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Dive into the research topics where Brian Niven is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian Niven.


Annals of Tourism Research | 1994

Measuring tourists' destination perceptions.

Angie Driscoll; Rob Lawson; Brian Niven

Abstract This article describes an exploratory study that tests the consistency of two response formats. They are both originally based on the semantic differential scale and have been widely used in the tourism literature to generate measures of perceptions regarding destinations. The results indicate that while the two response formats are reliable, there is evidence to suggest that they are not equivalent. This brings into question the comparability of research findings utilizing different data collection forms and indicates a need for more fundamental work on validity and measurement in tourism research.


Ergonomics | 2005

A light-weight cooling vest enhances performance of athletes in the heat

J Webster; Ej Holland; G Sleivert; Raechel M. Laing; Brian Niven

During the 1990s, emphasis on the health and safety of people who exercise in hot, humid conditions increased and many organizations became aware of the need for protection against heat-related disorders. A practical, pre-cooling strategy applicable to several sporting codes, which is low cost, easy to use, light-weight and which enhances cooling of the human body prior to and following exercise, was developed and tested. Eight males and eight females participated in a maximal oxygen consumption ([Vdot]O2max) test and four trials: a control (without cooling) and wearing each of three different cooling vests (A, B, C). Vests were worn during the rest, stretch, warm-up (50% [Vdot]O2max) and recovery stages of the protocol, but not during the 30 min run (70% [Vdot]O2max). Core and skin temperatures during exercise were reduced (by approximately 0.5°C, rectal; 0.1 – 1.4°C, abdominal skin temperature) and sweat rates were lower (by approximately 10 – 23%). Endurance times for running at 95% of [Vdot]O2max were increased by up to 49 s. Perceptions of the thermal state and skin wetness showed changes to greater levels of satisfaction. Physiological and sensory responses were related to design features of the vests.


Journal of Liquid Chromatography & Related Technologies | 1981

Analysis of Group Retention Contributions for Peptides Separated by Reversed Phase High Performance Liquid Chromatography

Suew-Jane Su; Boris Grego; Brian Niven; Milton T.W. Hearn

Abstract Within the framework provided by solvophobic theory, selectivities for unprotected peptides separated on fully porous, microparticulate, chemically bonded alkylsilicas can be ascribed to differences between the effective hydrophobic contact areas of the solutes. Furthermore, this theoretical treatment predicts that retention behaviour differences can be evaluated from topological parameters which accomodate the influence of amino acid side chain and end group contributions in the retention process. With data obtained for 57 peptides, including a variety of peptide hormones, eluted under the same conditions from a μBondapak C18 column, these predictions have been rigorously tested using two methods of numerical analysis. The results provide further evidence that the hydrophobic group retention contributions of the amino acid residues in small peptides have an essentially additive effect on peptide retention with alkylsilicas. Divergences in retention behaviour are interpreted in terms of specific ...


Ergonomics | 1999

Development of sizing systems for protective clothing for the adult male

Raechel M. Laing; Elizabeth J. Holland; Cheryl A. Wilson; Brian Niven

The aim of the study was to obtain comprehensive anthropometric data from which to develop a sizing system appropriate for inclusion in specifications for protective clothing; and for purchases of other selected equipment. Fifty-five body dimensions on a male sample of the New Zealand Fire Services (n = 691, approximately 7% of employees) were obtained by direct measurement. Descriptive statistics and selected percentiles (5th, 50th, 95th) are given. The body dimensions accounting for most of the variance in the data were established by factor analysis and are reported here. Size groups for various body sections based on the relevant measurements of that section were established by cluster analysis around a control variable.


Textile Research Journal | 2005

Fibers from three cultivars of New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax)

Debra J. Carr; Natasha Cruthers; Raechel M. Laing; Brian Niven

Botanists recognize only two kinds of New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax and Phormium colensoi), while Māori weavers recognise over fifty different cultivars that have specific end-uses. Selected properties of muka 4 (sclerenchyma fiber aggregates extracted from harakeke (P. tenax)) from three of these cultivars (Arawa, Tapamangu, Makaweroa) are examined. Māori consider these three cultivars to provide excellent fibers that are easy to process. Tapamangu and Arawa are similar in terms of muka length, linear density, tenacity, extension at maximum load, and maximum extension, and the ultimate fibers of these cultivars have similar dimensions (width, length). Muka from Makaweroa is longer, not as tough, but with a linear density similar to the other cultivars. The ultimate fiber length of Makaweroa is greater, but the width is similar to Tapamangu and Arawa. Muka from the keel is longer, of higher linear density, and tougher (similar tenacity, higher maximum extension) compared to margin muka. The side of the leaf from which muka is extracted does not affect the properties measured.


