Bambi L. Reinhart - Temple PA Robert A. Reinhart - Temple PA
International Classification:
B60R 9055
US Classification:
224319
Abstract:
A vehicle rooftop storage unit includes a rack portion which is permanently installed to the roof of the passenger vehicle at manufacture, or which may be installed as an aftermarket article after vehicle manufacture. A separate container portion is removably securable within the rack portion. The rack portion includes a generally rectangular rail, with the front and side members being fixed in position, and the rear member being hinged to the rear end of one of the side members. The rear member may be locked to the opposite side member to close the rail structure, and thereby capture the container portion within the rack rails. The rack portion captures the container portion by a tongue formed along the inner face of the rail, which engages a mating peripheral groove in the container portion; the tongue and groove configuration may be reversed between container and rack rail, if desired. The container may be slid into the rack rails and the rear rail member locked in place therebehind to lock the container to the rack and thus to the vehicle. The container portion has a lockable lid, with the locks of the container lid and rear rack member preferably requiring a key identical to the vehicle door and/or ignition key.
News
Zapping brain with electricity boosts working memory, study finds
By stimulating the brain in precise regions with alternating current (AC), we can bring back the superior working memory function you had when you were much younger, psychology researcher Robert Reinhart of Boston University told reporters. The negative age-related changes [in working memory] are
Date: Apr 08, 2019
Category: Health
Source: Google
Could Transcranial Brain Stimulation Help Sharpen Memory? : Shots - Health News
"In terms of this working memory task, we made the brain of a 70-year-old look like that of a 20-year-old," says Robert Reinhart, the Boston University neuroscientist who led the study. He says it's the first time that a study has shown that disconnected brain areas are tied to deficits in working m
Date: Apr 08, 2019
Category: Health
Source: Google
Scientists reverse memory decline using electrical pulses
Age-related changes are not unchangeable, said Robert Reinhart, a neuroscientist at Boston University, who led the work. We can bring back the superior working memory function that you had when you were much younger.