Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 14
pro vyhledávání: '"David E. Raymond"'
War Clubs in Southern California: an Interdisciplinary Study of Blunt Force Weapons and Their Impact
Autor:
David E. Raymond, Joseph B. Curran
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 28:1200-1223
Previous studies on violence have focused on patterns of trauma based on bioarchaeological studies of human remains or on architectural features such as palisades, towers, and protected locations. Artifacts used as weapons in conflict have received l
Publikováno v:
Forensic Science International. 299:187-194
Blunt traumas are the most common injuries observed and reported in medical examiner settings. Two common methods to describe bending bone fractures in the anthropological literature include the application of morphology nomenclature and describing c
Autor:
Mo Re Choi, Donald J. Johnson, Cynthia Chen, Aileen Han, Ray D. de Leon, David E. Raymond, Matthew Quon, Christopher Lopez, Julian Lis, Cynthia Bir
Publikováno v:
Journal of Forensic Sciences. 63:842-848
Previous research by the authors on an animal model showed that bloodstains can contain additional information about their somatic origin in the form of wound cells. Bloodstains produced by a gunshot wound to the head were distinguished from bloodsta
Publikováno v:
Rehabilitation Nursing. 36:248-254
This study investigated the biomechanics of simulated sideways falls from various bed heights onto two types of protective floor mats. This article presents biomechanical injury criteria for evaluating the probability of sustaining injuries to the he
Autor:
David E. Raymond, Sharon Kuo, Lee R. Berger, Patrick S. Randolph-Quinney, Steven A. Symes, Kyra E. Stull, James T. Pokines, Ericka Noelle L'Abbe, Luis L. Cabo
Publikováno v:
Scientific Reports
Malapa is one of the richest early hominin sites in Africa and the discovery site of the hominin species, Australopithecus sediba. The holotype and paratype (Malapa Hominin 1 and 2, or MH1 and MH2, respectively) skeletons are among the most complete
Autor:
David E. Raymond, Cynthia Bir
Publikováno v:
Journal of forensic sciences. 60(2)
The field of forensic injury biomechanics is an emerging field. Biomechanically validated tools may assist interdisciplinary teams of investigators in assessing mechanisms of blunt head trauma resulting in skull fractures. The objective of this study
Publikováno v:
Scopus-Elsevier
Due to the frequent occurrence of skull fractures from unintended head impacts from kinetic energy weapons, there is an immediate need to develop injury assessment tools for evaluating the risk of skull fracture under the high speed projectile impact
Publikováno v:
Journal of biomechanical engineering. 131(9)
There is a need to study the biomechanical response of the head to blunt ballistic impact. While the frequency of less-lethal munition impacts to the head may be less than other vital body regions, more serious injuries have been attributed to these
Publikováno v:
Journal of biomechanics. 42(15)
Less-lethal ballistic projectiles are used by police personnel to temporarily incapacitate suspects. While the frequency of these impacts to the head is low, they account for more serious injuries than impacts to any other body region. As a result, t
Autor:
David E. Raymond, Chris A. Van Ee, Warren N Hardy, Barbara Moroski-Browne, Kirk Thibault, John Plunkett
Publikováno v:
Volume 2: Biomedical and Biotechnology Engineering.
Only sparse experimental pediatric tissue tolerance data are available for the development of pediatric surrogates and associated injury reference values. The objective of this study is to improve the efficacy of the CRABI series anthropometric test