24 results
Search Results
2. Investigating the mechanical behaviour of the lining system for Raphael's Cartoon "The School of Athens".
- Author
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Gulotta, Davide, Villa, Tomaso, and Toniolo, Lucia
- Subjects
- *
PACKAGING materials , *TENSILE tests , *BEHAVIOR , *MURAL art , *SCHOOLS - Abstract
Lining of canvases and paper artworks is a diffused conservation methodology developed to ensure the safe and long-term preservation of weakened supports. Lining systems are generally constituted by a new supporting material or a package of new materials glued to the original artefact. This paper reports on the study of the mechanical behaviour of four multi-layered paper and canvas composites, proposed as lining systems for a large drawing on paper: the "School of Athens" by Raffaello Sanzio, dated 1508. This masterpiece is the 1:1 preparatory cartoon for the wall-painting in the Vatican rooms. Uniaxial tensile testing has been employed in this study to characterize both the single layer materials and the overall mechanical behaviour of the composites. The mechanical tests have been performed before and after artificial ageing with high humidity regime. The complex testing protocol allowed selecting the best performing composite for the final lining, and to assess a safety threshold in terms of stress value for the framing and display of the restored artwork in the new showcase. The results constitute a quantitative evaluation of the different systems, and therefore they can effectively support the conservators' activity and methodological choices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Mixed Systems and Mixed Behaviors: Explaining Legislative Behavior Differences in Russia and Ukraine.
- Author
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Thames, Frank
- Subjects
- *
LEGISLATIVE bodies , *LEGISLATORS , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
The two newly democratized post-Soviet giants, Russia and Ukraine, share a host of post-communist parallels. The long dominance of the CPSU in both countries denied them a legacy of open, democratic politics. Based on these parallels, one would expect their patterns of legislative behavior to mirror each other. Commonalities exist in the legislative behavior of both chambers; however, in at least one area, they are not analogous: the level of parliamentary party discipline among SMD deputies.the Ukrainian SMD deputies of the first mixed-member Rada (1998-2002) voted with the majority position of their parliamentary party at higher rates than their Russian brethren did in the first mixed-member Duma (1994-1995). In this paper, I attempt to find an answer for this conundrum by analyzing the roll-call voting behavior of SMD deputies in both legislatures. I argue that the higher level of discipline among SMD deputies in the Rada is a function of a more pronounced social cleavage found in the Ukrainian electorate. While both Russia and Ukraine feature a pro-reform/anti-reform cleavage, only Ukraine features a reinforcing regional cleavage built on ethnic and linguistic differences between eastern and western Ukraine. The presence of this reinforcing cleavage helps solidify behavior in the Rada, while Russia, lacking such cleavages, features a more fluid legislature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
4. Influence of perceived threat of Covid-19 and HEXACO personality traits on toilet paper stockpiling
- Author
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Theo Toppe, Lisa Garbe, and Richard Rau
- Subjects
Male ,Economics ,Emotions ,Social Sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Hoarding ,Geographical Locations ,Empirical research ,Sociology ,Resource Management ,Psychology ,Big Five personality traits ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,05 social sciences ,Social Communication ,Hygiene ,COVID-19 ,Social communication ,Personality ,Personality traits ,Behavior ,Europe ,Pandemics ,Bathroom Equipment ,Anxiety ,Medicine ,Hoarding (economics) ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Coronavirus Infections ,Social psychology ,Research Article ,Adult ,Paper ,Personality Tests ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Science ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Models, Psychological ,050105 experimental psychology ,Emotionality ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Consumer behaviour ,Personality Traits ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Conscientiousness ,Consumer Behavior ,Communications ,Personality Differences ,North America ,People and Places ,Stockpiles - Abstract
Following the fast spread of the coronavirus (Covid-19) across Europe and North America in March 2020, many people started stockpiling commodities like toilet paper. Despite the high relevance for public authorities to adequately address stockpiling behavior, empirical studies on the psychological underpinnings of toilet paper stockpiling are still scarce. In this study, we investigated the relation between personality traits, perceived threat of Covid-19, and stockpiling of toilet paper in an online survey (N = 996) across 22 countries. Results suggest that people who felt more threatened by Covid-19 stockpiled more toilet paper. Further, a predisposition towards Emotionality predicted the perceived threat of Covid-19 and affected stockpiling behavior indirectly. Finally, Conscientiousness was related to toilet paper stockpiling, such that individuals higher in Conscientiousness tended to stockpile more toilet paper. These results emphasize the importance of clear communication by public authorities acknowledging anxiety and, at the same time, transmitting a sense of control.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The limiting behaviour of a stochastic patch occupancy model.
