2,689 research outputs found
Capacity and tendency: A neuroscientific framework for the study of emotion regulation.
It is widely accepted that the ability to effectively regulate one's emotions is a cornerstone of physical and mental health. As such, it should come as no surprise that the number of neuroimaging studies focused on emotion regulation and associated processes has increased exponentially in the past decade. To date, neuroimaging research on this topic has examined two distinct but complementary features of emotion regulation - the capacity to effectively utilize a strategy to regulate emotion and to a lesser extent, the tendency to choose to regulate. However, theoretical accounts of emotion regulation have only recently begun to distinguish capacity from tendency. In the present review, we provide a novel framework for conceptualizing these two intertwined, yet distinct, facets of emotion regulation. First we characterize brain regions that support emotion generation and are thus targeted by emotion regulation. Next, we synthesize findings from the dozens of neuroimaging studies that have examined emotion regulation capacity, focusing in particular on the most commonly studied emotion regulation strategy - reappraisal. Finally, we discuss emerging neuroimaging research examining state and trait regulatory tendencies. We conclude by integrating findings from neuroimaging research on emotion regulation capacity and tendency and suggest ways that this integrated model can inform basic and translational neuroscientific research on emotion regulation
Degradation of 23S rRNA in Azithromycin-Treated Ribonuclease Mutants of \u3cem\u3eEscherichia coli\u3c/em\u3e.
Azithromycin, a macrolide antibiotic, specifically binds to the 50S ribosomal subunit of bacterial ribosomes and inhibits translation. Azithromycin also prevents 50S ribosomal subunit assembly by binding to a 50S ribosomal subunit precursor particle. When exposed to azithromycin, several ribonucleases in wild-type Escherichia coli cells degrade antibiotic-bound 50S precursor particles. Presumably, cells expressing one or more mutated ribonucleases will degrade the antibiotic-bound precursor less efficiently, resulting in increased sensitivity to the antibiotic. To test this, eight ribonucleaseƻdeficient strains of Escherichia coli were grown in the presence or absence of azithromycin. Cell viability, growth rates, and protein synthesis rates were measured. Degradation of 23S rRNA was examined by hybridization with a 23S specific probe. Ribonuclease II and polynucleotide phosphorylase mutants demonstrated hypersensitivity to the antibiotic and showed a greater extent of 23S rRNA accumulation, suggesting that these two ribonucleases are important for 23S rRNA turnover in azithromycin-treated Escherichia coli
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Is social decision making for close others consistent across domains and within individuals?
Humans make decisions across a variety of social contexts. Though social decision-making research has blossomed in recent decades, surprisingly little is known about whether social decision-making preferences are consistent across different domains. We conducted an exploratory study in which participants made choices about 2 types of close others: parents and friends. To elicit decision making preferences, we pit the interests in parents and friends against one another. To assess the consistency of preferences for close others, decision making was assessed in three domains-risk taking, probabilistic learning, and self-other similarity judgments. We reasoned that if social decision-making preferences are consistent across domains, participants ought to exhibit the same preference in all three domains (i.e., a parent preference, based on prior work), and individual differences in preference magnitude ought to be conserved across domains within individuals. A combination of computational modeling, random coefficient regression, and traditional statistical tests revealed a robust parent-over-friend preference in the risk taking and probabilistic learning domains but not the self-other similarity domain. Preferences for parent-over-friend in the risk-taking domain were strongly associated with similar preferences in the probabilistic learning domain but not the self-other similarity domain. These results suggest that distinct and dissociable value-based and social-cognitive computations underlie social decision making. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)
Magnetic buoyancy instabilities in the presence of magnetic flux pumping at the base of the solar convection zone
We perform idealized numerical simulations of magnetic buoyancy instabilities in three dimensions, solving the equations of compressible magnetohydrodynamics in a model of the solar tachocline. In particular, we study the effects of including a highly simplified model of magnetic flux pumping in an upper layer (āthe convection zoneā) on magnetic buoyancy instabilities in a lower layer (āthe upper parts of the radiative interior ā including the tachoclineā), to study these competing flux transport mechanisms at the base of the convection zone. The results of the inclusion of this effect in numerical simulations of the buoyancy instability of both a preconceived magnetic slab and a shear-generated magnetic layer are presented. In the former, we find that if we are in the regime that the downward pumping velocity is comparable with the AlfvĆ©n speed of the magnetic layer, magnetic flux pumping is able to hold back the bulk of the magnetic field, with only small pockets of strong field able to rise into the upper layer.