Textile Research Journal | 2007

Odor Intensity in Apparel Fabrics and the Link with Bacterial Populations

Rachel H. McQueen; Raechel M. Laing; Heather J. L. Brooks; Brian Niven

Nine apparel fabrics varying in fiber (cotton, wool, polyester) and knit structure (1 × 1 rib, interlock, single jersey) were investigated for their retention of axillary odor following wear. As axillary odor results from bacterial metabolism of apocrine and sebaceous secretions, counts of total aerobic bacteria and corynebacteria on the fabrics were carried out. Odor intensity was strongly associated with the fiber type, with polyester fabrics rating high in odor intensity and cotton and wool mid-low odor intensity. A structure effect was apparent for polyester fabrics, with the lightweight single jersey fabric rated less odorous than the heavier-weight interlock and 1 × 1 rib structures. The relationship between fiber type and odor was not influenced by bacterial numbers present, with counts after one day similar for all fabrics. However, the number of bacteria declined more rapidly on polyester fabrics than on either the cotton or wool fabrics. Counts of odor-associated corynebacteria subgroup (A) remained largely unchanged on wool fabrics for 28 days.


Textile Research Journal | 2006

Standardizing a Pre-treatment Cleaning Procedure and Effects of Application on Apparel Fabrics

Shani E. Gore; Raechel M. Laing; Cheryl A. Wilson; Debra J. Carr; Brian Niven

The objective of this work was to develop a pre-treatment (cleaning) procedure for a wide range of apparel fabrics and to determine whether differences observed in the properties of fabrics which had and had not been pre-treated were significant. Properties relevant to the manufacture and/or performance of apparel included mass per unit area, thickness, bending length, flex-ural rigidity, drape coefficient, air permeability, water vapor permeability, liquid absorptive capacity, drying time, ‘dry’ thermal resistance, ultra-violet transmission. Results for the same property on the same fabric measured when the fabrics had and had not been pre-treated generally differed significantly, confirming the importance of pre-treatment prior to measuring these properties, particularly when claiming in-use attributes of fabrics. A procedure for pre-treatment is recommended: six consecutive cleaning cycles following procedure 8A of British Standard EN ISO 6330: 2001 (i.e. not dried between cycles), and dried flat following procedure C of this standard.


Forensic Science International | 2009

Forensic evidence in apparel fabrics due to stab events.

