739 research outputs found
Quarkonia and Heavy-Quark Relaxation Times in the Quark-Gluon Plasma
A thermodynamic T-matrix approach for elastic 2-body interactions is employed
to calculate spectral functions of open and hidden heavy-quark systems in the
Quark-Gluon Plasma. This enables the evaluation of quarkonium bound-state
properties and heavy-quark diffusion on a common basis and thus to obtain
mutual constraints. The two-body interaction kernel is approximated within a
potential picture for spacelike momentum transfers. An effective
field-theoretical model combining color-Coulomb and confining terms is
implemented with relativistic corrections and for different color channels.
Four pertinent model parameters, characterizing the coupling strengths and
screening, are adjusted to reproduce the color-average heavy-quark free energy
as computed in thermal lattice QCD. The approach is tested against vacuum
spectroscopy in the open (D, B) and hidden (Psi and Upsilon) flavor sectors, as
well as in the high-energy limit of elastic perturbative QCD scattering.
Theoretical uncertainties in the static reduction scheme of the 4-dimensional
Bethe-Salpeter equation are elucidated. The quarkonium spectral functions are
used to calculate Euclidean correlators which are discussed in light of lattice
QCD results, while heavy-quark relaxation rates and diffusion coefficients are
extracted utilizing a Fokker-Planck equation.Comment: 33 pages, 28 figure
Do We Know What We Need? Preference for Feedback About Accurate Performances Does Not Benefit Sensorimotor Learning
Previous research on skill acquisition has shown that learners seem to prefer receiving knowledge of results (KR) about those trials in which they have performed more accurately. In the present study, we assessed whether this preference leads to an advantage in terms of skill acquisition, transfer, and retention of their capacity to extrapolate the motion of decelerating objects during periods of visual occlusion. Instead of questionnaires, we adopted a more direct approach to investigate learners' preferences for KR. Participants performed 90 trials of a motion extrapolation task (acquisition phase) in which, every three trials, they could decide between receiving KR about their best or worst performance. Retention and transfer tests were carried out 24 hr after the acquisition phase, without KR, to examine the effects of the self-selected KR on sensorimotor learning. Consistent with the current literature, a preference for receiving KR about the most accurate performance was observed. However, participants' preferences were not consistent throughout the experiment as less than 10% (N = 40) selected the same type of KR in all their choices. Importantly, although preferred by most participants, KR about accurate performances had detrimental effects on skill acquisition, suggesting that learners may not always choose the KR that will maximize their learning experiences and skill retention
D=2 gluon condensate and QCD propagators at finite temperature
We calculate the dimension two gluon condensate contribution to quark, gluon
and ghost propagators at finite temperature.Comment: Minor modifications. Accepted in PL
Visual attentional load influences plasticity in the human motor cortex
Neural plasticity plays a critical role in learning, memory, and recovery from injury to the nervous system. Although much is known about the physical and physiological determinants of plasticity, little is known about the influence of cognitive factors. In this study, we investigated whether selective attention plays a role in modifying changes in neural excitability reflecting long-term potentiation (LTP)like plasticity. We induced LTP-like effects in the hand area of the human motor cortex using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). During the induction of plasticity, participants engaged in a visual detection task with either low or high attentional demands. Changes in neural excitability were assessed by measuring motor-evoked potentials in a small hand muscle before and after the TMS procedures. In separate experiments plasticity was induced either by paired associative stimulation (PAS) or intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS). Because these procedures induce different forms of LTP-like effects, they allowed us to investigate the generality of any attentional influence on plasticity. In both experiments reliable changes in motor cortex excitability were evident under low-load conditions, but this effect was eliminated under high-attentional load. In a third experiment we investigated whether the attentional task was associated with ongoing changes in the excitability of motor cortex, but found no difference in evoked potentials across the levels of attentional load. Our findings indicate that in addition to their role in modifying sensory processing, mechanisms of attention can also be a potent modulator of cortical plasticity
The effect of distance on reaction time in aiming movements
