Academic literature on the topic 'Mirror-Box'

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Journal articles on the topic "Mirror-Box"

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Thompson, Gene, and Don Mathieson. "The mirror box." Physics Teacher 39, no. 8 (November 2001): 508–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.1424606.

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Raina, Arjun. "The ‘Kathakali Mirror Box’." Theatre, Dance and Performance Training 8, no. 1 (January 2, 2017): 61–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19443927.2016.1236513.

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McGrogan, Douglas G., and David L. G. Noakes. "Mirror-Box for Photographing Small Fishes." Copeia 1990, no. 4 (December 31, 1990): 1174. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1446510.

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Lamont, Kelly, May Chin, and Mikhail Kogan. "Mirror Box Therapy – Seeing is Believing." EXPLORE 7, no. 6 (November 2011): 369–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.explore.2011.08.002.

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Makin, Tamar R. "Phantom limb pain: thinking outside the (mirror) box." Brain 144, no. 7 (March 31, 2021): 1929–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab139.

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Despite our best efforts over the past century, our mechanistic understanding of phantom limb pain and our ability to treat it have remained limited. Tamar Makin invites readers to think more critically about some of the most popular approaches to understanding and treating this condition.
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Karmarkar, A., and I. Lieberman. "Mirror box therapy for complex regional pain syndrome." Anaesthesia 61, no. 4 (April 2006): 412–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.2006.04605.x.

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陈, 鸿. "Improved Box Cox Transform Based on Horizontal Mirror Algorithm." Statistics and Application 10, no. 02 (2021): 278–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/sa.2021.102027.

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Romano, Daniele, Gabriella Bottini, and Angelo Maravita. "Perceptual effects of the mirror box training in normal subjects." Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience 31, no. 4 (2013): 373–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/rnn-120273.

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Leach, William T., and Jared Medina. "Understanding components of embodiment: Evidence from the mirror box illusion." Consciousness and Cognition 103 (August 2022): 103373. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2022.103373.

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Takasugi, Jun, Daisuke Matsuzawa, Takashi Murayama, Ken Nakazawa, Kenji Numata, and Eiji Shimizu. "Referred sensations induced by a mirror box in healthy subjects." Psychological Research 75, no. 1 (May 28, 2010): 54–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00426-010-0287-2.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Mirror-Box"

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RUSSO, CRISTINA. "Viewing own movements through the mirror: the effects of sensorimotor conflict on the motor system." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10281/158173.

