1,455 research outputs found
On Uniformly finitely extensible Banach spaces
We continue the study of Uniformly Finitely Extensible Banach spaces (in
short, UFO) initiated in Moreno-Plichko, \emph{On automorphic Banach spaces},
Israel J. Math. 169 (2009) 29--45 and Castillo-Plichko, \emph{Banach spaces in
various positions.} J. Funct. Anal. 259 (2010) 2098-2138. We show that they
have the Uniform Approximation Property of Pe\l czy\'nski and Rosenthal and are
compactly extensible. We will also consider their connection with the
automorphic space problem of Lindenstrauss and Rosenthal --do there exist
automorphic spaces other than and ?-- showing that a space
all whose subspaces are UFO must be automorphic when it is Hereditarily
Indecomposable (HI), and a Hilbert space when it is either locally minimal or
isomorphic to its square. We will finally show that most HI --among them, the
super-reflexive HI space constructed by Ferenczi-- and asymptotically
spaces in the literature cannot be automorphic.Comment: This paper is to appear in the Journal of Mathematical Analysis and
Application
Regression and the Maternal in the History of Psychoanalysis, 1900-1957
This paper examines the history of the concept of âregressionâ as it was perceived by Sandor Ferenczi and some of his followers in the first half of the twentieth century. The first part provides a short history of the notion of âregressionâ from the late nineteenth century to Ferenczi's work in the 1920s and 1930s. The second and third parts of the paper focus on two other thinkers on regression, who worked in Britain, under the influence of the Ferenczian paradigmâââthe interwar Scottish psychiatrist, Ian D. Suttie; and the British-Hungarian psychoanalyst, and Ferenczi's most important pupil, Michael Balint. Rather than a descriptive term which comes to designate a pathological mental stage, Ferenczi understood âregressionâ as a much more literal phenomenon. For him, the mental desire to go backwards in time is a universal one, and a consequence of an inevitable traumatic separation from the mother in early childhood, which has some deep personal and cultural implications. The paper aims to show some close affinities between the preoccupation of some psychoanalysts with âregressionâ, and the growing interest in social and cultural aspects of âmotherhoodâ and âthe maternal roleâ in mid-twentieth-century British society
A Characterization of Infinite LSP Words
G. Fici proved that a finite word has a minimal suffix automaton if and only
if all its left special factors occur as prefixes. He called LSP all finite and
infinite words having this latter property. We characterize here infinite LSP
words in terms of -adicity. More precisely we provide a finite set of
morphisms and an automaton such that an infinite word is LSP if
and only if it is -adic and all its directive words are recognizable by
Differential Changes in Expression of Stress- and Metabolic-related Neuropeptides in the Rat Hypothalamus during Morphine Dependence and Withdrawal
Chronic morphine treatment and naloxone precipitated morphine withdrawal activates stress-related brain circuit and results in significant changes in food intake, body weight gain and energy metabolism. The present study aimed to reveal hypothalamic mechanisms underlying these effects. Adult male rats were made dependent on morphine by subcutaneous implantation of constant release drug pellets. Pair feeding revealed significantly smaller weight loss of morphine treated rats compared to placebo implanted animals whose food consumption was limited to that eaten by morphine implanted pairs. These results suggest reduced energy expenditure of morphine-treated animals. Chronic morphine exposure or pair feeding did not significantly affect hypothalamic expression of selected stress- and metabolic related neuropeptides - corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), urocortin 2 (UCN2) and proopiomelanocortin (POMC) compared to placebo implanted and pair fed animals.
Naloxone precipitated morphine withdrawal resulted in a dramatic weight loss starting as early as 15-30 min after naloxone injection and increased adrenocorticotrophic hormone, prolactin and corticosterone plasma levels in morphine dependent rats. Using real-time quantitative PCR to monitor the time course of relative expression of neuropeptide mRNAs in the hypothalamus we found elevated CRH and UCN2 mRNA and dramatically reduced POMC expression. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and arginine vasopressin (AVP) mRNA levels were transiently increased during opiate withdrawal. These data highlight that morphine withdrawal differentially affects expression of stress- and metabolic-related neuropeptides in the rat hypothalamus, while relative mRNA levels of these neuropeptides remain unchanged either in rats chronically treated with morphine or in their pair-fed controls
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