• Title/Summary/Keyword: Morris Equation

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Changes of Pulmonary Disability Grades according to the Spirometry Reference Equations (폐기능 예측식에 따른 폐환기능 장해도 변화)

  • Lee, Joung-Oh;Choi, Byung-Soon
    • Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
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    • v.69 no.2
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    • pp.108-114
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    • 2010
  • Background: The aim was to estimate the differences between pulmonary disability grades according to the spirometry reference equations (the Korean equation and the Morris equation). Methods: Spirometry was performed on 16,916 male and 1,353 female special examination for pneumoconiosis, in the period of 2007~2009. Changes in predictive values for forced expiratory volume in one second ($FEV_1$), forced vital capacity (FVC) and $FEV_1$/FVC and in disability grade were evaluated using both equations. Results: Mean FVCs for men and women were 4,218.7 mL and 2,801.5 mL in predictive values after the application of the Korean equation, and 3,763.9 mL and 2,395.6 mL after the Morris equation, respectively. Compared with the Morris equation, the Korean equation showed 10.8% and 14.5% of excesses for men and women (p<0.001). Mean $FEV_1s$ for men and women were 3,102.5 mL and 2,107.1 mL in the Korean equation, and 2,667.8 mL and 1,699.6 mL in the Morris equation, respectively. Compared with the Morris equation, the Korean equation showed 14.0% and 19.3% of excesses for men and women (p<0.001). Men and women who showed the changes of disability grades using the Korean equation in place of the Morris equation were 23.9% (4,052/16,916) and 22.9% (311/1,353) on FVC, and 23.1% (3,913/16,916) and 10.7% (145/1,353) on $FEV_1$. Conclusion: Applying different reference equations for spirometry has resulted in changes for disability grades in special examination for pneumoconiosis.

Effect of a New Spirometric Reference Equation on the Interpretation of Spirometric Patterns and Disease Severity (폐활량측정법의 새로운 정상예측식이 폐활량측정법 장애 양상 및 질병 중증도 해석에 미치는 영향)

  • Oh, Yeon-Mok;Hong, Sang-Bum;Shim, Tae Sun;Lim, Chae-Man;Koh, Younsuck;Kim, Woo Sung;Kim, Dong-Soon;Kim, Won Dong;Kim, Young Sam;Lee, Sang Do
    • Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
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    • v.60 no.2
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    • pp.215-220
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    • 2006
  • Background : A spirometric reference equation was recently developed for the general population in Korea. The applicability of the new Korean equation to clinical practice was examined by comparing it with the Morris equation, which is one of the most popular reference equations used for interpreting the spirometric patterns and for grading the disease severity in Korea. Methods : Spirometry was performed on 926 men and 694 women, aged 20 years or older, in November 2004 at the Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea. The subjects' age, gender, height, weight, and spirometric values ($FEV_1$ [forced expiratory volume in one second], FVC [forced vital capacity], and $FEV_1/FVC$) were obtained. The spirometric patterns and disease severity were evaluated using both equations, and the results of the Korean equation were compared with the Morris equation. The spirometric patterns were defined as normal, restrictive, obstructive, and undetermined according to the level of $FEV_1/FVC$ and FVC. The disease severity was defined according to the level of $FEV_1$ level for subjects with an airflow limitation, and according to the FVC level for those subjects without an airflow limitation. Results : Spirometric patterns were differently interpreted in 22.5% (208/926) of the men and 24.8% (172/694) of the women after the application of the Korean equation compared with the Morris equation. Of the subjects with airflow limitation, disease severity was differently graded in 30.2% (114/378) of the men and 39.4% (37/94) of the women after the application of the Korean equation. Of the subjects without airflow limitation, disease severity was differently graded in 27.9% (153/548) of the men and 30.2% (181/600) of the women after the application of the Korean equation. Conclusion : Achange in the reference equation for spirometry could have an effect on the interpretation of spirometric patterns and on the grading of disease severity.

A VARIANT OF THE QUADRATIC FUNCTIONAL EQUATION ON GROUPS AND AN APPLICATION

  • Elfen, Heather Hunt;Riedel, Thomas;Sahoo, Prasanna K.
    • Bulletin of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.54 no.6
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    • pp.2165-2182
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    • 2017
  • Let G be a group and $\mathbb{C}$ the field of complex numbers. Suppose ${\sigma}:G{\rightarrow}G$ is an endomorphism satisfying ${{\sigma}}({{\sigma}}(x))=x$ for all x in G. In this paper, we first determine the central solution, f : G or $G{\times}G{\rightarrow}\mathbb{C}$, of the functional equation $f(xy)+f({\sigma}(y)x)=2f(x)+2f(y)$ for all $x,y{\in}G$, which is a variant of the quadratic functional equation. Using the central solution of this functional equation, we determine the general solution of the functional equation f(pr, qs) + f(sp, rq) = 2f(p, q) + 2f(r, s) for all $p,q,r,s{\in}G$, which is a variant of the equation f(pr, qs) + f(ps, qr) = 2f(p, q) + 2f(r, s) studied by Chung, Kannappan, Ng and Sahoo in [3] (see also [16]). Finally, we determine the solutions of this equation on the free groups generated by one element, the cyclic groups of order m, the symmetric groups of order m, and the dihedral groups of order 2m for $m{\geq}2$.

