168,395 research outputs found

    Effects of crowding and attention on high-levels of motion processing and motion adaptation

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    The motion after-effect (MAE) persists in crowding conditions, i.e., when the adaptation direction cannot be reliably perceived. The MAE originating from complex moving patterns spreads into non-adapted sectors of a multi-sector adapting display (i.e., phantom MAE). In the present study we used global rotating patterns to measure the strength of the conventional and phantom MAEs in crowded and non-crowded conditions, and when attention was directed to the adapting stimulus and when it was diverted away from the adapting stimulus. The results show that: (i) the phantom MAE is weaker than the conventional MAE, for both non-crowded and crowded conditions, and when attention was focused on the adapting stimulus and when it was diverted from it, (ii) conventional and phantom MAEs in the crowded condition are weaker than in the non-crowded condition. Analysis conducted to assess the effect of crowding on high-level of motion adaptation suggests that crowding is likely to affect the awareness of the adapting stimulus rather than degrading its sensory representation, (iii) for high-level of motion processing the attentional manipulation does not affect the strength of either conventional or phantom MAEs, neither in the non-crowded nor in the crowded conditions. These results suggest that high-level MAEs do not depend on attention and that at high-level of motion adaptation the effects of crowding are not modulated by attention

    How Not To Watch Feminist Pornography

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    This paper has three goals. The first is to defend Tristan Taromino and Erika Lust (or some of their films) from criticisms that Rebecca Whisnant and Hans Maes make of them. Toward that end, I will be arguing against the narrow conceptions that Whisnant and Maes have of what `feminist' pornography must be like. More generally, I hope to show by example why it is important to take pornographic films seriously as films if we're to understand their potential to shape, or mis-shape, socio-sexual norms

    Tuning properties of radial phantom motion aftereffects

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    AbstractMotion aftereffects are normally tested in regions of the visual field that have been directly exposed to motion (local or concrete MAEs). We compared concrete MAEs with remote or phantom MAEs, in which motion is perceived in regions not previously adapted to motion. Our aim was to study the spatial dependencies and spatiotemporal tuning of phantom MAEs generated by radially expanding stimuli. For concrete and phantom MAEs, peripheral stimuli generated stronger aftereffects than central stimuli. Concrete MAEs display temporal frequency tuning, while phantom MAEs do not show categorical temporal frequency or velocity tuning. We found that subjects may use different response strategies to determine motion direction when presented with different stimulus sizes. In some subjects, as adapting stimulus size increased, phantom MAE strength increased while the concrete MAE strength decreased; in other subjects, the opposite effects were observed. We hypothesise that these opposing findings reflect interplay between the adaptation of global motion sensors and local motion sensors with inhibitory interconnections

    Perceived contributory factors to medication administration errors (MAEs) and barriers to self-reporting among nurses working in paediatric units of selected referral hospitals in Rwanda

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    Background: Medication administration errors (MAEs) occur in health care settings however, the types, contributing factors to MAEs and barriers to reporting are not well studied in Rwandan context.Methods: Quantitative approach was adopted. Descriptive cross-sectional design was used. A convenience sampling was used to select 151 nurses working in the paediatric units of the selected teaching hospitals in Rwanda. Pre-tested questionnaire for validity and reliability was used to collect data. Data was coded and entered into SPSS version 21. Descriptive statistics and inferential statistics (Chi-square test) were used to analyze data.Results: Approximately 33.6% of the participants were able to identify one type, 17.4 % two, 18.1% three, 17.4% four types, 10.7% six types and only 2.7% identified all the seven MAEs. Identified main contributory factor to MAEs was the heavy workload it like this-Identified main contributory factor to MAEs was the heavy workload [82 (55%)]. The main barrier to self-reporting was fear to be blamed if something happens to the patient as a result of the medication administration error (88 (59.1%)). All the socio demographic were associated with the types of MAEs committed by participants. In addition, the experience, marital status and job position of the participants were significantly associated with factors contributing to MAEs (p= .001, p=.000 and p= .044) respectively whereas all the socio demographic were significantly associated with barriers to self reporting.Conclusions: Factors contributing to MAEs were found in both parties and barriers to self-reporting were identified to be the fear reasons and administrative reasons. Therefore, the heavy workload should be addressed to reduce MAEs and a non-punitive environment is imperative in encouraging self-reporting of MAEs

    Physically motivated modelling of magnetoactive elastomers

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    Magnetoactive elastomers (MAEs) are polymer composites containing magnetically soft or hard particles incorporated into an elastomer matrix during the crosslinking procedure. In the presence of a magnetic field, the induced magnetic interactions and the corresponding particle rearrangements significantly alter the mechanical properties in dependence on the initial particle distribution and sample shape. In addition, applying magnetic fields also changes the macroscopic shape of an MAE. This thesis investigates the magneto-mechanical coupled behaviour of MAEs by means of analytical and numerical methods. The effects of particle distribution and sample shape have been studied with the help of a physically motivated model of MAEs that considers dipole-dipole interactions between magnetizable particles. The presence of a magnetic field leads to a mechanical anisotropy in MAEs with isotropic particle distribution, and the induced anisotropy is directed along the orientation of the field. Thus, MAEs exhibit direction-dependent mechanical properties with distinct elastic moduli along and perpendicular to the field direction when the MAE sample is subjected to uniaxial deformation. A good agreement is reported between the physically motivated approach and conventional transversely isotropic material models. Furthermore, we investigate the important interplay between the particle distribution and the sample shape of MAEs, where a simple analytical expression is derived based on geometrical arguments to describe the particle distribution inside MAEs. We show that the enhancement of elastic moduli arises not only from the induced dipole-dipole interactions but also considerably from the change in the particle microstructure. Moreover, the magneto-mechanical behaviour of isotropic MAEs under shear deformations is studied. Three principal geometries of shear deformation are investigated with respect to the orientation of the applied magnetic field. We show that the Cauchy stress tensor of MAEs is not always symmetric due to the generation of a magnetic torque acting on an anisometric MAE sample under shear loadings. The theoretical study of magneto-mechanical behaviour of MAEs confirms that the effect of sample shape is quite significant and cannot be neglected. On the other hand, the initial particle distribution and presumed rearrangements due to the magnetic field additionally influence the material response of MAEs. Finally, the physically motivated model of MAEs could be transformed into an invariants-based model enabling its implementation in commercial finite element software. Therefore, we have uncovered a new pathway to model MAEs based on dipole-dipole interactions, leading to a constitutive relation analogous to the macro-scale continuum approach and revealing a synergy between both modelling strategies

    Static and dynamical nonequilibrium fluctuations

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    Various notions of fluctuations exist depending on the way one chooses to measure them. We discuss two extreme cases (continuous measurement versus long inter-measurement times) and we see their relation with entropy production and with escape rates. A simple explanation of why the relative entropy satisfies a Hamilton-Jacobi equation is added.Comment: 10 page
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