- Author
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McVinish, R. and Pollett, P.
- Subjects
- *
BEHAVIOR , *METAPOPULATION (Ecology) , *HABITATS , *QUALITY , *PAPER - Abstract
Metapopulation models have been used to better understand the conditions necessary for the persistence of the metapopulation. In this paper, we study a stochastic patch occupancy model that incorporates variation in quality and connectivity of the habitat patches. Two important assumptions are imposed in our analysis. Firstly, the distance between patches has a special form. This amounts to assuming that migrating individuals follow certain pathways. Secondly, the area of the habitat patches is assumed to scale with the number of patches in the metapopulation. Under these assumptions, a deterministic limit is obtained as the number of patches goes to infinity. Using the deterministic limiting process, a condition for persistence of the metapopulation is derived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. L p estimates and asymptotic behavior of extremal function to Hardy-Sobolev type inequality on the H-type group*.
- Author
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Yazhou Han and Shutao Zhang
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HARDY classes , *PAPER , *EQUATIONS , *ASYMPTOTIC expansions , *BEHAVIOR - Abstract
This paper is devoted to discuss the regularity of the weak solution to a class of non-linear equations corresponding to Hardy-Sobolev type inequality on the H-type group. Combining the Serrin's idea and the Moser's iteration, L p estimates of the weak solution are obtained, which generalize the results of Garofalo and Vassilev in [6, 14]. As an application, asymptotic behavior of the weak solution has been discussed. Finally, doubling property and unique continuation of the weak solution are given. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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7. Constructing acceleration continuous tool paths using Pythagorean Hodograph curves
- Author
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Šı́r, Zbyněk and Jüttler, Bert
- Subjects
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HYDROGEN-ion concentration , *PAPER , *BEHAVIOR , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Abstract: Any set of C 2 planar boundary data (two points with associated velocities and acceleration vectors) can be interpolated by a PH curve of degree 9. In the generic case there are four such curves [R.T. Farouki, J. Manjunathaiah, S. Jee, Design of rational cam profiles with Pythagorean Hodograph curves, Mech. Mach. Theory 33 (1998) 669–682]. In this paper we give a detailed description and a qualitative analysis of these solutions. In particular we label the four solutions and compare their fairness from the point of view of possible application. For this purpose we consider the Hermite data taken from an analytical curve and study the behavior of the solutions for decreasing step-size h. This allows us to identify explicitly the solution which—for sufficiently small step-size—matches the shape of the curve with a high precision (the approximation order is 6). Consequently we are able to develop a highly robust, fast and precise algorithm converting analytical curves or curves described in G-code into a C 2 continuous PH spline curve of degree 9. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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8. A Conditioned Attitude Model of Individual Discriminatory Behavior.
- Author
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STODOLSKA, MONIKA
- Subjects
- *
DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) , *BEHAVIOR , *LEISURE , *RECREATION , *PAPER - Abstract
In this paper I present a model of individual-level discrimination that is consistent with the majority of mainstream sociological and psychological theories of discrimination and that reconciles many of the opposing views, to create a fuller and more realistic picture of the complex phenomenon of discrimination. The mechanism that determines whether discrimination occurs and what form it takes consists of three stages. First, an individual uses his or her information set to derive beliefs about a group or an evaluation of its characteristics. Then he or she combines these preexisting beliefs with any new information input received to form an attitude which signifies the degree of hostility or a favorable attitude toward the group members at any particular point in time. Finally, he or she weighs the internal benefits of discrimination against external consequences of such an action and chooses the perceived optimal form of behavior. Based on the predictions of the model, I propose several general policy recommendations for the reduction of discriminatory behavior in leisure settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The relation between Hill's equation and individual muscle properties
- Author
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Thaller, S. and Wagner, H.
