6 resultados para Repetitive-movement
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
In this article we describe a method for automatically generating text summaries of data corresponding to traces of spatial movement in geographical areas. The method can help humans to understand large data streams, such as the amounts of GPS data recorded by a variety of sensors in mobile phones, cars, etc. We describe the knowledge representations we designed for our method and the main components of our method for generating the summaries: a discourse planner, an abstraction module and a text generator. We also present evaluation results that show the ability of our method to generate certain types of geospatial and temporal descriptions.
Resumo:
Why should a progressive planner/urbanist pay attention to the Spanish 15M movement? From a disciplinary standpoint, its most complex and interesting aspect, which could hypothetically be transferred to other contexts (as in fact happened in the Occupy Wall Street and Occupy London movements), is its 'spatiality'. This article analyses the spatial practices of the so called #spanishrevolution, one of the 2011 social movements that showed the possibility for a new collective appropriation and self-management (autogestion) of urban public space. Although the political goals of the movement were vague at the time of its inception, the practices and spatial imaginaries deployed by it have become consolidated and proven to be yet another of its more successful facets in promoting the spreading and organisation of the protest, making it a phenomenon that calls for reflection on the part of urban thinkers and planners.
Resumo:
New PV self-orientating roof based on a balanced movement
Resumo:
This paper introduces a new approach for predicting people displacement by means of movementsurfaces. These surfaces can allow the simulation of a person?s movement through the use of semanticmovement concepts such as those making up the environment, the people who are moving, eventsthat describe a human activity, and time of occurrences. In order to represent this movement we havetransformed the trajectory of a person or group of persons into a raindrop path over a surface. As araindrop flows over a surface looking for the maximum slopes, people flow over the landscapelooking for the maximum utility. The movement surfaces are the response to a chained succession of events describing the way a person moves from one destination to another passing through the mostaffine trajectory to his interest. The three construction phases of this modelling approach (exploration,reasoning and prediction) are presented in this paper. The model was implemented in Protégé and aJava application was developed to generate the movement surface based on a recreational scenario.The results had shown the opportunity to apply our approach to optimise the accessibility of recreational areas according to the preferences of the users of that location.
Resumo:
It is essential to remotely and continuously monitor the movements of individuals in many social areas, for example, taking care of aging people, physical therapy, athletic training etc. Many methods have been used, such as video record, motion analysis or sensor-based methods. Due to the limitations in remote communication, power consumption, portability and so on, most of them are not able to fulfill the requirements. The development of wearable technology and cloud computing provides a new efficient way to achieve this goal. This paper presents an intelligent human movement monitoring system based on a smartwatch, an Android smartphone and a distributed data management engine. This system includes advantages of wide adaptability, remote and long-term monitoring capacity, high portability and flexibility. The structure of the system and its principle are introduced. Four experiments are designed to prove the feasibility of the system. The results of the experiments demonstrate the system is able to detect different actions of individuals with adequate accuracy.
Resumo:
Las personas que usan la silla de ruedas como su forma de movilidad prioritaria presentan una elevada incidencia (73%) de dolor de hombro debido al sobreuso y al movimiento repetitivo de la propulsión. Existen numerosos métodos de diagnóstico para la detección de las patologías del hombro, sin embargo la literatura reclama la necesidad de un test no invasivo y fiable, y sugiere la termografía como una técnica adecuada para evaluar el dolor articular. La termografía infrarroja (IRT) proporciona información acerca de los procesos fisiológicos a través del estudio de las distribuciones de la temperatura de la piel. Debido a la alta correlación entre ambos lados corporales, las asimetrías térmicas entre flancos contralaterales son una buena indicación de patologías o disfunciones físicas subyacentes. La fiabilidad de la IRT ha sido estudiada con anterioridad en sujetos sanos, pero nunca en usuarios de sillas de ruedas. Las características especiales de la población con discapacidad (problemas de sudoración y termorregulación, distribución sanguínea o medicación), hacen necesario estudiar los factores que afectan a la aplicación de la IRT en usuarios de sillas de ruedas. La bibliografía discrepa en cuanto a los beneficios o daños resultantes de la práctica de la actividad física en las lesiones de hombro por sobreuso en usuarios de sillas de ruedas. Recientes resultados apuntan a un aumento del riesgo de rotura del manguito rotador en personas con paraplejia que practican deportes con elevación del brazo por encima de la cabeza. Debido a esta falta de acuerdo en la literatura, surge la necesidad de analizar el perfil termográfico en usuarios de sillas de ruedas sedentarios y deportistas y su relación con el dolor de hombro. Hasta la fecha sólo se han publicado estudios termográficos durante el ejercicio en sujetos sanos. Un mayor entendimiento de la respuesta termográfica al ejercicio en silla de ruedas en relación al dolor de hombro clarificará su aparición y desarrollo y permitirá una apropiada intervención. El primer estudio demuestra que la fiabilidad de la IRT en usuarios de sillas de ruedas varía dependiendo de las zonas analizadas, y corrobora que la