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Publications - 6342

Privacy and Governmental Transparency

Publication Name: Public Governance Administration and Finances Law Review

Publication Date: 2021-01-01

Volume: 6

Issue: 2

Page Range: 5-6

Description:

No description provided

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.53116/pgaflr.2021.2.1

Effects of Different Longitudinal Bending Stiffness Shoes on Distal Joint Kinematics and Muscular Mechanics in Adolescent amateur Runners

Publication Name: Advances in Transdisciplinary Engineering

Publication Date: 2024-01-01

Volume: 59

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: 472-478

Description:

Research has indicated that modifying shoes' longitudinal bending stiffness (LBS) could potentially influence running biomechanics and performance among amateur runners. Nevertheless, scant attention has been given to adolescent runners in previous studies, leaving the impact of various LBS shoes on distal joint kinematics and muscular mechanics unclear. Given the distinctive musculoskeletal attributes of adolescents, delving into this matter holds significant importance. Thirteen adolescent amateur runners with rear foot strikes were recruited for the study. Each participant performed running tasks along a 10-meter runway at a speed of 3.3±5% m/s while wearing two types of LBS shoes, randomized for each trial. The specific LBS values of the shoes were 2.7 Nm/rad (low) and 8.6 Nm/rad (high). Lower limb joint biomechanical data were collected using a Vicon motion analysis system and AMTI force platform. Lower limb joint kinematics and muscular mechanics were analyzed using Opensim software. Paired t-tests were employed to identify differences in distal joint kinematics and muscular mechanics during stance phases. We found that there was a significant increase in contact time, while the range of motion (ROM) of the metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint in the sagittal plane significantly decreased in the high LBS shoe condition. Additionally, the impulse of flexor digitorum brevis and flexor hallucis longus significantly increased under the high LBS shoe condition. The results show that high LBS shoes impose a greater load on the distal muscles, potentially elevating the risk of running-related injuries. The low LBS shoes are more suitable for adolescent runners.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.3233/ATDE240582

Climate conditions in ISO container shipments from Hungary to South Africa and Asia

Publication Name: Periodica Polytechnica Transportation Engineering

Publication Date: 2019-01-01

Volume: 47

Issue: 3

Page Range: 233-241

Description:

The aim of this paper is to provide useful information about climate conditions of transcontinental shipments from Hungary and compare them to the climate profiles of conditioning standards. The climatic environments inside ISO intermodal containers carrying automotive products to three different destinations in India, China and South Africa were measured. All three recorded surveys contain temperature and relative humidity data while the containers were stored outdoors and indoors and travelled on truck, rail and ship. The measured data was analyzed and mean statistical values of daily temperature and RH shifts were determined for each route. The recorded data shows that 50 % of maximum temperature and RH shifts occurred in the EU continent. Temperature and relative humidity distribution as a function of cumulative percentages [%] of the duration of total shipping was also determined and compared to the climate profiles of conditioning standards. It shows that peak temperature and RH ranges occur mostly in the defined duration of conditioning testing time.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.3311/PPtr.11585

Study of Bonding between Façade Stones and Substrates with and without Anchorage Using Shear-Splitting Test—Case Study: Travertine, Granite, and Marble

Publication Name: Buildings

Publication Date: 2023-05-01

Volume: 13

Issue: 5

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

This paper presents an investigation into the bond strength of three common façade stones, namely, travertine, granite, and marble, to a concrete substrate using a shear-splitting test. The effects of anchorage, the number of curing days, and the presence of an anti-freezing agent in cement–sand mortar on bond strength were studied. The results show that the number of curing days had a significant impact on the bond strength between the stones and the substrates. The presence of an anti-freezing agent and accelerator increased bonding during the initial days, but this effect gradually decreased. The use of anchorage had a positive effect on the bond strength, particularly with fewer curing days. Granite had the lowest bond strength when no anchorage was used due to its low permeability. Based on the findings, a novel fuzzy logic approach was proposed to predict the bond strength. This study provides valuable insights into improving the bonding of façade stones to substrates and can aid in the safe and efficient use of these materials in construction.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.3390/buildings13051229

Criticality analysis of purchased materials based on fuzzy signatures

Publication Name: IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy Systems

