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Design and Evaluation of Accelerometer Based User Authentication MethodsHaitham, Seror January 2017 (has links)
Smartphone's are extremely popular and in high demand nowadays. They are easy to handle and very intuitive compared with old phones for end users. Approximately two billion people use Smartphones all over the world, so it is clear that these phones are very popular. One of the major issues of these smart phones is theft. What happens if someone steals your phone? Why should we try to secure our phones? The reason is that, even if the phone is stolen, the thief should not be able to open and use it through unlocking easily. People are generally careless while typing their password/pin code or drawing a pattern while others are watching. Maybe someone can see it just by standing next to or behind the person who is typing the pin or drawing the pattern. This scenario of getting the information is called shoulder surfing. Another scenario is to use a hidden camera, so-called Record monitoring. Shoulder surfing can be used by an attacker/observer to get passwords or PINs. Shoulder surfing is very easy to perform by just looking over the shoulder when a user is typing the PIN or drawing the unlock pattern. Record monitoring needs more preparation, but is not much more complicated to perform. Sometimes it also happens that the phone gets stolen and by seeing fingerprints or smudge patterns on the phone, the attacker can unlock it. These above two are general security threats for smart phone users. This thesis introduces some different approaches to overcome the above mentioned security threats in Smartphones. The basic aim is to make it more difficult to perform shoulder surfing or record monitoring, and these will not be easy to perform by the observer after switching to the new techniques introduced in the thesis. In this thesis, the usability of each method developed will be described and also future use of these approaches. There are a number of techniques by which a user can protect the phone from observation attacks. Some of these will be considered, and a user interface evaluation will be performed in the later phase of development. I will also consider some important aspects while developing the methods such as -user friendliness, Good UI concepts etc. I will also evaluate the actual security added by the methods, and the overall user impression. Two separate user studies have been performed, first one with students from the Computer Science department, and then one with students from other departments. The results indicate that students from Computer Science are more attracted to the new security solution than students from other departments.
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Využití prvků Feldenkraisovy metody při rehabilitaci ramenního kloubu / The utilization of the Feldenkrais method in shoulder rehabilitationŠkopánová, Nela January 2020 (has links)
Název: The utilization of the Feldenkrais method in shoulder rehabilitation Objectives: This thesis aims to investigate whether exercise with elements of the Feldenkrais method can positively influence the movement function in the cervicobrachial girdle area. Specifically, the extent of movement of the shoulder joint and cervical spine, movement pattern of shoulder abduction, overall posture and subjective body perception were tested. Method: It is qualitative-quantitative research in the form of quasi-experiment. Five probands, four women and one man, aged 26-68 years, underwent this research. The intervention consisted of six thirty-minute lessons that were conducted twice a week and focused on the shoulder and neck area. The data were obtained by pre-test and post-test, which included: evaluation of body posture by aspect, range of motion of the shoulder joint and cervical spine (goniometry) and movement stereotypes. The subjective feelings of the proband were obtained by using a survey. Results: All probands improved the mobility of the shoulder joint and cervical spine. In the shoulder joint, the movement improved on average: to flexion by 12ř, to extension by 8ř, to abduction by 15ř, to external rotation by 18ř, to internal rotation and horizontal adduction by 7ř and to horizontal abduction...
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The Impact of Experimental Pain on Shoulder Movement During an Arm Elevated Reaching Task in a Virtual Reality EnvironmentDupuis, Frédérique, Sole, Gisela, Wassinger, Craig A., Osborne, Hamish, Beilmann, Mathieu, Mercier, Catherine, Campeau-Lecours, Alexandre, Bouyer, Laurent J., Roy, Jean S. 01 September 2021 (has links)
Background: People with chronic shoulder pain have been shown to present with motor adaptations during arm movements. These adaptations may create abnormal physical stress on shoulder tendons and muscles. However, how and why these adaptations develop from the acute stage of pain is still not well-understood. Objective: To investigate motor adaptations following acute experimental shoulder pain during upper limb reaching. Methods: Forty participants were assigned to the Control or Pain group. They completed a task consisting of reaching targets in a virtual reality environment at three time points: (1) baseline (both groups pain-free), (2) experimental phase (Pain group experiencing acute shoulder pain induced by injecting hypertonic saline into subacromial space), and (3) Post experimental phase (both groups pain-free). Electromyographic (EMG) activity, kinematics, and performance data were collected. Results: The Pain group showed altered movement planning and execution as shown by a significant increased delay to reach muscles EMG peak and a loss of accuracy, compared to controls that have decreased their mean delay to reach muscles peak and improved their movement speed through the phases. The Pain group also showed protective kinematic adaptations using less shoulder elevation and elbow flexion, which persisted when they no longer felt the experimental pain. Conclusion: Acute experimental pain altered movement planning and execution, which affected task performance. Kinematic data also suggest that such adaptations may persist over time, which could explain those observed in chronic pain populations.