IRT es una técnica no invasiva, de no contacto, que permite medir la temperatura de la piel, y con la cual avanzar en la investigación en usuarios de sillas de ruedas. El segundo estudio proporciona un perfil de temperatura para usuarios de sillas de ruedas. Los sujetos no deportistas presentaron mayores asimetrías entre lados corporales que los sedentarios, y ambos obtuvieron superiores asimetrías que los sujetos sin discapacidad reportados en la literatura. Los no deportistas también presentaron resultados más elevados en el cuestionario de dolor de hombro. El área con mayores asimetrías térmicas fue hombro. En deportistas, algunas regiones de interés (ROIs) se relacionaron con el dolor de hombro. Estos resultados ayudan a entender el mapa térmico en usuarios de sillas de ruedas. El último estudio referente a la evaluación de la temperatura de la piel en usuarios de sillas de ruedas en ejercicio, reportó diferencias significativas entre la temperatura de la piel antes del test y 10 minutos después del test de propulsión de silla de ruedas, en 12 ROIs; y entre el post-test y 10 minutos después del test en la mayoría de las ROIs. Estas diferencias se vieron atenuadas cuando se compararon las asimetrías antes y después del test. La temperatura de la piel tendió a disminuir inmediatamente después completar el ejercicio, e incrementar significativamente 10 minutos después. El análisis de las asimetrías vs dolor de hombro reveló relaciones significativas negativas en 5 de las 26 ROIs. No se encontraron correlaciones significativas entre las variables de propulsión y el cuestionario de dolor de hombro. Todas las variables cinemáticas correlacionaron significativamente con las asimetrías en múltiples ROIs. Estos resultados indican que los deportistas en sillas de ruedas exhiben una capacidad similar de producir calor que los deportistas sin discapacidad; no obstante, su patrón térmico es más característico de ejercicios prolongados que de esfuerzos breves. Este trabajo contribuye al conocimiento de la termorregulación en usuarios de sillas de ruedas durante el ejercicio, y aporta información relevante para programas deportivos y de rehabilitación. ABSTRACT Individuals who use wheelchairs as their main means of mobility have a high incidence (73%) of shoulder pain (SP) owing to overuse and repetitive propulsion movement. There are numerous diagnostic methods for the detection of shoulder pathologies, however the literature claims that a noninvasive accurate test to properly assess shoulder pain would be necessary, and suggests thermography as a suitable technique for joint pain evaluation. Infrared thermography (IRT) provides information about physiological processes by studying the skin temperature (Tsk) distributions. Due to the high correlation of skin temperature between both sides of the body, thermal asymmetries between contralateral flanks are an indicator of underlying pathologies or physical dysfunctions. The reliability of infrared thermography has been studied in healthy subjects but there are no studies that have analyzed the reliability of IRT in wheelchair users (WCUs). The special characteristics of people with disabilities (sweating and thermoregulation problems, or blood distribution) make it necessary to study the factors affecting the application of IRT in WCUs. Discrepant reports exist on the benefits of, or damage resulting from, physical exercise and the relationship to shoulder overuse injuries in WCUs. Recent findings have found that overhead sports increase the risk of rotator cuff tears in wheelchair patients with paraplegia. Since there is no agreement in the literature, the thermographic profile of wheelchair athletes and nonathletes and its relation with shoulder pain should also be analysed. Infrared thermographic studies during exercise have been carried out only with able-bodied population at present. The understanding of the thermographic response to wheelchair exercise in relation to shoulder pain will offer an insight into the development of shoulder pain, which is necessary for appropriate interventions. The first study presented in this thesis demonstrates that the reliability of IRT in WCUs varies depending on the areas of the body that are analyzed. Moreover, it corroborates that IRT is a noninvasive and noncontact technique that allows the measurement of Tsk, which will allow for advances to be made in research concerned with WCUs. The second study provides a thermal profile of WCUs. Nonathletic subjects presented higher side-to-side skin temperature differences (ΔTsk) than athletes, and both had greater ΔTsk than the able-bodied results that have been published in the literature. Nonathletes also revealed larger Wheelchair Users Shoulder Pain Index (WUSPI) score than athletes. The shoulder region of interest (ROI) was the area with the highest ΔTsk of the regions measured. The analysis of the athletes’ Tsk showed that some ROIs are related to shoulder pain. These findings help to understand the thermal map in WCUs. Finally, the third study evaluated the thermal response of WCUs in exercise. There were significant differences in Tsk between the pre-test and the post-10 min in 12 ROIs, and between the post-test and the post-10 in most of the ROIs. These differences were attenuated when the ΔTsk was compared before and after exercise. Skin temperature tended to initially decrease immediately after the test, followed by a significant increase at 10 minutes after completing the exercise. The ΔTsk versus shoulder pain analysis yielded significant inverse relationships in 5 of the 26 ROIs. No significant correlations between propulsion variables and the results of the WUSPI questionnaire were found. All kinematic variables were significantly correlated with the temperature asymmetries in multiple ROIs. These results present indications that high performance wheelchair athletes exhibit similar capacity of heat production to able-bodied population; however, they presented a thermal pattern more characteristic of a prolonged exercise rather than brief exercise. This work contributes to improve the understanding about temperature changes in wheelchair athletes during exercise and provides implications to the sports and rehabilitation programs.