees and shrubs, (4) burned plantation allowed to naturally regenerate, and (5) forest roads rehabilitated by planting native trees and shrubs. At 14 years after the fire, we found that the regenerating native forest had the highest indices of water infiltration, nutrient cycling, and soil surface stability. The burned pine plantation that was replanted to pines in 2005 had indices of functionality that were higher than the burned plantation areas that were either allowed to naturally regenerate to native eucalypt forest or were planted with native forest species. These two types of native forest rehabilitation treatments had only minor differences in functionality. The rehabilitated closed roads were the least functional. We found that a pine plantation at the closed canopy stage can supply regulating services of water infiltration, nutrient cycling, and soil surface stability comparable to a native forest at a similar stage postfire; however, a significant limitation of the plantation was its low ecosystem resilience. It required massive soil disturbance to replant postfire and long-term maintenance of an extensive unpaved road network. The active or passive rehabilitation of native forest is justified to improve the natural resilience to wildfire. However, this rehabilitation of a native forest following use as a pine plantation is a multidecade process in this relatively low-rainfall environment. Study Implications The 2003 Canberra bushfire destroyed the entire pine plantation at Lower Cotter Catchment, a water catchment in Australian Capital Territory, but also provided an opportunity to examine and quantify changes in ecosystem functions with different restoration treatments. Landscape Function Analysis, including three indices (water infiltration, nutrient cycling, and soil surface stability), was used in this study. Findings suggest that both native eucalyptus forests and pine plantations recovered to relatively high levels of functionality within just 15 years after the bushfire, compared with all other restoration treatments, but plantations of Pinus radiata are not resilient to wildfire from a commercial perspective. These results help to justify the controversial decision to restore the majority of the catchment with native species in 2005. However, long-term monitoring is needed to determine how long it will take for the replanted and natural regeneration treatments to approach the functionality of the native forest.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyu Zhang ◽  
Xiaolin Qi ◽  
Miaolin Wang ◽  
Hua Gao

Abstract Purpose To analyze the clinical results and the efficacy of modified tectonic corneoscleral graft (TCG) in patients with devastating corneoscleral infections.Methods Twenty-five eyes from 25 patients who underwent modified TCG were enrolled. The recurrence, best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), ocular surface stability, postoperative complications and graft survival condition were recorded.Results Among 25 patients, 19 cases were fungal infection and 6 cases were bacterial. The rate of recurrence was 8% with Pythium Insidiosum as a corresponding pathogen. The rate of monocular blindness declined from 100% to 57%. Changes in BCVA from preoperative to postoperative values were significant ( Z=4.22, P<0.001). The survival of ocular surface stability was 73.6% and 43.9% at 1 and 3 years after surgery, respectively. Within the mean follow-up period of 17.5 ± 8.9 months, 21eyes (84.0%) had a stable ocular surface. The incidence rate of immune rejection was 36%. Corneal epithelial defects occurred in 7 patients and choroidal detachment occurred in 3 patients. No elevation of intraocular pressure was detected.Conclusions The modified TCG is effective in eradicating infection, salvaging the eyeball and saving some useful vision for devastating corneoscleral infections. Regular application of tacrolimus, timely addition of glucocorticoid and good compliance may decrease the postoperative course challenging.


2022 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 451-476
Author(s):  
Bamidele Samuel Oretade ◽  
Che Aziz Ali

In support of the ongoing temporal palaeoenvironment and palaeoclimatic reconstructions of the Neogene sediments, this study attempts to detail the paleo-proxies recovered from DEL-1 Well, western offshore Niger Delta. The standard smear slide method enabled the recovery of well-preserved calcareous nannofossils that depict early to mid–Miocene (NN4–NN5) sediments. The up-hole relationships between the nannofossil accumulation rate (NAR), the relative abundance of Discoaster and coccolith size of Reticulofenestra show step by step collapse of sea surface stability from early to middle Miocene. The lower horizons (8000–9460 ft) exhibit a low NAR, relatively high Discoaster abundance and relatively large Reticulofenestra size to suggest a deep thermocline and nutricline that characterise oligotrophic conditions in less warm-water induced climate. Conversely, upper horizons (5225–6550 ft) exhibit a high NAR, relatively low Discoaster abundance and relatively small Reticulofenestra size to suggest a shallow thermocline and nutricline that characterise eutrophic conditions in warm-water induced climate. The relative abundance of Helicosphaera carteri within the mid-NN5 suggests mesotrophic conditions within a stressed environment, with the possible occurrence of carbonate crash events. The combined parameters indicate gradual eutrophication and collapse of sea surface stability favouring nutrients and influx of terrestrial sediments in the ocean water as it progressed from early to middle Miocene. The abundance of the palaeo-proxies assemblages suggests hyposaline waters in a neritic environment that prevailed during the warm climatic condition.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 144
Author(s):  
Nouran S. Sharaf ◽  
Amro Shetta ◽  
Jailan E. Elhalawani ◽  
Wael Mamdouh

