TY - GEN A1 - Frauenrath, Tobias A1 - de Geyer d'Orth, Thibaut A1 - Niendorf, Thoralf T1 - Assessment of Accuracy & Reproducibility of ECG, Pulse Oximetry & Phonocardiogram Gating of Cardiac MRI at 7T T2 - 2011 ISMRM Annual Meeting Proceedings N2 - At (ultra)high magnetic fields the artifact sensitivity of ECG recordings increases. This bears the risk of R-wave mis-registration which has been consistently reported for ECG triggered CMR at 7.0T. Realizing the constraints of conventional ECG, acoustic cardiac triggering (ACT) has been proposed. The clinical ACT has not been carefully examined yet. For this reason, this work scrutinizes the suitability, accuracy and reproducibility of ACT for CMR at 7.0T. For this purpose, the trigger reliability and trigger detection variance are examined together with an qualitative and quantitative assessment of image quality of the heart at 7.0T. Y1 - 2011 SN - 1545-4428 N1 - ISMRM 19th Annual Meeting & Exhibition, 7-13 May 2011, Montreal, Quebec, Canada ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grinsven, Bart van A1 - Vanden Bon, Natalie A1 - Grieten, Lars A1 - Murib, Mohammed Sharif A1 - Janssen, Stoffel Dominique A1 - Haenen, Ken A1 - Schneider, E. A1 - Ingebrandt, Sven A1 - Schöning, Michael Josef A1 - Vermeeren, Veronique A1 - Ameloot, Marcel A1 - Michiels, Luc A1 - Thoelen, Ronald A1 - De Ceuninck, Ward A. A1 - Wagner, Patrick T1 - Rapid assessment of the stability of DNA duplexes by impedimetric real-time monitoring of chemically induced denaturation JF - Lab on a Chip Y1 - 2011 SN - 1473-0197 VL - 11 IS - 9 SP - 1656 EP - 1663 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) CY - Cambridge ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Reisgen, Uwe A1 - Schleser, Markus A1 - Scheik, Sven A1 - Michaeli, Walter A1 - Grönlund, Oliver A1 - Neuß, Andreas A1 - Wunderle, Johannes A1 - Poprawe, Reinhart A1 - Rösner, A. A1 - Bobzin, Kirsten A1 - Schläfer, Thomas A1 - Theiß, Sebastian A1 - Kutschmann, Pia A1 - Haberstroh, Edmund A1 - Flock, Dustin A1 - Bührig-Polaczek, Andreas A1 - Jakob, M. ED - Thoben, Klaus-Dieter T1 - Novel process chains for the production of plastics/metal-hybrids T2 - 17th International Conference on Concurrent Enterprising (ICE 2011) : Aachen, Germany, 20 - 22 June 2011 Y1 - 2011 SN - 978-1-457-70772-8 ; 978-3-943024-05-0 SP - 596 EP - 604 PB - IEEE CY - Piscataway, NJ ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schaefer, Thomas A1 - Höfken, Hans-Wilhelm A1 - Schuba, Marko T1 - Windows Phone 7 from a Digital Forensics’ Perspective Y1 - 2011 N1 - ICDF2C <3, 2011, Dublin> PB - Springer CY - Berlin ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Maus, Stefan A1 - Höfken, Hans-Wilhelm A1 - Schuba, Marko T1 - Forensic Analysis of Geodata in Android Smartphones Y1 - 2011 N1 - Cyberforensics 2011, Glasgow SP - 1 EP - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Karamanidis, Kiros A1 - Albracht, Kirsten A1 - Braunstein, Bjoern A1 - Catala, Maria Moreno A1 - Goldmann, Jan-Peter A1 - Brüggemann, Gert-Peter T1 - Lower leg musculoskeletal geometry and sprint performance JF - Gait and Posture N2 - The purpose of this study was to investigate whether sprint performance is related to lower leg musculoskeletal geometry within a homogeneous group of highly trained 100-m sprinters. Using a cluster analysis, eighteen male sprinters were divided into two groups based on their personal best (fast: N = 11, 10.30 ± 0.07 s; slow: N = 7, 10.70 ± 0.08 s). Calf muscular fascicle arrangement and Achilles tendon moment arms (calculated by the gradient of tendon excursion versus ankle joint angle) were analyzed for each athlete using ultrasonography. Achilles tendon moment arm, foot and ankle skeletal geometry, fascicle arrangement as well as the ratio of fascicle length to Achilles tendon moment arm showed no significant (p > 0.05) correlation with sprint performance, nor were there any differences in the analyzed musculoskeletal parameters between the fast and slow sprinter group. Our findings provide evidence that differences in sprint ability in world-class athletes are not a result of differences in the geometrical design of the lower leg even when considering both skeletal and muscular components. