885 resultados para audio device
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Audiovahvistimet pohjautuvat yhä useammin D-luokan vahvistimiin niiden korkean hyötysuhteen takia. Tämä mahdollistaa pidemmän käyttöajan tai vastaavasti tehon lisäämisen kannettavissa audiolaitteissa. Kuitenkin, jotta akkukäyttöisestä audiolaitteesta saataisiin suurempaa tehoa, se vaatii yleensä korkeamman jännitteen kuin yksittäisen akun lähtöjännite on. Korkeampi jännite voidaan saavuttaa lisäämällä akkuja tai käyttämällä jännitettä nostavaa hakkuria. Hakkureissa syntyy kuitenkin kytkennästä johtuvaa värettä, mille D-luokan vahvistimet ovat alttiita. Tässä työssä tutkitaan boost- ja Čuk-hakkurin soveltuvuutta jännitteen nostoon akkukäyttöisessä audiolaitteessa. Käytännön sovelluksena toimii Porsas, josta halutaan saada 500 W teho. Työssä tutkitaan audiolaitteen asettamia ehtoja jännitelähteelle sekä hakkurien mitoittamista ehtojen mukaisesti. Työn tutkimustapana on kirjallisuustutkimus ja simulointi. Audiolaitteen jännitelähteeltä vaatima teho vaihtelee suuresti. Tämä tulee ottaa huomioon hakkurin komponenttien mitoituksessa. Lisäksi hakkurin lähtöjännitteen väre pyritään minimoimaan, koska sillä on suuri vaikutus vahvistimen toimintaan. Tulovirran väreen minimoinnilla on pidentävä vaikutus akun purkusykliin. Hakkurien laskennalliset komponenttien arvot sekä simuloinnit osoittavat, että hakkurit olisivat myös mahdollista tehdä käytännössä. Simulointien perusteella boost-hakkurin komponenttien arvot ovat pienempiä kuin Čuk-hakkurin. Boost-hakkurille löytyy myös valmiita ohjainpiirejä enemmän. Toisaalta Čuk-hakkurilla on mahdollista tehdä myös energiansäästötila. Hakkurien ohjaus ja jäähdytys vaatisivat jatkotutkimusta.
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Akkuteknologia on kehittynyt viime vuosina erityyppisten litium-ioniakkujen hallitessa markkinoita. Uutta teknologiaa kaupallisissa litium-pohjaisissa akuissa edustavat litium-polymeeri- ja litium-rautafosfaattiakut. Työn tarkoituksena oli selvittää soveltuvatko litium-polymeeri- ja litium-rautafosfaattiakut kannettavaan audiolaitteeseen ja verrata näitä Ni-Cd- ja Ni-Mh-akkuihin sekä LiCoO2- ja LiMnO4-kemian litium-ioniakkuihin. Kyseisten akkutyyppien soveltuvuutta kannettavaan audiolaitteeseen ei kirjallisuudessa ole juuri tutkittu. Työ toteutettiin kirjallisuustutkimuksena.
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Pós-graduação em Enfermagem (mestrado profissional) - FMB
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Nykyaikaiset Java-teknologiaa sisältävät matkapuhelimet kehittyvät vauhdikkaasti prosessoritehon, muistin määrän sekä uusien käyttöjärjestelmäversioiden tarjoamien ominaisuuksien myötä. Laitteiden näyttöjen koko tulee pysymään pienenä,mutta silti moninaista multimediasisältöä äänen, videon ja kuvan osilta voidaanhuomattavasti parantaa JSR 234:n eli kehittyneen multimedialaajennuksen avulla.Erityisesti edistyneet ääniominaisuudet ovat tervetullut lisä, sillä viime aikojen kehitys matkapuhelimissa on saanut aikaan niiden muuntumisen myös kannettavaksi musiikkisoittimiksi. Diplomityössä JSR 234 -spesifikaation tietty osa kehitettiin ympäristössä, joka koostui Series 60 -ohjelmistoalustankolmannesta versiosta sekä Symbian OS v9.1 käyttöjärjestelmästä. Tuloksena syntynyt Java-rajapinta tarjoaa sovelluskehittäjille yksinkertaisemman lähestymistavan Symbianin efektirajapintaan piilottaen samalla alla olevan käyttöjärjestelmänmonimutkaisuuden. Toteutuksen täytyy olla läpikotaisin testattu, jotta voidaan varmentua sen noudattavan tarkkaan JSR 234 -spesifikaatiota. Työssä on esitelty useita eri testausmenetelmiä tarkoituksena saavuttaa projektissa paras mahdollinen laatu.
