4,540 research outputs found

    Universality in escape from a modulated potential well

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    We show that the rate of activated escape WW from a periodically modulated potential displays scaling behavior versus modulation amplitude AA. For adiabatic modulation of an optically trapped Brownian particle, measurements yield lnW(AcA)μ\ln W\propto (A_{\rm c} - A)^{\mu} with μ=1.5\mu = 1.5. The theory gives μ=3/2\mu=3/2 in the adiabatic limit and predicts a crossover to μ=2\mu=2 scaling as AA approaches the bifurcation point where the metastable state disappears.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Think Different: Applying the Old Macintosh Mantra to the Computability of the SUSY Auxiliary Field Problem

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    Starting with valise supermultiplets obtained from 0-branes plus field redefinitions, valise adinkra networks, and the "Garden Algebra," we discuss an architecture for algorithms that (starting from on-shell theories and, through a well-defined computation procedure), search for off-shell completions. We show in one dimension how to directly attack the notorious "off-shell auxiliary field" problem of supersymmetry with algorithms in the adinkra network-world formulation.Comment: 28 pages, 1 figur

    The “broken escalator” phenomenon: Vestibular dizziness interferes with locomotor adaptation

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    BACKGROUND: Although vestibular lesions degrade postural control we do not know the relative contributions of the magnitude of the vestibular loss and subjective vestibular symptoms to locomotor adaptation. OBJECTIVE: To study how dizzy symptoms interfere with adaptive locomotor learning. METHODS: We examined patients with contrasting peripheral vestibular deficits, vestibular neuritis in the chronic stable phase (n = 20) and strongly symptomatic unilateral Meniere’s disease (n = 15), compared to age-matched healthy controls (n = 15). We measured locomotor adaptive learning using the “broken escalator” aftereffect, simulated on a motorised moving sled. RESULTS: Patients with Meniere’s disease had an enhanced “broken escalator” postural aftereffect. More generally, the size of the locomotor aftereffect was related to how symptomatic patients were across both groups. Contrastingly, the degree of peripheral vestibular loss was not correlated with symptom load or locomotor aftereffect size. During the MOVING trials, both patient groups had larger levels of instability (trunk sway) and reduced adaptation than normal controls. CONCLUSION: Dizziness symptoms influence locomotor adaptation and its subsequent expression through motor aftereffects. Given that the unsteadiness experienced during the “broken escalator” paradigm is internally driven, the enhanced aftereffect found represents a new type of self-generated postural challenge for vestibular/unsteady patients

    Horizontal stress anisotropy and effective stress as regulator of coal seam gas zonation in the Sydney Basin, Australia

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    Coal seam gas zonation in the Sydney Basin, NSW, Australia is related to basin hydrodynamics and hydrochemical facies evolution along the flow path from the subcrop to the basin center. Biogenic methane corresponds with meteoric water under hydrostatic pressure and persists down to the top of the geopressured zone (~800 to 1000m). Thermogenic gases, including wet hydrocarbons, can reach up to relatively shallow horizons of less than 500-600m depth. In the transition zone between the top of the geopressured and base of the hydrostatic zone, a mixed water and gas regime prevails, comprising brackish waters, and gases of mixed biogenic, thermogenic and inorganic origins, including CO. Mechanisms for and the role of stress in the development of this layered hydrogeological and gas environment are investigated in this paper.The inverse relationship between effective horizontal stress and permeability in coals through regulation of cleat volumes is well documented, and there is evidence of regionally compartmentalized stress regimes with depth within the Sydney and other eastern Australian coal basins. This regional stress regime can be overprinted by the effect of localized geological features. It is hypothesized that the in situ stress regime plays an important role in the regulation of groundwater flow regimes and extents, resulting in the development of the reported gas content and compositional zonation.Analysis of regional gas and stress data obtained from public and private databases, as well as literature, supports this hypothesis. Changes in gas concentration and composition with depth correspond with discernable variations in horizontal stress anisotropy. Gas contents generally increase with depth down to a 'peak gas' horizon, below which concentrations decrease. This 'peak gas' zone is coincident with a horizontal stress anisotropy change from moderately high to low levels, associated with reverse to strike-slip faulting conditions, respectively. The stress release zone also marks the top of the thermogenic gas zone, identified by the first appearance of ethane in the vertical profile. This zone also hosts gases of mixed origins: biogenic, thermogenic and inorganic (CO) and represents a mixed (transitional) groundwater flow environment. The base of the mixed gas zone is the top of the 'geopressured-only' flow associated with thermogenic gases and is signaled by the return to high stress reverse faulting conditions below 850-900m depth in the Sydney Basin

    VEGF guides angiogenic sprouting utilizing endothelial tip cell filopodia

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    Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF-A) is a major regulator of blood vessel formation and function. it controls several processes in endothelial cells, such as proliferation, survival, and migration, but it is not known how these are coordinately regulated to result in more complex morphogenetic events, such as tubular sprouting, fusion, and network formation. We show here that VEGF-A controls angiogenic sprouting in the early postnatal retina by guiding filopodial extension from specialized endothelial cells situated at the tips of the vascular sprouts. The tip cells respond to VEGF-A only by guided migration; the proliferative response to VEGF-A occurs in the sprout stalks. These two cellular responses are both mediated by agonistic activity of VEGF-A on VEGF receptor 2. Whereas tip cell migration depends on a gradient of VEGF-A, proliferation is regulated by its concentration. Thus, vessel patterning during retinal angiogenesis depends on the balance between two different qualities of the extracellular VEGF-A distribution, which regulate distinct cellular responses in defined populations of endothelial cells

    Cohort profile: the avon longitudinal study of parents and children: ALSPAC mothers cohort

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    The Avon Longitudinal Study of Children and Parents (ALSPAC) was established to understand how genetic and environmental characteristics influence health and development in parents and children. All pregnant women resident in a defined area in the South West of England, with an expected date of delivery between 1st April 1991 and 31st December 1992, were eligible and 13 761 women (contributing 13 867 pregnancies) were recruited. These women have been followed over the last 19–22 years and have completed up to 20 questionnaires, have had detailed data abstracted from their medical records and have information on any cancer diagnoses and deaths through record linkage. A follow-up assessment was completed 17–18 years postnatal at which anthropometry, blood pressure, fat, lean and bone mass and carotid intima media thickness were assessed, and a fasting blood sample taken. The second follow-up clinic, which additionally measures cognitive function, physical capability, physical activity (with accelerometer) and wrist bone architecture, is underway and two further assessments with similar measurements will take place over the next 5 years. There is a detailed biobank that includes DNA, with genome-wide data available on >10 000, stored serum and plasma taken repeatedly since pregnancy and other samples; a wide range of data on completed biospecimen assays are available. Details of how to access these data are provided in this cohort profile

    A comparison of methods for the registration of tractographic fibre images

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    Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and tractography have opened up new avenues in neuroscience. As most applications require precise spatial localization of the fibre images, image registration is an important area of research. Registration is usually performed prior to tractography. However more reliable images could be produced if a viable registration can be performed post tractography. This study shows two available techniques for direct registration of fibre images and explores novel adaptations of these. The methods register volume images derived from the fibres, and reapply the transformation from these registrations to the fibre images. The first method is a local affine registration and the second is a global affine registration. The local affine method produced superior results
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