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS , *PAPER , *BEHAVIOR , *CONDUCT of life - Abstract
In this paper we deal with movement-independent individual muscle properties derived from Hill''s equation. Relations between these properties are found by theoretical considerations. We define a dimensionless quantity that turns out to play a major role in characterizing individual muscle properties, and we analyse normalization and symmetry behaviour of the parameters in Hill''s equation. This leads to a systematic, transparent, and useful overview of mathematical relations involving muscle parameters. We examine the experimentally determined parameters of 62 subjects to find additional empirical relations between the muscle properties described by the parameters of Hill''s equation. In the light of the theoretical end empirical results we investigate the connections between maximum efficiency, endurance, and fibre composition. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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10. Solvent Welding and Imprinting Cellulose Nanofiber Films Using Ionic Liquids
- Author
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Guillermo Reyes, Alistair W. T. King, Orlando J. Rojas, Johanna Lahti, Maryam Borghei, Tampere University, Materials Science, Research group: Paper Converting and Packaging, Department of Chemistry, and Materials Chemistry
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Polymers and Plastics ,116 Chemical sciences ,Nanofibers ,Ionic Liquids ,02 engineering and technology ,Welding ,01 natural sciences ,TOXICITY ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,DISSOLUTION ,law ,Imidazoles/chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,WATER ,Dissolution ,COATINGS ,Cellulose/analogs & derivatives ,Imidazoles ,Nanofibers/chemistry ,NANOCELLULOSE FILMS ,MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Artificial ,0210 nano-technology ,BEHAVIOR ,Plastic welding ,Materials science ,Bioengineering ,Context (language use) ,Biodegradable Plastics ,010402 general chemistry ,Biomaterials ,Elastic Modulus ,Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy ,Cellulose ,ta216 ,Membranes ,Membranes, Artificial ,Biodegradable Plastics/chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,FTIR ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,216 Materials engineering ,Nanofiber ,Ionic liquid ,PAPER ,Ionic Liquids/chemistry - Abstract
Cellulose nanofiber films (CNFF) were treated via a welding process using ionic liquids (ILs). Acid-base-conjugated ILs derived from 1,5-diazabicyclo[4.3.0]non-5-ene [DBN] and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate ([emim][OAc]) were utilized. The removal efficiency of ILs from welded CNFF was assessed using liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The mechanical and physical properties of CNFF indicated surface plasticization of CNFF, which improved transparency. Upon treatment, the average CNFF toughness increased by 27%, and the films reached a Young's modulus of ∼5.8 GPa. These first attempts for IL "welding" show promise to tune the surfaces of biobased films, expanding the scope of properties for the production of new biobased materials in a green chemistry context. The results of this work are highly relevant to the fabrication of CNFFs using ionic liquids and related solvents. acceptedVersion
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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11. On the Complete Solution of the Linear Cournot Oligopoly Model.
- Author
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Gehrig, Wilhelm
- Subjects
COMPETITION ,OLIGOPOLIES ,ECONOMICS ,LINEAR statistical models ,ECONOMISTS ,MATHEMATICAL models ,SOCIAL scientists ,BEHAVIOR ,PAPER - Abstract
The dynamic theory of oligopoly up to the end of the nineteen-fifties consisted mainly of the basic work of economists A. Cournot who showed that a linear duopoly is stable. In 1959 economist R.D. Theocharis proved that Cournot obtained his result by accident, since his model becomes unstable if more than two oligopolists act on the market. Theocharis' paper gave rise to a variety of successive publications, in which the duopoly of Cournot was modified in many respects; especially with regard to the Cournot-behaviour-rule, that consists, strictly speaking, of two assumptions, namely: Assumption C1: Each oligopolist computes his optimal quantity on the basis that the quantities of all his rivals remain unchanged and; Assumption C2: Every seller adjusts his output completely and instantaneously to the one that he derived according to Assumption C1.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Assessing Opportunities and Constraints in Campus Sustainability.
