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- Creator:
- Vaskov, Alex K, Vu, Philip P, North, Naia, Davis, Alicia J, Kung, Theodore A, Gates, Deanna H, Cederna, Paul S, and Chestek, Cynthia A
- Description:
- The data was used to calibrate and simulate pattern recognition algorithms for the following publication: Surgically Implanted Electrodes Enable Real-Time Finger and Grasp Pattern Recognition for Prosthetic Hands (medRxiv 2020, IEEE TRO in review). Each data file is named as follows Px_PostureSet.csv. Where Px is the patient number. The 1 of 10 posture set contains individual finger and intrinsic thumb movements, the grasps posture set contains a fewer number of combined finger movements. P1’s calibration data for individual fingers is labelled 1 of 12 because it also includes two grasps, which were removed for analysis in the publication. The first column of each .csv file is the experiment time in seconds. The second column is the posture of the cue hand at that timestamp. The rest of the columns are the raw EMG data in microvolts sampled at 30KSps. A legend of the movement postures, each patients EMG channels, and suggested signal processing and filtering is included in DataLabellingAndProcessing.pdf
- Keyword:
- pattern recognition, electromyography, regenerative peripheral nerve interface, intramuscular electrodes, and myoelectric prostheses
- Citation to related publication:
- Surgically Implanted Electrodes Enable Real-Time Finger and Grasp Pattern Recognition for Prosthetic Hands A. K. Vaskov, P. P. Vu, N. North, A. J. Davis, T. A. Kung, D. H. Gates, P. S. Cederna, C. A. Chestek medRxiv 2020.10.28.20217273; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.28.20217273
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
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- Creator:
- Hawes, Jason K, Johnson, Rebecca, Payne, Lindsey, Ley, Christian, Grady, Caitlin A., Domenech, Jennifer, Evich, Carly D., Kanach, Andrew, Koeppen, Allison, Roe, Kristen, Caprio, Audrey, Puente Castro, Jessica, LeMaster, Paige, and Blatchley, Ernest R. III
- Description:
- Global service-learning brings students, instructors, and communities together to support learning and community development across borders. In doing so, global service-learning practitioners act at the intersection of two fields: service-learning and international development. Critical scholarship in all three domains has highlighted the tensions inherent in defining and tracking “success” in community development. In response, service-learning and international development have turned considerable attention to documenting project characteristics, also known as best practices or success factors, which support equitable, sustainable community development. This database accompanies the article "Global Service-Learning - A systematic review of principle and practice," which presents a systematic synthesis of these fields’ best practices in the context of global service-learning. We propose 18 guiding principles for project design which aim to support practitioners in creating and maintaining justice-oriented, stakeholder-driven projects. This database contains the necessary reference material to trace the path of our analysis from abstract review to thematic synthesis. It also contains the final results of the thematic synthesis. To respect copyright restrictions, we have not made PDFs of all articles analyzed publicly accessible. Please contact the authors of this database or of the original article if you seek to access one of the articles we reference. For more information, see: Hawes, J. K., et al. “Global Service-Learning - A Systematic Review of Principle and Practice.” International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement 10, no. 1 (2022).
- Keyword:
- service-learning, international development, global service-learning, best practices, equitable development, higher education, community engagement, and student-friendly
- Citation to related publication:
- Hawes, J. K. (2021). Global Service-Learning—A systematic review of principle and practice. International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.37333/001c.31383
- Discipline:
- International Studies and Other
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- Creator:
- Brenner, Austin, M
- Description:
- Coupling between the solar wind and magnetosphere can be expressed in terms of energy transfer through the separating boundary known as the magnetopause. Geospace simulation is performed using the Space Weather Modeling Framework (SWMF) of a multi-ICME impact event on February 18-20, 2014 in order to study the energy transfer through the magnetopause during storm conditions. The magnetopause boundary is identified using a modified plasma $\beta$ and fully closed field line criteria to a downstream distance of $-20R_{e}$. Observations from Geotail, Themis, and Cluster are used as well as the Shue 1998 model to verify the simulation field data results and magnetopause boundary location. Once the boundary is identified, energy transfer is calculated in terms of total energy flux \textbf{K}, Poynting flux \textbf{S}, and hydrodynamic flux \textbf{H}. Surface motion effects are considered and the regional distribution of energy transfer on the magnetopause surface is explored in terms of dayside $\left(X>0\right)$, flank $\left(X<0\right)$, and tail cross section $\left(X=X_{min}\right)$ regions. It is found that total integrated energy flux over the boundary is nearly balanced between injection and escape, and flank contributions dominate the Poynting flux injection. Poynting flux dominates net energy input, while hydrodynamic flux dominates energy output. Surface fluctuations contribute significantly to net energy transfer and comparison with the Shue model reveals varying levels of cylindrical asymmetry in the magnetopause flank throughout the event. Finally existing energy coupling proxies such as the Akasofu $\epsilon$ parameter and Newell coupling function are compared with the energy transfer results.
- Keyword:
- Space plasma, Magnetosphere, MHD simulations, Magnetopause, Substorm, Energy transfer, and Poynting flux
- Citation to related publication:
- Brenner A, Pulkkinen TI, Al Shidi Q and Toth G (2021) Stormtime Energetics: Energy Transport Across the Magnetopause in a Global MHD Simulation. Front. Astron. Space Sci. 8:756732. doi: 10.3389/fspas.2021.756732
- Discipline:
- Science
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- Creator:
- Shi, Yining
- Description:
- Statistical study of Swarm observations and two Earth magnetic field models: IGRF-12 and CHAOS-6 categorized by Kp*10 index. Data analysis done on https://viresclient.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ JupyterLab.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
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- Creator:
- Malhotra, Garima and Ridley, Aaron J.
