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Category-based induction: An effect of conclusion typicality
Category-based induction involves the willingness of a thinker to project some newly learned property of one or more classesof objects to another class on the basis of their sharedmembership in a common superordinate category. Previous research has established that the perceived strength of arguments of the form âClass A has Property P; therefore, Class B has Property Pâ is influenced by the similarity of A to B and by the typicality or representativeness of A in a shared category, superordinate to both A and B. (The nature of P is also crucial, but we do not examine it in this study.) There is, however, no prior evidence that the relation between B and the category is influential. Three experiments were designed to test whether the typicalityof B in the superordinate category also has an effecton inductive argument strength. By using multiple regression (Experiment 1) and an experimental design (Experiment 3), an effect of conclusion typicality was found, so that people are more willing to project properties to more typical conclusions. Experiment 2 ruled out conclusion familiarity as a potential confounding variable. The results are interpreted in the light of current models of category-based induction
Heegaard diagrams and surgery descriptions for twisted face-pairing 3-manifolds
The twisted face-pairing construction of our earlier papers gives an
efficient way of generating, mechanically and with little effort, myriads of
relatively simple face-pairing descriptions of interesting closed 3-manifolds.
The corresponding description in terms of surgery, or Dehn-filling, reveals the
twist construction as a carefully organized surgery on a link.
In this paper, we work out the relationship between the twisted face-pairing
description of closed 3-manifolds and the more common descriptions by surgery
and Heegaard diagrams. We show that all Heegaard diagrams have a natural
decomposition into subdiagrams called Heegaard cylinders, each of which has a
natural shape given by the ratio of two positive integers. We characterize the
Heegaard diagrams arising naturally from a twisted face-pairing description as
those whose Heegaard cylinders all have integral shape. This characterization
allows us to use the Kirby calculus and standard tools of Heegaard theory to
attack the problem of finding which closed, orientable 3-manifolds have a
twisted face-pairing description.Comment: Published by Algebraic and Geometric Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/agt/AGTVol3/agt-3-10.abs.htm
The Algebra of Strand Splitting. II. A Presentation for the Braid Group on One Strand
Presentations are computed for a braided version BV of Thompson's group V and
for V itself showing that there is an Artin group/Coxeter group relation
between them. The presentation for V is obtained from that for BV by declaring
all that all generators are involutions.Comment: 15 page
MONTAGE: AGB nucleosynthesis with full s-process calculations
We present MONTAGE, a post-processing nucleosynthesis code that combines a
traditional network for isotopes lighter than calcium with a rapid algorithm
for calculating the s-process nucleosynthesis of the heavier isotopes. The
separation of those parts of the network where only neutron-capture and
beta-decay reactions are significant provides a substantial advantage in
computational efficiency. We present the yields for a complete set of s-process
isotopes for a 3 Mo, Z = 0.02 stellar model, as a demonstration of the utility
of the approach. Future work will include a large grid of models suitable for
use in calculations of Galactic chemical evolution.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by PAS
Universal shape ratios for polymers grafted at a flat surface
We consider dilute non-adsorbed polymers grafted at an impenetrable surface
and compute several quantities which characterize the polymer shape: the
asphericity and the ratios of the eigenvalues of the radius-of-gyration tensor.
The results are only slightly different from those obtained for polymers in the
bulk, showing that the surface has little influence on the polymer shape.Comment: 10 pages, LaTe
Point vortices on the hyperbolic plane
We investigate some properties of the dynamical system of point vortices on
the hyperboloid. This system has noncompact symmetry SL(2, R) and a coadjoint
equivariant momentum map J. The relative equilibrium conditions are found and
the trajectories of relative equilibria with non-zero momentum value are
described. We also provide the classification of relative equilibria and the
stability criteria for a number of cases, focusing on N=2, 3. Contrary to the
system on the sphere, relative equilibria with non-compact momentum isotropy
subgroup are found, and are used to illustrate the different stability types of
relative equilibria.Comment: To appear in J. Mathematical Physic
âHearts and mindsâ: association, causation and implication of cognitive impairment in heart failure
The clinical syndrome of heart failure is one of the leading causes of hospitalisation and mortality in older adults. An association between cognitive impairment and heart failure is well described but our understanding of the relationship between the two conditions remains limited. In this review we provide a synthesis of available evidence, focussing on epidemiology, the potential pathogenesis, and treatment implications of cognitive decline in heart failure. Most evidence available relates to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and the syndromes of chronic cognitive decline or dementia. These conditions are only part of a complex heart failure-cognition paradigm. Associations between cognition and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and between acute delirium and heart failure also seem evident and where data are available we will discuss these syndromes. Many questions remain unanswered regarding heart failure and cognition. Much of the observational evidence on the association is confounded by study design, comorbidity and insensitive cognitive assessment tools. If a causal link exists, there are several potential pathophysiological explanations. Plausible underlying mechanisms relating to cerebral hypoperfusion or occult cerebrovascular disease have been described and it seems likely that these may coexist and exert synergistic effects. Despite the prevalence of the two conditions, when cognitive impairment coexists with heart failure there is no specific guidance on treatment. Institution of evidence-based heart failure therapies that reduce mortality and hospitalisations seems intuitive and there is no signal that these interventions have an adverse effect on cognition. However, cognitive impairment will present a further barrier to the often complex medication self-management that is required in contemporary heart failure treatment
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