76,331 research outputs found
Aspects of quark mass generation on a torus
In this talk we report on recent results for the quark propagator on a
compact manifold. The corresponding Dyson-Schwinger equations on a torus are
solved on volumes similar to the ones used in lattice calculations. The
quark-gluon interaction is fixed such that the lattice results are reproduced.
We discuss both the effects in the infinite volume/continuum limit as well as
effects when the volume is small.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures; talk given by CF at QNP06, Madrid, June 200
Even circuits of prescribed clockwise parity
We show that a graph has an orientation under which every circuit of even
length is clockwise odd if and only if the graph contains no subgraph which is,
after the contraction of at most one circuit of odd length, an even subdivision
of K_{2,3}. In fact we give a more general characterisation of graphs that have
an orientation under which every even circuit has a prescribed clockwise
parity. This problem was motivated by the study of Pfaffian graphs, which are
the graphs that have an orientation under which every alternating circuit is
clockwise odd. Their significance is that they are precisely the graphs to
which Kasteleyn's powerful method for enumerating perfect matchings may be
applied
Donât Demean âInvasivesâ: Conservation and Wrongful Species Discrimination
It is common for conservationists to refer to non-native species that have undesirable impacts on humans as âinvasiveâ. We argue that the classification of any species as âinvasiveâ constitutes wrongful discrimination. Moreover, we argue that its being wrong to categorize a species as invasive is perfectly compatible with it being morally permissible to kill animalsâassuming that conservationists âkill equallyâ. It simply is not compatible with the double standard that conservationists tend to employ in their decisions about who lives and who dies
Dynamical Chiral Symmetry Breaking in Landau gauge QCD
We summarise results for the propagators of Landau gauge QCD from the Green's
functions approach and lattice calculations. The nonperturbative solutions for
the ghost, gluon and quark propagators from a coupled set of Dyson-Schwinger
equations agree almost quantitatively with corresponding lattice results.
Similar unquenching effects are found in both approaches. The dynamically
generated quark masses are close to `phenomenological' values. The chiral
condensate is found to be large.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, talk given by C.F. at 6th Conference on Quark
Confinement and the Hadron Spectrum, Villasimius, Sardinia, Italy, 21-25 Sep
200
Functionally referential signals: a promising paradigm whose time has passed
Finding the evolutionary origins of human language in the communication systems of our closest living relatives has, for the last several decades, been a major goal of many in the field of animal communication generally and primate communication specifically.1â4 The so-called âfunctionally referentialâ signals have long been considered promising in this regard, with apparent parallels with the semantic communication that characterizes language. The once-prominent idea that functionally referential signals are word-like, in that they are arbitrary sounds that refer to phenomena external to the caller, has largely been abandoned.5 However, the idea that these signals may offer the strongest link between primate communication and human language remains widespread, primarily due to the fact the behavior of receivers indicates that such signals enable them to make very specific inferences about their physical or social environment. Here we review the concept of functional reference and discuss modern perspectives that indicate that, although the sophistication of receivers provides some continuity between nonhuman primate and human cognition, this continuity is not unique to functionally referential signals. In fact, because functionally referential signals are, by definition, produced only in specific contexts, receivers are less dependent on the integration of contextual cues with signal features to determine an appropriate response. The processing of functionally referential signals is therefore likely to entail simpler cognitive operations than does that of less context-specific signals. While studies of functional reference have been important in highlighting the relatively sophisticated processes that underlie receiver behavior, we believe that the continued focus on context-specific calls detracts from the potentially more complex processes underlying responses to more unspecific calls. In this sense, we argue that the concept of functional reference, while historically important for the field, has outlived its usefulness and become a red herring in the pursuit of the links between primate communication and human language
Ultrastructure and localization of Neorickettsia in adult digenean trematodes provides novel insights into helminth-endobacteria interaction
Abstract Background Neorickettsia are a group of intracellular α proteobacteria transmitted by digeneans (Platyhelminthes, Trematoda). These endobacteria can also infect vertebrate hosts of the helminths and cause serious diseases in animals and humans. Neorickettsia have been isolated from infected animals and maintained in cell cultures, and their morphology in mammalian cells has been described. However, limited information is available on the morphology and localization of Neorickettsia in the trematode host. Methods We used a Neorickettsia-infected strain of the model trematode Plagiorchis elegans to infect Syrian Golden hamsters to produce adult worms. Ultrastructure of Neorickettsia was assessed by transmission electron microscopy of high pressure freezing/freeze substitution fixed specimens. A Neorickettsia surface protein from P. elegans (PeNsp-3) was cloned and antibodies against the recombinant protein were used to localize Neorickettsia by immunohistochemistry. Results Ultrastructural analysis revealed moderate numbers of pleomorphic endobacteria with a median size of 600âĂâ400 nm and characteristic double membranes in various tissue types. Endobacteria showed tubular membrane invaginations and secretion of polymorphic vesicles. Endobacteria were unevenly localized as single cells, or less frequently as small morula-like clusters in the ovary, Mehlisâ gland, vitelline follicles, uterus, intrauterine eggs, testis, cirrus-sac, tegument, intestine and the oral and ventral sucker. Examination of hamster small intestine infected with P. elegans showed many endobacteria at the host-parasite interface such as the oral and ventral sucker, the tegument and the excretory pore. Conclusions We conclude that adult P. elegans trematodes carry Neorickettsia endobacteria in varying numbers in many tissue types that support vertical transmission, trematode to trematode transmission via seminal fluid, and possibly horizontal transmission from trematodes to vertebrate hosts. These means appear to be novel mechanisms of pathogen transmission by endoparasitic worms
- âŠ