27,930 research outputs found
Integrating across memory episodes: Developmental trends
Memory enables us to use information from our past experiences to guide new behaviours, calling for the need to integrate or form inference across multiple distinct episodic experiences. Here, we compared children (aged 9-10 years), adolescents (aged 12-13 years), and young adults (aged 19-25 years) on their ability to form integration across overlapping associations in memory. Participants first encoded a set of overlapping, direct AB- and BC-associations (object-face and face-object pairs) as well as non-overlapping, unique DE-associations. They were then tested on these associations and inferential AC-associations. The experiment consisted of four such encoding/retrieval cycles, each consisting of different stimuli set. For accuracy on both unique and inferential associations, young adults were found to outperform teenagers, who in turn outperformed children. However, children were particularly slower than teenagers and young adults in making judgements during inferential than during unique associations. This suggests that children may rely more on making inferences during retrieval, by first retrieving the direct associations, followed by making the inferential judgement. Furthermore, young adults showed a higher correlation between accuracy in direct (AB, BC) and inferential AC-associations than children. This suggests that, young adults relied closely on AB- and BC-associations for making AC decisions, potentially by forming integrated ABC-triplets during encoding or retrieval. Taken together, our findings suggest that there may be an age-related shift in how information is integrated across experienced episodes, namely from relying on making inferences at retrieval during middle childhood to forming integrated representations at different memory processing stages in adulthood
Trilingual conversations: a window into multicompetence
A recurrent theme in the literature on trilingual language use is the question of whether there is a specific âtrilingual competence.â In this paper we consider this question in the light of codeswitching patterns in two dyadic trilingual conversations between a mother and daughter conducted in (Lebanese) Arabic, French, and English. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of codeswitching in both conversants shows that, despite the fact that both subjects are fluent in all three languages, uses of switching are significantly different for mother and daughter across a number of features, including relative frequency of different switch types, and the incidence of hybrid constructions involving items from two or more languages. The subjects appear to display qualitatively distinct profiles of competence in the trilingual mode. This in turn leads to the conclusion that the facts of trilingual language use are best characterized in terms of âmulticompetenceâ (Cook, 1991). The paper concludes with some further reflections on the uniqueness of trilingual language use (an âold chestnutâ in
trilingualism research, cf. Klein, 1995)
Fracture strength and Young's modulus of ZnO nanowires
The fracture strength of ZnO nanowires vertically grown on sapphire
substrates was measured in tensile and bending experiments. Nanowires with
diameters between 60 and 310 nm and a typical length of 2 um were manipulated
with an atomic force microscopy tip mounted on a nanomanipulator inside a
scanning electron microscope. The fracture strain of (7.7 +- 0.8)% measured in
the bending test was found close to the theoretical limit of 10% and revealed a
strength about twice as high as in the tensile test. From the tensile
experiments the Young's modulus could be measured to be within 30% of that of
bulk ZnO, contrary to the lower values found in literature.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Enhancement of perfluorooctanoate and perfluorooctanesulfonate activity at acoustic cavitation bubble interfaces
Acoustic cavitation driven by ultrasonic irradiation decomposes and mineralizes the recalcitrant perfluorinated surfactants perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoate (PFOA). Pyrolytic cleavage of the ionic headgroup is the rate-determining step. In this study, we examine the sonochemical adsorption of PFOX, where X = S for PFOS and A for PFOA, by determining kinetic order and absolute rates over an initial PFOX concentration range of 20 nM to 200 ÎŒM. Sonochemical PFOX kinetics transition from pseudo-first-order at low initial concentrations, [PFOX]_i 40 ÎŒM, as the bubble interface sites are saturated. At PFOX concentrations below 100 ÎŒM, concentration-dependent rates were modeled with LangmuirâHinshelwood (LH) kinetics. Empirically determined rate maximums, V_(Max)^(âPFOA) = 2230 ± 560 nM min^â1 and V_(Max)^(âPFOS) = 230 ± 60 nM min^â1, were used in the LH model, and sonochemical surface activities were estimated to be K_(Sono)^(PFOS) = 120000 M^â1 and K_(Sono)^(PFOA) = 28500 M^â1, 60 and 80 times greater than equilibrium surface activities, K_(Eq)^(PFOS) and K_(Eq)^(PFOA). These results suggest enhanced sonochemical degradation rates for PFOX when the bubble interface is undersaturated. The present results are compared to previously reported sonochemical kinetics of nonvolatile surfactants
Testrun results from prototype fiber detectors for high rate particle tracking
A fiber detector concept has been realized allowing to registrate particles
within less than 100 nsec with a space point precision of about 0.1 mm at low
occupancy. Three full size prototypes have been build by different producers
and tested at a 3 GeV electron beam at DESY. After 3 m of light guides 8-10
photoelectrons were registrated by multichannel photomultipliers providing an
efficiency of more than 99%. Using all available data a resolution of 0.086 mm
was measured.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figure
Toward inertial confinement fusion energy based on heavy ion beam
Heavy ion inertial fusion (HIF) energy would be one of promising energy
resources securing our future energy in order to sustain our human life for
centuries and beyond. The heavy ion beam (HIB) has remarkable preferable
features to release the fusion energy in inertial confinement fusion: in
particle accelerators HIBs are generated with a high driver efficiency of ~
30-40%, and the HIB ions deposit their energy inside of materials. Therefore, a
requirement for the fusion target energy gain is relatively low, that would be
~50-70 to operate a HIF fusion reactor with the standard energy output of 1GW
of electricity. The HIF reactor operation frequency would be ~10~15 Hz or so.
Several-MJ HIBs illuminate a fusion fuel target, and the fuel target is
imploded to about a thousand times of the solid density. Then the DT fuel is
ignited and burned. The HIB ion deposition range would be ~0.5-1 mm or so
depending on the material. Therefore, a relatively large density-scale length
appears in the fuel target material. The large density-gradient-scale length
helps to reduce the Rayleigh-Taylor (R-T) growth rate. The key merits in HIF
physics are presented in the article toward our bright future energy resource.Comment: 17 pages. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1511.06508, arXiv:1608.0106
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