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Nyquist Frequency – Medical Seat Cushions – Medical Wedge Pillow Manufacturer

The aliasing problem
In principle, a Nyquist frequency just larger than the signal bandwidth is sufficient to allow perfect reconstruction of the signal from the samples. However, this reconstruction requires an ideal filter that passes some frequencies unchanged while suppressing all others completely (commonly called a brickwall filter). Such a filter is both unattainable in practice and, even in theory, introduces unwanted time domain artifacts such as ringing artifacts.
Signal frequencies higher than the Nyquist frequency will encounter a “folding” about the Nyquist frequency, back into lower frequencies. For example, if the sample rate is 20 kHz, the Nyquist frequency is 10 kHz, and an 11 kHz signal will fold, or alias, to 9 kHz. However, a 9 kHz signal can also fold up to 11 kHz in that case if the reconstruction filter is not adequate. Both types of aliasing can be important.
When attainable filters are used, some degree of oversampling is necessary to accommodate the practical constraints on anti-aliasing filters: instead of a brickwall, one has flat response in the passband up to a point called the cutoff frequency or corner frequency, (pass all frequencies below there unchanged), then gradual rolloff in a transition band, finally suppressing signals above a certain point completely or almost completely in the stopband. Thus, frequencies close to the Nyquist frequency may be distorted in the sampling and reconstruction process, so the bandwidth should be kept below the Nyquist frequency by some margin (frequency headroom) that depends on the actual filters used.
For example, audio CDs have a sampling frequency of 44100 Hz. The Nyquist frequency is therefore 22050 Hz, which is an upper bound on the highest frequency the data can unambiguously represent. If the chosen anti-aliasing filter (a low-pass filter in this case) has a transition band of 2000 Hz, then the cut-off frequency should be no higher than 20050 Hz to yield a signal with negligible power at frequencies of 22050 Hz and greater.
To avoid aliasing, the Nyquist frequency must be strictly greater than the maximum frequency component within the signal. If the signal contains a frequency component at precisely the Nyquist frequency then the corresponding component of the sample values cannot have sufficient information to reconstruct the Nyquist component in the continuous-time signal because of phase ambiguity. In such a case, there would be an infinite number of possible and different sinusoids (of varying amplitude and phase) of the Nyquist frequency component that are represented by the discrete samples: see Sampling theorem: Critical frequency.
Other meanings
Early uses of the term Nyquist Frequency, such as those cited above, are all consistent with the definition presented in this article. Some later publications, including some respectable textbooks, call the signal bandwidth or twice the signal bandwidth the Nyquist frequency; still others refer to the Nyquist rate (twice the signal bandwidth) as Nyquist frequency; these are distinctly minority usages.
References
^ Ulf. Grenander (1959). Probability and Statistics: The Harald Cramr Volume. Wiley. http://books.google.com/books?id=UPc0AAAAMAAJ&q=%22nyquist+frequency%22+date:0-1965&dq=%22nyquist+frequency%22+date:0-1965&as_brr=0&ei=R0LsRtqLN6HApgLT8726Dw&pgis=1. “The Nyquist frequency is that frequency whose period is two sampling intervals.” 
^ Harry L. Stiltz (1961). Aerospace Telemetry. Prentice-Hall. http://books.google.com/books?id=cro8AAAAIAAJ&q=%22nyquist+frequency%22+date:0-1965&dq=%22nyquist+frequency%22+date:0-1965&as_brr=0&ei=R0LsRtqLN6HApgLT8726Dw&pgis=1. “the existence of power in the continuous signal spectrum at frequencies higher than the Nyquist frequency is the cause of aliasing error” 
^ B. V. Korvin-Kroukovsky (1961). Theory of Seakeeping. Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers. http://books.google.com/books?id=W7Q8AAAAIAAJ&q=%22nyquist+frequency%22+date:0-1965&dq=%22nyquist+frequency%22+date:0-1965&as_brr=0&ei=R0LsRtqLN6HApgLT8726Dw&pgis=1. “The Nyquist frequency is often called the folding frequency or cut-off frequency” 
^ Michael J. Roberts (2004). Signals and Systems: Analysis Using Transform Methods and MATLAB. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 0072499427. http://books.google.com/books?id=c2oN_GozNPoC&pg=PA503&dq=highest-frequency-present-in-a-signal+nyquist-frequency&lr=&as_brr=0&ei=aNGWR5vPN56ktgON2_jnBA&sig=c2t2D_p_8eYTSpQh_AkV1FG1hLo#PPA503,M1. 