Target distance affects movement duration in aiming tasks but its effect on reaction time (RT) is poorly documented. RT is a function of both preparation and initiation. Experiment 1 pre-cued movement (allowing advanced preparation) and found no influence of distance on RT. Thus, target distance does not affect initiation time. Experiment 2 removed pre-cue information and found that preparing a movement of increased distance lengthens RT. Experiment 3 explored movements to targets of cued size at non-cued distances and found size altered peak speed and movement duration but RT was influenced by distance alone. Thus, amplitude influences preparation time (for reasons other than altered duration) but not initiation time. We hypothesise that the RT distance effect might be due to the increased number of possible trajectories associated with further targets: a hypothesis that can be tested in future experiments
Medium Modifications of Hadron Properties and Partonic Processes
Chiral symmetry is one of the most fundamental symmetries in QCD. It is
closely connected to hadron properties in the nuclear medium via the reduction
of the quark condensate , manifesting the partial restoration of
chiral symmetry. To better understand this important issue, a number of
Jefferson Lab experiments over the past decade have focused on understanding
properties of mesons and nucleons in the nuclear medium, often benefiting from
the high polarization and luminosity of the CEBAF accelerator. In particular, a
novel, accurate, polarization transfer measurement technique revealed for the
first time a strong indication that the bound proton electromagnetic form
factors in 4He may be modified compared to those in the vacuum. Second, the
photoproduction of vector mesons on various nuclei has been measured via their
decay to e+e- to study possible in-medium effects on the properties of the rho
meson. In this experiment, no significant mass shift and some broadening
consistent with expected collisional broadening for the rho meson has been
observed, providing tight constraints on model calculations. Finally, processes
involving in-medium parton propagation have been studied. The medium
modifications of the quark fragmentation functions have been extracted with
much higher statistical accuracy than previously possible.Comment: to appear in J. Phys.: Conf. Proc. "New Insights into the Structure
of Matter: The First Decade of Science at Jefferson Lab", eds. D.
Higinbotham, W. Melnitchouk, A. Thomas; added reference
In-medium hadronic spectral functions through the soft-wall holographic model of QCD
We study the scalar glueball and vector meson spectral functions in a hot and
dense medium by means of the soft-wall holographic model of QCD. Finite
temperature and density effects are implemented through the AdS/RN metric. We
analyse the behaviour of the hadron masses and widths in the plane,
and compare our results with the experimental ones and with other theoretical
determinations.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures. matching the published versio
Artificial Gravity Reveals that Economy of Action Determines the Stability of Sensorimotor Coordination
Background: When we move along in time with a piece of music, we synchronise the downward phase of our gesture with the beat. While it is easy to demonstrate this tendency, there is considerable debate as to its neural origins. It may have a structural basis, whereby the gravitational field acts as an orientation reference that biases the formulation of motor commands. Alternatively, it may be functional, and related to the economy with which motion assisted by gravity can be generated by the motor system
Role of electrostatic interactions in amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) oligomer formation: A discrete molecular dynamics study
Pathological folding and oligomer formation of the amyloid beta-protein
(Abeta) are widely perceived as central to Alzheimer's disease (AD).
Experimental approaches to study Abeta self-assembly are problematic, because
most relevant aggregates are quasi-stable and inhomogeneous. We apply a
discrete molecular dynamics (DMD) approach combined with a four-bead protein
model to study oligomer formation of the amyloid beta-protein (Abeta). We
address the differences between the two most common Abeta alloforms, Abeta40
and Abeta42, which oligomerize differently in vitro. We study how the presence
of electrostatic interactions (EIs) between pairs of charged amino acids
affects Abeta40 and Abeta42 oligomer formation. Our results indicate that EIs
promote formation of larger oligomers in both Abeta40 and Abeta42. The Abeta40
size distribution remains unimodal, whereas the Abeta42 distribution is
trimodal, as observed experimentally. Abeta42 folded structure is characterized
by a turn in the C-terminus that is not present in Abeta40. We show that the
same C-terminal region is also responsible for the strongest intermolecular
contacts in Abeta42 pentamers and larger oligomers. Our results suggest that
this C-terminal region plays a key role in the formation of Abeta42 oligomers
and the relative importance of this region increases in the presence of EIs.
These results suggest that inhibitors targeting the C-terminal region of
Abeta42 oligomers may be able to prevent oligomer formation or structurally
modify the assemblies to reduce their toxicity.Comment: Accepted for publication at Biophysical Journa
- …