5,283 research outputs found
Individualism-collectivism and interpersonal memory guidance of attention
Recently it has been shown that the allocation of attention by a participant in a visual search task can be affected by memory items that have to be maintained by a co-actor, when similar tasks are jointly engaged by dyads (He, Lever, & Humphreys, 2011). In the present study we examined the contribution of individualism-collectivism to this āinterpersonal memory guidanceā effect. Actors performed visual search while a preview image was either held by the critical participant, held by a co-actor or was irrelevant to either participant. Attention during search was attracted to stimuli that matched the contents of the co-actorās memory. This interpersonal effect correlated with the collectivism scores, and was enhanced by priming with a collectivistic scenario. The dimensions of individualism, however, did not contribute to performance. These data suggest that collectivism, but not individualism, modulates interpersonal influences on memory and attention in joint action
Reflexive and preparatory selection and suppression of salient information in the right and left posterior parietal cortex
Attentional cues can trigger activity in the parietal cortex in anticipation of visual displays, and this activity may, in turn, induce changes in other areas of the visual cortex, hence, implementing attentional selection. In a recent TMS study [Mevorach, C., Humphreys, G. W., & Shalev, L. Opposite biases in salience-based selection for the left and right posterior parietal cortex. Nature Neuroscience, 9, 740-742, 2006b], it was shown that the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) can utilize the relative saliency (a nonspatial property) of a target and a distractor to bias visual selection. Furthermore, selection was lateralized so that the right PPC is engaged when salient information must be selected and the left PPC when the salient information must be ignored. However, it is not clear how the PPC implements these complementary forms of selection. Here we used on-line triple-pulse TMS over the right or left PPC prior to or after the onset of global/local displays. When delivered after the onset of the display, TMS to the right PPC disrupted the selection of the more salient aspect of the hierarchical letter. In contrast, left PPC TMS delivered prior to the onset of the stimulus disrupted responses to the lower saliency stimulus. These findings suggest that selection and suppression of saliency, rather than being "two sides of the same coin," are fundamentally different processes. Selection of saliency seems to operate reflexively, whereas suppression of saliency relies on a preparatory phase that "sets up" the system in order to effectively ignore saliency
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A Dense Reference Network for Mass-Market Centimeter-Accurate Positioning
The quality of atmospheric corrections provided
by a dense reference network for centimeter-accurate carrierphase
differential GNSS (CDGNSS) positioning is investigated.
A dense reference network (less than 20 km inter-station distance)
offers significant benefits for mass-market users, enabling lowcost
(including single-frequency) CDGNSS positioning with rapid
integer ambiguity resolution. Precise positioning on a massmarket
platform would significantly influence the world economy,
ushering in a host of consumer-focused applications such as
globally-registered augmented and virtual reality and improved
all-weather safety and efficiency for intelligent transportation
systems, applications which have so far been hampered by the
several-meter-level errors in standard GNSS positioning. This
contribution examines CDGNSS integer ambiguity resolution
performance in terms of network correction uncertainty, and
network correction uncertainty, in turn, in terms of network
density. It considers the total error in network corrections: a
sum of ionospheric, tropospheric, and reference station multipath
components. The paperās primary goal is to identify the network
density beyond which mass-market users would see no further
significant improvement in ambiguity resolution performance. It
finishes by describing development and deployment of a low-cost
dense reference network in Austin, Texas.Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanic
K-orbit closures on G/B as universal degeneracy loci for flagged vector bundles with symmetric or skew-symmetric bilinear form
We use equivariant localization and divided difference operators to determine
formulas for the torus-equivariant fundamental cohomology classes of -orbit
closures on the flag variety , where G = GL(n,\C), and where is one
of the symmetric subgroups O(n,\C) or Sp(n,\C). We realize these orbit
closures as universal degeneracy loci for a vector bundle over a variety
equipped with a single flag of subbundles and a nondegenerate symmetric or
skew-symmetric bilinear form taking values in the trivial bundle. We describe
how our equivariant formulas can be interpreted as giving formulas for the
classes of such loci in terms of the Chern classes of the various bundles.Comment: Minor revisions and corrections suggested by referees. Final version,
to appear in Transformation Group
Comparing Segmentation by Time and by Motion in Visual Search: An fMRI Investigation
