• Title/Summary/Keyword: physiological changes

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Anatomical and physiological changes in the aging eye (노인성 변화에 따른 안구와 해부생리학적 고찰)

  • Kim, Jai-Min;Seong, Jeong-Sub;Seo, Eun-Sun;Kho, Eun-Kyung;Lee, Seok-Ju;Yoo, Geun-Chang
    • Journal of Korean Ophthalmic Optics Society
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.135-143
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    • 2004
  • The Human body is subject to two patterns of senescence, both of which are represented in the eye and vision. This article discusses the anatomical and physiological changes in anterior and posterior segments which occur with age. The areas covered include the globe, lids, tears, conjunctiva, cornea, sclera, anterior chamber angle, iris, lens, choroid, vitreous and retina. A sample of 219 individuals between the ages of 50 and 79 years was tested with case history, slit lamp examination, palpebral fissure, horizontal visible iris diameter(HVID) and pupil size. The palpebral fissure decreases with age while HVID remains constant in all age classes. This study suggests that an understanding of anatomical and physiological changes which occur with age is helpful to all eye clinicians because the aging process affects all of the ocular tissues.

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Physiological Components of Cybersickness in a Virtual Reality (가상현실에서 사이버멀미의 생리적 요인)

  • Kim, Young-Youn;Kim, Hyun-Ju;Kim, Eun-Nam;Ko, Hee-Dong;Kim, Hyun-Taek
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Emotion and Sensibility Conference
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    • 2003.05a
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    • pp.78-83
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    • 2003
  • We investigated the physiological patterns of cybersickness in a Virtual Reality(VR). Subject were exposed to the VR for 9.5 min, and required to detect specific virtual objects. Sixteen electrophysiological signals were recorded before, during, and after the virtual navigation. five questionnaires on the VR experience were acquired form 61 healthy subjects. During the virtual navigation, subjects with the high cybersickness susceptibility showed significant physiological changes, which included increased gastric tachyarrhythmia, eyeblink frequency, and EEG delta wave and decreased EEG beta wave. These results suggest that cybersickness may induce or accompany the changes in central nervous system and autonomic nervous system. Also, these results suggest that there may be increased sympathetic activation in autonomic drive for cybersickness.

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A Study on Physiological Signal Changes Due to Distraction in Simulated Driving (차량시뮬레이터 환경에서 운전 중 주의분산에 따른 생체신호 변화 연구)

  • Park, Sung-Soo;Hu, Hwan;Lee, Woon-Sung
    • Journal of the Ergonomics Society of Korea
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    • v.29 no.1
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    • pp.55-59
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    • 2010
  • Driver distraction is a major cause of traffic accidents in Korea. Various measures are being introduced to detect and warn driver distraction. The objective of this research is to investigate changes in driver's physiological signals due to distraction during driving. Driving simulator experiments have been carried out to investigate discrepancy in EEG signals among normal driving, DMB watching during driving, and cellular phone use during driving. Based on the discrepancy, combination of EEG signals have been identfied as candidate variables for detecting driver distraction. Statistical analysis has been carried out to verify their statistical significance.

The Effects of Starvation on Physiological Changes and Stress Response in Cultured Cobitid Loach (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus) Exposed to Sodium Nitrite

  • Hur, Jun Wook;Gil, Hyun Woo;Park, In-Seok
    • Journal of Marine Life Science
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    • v.3 no.2
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    • pp.87-95
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    • 2018
  • To investigate effects of starvation on physiological changes, stress response, and survival of cobitid loach (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus) exposed to sodium nitrite (NaNO2), a 4-week experiment was conducted. Fewer fish survived in the starved group than those in the fed group during the experiment. Starvation resulted in growth retardation, leading to differences in body length and body depth between fed and starved groups. The fed gorup continued to grow and remained in good condition. Blood chemical analysis (plasma cortisol and glucose) showed significant differences in stress response to nitrite exposure between fed and starved groups (p < 0.05). These results suggest that all parameters employed in this study to assess effects of starvation with NaNO2 stress are useful information for researching nutritional status in cobitid loach.