^ Uwe Windhorst and Hkan Johansson (1999). Modern Techniques in Neuroscience Research. Springer. ISBN 3540644601. http://books.google.com/books?id=cjCnNtIhjMQC&pg=PA630&dq=bandwidth+nyquist-frequency&lr=&as_brr=0&ei=8c6WR6G1LqLstAOsqPjnBA&sig=vVqDAkDdIdrcoirjCWZdPTIOpHQ. 
^ Jonathan M. Blackledge (2003). Digital Signal Processing: Mathematical and Computational Methods, Software Development and Applications. Horwood Publishing. ISBN 1898563489. http://books.google.com/books?id=G_2Zh7ldQIIC&pg=PA93&dq=intitle:digital+intitle:signal+intitle:processing+nyquist-frequency&lr=&as_brr=0&ei=EsiWR8GAIYOUtgO865HoBA&sig=0nPyEIzaULnMF_UsY6TjPI6SN6w. 
^ Paulo Sergio Ramirez Diniz, Eduardo A. B. Da Silva, Sergio L. Netto (2002). Digital Signal Processing: System Analysis and Design. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521781752. http://books.google.com/books?id=L9ENNEPbZ8IC&pg=PA24&dq=intitle:digital+intitle:signal+intitle:processing+bandwidth+nyquist-frequency&lr=&as_brr=0&ei=8MmWR8DJF6CQtwOu4_znBA&sig=JFC3km12VpmWY6RyusmB594ZTQQ. 
See also
Nyquist rate
Kell factor
Sampling frequency
Superoscillation
Signal
Categories: Digital signal processing

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Pumpkin Seed Oil – Medical Cushion Manufacturer – Medical Seat Cushions Manufacturer

Pumpkin seed oil factory in Prekmurje, Slovenia
Cucurbita pepo var. styriaca
Dried seed of Cucurbita pepo var. styriaca
Pumpkin seed oil (Kernl or Krbiskernl in German, buno olje in Slovenian, buino ulje or bundevino ulje in Serbian and Croatian)and tkmag-olaj in Hungarian is a culinary specialty of south eastern Austria (Styria), eastern Slovenia (Styria and Prekmurje), north western Croatia (esp. Meimurje), adjacent regions of Hungary, and a European Union Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) product.
Today the oil is an important export commodity of Austrian and Slovenian parts of Styria. It is made by pressing roasted, hulled pumpkin seeds (pepitas), from a local variety of pumpkin, the “Styrian oil pumpkin” (Cucurbita pepo var. styriaca, also known as var. oleifera). It has been produced and used in Styria’s southern parts at least since the 18th century. The earliest confirmed record of oil pumpkin seeds in Styria (from the estate of a farmer in Gleinsttten) dates to February 18, 1697.
The viscous oil is light green to dark red in colour depending on the thickness of the observed sample. The oil appears green in thin layer and red in thick layer. Such optical phenomenon is called dichromatism. Pumpkin oil is one of the substances with strongest dichromatism. Its Kreft’s dichromaticity index is -44. Used together with yoghurt, the colour turns to bright green and is sometimes referred to as “green-gold”.
