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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Enhancing an International Perspective in Public Health Teaching through Formalized University Partnerships

Brzoska, Patrick, Akgün, Seval, Antia, Bassey E., Thankappan, K. R., Nayar, Kesavan Rajasekharan, Razum, Oliver 28 April 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Teaching in the field of public health needs to employ a global perspective to account for the fact that public health problems and solutions have global determinants and implications as well. International university partnerships can promote such a perspective through the strengthening of cooperation, exchange, and communication between academic institutions across national boundaries. As an example for such an academic network in the field of public health, we introduce the International Public Health Partnership—a collaboration between a university in Germany and universities in India, Turkey, and Nigeria. Formed in 2005, it facilitated the exchange of information, fostered discussion about the transferability of public health concepts, contributed to the structural development of the universities involved, and promoted an intercultural dialog through a combination of local and distance learning activities. Although well accepted by students and staff, different obstacles were encountered; these included limited external funding, scarce own financial, time and personnel resources, and diverging regulations and structures of degree programs at the partnership sites. In the present article, we share several lessons that we learned during our joint collaboration and provide recommendations for other universities that are involved in partnerships with institutions of higher education or are interested to initiate such collaborations.
2

Effects of active and passive warming of the foot sole on vibration perception thresholds

Schmidt, Daniel, Germano, Andresa M.C., Milani, Thomas L. 28 April 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Objective Skin temperatures are known to increase cutaneous sensitivity. However, it is unclear whether the amount of improved sensitivity differs depending on the protocol of heat application. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the effects of active (treadmill walking) and passive (infrared radiator) warming of the foot sole on vibration perception thresholds. Methods Sixty healthy and injury-free subjects voluntarily participated in this study. Vibration perception thresholds (200 Hz) and plantar temperatures were measured at the hallux and 1st metatarsal head. In experiment 1, warming and mechanically stimulating the skin was achieved by walking on a treadmill for 30 min. In a follow-up study (experiment 2), external plantar heat was administered via an infrared radiator (30 min). Results In both experiments, increasing temperatures led to increased plantar sensitivity. However, the amount of improved sensitivity was greater in experiment 1, although plantar temperature increases were lower compared to experiment 2. Conclusions Warming in conjunction with mechanical stimulation seems to have a greater potential to enhance plantar sensitivity compared to external heat supply only. Significance The possible influence of mechanical stimulation and warming towards superior plantar afferent feedback highlights its importance regarding human posture and fall prevention.
3

Oral health behaviour in migrant and non-migrant adults in Germany: the utilization of regular dental check-ups

Erdsiek, Fabian, Waury, Dorothee, Brzoska, Patrick 24 June 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Background Migrants in many European countries including Germany tend to utilize preventive measures less frequently than the majority population. Little is known about the dental health of migrants as well as about their oral health behaviour, particularly in the adult population. The aim of this study was to examine differences in the uptake of annual dental check-ups in adult migrants and non-migrants in Germany. Methods We used data from the cross-sectional survey ‘German Health Update 2010’ conducted by the Robert Koch Institute (n = 22,050). Data from 21,741 German-speaking respondents with information on the use of dental check-ups was available, of which 3404 (15.7%) were migrants. Multiple logistic regression models were applied to adjust for demographic and socioeconomic confounders, including the place of residence as well as type of health insurance. Results Migrants were generally younger, had a lower socioeconomic status and showed a lower utilization of dental check-ups. The unadjusted odds ratio (OR) for utilization was 0.67 (95%-CI = 0.61–0.73). After adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic confounders the chance only increased slightly (adjusted OR = 0.71; 95%-CI = 0.65–0.77). Conclusions The analysis shows that migration status is associated with a reduced chance of attending dental check-ups, independently of demographic and socioeconomic factors. The influence of other factors, such as type of health insurance and place of residence had also no influence on the association. Migrants are exposed to different barriers in the health care system, comprising the patient, provider and system level. Further studies need to examine the relevant barriers for the uptake of preventive dental services in order to devise appropriate migrant- sensitive measures of dental prevention.
4

