Search results for "Environment Design"

showing 6 items of 26 documents

Comparison of impact characteristics of four different ice hockey arena dasher boards

2012

During recent years the incidence of ice hockey related concussions has increased. Therefore, the main aim of this study was to determine how dasher board materials and structures affect impact characteristics and thereby concussion risk. The measurements were divided into two parts; 1. physiological characteristics of body checks were determined in real game measurements, and 2. simulation of body checks in the laboratory. Peak forces and stopping distances were determined from the high-speed camera data, and stiffness values were subsequently calculated. Dasher board materials and structures had a clear effect on impact characteristics. Flexible protective shielding material resulted in 1…

Materials sciencebusiness.industryProtective DevicesStiffnessPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationGeneral MedicineStructural engineeringIce hockeyProtective shieldingHockeyRisk FactorsEnergy absorptionAthletic InjuriesElectromagnetic shieldingmedicineHumansEnvironment DesignOrthopedics and Sports Medicinemedicine.symptomta315businessBrain ConcussionEuropean Journal of Sport Science
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Psychosocial and environmental correlates of active commuting for university students.

2009

Abstract Objective To examine psychosocial and environmental correlates of active commuting to university (ACU) and explore its association with overall physical activity among college students. Methods The sample included 518 students (mean 22.4 years; 59.7% female) from two universities in Valencia, Spain. Weekly estimations of energy expenditure from ACU and total physical activity were obtained. Socio-economic status, self-efficacy, barriers to active transport, access to car and motorbike, access to public transport, walking and cycling facilities and distance to university were assessed. Data were collected April and May of 2009, using a self-administered survey. A structural equation…

Total physical activityGerontologyMaleMultivariate statisticsUniversitiesEpidemiologyPsychological interventionPhysical activityTransportationWalkingMotor ActivitySocial EnvironmentStructural equation modelingYoung AdultEnvironmental healthMedicineHumansStudentsSocioeconomic statusExercisebusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthBicyclingMotor VehiclesSpainPublic transportEnvironment DesignFemalebusinessPsychosocialPreventive medicine
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The passive cooling system from tradition to innovation: wind Towers

2012

The work presented by Golnaz Ighany, tutored by Maria Luisa Germanà, is a scheme that shows a synthesis of her PhD Research concluded in March 2011. The aim of the research was exploring the potential of using passive cooling systems and natural ventilation with special attention on wind towers. The study was focused on traditional passive cooling strategies which had been used in Middle East and Mediterranean areas. More particularly, the most common types of wind towers were analyzed in relation to different aspects: from the typology analysis to the dimensional one, from materials to systems and construction processes, from “live welfare” to energy efficiency. In parallel, it was conduct…

Wind towersPassive coolingEnvironment DesignSettore ICAR/12 - Tecnologia Dell'Architettura
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Designing Affordances for Health-Enhancing Physical Activity and Exercise in Sedentary Individuals

2016

Ideas in ecological dynamics have profound implications for designing environments that offer opportunities for physical activity (PA), exercise and play in sedentary individuals. They imply how exercise scientists, health professionals, planners, designers, engineers and psychologists can collaborate in co-designing environments and playscapes that facilitate PA and exercise behaviours in different population subgroups. Here, we discuss how concepts in ecological dynamics emphasise the person-environment scale of analysis, indicating how PA environments might be (re)designed into qualitative regions of functional significance (affordances) that invite health-enhancing behaviours according …

medicine.medical_specialtySports medicineHealth BehaviorApplied psychologyPopulationPhysical activityPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationLevel design050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOrthopedics and Sports MedicineAffordanceeducationExerciseSedentary lifestyleeducation.field_of_studyHealth professionals05 social sciences030229 sport sciencesFunctional significanceEnvironment DesignSedentary BehaviorPsychologySports Medicine
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Designing Environments to Enhance Physical and Psychological Benefits of Physical Activity: A Multidisciplinary Perspective.

2016

This article is part of the Topical Collection on Designing environments to enhance physical and psychological benefits of physical activity : a multi-disciplinary perspective.

medicine.medical_specialtySports medicinePerspective (graphical)Health BehaviorPhysical activityMEDLINEPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation030229 sport sciencesLevel designHealth Promotion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMultidisciplinary approachmedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineEngineering ethicsEnvironment Design030212 general & internal medicineHealthy LifestyleHealth behaviorPsychologyExerciseIntroductory Journal ArticleSports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)
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A sustainable city environment through child safety and mobility:A challenge based on ITS?

2012

Our cities should be designed to accommodate everybody, including children. We will not move toward a more sustainable society unless we accept that children are people with transportation needs, and ‘bussing’ them around, or providing parental limousine services at all times, will not lead to sustainability. Rather, we will need to make our cities walkable for children, at least those above a certain age. Safety has two main aspects, traffic safety and personal safety (risk of assault). Besides being safe, children will also need an urban environment with reasonable mobility, where they themselves can reach destinations with reasonable effort; else they will still need to be driven. This p…

safetyEngineeringSafety ManagementAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlHuman Factors and ErgonomicsTransportationPedestrianWalkingViolenceOccupational safety and healthTransport engineering/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/sustainable_cities_and_communitieschildrenResidence CharacteristicsSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansQuality (business)surveyMarketingCity PlanningSafety Risk Reliability and QualityChildmedia_commonSustainable developmentbusiness.industryintelligent transportation systemsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAccidents TrafficmobilitySDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and CommunitiesSustainable cityWalkabilityChild PreschoolSustainabilityEnvironment DesignSafetybusiness
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