In an attempt to prove biological activity enhancement upon particle size reduction to the nanoscale, coffee (Cf) was chosen to be formulated into poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid (PLGA) nanoparticles (NPs) using the single emulsion-solvent evaporation (SE-SE) method via Box–Behnken Design (BBD) to study the impact of certain process and formulation parameters on the particle size and size homogeneity, surface stability and encapsulation efficiency (EE%). The coffee-loaded PLGA (PLGA-Cf) NPs were characterized by different methods to aid in selecting the optimum formulation conditions. The desirable physicochemical characteristics involved small particle sizes with an average of 318.60 ± 5.65 nm, uniformly distributed within a narrow range (PDI of 0.074 ± 0.015), with considerable stability (Zeta Potential of −20.50 ± 0.52 mV) and the highest EE% (85.92 ± 4.01%). The antioxidant and anticancer activities of plain PLGA NPs, pure Cf and the optimum PLGA-Cf NPs, were evaluated using 2,2-Diphenyl-1-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH) and 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assays, respectively. As a result of nano-encapsulation, antioxidant activity was enhanced by 26.5%. Encapsulated Cf showed higher anticancer potency than pure Cf against different cancerous cell lines with an increase of 86.78%, 78.17%, 85.84% and 84.84% against MCF-7, A-549, HeLa and HepG-2, respectively. The in vitro release followed the Weibull release model with slow and biphasic release profile in both tested pH media, 7.4 and 5.5.


Catalysts ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Jun-Woo Park ◽  
Jeongsuk Seo

The high activity of non-platinum electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in alkaline media is necessary for applications in energy conversion devices such as fuel cells and metal-air batteries. Herein, we present the electrocatalytic activity of TaOx/carbon black (CB) nanoparticles for the ORR in an alkaline atmosphere as well as in an acidic electrolyte. Ultrafine TaOx nanoparticles 1–2 nm in size and uniformly dispersed on CB supports were prepared by potentiostatic electrodeposition in a nonaqueous electrolyte and subsequent annealing treatment in an H2 flow. The TaOx/CB nanoparticles largely catalyzed the ORR with an onset potential of 1.03 VRHE in an O2-saturated 0.1 M KOH solution comparable to that of a commercial Pt/CB catalyst. ORR activity was also observed in 0.1 M H2SO4 solution. According to the rotating ring disk electrode measurement results, the oxide nanoparticles partly produced H2O2 during the ORR in 0.1 M KOH, and the ORR process was dominated by both the two- and four-electron reductions of oxygen in a diffusion-limited potential region. The Tafel slope of −120 mV dec−1 in low and high current densities revealed the surface stability of the oxide nanoparticles during the ORR. Therefore, these results demonstrated that the TaOx/CB nanoparticles were electroactive for the ORR in both acidic and alkaline electrolytes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 5179
Author(s):  
Chiao-Wei Chang ◽  
Wei-Ting Chen ◽  
Yi-Chun Chen

We constructed the A-Train co-located aerosol and marine warm cloud data from 2006 to 2010 winter and spring over East Asia and investigated the sensitivities of single-layer warm cloud properties to aerosols under different precipitation statuses and environmental regimes. The near-surface stability (NSS), modulated by cold air on top of a warm surface, and the estimated inversion strength (EIS) controlled by the subsidence are critical environmental parameters affecting the marine warm cloud structure over East Asia and, thus, the aerosols–cloud interactions. Based on our analysis, precipitating clouds revealed higher cloud susceptibility to aerosols as compared to non-precipitating clouds. The cloud liquid water path (LWP) increased with aerosols for precipitating clouds, yet decreased with aerosols for non-precipitating clouds, consistent with previous studies. For precipitating clouds, the cloud LWP and albedo increased more under higher NSS as unstable air promotes more moisture flux from the ocean. Under stronger EIS, the cloud albedo response to aerosols was lower than that under weaker EIS, indicating that stronger subsidence weakens the cloud susceptibility due to more entrainment drying. Our study suggests that the critical environmental factors governing the aerosol–cloud interactions may vary for different oceanic regions, depending on the thermodynamic conditions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 2106256
Author(s):  
Linze Li ◽  
Juhyeon Ahn ◽  
Yuan Yue ◽  
Wei Tong ◽  
Guoying Chen ◽  
...  

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