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Effekten av proprioceptiv neuromuskulär facilitering på skulderfunktion och rörlighet vid frusen skuldra - en systematisk litteraturöversikt / The effect of proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation on shoulder function and range of motion in patients with frozen shoulder - a systematic reviewDalén, Mirjam, Remmer, Michelle January 2021 (has links)
Bakgrund: Frusen skuldra (FS) är ett smärttillstånd som drabbar 2-5% av befolkningen och som påverkar skulderfunktionen. I dagsläget finns det ingen konsensus kring den bästa behandlingsformen vid FS, dock anses proprioceptiv neuromuskulär facilitering (PNF) ge minskad smärta och ökad rörlighet (ROM) samt skulderfunktion. Syfte: Att kartlägga evidensen av PNF som behandling vid FS. Det var även att granska kvaliteten i inkluderade studier och att studera effekten av PNF på skulderfunktion och ROM. Metod: En systematisk litteraturstudie. Sökningen utfördes i databaserna PubMed, Cochrane, Web of Science samt Google scholar. Artiklarna kvalitetsgranskades med PEDro scale och tillförlitligheten graderades med GRADEstud. Resultatsammanfattning: Åtta artiklar inkluderades i studien med totalt 360 deltagare. Enligt PEDro scale varierade kvaliteten i studierna mellan tre till åtta poäng. Evidensgraderingen enligt GRADEstud visade mycket låg (+) evidens gällande skulderfunktion och låg (++) evidens gällande ROM. Graderingen baserades på fyra studier av hög kvalitet vid skulderfunktion respektive ROM. Studiernas resultat var motstridiga gällande huruvida PNF ger en signifikant positiv effekt på skulderfunktion och ROM vid FS. Konklusion: Det finns mycket låg (+) evidens för att PNF skulle ha en effekt på skulderfunktionen och en låg (++) evidens för att PNF har en effekt på ROM. För att förtydliga evidensen och användningen av PNF behövs fler studier av hög kvalitet och med liknande tillvägagångssätt. / Background: Frozen shoulder (FS) is a painful condition affecting 2-5% of the population and it affects the shoulder function. Currently there’s no consensus to which treatment is most effective in FS. However, proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation (PNF) is assumed to bring pain relief and increase range of motion (ROM) and shoulder function. Objective: To review the evidence regarding the effect of PNF as treatment in patients with FS. It’s also to examine the quality of included studies and to study the effect of PNF on shoulder function and ROM. Method: A systematic review. The search was conducted in the databases of PubMed, Cochrane, Web of Science and Google scholar. The quality was assessed according to PEDro scale and the reliability with GRADEstud. Results: Eight studies were included with a total of 360 participants. The quality of the studies ranged between three to eight points according to PEDro scale. According to GRADEstud PNF received very low (+) evidence for shoulder function and low (++) evidence for ROM. The grading was based on four, high quality studies for both shoulder function and ROM. The included studies were conflicting regarding whether PNF had a significant, positive effect on shoulder function and ROM in FS. Conclusion: There’s very low (+) evidence that PNF would have an effect on shoulder function and low (++) evidence that PNF has an effect on ROM. In order to clarify the evidence there’s a need for future well-conducted studies with a similar approach.