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La presente tesi si compone di tre studi che esplorano l'impatto dell’incongruenza tra informazioni sensoriali e motorie (i.e., conflitto sensorimotorio) fornite dal Mirror Visual Feedback (MVF), quando cioè vengono eseguiti movimenti osservando il riflesso di uno specchio posto perpendicolarmente alla linea mediana del corpo. Globalmente, i risultati convergono nel mostrare l'importanza del conflitto sensorimotorio nell’influenzare l'impatto del MVF a livello di esperienze illusorie, eccitabilità corticale e recupero motorio post-ictale. Il primo studio offre una panoramica delle sensazioni illusorie (la cosiddetta illusione dello specchio) esperita da pazienti cerebrolesi con deficit motori. I risultati evidenziano che i pazienti con ictus mostrano un’illusione dello specchio affidabile, paragonabile a quella esperita dai partecipanti neurologicamente indenni, dimostrando la pervasività degli effetti del MVF. Tuttavia, diversi fattori influenzano la suscettibilità dei pazienti con ictus a tale illusione. In primo luogo, una residua funzionalità motoria è necessaria per generare l'illusione, mentre una percezione tattile inaffidabile può addirittura facilitarla. In secondo luogo, danni cerebrali a carico di aree motorie di alto e basso livello aumentano l’illusione, mentre lesioni parietali la influenzano in modo differenziale, inibendo o facilitando l'elaborazione di informazioni multisensoriali legate al sé e al corpo. Il secondo studio, in soggetti sani, ha sperimentalmente esacerbato il grado di incongruenza visuo-motoria per valutarne l'effetto modulatorio sull’eccitabilità corticale, attraverso la Stimolazione Magnetica Transcranica. I risultati mostrano che la corteccia motoria primaria (M1) ipsilaterale alla mano in movimento è differenzialmente influenzata dalla velocità del movimento osservato: a maggiore discrepanza con i movimenti eseguiti, corrisponde maggiore modulazione. In particolare, il maggior effetto modulatorio viene registrato durante l'osservazione di un movimento più lento. Questo risultato indica che l'entità della discrepanza tra movimento eseguito (output motorio) e movimento osservato (input visivo) può essere utilizzata per regolare l'attività del sistema motorio dell'osservatore. Sulla base di tali elementi, il terzo studio sviluppa una nuova strategia per la riabilitazione emiparesi post-ictus che sfrutta un MVF invertito: in contrasto con la Mirror Box Therapy tradizionale, che richiede di guardare nello specchio i movimenti dell’arto intatto, i pazienti sono invitati ad osservare il riflesso dell'arto paretico (i.e., Reversed Mirror Box Therapy - REMIT). I risultati mostrano che la REMIT ha effetti comparabili alla versione standard, in quanto entrambi portano a miglioramenti motori in pazienti con ictus, in fase cronica della malattia. Queste evidenze supportano l'ipotesi che il fattore critico alla base dell’efficacia clinica del MVF è rappresentato dal conflitto sensorimotorio, piuttosto che dalla semplice osservazione o immaginazione motoria, o dalla rimozione della componente appresa della paralisi. In conclusione, questa serie di esperimenti documenta il ruolo chiave del duplice conflitto insito in condizioni MVF: la mancata corrispondenza sensorimotoria e le informazioni sensoriali contrastanti interagiscono per generare le esperienze illusorie, e amplificano gli effetti comportamentali, neurali e clinici.
The present dissertation comprises three studies exploring the impact of the incongruence between sensory and motor information (i.e. sensorimotor conflict) provided by the Mirror Visual Feedback (MVF), a manipulation during which subjects are required to perform movements while observing their reflection through a mirror placed perpendicular to their body midline. Together, results converge in showing the importance of sensorimotor conflicts for influencing the impact of the MVF at the level of illusory experiences, cortical excitability and post-stroke motor recovery. The first study offers an overview of the illusory sensation (the so-called Mirror Illusion) brought about by the MVF in stroke patients with motor deficit (upper-limb hemiparesis). Results evidence that stroke patients show a reliable Mirror Illusion, similar to that experienced by neurologically healthy participants, demonstrating the pervasiveness of the MVF effects. However, different factors impact the susceptibility of stroke patients to the Mirror Illusion. First, residual motor functions are necessary to generate the illusion, while unreliable tactile sensation may even increase it. Second, cortical damages to low- and high-level motor areas are associated to a larger illusory effect, while parietal lesions differentially affect the Mirror Illusion, likely disrupting or facilitating multisensory, body- and self-related, processing. The second study, in healthy participants, aims at experimentally exaggerating the degree of visuo-motor incongruence to assess its modulatory effect on motor cortex excitability, measured through Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation. Results show that the primary motor cortex (M1) ipsilateral to the moving hand is differentially influenced by the speed of the observed movement: the greater the mismatch with the performed movements, the higher the increase of M1 excitability. Specifically, the utmost modulatory effect is registered during the observation of a slower pace. This result indicates that the magnitude of the mismatch between performed (motor output) and observed (visual input) movement can be used to adjust the activity of the observer’s motor system. Based on such evidence, the third study develops a novel strategy to rehabilitate post-stroke hemiparesis, which takes advantage of a reversed MVF: at variance with standard Mirror Box Therapy, that requires to watch the mirror reflection of the intact limb’s movements, patients are asked to observe the reflection of the paretic limb (here called Reversed Mirror Therapy - REMIT). Results show that the REMIT has comparable effects of the standard version, as both lead to motor improvements in stroke patients in a chronic stage of illness. This evidence supports the hypothesis that the critical factor at the basis of the clinical efficacy of the MVF is represented by the sensorimotor conflict, rather by the mere motor observation or imagery, or the removal of a learned component of hemiparesis. In conclusion, this set of experiments documents the key role of a two-fold conflict inherent in MVF conditions: the sensorimotor mismatch and incongruent multisensory inputs interact to generate illusory experiences boosting behavioral, neural and clinical effects.
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ROSSETTI, ILEANA. "Embodying a moving alien hand. An investigation of visuomotor integration processes underlying embodiment in healthy controls and in patients with diagnosis of schizophrenia." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10281/277381.

