24,019 research outputs found
The multisensory body revealed through its cast shadows
One key issue when conceiving the body as a multisensory object is how the cognitive
system integrates visible instances of the self and other bodies with one\u2019s own
somatosensory processing, to achieve self-recognition and body ownership. Recent
research has strongly suggested that shadows cast by our own body have a special
status for cognitive processing, directing attention to the body in a fast and highly specific
manner. The aim of the present article is to review the most recent scientific contributions
addressing how body shadows affect both sensory/perceptual and attentional processes.
The review examines three main points: (1) body shadows as a special window to
investigate the construction of multisensory body perception; (2) experimental paradigms
and related findings; (3) open questions and future trajectories. The reviewed literature
suggests that shadows cast by one\u2019s own body promote binding between personal
and extrapersonal space and elicit automatic orienting of attention toward the bodypart
casting the shadow. Future research should address whether the effects exerted
by body shadows are similar to those observed when observers are exposed to other
visual instances of their body. The results will further clarify the processes underlying the
merging of vision and somatosensation when creating body representations
Housing rent dynamics in Italy
In this paper we focus on tenant rents in Italy and compare results from several methods for the rent dynamic estimation. We first document the sources of data available and then introduce quality-adjusted techniques, which enable us to separate the price variation due to qualitative changes in housing attributes from pure price changes. Finally, we compare these measures with unconditional and matched-type price indices derived from microdata. Over the period 1998-2006, we estimate a cumulative rent increase ranging between 40 and 80%. The upper bound refers to the average dynamic for a subset of flats entering the market in a given period. The hedonic approach suggests a substantially lower overall growth in tenant rent, around 40% for the same period.Hedonic regressions, Matched-models, CPI, Downward bias
Economic performance in small open economies : the Caribbean experience, 1980-1992
The authors study the economic performance of ten Caribbean islands in two groups: six small islands from the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) and four larger islands: Barbados, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and Trinidad and Tobago. They compute external shocks together with each island's performance response to them. Some islands resorted inordinately to external financing to cope with adverse shocks. Others tried to compensate by stimulating exports and tourism. The buildup of debt created problems for some of the governments later in the decade, resulting in the need for strong contractionary measures. But the difference in performance between islands cannot be explained by external shocks alone. The OECS group achieved superior performance even though they faced roughly the same shocks as the larger islands. It helped that they had a monetary board that encouraged high investment levels. But this was complemented by concessionary flows used productively and by foreign direct investment. Now the question is how well these economies will fare when they face the inevitable reduction in concessionary flows in coming years.Payment Systems&Infrastructure,Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,International Terrorism&Counterterrorism,Financial Intermediation,Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Achieving Shared Growth,Inequality,Financial Intermediation
How many-body effects modify the van der Waals interaction between graphene sheets
Undoped graphene (Gr) sheets at low temperatures are known, via Random Phase
Approximation (RPA) calculations, to exhibit unusual van der Waals (vdW)
forces. Here we show that graphene is the first known system where effects
beyond the RPA make qualitative changes to the vdW force. For large
separations, nm where only the vdW forces remain, we find
the Gr-Gr vdW interaction is substantially reduced from the RPA prediction. Its
dependence is very sensitive to the form of the long-wavelength many-body
enhancement of the velocity of the massless Dirac fermions, and may provide
independent confirmation of the latter via direct force measurements.Comment: 3 Figures: PACS 73.22.Pr, 71.10.Pm, 61.48.Gh, 34.20.C
Existence of periodic orbits near heteroclinic connections
We consider a potential with two different global minima
and, under a symmetry assumption, we use a variational approach to
show that the Hamiltonian system \begin{equation} \ddot{u}=W_u(u), \hskip 2cm
(1) \end{equation} has a family of -periodic solutions which, along a
sequence , converges locally to a heteroclinic solution
that connects to . We then focus on the elliptic system
\begin{equation} \Delta u=W_u(u),\;\; u:R^2\rightarrow R^m, \hskip 2cm (2)
\end{equation} that we interpret as an infinite dimensional analogous of (1),
where plays the role of time and is replaced by the action functional
We assume that
has two different global minimizers in the set of maps that connect to . We work in a symmetric
context and prove, via a minimization procedure, that (2) has a family of
solutions , which is -periodic in , converges to
as and, along a sequence
, converges locally to a heteroclinic solution that
connects to .Comment: 36 pages, 4 figure
Assessment of thermal instabilities and oscillations in multifinger heterojunction bipolar transistors through a harmonic-balance-based CAD-oriented dynamic stability analysis technique
We present a novel analysis of thermal instabilities and oscillations in multifinger heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs), based on a harmonic-balance computer-aided-design (CAD)-oriented approach to the dynamic stability assessment. The stability analysis is carried out in time-periodic dynamic conditions by calculating the Floquet multipliers of the limit cycle representing the HBT working point. Such a computation is performed directly in the frequency domain, on the basis of the Jacobian of the harmonic-balance problem yielding the limit cycle. The corresponding stability assessment is rigorous, and the efficient calculation method makes it readily implementable in CAD tools, thus allowing for circuit and device optimization. Results on three- and four-finger layouts are presented, including closed-form oscillation criteria for two-finger device
New patents on topical anesthetics.
Anesthesia is defined as a total or partial loss of sensation and it may be general, local or topical, depending on the method of drug administration and area of the body affected. General anesthesia is a reversible state of unconsciousness produced by anesthetic agents, characterized by amnesia, muscle relaxation and loss of sensitivity to pain of the whole body. General anesthetic drugs can be classified into two main groups according to their predominant molecular pharmacological effects: volatile and intravenous agents. Local anesthesia produce a reversible loss of sensation in a portion of the body and it reversibly block impulse conduction along nerve axons and other excitable membrane. All local anesthetics (LA) are membrane stabilizing drugs; they reversibly decrease the rate of depolarization and repolarization of excitable membranes. They act mainly by inhibiting sodium influx through sodium-specific ion channels in the neuronal cell membrane, in particular the voltage-gated sodium channels. When the influx of sodium is interrupted, an action potential cannot arise and signal conduction is inhibited. The main local anesthetic (LA) agents for skin anesthesia are benzocaine (aminoester), prilocaine and lidocaine (aminoamides) which are commercially available as gels, ointments and creams (benzocaine and eutectic mixture of lidocaine and prilocaine) or as a bioadhesive (lidocaine) with different compositions (vehicles and excipients) for adults or pediatric use. Topical anesthetics decrease anxiety, pain and discomfort during cutaneous procedures and provide effective analgesia with rapid onset, prolonged duration and minimal side effects. This article outlines the different classes of topical anesthetics available and gives an overview of the mechanism of action, metabolism of each different class, of the possible complications that can occur because of their use and their possible treatment options and new patents. © 2014 Bentham Science Publishers
Measurement of the halo bias from stacked shear profiles of galaxy clusters
We present the observational evidence of the 2-halo term in the stacked shear
profile of a sample of about 1200 optically selected galaxy clusters based on
imaging data and the public shear catalog from the CFHTLenS. We find that the
halo bias, a measure of the correlated distribution of matter around galaxy
clusters, has amplitude and correlation with galaxy cluster mass in very good
agreement with the predictions based on the LCDM standard cosmological model.
The mass-concentration relation is flat but higher than theoretical
predictions. We also confirm the close scaling relation between the optical
richness of galaxy clusters and their mass.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. In press on ApJ Letter
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