598 research outputs found
Cobalt
This fact sheet answers the most frequently asked health questions (FAQs) about cobalt. For more information, call the ATSDR Information Center at 1-888-422-8737. This fact sheet is one in a series of summaries about hazardous substances and their health effects. It is important you understand this information because this substance may harm you. The effects of exposure to any hazardous substance depend on the dose, the duration, how you are exposed, personal traits and habits, and whether other chemicals are present. HIGHLIGHTS: The general population is exposed to low levels of cobalt in air, water, and food. Cobalt has both beneficial and harmful effects on health. At low levels, it is part of vitamin B12, which is essential for good health. At high levels, it may harm the lungs and heart. This chemical has been found in at least 426 of the 1,636 National Priorities List sites identified by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). What is cobalt? Cobalt is a naturally occurring element found in rocks, soil, water, plants, and animals. Cobalt is used to produce alloy
A population study of binocular function.
As part of a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of perceptual traits in healthy adults, we measured stereo acuity, the duration of alternative percepts in binocular rivalry and the extent of dichoptic masking in 1060 participants. We present the distributions of the measures, the correlations between measures, and their relationships to other psychophysical traits. We report sex differences, and correlations with age, interpupillary distance, eye dominance, phorias, visual acuity and personality. The GWAS, using data from 988 participants, yielded one genetic association that passed a permutation test for significance: The variant rs1022907 in the gene VTI1A was associated with self-reported ability to see autostereograms. We list a number of other suggestive genetic associations (p<10(-5)).This work was supported by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT2903). J.B. was supported by a fellowship from Gonville and Caius College.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2015.02.01
Individual differences in human eye movements: An oculomotor signature?
Human eye movements are stereotyped and repeatable, but how specific to a normal individual are the quantitative properties of his or her eye movements? We recorded saccades, anti-saccades and smooth-pursuit eye movements in a sample of over 1000 healthy young adults. A randomly selected subsample (10%) of participants were re-tested on a second occasion after a median interval of 18.8 days, allowing us to estimate reliabilities. Each of several derived measures, including latencies, accuracies, velocities, and left-right asymmetries, proved to be very reliable. We give normative means and distributions for each measure and describe the pattern of correlations amongst them. We identify several measures that exhibit significant sex differences. The profile of our oculomotor measures for an individual constitutes a personal oculomotor signature that distinguishes that individual from most other members of the sample of 1000.This research was funded by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT2903). PTG was supported by the Cambridge Commonwealth and Overseas Trusts and the Overseas Research Students Awards Scheme, and JMB by a Research Fellowship at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
The risk of telling : a dyadic perspective on romantic partners' responses to child sexual abuse disclosure and their associations with sexual and relationship satisfaction
Essai prĂ©sentĂ© Ă la FacultĂ© des arts et des sciences en vue de l'obtention du grade de Doctorat en psychologie clinique (D. Psy.)Les survivants dâagression sexuelle Ă lâenfance (ASE) doivent souvent composer avec les consĂ©quences Ă long terme de ce trauma. Toutefois, il existe une grande variabilitĂ© quant aux impacts individuels de lâASE. Certains auteurs croient que la rĂ©ponse obtenue lors du dĂ©voilement de lâASE aux proches du survivant, pourrait ĂȘtre lâun des dĂ©terminants de cette variabilitĂ©. Cependant, le dĂ©voilement Ă lâĂąge adulte, notamment au partenaire amoureux, a Ă©tĂ© peu Ă©tudiĂ©. La prĂ©sente Ă©tude examine les associations entre les rĂ©ponses des partenaires amoureux au dĂ©voilement, tels que perçues par les survivants, ainsi que la satisfaction sexuelle et conjugale des deux membres du couple, auprĂšs dâun Ă©chantillon de 70 couples de la communautĂ© ayant rapportĂ© une ASE et lâayant dĂ©voilĂ©e Ă leur partenaire. Les participants ont complĂ©tĂ© des questionnaires auto-rapportĂ©s en ligne. Les rĂ©sultats dâanalyses de trajectoire au sein dâun modĂšle « Actor-Partner Interdependence Model » (APIM) indiquent que les rĂ©ponses de « soutien Ă©motionnel » de la part des partenaires durant le dĂ©voilement, telles