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  2. Unidimensional Fatigue Impact Scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unidimensional_Fatigue...

    The Unidimensional Fatigue Impact Scale (U-FIS) is a disease-specific patient-reported outcome measure which measures the impact of multiple sclerosis related fatigue. [1] It is a 22-item unidimensional scale which is based on needs-based quality of life theory.

  3. NASA-TLX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA-TLX

    The number of times each is chosen is the weighted score. [6] This is multiplied by the scale score for each dimension and then divided by 15 to get a workload score from 0 to 100, the overall task load index. Many researchers eliminate these pairwise comparisons, though, and refer to the test as "Raw TLX" then. [7]

  4. Maslach Burnout Inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maslach_Burnout_Inventory

    There are score ranges that define low, moderate and high levels of each scale based on the 0-6 scoring. The 7-level frequency scale for all MBI scales is as follows: Never (0) A few times a year or less (1) Once a month or less (2) A few times a month (3) Once a week (4) A few times a week (5) Every day (6)

  5. SF-36 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SF-36

    The Short Form (36) Health Survey is a 36-item, patient-reported survey of patient health. The SF-36 is a measure of health status and an abbreviated variant of it, the SF-6D, is commonly used in health economics as a variable in the quality-adjusted life year calculation to determine the cost-effectiveness of a health treatment.

  6. Profile of mood states - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profile_of_mood_states

    The second edition of the profile of mood states scale is known as the POMS short form. POMS measures six different dimensions of mood swings over a period of time. These include: Tension or Anxiety, Anger or Hostility, Vigor or Activity, Fatigue or Inertia, Depression or Dejection, Confusion or Bewilderment.

  7. Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling Tool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatigue_Avoidance...

    The Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling Tool (FAST) was developed by the United States Air Force in 2000–2001 to address the problem of aircrew fatigue in aircrew flight scheduling. [2] FAST is a Windows program that allows scientists, planners and schedulers to quantify the effects of various work-rest schedules on human performance.

  8. Rainflow-counting algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainflow-counting_algorithm

    This simplification allows the number of cycles until failure of a component to be determined for each rainflow cycle using either Miner's rule to calculate the fatigue damage, or in a crack growth equation to calculate the crack increments. [2] Both methods give an estimate of the fatigue life of a component.

  9. Expanded Disability Status Scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expanded_Disability_Status...

    Nonetheless, it has many criticisms, [5] including the fact that it has moderate intra-rater reliability (EDSS kappa values between 0.32 and 0.76 and between 0.23 and 0.58 for the individual FSs were reported), offers poor assessment of upper limb and cognitive function, and lacks linearity between score difference and clinical severity. Other ...