95 research outputs found
Synaesthesia: a distinct entity that is an emergent feature of adaptive neurocognitive differences
In this article, I argue that synaesthesia is not on a continuum with neurotypical cognition. Synaesthesia is special: its phenomenology is different; it has distinct causal mechanisms; and is likely to be associated with a distinct neurocognitive profile. However, not all synaesthetes are the same, and there are quantifiable differences between them. In particular, the number of types of synaesthesia that a person possesses is a hitherto underappreciated variable that predicts cognitive differences along a number of dimensions (mental imagery, sensory sensitivity, attention to detail). Together with enhanced memory, this may constitute a common core of abilities that may go some way to explaining why synaesthesia might have evolved. I argue that the direct benefits of synaesthesia are generally limited (i.e. the synaesthetic associations do not convey novel information about the world) but, nevertheless, synaesthesia may develop due to other adaptive functions (e.g. perceptual ability, memory) that necessitate changes to design features of the brain. The article concludes by suggesting that synaesthesia forces us to reconsider what we mean by a ‘normal’ mind/brain. There may be multiple ‘normal’ neurodevelopmental trajectories that can sculpt very different ways of experiencing the world, of which synaesthesia is but one.
This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Bridging senses: novel insights from synaesthesia’
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Electrical sensing of the dynamical structure of the planetary boundary layer
Turbulent and convective processes within the planetary boundary layer are responsible for the transport of moisture, momentum and particulate matter, but are also important in determining the electrical charge transport of the lower atmosphere. This paper presents the first high resolution vertical charge profiles during fair weather conditions obtained with instrumented radiosonde balloons over Alqueva, Portugal during the summer of 2014. The short intervals (4 hours) between balloon flights enabled the diurnal variation in the vertical profile of charge within the boundary layer to be examined in detail, with much smaller charges (up to 20pCm-3) observed during stable night time periods than during the day. Following sunrise, the evolution of the charge profile was complex, demonstrating charged ultrafine aerosol, lofted upwards by daytime convection. This produced charge up to 92pCm-3 up to 500m above the surface. The diurnal variation in the integrated column of charge above the site tracked closely with the diurnal variation in near surface charge as derived from a nearby electric field mill, confirming the importance of the link between surface charge generation processes and aloft. The local aerosol vertical profiles were estimated using backscatter measurements from a collocated ceilometer. These were utilised in a simple model to calculate the charge expected due to vertical conduction current flow in the global electric circuit through aerosol layers. The analysis presented here demonstrates that charge can provide detailed information about boundary layer transport, particularly in regard to the ultrafine aerosol structure, that conventional thermodynamic and ceilometer measurements do not
Design, simulation, and characterization of a radial opposed migration ion and aerosol classifier (ROMIAC)
SMEAR Estonia : Perspectives of a large-scale forest ecosystem – Atmosphere research infrastructure
Non peer reviewe
Mining Big Data for Tourist Hot Spots: Geographical Patterns of Online Footprints
Understanding the complex, and often unequal, spatiality of tourist
demand in urban contexts requires other methodologies, among which the information base available online and in social networks has gained prominence. Innovation
supported by Information and Communication Technologies in terms of data access
and data exchange has emerged as a complementary supporting tool for the more traditional data collection techniques currently in use, particularly, in urban destinations
where there is the need to more (near)real-time monitoring. The capacity to collect
and analise massive amounts of data on individual and group behaviour is leading to
new data-rich research approaches. This chapter addresses the potential for discovering geographical insights regarding tourists’ spatial patterns within a destination,
based on the analysis of geotagged data available from two social networks.
·info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Diurnal variation of surface electric field at a tropical station in different seasons: a study of plausible influences
Sizing large proteins and protein complexes by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and ion mobility
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