5,196 research outputs found

    Visual perception in twins - A pilot study

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    INTRODUCTION Tests of visual perception are commonly used for diagnosis and guiding effective treatment. However, few studies have attempted to ascertain the contributions of genetics or environment to visual-perceptual ability. Results of these studies have been equivocal. Based on casual observation, a hypothesis was developed that monozygotic (MZ) twins would have more similar visual-perceptual skills than dizygotic (DZ) twins. The purpose of this study is to compare visual-perceptual test results of monozygotic versus dizygotic twins to see if a genetic link could be demonstrated. Versions of Gardner\u27s Test of Visual-Perceptual Skills were chosen due to its ease of administration, common utilization, and because it, is a non-language test and is not biased according to race, culture, gender or education. \u27 METHODS The Test of Visual-Perceptual Skills (non-motor) Revised (TVPS-R) or Test of Visual- Perceptual Skills (non-motor) Upper Level-Revised (TVPS-(UL)-R) was administered to seven sets of MZ twins, 12 sets of DZ twins, and 32 family members of these twins. (The 17 years, 11 months-norms were used for all adults2) Identification of twins as MZ or DZ was based on information from reports the twins themselves or their parents. All subjects wore their habitual correction while taking the test. RESULTS Overall Sum of Standard Scores, and scores for each subtest were analyzed using both Fixed Effects Regression Analysis and Difference of Means Test with Student T-Test. In addition to comparisons between MZ and DZ twins, results from dizygotic-different gender twins (DZDG) and dizygotic-same gender twins (DZSG) were also analyzed. For all twin pairs, scores of one twin closely matched the other (p\u3c0.05) for Visual Memory, Visual Form Constancy, Visual Sequential Memory, Visual Closure subtests and Sum of Standard Scores. Same-Gender twins\u27 scores were even more similar than non-twin scores (p\u3c0.01 or less) for all subtests except Visual Discrimination and Visual Sequential Memory. Spatial Relationships scores and Sum of Sandard Scores were more similar for MZ than DZ twins (p\u3c0.01 and pC0.05). With same-gender twins, other than Spatial Relationships, no difference existed between MZ and DZ (p\u3c0.05). Spatial Relationships, Form Constancy, and Sum of Standard Scores (all p\u3c0.001) were more similar with MZ twins than DZDG twins. Same-gender DZ twins were also more similar than different-gender DZ twins for the above three areas (pc0.02; 0.01 and 0.001 respectively). DISCUSSION The hypothesis that MZ twins would score with more similarity on a visual-perceptual test than DZ twins was partially supported by these results; notably for Spatial Relationships and Sum of the Standard Scores. Of interest is that the overall Sum of Standard Scores differentiation was no longer seen when different gender twins were removed from the sample. In other words, the Sum of Standard Scores was more dissimilar for different gender twins. Although the sample size is too small for generalization, this discovery implies that gender may be a dominant factor in the visual-perceptual differences that were found. Since the TVPS is thought to be gender-blind, this should be addressed in future investigations

    Biharmonic Riemannian submersions from 3-manifolds

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    An important theorem about biharmonic submanifolds proved independently by Chen-Ishikawa [CI] and Jiang [Ji] states that an isometric immersion of a surface into 3-dimensional Euclidean space is biharmonic if and only if it is harmonic (i.e, minimal). In a later paper [CMO2], Cadeo-Monttaldo-Oniciuc shown that the theorem remains true if the target Euclidean space is replaced by a 3-dimensional hyperbolic space form. In this paper, we prove the dual results for Riemannian submersions, i.e., a Riemannian submersion from a 3-dimensional space form of non-positive curvature into a surface is biharmonic if and only if it is harmonic

    Quantifying wind and pressure effects on trace gas fluxes across the soil–atmosphere interface

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    Acknowledgements. We would like to acknowledge the manufacturers of the inner toroid: Mark Bentley and Steve Howarth from the University of York, Dept. of Biology, mechanical and electronics workshops respectively. Furthermore, we would like to acknowledge the Forestry Commission for access and aid at Wheldrake Forest, Mike Bailey and Natural Resources Wales for access and assistance at Cors Fochno, and Norrie Russell and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds for access and aid at Forsinard. We would also like to thank Graham Hambley, James Robinson, and Elizabeth Donkin for equipment preparation and sampling. Phil Ineson is thanked for the loan of essential equipment, site suggestions, and accessible power supply. Funding was provided by the University of York, Dept. of Biology, and by a grant to YAT by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NE/H01182X/1).Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Sr0.9_{0.9}K0.1_{0.1}Zn1.8_{1.8}Mn0.2_{0.2}As2_{2}: a ferromagnetic semiconductor with colossal magnetoresistance

