3,896 research outputs found

    Factors affecting breeding status of wading birds in the Everglades.

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    This goals of this research and monitoring effort are to document nesting effort and roughly categorize success of nesting by wading birds in the central Everglades of Florida, and to investigate the causes of nonbreeding in a high proportion of the adult wading birds in the ecosystem The latter goal has focused on breeding of White Ibises (Eudocimus albus) and has been approached through 1) understanding the nutritional, behavioral, and hormonal aspects of normal breeding in a captive colony ofScarlet Ibises (considered conspecific to White Ibises) in central Florida, and 2) comparing breeding and nonbreeding wild White Ibises in the Everglades, in their physiology, nutritional state, breeding phenology, contaminant load, and hormonal status. This report covers work on this project between January and November, 2000. (81 page docoument

    Cutaneous sensory input to the spinocervical tract of the cat and the corticofugal modulation of transmission from the forelimb component

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    SECTION I - LITERATURE REVIEW The literature is reviewed with special reference to knowledge of cutaneous afferent fibres and their representation in spinocervical tract fibres in the lumbar spinal cord of the cat. Attention is drawn to the paucity of information about forelimb afferents and their representation in the cervical spinal cord. The control of transmission through ascending sensory pathways and in particular the spinocervical tract is discussed. Finally relevant work on the somatosensory cortex and corticofugal inhibition is reviewed and comment is made on the influence of anaesthetics on our knowledge of sensory mechanisms.SECTION II - RECEPTIVE FIELDS AND CONDUCTION VELOCITIES OF IDENTIFIED SPINOCERVICAL TRACT AXONS IN THE CERVICAL SPINAL CORD. Recordings were made with micro-electrodes from single axons in the dorsolateral funiculus of the cervical spinal cord of decerebrate cats. Some of these axons could be designated on electrophysiological criteria as belonging to the spinocervical tract. Such axons conveyed tactile information qualitatively similar to that found by other workers in the lumbar cord. Quantitatively SCT axons with receptive fields in the forelimb were most common and were more frequently activated only by hair movement. Axonal conduction velocities were analysed in relation to the site and type of their afferent input.SECTION III - HOMOSEGMENTAL AND HETEROSEGMENTAL INHIBITION OF TRANSMISSION THROUGH THE SPINOCERVICAL TRACT IN DECEREBRATE CATS. Discharges evoked in SCT axons by electrical and natural stimulation were tested for inhibition from other cutaneous nerves both by electrical and natural stimulation. Inhibition was most easily elicited from the homologous limb and least easily from the heterologous contralateral limb. Conditioning curves of segmental inhibition were plotted and were consistent with a pre-synaptic mechanism. In two spinalized decerebrate cats, only homosegmental inhibition was found.SECTION IV - IPSI- AND CONTRALATERAL CORTICOFUGAL INHIBITION OF TRANSMISSION THROUGH THE SPINOCERVICAL TRACT. Chloralose anaesthetised curarised cats were used to demonstrate corticofugal inhibition of spinocervical tract cells which were excited by electrical stimulation of the superficial radialX^nerve . Surf ace , sprung ball ,stimulating electrodes were u^ed to make a grid map of the cortical surface for areas of maximum inhibitory effect and glass micro-electrodes were used to stimulate the depth of the cortex. For both types of stimulation cathodal currents were most effective. Those areas of cortex eliciting most inhibition at a given current strength corresponded with the contralateral forelimb sensory receiving areas S.I and S.II. Weaker inhibition was elicited from the ipsilateral cortex. Conditioning curves of corticofugal inhibition were plotted.SECTION V - CONCLUSION AND GENERAL DISCUSSION OF THE FUNCTION OF THE SPINOCERVICAL TRACT. The results of the previous sections are discussed in relation to present knowledge of the ascending sensory pathways and the problems they raise. Theories concerning the function of the spinocervical tract are discussed and it is postulated that the spinocervical tract may be concerned in the control of certain types of movement

    Towards human technology symbiosis in the haptic mode

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    Search and rescue operations are often undertaken in dark and noisy environments in which rescue teams must rely on haptic feedback for exploration and safe exit. However, little attention has been paid specifically to haptic sensitivity in such contexts or to the possibility of enhancing communicational proficiency in the haptic mode as a life-preserving measure. Here we discuss the design of a haptic guide robot, inspired by careful study of the communication between blind person and guide dog. In the case of this partnership, the development of a symbiotic relationship between person and dog, based on mutual trust and confidence, is a prerequisite for successful task performance. We argue that a human-technology symbiosis is equally necessary and possible in the case of the robot guide. But this is dependent on the robot becoming 'transparent technology' in Andy Clark's sense. We report on initial haptic mode experiments in which a person uses a simple mobile mechanical device (a metal disk fixed with a rigid handle) to explore the immediate environment. These experiments demonstrate the extreme sensitivity and trainability of haptic communication and the speed with which users develop and refine their haptic proficiencies in using the device, permitting reliable and accurate discrimination between objects of different weights. We argue that such trials show the transformation of the mobile device into a transparent information appliance and the beginnings of the development of a symbiotic relationship between device and human user. We discuss how these initial explorations may shed light on the more general question of how a human mind, on being exposed to an unknown environment, may enter into collaboration with an external information source in order to learn about, and navigate, that environment

    Lincoln on Secession

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    The recent spate of secessionist conflicts has inspired many of us to return to the classics of political theory for moral guidance on statebreaking. Because Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, et al. are virtually silent on this topic, however, we look in this paper at the writing of Abraham Lincoln

    Development of a novel mortar for use with unfired clay bricks

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    Interest in traditional unfired clay building materials, including cob, earth brick, and rammed earth, has grown in the UK in recent years. Although the use of vernacular techniques, such as cob and rammed earth, has raised the profile of earthen architecture, a wider impact on modern construction is more likely to come from modern innovations such as unfired extruded clay masonry units and premixed plasters. Traditional unfired clay walls often have basal widths of 300 mm or more, providing an inherent stability and resistance to toppling through self-weight. Masonry units extracted from UK brick production lines before the firing process are typically 100 mm wide, which requires good mortar-brick bond strength to meet structural robustness requirements in a typical 2.4 m high wall. In testing, traditional mortars based on clay, cement or lime, have not provided sufficient strength. This paper examines the bonding of unfired clay units with unconventional mortars based on novel binders. It reports on the development of a mortar which appears to be suitable for a wide range of clay types. This mortar can be readily recycled and has a carbon footprint lower than many alternative binders. Results of long-term bond strengths and the structural performance of masonry walls are given, which demonstrate the suitability of this mortar for use with unfired clay masonry units. </jats:p
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