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Collaborative software is usually thought of as providing audio-video conferencing services, application/desktop sharing, and access to large content repositories. However mobile device usage is characterized by users carrying out short and intermittent tasks sometimes referred to as 'micro-tasking'. Micro-collaborations are not well supported by traditional groupware systems and the work in this paper seeks out to address this. Mico is a system that provides a set of application level peer-to-peer services for the ad-hoc formation and facilitation of collaborative groups across a diverse mobile device domain. The system builds on the Java ME bindings of the JXTA P2P protocols, and is designed with an approach to use the lowest common denominators that are required for collaboration between varying degrees of mobile device capability. To demonstrate how our platform facilitates application development, we built an exemplary set of demonstration applications and include code examples here to illustrate the ease and speed afforded when developing collaborative software with Mico.
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Background. Falls and fear of falling present a major risk to older people as both can affect their quality of life and independence. Mobile assistive technologies (AT) fall detection devices may maximise the potential for older people to live independently for as long as possible within their own homes by facilitating early detection of falls. Aims. To explore the experiences and perceptions of older people and their carers as to the potential of a mobile falls detection AT device. Methods. Nine focus groups with 47 participants including both older people with a range of health conditions and their carers. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analysed. Results. Four key themes were identified relating to participants’ experiences and perceptions of falling and the potential impact of a mobile falls detector: cause of falling, falling as everyday vulnerability, the environmental context of falling, and regaining confidence and independence by having a mobile falls detector. Conclusion. The perceived benefits of a mobile falls detector may differ between older people and their carers. The experience of falling has to be taken into account when designing mobile assistive technology devices as these may influence perceptions of such devices and how older people utilise them.
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A new hearing therapy based on direct acoustic cochlear stimulation was developed for the treatment of severe to profound mixed hearing loss. The device efficacy was validated in an initial clinical trial with four patients. This semi-implantable investigational device consists of an externally worn audio processor, a percutaneous connector, and an implantable microactuator. The actuator is placed in the mastoid bone, right behind the external auditory canal. It generates vibrations that are directly coupled to the inner ear fluids and that, therefore, bypass the external and the middle ear. The system is able to provide an equivalent sound pressure level of 125 dB over the frequency range between 125 and 8000 Hz. The hermetically sealed actuator is designed to provide maximal output power by keeping its dimensions small enough to enable implantation. A network model is used to simulate the dynamic characteristics of the actuator to adjust its transfer function to the characteristics of the middle ear. The geometry of the different actuator components is optimized using finite-element modeling.
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Future generations of mobile communication devices will serve more and more as multimedia platforms capable of reproducing high quality audio. In order to achieve a 3-D sound perception the reproduction quality of audio via headphones can be significantly increased by applying binaural technology. To be independent of individual head-related transfer functions (HRTFs) and to guarantee a good performance for all listeners, an adaptation of the synthesized sound field to the listener's head movements is required. In this article several methods of head-tracking for mobile communication devices are presented and compared. A system for testing the identified methods is set up and experiments are performed to evaluate the prosand cons of each method. The implementation of such a device in a 3-D audio system is described and applications making use of such a system are identified and discussed.
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Introduction: Clinical medical education is increasingly utilizing novel technological approaches in order to supplement traditional lecture-based didactics. The Neurology Core Clerkship at Baylor College of Medicine is a four week required course taken by clinical medical students. Given the large amount of information to be disseminated in a short period of time, part of the didactic material has been provided online in the form of narrated PowerPoint files or lecture audio tracks along with stand-alone PowerPoint files. The narrated files are generated using the native PowerPoint narration function while the stand-alone audio files are created as MP3 format files using an inexpensive digital recording device. [See PDF for complete abstract]
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In this paper, we propose an original method to geoposition an audio/video stream with multiple emitters that are at the same time receivers of the mixed signal. The obtained method is suitable when a list of positions within a known area is encoded with precision tailored to the visualization capabilities of the target device. Nevertheless, it is easily adaptable to new precision requirements, as well as parameterized data precision. This method extends a previously proposed protocol, without incurring in any performance penalty.
