3,080 research outputs found
Single-image measurements of monochromatic subdiffraction dimolecular separations
Measuring subdiffraction separations between single fluorescent particles is
important for biological, nano-, and medical-technology studies. Major
challenges include (i) measuring changing molecular separations with high
temporal resolution while (ii) using identical fluorescent labels. Here we
report a method that measures subdiffraction separations between two identical
fluorophores by using a single image of milliseconds exposure time and a
standard single-molecule fluorescent imaging setup. The fluorophores do not
need to be bleached and the separations can be measured down to 40 nm with
nanometer precision. The method is called single-molecule image deconvolution
-- SMID, and in this article it measures the standard deviation (SD) of
Gaussian-approximated combined fluorescent intensity profiles of the two
subdiffraction-separated fluorophores. This study enables measurements of (i)
subdiffraction dimolecular separations using a single image, lifting the
temporal resolution of seconds to milliseconds, while (ii) using identical
fluorophores. The single-image nature of this dimer separation study makes it a
single-image molecular analysis (SIMA) study.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
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The Feeling of a Line: Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Psychology of Imagination
This dissertation is about the psychology of imagination in the last two decades of the nineteenth century. In the critical account of this period, much has been written about the relation between literature and sight; it has hardly been noted, however, that the period was marked by the emergence of a field of research into a different kind of "vision" -- the images produced by words on a page. My dissertation addresses this gap in two ways: first, in an account of a major shift in the psychological understanding of the mind's eye in this period; second, in a series of readings which explore the ways in which writers and critics responded to this new science. Both accounts begin with Francis Galton's 1880 publication of "Statistics of Mental Imagery" -- the first study of its kind. His findings -- still cited by psychologists today -- disrupted the idea that words predictably or even reliably produced "pictures" in the mind, thus troubling more than a century of philosophic and literary debate over the nature of mental representation. As William James observed in 1890, Galton's study had "made an era in descriptive Psychology." After repeating Galton's investigation in his own classroom, James concluded that "There are imaginations, not `The Imagination,' and they must be studied in detail." My dissertation traces the work of a series of writers who drew upon this research. In chapters centered on Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Mark Twain, William James and Helen Keller -- all of whom were familiar with Galton's study -- I locate a literary tradition which found its value not in objective correspondence with the outside world, but rather, in the embodied feeling of the mind at work. These writers took from psychology the premise that mental vision, like physical vision, had limits -- limits defined by the body. While this limitation could be understood as a constriction, it also suggested the possibility that the imagination could take on the status of physical experience -- that the mechanical act of transforming shapes into signs could become a form of training for "real" life. In order to understand these texts, I argue, we must attend to what James described as the "half" of reading that is not present on the printed page -- the "half" provided by the reader him or herself. In pursuing this claim, I model a style of critical analysis that remains grounded in close reading, but that nevertheless seeks to account for the reader's imaginative experience. This style of reading critically re-orients our understanding of these texts, moving us away from "problem" plots and unresolved themes, towards larger structures of perception. These writers, I argue, do not seek to inform us about another person's experience; rather they provide us with a grammar of experience -- a technique for living intended to last well beyond the moment when the book is set aside
A constrained matrix factorization problem
AbstractThe present paper considers a constrained matrix factorization problem which is a natural generalization of the classical triangular factorization
Subjective Report of Side Effects of Prescribed and Nonprescribed Psychostimulant Use in Young Adults
Background: Side effects of prescribed and nonprescribed psychostimulant use are understudied. Objectives: The study examined side effects of prescribed and nonprescribed psychostimulant use in a college sample with attention to possible gender differences. Methods: 2716 undergraduates (1448 male) between the ages of 17 and 57 years (M = 19.43 years, SD = 1.7 years) completed an online survey that included questions about the subjective side effects of prescribed and nonprescribed psychostimulant use. Results: Results suggested that prescribed users more frequently reported side effects, compared to nonprescribed users. For prescribed users, females more frequently reported appetite, somatic, and anxiety-related side effects compared to males. For nonprescribed users, while females reported more somatic and anxiety-related side effects, males more frequently reported loss of sex drive and sweating as side effects. Conclusions/Importance: These findings suggest prescribed users of psychostimulants more frequently report side effects with prominent gender differences in line with gender roles
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