The Phase composition and microstructure of AlχCoCrFeNiTi alloys for the development of high-entropy alloy systems

Lindner, Thomas, Löbel, Martin, Mehner, Thomas, Dietrich, Dagmar, Lampke, Thomas 26 June 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Alloying aluminum offers the possibility of creating low-density high-entropy alloys (HEAs). Several studies that focus on the system AlCoCrFeNiTi differ in their phase determination. The effect of aluminum on the phase composition and microstructure of the compositionally complex alloy (CCA) system AlxCoCrFeNiTi was studied with variation in aluminum content (molar ratios x = 0.2, 0.8, and 1.5). The chemical composition and elemental segregation was measured for the different domains in the microstructure. The crystal structure was determined using X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis. To identify the spatial distribution of the phases found with XRD, phase mapping with associated orientation distribution was performed using electron backscatter diffraction. This made it possible to correlate the chemical and structural conditions of the phases. The phase formation strongly depends on the aluminum content. Two different body-centered cubic (bcc) phases were found. Texture analysis proved the presence of a face-centered cubic (fcc) phase for all aluminum amounts. The hard η-(Ni, Co)3Ti phase in the x = 0.2 alloy was detected via metallographic investigation and confirmed via electron backscatter diffraction. Additionally, a centered cluster (cc) with the A12 structure type was detected in the x = 0.2 and 0.8 alloys. The correlation of structural and chemical properties as well as microstructure formation contribute to a better understanding of the alloying effects concerning the aluminum content in CCAs. Especially in the context of current developments in lightweight high-entropy alloys (HEAs), the presented results provide an approach to the development of new alloy systems.
5

175 – Das etwas andere Jubiläumsbuch

Steinebach, Mario, Thehos, Katharina 08 May 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Etwas anders soll es sein, dieses Buch zum 175-jährigen Jubiläum der Technischen Universität Chemnitz. Es erlaubt Vergleiche zwischen Generationen von Studierenden und Wissenschaftlern, die hier studiert, geforscht und gelebt haben. Es stellt Menschen vor, die im Großen und im Kleinen an der Geschichte der Hochschule mitgewirkt haben oder es noch tun. Es zeigt zudem viele Facetten der Universität und ihrer Vorläufereinrichtungen. Es gestattet aber auch den Blick in die Zukunft. Die Autoren erzählen Geschichten aus der Geschichte - und spielen dabei mit der Jubiläumszahl 175. Dazu zählen 1-Blicke in 7 Fachgebiete auf jeweils 5 Seiten sowie 1 x 7 x 5 Geschichten aus der Forschung. Außerdem ziehen sich 175 farblich hervorgehobene Superlative und Besonderheiten als "grüner Faden" durch das Buch.
6

175 Jahre Technische Mechanik / 175 Years Technical Mechanics : A Contribution to the »175 Years Technical University of Chemnitz« Anniversary

