2,123 research outputs found
Rare dental trait provides morphological evidence of archaic introgression in Asian fossil record
The recently described Denisovan hemimandible from Xiahe, China [F. Chen et al., (2019) Nature 569, 409–412], possesses an unusual dental feature: a 3-rooted lower second molar. A survey of the clinical and bioarchaeological literature demonstrates that the 3-rooted lower molar is rare (less than 3.5% occurrence) in non-Asian Homo sapiens. In contrast, its presence in Asian-derived populations can exceed 40% in China and the New World. It has long been thought that the prevalence of 3-rooted lower molars in Asia is a relatively late acquisition occurring well after the origin and dispersal of H. sapiens. However, the presence of a 3-rooted lower second molar in this 160,000-y-old fossil hominin suggests greater antiquity for the trait. Importantly, it also provides morphological evidence of a strong link between archaic and recent Asian H. sapiens populations. This link provides compelling evidence that modern Asian lineages acquired the 3-rooted lower molar via introgression from Denisovans
Renormalized masses of heavy Kaluza-Klein states
Several ways of computing the radiative corrections to the heavy boson masses
in Kaluza-Klein theory are discussed. It is argued that only an intrinsically
higher dimensional approach embodies all the desired physical properties.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages. Fully rewritten and streamlined. Five and six
dimensional cases treated separatelly. References adde
Unimodular cosmology and the weight of energy
Some models are presented in which the strength of the gravitational coupling
of the potential energy relative to the same coupling for the kinetic energy
is, in a precise sense, adjustable. The gauge symmetry of these models consists
of those coordinate changes with unit jacobian.Comment: LaTeX, 23 pages, conclusions expanded. Two paragraphs and a new
reference adde
Visual Spike-based Convolution Processing with a Cellular Automata Architecture
this paper presents a first approach for
implementations which fuse the Address-Event-Representation
(AER) processing with the Cellular Automata using FPGA and
AER-tools. This new strategy applies spike-based convolution
filters inspired by Cellular Automata for AER vision
processing. Spike-based systems are neuro-inspired circuits
implementations traditionally used for sensory systems or
sensor signal processing. AER is a neuromorphic
communication protocol for transferring asynchronous events
between VLSI spike-based chips. These neuro-inspired
implementations allow developing complex, multilayer,
multichip neuromorphic systems and have been used to design
sensor chips, such as retinas and cochlea, processing chips, e.g.
filters, and learning chips. Furthermore, Cellular Automata is a
bio-inspired processing model for problem solving. This
approach divides the processing synchronous cells which
change their states at the same time in order to get the solution.Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia TEC2006-11730-C03-02Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación TEC2009-10639-C04-02Junta de Andalucía P06-TIC-0141
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