Publicidad

Publicidad

becas.universia.netBiblioteca.Net

Buscar recursos:

Buscador Google

Power-law temporal auto-correlations in day-long records of human physical activity and their alteration with disease

Descargar SCORM

Este recurso ha sido solicitado 1 veces (0 veces en los últimos 31 días).

Para poder solicitar este recurso debe identificarse como usuario de la biblioteca

 
Ver

Detalles del recurso

Marcadores Sociales
Power-law temporal auto-correlations in day-long records of human physical activity and their alteration with disease
Id. 207396
Titulo Power-law temporal auto-correlations in day-long records of human physical activity and their alteration with disease
Autor(es) Amaral, Luis A. Nunes
Soares, Danyel J. Bezerra
da Silva, Luciano R.
Lucena, Liacir S.
Saito, Mariko
Kumano, Hiroaki
Aoyagi, Naoko
Yamamoto, Yoshiharu
Localización http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0210028
Versión 1.0
Estado Final
Descripción We investigate long-duration time series of human physical activity under three different conditions: healthy individuals in (i) a constant routine protocol and (ii) in regular daily routine, and (iii) individuals diagnosed with multiple chemical sensitivities. We find that in all cases human physical activity displays power law decaying temporal auto-correlations. Moreover, we find that under regular daily routine, time correlations of physical activity are significantly different during diurnal and nocturnal periods but that no difference exists under constant routine conditions. Finally, we find significantly different auto-correlations for diurnal records of patients with multiple chemical sensitivities.
Palabras clave Condensed Matter
Tipo de recurso Texto Narrativo
Tipo de Interactividad Expositivo
Nivel de Interactividad muy bajo
Audiencia Estudiante
Profesor
Autor
Estructura Atomic
Coste no
Copyright
Requerimientos técnicos Browser: Any
Fecha de contribución 04-mar-2007
Contacto

Valoración de los usuarios

No hay ninguna valoración para este recurso. Sea el primero en valorar este recurso.