16,178 research outputs found
sj-docx-2-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 – Supplemental material for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Linhong Jiang, Pingping Sun, Peijun Li, Weibing Wu, Zhenwei Wang and Xiaodan Liu in Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease</p
sj-docx-1-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 – Supplemental material for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Linhong Jiang, Pingping Sun, Peijun Li, Weibing Wu, Zhenwei Wang and Xiaodan Liu in Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease</p
sj-docx-3-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 – Supplemental material for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-3-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Linhong Jiang, Pingping Sun, Peijun Li, Weibing Wu, Zhenwei Wang and Xiaodan Liu in Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease</p
sj-docx-4-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 – Supplemental material for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-4-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Linhong Jiang, Pingping Sun, Peijun Li, Weibing Wu, Zhenwei Wang and Xiaodan Liu in Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease</p
sj-docx-6-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 – Supplemental material for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-6-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Linhong Jiang, Pingping Sun, Peijun Li, Weibing Wu, Zhenwei Wang and Xiaodan Liu in Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease</p
sj-docx-5-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 – Supplemental material for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-5-tar-10.1177_17534666231218086 for Effects of external diaphragm pacing combined with conventional rehabilitation therapies in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Linhong Jiang, Pingping Sun, Peijun Li, Weibing Wu, Zhenwei Wang and Xiaodan Liu in Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease</p
Control and Filtering for Discrete Linear Repetitive Processes with H infty and ell 2--ell infty Performance
Repetitive processes are characterized by a series of sweeps, termed passes, through a set of dynamics defined over a finite duration known as the pass length. On each pass an output, termed the pass profile, is produced which acts as a forcing function on, and hence contributes to, the dynamics of the next pass profile. This can lead to oscillations which increase in amplitude in the pass to pass direction and cannot be controlled by standard control laws. Here we give new results on the design of physically based control laws for the sub-class of so-called discrete linear repetitive processes which arise in applications areas such as iterative learning control. The main contribution is to show how control law design can be undertaken within the framework of a general robust filtering problem with guaranteed levels of performance. In particular, we develop algorithms for the design of an H? and dynamic output feedback controller and filter which guarantees that the resulting controlled (filtering error) process, respectively, is stable along the pass and has prescribed disturbance attenuation performance as measured by and – norms
Figure 3 in Biased heteroplasmy within the mitogenomic sequences of Gigantometra gigas revealed by sanger and high-throughput methods
Figure 3. The different nucleotides in the ITS-1 and ITS-2 regions are shown. The result shows the different nucleotides at nucleotide position np 1897 (G nucleotide and T nucleotide) and np 2790 (C nucleotide and T nucleotide) obtained by Sanger and HTS methods.Published as part of Sun, Xiaoya, Wang, Yanhui, Chen, Pingping, Wang, Hesheng, Lu, Lixiang, Ye, Zhen, Wu, Yanzhuo, Li, Teng, Bu, Wenjun & Xie, Qiang, 2018, Biased heteroplasmy within the mitogenomic sequences of Gigantometra gigas revealed by sanger and high-throughput methods, pp. 356-386 in Zoological Systematics 43 (4) on page 362, DOI: 10.11865/zs.201833, http://zenodo.org/record/536362
Acoustic radiation due to scattering of T-S wave by the mean-flow distortion induced by steady local suction
Substantial sound waves can be generated by boundary-layer instability modes when the latter are scattered by a rapid mean-flow distortion. This is a rather generic mechanism and operates when an oncoming T-S wave is scattered by a steady local suction slot. This paper focuses on this problem by extending a recently developed Local Scattering Theory (Wu & Dong, J. Fluid Mech. submitted), where a so-called transmission coefficient, defined as the ratio of the T-S wave amplitude downstream of the scatter to that upstream, is introduced to characterize the effect of a local scatter on boundary-layer instability and transition. As in the earlier work, the mathematical formulation is based on triple-deck formulism, but in order to accommodate the acoustic far field, which was not considered in the paper mentioned, the unsteady terms in the upper deck, which play a leading-order role in radiation, are retained, and the influence of the radiated sound on the near-wall perturbation is included. The upper deck equation for the pressure is the Helmholtz equation rather than the Laplace equation. This leads to a modified pressure-displacement relation, which is coupled with the linearized boundary-layer equations in the lower deck. Discretization of the whole system formulates a generalized eigenvalue problem, which is solved numerically. It is found that suction suppresses oncoming T-S waves, and this effect increases with the suction velocity and the slot width. The directivity is ndependent of the flow parameters only when the Mach number is low. The intensity of the radiated sound in general increases with the frequency, the suction velocity and the width of the suction slot. Interestingly, for O(1) suction velocities, the radiated sound is very weak, indicating that the gain of stabilizing effect does not cause aeroacoustic penalty
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