Culinary uses
Pumpkin seed oil has an intense nutty taste and is rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids. Browned oil has a bitter taste. Pumpkin seed oil serves as a salad dressing when combined with honey or olive oil. The typical Styrian dressing consists of pumpkin seed oil and cider vinegar. But the oil is also used for desserts, giving ordinary vanilla icecream an exquisite nutty taste. Using it as a cooking oil, however, destroys its essential fatty acids.[not in citation given]
Medicinal uses
Claims, based on local folk medicine, suggesting usefulness of the oil in the prevention and treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia may be backed by some studies showing clinically proven efficacy (particularly along with Serenoa repens, saw palmetto, and Pygeum africanum) according to the criteria of evidence-based medicine.[citation needed]
Pumpkin seed oil is most commonly used to treat irritable bowel syndrome.[citation needed] Small studies have also shown that pumpkin seeds, which contain amino acids, steroidal compounds, and omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, may lower the risk of certain types of kidney stones and improve symptoms associated with enlarged prostates Additionally, pumpkin seeds reportedly contain significant amounts of L-tryptophan.[citation needed] Some studies have also found pumpkin seeds to prevent arteriosclerosis and regulate cholesterol levels.[citation needed]
Pumpkin seed oil, commonly prescribed in German folk medicine, remedies parasitic infestations of the intestinal tract such as tapeworms.
Seed types and oil
Other types of pumpkin seed oil are also marketed worldwide. International producers use white seeds with shells and this produces a cheaper white oil. New producers of seeds are located in China and India.
An analysis of the oil extracted from the seeds of each of twelve cultivars of C. maxima yielded the following ranges for the percentage of several fatty acids:
n:unsat
Fatty acid name
Percentage range
(14:0)
Myristic acid
0.09-0.27
(16:0)
Palmitic acid
12.6-18.4
(16:1)
Palmitoleic acid
0.12-0.52
(18:0)
Stearic acid
5.1-8.5
(18:1)
Oleic acid
17.0-39.5
(18:2)
Linoleic acid
18.1-62.8
(18:3)
Linolenic acid
0.34-0.82
(20:0)
Arachidic acid
0.26-1.12
(20:1)
Gadoleic acid
0-0.17
(22:0)
Behenic acid
0.12-0.58
The study did not distinguish between positional isomers (e.g. -3 versus -6 linolenic acid). The sum of myristic and palmitic acid (cholesterogenic saturated fatty acids) content ranged from 12.8 to 18.7%. The total unsaturated acid content ranged from 73.1 to 80.5%. The very long chain fatty acid (> 18 carbon atoms) content ranged from 0.44 to 1.37%.
References
^ Kreft S and Kreft M (2007) Physicochemical and physiological basis of dichromatic colour, Naturwissenschaften 94, 935-939. On-line PDF
^ Kreft S, Kreft M: Quantification of dichromatism: a characteristic of colour in transparent materials; Journal of the Optical Society of America A: Vol. 26, Iss. 7, pp. 15761581 (2009) http://www.opticsinfobase.org/josaa/abstract.cfm?uri=josaa-26-7-1576
^ The Benefits of Pumpkin Seeds[unreliable source?]
^ World’s Healthiest Foods
^ Alternative Medicine Magazine, January 2008, Issue 103, page 16.
^ Pumpkin Seed Oil – Vits n’ Pieces
^ Stevenson, D. G., Eller, F. J., Wang, L., Jane, J., Wang, T., & INglett, G. E. “Oil and Tocopherol content and Composition of Pumpkin Seed Oil in 12 Cultivars” J. Agric. Food Chem. 2007(55) 4005-4013. The data are found in Table 3 on page 4010.
Dreikorn, K; Berges, R; Pientka, L; Jonas, U. “Phytotherapy of benign prostatic hyperplasia. Current evidence-based evaluation” Urologe A. September 2002; 41(5):447-51. (German) Quotation: “Only a few randomized clinical trials that meet standard criteria of evidence-based medicine but with relatively short follow-up times and some meta-analyses mainly regarding Serenoa repens and Pygeum africanum as well as more recent studies on pumpkin seeds have shown clinical effects and good tolerability.”
Vahlensieck, W, Jr. “With alpha blockers, finasteride and nettle root against benign prostatic hyperplasia. Which patients are helped by conservative therapy?” MMW Fortschr Med. 18 April 2002; 144(16):33-6. (German) Summary: Established medications for the treatment of BPH in current use are alpha-blockers, finasteride, and the phytotherapeutic agents pumpkin seed (Cucurbitae semen), nettle root (Urticae radix), the phytosterols contained in Hypoxis rooperi, rye pollen and the fruits of saw palmetto (Sabalis serrulati fructus)
Dreikorn, K. “The role of phytotherapy in treating lower urinary tract symptoms and benign prostatic hyperplasia”. World J Urol. April 2002; 19(6):426-35. Summary: A number of short-term randomised trials and some meta-analyses in the recent literature suggest clinical efficacy and good tolerability for some preparations, mainly extracts from Serenoa repens and also Pygeum africanum, products with high concentrations of beta-sitosterol, and pumpkin seeds.