Publication Date: 2017-08-23

Volume: 0

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

Selecting and evaluating the suppliers represent a very complex task, because a wide range of attributions must be taken into consideration and many of them are difficult to be made objectively quantified. The aim of this research is to provide a new model based on fuzzy signatures for selecting and evaluating the critical parts for the production.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1109/FUZZ-IEEE.2017.8015649

Determinants of Rural Households’ Intensity of Flood Adaptation in the Fogera Rice Plain, Ethiopia: Evidence from Generalised Poisson Regression

Publication Name: Sustainability Switzerland

Publication Date: 2023-07-01

Volume: 15

Issue: 14

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

Effective adaptation to flooding risk depends on careful identification and combinations of strategies which, in turn, depends on knowledge of the determinants of flood adaptation. The main objective of this study was to examine the determinants of rural households’ intensity of flood adaptation in the Fogera rice plain, Ethiopia. A three-stage stratified sampling technique was employed to select 337 sample household heads. Primary data was collected through a structured household survey. Data analysis was accompanied by a descriptive and generalised Poisson regression (GP) model. The descriptive analysis showed that households adopted an average of three (3) flood adaptation strategies. The generalised Poisson regression further revealed that family size, availability of off-farm income, previous flood experience, access to credit, access to extension services, and an early warning information system statistically significantly increase flood adaptation strategies’ average number (intensity). However, the age of the household head negatively and significantly influences the intensity of flood adaptation. More specifically, households with off-farm income, previous flood experience, access to credit, access to extension, and an early warning information system were 20%, 94%, 13%, 30%, and 29% more likely to adopt more flood adaptation strategies, respectively. The findings call for immediate response and coordination among stakeholders to design strategies that enhance households’ livelihood, access to credit, access to extension services, and early warning information systems for effective flood adaptation in the study area.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.3390/su151411025

On the vertex degree indices of connected graphs

Publication Name: Chemical Physics Letters

Publication Date: 2011-08-25

Volume: 512

Issue: 4-6

Page Range: 283-286

Description:

We introduce a family of invariants defined in terms of positive functions of degrees of vertices in a graph. A member of the family that measures the average degree of neighbors of vertices in a graph is then investigated for the predictive potential for stability in the class of generalized fullerenes. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1016/j.cplett.2011.07.040

Understanding Determining Factors: Purchasing Decisions

Publication Name: Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering

Publication Date: 2024-01-01

Volume: Unknown

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: 250-256

Description:

The paper aims to highlight the lack of usage of knowledge-based expert systems in purchasing decisions in the context of hybrid corporate reality. We use the transdisciplinary approach in our work, which is essential to examine the problem that occurs in the reality. While reviewing publications containing the keywords “Cognitive bias” and “Supplier selection”, we focused on the methods used. The examined methods in the pooled papers are mainly based on arithmetic and rank the possibilities without considering the available expert knowledge then and there. Afterwards, we propose a solution beyond analyzing the data measured in the past; in addition, the decision-maker, their mental model, and their knowledge is considered. We assume that the effects of cognitive biases are more readily identifiable when using expert systems in considering the decision-maker’s opinions in connection with the actually applied rules in making decisions. In addition to seemingly objective solutions, in our experiment, we propose that by using past cases with known results, complex rules, which are based on the expert’s knowledge, can be simplified without changing the results of decisions in purchasing.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-38165-2_30

Using multiple populations of memetic algorithms for fuzzy rule-base optimization

Publication Name: 11th IEEE International Symposium on Computational Intelligence and Informatics Cinti 2010 Proceedings

Publication Date: 2010-12-01

Volume: Unknown

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: 113-118

Description:

Evolutionary algorithms are an important branch of soft computing, being able to provide approximate solutions to problems in a reasonable amount of time. The underlying principle can be realized in an almost unlimited number of ways. This paper presents four main variants of evolutionary algorithms, and a method of running them in a topology consisting of multiple populations. The resources given to each population and migration are altered dynamically throughout the test, based on the effectiveness they show. Along with evolutionary methods, the solutions are also adjusted by gradient-based numerical optimization, in our case the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm. These steps are added to the evolutionary processes as an extension, resulting in what are called memetic algorithms. The specific application for these methods here is optimizing fuzzy rule-bases, thereby making inference systems better at emulating a desired behavior, such as modeling a certain objective function. ©2010 IEEE.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1109/CINTI.2010.5672264