2,508 research outputs found

    Access to consciousness of briefly presented visual events is modulated by transcranial direct current stimulation of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

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    Adaptive behaviour requires the ability to process goal-relevant events at the expense of irrelevant ones. However, perception of a relevant visual event can transiently preclude access to consciousness of subsequent events — a phenomenon called attentional blink (AB). Here we investigated involvement of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) in conscious access, by using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to potentiate or reduce neural excitability in the context of an AB task. In a sham-controlled experimental design, we applied between groups anodal or cathodal tDCS over the left DLPFC, and examined whether this stimulation modulated the proportion of stimuli that were consciously reported during the AB period. We found that tDCS over the left DLPFC affected the proportion of consciously perceived target stimuli. Moreover, anodal and cathodal tDCS had opposing effects, and exhibited different temporal patterns. Anodal stimulation attenuated the AB, enhancing conscious report earlier in the AB period. Cathodal stimulation accentuated the AB, reducing conscious report later in the AB period. These findings support the notion that the DLPFC plays a role in facilitating information transition from the unconscious to the conscious stage of processing

    Are Domain Walls ruled out ?

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    Recent analysis of the combined data of cosmic microwave background, galaxy clustering and supernovae type Ia observations have set strong constraints on the equation of state parameter wXw_X. The upper bound wX<0.82w_X < -0.82 at 95% c.l. rules out an important class of models, the domain walls (2/3<wX<1/3-2/3 < w_X < -1/3). Here we revisit the issue of domain walls as a possible alternative to the standard Λ\Lambda-CDM model by questioning the assumptions made in the choice of priors of the data analysis. The results of our investigation show that domain walls can provide a good fit to the WMAP data for a different choice of priors with ``lower'' values of the Hubble parameter (h<0.65h<0.65), (as indicated by Sunyaev-Zeldovich and time delays for gravitational lensing observations), and ``higher'' values of the matter density (Ωm>0.35\Omega_m > 0.35), (in agreement with recent measurements of the temperature-luminosity relation of distant clusters observed with the XMM-Newton satellite). In this new perspective, their existence would lead to important implications for the CMB constraints on cosmological and inflationary parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure

    Inclusive Muon Capture in Light Nuclei

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    We study total muon capture rates in light nuclei, taking into account renormalizations of the nuclear vector and axial vector strengths. We estimate the influence in the results of uncertainties of the spin-isospin interaction parameter and nuclear densities. A few of these reactions are theoretical benchmarks for physics involving searches for neutrino oscillations. New experiments in muon capture in several targets are suggested, in the light of some discrepancies with theory, crudeness of some experimental results and relevance to neutrino physics.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, no figures. Submitted to Phys.Lett.

    Acquired ptosis associated with oculomotor and contralateral facial nerve synkinesis: the first reported case

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    Evidence of oculomotor nerve (ON) synkinesis is a common occurrence following both acquired and congenital III nerve palsy. It is generally accepted that aberrant regeneration is the likely aetiology of synkinesis in acquired III nerve palsy, following intracranial aneurysm, trauma, compressive neoplasms, cavernous sinus thrombosis and basilar meningitis

    SPIRE Map-Making Test Report

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    The photometer section of SPIRE is one of the key instruments on board of Herschel. Its legacy depends very much on how well the scanmap observations that it carried out during the Herschel mission can be converted to high quality maps. In order to have a comprehensive assessment on the current status of SPIRE map-making, as well as to provide guidance for future development of the SPIRE scan-map data reduction pipeline, we carried out a test campaign on SPIRE map-making. In this report, we present results of the tests in this campaign.Comment: This document has an executive summary, 6 chapters, and 102 pages. More information can be found at: https://nhscsci.ipac.caltech.edu/sc/index.php/Spire/SPIREMap-MakingTest201

    Analisi di variabili climatiche in funzione della comprensione della variabilit? planctonica (caso di studio: Golfo di Trieste)

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    No abstract available in english.Con questo lavoro si presenta il confronto fra le rianalisi ERA-40 e i dati osservati alla stazione meteo di Trieste, finalizzato all\u27individuazione delle variabili pi? appropriate per lo studio degli effetti del clima sul plancton. Per quello che riguarda pressione a livello del mare, i primi risultati indicano un accordo quasi completo (r=0,99) fra rianalisi e osservazioni. Si riscontra invece una generale sottostima della velocit? del vento da parte degli ERA-40 rispetto ai dati locali. Le rianalisi ERA-40, per via della loro omogeneit? spazio-temporale, restano appropriate per la costruzione di mappe di regressione temporale rispetto alla serie planctoniche. Sono indicati gli anni anomali rispetto a queste due variabili e alla SST

    Large Spatial Scale Variability in Bathyal Macrobenthos Abundance, Biomass, a- and b-Diversity along the Mediterranean Continental Margin

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    The large-scale deep-sea biodiversity distribution of the benthic fauna was explored in the Mediterranean Sea, which can beseen as a miniature model of the oceans of the world. Within the framework of the BIOFUN project (‘‘Biodiversity andEcosystem Functioning in Contrasting Southern European Deep-sea Environments: from viruses to megafauna’’), weinvestigated the large spatial scale variability (over .1,000 km) of the bathyal macrofauna communities that inhabit theMediterranean basin, and their relationships with the environmental variables. The macrofauna abundance, biomass,community structure and functional diversity were analysed and the a-diversity and b-diversity were estimated across sixselected slope areas at different longitudes and along three main depths. The macrobenthic standing stock and a-diversitywere lower in the deep-sea sediments of the eastern Mediterranean basin, compared to the western and central basins. Themacrofaunal standing stock and diversity decreased significantly from the upper bathyal to the lower bathyal slope stations.The major changes in the community composition of the higher taxa and in the trophic (functional) structure occurred atdifferent longitudes, rather than at increasing water depth. For the b-diversity, very high dissimilarities emerged at all levels:(i) between basins; (ii) between slopes within the same basin; and (iii) between stations at different depths; this thereforedemonstrates the high macrofaunal diversity of the Mediterranean basins at large spatial scales. Overall, the food sources(i.e., quantity and quality) that characterised the west, central and eastern Mediterranean basins, as well as sediment grainsize, appear to influence the macrobenthic standing stock and the biodiversity along the different slope areas
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