- Author
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Isaev, Nurlan, Clark, Michael Rawson, and Davidson, Debra J.
- Subjects
PAPER ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,BEHAVIOR ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The article deals with the results of a case study of paper consumption behavior at the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta. Explanations of pro-environmental behavior with respect to paper consumption in academia were tested using methods of social research. An inverse relationship between willingness to adopt pro-environmental behaviors and individual effort is observed.
- Published
- 2010
13. A comparison of smartphone and paper data-collection tools in the Burden of Obstructive Lung Disease (BOLD) study in Gezira state, Sudan
- Author
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Peter Burney, R Robinson, Kevin Mortimer, S. Bertel Squire, Asma Elsony, Rachael Thomson, Rana Ahmed, Rasmus Malmborg, Kodgule, Rahul, and Wellcome Trust
- Subjects
Male ,Rural Population ,Questionnaires ,Pulmonology ,020205 medical informatics ,Electronic data capture ,Physiology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Social Sciences ,Pilot Projects ,02 engineering and technology ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,ELECTRONIC DATA CAPTURE ,Medical Records ,Sudan ,Geographical Locations ,Random Allocation ,Habits ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cohen's kappa ,Sociology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Smoking Habits ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Coughing ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Electronic Health Records ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Medical History Taking ,Observer Variation ,education.field_of_study ,wa_30 ,Schools ,Multidisciplinary ,Data Collection ,Smoking ,wa_900 ,Information quality ,Middle Aged ,Socioeconomic Aspects of Health ,Obstructive lung disease ,Multidisciplinary Sciences ,Open data ,Research Design ,Science & Technology - Other Topics ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,Smartphone ,Symptom Assessment ,wf_600 ,Research Article ,Adult ,Paper ,wa_950 ,Adolescent ,General Science & Technology ,Population ,Equipment ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Sampling Studies ,Education ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Signs and Symptoms ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Environmental health ,MD Multidisciplinary ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,education ,c941fbbd ,Aged ,Communication Equipment ,Behavior ,Science & Technology ,Survey Research ,Data collection ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Health Care ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Dyspnea ,Data quality ,People and Places ,Africa ,Feasibility Studies ,lcsh:Q ,Forms and Records Control ,Cell Phones ,Physiological Processes ,business - Abstract
Introduction \ud Data collection using paper-based questionnaires can be time consuming and return errors affect data accuracy, completeness, and information quality in health surveys. We compared smartphone and paper-based data collection systems in the Burden of Obstructive Lung Disease (BOLD) study in rural Sudan. \ud Methods \ud This exploratory pilot study was designed to run in parallel with the cross-sectional household survey. The Open Data Kit was used to programme questionnaires in Arabic into smartphones. We included 100 study participants (83% women; median age = 41.5 ± 16.4 years) from the BOLD study from 3 rural villages in East-Gezira and Kamleen localities of Gezira state, Sudan. Questionnaire data were collected using smartphone and paper-based technologies simultaneously. We used Kappa statistics and inter-rater class coefficient to test agreement between the two methods. Results Symptoms reported included cough (24%), phlegm (15%), wheezing (17%), and shortness of breath (18%). One in five were or had been cigarette smokers. The two data collection methods varied between perfect to slight agreement across the 204 variables evaluated (Kappa varied between 1.00 and 0.02 and inter-rater coefficient between 1.00 and -0.12). Errors were most commonly seen with paper questionnaires (83% of errors seen) vs smartphones (17% of errors seen) administered questionnaires with questions with complex skip-patterns being a major source of errors in paper questionnaires. Automated checks and validations in smartphone-administered questionnaires avoided skip-pattern related errors. Incomplete and inconsistent records were more likely seen on paper questionnaires. \ud Conclusion \ud Compared to paper-based data collection, smartphone technology worked well for data collection in the study, which was conducted in a challenging rural environment in Sudan. This approach provided timely, quality data with fewer errors and inconsistencies compared to paper-based data collection. We recommend this method for future BOLD studies and other population-based studies in similar settings.