Bracher, F. “Phytotherapy of benign prostatic hyperplasia”, Urologe A. January 1997; 36(1):10-7. (German) Quotation: “In this article, the most widely used phytopharmaceutical agents, such as saw palmetto berry extracts, Radix urticae extracts, pumpkin seeds, pollen extracts and different phytosterols, are described. Based on these results, the use of phytopharmaceutical agents for the treatment of mild to moderate symptomatic BPH seems to be well justified.”
Carbin, B.E.; Larsson, B.; Lindahl, O. “Treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia with phytosterols”, Br J Urol. December 1990; 66(6):639-41. Quotation: “In a randomised, double-blind study, the preparation Curbicin, obtained from pumpkin seeds and dwarf palm plants (Cucurbita pepo l. and Sabal serrulata), was compared with a placebo in the treatment of symptoms caused by prostatic hyperplasia; 53 patients took part in the study, which was carried out over a 3-month period. Urinary flow, micturition time, residual urine, frequency of micturition and a subjective assessment of the effect of treatment were all significantly improved in the treatment group.”
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Pumpkin seed oil
Record on the EU Commission Agriculture PDO/PGI website[clarification needed]
v d e
Edible fats and oils
Fats
Bacon fat  Blubber  Butter  Clarified butter  Cocoa butter  Dripping  Duck fat  Ghee  Lard  Margarine  Niter kibbeh  Salo  Schmaltz  Shea butter  Smen  Suet  Tallow  Vegetable shortening
Oils
Almond oil  Argan oil  Avocado oil  Canola oil  Cashew oil  Castor oil  Coconut oil  Colza oil  Corn oil  Cottonseed oil  Fish oil  Grape seed oil  Hazelnut oil  Hemp oil  Linseed oil (flaxseed oil)  Macadamia oil  Marula oil  Mongongo nut oil  Mustard oil  Olive oil  Palm oil (palm kernel oil)  Peanut oil  Pecan oil  Perilla oil  Pine nut oil  Pistachio oil  Poppyseed oil  Pumpkin seed oil  Rapeseed oil  Rice bran oil  Safflower oil  Sesame oil  Soybean oil  Sunflower oil  Tea seed oil  Walnut oil  Watermelon seed oil  Whale oil
See also: List of vegetable oils  Cooking oil  Essential oil
Categories: Cooking oils | Vegetable oilsHidden categories: All articles lacking reliable references | Articles lacking reliable references from July 2009 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from July 2009 | Articles with unsourced statements from March 2008 | Articles with unsourced statements from May 2008 | All pages needing cleanup | Wikipedia articles needing clarification from February 2008

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Sara Little Turnbull – China Medical Seat Cushions – Medical Wedge Pillow

Early life and education
Sara Finkelstein was born in Manhattan and raised in Brooklyn. Her mother introduced her to the use of color and form by arranging fruits and vegetables in bowls. She attended Parsons School of Design on scholarships from the School Art League of NYC and the National Council of Jewish Women, graduating in 1939.
Because she was 4’11” in height, she acquired the nickname “Little Sara,” and then began to call herself Sara Little professionally. She married James R. Turnbull (then executive vice president of Monsanto Chemical) in 1965, but used the name Sara Little for her entire career.
Career
House Beautiful
After college, Sara Little worked at Marshall Fields as a bench designer and assistant art director, then became art director at Blaker Advertising Agency. She was eventually hired as an editorial assistant at House Beautiful magazine, where she wrote the “Girl with a Future” column until she rose to the position of Decorating Editor, which she held for nearly two decades.
