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Monitoring the sleep patterns of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and understanding how sleep quality influences their daytime behavior is an important issue that has received very limited attention. Polysomnography (PSG) is commonly used as a gold standard for evaluating sleep quality in children and adults. However, the intrusive nature of sensors used as part of PSG can themselves affect sleep and is, therefore, not suitable for children with ASD. In this study, we evaluate an unobtrusive and inexpensive bed system for in-home, long-term sleep quality monitoring using ballistocardiogram (BCG) signals. Using the BCG signals from this smart bed system, we define "restlessness" as a surrogate sleep quality estimator. Using this sleep feature, we build predictive models for daytime behavior based on 1-8 previous nights of sleep. Specifically, we use two supervised machine learning algorithms namely support vector machine (SVM) and artificial neural network (ANN). For all daytime behaviors, we achieve more than 78% and 79% accuracy of correctly predicting behavioral issues with both SVM and ANN classifiers, respectively. Our findings indicate the usefulness of our designed bed system and how the restlessness feature can improve the prediction performance.Understanding the tribological behaviour of articular cartilage enables the development of effective replacement biomaterials. This study presents a technique for the investigation of the frictional torque of articular cartilage, for the assessment of replacement biomaterials. A calcium alginate hydrogel was used as the biomaterial for this study. Three different specimen types were examined to include articular cartilage, calcium alginate hydrogel, alone, and in combination with articular cartilage. An axial load, varying from 10 to 100 N, was applied to the specimen and the frictional torque measured whilst an indenter underwent axial rotation from 0° to 2° to 0° for 100 cycles. The resulting frictional torque magnitude was evaluated with a smooth curve fitting function. Linear regression identified a statistically significant relationship between torque magnitude and axial load (p less then 0.05) for all specimen variations. From 10 to 100 N of applied load, mean torque magnitude ranged from 0.08±0.010 to 0.11±0.013 N m, 0.08±0.012 to 0.09±0.016 N m and 0.07±0.017 to 0.09±0.020 N m (mean ± standard deviation), for articular cartilage, calcium alginate separately and in combination with articular cartilage, respectively. This study has established a suitable frictional torque testing protocol for potential cartilage replacement biomaterials.Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries often occur when individuals land primarily on a single leg. Falling has been proposed as a potential strategy to decrease knee loading during landings. The purpose of this study was to compare impact forces, knee angles, and knee moments during natural landings, soft landings, and landings followed by falling after forward and vertical jumps, each under single or double-leg conditions. Sixteen male and sixteen female participants (age 22.0 ± 2.9 years) completed each landing condition while kinematics and ground reaction forces were collected. In the natural landing condition, participants landed as they would in a sport setting. In the soft landing condition, participants landed as softly as possible with increased knee and hip flexion. In the falling condition, participants landed softly and then fell forward or backward onto a mat after forward and vertical jumps, respectively. The falling condition demonstrated the greatest initial and peak knee flexion angles, the least peak vertical ground reaction forces, and the least peak knee extension and adduction moments compared to the natural landing and soft landing conditions. The soft landing condition resulted in similar changes in landing mechanics compared to the natural landing, but the effect was limited for single-leg landings compared to double-leg landings. When the sports environment allows, falling appears to be a potential strategy to decrease knee loading when individuals must land on a single leg with sub-optimal body postures. Future studies are needed to develop progressive training of effective and safe falling techniques.Tendon's viscoelastic behaviors are important to the tissue mechanical function and cellular mechanobiology. When loaded in longitudinal tension, tendons often have a large Poisson's ratio (ν>2) that exceeds the limit of incompressibility for isotropic material (ν=0.5), indicating that tendon experiences volume loss, inducing poroelastic fluid exudation in the transverse direction. Therefore, transverse poroelasticity is an important contributor to tendon material behavior. Tendon hydraulic permeability which is required to evaluate the fluid flow contribution to viscoelasticity, is mostly unavailable, and where available, varies by several orders of magnitude. In this manuscript, we quantified the transverse poroelastic material parameters of rat tail tendon fascicles by conducting transverse osmotic loading experiments, in both tension and compression. We used a multi-start optimization method to evaluate the parameters using biphasic finite element modeling. Our tendon samples had a transverse hydraulic permeability of 10-4 to 10-5 mm4. (Ns)-1 and showed a significant tension-compression nonlinearity in the transverse direction. Docetaxel Further, using these results, we predict hydraulic permeability during longitudinal (fiber-aligned) tensile loading, and the spatial distribution of fluid flow during osmotic loading. These results reveal novel aspects of tendon mechanics and can be used to study the physiomechanical response of tendon in response to mechanical loading.Accurate knowledge of extraocular muscle (EOM) tension is important for the diagnosis of and surgical planning for strabismus, such as choosing which eye to operate or determining the amount of muscle displacement. Previous evaluations of passive EOM tension have relied extensively on the experience and skill of ophthalmic surgeons, who generally perform such evaluations by gripping the eyeball and then pushing and pulling it. This methodology, named the forced duction test, has the significant limitation that the tension is felt subjectively via the forceps, with the results therefore not being quantifiable. Previous quantitative analyses have utilized several different types of equipment with implanted force transducers or have involved connecting the muscle tendon to a strain gauge. However, the associated equipment setups and recording systems are highly complex and rarely used outside research settings. This situation prompted the present study to develop a novel compact, quantifiable and clinically applicable device for measuring the passive tension in human EOMs for use in clinical practice.

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