63 research outputs found

    On the thermodynamic origin of metabolic scaling

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    This work has been funded by projects AYA2013-48623-C2-2, FIS2013-41057-P, CGL2013-46862-C2-1-P and SAF2015-65878-R from the Spanish Ministerio de Economa y Competitividad and PrometeoII/2014/086, PrometeoII/2014/060 and PrometeoII/2014/065 from the Generalitat Valenciana (Spain). BL acknowledges funding from a Salvador de Madariaga fellowship, and L.L. acknowledges funding from EPSRC Early Career fellowship EP/P01660X/1

    Dimensions of invasiveness: Links between local abundance, geographic range size, and habitat breadth in Europe's alien and native floras

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    Understanding drivers of success for alien species can inform on potential future invasions. Recent conceptual advances highlight that species may achieve invasiveness via performance along at least three distinct dimensions: 1) local abundance, 2) geographic range size, and 3) habitat breadth in naturalized distributions. Associations among these dimensions and the factors that determine success in each have yet to be assessed at large geographic scales. Here, we combine data from over one million vegetation plots covering the extent of Europe and its habitat diversity with databases on species' distributions, traits, and historical origins to provide a comprehensive assessment of invasiveness dimensions for the European alien seed plant flora. Invasiveness dimensions are linked in alien distributions, leading to a continuum from overall poor invaders to super invaders - abundant, widespread aliens that invade diverse habitats. This pattern echoes relationships among analogous dimensions measured for native European species. Success along invasiveness dimensions was associated with details of alien species' introduction histories: earlier introduction dates were positively associated with all three dimensions, and consistent with theory-based expectations, species originating from other continents, particularly acquisitive growth strategists, were among the most successful invaders in Europe. Despite general correlations among invasiveness dimensions, we identified habitats and traits associated with atypical patterns of success in only one or two dimensions - for example, the role of disturbed habitats in facilitating widespread specialists. We conclude that considering invasiveness within a multidimensional framework can provide insights into invasion processes while also informing general understanding of the dynamics of species distributions.Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (264740629) Grantová Agentura České Republiky (19-28491X) Grantová Agentura České Republiky (19-28807X) Grantová Agentura České Republiky (RVO 67985939) Austrian Science Fund (I 2086 - B29) Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (01LC1807A) Eusko Jaurlaritza (IT299-10) National Research Foundation of Korea (2018R1C1B6005351) University of Latvia (AAp2016/B041//Zd2016/AZ03) Villum Fonden (16549

    Examination of age-related deficits on the Wisconsin card sorting test

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    M.S.Timothy Salthous

    Aging of Attention: Does the Ability to Divide Decline?

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    Previous research has yielded conflicting results regarding the relationship between adult age and the ability to divide attention between two concurrent tasks. At least some of the inconsistency is probably attributable to methodological variations, such as the manner in which divided-attention ability has been assessed, how single-task performance has been considered, and the degree of control over relative emphasis placed on each task. Two experiments employing procedures sensitive to these concerns were conducted in which a speeded decision task was performed during the retention interval of a letter-memory task. The results of both experiments indicated that there were relatively few age-related influences on dual-task performance vis-à-vis those on single-task performance

    Urethral Perfusion for Cryoablation of the Prostate

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    Cryosurgery is an emerging treatment method for prostate cancer patients that may expand the scope of practice for perfusionists. Because of the low temperatures needed to cryogenically destroy cancerous tissue, damage to the urethra and bladder may cause incontinence and impotence. As a result of this associated morbidity, an extracorporeal circuit was constructed by the perfusionists at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (Omaha, NE). This urethral perfusion circuit provides a way to maintain normothermic urethral and bladder temperatures during cryogenic procedures, thus preventing trauma to the urethra and bladder. Five patients with a mean age of 73.3 ± 3.0 years diagnosed with localized prostate cancer (Stage A, B, C) were offered cryosurgery using urethral perfusion to treat their cancer. After induction of general anesthesia, a specially designed urethral catheter was inserted. Quarter-inch tubing was attached to barbed connections on the catheter and the free ends were then attached to the circuit. This extracorporeal circuit consisted of a heater/cooler, a twin roller pump, a cardioplegia heat exchanger, and temperature and pressure monitoring devices at the inlet and outlet sites on the catheter. Normal saline was circulated through the tubing of the urethral perfusion circuit to maintain flow rates of 200-400 ml/min, with the circuit pressure not exceeding 300 mmHg. Average urethral perfusion time was 139.3 ± 17.7 minutes. Inlet temperature of the catheter was kept at 42° C to maintain an average bladder temperature of 38.2 ± 2.3° C. All of the patients tolerated the procedure well and were ambulating without assistance on postoperative day one. With the exception of one patient with acute postoperative anuria, patients were discharged on the first postoperative day. Cryosurgery of prostate cancer using urethral perfusion has the potential to serve as a unique practice opportunity for perfusionists

    Scope of attention, control of attention, and intelligence in children and adults

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    Recent experimentation has shown that cognitive aptitude measures are predicted by tests of the scope of an individual’s attention or capacity in simple working-memory tasks, and also by the ability to control attention. However, these experiments do not indicate how separate or related the scope and control of attention are. An experiment with 52 children 10 to 11 years old and 52 college students included measures of the scope and control of attention as well as verbal and nonverbal aptitude measures. The children showed little evidence of using sophisticated attentional control, but the scope of attention predicted intelligence in that group. In adults, the scope and control of attention both varied among individuals, and they accounted for considerable individual variance in intelligence. About 1/3 that variance was shared between scope and control, the rest being unique to one or the other. Scope and control of attention appear to be related but distinct contributors to intelligence

    Cultural transmission and ecological opportunity jointly shaped global patterns of reliance on agriculture

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    The evolution of agriculture improved food security and enabled significant increases in the size and complexity of human groups. Despite these positive effects, some societies never adopted these practices, became only partially reliant on them, or even reverted to foraging after temporarily adopting them. Given the critical importance of climate and biotic interactions for modern agriculture, it seems likely that ecological conditions could have played a major role in determining the degree to which different societies adopted farming. However, this seemingly simple proposition has been surprisingly difficult to prove and is currently controversial. Here, we investigate how recent agricultural practices relate both to contemporary ecological opportunities and the suitability of local environments for the first species domesticated by humans. Leveraging a globally distributed dataset on 1,291 traditional societies, we show that after accounting for the effects of cultural transmission and more current ecological opportunities, levels of reliance on farming continue to be predicted by the opportunities local ecologies provided to the first human domesticates even after centuries of cultural evolution. Based on the details of our models, we conclude that ecology likely helped shape the geography of agriculture by biasing both human movement and the human-assisted dispersal of domesticates.Introduction Methods - Raw data - Integrating farming data into a continuous numerical scale - Ecological niche models - Cultural modes of transmission - Statistical analysis Results Discussio
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