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Clinical Measurement of Scapular Upward Rotation in Response to Acute Subacromial PainWassinger, Craig A., Sole, Gisela, Osborne, Hamish 01 January 2013 (has links)
STUDY DESIGN: Block-counterbalanced, repeated-measures crossover study. OBJECTIVES: To assess scapular upward rotation positional adaptations to experimentally induced subacromial pain. BACKGROUND: Existing subacromial pathology is often related to altered scapular kinematics during humeral elevation, such as decreased upward rotation and posterior tilting. These changes have the potential to limit subacromial space and mechanically impinge subacromial structures. Yet, it is unknown whether these changes are the cause or result of injury and what the acute effects of subacromial pain on scapular upward rotation may be. METHODS: Subacromial pain was induced via hypertonic saline injection in 20 participants, aged 18 to 31 years. Scapular upward rotation was measured with a digital inclinometer at rest and at 30°, 60°, 90°, and 120° of humeral elevation during a painful condition and a pain-free condition. Repeated-measures analyses of variance were conducted for scapular upward rotation position, based on condition (pain or control) and humeral position. Post hoc testing was conducted with paired t tests as appropriate. RESULTS: Scapular upward rotation during the pain condition was significantly increased (range of average increase, 3.5°-7.7°) compared to the control condition at all angles of humeral elevation tested. CONCLUSION: Acute subacromial pain elicited an increase in scapular upward rotation at all angles of humeral elevation tested. This adaptation to acute experimental pain may provide protective compensation to subacromial structures during humeral elevation.
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Clinical Measurement of Scapular Upward Rotation in Response to Acute Subacromial PainWassinger, Craig A., Sole, Gisela, Osborne, Hamish 01 January 2013 (has links)
STUDY DESIGN: Block-counterbalanced, repeated-measures crossover study. OBJECTIVES: To assess scapular upward rotation positional adaptations to experimentally induced subacromial pain. BACKGROUND: Existing subacromial pathology is often related to altered scapular kinematics during humeral elevation, such as decreased upward rotation and posterior tilting. These changes have the potential to limit subacromial space and mechanically impinge subacromial structures. Yet, it is unknown whether these changes are the cause or result of injury and what the acute effects of subacromial pain on scapular upward rotation may be. METHODS: Subacromial pain was induced via hypertonic saline injection in 20 participants, aged 18 to 31 years. Scapular upward rotation was measured with a digital inclinometer at rest and at 30°, 60°, 90°, and 120° of humeral elevation during a painful condition and a pain-free condition. Repeated-measures analyses of variance were conducted for scapular upward rotation position, based on condition (pain or control) and humeral position. Post hoc testing was conducted with paired t tests as appropriate. RESULTS: Scapular upward rotation during the pain condition was significantly increased (range of average increase, 3.5°-7.7°) compared to the control condition at all angles of humeral elevation tested. CONCLUSION: Acute subacromial pain elicited an increase in scapular upward rotation at all angles of humeral elevation tested. This adaptation to acute experimental pain may provide protective compensation to subacromial structures during humeral elevation.
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Cervical & Amp; Thoracic Manipulations: Acute Effects Upon Pain Pressure Threshold and Self-Reported Pain in Experimentally Induced Shoulder PainWassinger, Craig A., Rich, Dustin, Cameron, Nicholas, Clark, Shelley, Davenport, Scott, Lingelbach, Maranda, Smith, Albert, Baxter, G. David, Davidson, Joshua 01 February 2016 (has links)
Background: Emerging evidence suggests that cervical and thoracic joint manipulations may be advocated in treating patients with shoulder pain. Objectives: To determine the acute effects of cervical, cervicothoracic, and thoracic joint manipulations on outcomes of self-reported pain and pain pressure threshold in experimentally induced shoulder pain. Design: Repeated measures. Methods: Twenty (20) healthy volunteers were tested on two sessions. Session 1 consisted on baseline assessment of pain pressure threshold testing over the infraspinatus bilaterally and self-reported shoulder pain using the shoulder pain and disability index (SPADI) pain scale. An isokinetic exercise protocol was used to induce delayed onset muscle soreness. In session 2 (24-48 h later), all variables were reassessed before and immediately after a combination of cervical, cervicothoracic and thoracic manipulations. Results: SPADI pain scale scores were significantly different between time points (p < 0.001): the exercise protocol significantly increased reported pain [mean increase 14.1, p < 0.001] while the manipulation significantly decreased reported pain (mean decrease 5.60, p < 0.001)) although pain remained higher than baseline levels. Pain pressure threshold differences were also found between time points (p = 0.001): manipulation significantly increased pain threshold bilaterally (p < 0.001) similar to baseline levels. Conclusions: Cervical, cervicothoracic, and thoracic joint manipulations acutely increased pain pressure threshold and decreased self-reported shoulder pain in participants with experimentally induced shoulder pain. Physiotherapists may consider the combination of such techniques to achieve short-term hypoalgesic effects and facilitate the application of more active interventions.