S. E. Kemp; Debra J. Carr; Jules A. Kieser; Brian Niven; Michael C. Taylor

Stab injuries and fatalities have been reported to be the most common crimes of violence in several countries, particularly in those where access to firearms is restricted [J.M. Taupin, F.-P. Adolf, J. Robertson, Examination of damage to textiles, in: J. Robertson, M. Grieve (Eds.), Forensic Examination of Fibres, CRC Press, United States of America, 1999, pp. 65-87; A.C. Hunt, R.J. Cowling, Murder by stabbing, Forensic Sci. Int. 52 (1991) 107-112; D.A. Rouse, Patterns of stab wounds: a six year study, Med. Sci. Law 34 (1994) 67-71]. Analysis of damaged apparel may provide important information about the cause of death and the events leading up to and after the victims final moments [M.T. Pailthorpe, N.A.G. Johnson, The private forensic scientist and the criminal justice system, in: D. Biles, J. Vernon (Eds.), Private Sector and Community Involvement in the Criminal Justice System: Conference Proceedings, vol. 23, Australian Institute of Criminology, Wellington, 1994, 231-240]. A high proportion of stab wounds occur in the chest and as this area is generally clothed many sharp force cases involve damage to fabrics [J.M. Taupin, F.-P. Adolf, J. Robertson, Examination of damage to textiles, in: J. Robertson, M. Grieve (Eds.), Forensic Examination of Fibres, CRC Press, United States of America, 1999, pp. 65-87; A.C. Hunt, R.J. Cowling, Murder by stabbing, Forensic Sci. Int. 52 (1991) 107-112; D.A. Rouse, Patterns of stab wounds: a six year study, Med. Sci. Law 34 (1994) 67-71]. The structural stabilisation and degradation of fabric due to laundering significantly alters fabric properties [S.E. Gore, R.M. Laing, C.A. Wilson, D.J. Carr, B.E. Niven, Standardizing a pre-treatment cleaning procedure and effects of application on apparel fabrics, Text. Res. J. 76 (2006) 455-464], yet the effect of such on severance morphology does not appear to have been investigated. In this work the effect of blade type (hunting knife, kitchen knife, screwdriver) on new and laundered apparel fabrics was investigated. Two approaches were used (i) a human participant trial, and (ii) guided drop testing (using an impact rig). Force-time plots from the human participant trials were matched to those from the impact rig. Information on severance morphology was obtained using visual analysis techniques. Blades could be differentiated and directionality estimated by observing differences in severance shape and size, the degree of fabric distortion, the position of severed yarn ends, loop snippets, curled yarns, planar array and the morphology of fractured fibres. Fabric construction had a visible effect on severance morphology. Pre-impact degradation via laundering hindered the ability to link fractured fibre ends to a source of damage by altering morphology and increasing the variability. The correlation between blade height and severance length was weak, attributed to elastic deformation and recovery. The impact rig was a valuable tool in the reconstruction of textile damage. Damage was consistent when inflicted using a human participant trial and the impact rig, although more variable in the former. The advantage of the impact rig lies in the ability to produce a severance typical of the blade in question, under controlled conditions, in a reproducible manner.


Textile Research Journal | 2008

Solar Protection — Effect of Selected Fabric and Use Characteristics on Ultraviolet Transmission

Cheryl A. Wilson; Nicola K. Bevin; Raechel M. Laing; Brian Niven

Clothing is worn in single- and multiple-layer arrangements and during use subjected to conditions such as extension and wetting. This study investigated how selected variables affected transmission of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) through fabrics and whether these variables interacted to modify transmission. Using a spectrophotometer the effect of i) fabric type (two knitted, two woven), color (black and white), wetness (dry, damp, wet), and extension (relaxed, extended (10 × 10%, 10 × 20%)), and ii) fabric type and layering (1, 2, 3 layers) of white fabrics, on UVR (290—400 nm), UVA (315—400 nm), UVB (290—315 nm), and ultraviolet protection factor (UPF) rating was investigated. Differences among variables were identified using univariate and repeated measures ANOVA, and interactions among variables identified and described. Selecting dark colors, limiting extension and layering fabric were shown to be effective ways of increasing UV protection and UPF by decreasing transmittance. However, the effect of color, extension and layering varied among fabric types and modified UVA and UVB transmittance differently.


Journal of The Textile Institute | 2008

Retention of axillary odour on apparel fabrics

Rachel H. McQueen; Raechel M. Laing; C. M. Delahunty; Heather J. L. Brooks; Brian Niven

Abstract Clothing worn in close proximity to the human axilla can retain and emanate human body odour even remaining odorous long after removal from the body. Intensity of odour is affected by the fibre type from which the garment is made. Headspace analysis of axillary volatile compounds released from three interlock fabrics (cotton, wool, polyester) following wear were measured using an online monitoring instrument, proton transfer reaction-mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). Compounds likely to be short-chain carboxylic acids increased in the headspace above the polyester fabrics after 7 days. This increase was not evident above either the wool or cotton fabrics. The intensity of axillary odour emanating from these fabrics was inversely related to fibre hygroscopicity. The relationship between a textile fibre/fabrics ability to retain and emanate odour is likely to be related to the metabolic versatility of resident microbial strains and/or the chemical and physical morphology of the fibre and its ability to absorb volatile compounds and precursors to odour.

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Neetu Rishiraj

University of British Columbia

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Jack E. Taunton

University of British Columbia

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Robert Lloyd-Smith

University of British Columbia

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Robert Woollard

University of British Columbia

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