1,823 research outputs found
Diverse roles of the GlcP glucose permease in free-living and symbiotic cyanobacteria
Certain cyanobacteria can form symbiotic associations with plants, where the symbiont supplies the plant partner with nitrogen and in return obtains sugars. We recently showed that in the symbiotic cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme, a glucose specific permease, GlcP, is necessary for the symbiosis to be formed. Results presented here from growth yield measurements of mutant strains with inactivated or overexpressing sugar transporters suggest that GlcP could be induced by a symbiosis specific substance. We also discuss that the transporter may have a role other than nutritional once the symbiosis is established, i.e., during infection, and more specifically in the chemotaxis of the symbiont. Phylogenetic analysis shows that the distribution of GlcP among cyanobacteria is likely influenced by horizontal gene transfer, but also that it is not correlated with symbiotic competence. Instead, regulatory patterns of the transporter in Nostoc punctiforme likely constitute symbiosis specific adaptations.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación BFU2011–2276
New and interesting records of lichens from Pältsan (Mt Bealccan) in northernmost Sweden
Austroplaca subtiroliensis, Gyalidea lecideopsis, Phacographa protoparmeliae, Placynthium pulvinatum and Solorina octospora are reported new to Sweden. Several other rare or rarely collected lichens are also reported: Absconditella annexa, Arthrorhaphis vacillans, Farnoldia micropsis, Gyalidea polyspora, Ionaspis ventosa, Lecanora lecanoricola, L. leptacinella, Lecidea commaculans, Pachyascus lapponicus, Placidiopsis pseudocinerea, Schadonia fecunda, Scytinium aquale and Thelocarpon sphaerosporum
Volatility distribution in the S&P500 Stock Index
We study the volatility of the S&P500 stock index from 1984 to 1996 and find
that the volatility distribution can be very well described by a log-normal
function. Further, using detrended fluctuation analysis we show that the
volatility is power-law correlated with Hurst exponent .Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Perception of Blended Emotions: From Video Corpus to Expressive Agent
Abstract. Real life emotions are often blended and involve several simultane-ous superposed or masked emotions. This paper reports on a study on the per-ception of multimodal emotional behaviors in Embodied Conversational Agents. This experimental study aims at evaluating if people detect properly the signs of emotions in different modalities (speech, facial expressions, gestures) when they appear to be superposed or masked. We compared the perception of emotional behaviors annotated in a corpus of TV interviews and replayed by an expressive agent at different levels of abstraction. The results provide insights on the use of such protocols for studying the effect of various models and modalities on the perception of complex emotions.
The CEA Second-Look Trial: a randomised controlled trial of carcinoembryonic antigen prompted reoperation for recurrent colorectal cancer
Objective In patients who have undergone a potentially curative resection of colorectal cancer, does a ‘second-look’ operation to resect recurrence, prompted by monthly monitoring of carcinoembryonic antigen, confer a survival benefit?Design A randomised controlled trial recruiting patients from 1982 to 1993 was recovered under the Restoring Invisible and Abandoned Trials (RIAT) initiative.Setting 58 hospitals in the UK.Participants From 1982 to 1993, 1447 patients were enrolled. Of these 216 met the criteria for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) elevation and were randomised to ‘Aggressive’ or ‘Conventional’ arms.Interventions ‘Second-look’ surgery with intention to remove any recurrence discovered.Primary outcome measure Survival.Results By February 1993, 91/108 patients had died in the ‘Aggressive arm’ and 88/108 in the ‘Conventional’ arm (relative risk=1.16, 95% CI 0.87 to 1.37). By 2011 a further 25 randomised patients had died. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed no difference in long-term survival.Conclusions The trial was closed in 1993 following a recommendation from the Data Monitoring Committee that it was highly unlikely that any survival advantage would be demonstrated for CEA prompted second-look surgery. This conclusion was confirmed by repeat analysis of survival times after 20 years.Trial registration number ISRCTN76694943
Suspended photonic crystal membranes in AlGaAs heterostructures for integrated multi-element optomechanics
We present high-reflectivity mechanical resonators fabricated from AlGaAs
heterostructures for use in free-space optical cavities operating in the
telecom wavelength regime. The mechanical resonators are fabricated in slabs of
GaAs and patterned with a photonic crystal to increase their out-of-plane
reflectivity. Characterization of the mechanical modes reveals residual tensile