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Il seguente lavoro di tesi indaga il senso di ownership e di agency in schizofrenia come modalità per approfondire i meccanismi di consapevolezza del sé in questi pazienti. Basandoci su studi precedenti che evidenziano disturbi del senso di agency e deficit di integrazione sensorimotoria, abbiamo condotto tre studi finalizzati ad esplorare il riconoscimento del proprio corpo servendoci di un’illusione corporea visuo-motoria, i.e., la Mirror Box illusion. Il paradigma è utile al fine di elicitare sensazioni di agency e ownership durante l’incorporazione illusoria di una mano aliena in movimento. Nell’Esperimento 1 è stato investigato l’effetto della congruenza temporale tra il feedback visivo (la mano di uno sperimentatore riflessa nello specchio) e il feedback propriocettivo (la mano del partecipante) sulle misure esplicite ed implicite dell’illusione (il questionario di embodiment e il compito di bisezione del braccio). I partecipanti sani presentano una modulazione significativa del senso di ownership, del senso di agency e dalla stima di bisezione in accordo col grado di congruenza visuo-motoria esperita durante l’illusione. Senso di agency e stima di bisezione non modulano invece nei pazienti. Abbiamo ipotizzato che due meccanismi potrebbero spiegare i risultati ottenuti nel gruppo di pazienti: una finestra di integrazione temporale visuo-propriocettiva ampia e/o un deficit a livello di copia efferente del comando motorio. Il secondo esperimento è stato pianificato al fine di dissociare il contributo relativo di ciascuno dei due meccanismi ipotizzati. Nell’Esperimento 2 i partecipanti dovevano eseguire movimenti attivi vs. passivi mentre un ritardo gradualmente maggiore veniva inserito tra l’input visivo e l’input propriocettivo tramite un’apposita apparecchiatura. Dalle analisi preliminari emerge un’alterata modulazione del senso di ownership nei pazienti, la quale sembra essere maggiormente dovuta ad un’aumentata finestra di integrazione sensoriale. Questo risultato potrebbe indicare che un’alterazione a livello di integrazione delle afferenze sensoriali potrebbe essere maggiormente implicata nell’alterazione del senso di ownership. Tale conclusione è tuttavia da considerarsi provvisoria data la scarsa numerosità del gruppo di pazienti. In ultimo, l’Esperimento 3 costituisce un’analisi esplorativa dei confini spaziali dell’illusione al fine di testare l’ipotesi relativa all’estrema malleabilità della rappresentazione corporea in schizofrenia. Basandosi su quest’ipotesi, è possibile che i pazienti siano maggiormente predisposti ad incorporare una mano aliena posizionata ad una distanza anatomicamente implausibile dal loro corpo. Abbiamo inizialmente condotto uno studio per verificare in che misura un’elevata discrepanza visuo-propriocettiva sia in grado di inibire il senso di ownership per la mano aliena in un gruppo di partecipanti sani. Utilizzando la stessa apparecchiatura dello studio precedente abbiamo ottenuto risultati solo parzialmente in accordo con l’ipotesi poichè il senso di ownership diminuisce a livello esplicito, ma non a livello implicito. Altro lavoro di ricerca basato su altre manipolazioni sperimentali potrebbe consentire di capire se i risultati ottenuti siano dovuti al compito utilizzato oppure ad una maggior sensibilità della valutazione soggettiva del senso di ownership a questo tipo di manipolazioni. In conclusione, il presente lavoro mostra che i deficit di integrazione visuo-motoria in schizofrenia non impattano solo sul senso di agency, ma anche sul riconoscimento del proprio corpo. Questi risultati espandono i risultati precedentemente osservati negli studi di Rubber Hand illusion, portando evidenza empirica rispetto al fatto che i disturbi di percezione corporea in schizofrenia potrebbero essere dipendenti da processi di integrazione sensorimotoria deficitari.
The present thesis addresses the build-up of the senses of agency and ownership in schizophrenia, as a clue to understand the mechanisms of self-awareness in these patients. Based on previous literature highlighting disturbances of sense of agency and impairments in sensorimotor integration, we carried out a series of three studies aimed to explore self-body recognition by capitalizing on a visuomotor body illusion, i.e. the mirror box illusion. This paradigm was useful in order to elicit overt sensations of agency and ownership under condition of illusorily embodiment of a moving alien hand. In Experiment 1, the effect of temporal congruency between visual (experimenter’s hand reflected in the mirror) and the proprioceptive (participant’s hand) input on subjective and objective measures (namely, embodiment questionnaire and forearm bisection task) of the illusion was addressed in 36 healthy participants and 29 patients affected by schizophrenia. In healthy participants, sense of agency, sense of ownership and bisection performance modulate in accordance to the extent of visuo-proprioceptive synchrony. By contrast, the sense of agency and bisection performance did not significantly vary across conditions in patients. Such results indicate that impaired sensorimotor processes, as testified by previous work on self-attribution task, may explain the altered modulation of embodiment in the schizophrenia group. We hypothesized that two sensorimotor mechanisms might be implicated, namely a widened visuo-proprioceptive TBW and a disruption of efference-related signals. In order to help disentangling the role of these two mechanisms, the second experiment was designed. In Experiment 2, participants were asked to perform active vs. passive movements, while increasing time-lags between the visual and the proprioceptive input were introduced using a custom-made mirror box setting. A sample of 32 healthy controls and 18 patients with schizophrenia was recruited. Preliminary analyses show an altered modulation of the illusorily sense of ownership in patients, which is mostly accounted for by an enlarged visuo-proprioceptive temporal binding window. This result might indicate that an abnormal integration of afferent signals is strongly involved in the disruption of self-body ownership in schizophrenia. This conclusion, however, warrants caution given the small size of the patients group. Finally, Experiment 3 represents an exploratory study to test the hypothesis of abnormal malleability of body representation in schizophrenia derived from the literature on rubber hand illusion in schizophrenia. Based on this assumption, it could be expected that patients are abnormally prone to embody an alien hand positioned at an anatomically implausible distance from the body. In order to address this issue, we first sought to verify to what extent high spatial visuo-proprioceptive discrepancy can inhibit the sense of ownership for a moving alien hand in healthy people. Using the same mirror box setting previously mentioned, we obtained results that are only partially in agreement with the hypothesis, since illusory ownership deems to decreases only at a subjective, but not objective level. Further work, using a different experimental manipulation, might better address whether these results may be due to the task used or to the higher sensitivity of subjective assessment of body ownership to this kind of manipulation. In conclusion, the present work demonstrates that putatively impaired visuo-motor integration processes in schizophrenia do not only impact on the sense of agency, but also on the recognition of one’s own body. These findings expand previous work based on the rubber hand illusion, providing empirical evidence of the fact that disturbances of body perception in schizophrenia can be dependent on defective sensorimotor processes for action.
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Feltham, Maxwell George. "The 'mirror box' illusion : manipulation of visual information during bimanual coordination in children with and without spastic hemiparetic cerebral palsy." Thesis, Manchester Metropolitan University, 2009. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.496173.