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2011.03.009 SN - 0966-6362 VL - 34 IS - 1 SP - 138 EP - 141 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ribitsch, D. A1 - Heumann, S. A1 - Trotscha, E. A1 - Herrero Acero, E. A1 - Greimel, K. A1 - Leber, R. A1 - Birner-Gruenberger, R. A1 - Deller, S. A1 - Eiteljoerg, I. A1 - Remler, P. A1 - Weber, Th. A1 - Siegert, Petra A1 - Maurer, Karl-Heinz A1 - Donelli, I. A1 - Freddi, G. A1 - Schwab, H. A1 - Guebitz, G. M. T1 - Hydrolysis of polyethyleneterephthalate by p-nitrobenzylesterase from Bacillus subtilis JF - Biotechnology progress Y1 - 2011 SN - 1520-6033 (E-Journal); 8756-7938 (Print) VL - Vol. 27 IS - Iss. 4 SP - 951 EP - 960 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Schiffer, Stefan A1 - Ferrein, Alexander A1 - Lakemeyer, Gerhard T1 - Fuzzy representations and control for domestic service robots in Golog T2 - Intelligent robotics and applications : 4th International conference, ICIRA 2011, Aachen, Germany, December 6-8, 2011, proceedings, part I. (Lecture notes in computer science ; 7102) N2 - In the RoboCup@Home domestic service robot competition, complex tasks such as "get the cup from the kitchen and bring it to the living room" or "find me this and that object in the apartment" have to be accomplished. At these competitions the robots may only be instructed by natural language. As humans use qualitative concepts such as "near" or "far", the robot needs to cope with them, too. For our domestic robot, we use the robot programming and plan language Readylog, our variant of Golog. In previous work we extended the action language Golog, which was developed for the high-level control of agents and robots, with fuzzy concepts and showed how to embed fuzzy controllers in Golog. In this paper, we demonstrate how these notions can be fruitfully applied to two domestic service robotic scenarios. In the first application, we demonstrate how qualitative fluents based on a fuzzy set semantics can be deployed. In the second program, we show an example of a fuzzy controller for a follow-a-person task. Y1 - 2011 SN - 978-3-642-25486-4 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25489-5_24 SP - 241 EP - 250 PB - ACM CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dieringer, Matthias A. A1 - Renz, Wolfgang A1 - Lindel, Tomasz Dawid A1 - Seifert, Frank A1 - Frauenrath, Tobias A1 - von Knobelsdorf-Brenkenhoff, Florian A1 - Waiczies, Helmar A1 - Hoffmann, Werner A1 - Rieger, Jan A1 - Pfeiffer, Harald A1 - Ittermann, Bernd A1 - Schulz-Menger, Jeanette A1 - Niendorf, Thoralf T1 - Design and application of a four-channel transmit/receive surface coil for functional cardiac imaging at 7T JF - Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging N2 - Purpose To design and evaluate a four-channel cardiac transceiver coil array for functional cardiac imaging at 7T. Materials and Methods A four-element cardiac transceiver surface coil array was developed with two rectangular loops mounted on an anterior former and two rectangular loops on a posterior former. specific absorption rate (SAR) simulations were performed and a Burn:x-wiley:10531807:media:JMRI22451:tex2gif-stack-1 calibration method was applied prior to obtain 2D FLASH CINE (mSENSE, R = 2) images from nine healthy volunteers with a spatial resolution of up to 1 × 1 × 2.5 mm3. Results Tuning and matching was found to be better than 10 dB for all subjects. The decoupling (S21) was measured to be >18 dB between neighboring loops, >20 dB for opposite loops, and >30 dB for other loop combinations. SAR values were well within the limits provided by the IEC. Imaging provided clinically acceptable signal homogeneity with an excellent blood-myocardium contrast applying the Burn:x-wiley:10531807:media:JMRI22451:tex2gif-stack-2 calibration approach. Conclusion A four-channel cardiac transceiver coil array for 7T was built, allowing for cardiac imaging with clinically acceptable signal homogeneity and an excellent blood-myocardium contrast. Minor anatomic structures, such as pericardium, mitral, and tricuspid valves and their apparatus, as well as trabeculae, were accurately delineated. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.22451 SN - 1522-2586 VL - 33 IS - 3 SP - 736 EP - 741 PB - Wiley-Liss CY - New York ER -