Search results for "Motor speed"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Manual motor speed dysfunction as a neurocognitive endophenotype in euthymic bipolar disorder patients and their healthy relatives. Evidence from a 5…

2017

Background: Few studies have examined Manual Motor Speed (MMS) in bipolar disorder (BD). The aim of this longitudinal, family study was to explore whether dysfunctional MMS represents a neurocognitive endophenotype of BD. Methods: A sample of 291 subjects, including 131 BD patients, 77 healthy first-degree relatives (BD-Rel), and 83 genetically-unrelated healthy controls (HC), was assessed with the Finger-Tapping Test (En) on three occasions over a 5-year period. Dependence of FTT on participants' age was removed by means of a lineal model of HC samples, while correcting simultaneously the time and learning effect. Differences between groups were evaluated with an ANOVA test. Results: The p…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyLongitudinal studyBipolar DisorderAdolescentEndophenotypesBipolar disorderDysfunctional familyAffect (psychology)Young AdultManual motor speed03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineHumansFamilyMotor speedLongitudinal StudiesBipolar disorderPsychiatryNeurocognitionAgedAnalysis of VarianceCarbamazepineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseFamily study030227 psychiatryMotor Skills DisordersEndophenotypePsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyMotor SkillsCase-Control StudiesEndophenotypeFemaleLongitudinal studyPsychologyNeurocognitivePsychomotor Performance030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drug
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Psychomotor and Motor Speed in Power Athletes Self-Administering Testosterone and Anabolic Steroids

1988

Abstract The effect of self-administered testosterone and anabolic steroids on psychomotor and motor speed were studied among five top-level power athletes. The experiment included a 26-week intensive strength training period in association with the use of exogenous hormones and a 6-week follow-up after drug withdrawal. Six athletes not using exogenous hormones served as a control group. The results indicated a similar, and in most cases insignificant, improvement (0–10%) in performance in both groups in both the simple and more complicated motor and psychomotor tests. Only in maximal vertical speed related to body weight was there more improvement in the experimental group, from 122.2 to 1…

Psychomotor learningmedicine.medical_specialtyAnabolismbiologyAthletesStrength trainingPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasePhysical strengthbiology.organism_classificationDrug withdrawalEndocrinologyNephrologyInternal medicinemedicineOrthopedics and Sports MedicineMotor speedPsychologyTestosteroneResearch Quarterly for Exercise and Sport
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Interior permanent magnet synchronous motors: Impact of the variability of the parameters on their efficiency

2016

In the scientific literature, various authors presented different control strategies aimed to increase the efficiency of the interior permanent magnet synchronous motors. These strategies, starting from a well-known mathematical model of the dynamic behaviour of the motor, are able to reduce the power losses acting on the magnetizing component of the stator current. However, none of the proposed approaches takes into account that, varying the working conditions of the motor, also the values of the parameters, which have an impact on the power losses, can vary. In this paper, therefore, starting from an accurate measurement of the motor characteristics for various values of speed and load, w…

EngineeringStatorEnergy Engineering and Power Technology02 engineering and technologySettore ING-IND/32 - Convertitori Macchine E Azionamenti Elettrici01 natural sciencesElectrical motor speed control strategielaw.inventionQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesControl theorylawComponent (UML)0103 physical sciences0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering010302 applied physicsMotor powerPermanent magnet synchronous motorbusiness.industryRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment020208 electrical & electronic engineeringControl engineeringPower (physics)IPMSMSettore ING-IND/31 - ElettrotecnicaEfficiency increaseReduction (mathematics)business
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Motor speed predicts stability of cognitive deficits in both schizophrenic and bipolar I patients at one-year follow-up

2009

Background: We examined whether motor speed assessed by the finger tapping test predicts generalized and specific stable deficits because of a common pathogenic process in bipolar and schizophrenic patients. Methods: One hundred and two patients underwent a battery of neuropsychological tests. Patients with a score of less than one standard deviation from their siblings', sample in two assessments with an interval of one year were defined as suffering from stable deficits because of a common pathogenic process. In addition to univariate analyses, factor analyses, ordinal logistic regression, and multiple linear regressions were used. A general score was also calculated. Results: No differen…

Bipolar IEndophenotypeTrastorn bipolarPsicobiologiaCognitive deficitEstudi de casosMotor speedSchizophreniaManic-depressive illnessEsquizofrèniaCase studiesPsychobiologyPsychomotor slowness
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