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Dissociating visuo-spatial and verbal working memory: It’s all in the features
Echoing many of the themes of the seminal work of Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968), this paper uses the Feature Model (Nairne, 1988, 1990; Neath & Nairne, 1995) to account for performance in working memory tasks. The Brooks verbal and visuo-spatial matrix tasks were performed alone, with articulatory suppression, or with a spatial suppression task; the results produced the expected dissociation. We used Approximate Bayesian Computation techniques to fit the Feature Model to the data and showed that the similarity-based interference process implemented in the model accounted for the data patterns well. We then fit the model to data from Guérard and Tremblay (2008); the latter study produced a double dissociation while calling upon more typical order reconstruction tasks. Again, the model performed well. The findings show that a double dissociation can be modelled without appealing to separate systems for verbal and visuo-spatial processing. The latter findings are significant as the Feature Model had not been used to model this type of dissociation before; importantly, this is also the first time the model is quantitatively fit to data. For the demonstration provided here, modularity was unnecessary if two assumptions were made: (1) the main difference between spatial and verbal working memory tasks is the features that are encoded; (2) secondary tasks selectively interfere with primary tasks to the extent that both tasks involve similar features. It is argued that a feature-based view is more parsimonious (see Morey, 2018) and offers flexibility in accounting for multiple benchmark effects in the field
A differential equation for specific catchment area
Analysis of the behavior of specific catchment area in a stream tube leads to a simple nonlinear differential equation describing the rate of change of specific catchment area along a flow path. The differential equation can be integrated numerically along a flow path to calculate specific catchment area at any point on a digital elevation model without requiring the usual estimates of catchment area and width. The method is more computationally intensive than most grid-based methods for calculating specific catchment area, so its main application is as a reference against which conventional methods can be tested. This is the first method that provides a benchmark for more approximate methods in complex terrain with both convergent and divergent areas, not just on simple surfaces for which analytical solutions are known. Preliminary evaluation of the D8, M8, digital elevation model networks (DEMON), and D methods indicate that the D method is the best of those methods for estimating specific catchment area, but all methods overestimate in divergent terrain
H.E.S.S. observations of the Large Magellanic Cloud
The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way at a
distance of approximately 48 kpc. Despite its distance it harbours several
interesting targets for TeV gamma-ray observations. The composite supernova
remnant N 157B/PSR J05367-6910 was discovered by H.E.S.S. being an emitter of
very high energy (VHE) gamma-rays. It is the most distant pulsar wind nebula
ever detected in VHE gamma-rays. Another very exciting target is SN 1987A, the
remnant of the most recent supernova explosion that occurred in the
neighbourhood of the Milky Way. Models for Cosmic Ray acceleration in this
remnant predict gamma-ray emission at a level detectable by H.E.S.S. but this
has not been detected so far. Fermi/LAT discovered diffuse high energy (HE)
gamma-ray emission from the general direction of the massive star forming
region 30 Doradus but no clear evidence for emission from either N 157B or SN
1987A has been published. The part of the LMC containing these objects has been
observed regularly with the H.E.S.S. telescopes since 2003. With deep
observations carried out in 2010 a very good exposure of this part of the sky
has been obtained. The current status of the H.E.S.S. LMC observations is
reported along with new results on N 157B and SN 1987A.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of the 32nd Internatioal Cosmic Ray
Conference, Beijing 201
Spin current propagation through ultra-thin insulating layers in multilayered ferromagnetic systems
Spin current pumping from a ferromagnet through an insulating layer into a heavy metal was studied in a CoFeB/SiO2/Pt system in relation to the thickness and interfacial structure of the insulating layer. The propagation of spin current from the ferromagnet into the heavy metal falls rapidly with sub-nanometer thicknesses of SiO2 and is suppressed beyond a nominal thickness of 2 nm. Structural analysis shows that SiO2 only forms a complete barrier layer beyond around 2 nm, indicating that the presence of a discontinuous insulating barrier, and not tunneling or diffusion, explains the main observations of spin-pumping with thin insulating layers
3D polymer structures with variable permittivity at terahertz frequencies
Titanium dioxide (TiO2) powder has been blended with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) to manufacture a composite polymer with variable permittivity. Vector network analyser measurements taken between 0.75-1.1 THz quantify the relationship between TiO2 concentration and complex permittivity of the resultant material. Complex 3D structures have been produced with a casting process. Applications for the tunable-permittivity polymer include dielectric regions in photonic and plasmonic devices operating at terahertz frequencies as well as single pixel imaging systems
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