1,340 research outputs found
Chronic Contusion Spinal Cord Injury Impairs Ejaculatory Reflexes in Male Rats: Partial Recovery by Systemic Infusions of Dopamine D3 Receptor Agonist 7OHDPAT
Chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) causes major disruption of ejaculatory function in men. Ejaculation is a reflex and the spinal generator for ejaculatory reflexes in the rat has been located in the lumbosacral spinal cord. The effects of SCI on the rat spinal ejaculation generator and ejaculatory reflexes remain understudied. The first goal of the current study was to establish the effects of chronic SCI on the function of the spinal ejaculation generator. Male rats received a contusion injury of the spinal cord at spinal level T6?T7. Ejaculatory reflexes elicited by electrical stimulation of the dorsal penile nerve (DPN) were evaluated in injured and control rats at 4?6 weeks following SCI. SCI males demonstrated significant reductions in bursting of the bulbocavernosus muscle (BCM), an indicator for expulsion phase of ejaculation, and in seminal vesicle pressure (SVP) increases, an indicator for the emission phase of ejaculation, following DPN stimulation. Thus, contusion SCI resulted in long-term impairment of ejaculatory reflexes. The D3 agonist 7-hydroxy-2-(di-N-propylamino) tetralin (7OHDPAT) facilitates ejaculation in spinal cord intact rats, thus the second goal of the current study was to test whether subcutaneous infusions of 7OHDPAT can facilitate ejaculatory reflexes in rats with chronic SCI. Male rats received a contusion injury at T6?T7 and effects of systemic administration of 7OHDPAT (1?mg/kg) were tested 4?5 weeks following injury. Results showed that 7OHDPAT administration facilitated ejaculatory reflexes in SCI males with or without DPN stimulation, provided that supraspinal inputs to the lumbar cord were severed by transection just prior to evaluating the reflex. Thus, 7OHDPAT administration in SCI males was able to overcome the detrimental effects of SCI on ejaculatory reflexes.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/140172/1/neu.2015.4232.pd
Chronic contusion spinal cord injury impairs ejaculatory reflexes in male rats: Partial recovery by systemic infusions of dopamine D3 receptor agonist 7OHDPAT
Chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) causes major disruption of ejaculatory function in men. Ejaculation is a reflex and the spinal generator for ejaculatory reflexes in the rat has been located in the lumbosacral spinal cord. The effects of SCI on the rat spinal ejaculation generator and ejaculatory reflexes remain understudied. The first goal of the current study was to establish the effects of chronic SCI on the function of the spinal ejaculation generator. Male rats received a contusion injury of the spinal cord at spinal level T6-T7. Ejaculatory reflexes elicited by electrical stimulation of the dorsal penile nerve (DPN) were evaluated in injured and control rats at 4-6 weeks following SCI. SCI males demonstrated significant reductions in bursting of the bulbocavernosus muscle (BCM), an indicator for expulsion phase of ejaculation, and in seminal vesicle pressure (SVP) increases, an indicator for the emission phase of ejaculation, following DPN stimulation. Thus, contusion SCI resulted in long-term impairment of ejaculatory reflexes. The D3 agonist 7-hydroxy-2-(di-N-propylamino) tetralin (7OHDPAT) facilitates ejaculation in spinal cord intact rats, thus the second goal of the current study was to test whether subcutaneous infusions of 7OHDPAT can facilitate ejaculatory reflexes in rats with chronic SCI. Male rats received a contusion injury at T6-T7 and effects of systemic administration of 7OHDPAT (1 mg/kg) were tested 4-5 weeks following injury. Results showed that 7OHDPAT administration facilitated ejaculatory reflexes in SCI males with or without DPN stimulation, provided that supraspinal inputs to the lumbar cord were severed by transection just prior to evaluating the reflex. Thus, 7OHDPAT administration in SCI males was able to overcome the detrimental effects of SCI on ejaculatory reflexes
Nuclear signatures in high-harmonic generation from laser-driven muonic atoms
High-harmonic generation from muonic atoms exposed to intense laser fields is
considered. Our particular interest lies in effects arising from the finite
nuclear mass and size. We numerically perform a fully quantum mechanical
treatment of the muon-nucleus dynamics by employing modified soft-core and
hard-core potentials. It is shown that the position of the high-energy cutoff
of the harmonic spectrum depends on the nuclear mass, while the height of the
spectral plateau is sensitive to the nuclear radius. We also demonstrate that
-ray harmonics can be generated from muonic atoms in ultrastrong VUV
fields, which have potential to induce photo-nuclear reactions.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Saturation of Cs2 Photoassociation in an Optical Dipole Trap
We present studies of strong coupling in single-photon photoassociation of
cesium dimers using an optical dipole trap. A thermodynamic model of the trap
depletion dynamics is employed to extract absolute rate coefficents. From the
dependence of the rate coefficient on the photoassociation laser intensity, we
observe saturation of the photoassociation scattering probability at the
unitarity limit in quantitative agreement with the theoretical model by Bohn
and Julienne [Phys. Rev. A, 60, 414 (1999)]. Also the corresponding power
broadening of the resonance width is measured. We could not observe an
intensity dependent light shift in contrast to findings for lithium and
rubidium, which is attributed to the absence of a p or d-wave shape resonance
in cesium
The impact of partially missing communities~on the reliability of centrality measures
Network data is usually not error-free, and the absence of some nodes is a
very common type of measurement error. Studies have shown that the reliability
of centrality measures is severely affected by missing nodes. This paper
investigates the reliability of centrality measures when missing nodes are
likely to belong to the same community. We study the behavior of five commonly
used centrality measures in uniform and scale-free networks in various error
scenarios. We find that centrality measures are generally more reliable when
missing nodes are likely to belong to the same community than in cases in which
nodes are missing uniformly at random. In scale-free networks, the betweenness
centrality becomes, however, less reliable when missing nodes are more likely
to belong to the same community. Moreover, centrality measures in scale-free
networks are more reliable in networks with stronger community structure. In
contrast, we do not observe this effect for uniform networks. Our observations
suggest that the impact of missing nodes on the reliability of centrality
measures might not be as severe as the literature suggests
Distributed Graph Clustering using Modularity and Map Equation
We study large-scale, distributed graph clustering. Given an undirected
graph, our objective is to partition the nodes into disjoint sets called
clusters. A cluster should contain many internal edges while being sparsely
connected to other clusters. In the context of a social network, a cluster
could be a group of friends. Modularity and map equation are established
formalizations of this internally-dense-externally-sparse principle. We present
two versions of a simple distributed algorithm to optimize both measures. They
are based on Thrill, a distributed big data processing framework that
implements an extended MapReduce model. The algorithms for the two measures,
DSLM-Mod and DSLM-Map, differ only slightly. Adapting them for similar quality
measures is straight-forward. We conduct an extensive experimental study on
real-world graphs and on synthetic benchmark graphs with up to 68 billion
edges. Our algorithms are fast while detecting clusterings similar to those
detected by other sequential, parallel and distributed clustering algorithms.
Compared to the distributed GossipMap algorithm, DSLM-Map needs less memory, is
up to an order of magnitude faster and achieves better quality.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures; v3: Camera ready for Euro-Par 2018, more
details, more results; v2: extended experiments to include comparison with
competing algorithms, shortened for submission to Euro-Par 201
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