188 research outputs found

    Perception of American English /r/ and /U by Mandarin speakers: Influences of phonetic identification and category goodness

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    Abstract: This study examined Mandarin speakers' perception of American English /r/and ill. Eighteen /ra/ and ila'tokens were used that varied in F2 and F3 onset frequencies. Stimuli were identified as the lu/. /ml or /I/ of Mandarin, and were rated for goodness. The similarity of pairs of stimuli was also evaluated. Multi-dimensional scaling (MDS) analyses of similarit) ratings revealed that perception differed substantially from American speakers listening to the same stimuli, indicating the use of native-language representations in the perception of a non-native language. Young infants are able to discriminate phonemic contrasts of both their native language and non-native languages. With continued linguistic experience, sensitivity to non-native contrasts weakens, while sensitivity to native language contrasts is enhanced (1). Language-specific experience not only influences the perceptual organization at the boundaries between speech categories, but within categories as well The current study addressed the non-native perception of American English ir/ and ill by Mandarin speakers. The ill in American English is acoustically and phonetically similar to that of Mandarin. In contrast, ir/ is not a phoneme in Mandarin. Therefore, Mandarin speakers were expected to rely on representations of phonemes in their native language to perceive this non-native sound. The nature of these representations, and whether perception of /I/ is similar to that of Americans, remained questions for the research to answer, thereby providing an example of the perceptual impact of linguistic experience. METHOD Stimuli were 18 synthetic /ra/ and /la/ tokens from Ameiican English which varied in F2 and F3 onset frequencies in 200-me1 steps. Twenty-one native speakers of Mandarin, students in Taiwan, participated in two sessions. In the first session, the initial phoneme of each token was identified and rated for goodness on a 7-point scale. Pilot work revealed that Mandarin speakers classified the tokens as Mandarin /la/, /ua/, and /ma/, so identification was restricted to these phonemes. In the second session, participants rated the similarity of paired tokens on a 7-point scale. Similarity ratings were submitted to MDS to create a perceptual map where the distance between any two tokens corresponded to perceived similarity. [For additional details about procedures and stimuli, see Iverson and Kuhl(5).] RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Identification performance and goodness ratings (top), as well as MDS solutions (bottom), are summarized in The right panel of 206

    Phenomenology of the Deuteron Electromagnetic Form Factors

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    A rigorous extraction of the deuteron charge form factors from tensor polarization data in elastic electron-deuteron scattering, at given values of the 4-momentum transfer, is presented. Then the world data for elastic electron-deuteron scattering is used to parameterize, in three different ways, the three electromagnetic form factors of the deuteron in the 4-momentum transfer range 0-7 fm^-1. This procedure is made possible with the advent of recent polarization measurements. The parameterizations allow a phenomenological characterization of the deuteron electromagnetic structure. They can be used to remove ambiguities in the form factors extraction from future polarization data.Comment: 18 pages (LaTeX), 2 figures Feb. 25: minor changes of content and in Table

    Measurement of Tensor Polarization in Elastic Electron-Deuteron Scattering at Large Momentum Transfer

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    Tensor polarization observables (t20, t21 and t22) have been measured in elastic electron-deuteron scattering for six values of momentum transfer between 0.66 and 1.7 (GeV/c)^2. The experiment was performed at the Jefferson Laboratory in Hall C using the electron HMS Spectrometer, a specially designed deuteron magnetic channel and the recoil deuteron polarimeter POLDER. The new data determine to much larger Q^2 the deuteron charge form factors G_C and G_Q. They are in good agreement with relativistic calculations and disagree with pQCD predictions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, for associated informations, see http://isnwww.in2p3.fr/hadrons/t20/t20_ang.html clarification about several topics, one figure has been had, extraction of form factors use AQ interpolation in our Q2 range onl

    A precise measurement of the deuteron elastic structure function A(Q^2)

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    The A(Q^2) structure function in elastic electron-deuteron scattering was measured at six momentum transfers Q^2 between 0.66 and 1.80 (GeV/c)^2 in Hall C at Jefferson Laboratory. The scattered electrons and recoil deuterons were detected in coincidence, at a fixed deuteron angle of 60.5 degrees. These new precise measurements resolve discrepancies between older sets of data. They put significant constraints on existing models of the deuteron electromagnetic structure, and on the strength of isoscalar meson exchange currents.Comment: 3 LaTeX pages plus 2 PS figure

    The deuteron: structure and form factors

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    A brief review of the history of the discovery of the deuteron in provided. The current status of both experiment and theory for the elastic electron scattering is then presented.Comment: 80 pages, 33 figures, submited to Advances in Nuclear Physic

    Role of biomarkers in early infectious complications after lung transplantation

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    Background Infections and primary graft dysfunction are devastating complications in the immediate postoperative period following lung transplantation. Nowadays, reliable diagnostic tools are not available. Biomarkers could improve early infection diagnosis. Methods Multicentre prospective observational study that included all centres authorized to perform lung transplantation in Spain. Lung infection and/or primary graft dysfunction presentation during study period (first postoperative week) was determined. Biomarkers were measured on ICU admission and daily till ICU discharge or for the following 6 consecutive postoperative days. Results We included 233 patients. Median PCT levels were significantly lower in patients with no infection than in patients with Infection on all follow up days. PCT levels were similar for PGD grades 1 and 2 and increased significantly in grade 3. CRP levels were similar in all groups, and no significant differences were observed at any study time point. In the absence of PGD grade 3, PCT levels above median (0.50 ng/ml on admission or 1.17 ng/ml on day 1) were significantly associated with more than two- and three-fold increase in the risk of infection (adjusted Odds Ratio 2.37, 95% confidence interval 1.06 to 5.30 and 3.44, 95% confidence interval 1.52 to 7.78, respectively). Conclusions In the absence of severe primary graft dysfunction, procalcitonin can be useful in detecting infections during the first postoperative week. PGD grade 3 significantly increases PCT levels and interferes with the capacity of PCT as a marker of infection. PCT was superior to CRP in the diagnosis of infection during the study period

    High toxicity and specificity of the saponin 3-GlcA-28-AraRhaxyl-medicagenate, from Medicago truncatula seeds, for Sitophilus oryzae

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Because of the increasingly concern of consumers and public policy about problems for environment and for public health due to chemical pesticides, the search for molecules more safe is currently of great importance. Particularly, plants are able to fight the pathogens as insects, bacteria or fungi; so that plants could represent a valuable source of new molecules.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>It was observed that <it>Medicago truncatul</it>a seed flour displayed a strong toxic activity towards the adults of the rice weevil <it>Sitophilus oryzae</it> (Coleoptera), a major pest of stored cereals. The molecule responsible for toxicity was purified, by solvent extraction and HPLC, and identified as a saponin, namely 3-GlcA-28-AraRhaxyl-medicagenate. Saponins are detergents, and the CMC of this molecule was found to be 0.65 mg per mL. Neither the worm <it>Caenorhabditis elegans</it> nor the bacteria <it>E. coli</it> were found to be sensitive to this saponin, but growth of the yeast <it>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</it> was inhibited at concentrations higher than 100 μg per mL. The purified molecule is toxic for the adults of the rice weevils at concentrations down to 100 μg per g of food, but this does not apply to the others insects tested, including the coleopteran <it>Tribolium castaneum</it> and the Sf9 insect cultured cells.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This specificity for the weevil led us to investigate this saponin potential for pest control and to propose the hypothesis that this saponin has a specific mode of action, rather than acting <it>via</it> its non-specific detergent properties.</p
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