9,159 research outputs found
Ilha das Flores, estatura e peso em crianças dos 6 aos 11 anos.
IV Expedição Científica do Departamento de Biologia – Flores 1989.0s estudos de crescimento físico humano têm-se revelado de grande interesse pois
permitem conhecer as características de diferentes populações e a variabilidade
existente intra e interpopulações. Mas um dos aspectos mais importantes destes
estudos talvez o de, ao se analisar o estado de crescimento e tempo de desenvolvimento
do indivíduo, permitir destrinçar factores que influenciam nefastamente o crescimento.
As diferenças existentes entre populações são o resultado da interacção do ambiente
com os factores genéticos. 0s factores ambientais influênciadores do crescimento são: nutrição, doenças, status sócio-económico, urbanismo, actividade física, stress psicológico, estado do ano e clima. A nutrição é considerado o agente mais influenciador no processo de crescimento (Eveleth, 1979; Malcolm, 1979). Neste estudo consideraram-se a estatura e o peso como os indicadores do crescimento das crianças, de idades entre os 6 e 11 anos, na sua maioria naturais da Ilha das Flores. 0s objectivos foram comparar os valores obtidos com existentes para crianças continentais, descrever a sua variação em função dos indicadores sócio-económicos: profissão do pai, número de irmãos e ordem de nascimento
Neural mechanisms of stimulus generalization in auditory fear conditioning
Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Neuroscience Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica, Universidade Nova de LisboaFear is a physiological trait with a strong weight on survival and
adaptation. Great progress has been made to understand the
mechanisms of fear learning, mainly using auditory fear conditioning
(AFC). In this behavioral paradigm, an initial neutral tone (conditioned
stimulus, CS) acquires aversive predictive properties after successive
pairings with a footshock (unconditioned stimulus, US) and comes to
elicit responses characteristically elicited by threatening stimuli. In this
behavioral paradigm, the amygdala has been identified has a key
neural substrate for associative fear learning, and the site where
unconditioned stimuli (US) and conditioned (CS) auditory stimuli come
to be associated.
Auditory information may reach the amygdala either directly
from the auditory thalamus or indirectly via thalamo-cortico-amygdala
projections. The “high route/low route” hypothesis has thus been
proposed, which claims that the cortical pathway (“high route”) is
crucial for discrimination between fearful and neutral sounds, while the
direct thalamic pathway (“low route”) provides a rapid but less
accurate relay of auditory information to the amygdala. This
hypothesis relies on the assumption that more complex processing
requires cortical activity and that thalamic relay is faster then cortical
transmission to the amygdala. The present work essentially aims at
putting to test this largely accepted hypothesis.Auditory fear
conditioning was used as the behavioral paradigm to unravel the
possible functional explanation for the coexistence of two parallel
auditory pathways converging into the amygdala, and the high route/low route hypothesis was the working model for the identification
of neuronal substrates of auditory discrimination.(...)This work was supported by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Grant SFRH/BD/27500/2006)
Agricultores guardiões de sementes e o desenvolvimento in situ de cultivares crioulas.
bitstream/CPACT-2009-09/11716/1/artigo-Bevilaq_sement.pd
A new method based on noise counting to monitor the frontend electronics of the LHCb muon detector
A new method has been developed to check the correct behaviour of the
frontend electronics of the LHCb muon detector. This method is based on the
measurement of the electronic noise rate at different thresholds of the
frontend discriminator. The method was used to choose the optimal discriminator
thresholds. A procedure based on this method was implemented in the detector
control system and allowed the detection of a small percentage of frontend
channels which had deteriorated. A Monte Carlo simulation has been performed to
check the validity of the method
The Ginzburg regime and its effects on topological defect formation
The Ginzburg temperature has historically been proposed as the energy scale
of formation of topological defects at a second order symmetry breaking phase
transition. More recently alternative proposals which compute the time of
formation of defects from the critical dynamics of the system, have been
gaining both theoretical and experimental support. We investigate, using a
canonical model for string formation, how these two pictures compare. In
particular we show that prolonged exposure of a critical field configuration to
the Ginzburg regime results in no substantial suppression of the final density
of defects formed. These results dismiss the recently proposed role of the
Ginzburg regime in explaining the absence of topological defects in 4He
pressure quench experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 5 ps figure
Predicting the critical density of topological defects in O(N) scalar field theories
O(N) symmetric field theories describe many critical
phenomena in the laboratory and in the early Universe. Given N and ,
the dimension of space, these models exhibit topological defect classical
solutions that in some cases fully determine their critical behavior. For N=2,
D=3 it has been observed that the defect density is seemingly a universal
quantity at T_c. We prove this conjecture and show how to predict its value
based on the universal critical exponents of the field theory. Analogously, for
general N and D we predict the universal critical densities of domain walls and
monopoles, for which no detailed thermodynamic study exists. This procedure can
also be inverted, producing an algorithm for generating typical defect networks
at criticality, in contrast to the canonical procedure, which applies only in
the unphysical limit of infinite temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, uses RevTex, typos in Eq.(11) and (14) correcte
Vortex Loop Phase Transitions in Liquid Helium, Cosmic Strings, and High-T_c Superconductors
The distribution of thermally excited vortex loops near a superfluid phase
transition is calculated from a renormalized theory. The number density of
loops with a given perimeter is found to change from exponential decay with
increasing perimeter to algebraic decay as T_c is approached, in agreement with
recent simulations of both cosmic strings and high-T_c superconductors.
Predictions of the value of the exponent of the algebraic decay at T_c and of
critical behavior in the vortex density are confirmed by the simulations,
giving strong support to the vortex-folding model proposed by Shenoy.Comment: Version to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett, with a number of corrections
and addition
Monitoramento da cultura da cana-de-açúcar utilizando a Transformada de Wavelet em séries temporais de dados EVI/MODIS.
O objetivo do trabalho foi realizar o monitoramento da cultura da cana-de-açúcar no noroeste do Estado de São Paulo, utilizando a Transformada de Wavelet em séries temporais de dados EVI/MODIS, do ano de 2005 a 2009.SBSR 2011
The Creation of Defects with Core Condensation
Defects in superfluid 3He, high-Tc superconductors, QCD colour superfluids
and cosmic vortons can possess (anti)ferromagnetic cores, and their
generalisations. In each case there is a second order parameter whose value is
zero in the bulk which does not vanish in the core. We examine the production
of defects in the simplest 1+1 dimensional scalar theory in which a second
order parameter can take non-zero values in a defect core. We study in detail
the effects of core condensation on the defect production mechanism.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, small corrections, 2 references added, final
version to be published in PR
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