229 research outputs found
Action adaptation during natural unfolding social scenes influences action recognition and inferences made about actor beliefs
When observing another individual's actions, we can both recognize their actions and infer their beliefs concerning the physical and social environment. The extent to which visual adaptation influences action recognition and conceptually later stages of processing involved in deriving the belief state of the actor remains unknown. To explore this we used virtual reality (life-size photorealistic actors presented in stereoscopic three dimensions) to see how visual adaptation influences the perception of individuals in naturally unfolding social scenes at increasingly higher levels of action understanding. We presented scenes in which one actor picked up boxes (of varying number and weight), after which a second actor picked up a single box. Adaptation to the first actor's behavior systematically changed perception of the second actor. Aftereffects increased with the duration of the first actor's behavior, declined exponentially over time, and were independent of view direction. Inferences about the second actor's expectation of box weight were also distorted by adaptation to the first actor. Distortions in action recognition and actor expectations did not, however, extend across different actions, indicating that adaptation is not acting at an action-independent abstract level but rather at an action-dependent level. We conclude that although adaptation influences more complex inferences about belief states of individuals, this is likely to be a result of adaptation at an earlier action recognition stage rather than adaptation operating at a higher, more abstract level in mentalizing or simulation systems
English Premier League and English Football League academy managers’ experiences of how psychosocial skills and characteristics are identified and developed in youth academy soccer players
Psychological skills and characteristics (PSCs) are vital for player development, yet there is a lack of agreement on which are important and how they should be identified and developed in academy players, creating barriers to implementation into curricula. The key stakeholder with considerable insight into PSC development is the academy manager (AM). The aims of this study were (a) explore AMs’ experiences of PSC identification and development, (b) identify challenges AMs feel affect development of PSCs. Nine AMs (i.e. Category 1; n = 3, Category 2; n = 3 and Category 3; n = 3) comprising an average coaching experience of 20.4 ± 7.4 years and time in the role of 5.2 years ±3.2 years participated in semi-structured interviews. Reflexive thematic analysis generated themes identified ideal PSC outcomes that AMs felt were important. AMs identified current practices within academies alongside challenges: transitions, need to upskill coaches, access to additional support from external partners and National Governing Bodies. There was consensus that PSCs are key drivers of progression and that embedding them into the pathway was critical to facilitating development. Academies should think carefully about design, implementation and evaluation of programmes to support player PSC development for success during and after soccer careers
Integrating ecology into macroevolutionary research
On 9 March, over 150 biologists gathered in London for the Centre for Ecology and Evolution spring symposium, ‘Integrating Ecology into Macroevolutionary Research’. The event brought together researchers from London-based institutions alongside others from across the UK, Europe and North America for a day of talks. The meeting highlighted methodological advances and recent analyses of exemplar datasets focusing on the exploration of the role of ecological processes in shaping macroevolutionary patterns
OzFuel Pre-Phase A Study
This document presents the results of a Pre-Phase A study for the OzFuel bushfire fuel monitoring
mission in accordance with NASA system engineering standards.
The OzFuel Pre-Phase A Study (Australian Forest Fuel Monitoring from Space) report was developed
by the Australian National University (ANU) Institute for Space for Geoscience Australia (GA) and
CSIRO in support of their contribution to Australia’s Satellite Cross-Calibration Radiometer (SCR) and
AquaWatch missions (UNSW Canberra Space, 2021).
The OzFuel study conceptualises a multispectral bushfire fuel monitoring satellite mission to fulfil
two major goals:
To launch a dedicated science and research mission to mitigate the risk of future
catastrophic bushfires; and
To deliver an Australian designed and built pathfinder mission to de-risk the SCR program.
Key outcomes of the OzFuel mission are:
Australian capability enables the forward-looking development of a fully operational satellite
constellation for bushfire prevention, mitigation and resilience.
ANU expertise in global fuel hazard spatial data augments international commercial and
government fire detection initiatives.