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The object of this thesis was to improve our understanding of bimanual coordination and neuromuscular activation in children with and without spastic hemiparetic cerebral palsy (SHCP) and to gain insight into the contribution of visual information towards interlimb coupling. The availability of visual information was manipulated by placing a glass screen, opaque screen or a mirror ('mirror box') between the arms. Using this arrangement, visual information was available from both arms (glass condition), from one arm only (opaque screen condition), or from one arm and its mirror reflection ('mirror (box) condition) that was superimposed on the arm behind mirror. When both arms were moved simultaneously in the latter condition, children with a strong asymmetry between body-sides as a result of SHCP saw a visual perception of a zero lag, symmetric movement between the two less impaired arms. Without visual manipulation it was found that children with SHCP exhibited a similar mean coordination pattern compared to typically developing (TD) children, but had greater movement variability between the arms.
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Trnková, Barbora. "Rozklad černé, technika nedůsledného překládání Světla." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta výtvarných umění, 2012. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-232329.

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Im interested in the topic of praying machine, because I want to analyze aspects of photography and its functions. It's known, that the reality is manipulated by photography. Bud we can also say, that the relationship between reality and photography is neutral in fact, that the manipulation is made by our interpretation of photography. The change of the reality can be realized just in the dialog between photography and reality. Can it be, that the mechanization change into the will? Does it prays praying mill or the buddhistic monk, who rotates the mill? When he believes into it, is it enough? Or is it enough if believes who watch the monk with his mill? ... The computers from he place A are "praying" the prayers from the place B. With Tomáš Javůrek we collaborated with Vladimír Veselý and Radek Lát to create the Game for re-articulation our reality on the base of the revision of our faith.
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Robichaux, Christopher B. "Vision and touch testing the Ramachandran mirror box /." 2009. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:1470363.

