scholarly journals The Prediction of Passenger Riding Comfort From Acceleration Data

1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. C. Smith ◽  
D. Y. McGehee ◽  
A. J. Healey

Various methods for evaluating ride quality in automobiles are investigated by means of a field study involving two different automobiles, seventy-eight different passengers, and eighteen different raodway sections. Passenger rating panels were used to obtain subjective evaluation of the various rides, and measured vibration spectra were examined on the basis of various frequency weighting techniques to determine their ability to predict the subjective ratings. Included in the evaluation criteria considered are weighting functions derived from the ISO (International Standards Organization) Standard, the UTACV (Urban Tracked Air Cushion Vehicle) Specification, and the Absorbed Power method of Lee and Pradko. Excellent correlation was found to exist between the subjective ride ratings and simple root mean square acceleration measurements at either the vehicle floorboard or the passenger/seat interface. Equations are presented to predict the subjective ride rating from measured vibration spectra.

1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (4) ◽  
pp. 440-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig C. Smith

The International Standards Organization “Guide for the Evaluation of Human Exposure to Whole-Body Vibrations”, ISO 2631, is converted to a form usable for direct comparison with vibration data represented in power spectral density form. Comparisons are made between the ISO standard, the Urban Tracked Air Cushion Vehicle (UTACV) specification, and measured vibrations at the floorboard and seat of an automobile over smooth and rough roads. The data indicate that the ISO standard is less restrictive than the UTACV specification, and generally not restrictive enough to indicate the roughness of an automobile ride on a rough country road.


Author(s):  
Paul Green

An HFES Task Force is considering if, when, and which, HFES research publications should require the citation of relevant standards, policies, and practices to help translate research into practice. To support the Task Force activities, papers and reports are being written about how to find relevant standards produced by various organizations (e.g., the International Standards Organization, ISO) and the content of those standards. This paper describes the human-computer interaction standards being produced by ISO/IEC Joint Technical Committee 1 (Information Technology). Subcommittees 7 (Software and Systems Engineering) and 35 (User Interfaces), and Technical Committee 159, Subcommittee 4 (Ergonomics of Human-System Interaction), in particular, the contents of the ISO 9241 series and the ISO 2506x series. Also included are instructions on how to find standards using the ISO Browsing Tool and Technical Committee listings, and references to other materials on finding standards and standards-related teaching materials.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 371-379
Author(s):  
Seok-Hee Joo ◽  
Eun-Yeong Shin

Purpose: It was intended to measure the sound intensity of children's sound books and to compare them with the standards of Korea and the International Standards Organization (ISO).Methods: The loudness of 15 children’s sound books was measured at a distance of 25 cm (child’s arm length), and 2.5 cm length of external auditory canal. Measurements taken three times with each book were performed, and the overall sound intensity of the sound books and the sound intensity of each button were measured and compared.Results: Compared with the Korean standard, all the buttons of all books exceeded the standard for the sound volume of the children’s book measured at a distance of 2.5 cm. When comparing the maximum sound intensity measured at a distance of 25 cm with 85 LAmax, a total of 168 buttons of these, 25 (14.88%) were recorded as exceeding the maximum loudness. According to the standards of the ISO, all buttons in all books were below the standard 85 LAeq.Conclusion: Several children’s books are loud enough to cause noise-induced hearing loss, especially when they are placed close to the ear. Strict standards for sound children’s books are required, and it is important to put a warning on the cover of the book. It is expected that the sound intensity of the children’s sound book presented in this study can be referenced when referring to the loudness during hearing rehabilitation in children.


Solar Energy ◽  
2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daryl R. Myers ◽  
Keith Emery ◽  
C. Gueymard

In 1982, the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) adopted consensus standard direct-normal and global-tilted solar terrestrial spectra (ASTM E891/E892). These standard spectra were intended to evaluate photovoltaic (PV) device performance and other solar-related applications. The International Standards Organization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) adopted these spectra as spectral standards ISO 9845-1 and IEC 60904-3. Additional information and more accurately representative spectra are needed by today’s PV community. Modern terrestrial spectral radiation models, knowledge of atmospheric physics, and measured radiometric quantities are applied to develop new reference spectra for consideration by ASTM.