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The Effects of Shoulder Injury on Kinaesthesia: A Systematic Review and Meta-AnalysisFyhr, Charlotte, Gustavsson, Linnéa, Wassinger, Craig, Sole, Gisela 01 January 2015 (has links)
The aim of this systematic review was to synthesize the evidence for changes for proprioceptive variables consisting of movement and position sense in participants with glenohumeral musculoskeletal disorders. Five databases were searched until 13th August 2013. Methodological quality was assessed and meta-analyses were performed for active and passive joint reposition sense (AJPS and PJPS) and movement sense, determined with threshold to detection of passive motion (TTDPM). The search yielded 17 studies, four of which were classified as having high methodological quality, seven as moderate and six as low quality. For participants with post-traumatic glenohumeral instability, pooled findings indicate moderate evidence for higher TTDPM for involved shoulders compared to control groups and the contralateral uninvolved side, indicating decreased movement sense. For AJPS and PJPS there was moderate to limited evidence for significant increased errors for involved compared to uninvovled shoulders, but not when compared to the control groups. Limited evidence was found for decreased AJPS acuity for patients with chronic rotator cuff pain and for patients with unspecified shoulder pain compared to healthy controls. Movement sense is most likely to be impaired after shoulder injury involving post-traumatic instability when compared to the contralateral shoulder and to controls, while deficits for AJPS and PJPS are more likely to be evident compared to the contralateral shoulder in participants with glenohumeral musculoskeletal disorders.
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The Role of Experimentally-Induced Subacromial Pain on Shoulder Strength and Throwing AccuracyWassinger, Craig A., Sole, Gisela, Osborne, Hamish 01 October 2012 (has links)
Shoulder injuries often comprise two separate yet related components, structural tissue damage and pain. The role of each of these components on shoulder function is difficult to ascertain. Experimental pain models allow the assessment of consequences of localized pain when applied to healthy individuals. By understanding the role of pain on shoulder function, clinicians will be able to more efficiently assess and treat shoulder injuries. The objective of the study was to evaluate the role of experimentally-induced sub-acromial pain on shoulder isokinetic rotational strength and throwing accuracy. This was a block counterbalanced, crossover, repeated measures study design utilizing 20 individuals without self-reported shoulder or cervical pathology. Shoulder function was measured with and without experimental pain injection (2 mL of 5% hypertonic saline) in the sub-acromial space. Functional tasks consisted of shoulder rotational strength utilizing isokinetic testing and throwing accuracy via the functional throwing performance index. The hypertonic saline induced moderate pain levels in all participants (4.3-5.1/10). Normalized shoulder internal (t = 3.76, p = 0.001) and external (t = 3.12, p = 0.006) rotation strength were both diminished in the painful condition compared to the pain free condition. Throwing accuracy was also reduced while the participants experienced pain (t = 3.99, p = 0.001). Moderate levels of experimental shoulder pain were sufficient to negatively influence shoulder strength and throwing accuracy in participants without shoulder pathology.
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Predictors of shoulder injuries in female collegiate swimmersLippincott, Eric Lee 01 January 2018 (has links)
Competitive swimmers frequently injure their shoulders. The risk factors for shoulder injuries in competitive swimmers have not been clearly identified. The primary purposes of this study were to describe the characteristics of female collegiate swimmers at the onset of a swim season, identify the risk factors of shoulder injury in female collegiate swimmers, characterize the swim volume of female collegiate swimmers, and determine if swim volume is a predictor of shoulder injury.
A prospective longitudinal cohort multi-center design was utilized. Female collegiate swimmers [n=53, mean age=19.3+/– 1.2] from four NCAA Division II universities were recruited to participate in this study. Preseason screening data that included demographics and sport history, swimming characteristics, and a musculoskeletal assessment was collected on 106 shoulders. Participants completed a weekly survey to track exposure data over the course of the season. Shoulder injury data was also collected. A shoulder injury was defined as swimming-related shoulder pain that resulted in one or more limited or modified athletic practices or competitions.
Female swimmers reported a history of shoulder pain in 18/106 (17.0%) shoulders, and 14/106 (13.2%) of swimmers presented with obvious scapular dyskinesis at preseason. No differences in shoulder characteristics were found between swimmers with a history of shoulder pain and those without and those with obvious dyskinesis compared to those with normal scapular motion. There was a positive correlation between anterior glenohumeral laxity and shoulder external rotation range of motion (r=0.37, p
Previous injury was the sole predictor of new shoulder injury in the group studied. Further research into the predictors of shoulder injury in female collegiate swimmers is warranted.
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