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Thompson, Anna F. B. "Pragmatism and pain : the melioristic rhetoric of mirror box therapy." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1957/29786.

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The phenomenon of phantom limb pain has been well documented for centuries, but little clinical work has been done to alleviate it. Physician and neuroscientist Vilayanur S. Ramachandran began researching this condition nearly two decades ago, and has discovered a promising alternative treatment: mirror-box therapy. This therapy is not yet widely accepted by the scientific and medical communities because there is insufficient data explaining how and why it works. This study analyzes Ramachandran's rhetoric promoting the therapy. Scott Stroud's melioristic method is applied to Ramachandran's scientific and popular publications. The purpose is to determine whether or not his rhetoric is melioristic in that it promotes positive, and thus, pragmatic changes. This thesis indicates the important insights pragmatism can yield when utilized in acts of rhetorical criticism.
Graduation date: 2012
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Sharma, Aarti. "Effects of Mirror-Box Therapy on Neuroplasticity and Functional Outcome in Hemiparetic Upper Limb Post Stroke: A Crossover Randomised Controlled Feasibility Study." Thesis, 2019. https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/706862/1/Sharma_2019.pdf.

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Objective: Mirror-Box therapy (MBT) has immerged as an innovative, economical, task specific rehabilitation technique. However, little is known regarding its underlying mechanism. The objective of this work was to monitor the neuroplastic and functional effect of standard therapy (ST) and MBT as an adjuvant to ST in upper limb acute stroke using resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI). Methods: 29 patients were screened. 7 patients were randomised to either ST (n=3) or MBT combined with ST (n=4). After 3 weeks patients crossed over into the other study arm for a further 3 weeks. Functional connectivity (FC) using rs-fMRI was utilised as the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcome measures were the Action-Research-Arm-Test(ARAT), Fugl Meyer Test(FMT), Barthel Index(BI), Pinch and Grip strength. Outcome measures were collected at baseline, 3 and 6 weeks. Results: At 3 weeks there was increased FC in the motor, anterior salience and left executive control network in the MBG and significant improvement in ARAT, FMT (motor) and BI (80% CI). There was no change in FC in the ST group. Mirror-Box FC increased linearly with pinch strength. FC gained during MBT was not lost after ST. After crossover, at 6 weeks, no statistical differences were observed compared to 3 weeks. FC and motor function gained during MBT was not lost after ST when compared to baseline. Conclusion: This is the first study using rs-fMRI to understand the underlying mechanism of MBT in stroke rehabilitation. In our patients, neuroplasticity could be augmented using MBT. Our findings of better functional outcomes and increased FC in patients that received MBT raises the question if rehabilitation therapies delivered today need to be adapted.
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Books on the topic "Mirror-Box"

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Amadeus, Mozart Wolfgang. The jewel box: Or, A mirror remade : an opera in two acts. London: Chatto & Windus, 1991.

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1707-1793, Goldoni Carlo, and Griffiths, Paul, 1947 Nov. 24-, eds. The jewel box, or, A mirror remade: An opera in two acts : including songs from the favourite operas of Lo sposo deluso ... [et al.]. London: Chatto & Windus, 1991.

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Jr, Lance G. Powell. Mirror Box. Draft2Digital, 2020.

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Melser, June. The mirror (The story box). The Wright Group, 1998.

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Author, No. My Toy Box Mirror Book. Brimax, 2005.

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Kinkade, Thomas. Foxglove Cottage Musical Jewelry Box W/Beveled Mirror. Lightpost Publishing (Thomas Kinkade), 2000.

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In the Mirror (The Story Box, Set A). The Wright Group, 1990.

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Cowley, Joy. In the Mirror (The Story Box, Level 1, Set A). The Wright Group, 1998.

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Scott, Laura, Rachel Dylan, and Heather Woodhaven. Harlequin Love Inspired Suspense April 2016 - Box Set 2 Of 2: Mirror Image Code of Silence Picture Perfect Murder. Harlequin Enterprises, Limited, 2016.

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Lin, Hung-yao. The Illustrated Sutra of the One Hundred Parables (Vol. 1), Mirror in the Treasure Box, Ah Fan and the Golden Weasel. Foguang Cultural Enterprise Co., Ltd., 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Mirror-Box"

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Syrov, Nikolay, Anatoly Vasilyev, and Alexander Kaplan. "Sensorimotor EEG Rhythms During Action Observation and Passive Mirror-Box Illusion." In Communications in Computer and Information Science, 101–6. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-90179-0_14.