Naumann, Friedrich 03 March 2015 (has links) (PDF)
In der 175-jährigen Geschichte der Technischen Universität Chemnitz nimmt die Technische Mechanik im Kanon der technikwissenschaftlichen Disziplinen eine exponierte Stellung ein, zählt sie doch zu jenen Grundlagenfächern, die bereits nach Gründung der Königlichen Gewerbschule im Jahre 1836 auf dem Lehrplan standen und im Fortgang der Schulentwicklung stete Ausformung und Bereicherung erfuhren. Getragen von einer Vielzahl von Lehrer- und Forscherpersönlichkeiten, die überwiegend auf langjährige praktische Erfahrungen in renommierten Betrieben und unterschiedlichen gesellschaftlichen Bereichen verweisen konnten, nahm das Fachgebiet bis zur Gegenwart eine bemerkenswerte Entwicklung. Heute stellt es einen wichtigen Eckpfeiler der Fachausbildung dar und wird nicht nur von den Studenten im Maschineningenieurwesen, sondern auch von zahlreichen tangierenden Disziplinen wahrgenommen. Erstmals wird diese historische Entwicklung aus verschiedenen Perspektiven zusammengefasst, indem sowohl die Entwicklung der Lehrinhalte als auch die Spezifik der jeweiligen Ausbildungsgegebenheiten eingehender beschrieben wird. Dabei finden Lehrende wie Lernende, aber auch Forschung und Entwicklung, wissenschaftliches Leben, internationale Zusammenarbeit und Publizistik gleichermaßen Berücksichtigung. Das Buch ist das Resultat langjähriger Forschungsarbeiten, die im Zusammenhang mit der Geschichte der Bildungseinrichtung und zu ausgewählten Themen der Wissenschaftsentwicklung unter der Obhut der Professur Wissenschafts-, Technik- und Hochschulgeschichte geleistet wurden, und als ein Beitrag zum Jubiläum »175 Jahre TU Chemnitz« zu verstehen. / During the 175 years history of the Technical University of Chemnitz technical mechanics has been one of the basic disciplines of the engineering sciences. From the Higher Vocational School`s foundation in 1836 it has been part of the curriculum and has experienced continuous enrichment and refinement. As a result of excellent work of a large number of academic researchers and teachers, most of them with a background at renowned industrial companies and in diverse social areas, this scientific field experienced a remarkable development. Today it represents an important cornerstone of the curriculum and is studied not only by mechanical engineering students but also by many others from neighboring disciplines. For the first time this historical development is presented from different perspectives, dealing in depth with the evolution of the different subjects taught and also with the specifics of the conditions of academic teaching. In this context, academic teachers and students, research and development, academic life, international cooperation as well as publications are dealt with. This book is the outcome of longstanding research pursued by the Chair of the History of Science, Technology and Higher Learning on selected topics of the history of science and academic education. It is a contribution to the 175th anniversary of the Technical University of Chemnitz.
7

Performance Features of a Stationary Stochastic Novikov Engine

Schwalbe, Karsten, Hoffmann, Karl Heinz 22 January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
In this article a Novikov engine with fluctuating hot heat bath temperature is presented. Based on this model, the performance measure maximum expected power as well as the corresponding efficiency and entropy production rate is investigated for four different stationary distributions: continuous uniform, normal, triangle, quadratic, and Pareto. It is found that the performance measures increase monotonously with increasing expectation value and increasing standard deviation of the distributions. Additionally, we show that the distribution has only little influence on the performance measures for small standard deviations. For larger values of the standard deviation, the performance measures in the case of the Pareto distribution are significantly different compared to the other distributions. These observations are explained by a comparison of the Taylor expansions in terms of the distributions’ standard deviations. For the considered symmetric distributions, an extension of the well known Curzon–Ahlborn efficiency to a stochastic Novikov engine is given.
8

Enabling and Predisposing Factors for the Utilization of Preventive Dental Health Care in Migrants and Non-Migrants in Germany