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BACKGROUND Resuscitation guidelines encourage the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) feedback devices implying better outcomes after sudden cardiac arrest. Whether effective continuous feedback could also be given verbally by a second rescuer ("human feedback") has not been investigated yet. We, therefore, compared the effect of human feedback to a CPR feedback device. METHODS In an open, prospective, randomised, controlled trial, we compared CPR performance of three groups of medical students in a two-rescuer scenario. Group "sCPR" was taught standard BLS without continuous feedback, serving as control. Group "mfCPR" was taught BLS with mechanical audio-visual feedback (HeartStart MRx with Q-CPR-Technology™). Group "hfCPR" was taught standard BLS with human feedback. Afterwards, 326 medical students performed two-rescuer BLS on a manikin for 8 min. CPR quality parameters, such as "effective compression ratio" (ECR: compressions with correct hand position, depth and complete decompression multiplied by flow-time fraction), and other compression, ventilation and time-related parameters were assessed for all groups. RESULTS ECR was comparable between the hfCPR and the mfCPR group (0.33 vs. 0.35, p = 0.435). The hfCPR group needed less time until starting chest compressions (2 vs. 8 s, p < 0.001) and showed fewer incorrect decompressions (26 vs. 33 %, p = 0.044). On the other hand, absolute hands-off time was higher in the hfCPR group (67 vs. 60 s, p = 0.021). CONCLUSIONS The quality of CPR with human feedback or by using a mechanical audio-visual feedback device was similar. Further studies should investigate whether extended human feedback training could further increase CPR quality at comparable costs for training.
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In the digital age the internet and the ICT devices changed our daily life and routines. It means we couldn't live without these services and devices anywhere (work, home, holiday, etc.). It can be experienced in the tourism sector; digital contents become key tools in the tourism of the 21st century; they will be able to adapt the traditional tourist guide methodology to the applications running on novel digital devices. Tourists belong to a new generation, an "ICT generation" using innovative tools, a new info-media to communicate. A possible direction for tourism development is to use modern ICT systems and devices. Besides participating in classical tours guided by travel guides, there is a new opportunity for individual tourists to enjoy high quality ICT based guided walks prepared on the knowledge of travel guides. The main idea of the GUIDE@HAND service is to use reusable, and create new tourism contents for an advanced mobile device, in order to give a contemporary answer to traditional systems of tourism information, by developing new tourism services based on digital contents for innovative mobile applications. The service is based on a new concept of enhancing territorial heritage and values, through knowledge, innovation, languages and multilingual solutions going along with new tourists‟ “sensitiveness”.
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This study examines the correlation between how certified music educators understand audio technology and how they incorporate it in their instructional methods. Participants were classroom music teachers selected from fifty middle schools in Miami- Dade Public Schools. The study adopted a non-experimental research design in which a survey was the primary tool of investigation. The findings reveal that a majority of middle school music teachers in Miami-Dade are not familiar with advanced audiorecording software or any other digital device dedicated to the recording and processing of audio signals. Moreover, they report a lack of opportunities to develop this knowledge. Younger music teachers, however, are more open to developing up-to-date instructional methodologies. Most of the participants agreed that music instruction should be a platform for preparing students for a future in the entertainment industry. A basic knowledge of music business should be delivered to students enrolled in middle-school music courses.
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The recording and processing of voice data raises increasing privacy concerns for users and service providers. One way to address these issues is to move processing on the edge device closer to the recording so that potentially identifiable information is not transmitted over the internet. However, this is often not possible due to hardware limitations. An interesting alternative is the development of voice anonymization techniques that remove individual speakers characteristics while preserving linguistic and acoustic information in the data. In this work, a state-of-the-art approach to sequence-to-sequence speech conversion, ini- tially based on x-vectors and bottleneck features for automatic speech recognition, is explored to disentangle the two acoustic information using different pre-trained speech and speakers representation. Furthermore, different strategies for selecting target speech representations are analyzed. Results on public datasets in terms of equal error rate and word error rate show that good privacy is achieved with limited impact on converted speech quality relative to the original method.
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Patients with myofascial pain experience impaired mastication, which might also interfere with their sleep quality. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the jaw motion and sleep quality of patients with myofascial pain and the impact of a stabilization device therapy on both parameters. Fifty women diagnosed with myofascial pain by the Research Diagnostic Criteria were enrolled. Pain levels (visual analog scale), jaw movements (kinesiography), and sleep quality (Epworth Sleepiness Scale; Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index) were evaluated before (control) and after stabilization device use. Range of motion (maximum opening, right and left excursions, and protrusion) and masticatory movements during Optosil mastication (opening, closing, and total cycle time; opening and closing angles; and maximum velocity) also were evaluated. Repeated-measures analysis of variance in a generalized linear mixed models procedure was used for statistical analysis (α=.05). At baseline, participants with myofascial pain showed a reduced range of jaw motion and poorer sleep quality. Treatment with a stabilization device reduced pain (P<.001) and increased both mouth opening (P<.001) and anteroposterior movement (P=.01). Also, after treatment, the maximum opening (P<.001) and closing (P=.04) velocities during mastication increased, and improvements in sleep scores for the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (P<.001) and Epworth Sleepiness Scale (P=.04) were found. Myofascial pain impairs jaw motion and quality of sleep; the reduction of pain after the use of a stabilization device improves the range of motion and sleep parameters.