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of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Michael J. Gerard"'
Autor:
Robert Davies, Yuhe Feng, Dieter Boeyaert, John C. Schmitt, Michael J. Gerard, Kelly A. Garcia, Oliver Schmitz, Benedikt Geiger, Sophia A. Henneberg
Publikováno v:
Nuclear Fusion, Vol 64, Iss 12, p 126044 (2024)
We present a semi-automated algorithm for designing three-dimensional divertor or limiter plates targeting low heat loads. The algorithm designs the plates in two stages: firstly, the parallel heat flux distribution is caught on vertically-inclined p
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/d98d4f50dc1c4191bef037d1dcc3f52c
Publikováno v:
Applied Ergonomics. 33:129-138
Two studies were conducted to determine the effects of enhanced auditory feedback on typing force, electromyography (EMG) and subjective discomfort. The introduction of enhanced auditory feedback caused a 10-20% reduction in 90th percentile typing fo
Publikováno v:
Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 44:51-61
A laboratory study was conducted to determine the effects of work pace on typing force, electromyographic (EMG) activity, and subjective discomfort. We found that as participants typed faster, their typing force and finger flexor and extensor EMG act
Publikováno v:
American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal. 60:762-769
The effects of keyswitch stiffness and key action on typing force, electromyography (EMG), and subjective preference were examined. Each subject's own keyboard (with an audible key click and key activation force of 0.72 N) and three keyboards with no
Autor:
Michael J. Gerard, Bernard J. Martin
Publikováno v:
Ergonomics. 42:314-326
Movement precision and performance time were evaluated through a visuo-manual tracking task performed before and after 10-min hand vibration exposure. Constant displacement amplitude vibration of 0.2 and 0.3 mm peak to peak at 90, 150, 300 Hz were ap
Publikováno v:
American Industrial Hygiene Association journal. 57(9)
An experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of key stiffness on the development of fatigue, keyboard reaction forces, and muscle electromyography (EMG) responses. Six subjects typed continuously for 2 hours on each of two keyboards (0.28 N