90 research outputs found
Genetic Assimilation and Canalisation in the Baldwin Effect
The Baldwin Effect indicates that individually learned behaviours acquired during an organism’s lifetime can influence the evolutionary path taken by a population, without any direct Lamarckian transfer of traits from phenotype to genotype. Several computational studies modelling this effect have included complications that restrict its applicability. Here we present a simplified model that is used to reveal the essential mechanisms and highlight several conceptual issues that have not been clearly defined in prior literature. In particular, we suggest that canalisation and genetic assimilation, often conflated in previous studies, are separate concepts and the former is actually not required for non-heritable phenotypic variation to guide genetic variation. Additionally, learning, often considered to be essential for the Baldwin Effect, can be replaced with a more general phenotypic plasticity model. These simplifications potentially permit the Baldwin Effect to operate in much more general circumstances
Landscape statistics of the p-spin Ising model
The statistical properties of the local optima (metastable states) of the
infinite range Ising spin glass with p-spin interactions in the presence of an
external magnetic field h are investigated analytically. The average number of
optima as well as the typical overlap between pairs of identical optima are
calculated for general p. Similarly to the thermodynamic order parameter, for
p>2 and small h the typical overlap q_t is a discontinuous function of the
energy. The size of the jump in q_t increases with p and decreases with h,
vanishing at finite values of the magnetic field.Comment: 12 pages,te
How to return to subjectivity? Natorp, Husserl, and Lacan on the limits of reflection
This article discusses the recent call within contemporary phenomenology to return to subjectivity in response to certain limitations of naturalistic explanations of the mind. The meaning and feasibility of this call is elaborated by connecting it to a classical issue within the phenomenological tradition concerning the possibility of investigating the first-person perspective through reflection. We will discuss how this methodological question is respectively treated and reconfigured in the works of Natorp, Husserl, and Lacan. Finally, we will lay out some possible consequences of such a cross-reading for the conception of subjectivity and the concomitant effort to account for this dimension of first-person experience in response and in addition to its omission within the standard third-person perspective of psychological research
A new conceptual framework for revenge firesetting
Revenge has frequently been acknowledged to account for a relatively large proportion of motives in deliberate firesetting. However, very little is actually known about the aetiology of revenge firesetting. Theoretical approaches to revenge-seeking behaviour are discussed. A brief review of how revenge is accounted for in existing theoretical explanations of deliberate firesetting and the known characteristics of revenge firesetters are provided. On this basis, the authors suggest, as a motive, revenge firesetting has to date been misconceptualised. A new conceptual framework is thus proposed, paying particular attention to the contextual, affective, cognitive, volitional and behavioural factors which may influence and generate a single episode of revenge firesetting. Treatment implications and suggestions for future research are also provided
The cubicle warrior: the marionette of the digitalized warfare
In the last decade we have entered the era of remote controlled military technology. The excitement about this new technology should not mask the ethical questions that it raises. A fundamental ethical question is who may be held responsible for civilian deaths. In this paper we will discuss the role of the human operator or so-called ‘cubicle warrior’, who remotely controls the military robots behind visual interfaces. We will argue that the socio-technical system conditions the cubicle warrior to dehumanize the enemy. As a result the cubicle warrior is morally disengaged from his destructive and lethal actions. This challenges what he should know to make responsible decisions (the so-called knowledge condition). Nowadays and in the near future, three factors will influence and may increase the moral disengagement even further due to the decrease of locus of control orientation: (1) photo shopping the war; (2) the moralization of technology; (3) the speed of decision-making. As a result, cubicle warriors cannot be held reasonably responsible anymore for the decisions they make
Interstellar Plasma Turbulence Spectrum Toward the Pulsars PSR B0809+74 and B0950+08
Interstellar scintillations of pulsars PSR B0809+74 and B0950+08 have been
studied using observations at low frequencies (41, 62, 89, and 112 MHz).
Characteristic temporal and frequency scales of diffractive scintillations at
these frequencies have been determined. The comprehensive analysis of the
frequency and temporal structure functions reduced to the same frequency has
shown that the spectrum of interstellar plasma inhomogeneities toward both
pulsars is described by a power law. The exponent of the spectrum of
fluctuations of interstellar plasma inhomogeneities toward PSR B0950+08 (n =
3.00 +- 0.05) appreciably differs from the Kolmogorov exponent. Toward PSR
B0809+74 the spectrum is a power law with an exponent n = 3.7 +- 0.1. A strong
angular refraction has been detected toward PSR B0950+08. The distribution of
inhomogeneities along the line of sight has been analyzed; it has been shown
that the scintillations of PSR B0950+08 take place on a turbulent layer with
enhanced electron density, which is localized at approximately 10 pc from the
observer. For PSR B0809+74 the distribution of inhomogeneities is
quasi-uniform. Mean-square fluctuations of electron density on inhomogeneities
with a characteristic scale rho_0 = 10^7 m toward four pulsars have been
estimated. On this scale the local turbulence level in the 10-pc layer is 20
times higher than in an extended region responsible for the scintillations of
PSR B0809+74.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
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