Background Single repetition, contraction-phase specific and total time-under-tension (TUT) are crucial mechano-biological descriptors associated with distinct morphological, molecular and metabolic muscular adaptations in response to exercise, rehabilitation and/or fighting sarcopenia. However, to date, no simple, reliable and valid method has been developed to measure these descriptors. Objective In this study we aimed to test whether accelerometer data obtained from a standard smartphone placed on the weight stack can be used to extract single repetition, contraction-phase specific and total TUT. Methods Twenty-two participants performed two sets of ten repetitions of their 60% one repetition maximum with a self-paced velocity on nine commonly used resistance exercise machines. Two identical smartphones were attached on the resistance exercise weight stacks and recorded all user-exerted accelerations. An algorithm extracted the number of repetitions, single repetition, contraction-phase specific and total TUT. All exercises were videorecorded. The TUT determined from the algorithmically-derived mechano-biological descriptors was compared with the video recordings that served as the gold standard. The agreement between the methods was examined using Limits of Agreement (LoA). The association was calculated using the Pearson correlation coefficients and interrater reliability was determined using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC 2.1). Results The error rate of the algorithmic detection of single repetitions derived from two smartphones accelerometers was 0.16%. Comparing algorithmically-derived, contraction-phase
This paper describes a number of XQuery-related projects. Its goal is to show that XQuery is a useful tool for many different application scenarios. In particular, this paper tries to correct a common myth that XQuery is merely a query language and that SQL is the better query language. Instead, XQuery is a full-fledged programming language for Web applications and services. Furthermore, this paper tries to correct a second myth that XQuery is slow. This paper gives an overview of the state-of-the-art in XQuery implementation and optimization techniques and discusses one particular open-source XQuery processor, Zorba, in more detail. Among others, this paper presents an XQuery Benchmark Service which helps practitioners and XQuery processor vendors to find performance problems in an XQuery processor.
Master Thesis to obtain the academic degree of Diplom-Ingenieur in the Master's Program Computer Science Statutory Declaration III Statutory Declaration I hereby declare that the thesis submitted is my own unaided work, that I have not used other than the sources indicated, and that all direct and indirect sources are acknowledged as references.
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