In simulations in which the magnetic layer is generated by shear, we find that the shear velocity is not necessarily required to exceed that of the pumping (therefore the kinetic energy of the shear is not required to exceed that of the overlying convection) for strong localized pockets of magnetic field to be produced which can rise into the upper layer. This is because magnetic flux pumping acts to store the field below the interface, allowing it to be amplified both by the shear and by vortical fluid motions, until pockets of field can achieve sufficient strength to rise into the upper layer. In addition, we find that the interface between the two layers is a natural location for the production of strong vertical gradients in the magnetic field. If these gradients are sufficiently strong to allow the development of magnetic buoyancy instabilities, strong shear is not necessarily required to drive them (cf. previous work by Vasil & Brummell). We find that the addition of magnetic flux pumping appears to be able to assist shear-driven magnetic buoyancy in producing strong flux concentrations that can rise up into the convection zone from the radiative interior
An Equality Paradign for Preventing Genetic Discrimination
On June 26, 2000, scientists announced at a White House news conference that they had completed mapping the human genome sequence, the human race\u27s genetic blueprint. This pronouncement generated tremendous and well-deserved excitement. Genomics, the study and application of genetic information, promises to be an unparalleled tool for improving public health. Genetic testing can identify asymptomatic individuals who are at risk of becoming ill themselves or bestowing illness on their children. As a result, individuals who test positive can take prophylactic measures to slow or stop disease and can also reduce the births of progeny at high risk of compromised health. At the same time, predictive genetic testing threatens unprecedented harm in its potential to engender (and then defend on the grounds of alleged statistical probability) discriminatory treatment in employment. Consequently, scientists most involved in the Human Genome Project and politicians most supportive of it recommend strong legal protections against genetic discrimination.
Nevertheless, while the Constitution and the Privacy Act of 19749 provide some protection against the collection, use, and dissemination of genetic information on privacy grounds, effective federal regulations specifically protecting individuals from genetic discrimination in employment are almost nonexistent. Specifically, a single executive order bars federal agencies from discriminating in employment on the basis of genetic information. Despite repeatedly voiced intentions, Congress has yet to pass legislation specifically prohibiting misuse of genetic information in the area of employment, although a five-year-old bill is once more pending. Notably, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ( EEOC ) has had mixed initial success in applying the antidiscrimination provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act ( ADA ) to the realm of genetic discrimination. By contrast, the scope of state statutes varies by jurisdiction. About half of the jurisdictions prohibit workplace ethical acceptability of somatic gene therapy, germ-line therapy, and somatic or germ-line modification)
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The effect of temperature-dependent viscosity and thermal conductivity on the onset of compressible convection
The linear equations of thermal convection in a compressible fluid with non-constant transport coefficients are derived. The criterion for the onset of convection is established, based on linear stability analysis, for a range of different temperature-dependent profiles of thermal conductivity and viscosity. Temperature-dependent transport coefficients are shown to lead to a more complex behaviour than their constant counterparts, and modifies the stability condition of the fluid. When the Rayleigh number is defined in terms of the mid-layer physical properties and the temperature gradient at the top is held constant, increasing the temperature-dependence of thermal conductivity is found to raise the critical Rayleigh number dramatically, as the convective disturbance is then concentrated mainly at the top of the layer. In contrast, for viscosity a more subtle effect on stability is identified
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Spatial and temporal cortical variability track with age and affective experience during emotion regulation in youth.
Variability is a fundamental feature of human brain activity that is particularly pronounced during development. However, developmental neuroimaging research has only recently begun to move beyond characterizing brain function exclusively in terms of magnitude of neural activation to incorporate estimates of variability. No prior neuroimaging study has done so in the domain of emotion regulation. We investigated how age and affective experiences relate to spatial and temporal variability in neural activity during emotion regulation. In the current study, 70 typically developing youth aged 8 to 17 years completed a cognitive reappraisal task of emotion regulation while undergoing functional MRI. Estimates of spatial and temporal variability during regulation were calculated across a network of brain regions, defined a priori, and were then related to age and affective experiences. Results showed that increasing age was associated with reduced spatial and temporal variability in a set of frontoparietal regions (e.g., dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, superior parietal lobule) known to be involved in effortful emotion regulation. In addition, youth who reported less negative affect during regulation had less spatial variability in the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, which has previously been linked to cognitive reappraisal. We interpret age-related reductions in spatial and temporal variability as implying neural specialization. These results suggest that the development of emotion regulation is undergirded by a process of neural specialization and open a host of possibilities for incorporating neural variability into the study of emotion regulation development. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)
Collisional depolarization of state selected (J,M J ) BaO Aā1Ī£+ measured by opticalāoptical double resonance
The opticalāoptical double resonance (OODR) technique is used to investigate the change in magnetic quantum number (M) a state selected molecule undergoes on collision with other molecules. A first linearly polarized dye laser prepares Aā 1Ī£+BaO(v = 1) in the J = 1, M = 0 sublevel. The extent of collisional transfer to other M sublevels of both J = 1 and J = 2 is then probed by a second polarized dye laser which induces fluorescence from the Cā 1Ī£+ state. Elastic collisions (ĪJ = 0) between BaO (Aā 1Ī£+) and CO2 are observed to change M from 0 to Ā±1 leaving J unchanged. The total elasticMāchanging cross section is ĻĪM CO2 = 8.4Ā±2.4 Ć
2. Inelastic collisions (ĪJ = +1ā which transfer molecules to j = 2 also cause M changes. with both Ar and CO2 as collision partners. M, the s p a c eāf i x e d projection of J, is found to be neither conserved nor randomized. Quantum atomādiatom collision models with quantization axis along the relative velocity vector are considered. Transition amplitudes in this system are evaluated using the lādominant and CS approximations
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