IMMERSED BOUNDARY METHOD FOR COMPRESSIBLE VISCOUS FLOW AROUND MOVING BODIES (이동하는 물체 주위의 압축성 유동에 대한 가상경계법)

  • Cho, Yong;Chopra, Jogesh;Morris, Philip J.
    • Journal of computational fluids engineering
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.35-43
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    • 2008
  • A methodology for the simulation of compressible high Reynolds number flow over rigid and moving bodies on a structured Cartesian grid is described in this paper. The approach is based on a modified version of the Brinkman Penalization method. To avoid oscillations in the vicinity of the body and to simulate shcok-containing flows, a Weighted Essentially Non-Oscillatory scheme is used to discretize the spatial flux derivatives. For high Reynolds number viscous flow, two turbulence models of the two-equation Menter's SST URANS model and a two-equation Detached Eddy Simulation are implemented. Some simple flow examples are given to assess the accuracy of the technique. Finally, a moving grid capability is demonstrated.

IMMERSED BOUNDARY METHOD FOR COMPRESSIBLE VISCOUS FLOW AROUND MOVING BODIES (이동하는 물체 주위의 압축성 유동에 대한 가상경계법)

  • Cho, Yong;Chopra, Jogesh;Morris, Philip J.
    • 한국전산유체공학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2007.10a
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    • pp.200-208
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    • 2007
  • A methodology for the simulation of compressible high Reynolds number flow over rigid and moving bodies on a structured Cartesian grid is described in this paper. The approach is based on a modified version of the Brinkman Penalization method. To avoid oscillations in the vicinity of the body and to simulate shcok-containing flows, a Weighted Essentially Non-Oscillatory scheme is used to discretize the spatial flux derivatives. For high Reynolds number viscous flow, two turbulence models of the two-equation Menter's SST URANS model and a two-equation Detached Eddy Simulation are implemented. Some simple flow examples are given to assess the accuracy of the technique. Finally, a moving grid capability is demonstrated.

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MASS DISTRIBUTION IN THE CENTRAL FEW PARSECS OF THE MILKY WAY

  • Oh Seungkyung;Kim Sungsoo S.;Figer Donald F.;Morris Mark
    • Bulletin of the Korean Space Science Society
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    • 2004.10b
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    • pp.290-292
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    • 2004
  • Near-IR observations of the central few parsecs of our Galaxy from the HST/NICMOS have been analyzed to produce H, K photometry. We have cross-identified our photometry with the Keck high-resolution spectrometry of the central 0.5 pc of our galaxy to distinguish evolved late-type stars from early-type stars, and use late-type stars as tracer population. We perform several statistical tests to find the best fitting parameters of stellar density distribution and velocity dispersion models, then derive volume number densities and velocity dispersions. The volume number density distribution has power law index $1.55\~1.7$. We then derive the mass distribution in the Central region of our Galaxy using the Jeans equation.

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Gravitational Perturbation of Traversable Wormhole Spacetime and the Stability

  • Kang, YuRi;Kim, Sung-Won
    • Journal of the Korean Physical Society
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    • v.73 no.12
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    • pp.1800-1807
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    • 2018
  • In this paper, we study the gravitational perturbation of traversable wormhole spacetime, especially the Morris-Thorne wormhole spacetime, by using the linearized theory of gravity. We restrict our interest to the first order term and ignore the higher order terms. We assume that the perturbation is axisymmetric. We also assume that the time dependence follows the Fourier decomposition and the angular dependence is expressed in terms of the Legendre functions. As a result, we derive the gravitational perturbation equation of traversable wormhole in terms of a single linear second-order differential equation. As a consequence, we could analyze the unstability of the spacetime with the effective potentials. Furthermore, we consider the interaction between the external gravitational perturbation and the exotic matter, constituting traversable wormholes and its effect on the stability of traversable wormholes.