At House Beautiful, she anticipated and helped develop the American post-World War II domestic lifestyle. By asking, “how we could help these people put their lives back together through ideas in our magazine?” she encouraged readers to utilize more informal space in the home (in what eventually became known as the family room), share living space with a roommate, and organize small spaces for maximum domestic efficiency (she lived for 20 years in a 400 square foot hotel room from which she also ran her international consulting practice).
Product Design
In 1958, Little left the magazine world and formed Sara Little Design Consultant. At the time, she wrote a trade article for Housewares Review entitled “Forgetting the Little Woman” (although she often referred to this article in subsequent interviews as “When Will The Consumer Become Your Customer?”). Her main argument was that most companies created products for retailers, instead of considering the people who were actually going to use them. The story caught the attention of a few prominent CEO’s and executives, including the heads of General Mills, 3M and the Corning Glass consumer products division. All three companies eventually hired her as a product research consultant to assist in finding new applications for technologies developed for the war effort. She helped create disposable medical and antipollution masks made from non-woven fibers, nutritious soybean candy, and the ubiquitous freezer-to-oven CorningWare that was developed from a material originally used on missile cones.
During her 65-year design career she provided advice on strategic design, consumer awareness, and cultural change to an international slate of companies such as: Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, General Mills, Macy, Neiman Marcus, Marks & Spencer, American Can, DuPont, Ford, Nissan, Pfizer, Revlon, Elizabeth Arden, Lever Brothers, Motorola, NASA and Volvo. She consulted on a range of domestic products including housewares, home storage systems, food, counters that cook, microwave cooking products, personal care, medication delivery systems, cosmetics, fabric processes (knit and non-wovens), space suits, furniture, toys, decoration and packaging, household cleaning products, pet care, tapes and adhesives, and car interiors.
Many of her ideas arose from her intense interest in different cultures and the natural world. A self-trained cultural anthropologist, she traveled frequently to destinations such as Borneo, Malaysia, the Philippines, India and Kenya, always on the lookout for how people and animals solved the problems of everyday living. Her design for a pot lid was inspired by observing cheetahs grasping their prey in the wild. t always starts with a fundamental curiosity, she said of her quest for innovative product design. hen I can’t find the answer in a book, I go out and search for it. The excitement of my life is that I have always jumped into the unknown to find what I needed to know.2] In another case, she began the design process for a burglar-proof lock by interviewing thieves in jail.
In 1971, she established the Sara Little Center for Design Research at the Tacoma Art Museum in Washington State to archive and display her collection of over 5,000 artifacts gathered during her travels. The collection includes body coverings and accessories, food preparation and dining implements, textiles, fine and folk art, much of which had influenced her concepts for domestic product design. The collection was deaccessioned from the Tacoma Art Museum in 2003 and is being re-established in Seattle, WA for design scholarship and educational purposes.
Process of Change: Laboratory for Innovation and Design
In 1988, Little founded and for the next 18 years directed the Process of Change: Laboratory for Innovation and Design at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. The Laboratory tracked changing trends in more than 375 areas including education, healthcare, aging, sexuality, food and nutrition, housing, clothing, and manufacturing. Little used this information to fuel her design concepts. “The quality of life of a people dictates what they design, what they make,” she said. “It’s a reflection of life itself.”
In her work with students at Stanford, Little continually emphasized digging deep into the “why” of a product before leaping into the “how,” in order to avoid designing products that only addressed superficial symptoms rather than the deeper need. he designer is the conscience of the company. We can’t expect anyone else to fill this role. That why the Process of Change Laboratory delineated the need to know more. Design requires a background of scholarship, otherwise it remains a visual trick.10]
Teaching, Awards and Honors
In addition to her work at Stanford, Sara Little has been a guest lecturer at schools such as Parsons School of Design, Rhode Island School of Design, MIT, Harvard, Illinois School of Technology, Copenhagen Business School, University of Washington, San Francisco State University and University of California Berkeley.
She received a Distinguished Designer Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1988; the Trailblazer Award from the National Home Fashion League (1980), and an honorary doctorate from Academy of Art University (2003). In 2008, Chrysler Corporation established the Chrysler Sara Little Turnbull Scholarship at Academy of Art University. The Modern Art Council of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art designated her a “Bay Area Living Treasure” in 2001. In 2006, at the age of 89, Sara Little received the Lifetime Achievement Award from Icograda (International Congress of Graphic Design Associations).