Space-proven Australian detector technology becomes available for national and
commercial small satellite missions.
This report comprises two parts:
Part 1: OzFuel Mission Requirements developed by Nicolas Younes and Marta Yebra from
the ANU Fenner School of Environment & Society. The report introduces the OzFuel mission,
the need for a dedicated fuel monitoring mission, and the remote sensing requirements for
a pathfinder mission.
Part 2: OzFuel Technical Overview developed by Rob Sharp from the ANU Advanced
Instrumentation & Technology Centre. The overview outlines the technical design and
payload options for the OzFuel-1mission.
The climate crisis over the past decade culminated in the unprecedented 2019/2020 Australian
bushfire conditions that were more catastrophic than expected or modelled. The risk of larger and
more frequent mega-fires is only going to increase in future years. Allocating further ground
resources to suppress fires is extremely costly and dangerous, and needs to be augmented with
more effective prediction, prevention and mitigation strategies before an unforeseen ignition event
burns out of control.
One of the most crucial aspects of fire prevention is understanding vegetative fuel state. The 2020
Royal Commission into National Natural Disasters highlights the need for whole-of-continent
visibility of vegetative fuel state – how much fuel there is and how dry it is. Australia relies on foreign
satellite data which is not optimised for measuring our unique bush landscape. The growing need forsovereign satellites to remotely sense Australia’s unique vegetation has been supported by
recommendations from government, agencies, industry and research institutions.Geoscience Australi
Primary Hyperparathyroidism Patients with Positive Preoperative Sestamibi Scan and Negative Ultrasound Are More Likely to Have Posteriorly Located Upper Gland Adenomas (PLUGs)
BackgroundStandard preoperative imaging for primary hyperparathyroidism usually includes sestamibi scanning (MIBI) and ultrasound (US). In a subset of patients with a positive MIBI and a negative US, we hypothesize that the parathyroid adenomas are more likely to be located posteriorly in the neck, where anatomically they are more difficult to detect by US.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed the records of 661 patients treated for primary hyperparathyroidism between 2004 and 2009 at a tertiary referral center. We included patients who for their first operation had a MIBI that localized a single lesion in the neck and an US that found no parathyroid adenoma. We excluded patients with persistent or recurrent hyperparathyroidism, and patients with MIBIs that were negative, that had more than one positive focus, or that had foci outside of the neck. Sixty-six cases were included in the final analysis.ResultsA total of 54 patients (83%) had a single adenoma, 4 (6%) had double adenomas, and 7 (11%) had hyperplasia. Thirty-three patients (51%) had a single upper gland adenoma; 19 of these (58%) were posteriorly located upper gland adenomas (PLUGs). PLUGs occurred more often on the right side than on the left (P = 0.048, Fisher's test). PLUGs were also larger than other single adenomas (mean 1.85 vs. 1.48 cm, P = 0.021, t-test). Seventy-six percent of patients successfully underwent a unilateral or focused exploration. Six patients (9%) had persistent disease, which is double our group's overall average (4-5%).ConclusionsPrimary hyperparathyroid patients with preoperative positive MIBI and negative US are more likely to have PLUGs
msBayes: Pipeline for testing comparative phylogeographic histories using hierarchical approximate Bayesian computation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although testing for simultaneous divergence (vicariance) across different population-pairs that span the same barrier to gene flow is of central importance to evolutionary biology, researchers often equate the gene tree and population/species tree thereby ignoring stochastic coalescent variance in their conclusions of temporal incongruence. In contrast to other available phylogeographic software packages, msBayes is the only one that analyses data from multiple species/population pairs under a hierarchical model.