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    A bulk diluted magnetic semiconductor (Sr,K)(Zn,Mn)2_{2}As2_{2} was synthesized with decoupled charge and spin doping. It has a hexagonal CaAl2_{2}Si2_{2}-type structure with the (Zn,Mn)2_{2}As2_{2} layer forming a honeycomb-like network. Magnetization measurements show that the sample undergoes a ferromagnetic transition with a Curie temperature of 12 K and \revision{magnetic moment reaches about 1.5 ÎŒB\mu_{B}/Mn under ÎŒ0H\mu_0H = 5 T and TT = 2 K}. Surprisingly, a colossal negative magnetoresistance, defined as [ρ(H)−ρ(0)]/ρ(0)[\rho(H)-\rho(0)]/\rho(0), up to −-38\% under a low field of ÎŒ0H\mu_0H = 0.1 T and to −-99.8\% under ÎŒ0H\mu_0H = 5 T, was observed at TT = 2 K. The colossal magnetoresistance can be explained based on the Anderson localization theory.Comment: Accepted for publication in EP

    Perfect fluids from high power sigma-models

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    Certain solutions of a sextic sigma-model Lagrangian reminiscent of Skyrme model correspond to perfect fluids with stiff matter equation of state. We analyse from a differential geometric perspective this correspondence extended to general barotropic fluids.Comment: 17 pages. Version published in IJGMMP 8 (2011). Added Example 3.4 and 1 referenc

    Towards the “ultimate earthquake-proof” building: Development of an integrated low-damage system

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    The 2010–2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence has highlighted the severe mismatch between societal expectations over the reality of seismic performance of modern buildings. A paradigm shift in performance-based design criteria and objectives towards damage-control or low-damage design philosophy and technologies is urgently required. The increased awareness by the general public, tenants, building owners, territorial authorities as well as (re)insurers, of the severe socio-economic impacts of moderate-strong earthquakes in terms of damage/dollars/ downtime, has indeed stimulated and facilitated the wider acceptance and implementation of cost-efficient damage-control (or low-damage) technologies. The ‘bar’ has been raised significantly with the request to fast-track the development of what the wider general public would hope, and somehow expect, to live in, i.e. an “earthquake-proof” building system, capable of sustaining the shaking of a severe earthquake basically unscathed. The paper provides an overview of recent advances through extensive research, carried out at the University of Canterbury in the past decade towards the development of a low-damage building system as a whole, within an integrated performance-based framework, including the skeleton of the superstructure, the non-structural components and the interaction with the soil/foundation system. Examples of real on site-applications of such technology in New Zealand, using concrete, timber (engineered wood), steel or a combination of these materials, and featuring some of the latest innovative technical solutions developed in the laboratory are presented as examples of successful transfer of performance-based seismic design approach and advanced technology from theory to practice

    Damage function for historic paper. Part I: Fitness for use

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    Background In heritage science literature and in preventive conservation practice, damage functions are used to model material behaviour and specifically damage (unacceptable change), as a result of the presence of a stressor over time. For such functions to be of use in the context of collection management, it is important to define a range of parameters, such as who the stakeholders are (e.g. the public, curators, researchers), the mode of use (e.g. display, storage, manual handling), the long-term planning horizon (i.e. when in the future it is deemed acceptable for an item to become damaged or unfit for use), and what the threshold of damage is, i.e. extent of physical change assessed as damage. Results In this paper, we explore the threshold of fitness for use for archival and library paper documents used for display or reading in the context of access in reading rooms by the general public. Change is considered in the context of discolouration and mechanical deterioration such as tears and missing pieces: forms of physical deterioration that accumulate with time in libraries and archives. We also explore whether the threshold fitness for use is defined differently for objects perceived to be of different value, and for different modes of use. The data were collected in a series of fitness-for-use workshops carried out with readers/visitors in heritage institutions using principles of Design of Experiments. Conclusions The results show that when no particular value is pre-assigned to an archival or library document, missing pieces influenced readers/visitors’ subjective judgements of fitness-for-use to a greater extent than did discolouration and tears (which had little or no influence). This finding was most apparent in the display context in comparison to the reading room context. The finding also best applied when readers/visitors were not given a value scenario (in comparison to when they were asked to think about the document having personal or historic value). It can be estimated that, in general, items become unfit when text is evidently missing. However, if the visitor/reader is prompted to think of a document in terms of its historic value, then change in a document has little impact on fitness for use

    Conformational changes of calmodulin upon Ca2+ binding studied with a microfluidic mixer

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    A microfluidic mixer is applied to study the kinetics of calmodulin conformational changes upon Ca2+ binding. The device facilitates rapid, uniform mixing by decoupling hydrodynamic focusing from diffusive mixing and accesses time scales of tens of microseconds. The mixer is used in conjunction with multiphoton microscopy to examine the fast Ca2+-induced transitions of acrylodan-labeled calmodulin. We find that the kinetic rates of the conformational changes in two homologous globular domains differ by more than an order of magnitude. The characteristic time constants are ≈490 ÎŒs for the transitions in the C-terminal domain and ≈20 ms for those in the N-terminal domain of the protein. We discuss possible mechanisms for the two distinct events and the biological role of the stable intermediate, half-saturated calmodulin
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