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Bouju, Emmanuel. "A Nest in the Air." In Being Contemporary, translated by Jane Kuntz, 349–61. Liverpool University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781781382639.003.0022.

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‘A Nest in the Air: Phantom Pain and Contemporary Narrative’, written by Emmanuel Bouju, is the first in the ‘Memory: Past and Future’ section, and provides a study on the intersection of new narrative and contemporary medical theories. Bouju’s essay posits contemporary European novels about loss and trauma as textual iterations of the ‘mirror-box’— a contraption designed by neuroscience researchers in order to permit amputees to visualize their missing limb through specular inversion, thus attenuating pain by imaginary muscular exercise of the phantom limb. Similarly, for Bouju, the ‘mirror-box of fiction’ allows for a certain form of ‘resolution, through make-believe, of the intractable problem of representation.’
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Yiu-Wai, Chu. "Underneath the Shock Waves: The (Un)told Stories of Herman Yau." In Main Melody Films, 163–88. Edinburgh University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474493864.003.0007.

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A director who remains central to the dwindling film industry in Hong Kong, Herman Yau is one of the most efficient, versatile and productive directors in Hong Kong. He has been considered a B-movie expert who has directed some cult horror classics, but more recently, his high-concept crime thrillers amassed huge box-office totals, not only in Hong Kong but also in mainland China. His extraordinary ability to handle different themes, genres and budgets has made him stand out amongst his contemporaries. Moreover, his The Woman Knight of Mirror Lake, a tribute to the Xin Hai Revolution, is a forerunner of main melody projects of Hong Kong directors. This chapter uses Yau to throw light on a flexible model of Hong Kong filmmaking, which has not been widely recognised and awarded.
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Hendley, Kathryn. "The View from the Trenches of the Justice-of-the-Peace Courts." In Everyday Law in Russia. Cornell University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501705243.003.0006.

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This chapter examines how litigants experience Russia's justice-of-the-peace courts (JP courts). The views of judges are unlikely to mirror those of litigants. For judges, the judicial process represents routine behavior, whereas for most litigants, it opens a Pandora's box of formal rules and informal norms that are unfamiliar and mysterious. This is particularly true for the JP courts, which handle the simplest cases. The chapter first provides an overview of access to justice in Russia before turning to legal literacy, and especially how Russians negotiate the JP courts without a lawyer. It then considers the availability and use of legal expertise by Russians, along with litigants' participation in judicial hearings as performance and their satisfaction with the JP courts. It also describes the image of JP courts and suggests that litigants' willingness to turn to the courts provides a window into the demand for law and, more generally, Russian legal culture.
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Giles, Melanie. "Reconstructing Death: The Chariot Burials of Iron Age East Yorkshire." In Archaeologists and the Dead. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198753537.003.0028.

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Visitors to the Hull and East Riding Museum used to reach the climax of the Iron Age exhibition, Celtic World, by coming face-to-face with the extraordinary funerary offerings from three chariot burials at Wetwang Slack (Dent 1985). Now removed for urgent conservation, the iron swords from two male burials, their scabbards decorated with intricate, incised Celtic art, and the corroded iron mirror and sealed bronze container from the female burial, were displayed in Perspex cases. Beads of red glass ‘enamel’ adorned both swords and box, and a slender iron pin shone with a thin strip of glowing gold, entwined around a coral bead. These artefacts are marvellous testimonies to Iron Age craft skill, speaking of the repertoire of decorated objects through which power amongst these communities was underpinned and reproduced (Giles 2008). Behind these cases, setting the scene for these personal possessions or funerary gifts, is an oversized image—now the focus of that section of the museum: a reproduction of Peter Connolly’s impressive and moving reconstruction of a chariot burial (Fig. 19.1), loosely modelled on the Kirkburn K5 inhumation (see Stead 1991) and painted in the late 1980s. The image shows a tableau of mourners surrounding a grave, in which has been interred the body of an adult male (Fig. 19.1). He is lying over the wheels of a dismantled chariot, with a shield placed over his chest, and forequarters of pig lain on top. The box of the chariot (still attached to the pole shaft) is being lowered over the body like a coffin, before the grave is back-filled. The participants in this ceremony are predominantly male, with one woman at the edge in an apparent state of grief: two others are in the background, one keeping a pair of children at a distance from the proceedings. Two ponies are being led away from the scene, tossing their heads as if perturbed by the event. Such images have a powerful, instantaneous impact: ‘act[ing] at a distance, across the gallery, in a way a block of text cannot’ (James 1999a: 121).
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Conference papers on the topic "Mirror-Box"

