2,381 research outputs found
The lateral occipital complex subserves the perceptual persistence of motion-defined groupings.
How are the bits and pieces of retinal information assembled and integrated to form the coherent objects that we see? One long-established principle is that elements that move as a group are linked together. For instance a fragmented line-drawing of an object, placed on a background of randomly distributed short lines, can be impossible to see. But if the object moves relative to the background, its shape is instantly recognized. Even after the motion stops, the percept of the object persists briefly before it fades into the background of random lines. Where in the brain does the percept of the object persist? Using functional brain imaging, we found that such moving line-drawings activated both motion-sensitive areas (medial temporal complex, MT+) and object-sensitive areas (lateral occipital complex, LOC). However, after the motion stopped only the LOC maintained its activity while the percept endured. Evidently a percept assembled by motion-sensitive areas like MT+ can be stored, at least briefly, in the LOC
Where two fractals meet: the scaling of a self-avoiding walk on a percolation cluster
The scaling properties of self-avoiding walks on a d-dimensional diluted
lattice at the percolation threshold are analyzed by a field-theoretical
renormalization group approach. To this end we reconsider the model of Y. Meir
and A. B. Harris (Phys. Rev. Lett. 63:2819 (1989)) and argue that via
renormalization its multifractal properties are directly accessible. While the
former first order perturbation did not agree with the results of other
methods, we find that the asymptotic behavior of a self-avoiding walk on the
percolation cluster is governed by the exponent nu_p=1/2 + epsilon/42 +
110epsilon^2/21^3, epsilon=6-d. This analytic result gives an accurate numeric
description of the available MC and exact enumeration data in a wide range of
dimensions 2<=d<=6.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Entropy-induced separation of star polymers in porous media
We present a quantitative picture of the separation of star polymers in a
solution where part of the volume is influenced by a porous medium. To this
end, we study the impact of long-range-correlated quenched disorder on the
entropy and scaling properties of -arm star polymers in a good solvent. We
assume that the disorder is correlated on the polymer length scale with a
power-law decay of the pair correlation function . Applying
the field-theoretical renormalization group approach we show in a double
expansion in and that there is a range of
correlation strengths for which the disorder changes the scaling
behavior of star polymers. In a second approach we calculate for fixed space
dimension and different values of the correlation parameter the
corresponding scaling exponents that govern entropic effects. We
find that , the deviation of from its mean field value
is amplified by the disorder once we increase beyond a threshold. The
consequences for a solution of diluted chain and star polymers of equal
molecular weight inside a porous medium are: star polymers exert a higher
osmotic pressure than chain polymers and in general higher branched star
polymers are expelled more strongly from the correlated porous medium.
Surprisingly, polymer chains will prefer a stronger correlated medium to a less
or uncorrelated medium of the same density while the opposite is the case for
star polymers.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Multifractality of Brownian motion near absorbing polymers
We characterize the multifractal behavior of Brownian motion in the vicinity
of an absorbing star polymer. We map the problem to an O(M)-symmetric
phi^4-field theory relating higher moments of the Laplacian field of Brownian
motion to corresponding composite operators. The resulting spectra of scaling
dimensions of these operators display the convexity properties which are
necessarily found for multifractal scaling but unusual for power of field
operators in field theory. Using a field-theoretic renormalization group
approach we obtain the multifractal spectrum for absorbtion at the core of a
polymer star as an asymptotic series. We evaluate these series using
resummation techniques.Comment: 18 pages, revtex, 6 ps-figure
Two-Dimensional Copolymers and Exact Conformal Multifractality
We consider in two dimensions the most general star-shaped copolymer, mixing
random (RW) or self-avoiding walks (SAW) with specific interactions thereof.
Its exact bulk or boundary conformal scaling dimensions in the plane are all
derived from an algebraic structure existing on a random lattice (2D quantum
gravity). The multifractal dimensions of the harmonic measure of a 2D RW or SAW
are conformal dimensions of certain star copolymers, here calculated exactly as
non rational algebraic numbers. The associated multifractal function f(alpha)
are found to be identical for a random walk or a SAW in 2D. These are the first
examples of exact conformal multifractality in two dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revtex, to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett., January
199
Mini-Proceedings of the 15th meeting of the Working Group on Rad. Corrections and MC Generators for Low Energies
The mini-proceedings of the 15th Meeting of the "Working Group on Rad.
Corrections and MC Generators for Low Energies" held in Mainz on April 11,
2014, are presented. These meetings, started in 2006, have as aim to bring
together experimentalists and theorists working in the fields of meson
transition form factors, hadronic contributions to and the
effective fine structure constant, and development of Monte Carlo generators
and Radiative Corrections for precision e+e- and tau physics.Comment: 21 pages, 7 contributions. Editors: S. E. Mueller and G. Venanzon
Detailed studies of non-linear magneto-optical resonances at D1 excitation of Rb-85 and Rb-87 for partially resolved hyperfine F-levels
Experimental signals of non-linear magneto-optical resonances at D1
excitation of natural rubidium in a vapor cell have been obtained and described
with experimental accuracy by a detailed theoretical model based on the optical
Bloch equations. The D1 transition of rubidium is a challenging system to
analyze theoretically because it contains transitions that are only partially
resolved under Doppler broadening. The theoretical model took into account all
nearby transitions, the coherence properties of the exciting laser radiation,
and the mixing of magnetic sublevels in an external magnetic field and also
included averaging over the Doppler profile. Great care was taken to obtain
accurate experimental signals and avoid systematic errors. The experimental
signals were reproduced very well at each hyperfine transition and over a wide
range of laser power densities, beam diameters, and laser detunings from the
exact transition frequency. The bright resonance expected at the F_g=1 -->
F_e=2 transition of Rb-87 has been observed. A bright resonance was observed at
the F_g=2 --> F_e=3 transition of Rb-85, but displaced from the exact position
of the transition due to the influence of the nearby F_g=2 --> F_e=2
transition, which is a dark resonance whose contrast is almost two orders of
magnitude larger than the contrast of the bright resonance at the F_g=2 -->
F_e=3 transition. Even in this very delicate situation, the theoretical model
described in detail the experimental signals at different laser detunings.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
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