Thursday, November 10, 2005

Annals of Computer Generated Bibliography

So the Dodger clicked the related articles button on this ergonomics low back injury paper. Look what came up: schizophrenia and atopy. Whatever artificial logic medline followed, it wasn't intelligence.

Luckily, BrooklynDodger wasn't beefing up ProCite, or the Dodger might have dumped these into a bibliography.

By the way, it's worth reading the Lavender paper. Various back risk factor methods don't correlate well. In the Dodger's opinion, the reason is that these measures were developed in conjunction with very short retrospective injury windows, so they all allow too much risk. Second, these measures don't account for the back injury risk associated with prolonged standing.



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Starting point, ergonomics:

Lavender SA. Oleske DM. Nicholson L. Andersson GB. Hahn J.
Comparison of five methods used to determine low back disorder risk in a manufacturing environment. [Journal Article]

Spine. 24(14):1441-8, 1999 Jul 15.
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find similar to Comparison of five methods used to determine low back disorder risk in a manufacturing environment.
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1.
Keshavan MS. Stanley JA. Montrose DM. Minshew NJ. Pettegrew JW. Prefrontal membrane phospholipid metabolism of child and adolescent offspring at risk for schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder: an in vivo 31P MRS study. [Journal Article] Molecular Psychiatry. 8(3):316-23, 251, 2003 Mar. UI: 12660804

2.
Filipiak B. Heinrich J. Schafer T. Ring J. Wichmann HE. Farming, rural lifestyle and atopy in adults from southern Germany--results from the MONICA/KORA study Augsburg. [Journal Article] Clinical & Experimental Allergy. 31(12):1829-38, 2001 Dec. UI: 11737033


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