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Blanco, Daniel R., Clinton C. Janes, John W. Montgomery, David B. Ouellette, and Frank H. Sharp. "The Multiple Mirror Telescope (MMT) Top Box." In 1986 Astronomy Conferences, edited by Lawrence D. Barr. SPIE, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.963507.

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Robertson, Craig, Liam Vink, Holger Regenbrecht, Christof Lutteroth, and Burkhard C. Wunsche. "Mixed reality Kinect Mirror box for stroke rehabilitation." In 2013 28th International Conference of Image and Vision Computing New Zealand (IVCNZ). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ivcnz.2013.6727021.

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Fujimura, Makoto, Shuhei Sato, Toshio Higashi, and Kiyoshi Oguri. "Study of mirror box therapy support system by leap motion." In 2015 IEEE International Conference on Consumer Electronics - Taiwan (ICCE-TW). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icce-tw.2015.7216982.

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Jeong, Jin-seong, Dong-Hwan Kim, Hwan-ho Maeng, Hyoung-uk Jang, Seung-Hyun Kim, and Tae-sik Myung. "Design of all-round direction mirror for the one channel black box." In Optical Modeling and Performance Predictions XI, edited by Mark A. Kahan. SPIE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2568387.

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Ono, Yumie, Takanori Tominaga, and Takaho Murata. "Digital mirror box: An interactive hand-motor BMI rehabilitation tool for stroke patients." In 2016 Asia-Pacific Signal and Information Processing Association Annual Summit and Conference (APSIPA). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/apsipa.2016.7820761.

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Wechsler, Felix, Rainer Heintzmann, and Ivo Ihrke. "Kaleidomicroscope-A Kaleidoscopic Multiview Microscope." In Computational Optical Sensing and Imaging. Washington, D.C.: Optica Publishing Group, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/cosi.2022.ctu4f.5.

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We introduce the Kaleidomicroscope-a kaleidoscopic multview microscope. A mirror box in front of the objective allows to capture different 3D views of a sample. A 3D deconvolution is demonstrated in simulations and experiments.
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Czechowicz, Alexander, Fabian Hoffmann, Sven Langbein, Peter Dültgen, and Romeo Wieczorek. "On the Development of an SMA Based Rear Mirror Folding Actuator." In ASME 2016 Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/smasis2016-9119.

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Nowadays electric motors are used for various applications in the automotive industry which affects the automobiles’ mass significantly. Small and medium sized electromotors are mainly used for comfort applications like locking systems or mirror folding drives. On the other hand, electromotor drives use often a reduction of a high speed rotation to a slow and powerful movement by the usage of gears. Due to the multistage gear ratio principle, such drives emit a noise level up which can be an inferiority attribute of an automotive system. Nevertheless, comfort applications are mainly driven by electromotor actuators in automobiles. Figure 1 shows a cut through a schematic side mirror of a car with two major electromotor drives comparable to the state of the art. The motor for mirror folding consists mainly of the complex gear box which has to fulfill a mirror movement of more than 65° in less than 5 seconds. To move the mirror with the motor has to have enough mechanical power to overcome this force and to move the mirror with a torque of more than 5 Nm.
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Basso, Stefano, and Bianca Salmaso. "Thermal simulations for characterization of ATHENA mirror modules with a radiating box in the BEaTriX facility." In Optics for EUV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Astronomy IX, edited by Giovanni Pareschi and Stephen L. O'Dell. SPIE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2530622.

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Henriksen, Bartal, Ronni Nedergaard Nielsen, Martin Kraus, and Bo Geng. "Comparison of Movements in a Virtual Reality Mirror Box Therapy for Treatment of Lower Limb Phantom Pain." In International Conference on Computer Graphics Theory and Applications. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0006537801670174.

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van Gerwen, M. A. A. M., and F. L. B. Meijboom. "62. The black box of rodents perceived as pests: on inconsistencies, lack of knowledge and a moral mirror." In 14th Congress of the European Society for Agricultural and Food Ethics. The Netherlands: Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_62.

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