Board Service
1948: American Institute of Decorators “Design Associate”
1951-54: Alumni Board, Parsons School of Art and Design
1965-70: Board of Trustees, Parsons School of Art and Design
1990-? Board of Director, Corporate Design Foundation
1991: Board of Directors, Long Term Care Implementation Committee at the Age Center Alliance, Inc. (Palo Alto, CA)
1995: Advisory Member, National Design Forum
2004: Board of Directors, Cooper Hewitt Museum and Committee for the Arts
Footnotes
^ a b c d Vienne, Veronique (November 2000) “The Why of It All”, Metropolis Magazine
^ a b c d “Stanford’s Sarah (sic) Little Turnbull on Design”, Corporate Design Foundation
^ Sara Little Turnbull website
^ Speaking Freely: An Evening with Remarkable Women, KQED Television
^ “Laboratory Director Shuts Red Door”, November 2006, Stanford Business Magazine
^ Tacoma Art Museum website
^ Sara Little Turnbull faculty page, Stanford University
^ Knight, Heather (January 28, 2000) “Mother of Invention”, San Francisco Chronicle
^ Interview with Sara Little Turnbull at TAXI: The Global Creative Network website, 2006
^ Video interview with Sara Little Turnbull conducted in 2006 by Paula Rees, special trustee for Sara Little Turnbull
^ Academy of Art University website
^ “Spreadsheet One: The GSB’s Living Treasure,” February 2002, Stanford Business Magazine
^ “Icograda Design Week in Seattle” AIGA (American Institute of Graphic Arts) website
External links
Sara Little Turnbull official website
Categories: Design | American designers | Product design | Industrial design | American industrial designers | 1917 births | Living people

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Robert Swirsky – Medical Cushion – China Medical Seat Cushions

The Disney Years
In 1998, Robert Swirsky started working for Walt Disney Imagineering R&D as Director, Creative technology , under Bran Ferren, developing electronic games and digital imaging systems. He developed technology to play interactive games synchronized with live television shows, and electronic toys including Disney’s Magical Moments Pin. Digital Photography projects included systems to synchronize picture taking with ride vehicles, and active infrared badges to identify picture-takers.
Mr. Swirsky was a major technical contributor to ABC’s Enhanced TV , an Emmy Award winning technology that allows television viewers to play along with game shows, sporting events, and answer live polls during talk shows.
Swirsky’s interactive media research also involved working with nerdcore rapper Monzy, then an intern at Walt Disney Imagineering, on a variety of cutting edge display technologies, including the display of digital data on a spherical surface.
Mr. Swirsky continues to work as a consultant for the themed entertainment industry, for Disney and other amusement enterprises.
3D Photography
Swirsky is best known for his work in 3D digital photography. He has developed algorithms for generating full-color anaglyph images from stereo pairs that can be viewed through red/cyan glasses. A popular freeware program, Callipygian 3D is widely used and has been featured on TechTV’s The Screen Savers show several times, with Swirsky demonstrating its use . The popularity of anaglyph images from Mars, and in anaglyph movies like Spy Kids 3D introduced new people to the anaglyph technique. Swirsky’s software played a major role in letting people create their own anaglyph images.
Production Company
In 2003, Swirsky started a production company, Swirsky-AO[citation needed], to produce and distribute short films and related media for the portable media player market. Swirsky-AO has a 20-acre (81,000 m2) lot adjacent to Walt Disney World in Florida. This property, known as Swampworth, is used as a filming location for many of Swirsky-AO’s productions, and serves as a residence and studio for Swirsky’s other projects.
References
^ Index of Creative Computing articles by Robert Swirsky
^ PopCult Magazine
^ a b Theme Park Photo, LLC
^ Walt Disney Imagineering
^ Robert Swirsky’s Callipygian 3D software demoed on TechTV
External links
US Patents for Robert Swirsky
System and method for automating the creation of customized multimedia content
Categories: 1962 births | Living people | American computer scientists | Pianists | Hofstra University alumniHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from July 2007

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