39 research outputs found
CMB signal in WMAP 3yr data with FastICA
We present an application of the fast Independent Component Analysis
(FastICA) to the WMAP 3yr data with the goal of extracting the CMB signal. We
evaluate the confidence of our results by means of Monte Carlo simulations
including CMB, foreground contaminations and instrumental noise specific of
each WMAP frequency band. We perform a complete analysis involving all or a
subset of the WMAP channels in order to select the optimal combination for CMB
extraction, using the frequency scaling of the reconstructed component as a
figure of merit. We found that the combination KQVW provides the best CMB
frequency scaling, indicating that the low frequency foreground contamination
in Q, V and W bands is better traced by the emission in the K band. The CMB
angular power spectrum is recovered up to the degree scale, it is consistent
within errors for all WMAP channel combination considered, and in close
agreement with the WMAP 3yr results. We perform a statistical analysis of the
recovered CMB pattern, and confirm the sky asymmetry reported in several
previous works with independent techniques.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, submitted to MNRA
Developmental vision determines the reference frame for the multisensory control of action
Both animal and human studies suggest that action goals are defined in external coordinates regardless of their sensory modality. The present study used an auditory-manual task to test whether the default use of such an external reference frame is innately determined or instead acquired during development because of the increasing dominance of vision over manual control. In Experiment I, congenitally blind, late blind, and age-matched sighted adults had to press a left or right response key depending on the bandwidth of pink noise bursts presented from either the left or right loudspeaker. Although the spatial location of the sounds was entirely task-irrelevant, all groups responded more efficiently with uncrossed hands when the sound was presented from the same side as the responding hand (“Simon effect”). This effect reversed with crossed hands only in the congenitally blind: They responded faster with the hand that was located contralateral to the sound source. In Experiment II, the instruction to the participants was changed: They now had to respond with the hand located next to the sound source. In contrast to Experiment I (“Simon-task”), this task required an explicit matching of the sound's location with the position of the responding hand. In Experiment II, the congenitally blind participants showed a significantly larger crossing deficit than both the sighted and late blind adults. This pattern of results implies that developmental vision induces the default use of an external coordinate frame for multisensory action control; this facilitates not only visual but also auditory–manual control