Survival of the Ark Shell, Scapharca subcrenata and Physiological and Histological Changes at Decreasing Salinity

  • Shin, Yun-Kyung;Lee, Won-Chan;Jun, Rae-Hong;Kim, Sung-Yeon;Park, Jung-Jun
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.12 no.3
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    • pp.209-218
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    • 2009
  • We examined physiological and histological responses related to the survival, oxygen consumption, excretion, and O/N ratio of the ark shell, Scapharca subcrenata, as a result of salinity changes. The 20-day $LS_{50}$ (median lethal salinity) at $15^{\circ}C$ was 13.87 practical salinity units (psu; confidence limits 10.30-18.74 psu), whereas the 14-day $LS_{50}$ at $25^{\circ}C$ was 12.59 psu (confidence limits 8.03-18.16 psu). In conditions of decreasing salinity, the osmolarity of individuals acclimated within 5 h above 26.4 psu but required more than 60 h below 13.2 psu. Oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion rates varied irregularly as salinity decreased. The O/N ratio was 19 and 27 at water temperatures of $15^{\circ}C$ and $25^{\circ}C$, respectively, but decreased to 1-10 as salinity declined. The effects of decreasing salinity were observed in the histological changes to each organ of S. subcrenata. As salinity decreased, cilia fell off, the epithelial layer underwent necrosis and vacuolation, the connective tissue layers of the mantle and visceral mass were destroyed, and hemocytes increased in the gills. The results of this study could prove important in investigating causes of mass mortality and managing shellfish aquaculture farms.

Physiological Changes in the Cichlid Fish Maylandia lombardoi according to Various Calcium Concentrations in Rearing Water (환경수 내의 다양한 Ca2+ 농도에 따른 시클리드(Maylandia lombardoi)의 생리적 변화)

  • Moon, Hye-Na;Yeo, In-Kyu
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.49 no.2
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    • pp.184-189
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    • 2016
  • We investigated physiological changes in the freshwater cichlid, fish Maylandia lombardoi in response to different calcium concentrations in rearing water. Four different calcium concentrations (0, 2, 4 and 8 mM) were prepared in rearing water by the addition of ionized calcium (CaO) to examine the effect of various calcium concentrations in rearing water on physiological changes in the cichlid fish, M. lombardoi. Total calcium concentrations in plasma and body increased in a calcium concentration-dependent manner and reached the maximum at 8-mM calcium concentration. Stress-related cortisol was significantly decreased in the 8-mM group compared to the control group (0 mM). Lysozyme activity also significantly decreased in the 8-mM group. These results suggest that CaO in rearing water increases calcium uptake in fish and affects the body by decreasing stress and improving immunity in fish.

Physiological Changes According to Workload Wearing Aluminized Firefighter's Protective Clothing (소방방열복 착용시 작업강도에 따른 신체변화)

  • Bang, Chang-Hoon;Lee, Jun-Kyoung;Kwan, Jung-Suk
    • Fire Science and Engineering
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.56-60
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    • 2013
  • The aim of study intends to investigate physiological changes according to workload wearing aluminized firefighter's protective clothing and to provide the base data for the safety of firefighter. The results of the study are as follows. To increase work intensity 4 to 8 METs after experiment (20 min), mean skin temperature change (33.3 %), tympanic temperature change (57.1 %) heart rate (32.5 %), RPE (75.6 %) is statistically significantly higher and thermal Sensation, weight loss are not statistically significant. It was concluded that physiological changes of human body varied considerably by increase of workload wearing aluminized firefighter's protective clothing.

