956 research outputs found

    A reflection on the ‘Big Draw’ events (October 2007 and 2008)

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    Optical and ROSAT X-ray observations of the dwarf nova OY Carinae in superoutburst and quiescence

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    We present ROSAT X-ray and optical light curves of the 1994 February superoutburst of the eclipsing SU UMa dwarf nova OY Carinae. There is no eclipse of the flux in the ROSAT HRI light curve. Contemporaneous `wide B' band optical light curves show extensive superhump activity and dips at superhump maximum. Eclipse mapping of these optical light curves reveals a disc with a considerable physical flare, even three days into the superoutburst decline. We include a later (1994 July) ROSAT PSPC observation of OY Car that allows us to put constraints on the quiescent X-ray spectrum. We find that while there is little to choose between OY Car and its fellow high inclination systems with regard to the temperature of the emitting gas and the emission measure, we have difficulties reconciling the column density found from our X-ray observation with the column found in HST UV observations by Horne et al. (1994). The obvious option is to invoke time variability.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    An empirical, cross-taxon evaluation of landscape-scale connectivity

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    Connectivity is vital for the maintenance of spatially structured ecosystems, but is threatened by anthropogenic processes that degrade habitat networks. Thus, connectivity enhancement has become a conservation priority, with resources dedicated to enhancing habitat networks. However, much effort may be wasted on ineffective management, as conservation theory and practice can be poorly linked. Here we evaluate the success of landscape management designed to restore connectivity in the Humberhead wetlands (UK). Hybrid pattern-process models were created for six species, representing key taxa in the wetland ecosystem. Habitat suitability models were used to provide the spatial context for individual-based models that predicted metapopulation dynamics, including functional connectivity. To create models representing post-management conditions, landscape structure was modified to represent local improvements in habitat quality achieved through management. Models indicate that management had limited success in enhancing connectivity. Interventions have buffered existing connectivity in several species’ habitat networks, with inter-patch movement increasing for modelled species by up to 22% (for water vole, Arvicola amphibius), but have not reconnected isolated habitat fragments. Field surveys provided provisional support for the accuracy of baseline models, but could not identify predicted benefits from management interventions, likely due to time-lags following these interventions. Despite lacking clear empirical support as yet, models suggest the management of the Humberhead wetlands has successfully enhanced the landscape-scale ecological network, achieving management targets. However we identify key limitations to this success and provide specific recommendations for improvement of future landscape-scale management. Our developments in model application and integration can be developed further and be usefully applied to studies of species and/or community dynamics in a range of contexts

    Discontinuities in 'Gulliver's Travels'

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    Ten days after the publication of Gulliver's Travels in November 1726 the author's friend John Gay wrote to Swift in Ireland: "From the highest to the lowest it is universally read, from the Cabinet-council to the Nursery." From the beginning the audience with which the book has been popular has been unusually diverse, and different parts of the work have evoked very different responses. Thackeray's celebrated denunciation of the Fourth Voyage as "horrible, shameful, unmanly, blasphemous . . . filthy in word, filthy in thought, furious, raging, obscene," is hardly the description one expects to find of a book that was and is a children's classic. Children enjoy the story and keep it one-dimensional by skipping through the passages which are sometimes bowdlerized for them, but adult readers find themselves alternately fascinated by the narrative and distracted by the invective. Gulliver's Travels is both a marvellously realized account of fantastic adventures in imaginary lands, and a searching, brutally reductive account of the delusions, follies, and vices of men, and of the radical limitations of human nature. It is a strangely discontinuous book, and it is the effect of this on the reader that I want to explore

    We are more selfish than we think:The endowment effect and reward processing within the human medial-frontal cortex

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    Perceived ownership has been shown to impact a variety of cognitive processes: attention, memory, and—more recently—reward processing. In the present experiment we examined whether or not perceived ownership would interact with the construct of value—the relative worth of an object. Participants completed a simple gambling game in which they gambled either for themselves or for another while electroencephalographic data were recorded. In a key manipulation, gambles for oneself or for another were for either small or large rewards. We tested the hypothesis that value affects the neural response to self-gamble outcomes, but not other-gamble outcomes. Our experimental data revealed that while participants learned the correct response option for both self and other gambles, the reward positivity evoked by wins was impacted by value only when gambling for oneself. Importantly, our findings provide additional evidence for a self-ownership bias in cognitive processing and further demonstrate the insensitivity of the medial-frontal reward system to gambles for another. </jats:p

    Incorporating intraspecific trait variation into functional diversity: Impacts of selective logging on birds in Borneo

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    1. As conservation increasingly recognises the importance of species’ functional roles in ecosystem processes, studies are shifting away from measuring species richness towards measures that account for the functional differences between species in a community. These functional diversity (FD) indices have received much recent attention and refinement, but their greatest limitation remains their inability to incorporate information about intraspecific trait variation (ITV). 2. We use an individual-based model to account for ITV when calculating the functional diversity of two avian communities in Borneo; one in primary (unlogged) forest and one in selectively logged forest. We deal with the scarcity of trait data for individual species by developing a simulation approach, taking data from the literature where necessary. Using a bootstrapping procedure, we produce a range of ecologically feasible FD values taking account of ITV for five commonly-used FD indices, and we quantify the confidence that can be placed in these values using a newly-developed bootstrapping method: btFD. 3. We found that incorporating ITV significantly altered the FD values of all indices used in our models. The rank order of FD for the two communities, indicating whether diversity was higher in primary or selectively logged forest, was largely unchanged by the inclusion of ITV. However, by accounting for ITV, we were able to reveal previously unrecognized impacts of selective logging on avian functional diversity through a narrower dispersion of individuals in functional trait space in logged forest. 4. Our results highlight the importance of incorporating ITV into measures of functional diversity, whilst our simulation approach addresses the frequently encountered difficulty of working with sparse trait data and quantifies the confidence that should be placed in such findings
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