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Bryan Buchholz
Researcher at University of Massachusetts Lowell
Publications - 87
Citations - 6161
Bryan Buchholz is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Lowell. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 83 publications receiving 5524 citations. Previous affiliations of Bryan Buchholz include Marshall University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
ISB recommendation on definitions of joint coordinate systems of various joints for the reporting of human joint motion-Part II: shoulder, elbow, wrist and hand
Ge Wu,Frans C. T. van der Helm,H.E.J. Veeger,Mohsen Makhsous,Peter Van Roy,Carolyn Anglin,Jochem Nagels,Andrew R. Karduna,Kevin J. McQuade,Xuguang Wang,Frederick W. Werner,Bryan Buchholz +11 more
TL;DR: A definition of a joint coordinate system (JCS) for the shoulder, elbow, wrist, and hand is proposed and a standard for the local axis system in each articulating segment or bone is generated.
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PATH: a work sampling-based approach to ergonomic job analysis for construction and other non-repetitive work.
TL;DR: These results demonstrate how the PATH method can be used to identify specific construction operations and tasks that are ergonomically hazardous.
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Anthropometric data for describing the kinematics of the human hand
TL;DR: The major goal of this investigation was to collect statistically-based anthropometry describing the kinematics of the human hand and to model this anthropometry as a function of external hand measurements, so that it may be predicted noninvasively.
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A kinematic model of the human hand to evaluate its prehensile capabilities.
TL;DR: A kinematic model has been developed for simulation and prediction of the prehensile capabilities of the human hand that predicts the hand posture (joint angles) for power grasp of ellipsoidal objects by 'wrapping' the fingers around the object.
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Whole-body vibration and postural stress among operators of construction equipment: a literature review
TL;DR: In order to better understand whole-body vibration and postural stress among OEs, it is recommended that future studies are needed in evaluating these risk factorsamong OEs.