Author(s):  
Santhosh Menon ◽  
Jaspreet Singh Sethi

The study will focus on technological components of the Indian Aadhaar program which tries to give every resident of the country a digital ID. The paper provides the architectural and implementation features of the program. Aadhaar program is only 40% implemented to date as mandated by the Government of India. Aadhaar is mostly based on Free Open Source Software (FOSS) and its processes are International Standards Organization (ISO) compliant. The paper would do a critical analysis of the architectures of the ID programs.


2001 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 309-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadiá M Jones ◽  
M Gabriela Bernardo-Gil ◽  
M Graço Lourenco

Abstract Ultrasound and microwave techniques were used to extract tobacco alkaloids, and response surface methodology was used to optimize extraction conditions. Ultrasonic technique factors were temperature, 30–85°C; time, 3–45 min; solvent volume, 8–80 mL. Microwave extraction factors were pressure, 15–75 psi; time, 3–40 min; power, 30–90% of the maximum magnetron power of 650 W. Soxhlet and solvent AOAC-modified extraction methods were also applied after some improvements. Nicotine, nornicotine, anabasine, and anatabine were quantified by gas chromatography. A steam distillation International Standards Organization method for total alkaloid evaluation was used as reference. The results obtained by the different methods were compared using a least squares deviation test. The ultrasonic and the proposed modified-AOAC extraction method were the more convenient with regard to practicability and precision. The relative deviations (n = 5) were as follows: For the ultrasonic method in low-level alkaloid tobaccos, 0.7% nicotine and 1.4–14% minor alkaloids; in high-level alkaloid tobaccos, 2.4% nicotine and 4.5–5.1% minor alkaloids. For the modified AOAC method in low-level alkaloid tobaccos, 0.9% nicotine and 2.4–11.6% minor alkaloids; and in high-level alkaloid tobaccos, 1.7% nicotine and 2.0–2.4% minor alkaloids.


2012 ◽  
Vol 164 ◽  
pp. 272-275
Author(s):  
Min Yi Huang ◽  
Ren Yan Duan ◽  
Rui Juan Hao ◽  
Li Ping Ren

Utilizing international standards organization published the earthworm avoid behavioral responses to evaluate the quality of the soil experimental method standardization, we test the effect of six different concentrations of cadmium on the behavior of response of the earthworms (Eisenia fetida). After 24 hour and 48 hour respectively, the number of earthworms in the different quantity of the soil was counted. And at the same time, the earthworms were used to do a try-wrong learning behavior experiment, to research the relation between the earthworms treated with different concentrations of cadmium and memory time. The results showed that the earthworms like to stay in 50 mg/kg concentration in the soil.


2020 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Siti Zulaikha Binti Zulkifli ◽  
KyoungOk Kim ◽  
Masayuki Takatera

PurposeThis study aimed to clarify the criteria for subjective evaluation of the similarities and differences between virtual and actual pants and propose a quantitative evaluation method for those similarities and differences based on geometric features related to the evaluation.Design/methodology/approachUsing patterns, we made five pairs of actual pants for a dummy in five fabrics. We simulated virtual pants with a 3-D simulator. Sensory evaluation was conducted with images of the virtual and actual pants: 20 participants compared the images based on a questionnaire. For the structure of evaluation, the authors undertook analysis of variance and principal component analysis. The actual and virtual pants were geometrically compared using the 3-D scanned data. To investigate the relationship between quantitative and sensory evaluation, the authors calculated the correlation coefficients.FindingsThe authors found that subjects perceived the differences between actual and simulated pants. When comparing the virtual and actual pants, the criteria for the differences were the silhouette from the front view, hem width, waist and wrinkles. Using differences in the hem width, it would be possible to evaluate the differences between actual and simulated pants. Roughness and smoothness of the silhouette also affected evaluation.Originality/valueThe authors clarified the evaluation criteria for the similarities and differences between virtual and actual pants. The authors proposed a quantitative evaluation method for the similarities and differences between virtual and actual garment based on our criteria. This study will be of benefit to 3-D simulator users and developers.


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