Abstract
Brain activity was recorded while participants engaged in a difficult visual search task for a target defined by the spatial configuration of its component elements. The search displays were segmented by time (a preview then a search display), by motion, or were unsegmented. A preparatory network showed activity to the preview display, in the time but not in the motion segmentation condition. A region of the precuneus showed (i) higher activation when displays were segmented by time or by motion, and (ii) correlated activity with larger segmentation benefits behaviorally, regardless of the cue. Additionally, the results revealed that success in temporal segmentation was correlated with reduced activation in early visual areas, including V1. The results depict partially overlapping brain networks for segmentation in search by time and motion, with both cue-independent and cue-specific mechanisms.</jats:p
Results of winglet development studies for DC-10 derivatives
The results of investigations into the application of winglets to the DC-10 aircraft are presented. The DC-10 winglet configuration was developed and its cruise performance determined in a previous investigation. This study included high speed and low speed wind tunnel tests to evaluate aerodynamic characteristics, and a subsonic flutter wind tunnel test with accompanying analysis and evaluation of results. Additionally, a configuration integration study employed the results of the wind tunnel studies to determine the overall impact of the installation of winglets on the DC-10 aircraft. Conclusions derived from the high speed and low speed tests indicate that the winglets had no significant effects on the DC-10 stability characteristics or high speed buffet. It was determined that winglets had a minimal effect on aircraft lift characteristics and improved the low speed aircraft drag under high lift conditions. The winglets affected the DC-10 flutter characteristics by reducing the flutter speed of the basic critical mode and introducing a new critical mode involving outer wing torsion and longitudinal bending. The overall impact of winglets was determined to be of sufficient benefit to merit flight evaluation
On the direct indecomposability of infinite irreducible Coxeter groups and the Isomorphism Problem of Coxeter groups
In this paper we prove, without the finite rank assumption, that any
irreducible Coxeter group of infinite order is directly indecomposable as an
abstract group. The key ingredient of the proof is that we can determine, for
an irreducible Coxeter group, the centralizers of the normal subgroups that are
generated by involutions. As a consequence, we show that the problem of
deciding whether two general Coxeter groups are isomorphic, as abstract groups,
is reduced to the case of irreducible Coxeter groups, without assuming the
finiteness of the number of the irreducible components or their ranks. We also
give a description of the automorphism group of a general Coxeter group in
terms of those of its irreducible components.Comment: 30 page
An Optimal Design for Universal Multiport Interferometers
Universal multiport interferometers, which can be programmed to implement any
linear transformation between multiple channels, are emerging as a powerful
tool for both classical and quantum photonics. These interferometers are
typically composed of a regular mesh of beam splitters and phase shifters,
allowing for straightforward fabrication using integrated photonic
architectures and ready scalability. The current, standard design for universal
multiport interferometers is based on work by Reck et al (Phys. Rev. Lett. 73,
58, 1994). We demonstrate a new design for universal multiport interferometers
based on an alternative arrangement of beam splitters and phase shifters, which
outperforms that by Reck et al. Our design occupies half the physical footprint
of the Reck design and is significantly more robust to optical losses.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Antilinear deformations of Coxeter groups, an application to Calogero models
We construct complex root spaces remaining invariant under antilinear
involutions related to all Coxeter groups. We provide two alternative
constructions: One is based on deformations of factors of the Coxeter element
and the other based on the deformation of the longest element of the Coxeter
group. Motivated by the fact that non-Hermitian Hamiltonians admitting an
antilinear symmetry may be used to define consistent quantum mechanical systems
with real discrete energy spectra, we subsequently employ our constructions to
formulate deformations of Coxeter models remaining invariant under these
extended Coxeter groups. We provide explicit and generic solutions for the
Schroedinger equation of these models for the eigenenergies and corresponding
wavefunctions. A new feature of these novel models is that when compared with
the undeformed case their solutions are usually no longer singular for an
exchange of an amount of particles less than the dimension of the
representation space of the roots. The simultaneous scattering of all particles
in the model leads to anyonic exchange factors for processes which have no
analogue in the undeformed case.Comment: 32 page
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