- Description:
- The goal of this research study is to understand the sensitivity of the IT region to the spatial variation of Kzz. This is done using the IT model, GITM, with different settings and spatial distributions for Kzz. We introduce latitudinal bands (longitudinally uniform) of 30 degrees width at equatorial and polar latitudes during different seasons similar to the previous observations in literature. We investigate the mechanisms through which a non-uniform global distribution of Kzz can alter the dynamics and thermal structure of the thermosphere, and how these effects compare to when a globally uniform value of Kzz is used.
- Keyword:
- Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere, Eddy Diffusion, Thermospheric Dynamics, Thermospheric composition and mixing, Lower-Upper Thermosphere Vertical Coupling, Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model, and Eddy Mixing
- Citation to related publication:
- Malhotra, G., Ridley, A.J. (2021). Impacts of Spatially Varying Eddy Diffusion in the Lower Thermosphere on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere using GITM - Sensitivity Study. and A.J. Ridley, Y. Deng, G. Tóth, The global ionosphere–thermosphere model, Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 68, Issue 8, 2006, Pages 839-864, ISSN 1364-6826, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jastp.2006.01.008.
- Discipline:
- Science
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- Creator:
- Adler, Jeremy
- Description:
- Data comparing the Simplified Endoscopic Mucosal Assessment for Crohn's Disease (SEMA-CD) from video recordings of colonoscopies to SEMA-CD scoring of their corresponding colonoscopy reports from pediatric patients with Crohn's disease.
- Keyword:
- Crohn's disease and colonoscopy
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
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- Creator:
- Fuller, Jennifer, Rowan, Erin, Landgraf, Ava, Alofs, Karen, Foufopoulos, Johannes, and Gronewold, Andrew
- Description:
- This study investigates the rapid decline of black tern (Chlidonias niger) over eight years in one of Michigan’s largest colonies, Lake St. Clair. 1. Nesting Success Model: A multiple logistic regression with a binomial (logit-link) fit using the glm() function from the ‘stats’ package in R (55) to determine the influence of habitat and biological predictors on nesting survival. 2. ArcMap visualization of Nesting Success: To visualize the geographic extent of the habitat’s potential to predispose nests’ vulnerability, the coefficients and intercept from our selected GLM were applied to raster layers in ArcMap using the Raster Calculator Tool. 3. Population Change & Habitat Extent: To quantify sub-colony breeding pair population size and their response to changes in sub-colony habitat in the geospatial model, we applied a general linear mixed model (GLMM) using the lmer() function from the ‘lme4’ package in R (55). Predictor variables were chosen a priori, and included the area of open water, uninhabitable vegetation (NDVI>0.72), any habitable area, and area with >50% hatch success.
- Keyword:
- black terns, wetlands, ecology, climate change, lake levels, Great Lakes, waterbirds, ornithology, general linear model, geospatial, GIS, nesting success, avian, and breeding
- Citation to related publication:
- Fuller, J., Rowan, E., Landgraf, A., Alofs, K., Foufopoulos, J., Gronewold, A., (2021). Collapse of a Black Tern Colony (Chlidonias niger) as a Result of Climate Change Driven Lake-Level Extremes and Anthropogenic Habitat Alteration [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue. and Fuller, J., et al. (2021). Shorebird colony collapses under climate driven lake-level rise and anthropogenic stressors. Forthcoming.
- Discipline:
- Science
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- Creator:
- Lynch, Erin and van der Pluijm, Ben
- Description:
- High-resolution, low-angle XRD analysis of oriented clay samples (.txt files) and TC/EA, Mass Spectronometric analysis of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes (.xslx files)
- Keyword:
- fault gouge and geofluids
- Citation to related publication:
- In submission
- Discipline:
- Science
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- Creator:
- BIRDS Lab, U. Michigan
- Description:
- These data were produced in an attempt to characterize the turning and steering behaviors of 1-DoF multi-legged (hexpedal in this case) robots. Such turning behaviors require sliding contact points. The .tar file contains multiple trials in .csv.gz format, with names following an informative naming convention documented in the README. Additional metadata for the trials is given in the metadata.py file in both machine and human readable form.
- Keyword:
- robot, multilegged, and steering
- Citation to related publication:
- Dan Zhao and Shai Revzen 2020 Bioinspir. Biomim. 15 045001 https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/ab84c0
- Discipline:
- Engineering
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- Creator:
- Herrick, Etienne M
- Description:
- This data was produced as part of field experiment investigating the extent, drivers, and consequences of functional trait variation in cover crops. Specifically, we studied the role of intraspecific trait variation in explaining interactions between species in cover crop mixtures, and whether and how intraspecific trait variation improves understanding of relationships between functional traits and ecosystem services from cover crops.
- Keyword:
- agroecology, cover crops, functional diversity, functional traits, intraspecific trait variation, ecosystem services, nitrogen, species interactions, and student-friendly
- Citation to related publication:
- Herrick, E., and Blesh, J. (2021) Intraspecific trait variation improves understanding and management of cover crop outcomes. Ecosphere.
- Discipline:
- Science