Brzoska, Patrick, Erdsiek, Fabian, Waury, Dorothee 27 October 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Background: In many European countries including Germany, migrants utilize preventive services less frequently than the majority population. This is also true for the utilization of dental checkups. Little is known about which demographic, social, behavioral, and health-related factors influence the decision of migrants to seek preventive dental health care and how these factors differ from those in non-migrants. The aim of the present study was to examine the role of these factors among migrants and non-migrants residing in Germany. Methods: Data from cross-sectional national health surveys are used, providing information on preventive dental health behavior from n = 41,220 individuals, of which 15.0% are migrants. Andersen’s Behavioral Model of Health Services Use is the conceptual framework of the investigation. Multiple logistic regression models were applied to examine the role of different predisposing and enabling factors. Interaction terms were included in order to examine whether determinants differ between migrants and non-migrants. Average marginal effects (AMEs) are reported in addition to odds ratios (ORs) as measures of effect size which are robust against bias arising from unobserved heterogeneity. Results: Migrants are at an about 36% lower chance of utilizing regular dental checkups than non-migrants [OR = 0.64 (95% confidence interval, 95% CI: 0.61, 0.68); AME = −0.081 (95% CI = −0.093, −0.069)]. Differences are partly explained by the influence of demographic, social, behavioral, and health-related factors [adjusted OR = 0.69 (95% CI: 0.64, 0.73); AME = −0.065 (95% CI = −0.076, −0.053)]. Younger age, being male, lower socioeconomic status, a non-statutory health insurance, not living in a relationship, living in the Western part of Germany and in an urban setting, and poor limited social support were associated with a lower chance of utilizing regular dental checkups. Interaction effects could be observed for age and for the type of health insurance. Discussion: The study identifies different enabling and predisposing factors that are relevant for the utilization of dental checkups among the population in Germany, some of which differ between migrants and non-migrants. Differences are particularly pronounced for younger ages. This differs from findings on other preventive services where older migrants tend to be more disadvantaged. Additional explanatory factors such as barriers that migrants experience in the dental health care system need to be considered in order to implement patient-oriented services and to reduce disparities in access to dental prevention.
9

Using binocular rivalry to tag foreground sounds: Towards an objective visual measure for auditory multistability

Einhäuser, Wolfgang, Thomassen, Sabine, Bendixen, Alexandra 29 September 2017 (has links) (PDF)
In binocular rivalry, paradigms have been proposed for unobtrusive moment-by-moment readout of observers' perceptual experience (“no-report paradigms”). Here, we take a first step to extend this concept to auditory multistability. Observers continuously reported which of two concurrent tone sequences they perceived in the foreground: high-pitch (1008 Hz) or low-pitch (400 Hz) tones. Interstimulus intervals were either fixed per sequence (Experiments 1 and 2) or random with tones alternating (Experiment 3). A horizontally drifting grating was presented to each eye; to induce binocular rivalry, gratings had distinct colors and motion directions. To associate each grating with one tone sequence, a pattern on the grating jumped vertically whenever the respective tone occurred. We found that the direction of the optokinetic nystagmus (OKN)—induced by the visually dominant grating—could be used to decode the tone (high/low) that was perceived in the foreground well above chance. This OKN-based readout improved after observers had gained experience with the auditory task (Experiments 1 and 2) and for simpler auditory tasks (Experiment 3). We found no evidence that the visual stimulus affected auditory multistability. Although decoding performance is still far from perfect, our paradigm may eventually provide a continuous estimate of the currently dominant percept in auditory multistability.
10

Which Method Detects Foot Strike in Rearfoot and Forefoot Runners Accurately when Using an Inertial Measurement Unit?

Mitschke , Christian, Heß, Tobias, Milani, Thomas L. 02 October 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Accelerometers and gyroscopes are used to detect foot strike (FS), i.e., the moment when the foot first touches the ground. However, it is unclear whether different conditions (footwear hardness or foot strike pattern) influence the accuracy and precision of different FS detection methods when using such micro-electromechanical sensors (MEMS). This study compared the accuracy of four published MEMS-based FS detection methods with each other and the gold standard (force plate) to establish the most accurate method with regard to different foot strike patterns and footwear conditions. Twenty-three recreational runners (12 rearfoot and 11 forefoot strikers) ran on a 15-m indoor track at their individual running speed in three footwear conditions (low to high hardness). MEMS and a force plate were sampled at a rate of 3750 Hz. Individual accuracy and precision of FS detection methods were found which were dependent on running styles and footwear conditions. Most of the methods were characterized by a delay which generally increased from rearfoot to forefoot strike pattern and from high to low midsole hardness. It can be concluded that only one of the four methods can accurately determine FS in a variety of conditions.

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