- Published
- 2018
14. Handling of thermal paper: Implications for dermal exposure to bisphenol A and its alternatives
- Author
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Laura N. Vandenberg and Meghan R. Bernier
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Bisphenol A ,Physiology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Hands ,Endocrine Disruptors ,010501 environmental sciences ,Toxicology ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Mechanical Treatment of Specimens ,01 natural sciences ,Dermal exposure ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,lcsh:Science ,Musculoskeletal System ,Skin ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,Phenols toxicity ,Environmental exposure ,Chemical Disruption ,Chemical used ,Toxicokinetics ,3. Good health ,Arms ,Physiological Parameters ,Specimen Disruption ,Research Design ,Observational Studies ,Anatomy ,Integumentary System ,Research Article ,Paper ,Population ,Absorption (skin) ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Fingers ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phenols ,Humans ,Benzhydryl Compounds ,education ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Behavior ,Limbs (Anatomy) ,Body Weight ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Environmental Exposure ,Thermal paper ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Specimen Preparation and Treatment ,Environmental science ,lcsh:Q - Abstract
Bisphenol A (BPA) is an endocrine disrupting chemical used in a wide range of consumer products including photoactive dyes used in thermal paper. Recent studies have shown that dermal absorption of BPA can occur when handling these papers. Yet, regulatory agencies have largely dismissed thermal paper as a major source of BPA exposure. Exposure estimates provided by agencies such as the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) are based on assumptions about how humans interact with this material, stating that ‘typical’ exposures for adults involve only one handling per day for short periods of time (30% of individuals hold thermal paper with more than three fingertips, and >60% allow the paper to touch their palm. Only 11% of the participants we observed were consistent with the EFSA model for time of contact and dermal surface area. Mathematical modeling based on handling times we measured and previously published transfer coefficients, concentrations of BPA in paper, and absorption factors indicate the most conservative estimated intake from handling thermal paper in this population is 51.1 ng/kg/day, similar to EFSA’s estimates of 59 ng/kg/day from dermal exposures. Less conservative estimates, using published data on concentrations in thermal paper and transfer rates to skin, indicate that exposures are likely significantly higher. Based on our observational data, we propose that the current models for estimating dermal BPA exposures are not consistent with normal human behavior and should be reevaluated.
- Published
- 2017
15. Physics driven behavioural clustering of free-falling paper shapes
- Author
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Fumiya Iida, Toby Howison, Josie Hughes, Fabio Giardina, Howison, Toby [0000-0001-8548-5550], Iida, Fumiya [0000-0001-9246-7190], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Inertia ,Physiology ,Physical system ,Social Sciences ,computer.software_genre ,Systems Science ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Physical Phenomena ,Physical phenomena ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Cluster Analysis ,Moment of Inertia ,Multidisciplinary ,Applied Mathematics ,Simulation and Modeling ,theoretical model ,article ,Classical Mechanics ,Dynamical Systems ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Free falling ,machine learning ,Physical Sciences ,Medicine ,physics ,Algorithms ,Research Article ,Paper ,Computer and Information Sciences ,Reynolds Number ,Science ,Fluid Mechanics ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Machine learning ,Continuum Mechanics ,Motion ,Machine Learning Algorithms ,Artificial Intelligence ,0103 physical sciences ,010306 general physics ,Set (psychology) ,Cluster analysis ,Behavior ,Biological Locomotion ,business.industry ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Fluid Dynamics ,Models, Theoretical ,Nonlinear Dynamics ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Mathematics - Abstract
