452 research outputs found

    The Family History of Arin A. Pitcher

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    The Family History of Arin A. Pitcher 30 April 2023 Arin Alicejean Pitcher authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550/700 Your Family in History offered online in Spring 2023 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected] This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

    Mike Greenan

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    Alt Text: Baseball pitcher Mike Greenan pitches the ball during an outdoor game. Another infielder waits on second base for a possible play. Black and white image.https://scholarworks.uni.edu/panther_athletics/1147/thumbnail.jp

    Minor Postgame Press - South Carolina 03/14/08

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    Includes descriptive metadata provided by producer in MP3 file: "Vanderbilt Athletics Podcast - Minor Postgame Press - South Carolina 03/14/08." By CSTV. Vanderbilt pitcher Mike Minor answers questions about Vanderbilt's 4-3 win over South Carolina

    Establishing the elbow load and the within-pitcher load variability during a baseball pitch in relation to the ball speed

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    Ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) injuries are common in baseball pitching. The elbow external valgus torque is assumed to be indicative for the applied load on the UCL. This study investigated the maximum external valgus and extension torque and their corresponding load variability during a baseball pitch and the relationship between the magnitude and the within-pitcher load variability of these elbow torques. Furthermore, this study investigated to what extend the elbow torques and the ball speed are related. Eleven Dutch AAA pitchers each threw 25 fastballs. The motion was captured with an optical motion capture system. The ball speed was measured with a radar gun. The data of the upper body, in particular the elbow torques, were analysed using a custom-made 3D inverse dynamics model. The results show that the within-pitcher load variability differs among pitchers. A higher applied elbow torque compared to other pitchers indicates a higher within-pitcher variability. From these results, both a higher valgus torque and a higher within-pitcher load variability are expected to lead to higher injury risk. It is advised not to take one pitch per pitcher into account since it cannot represent all the pitches, especially if only the fastest is selected. Among the pitchers, ball speed is found not to be a good indicator for the elbow torques. Within a pitcher, the ball speed serves better as an indicator. This study emphasises the importance of analysing each pitcher’s results individually instead of comparing them to the whole group.Biomedical Engineerin

    sj-xlsx-2-pec-10.1177_03010066221098728 - Supplemental material for Face learning via brief real-world social interactions includes changes in face-selective brain areas and hippocampus

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    Supplemental material, sj-xlsx-2-pec-10.1177_03010066221098728 for Face learning via brief real-world social interactions includes changes in face-selective brain areas and hippocampus by Magdalena W. Sliwinska, Lydia R. Searle, Megan Earl, Daniel O’Gorman, Giusi Pollicina, A. Mike Burton and David Pitcher in Perception</p

    sj-docx-1-pec-10.1177_03010066221098728 - Supplemental material for Face learning via brief real-world social interactions includes changes in face-selective brain areas and hippocampus

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-pec-10.1177_03010066221098728 for Face learning via brief real-world social interactions includes changes in face-selective brain areas and hippocampus by Magdalena W. Sliwinska, Lydia R. Searle, Megan Earl, Daniel O’Gorman, Giusi Pollicina, A. Mike Burton and David Pitcher in Perception</p

    Aquatic insect populations in transplanted and natural populations of the purple pitcher plant, Sarracenia purpurea, on Prince Edward Island, Canada

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    In early July 1991, 234 pitcher plants (Sarracenia pulpurea) were transplanted from a Prince Edward Island bog being mined for peat into three bogs that varied with respect to previous pitcher plant abundance. One bog had a thriving natural pitcher plant population prior to transplant, while the other two had fewer than three pitcher plants. Between mid-June and late August 1993, abundances of the pitcher plant inquilines Wyeomyia smithii (Diptera: Culicidae), Metriocnemus knabi (Diptera: Chironomidae) and an unidentified sarcophagid fly (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) from transplant bogs were compared with remaining populations in die source bog and with other natural populations. Of the three inquilines, W. smithii was the most severely affected by transplant; it was extremely rare or absent in transplanted pitchers, although it was found in all other bogs investigated on Prince Edward Island. Metriocnemus knabi larvae were common in ail bogs investigated, except for those transplant bogs where pitcher plants were rare prior to transplant. Sarcophagid larvae were found in all of the bogs sampled, and were apparently unaffected by transplant. Desiccation during the transplant process, as well as the time of the transplant, may play a role in the success of recolonization of the pitcher plants after transplanting.PT: J; CR: ADDICOTT JF, 1974, ECOLOGY, V55, P475 BRADSHAW WE, 1984, AM MIDL NAT, V112, P294 CAMERON CJ, 1977, CAN J ZOOL, V55, P2018 ELLIOTT JM, 1977, FRESHWATER BIOL ASS, V25 FAIRCHILD WL, 1987, CAN ENTOMOL, V119, P647 FARKAS MJ, 1986, CAN ENTOMOL, V118, P1307 FARKAS MJ, 1986, CAN J ZOOL, V64, P285 FISH D, 1978, AM MIDL NAT, V99, P172 FORSYTH AB, 1975, CAN J ZOOL, V53, P174 GIVNISH TJ, 1989, PLANT ANIMAL INTERAC, P243 HEARD SB, 1994, ECOLOGY, V75, P1647 HEARD SB, 1994, ENVIRON ENTOMOL, V23, P1250 ISTOCK CA, 1975, EVOLUTION, V29, P296 ISTOCK CA, 1983, PHYTOTELMATA TERREST, P191 JUNIPER BE, 1989, CARNIVOROUS PLANTS MOGI M, 1980, TROPICAL MED, V22, P1 MOORE PD, 1974, PEATLANDS NASTASE AJ, 1991, AM MIDL NAT, V125, P356 NASTASE AJ, 1995, AM MIDL NAT, V133, P44 PATERSON CG, 1982, CAN J ZOOL, V60, P3075 SCHNELL DE, 1976, CARNIVOROUS PLANTS U WALLIS RC, 1967, MOSQ NEWS, V27, P9; NR: 22; TC: 5; J9: CAN J ZOOL; PG: 8; GA: VQ081Source type: Electronic(1

    A Training and Conditioning Program for the High School Baseball Pitcher

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    The purpose of this study is to present in a clear and concise form the rudimentary mechanics of the game and an adaptable conditioning program for the high school baseball pitcher. While organizing the paper, the author hoped to gain further insight into the complexities of improving the young pitcher during the high school\u27s short spring season

    Population Growth of the Pitcher Plant, Sarracenia Purprea L., at Cranberry Bog, Licking County, Ohio

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    Author Institution: Department of Botany, University of IllinoisA population of the pitcher plant, Sarracenia purpurea L., at Cranberry Bog Nature Preserve, Licking County, Ohio, was founded by a single individual transplanted to the bog in 1912. From an observation of the population in 1921, the intrinsic rate of increase for this population was estimated to be between .0016 and .0023 per day. A recent survey of the present size of the population revealed approximately 157,000 pitcher plants. These observations suggest that the population has not only reached the carrying capacity of Cranberry Bog, but that it did so as early as 1942. Comparisons between the intrinsic rate of increase for S. purpurea and the few other plant species that have been studied suggest that pitcher plants have a relatively slow rate of population increase for an herbaceous species

    Athlete, Baseball

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    Pitcher Mike Tout.https://digitalcommons.cortland.edu/baseball_images/1047/thumbnail.jp
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