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>msBayes employs approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) under a hierarchical coalescent model to test for simultaneous divergence (TSD) in multiple co-distributed population-pairs. Simultaneous isolation is tested by estimating three hyper-parameters that characterize the degree of variability in divergence times across co-distributed population pairs while allowing for variation in various within population-pair demographic parameters (sub-parameters) that can affect the coalescent. msBayes is a software package consisting of several C and R programs that are run with a Perl "front-end".</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The method reasonably distinguishes simultaneous isolation from temporal incongruence in the divergence of co-distributed population pairs, even with sparse sampling of individuals. Because the estimate step is decoupled from the simulation step, one can rapidly evaluate different ABC acceptance/rejection conditions and the choice of summary statistics. Given the complex and idiosyncratic nature of testing multi-species biogeographic hypotheses, we envision msBayes as a powerful and flexible tool for tackling a wide array of difficult research questions that use population genetic data from multiple co-distributed species. The msBayes pipeline is available for download at <url>http://msbayes.sourceforge.net/</url> under an open source license (GNU Public License). The msBayes pipeline is comprised of several C and R programs that are run with a Perl "front-end" and runs on Linux, Mac OS-X, and most POSIX systems. Although the current implementation is for a single locus per species-pair, future implementations will allow analysis of multi-loci data per species pair.</p
Reference Force Field and CDW Amplitude of Mixed-Valence Halogen-Bridged Pt Complexes
The spectroscopic effects of electron-phonon coupling in mixed-valence
chlorine-bridged Pt chains complexes are investigated through a parallel
infrared and Raman study of three compounds with decreasing Pt-Pt distance
along the chain. The e-ph interaction is analyzed in terms of the
Herzberg-Teller coupling scheme. We take into account the quadratic term and
define a precise reference state. The force field relevant to this state is
constructed, whereas the electronic structure is analyzed in terms of a simple
phenomenological model, singling out a trimeric unit along the chain. In this
way we are able to account for all the available optical data of the three
compounds, and to estimate the relevant microscopic parameters, such as the
e-ph coupling constants and the CDW amplitude.Comment: 10 pages, compressed postscript, 6 Tables and 5 Figures also in a
compressed ps.Z file. Revision is in the submission format only (postscript
instead of tex
Diagnostic delay for giant cell arteritis – a systematic review and meta-analysis
Background Giant cell arteritis (GCA), if untreated, can lead to blindness and stroke. The study’s objectives were to (1) determine a new evidence-based benchmark of the extent of diagnostic delay for GCA and (2) examine the role of GCA-specific characteristics on diagnostic delay. Methods Medical literature databases were searched from inception to November 2015. Articles were included if reporting a time-period of diagnostic delay between onset of GCA symptoms and diagnosis. Two reviewers assessed the quality of the final articles and extracted data from these. Random-effects meta-analysis was used to pool the mean time-period (95% confidence interval (CI)) between GCA symptom onset and diagnosis, and the delay observed for GCA-specific characteristics. Heterogeneity was assessed by I 2 and by 95% prediction interval (PI). Results Of 4128 articles initially identified, 16 provided data for meta-analysis. Mean diagnostic delay was 9.0 weeks (95% CI, 6.5 to 11.4) between symptom onset and GCA diagnosis (I 2 = 96.0%; P < 0.001; 95% PI, 0 to 19.2 weeks). Patients with a cranial presentation of GCA received a diagnosis after 7.7 (95% CI, 2.7 to 12.8) weeks (I 2 = 98.4%; P < 0.001; 95% PI, 0 to 27.6 weeks) and those with non-cranial GCA after 17.6 (95% CI, 9.7 to 25.5) weeks (I 2 = 96.6%; P < 0.001; 95% PI, 0 to 46.1 weeks). Conclusions The mean delay from symptom onset to GCA diagnosis was 9 weeks, or longer when cranial symptoms were absent. Our research provides an evidence-based benchmark for diagnostic delay of GCA and supports the need for improved public awareness and fast-track diagnostic pathways
Extinction Risk and Diversification Are Linked in a Plant Biodiversity Hotspot
Plant extinction risks in the Cape, South Africa differ from those for
vertebrates worldwide, with young and fast-evolving plant lineages marching
towards extinction at the fastest rate, but independently of human effects
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