Many complex physical systems exhibit a rich variety of discrete behavioural modes. Often, the system complexity limits the applicability of standard modelling tools. Hence, understanding the underlying physics of different behaviours and distinguishing between them is challenging. Although traditional machine learning techniques could predict and classify behaviour well, typically they do not provide any meaningful insight into the underlying physics of the system. In this paper we present a novel method for extracting physically meaningful clusters of discrete behaviour from limited experimental observations. This method obtains a set of physically plausible functions that both facilitate behavioural clustering and aid in system understanding. We demonstrate the approach on the V-shaped falling paper system, a new falling paper type system that exhibits four distinct behavioural modes depending on a few morphological parameters. Using just 49 experimental observations, the method discovered a set of candidate functions that distinguish behaviours with an error of 2.04%, while also aiding insight into the physical phenomena driving each behaviour. © 2019 Howison et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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16. Estimation of nicotine and tar yields from human-smoked cigarettes before and after the implementation of the cigarette ignition propensity regulations in Canada
- Author
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France Côté, Cécile Létourneau, Gavin Mullard, and Richard Voisine
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Paper ,Canada ,Nicotine ,Toxicology ,Smoking behavior ,Young Adult ,Tar (tobacco residue) ,Smoke ,Tobacco ,medicine ,Humans ,Human-smoked yield ,Food science ,Cigarette ,Nicotine yield ,Behavior ,Inhalation Exposure ,Chemistry ,Smoking ,Advertising ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Low ignition propensity ,Tars ,Filter analysis ,Tar ,Female ,Filtration ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In 2005, Human-Smoked (HS) tar and nicotine yields from commercial Canadian cigarettes were determined using a part filter analysis method to obtain estimates representative of human smoking behavior. In 2006, new cigarette designs were introduced to ensure compliance with the Canadian Low Ignition Propensity (LIP) regulations. It was not known how the changes in product design would affect HS yields. To assess the impact of the cigarette design modifications on HS yields, a further group of Canadian smokers was recruited for smoking the modified version of 10 products previously assessed. No differences in estimated HS tar yields were found between products following product modification. The HS nicotine yield was different for one product. In general, HS yields were higher than ISO machine yields while Canadian intense machine yields were more representative of the maximum HS yields. The same product ranking order was obtained for HS yields and the two machine yields but differences between the mean HS yields and ISO yields were smaller as the product ISO yields increased. Higher HS yields were measured when products were smoked by male smokers. The methodology used in this study showed the wide range of HS yields obtained by smokers as well as a good degree of stability in average HS yields just before and after the introduction of LIP regulations.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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17. [A case of paper-eating as symptom of a neurotic reaction]
- Author
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G, DESTUNIS
- Subjects
Paper ,Psychotherapy ,Behavior ,Eating ,Neurotic Disorders ,Humans ,Infant ,Child - Published
- 2014
18. How one woman is trying to get one small city off the dime and onto resource recovery. [Municipal recycling and separation of solid wastes]
- Published
- 1976
19. ON THE STATE OF ZIRCONIUM IN MINERAL ACID SOLUTIONS
- Author
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Mu, P
- Published
- 1959
20. EXPOSURE OF THE BASE OF THE BRAIN TO ROENTGEN RAYS DURING EPILATION OF THE SCALP
- Author
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Nikl, I
- Published
- 1961
21. REVERSED-PHASE PARTITION CHROMATOGRAPHY ON PAPER TREATED WITH DI-(2- ETHYLHEXYL) ORTHOPHOSPHORIC ACID: A SYSTEMATIC STUDY OF 67 CATIONS IN HYDROCHLORIC ACID.
- Author
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Ghersini, G
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Influence of Self-Absorption, Volatilization, and Deliquescence in Counting of Radioelements
- Author
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Burch, G
- Published
- 1950
23. DEVELOPMENT OF SCHEMATIC ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES FOR SYNTHETIC LUBRICANTS AND THEIR ADDITIVES. PART IV. LABORATORY MANUAL FOR THE ANALYSIS OF SYNTHETIC LUBRICANTS, GREASES, AND THEIR ADDITIVES
- Author
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Bonomo, F
- Published
- 1956
24. Patch Exploitation by female Red Flour Beetles, Tribolium castaneum
- Author
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Campbell, J. F. and Runnion, C.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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