754 research outputs found

    Reading point-light walkers and amorphous: a TMS study

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    Objectives: (i) Evaluate if human actions with and without pictorial information result in comparable motor facilitation clarifying the adequacy of point-light (PL) human actions in motor observation and motor resonance research; (ii) Verify if the isolated aspects of human shape, i.e., without movement; and the isolated aspect of movement, i.e., PL in amorphous shape, are not enough for eliciting motor network response and thus that motor facilitation is specific to human action perception involving human motor and spatial configurations. Research question: Are PL human actions suitable stimuli for action observation experiments evaluating motor resonance response and what are the adequate parameters for preparing their control stimuli? Methods: Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) of M1 were recorded from 18 healthy subjects using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) during presentation of full-body video clips of: everyday human actions either with (real movement - RM) or without (biological point-light - PLbio) pictorial information, scrambled moving point-lights (PLscr) and static point-lights forming a human shape (PLs). All videos were approximately 1000ms long. Peak-to-peak MEP amplitude (maximal distance) was individually averaged for each condition (RM, PLbio, PLscr, PLs). Results: rmANOVA considering MEP as dependent variable and condition as within-subject factor revealed a main effect for Stimuli (F1,17= 6.91; p=.029; np2 =.16). Specifically, Fisher LSD post hoc revealed that such effect was due to inferior MEP amplitude in PLs condition when compared to RM (p=.016), PLbio (p= .006) and PLscr (p=.047). Conclusion: Our findings account for future studies elaboration by providing information on similar CE increase during PLbio and RM observation, thus corroborating the use of human PL in motor resonate/action observation studies. Noteworthy, PLscr also engaged the motor network, which could be due to kinematic aspects of human velocity profile or anthropomorphism of non- biological agents. Observation of PLs resulted in significantly smaller MEPs. Therefore, M1 activation seems restrict to movement perception but not to human form. Thus, planning the control stimuli and task context is crucial when using PL displays in the study of human action perception and the action observation network activation

    A mutation in caspase-9 decreases the expression of BAFFR and ICOS in patients with immunodeficiency and lymphoproliferation

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    Lymphocyte apoptosis is mainly induced by either death receptor-dependent activation of caspase-8 or mitochondria-dependent activation of caspase-9. Mutations in caspase-8 lead to autoimmunity/lymphoproliferation and immunodeficiency. This work describes a heterozygous H237P mutation in caspase-9 that can lead to similar disorders. H237P mutation was detected in two patients: Pt1 with autoimmunity/lymphoproliferation, severe hypogammaglobulinemia and Pt2 with mild hypogammaglobulinemia and Burkitt lymphoma. Their lymphocytes displayed defective caspase-9 activity and decreased apoptotic and activation responses. Transfection experiments showed that mutant caspase-9 display defective enzyme and proapoptotic activities and a dominant-negative effect on wild-type caspase-9. Ex vivo analysis of the patients' lymphocytes and in vitro transfection experiments showed that the expression of mutant caspase-9 correlated with a downregulation of BAFFR (B-cell-activating factor belonging to the TNF family (BAFF) receptor) in B cells and ICOS (inducible T-cell costimulator) in T cells. Both patients carried a second inherited heterozygous mutation missing in the relatives carrying H237P: Pt1 in the transmembrane activator and CAML interactor (TACI) gene (S144X) and Pt2 in the perforin (PRF1) gene (N252S). Both mutations have been previously associated with immunodeficiencies in homozygosis or compound heterozygosis. Taken together, these data suggest that caspase-9 mutations may predispose to immunodeficiency by cooperating with other genetic factors, possibly by downregulating the expression of BAFFR and ICO

    Insertion of the DNA for the 163-171 peptide of IL1beta enables a DNA vaccine encoding p185(neu) to inhibit mammary carcinogenesis in Her-2/neu transgenic BALB/c mice.

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    Insertion of the DNA for the 163–171 peptide of IL1ÎČ enables a DNA vaccine encoding p185 neu to inhibit mammary carcinogenesis in Her-2/neu transgenic BALB/c mic

    The critical dimension for a 4th order problem with singular nonlinearity

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    We study the regularity of the extremal solution of the semilinear biharmonic equation \bi u=\f{\lambda}{(1-u)^2}, which models a simple Micro-Electromechanical System (MEMS) device on a ball B\subset\IR^N, under Dirichlet boundary conditions u=∂Μu=0u=\partial_\nu u=0 on ∂B\partial B. We complete here the results of F.H. Lin and Y.S. Yang \cite{LY} regarding the identification of a "pull-in voltage" \la^*>0 such that a stable classical solution u_\la with 0 exists for \la\in (0,\la^*), while there is none of any kind when \la>\la^*. Our main result asserts that the extremal solution uλ∗u_{\lambda^*} is regular (sup⁥Buλ∗<1)(\sup_B u_{\lambda^*} <1) provided N≀8 N \le 8 while uλ∗u_{\lambda^*} is singular (sup⁥Buλ∗=1\sup_B u_{\lambda^*} =1) for N≄9N \ge 9, in which case 1−C0∣x∣4/3≀uλ∗(x)≀1−∣x∣4/31-C_0|x|^{4/3}\leq u_{\lambda^*} (x) \leq 1-|x|^{4/3} on the unit ball, where C0:=(λ∗λ‟)1/3 C_0:= (\frac{\lambda^*}{\overline{\lambda}})^{1/3} and λˉ:=8/9(N−2/3)(N−8/3) \bar{\lambda}:= {8/9} (N-{2/3}) (N- {8/3}).Comment: 19 pages. This paper completes and replaces a paper (with a similar title) which appeared in arXiv:0810.5380. Updated versions --if any-- of this author's papers can be downloaded at this http://www.birs.ca/~nassif
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