que perçues par les survivants, Ă©taient positivement associĂ©es Ă leur propre satisfaction sexuelle ainsi quâĂ celle de leur partenaire. Les rĂ©ponses de « stigmatisation/se sentir traitĂ© diffĂ©remment » de la part des partenaires, telles que perçues par les survivants, Ă©taient associĂ©es Ă une moins bonne satisfaction conjugale, Ă la fois pour les survivants et leurs partenaires. Les rĂ©sultats suggĂšrent que les rĂ©ponses des partenaires au dĂ©voilement dâune ASE, tels que perçues par les survivants, peuvent avoir un impact positif autant que nĂ©gatif sur la satisfaction conjugale et sexuelle des deux partenaires.Survivors of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) often experience adverse trauma-related long term consequences, which vary widely among survivors. Some authors argued that this variability might be explained in part by the response of others to survivorsâ disclosure of the CSA. However, disclosure during adulthood has received little empirical attention, in particular, disclosure to a romantic partner. Among 70 community couples who reported CSA and disclosure to their partner, this study examined associations between survivorsâ perception of partner responses to their disclosure, and both partnersâ sexual and relationship satisfaction. Participants completed self-report questionnaires online. Results of path analyses within an actor-partner interdependence model indicated that survivorsâ perceived partner responses of emotional support to disclosure were associated with their own and their partners' higher sexual satisfaction. Survivorsâ perceived responses of being stigmatized/treated differently by the partner were associated with their own and their partnersâ poorer relationship satisfaction. Findings suggest that survivor-perceived partner responses to the disclosure of CSA can have both a positive and a negative impact on the sexual and relationship satisfaction of both partners
An exploratory factor analysis of visual performance in a large population
A factor analysis was performed on 25 visual and auditory performance measures from 1060 participants. The results revealed evidence both for a factor relating to general perceptual performance, and for eight independent factors that relate to particular perceptual skills. In an unrotated PCA, the general factor for perceptual performance accounted for 19.9% of the total variance in the 25 performance measures. Following varimax rotation, 8 consistent factors were identified, which appear to relate to (1) sensitivity to medium and high spatial frequencies, (2) auditory perceptual ability (3) oculomotor speed, (4) oculomotor control, (5) contrast sensitivity at low spatial frequencies, (6) stereo acuity, (7) letter recognition, and (8) flicker sensitivity. The results of a hierarchical cluster analysis were consistent with our rotated factor solution. We also report correlations between the eight performance factors and other (non-performance) measures of perception, demographic and anatomical measures, and questionnaire items probing other psychological variables.This work was supported by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT2903). J.B. was supported by a fellowship from Gonville and Caius College
Thermodynamic analysis of the Quantum Critical behavior of Ce-lattice compounds
A systematic analysis of low temperature magnetic phase diagrams of Ce
compounds is performed in order to recognize the thermodynamic conditions to be
fulfilled by those systems to reach a quantum critical regime and,
alternatively, to identify other kinds of low temperature behaviors. Based on
specific heat () and entropy () results, three different types of
phase diagrams are recognized: i) with the entropy involved into the ordered
phase () decreasing proportionally to the ordering temperature
(), ii) those showing a transference of degrees of freedom from the
ordered phase to a non-magnetic component, with their jump
() vanishing at finite temperature, and iii) those ending in a
critical point at finite temperature because their do not decrease
with producing an entropy accumulation at low temperature.
Only those systems belonging to the first case, i.e. with as
, can be regarded as candidates for quantum critical behavior.
Their magnetic phase boundaries deviate from the classical negative curvature
below \,K, denouncing frequent misleading extrapolations down to
T=0. Different characteristic concentrations are recognized and analyzed for
Ce-ligand alloyed systems. Particularly, a pre-critical region is identified,
where the nature of the magnetic transition undergoes significant
modifications, with its discontinuity strongly
affected by magnetic field and showing an increasing remnant entropy at . Physical constraints arising from the third law at are discussed
and recognized from experimental results
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