Post Infection Physiobiochemical Alteration at Various Intensities of Leaf spot (Myrothecium roridum) in Mulberry

  • Kumar, P.M.Pratheesh;Qadri, S.M.H.;Pal, S.C.;Mishra, A.K.;Urs, S.Raje
    • International Journal of Industrial Entomology and Biomaterials
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.175-180
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    • 2003
  • Changes in biochemical constituents and physiological alteration were studied in various intensities (1-5%, 6-15%, 16-30%, 31-50% and > 50%) of leaf spot (Myrothecium roridum) on mulberry leaves and compared with healthy leaves. Chlorophyll, total soluble sugar and total protein were decreased (P < 0.01), but total phenol increased due to pathogen infection. Changes in biochemical constituents showed significant correlation with intensity of disease. Chlorophyll ($r^2$= 0.92), and protein (($r^2$= 0.83) possessed negative while phenol (($r^2$= 0.61) possessed positive correlation. Photosynthetic rate, transpiration rate, stomatal conductance, moisture content (%) and physiological water use efficiency (pWUE) were decreased, but stomatal resistance increased in the infected leaves. Physiological parameters also possessed significant (P < 0.01) correlation with disease intensity. Photosynthetic rate (($r^2$= 0.96), transpiration rate ($r^2$=0.88), stomatal conductance (($r^2$= = 0.65), physiological water use efficiency (($r^2$= 0.88) and moisture content (r = 0.85) were negatively but stomatal resistance (($r^2$= 0.75) was positively correlated to disease intensities.

Autonomic, Respiratory and Subjective Effects of Long-term Exposure to Aversive Loud Noise : Tonic Effects in Accumulated Stress Model

  • Sohn, Jin-Hun;Sokhadze, Estate;Choi, Sang-Sup;Lee, Kyung-Hwa
    • Science of Emotion and Sensibility
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.37-42
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    • 1999
  • Long-term exposure to loud noise affects performance since it changes arousal level, distracts attention, and also is able to evoke subjective stress accompanied by negative emotional states. The purpose of the study was to analyze dynamics of subjective and physiological variables during a relatively long-lasting (30 min) exposure to white noise (85 dB[A]). Physiological signals were recorded on 15 college students during 30 min of intense auditory stimulation. Autonomic variables, namely skin conductance level , non-specific SCR number, inter-best intervals in ECG, heart rate variability index (HF/LF ratio of HRV), skin temperature, as well as respiration rate were analyzed on 5 min epoch basis. Psychological assessment (subjective rating of stress level) was also repeated every 5 min. Statistical analysis was employed to trace the time course of the dynamics of subjective and autonomic physiological variables and their relationships. Results showed that the intense noise evoked subjective stress as well as associated autonomic nervous system responses. However it was shown that physiological variables endured specific changes in the process of exposure to the loud white noise. Discussed were probable psychophysiological mechanisms mediating reactivity to long-term auditory stimulation of high intensity, namely short-term activation, followed by transient adaptation (with relatively stable autonomic balance) and then a subsequent wave of arousal due to tonic sympathetic dominance.

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A Study on Simulator Sickness and Physiological Responses in Dynamic Driving Simulator (동적 자동차 시뮬레이터에서 Simulator Sickness와 생리적 반응에 대한 연구)

  • 민병찬;전효정;성은정;정순철;김철중
    • Journal of Korean Society of Industrial and Systems Engineering
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.22-29
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    • 2003
  • The study was to evaluate psychological and physiological changes of simulator sickness in the controlled condition of driving a car (1 hr. at speed of 60 km/h) in a graphic simulator. Simulator sickness was measured and analyzed every 5 min using both subjective responses(i.e., Simulator Sickness Questionnaire) and Physiological signals(EEG, HRV, Skin Temperature, GSR). The results showed that there was significant differences in subjective response 10 min after the main experiment. From 10 min after the driving, the level of subjective simulator sickness increased significantly, relative one of the rest condition. There also was significant differences in physiological responses between the rest and the 5 min after from the start of driving : for EEG, $\delta$ and $\theta$ at Fz area increased, while $\alpha$ decreased; the averaged R-R interval and skin temperature decreased; LF/HF and GSR increased. The results indicated that simulator sickness was induced by activation of the autonomic nerves and inactivation of the central nerves.