stress in the GaAs device layer. This stress results in higher mechanical
frequencies than in unstressed GaAs and can be used for strain engineering of
mechanical dissipation. Simultaneously, we find that the finite waist of the
incident optical beam leads to a dip in the reflectance spectrum. This feature
originates from coupling to a guided resonance of the photonic crystal, an
effect that must be taken into account when designing slabs of finite size. The
single- and sub-\upmum-spaced double-layer slabs demonstrated here can be
directly fabricated on top of a distributed Bragg reflector mirror in the same
material platform. Such a platform opens a route for realizing integrated
multi-element cavity optomechanical devices and optomechanical microcavities on
chip.Comment: close to published version, 4+9 pages, 6+11 figure
Correlations in Economic Time Series
The correlation function of a financial index of the New York stock exchange,
the S&P 500, is analyzed at 1 min intervals over the 13-year period, Jan 84 --
Dec 96. We quantify the correlations of the absolute values of the index
increment. We find that these correlations can be described by two different
power laws with a crossover time t_\times\approx 600 min. Detrended fluctuation
analysis gives exponents and for
and respectively. Power spectrum analysis gives corresponding
exponents and for and
respectively.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
The role of spatial frequency information for ERP components sensitive to faces and emotional facial expression
To investigate the impact of spatial frequency on emotional facial expression analysis, ERPs were recorded in response to low spatial frequency (LSF), high spatial frequency (HSF), and unfiltered broad spatial frequency (BSF) faces with fearful or neutral expressions, houses, and chairs. In line with previous findings, BSF fearful facial expressions elicited a greater frontal positivity than BSF neutral facial expressions, starting at about 150 ms after stimulus onset. In contrast, this emotional expression effect was absent for HSF and LSF faces. Given that some brain regions involved in emotion processing, such as amygdala and connected structures, are selectively tuned to LSF visual inputs, these data suggest that ERP effects of emotional facial expression do not directly reflect activity in these regions. It is argued that higher order neocortical brain systems are involved in the generation of emotion-specific waveform modulations. The face-sensitive N170 component was neither affected by emotional facial expression nor by spatial frequency information
Dysfunctions in brain networks supporting empathy: An fMRI study in adults with autism spectrum disorders
The present study aimed at identifying dysfunctions in brain networks that may underlie disturbed empathic behavior in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). During functional magnetic resonance imaging, subjects were asked to identify the emotional state observed in a facial stimulus (other-task) or to evaluate their own emotional response (self-task). Behaviorally, ASD subjects performed equally to the control group during the other-task, but showed less emotionally congruent responses in the self-task. Activations in brain regions related to theory of mind were observed in both groups. Activations of the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) were located in dorsal subregions in ASD subjects and in ventral areas in control subjects. During the self-task, ASD subjects activated an additional network of frontal and inferior temporal areas. Frontal areas previously associated with the human mirror system were activated in both tasks in control subjects, while ASD subjects recruited these areas during the self-task only. Activations in the ventral MPFC may provide the basis for one's “emotional bond” with other persons’ emotions. Such atypical patterns of activation may underlie disturbed empathy in individuals with ASD. Subjects with ASD may use an atypical cognitive strategy to gain access to their own emotional state in response to other people's emotions
The NMDA agonist D-cycloserine facilitates fear memory consolidation in humans
Animal research suggests that the consolidation of fear and
extinction memories depends on N-methyl D-aspartate (NMDA)-
type glutamate receptors. Using a fear conditioning and extinction
paradigm in healthy normal volunteers, we show that postlearning
administration of the NMDA partial agonist D-cycloserine (DCS)
facilitates fear memory consolidation, evidenced behaviorally by
enhanced skin conductance responses, relative to placebo, for
presentations of a conditioned stimulus (CS) at a memory test
performed 72 h later. DCS also enhanced CS-evoked neural
responses in a posterior hippocampus/collateral sulcus region and
in the medial prefrontal cortex at test. Our data suggest a role for
NMDA receptors in regulating fear memory consolidation in humans
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