Repeatability and Appropriate Predicted Value of Portable Spirometry on Korean Adults (휴대용 폐기능 검사기의 재현성과 기대치에 관한 연구)

  • Choi, Jun-Yong;Jung, Hee-Jae;Lee, Kun-Young;Jeong, Seung-Yeon;Hwang, Joon-Ho;Rhee, Hyung-Koo;Jung, Sung-Ki
    • The Journal of Internal Korean Medicine
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.587-595
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    • 2005
  • Objectives : The object of this study was to evaluate repeatability of portable spirometry and to determine an appropriate equation for predicted value. Materials and Methods : The subjects were 76 men and 45 women recruited from among Kyunghee University oriental medical students. Portable spirometry was performed via the procedure recommended in ATS guidelines. Repeatability of spirometry was checked against ATS repeatability standards and NHLEP QC grade. Percentage of predicted value of non-smokers was calculated through a Caucasian population-based regression equation(by Morris et al.) and Korean population based regression equation(by Kim et al.). These were compared. Result : 91.7% of subjects matched repeatability standards of ATS and 95% of subjects got interpretable NHLEP QC grades of A, B, and C. Mean percentage of predicted value by Morris et al. were as follows: Mean of FVC% was 90.86, FEV1% was 96.66, FEV1/FVC% was 107.48. Mean percentage of predicted value by Kim et al. were as follows. Mean FVC% was 92.38, FEV1% was 89.77, FEV1/FVC% was 96.95. Conclusions : Results of this study show that more than 90% of subjects meet repeatability criteria. This supports a role for the portable spirometer as a primary oriental medical office tool. Further, results are a verify that they Korean population-based predicted value equation is a more appropriate standard than the Caucasian population-based one, but a still more accurate standard is needed for the Korean adult population.

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Selection of Reference Equations for Lung Volumes and Diffusing Capacity in Korea (우리나라 성인 폐용적 및 폐확산능 정상예측식의 선정)

  • Song, Eun Hee;Oh, Yeon Mok;Hong, Sang Bum;Shim, Tae Sun;Lim, Chae Man;Lee, Sang Do;Koh, Youn Suck;Kim, Woo Sung;Kim, Dong Soon;Kim, Won Dong;Kim, Tae Hyung
    • Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
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    • v.61 no.3
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    • pp.218-226
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    • 2006
  • Background: The lung volume and diffusing capacity are influenced by ethnicity. However, there are no equations for predicting the normal lung volume in the adult Korean population, and there is only one equation for diffusing capacity. The aim of this study is to select the most suitable reference equation for the Korean population. Method: 30 men and 33 women at Hanyang University Guri Hospital, and 27 men and 34 women at Asan Medical Center in healthy nonsmoking adults were enrolled in this study. The subject's age, gender, height, weight, lung volume by plethysmography, and diffusing capacity by a single breathing method were obtained. The most suitable equation with the lowest sum of residuals between the observed and predicted values for lung volume and diffusing capacity was selected. Result: At Hanyang University Guri Hospital, the equations with the lowest sum of residuals in the total lung capacity were ECSC's equation in males (sum of residual: 0.04 L) and Crapo/Morris's equation (-1.04) in women. At the Asan Medical Center, the equations with the lowest sum of residuals in the total lung capacity were Goldman/Becklake's equation in males (sum of residual: -2.35) and the ECSC's equation -4.49) in women. The equations with the lowest sum of residuals in the Diffusing capacity were Roca's equation in males (sum of residual: -13.66 ml/min/mmHg) and Park's in women (25.08) in Hanyang University Guri hospital and Park's equation in all cases in the Asan Medical Center (male: -1.65, female: -6.46). Conclusions: Until a reference equstion can be made for healthy Koreans by sampling, ECSC's equation can be used for estimating the lung volume and Park's can be used for estimating the diffusing capacity.

Retail Distribution Strategies for Train Tickets: The Extended UTAUT Model

  • PARK, Yoon-Joo;AHN, Sung-Sook
    • Journal of Distribution Science
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    • v.19 no.9
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    • pp.5-17
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    • 2021
  • Purpose: As mobile devices are commonly used and contact-free services are widespread due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the recent distribution environment, this study suggests retail strategies for consumers using high-speed railways. To this end, we analyzed how consumer perception on technologies necessary for use of mobile apps is related to the attitude that drives consumers to continue using the app services. Research design, data and methodology: Based on the extended unified theory of technology acceptance and use of technology model by Venkatesh, Morris, Davis and Davis (2003), we added variables proposed by existing theories that studied the technology acceptance model from multiple perspectives and empirically analyzed the relationship between user satisfaction and use intention with structural equation modeling. Results: As expected, factors necessary for the use of app services such as performance expectancy, social influence, price value, facilitating conditions, security, and aesthetics had positive effects on user satisfaction, whereas the effect of effort expectancy on user satisfaction was rejected. And user satisfaction was found to have a significant effect on intention to use. Conclusions: The results provide implications that strategic retail management of the above factors can motivate passengers to continuously use high-speed railways.