17,652 research outputs found
Casimir Energy for a Wedge with Three Surfaces and for a Pyramidal Cavity
Casimir energy calculations for the conformally coupled massless scalar field
for a wedge defined by three intersecting planes and for a pyramid with four
triangular surfaces are presented. The group generated by reflections are
employed in the formulation of the required Green functions and the wave
functions.Comment: Latex, 9 page
Eerste ontwerp format voor de beschrijving van virtuele klas scenario’s – Memo:Deliverable D2.2
Deze deliverable beschrijft een eerste ontwerp van een format voor de beschrijving van virtuele klas scenario's
The Causal Role of Three Frontal Cortical Areas in Grasping
Efficient object grasping requires the continuous control of arm and hand movements based on visual information. Previous studies have identified a network of parietal and frontal areas that is crucial for the visual control of prehension movements. Electrical microstimulation of 3D shape-selective clusters in AIP during functional magnetic resonance imaging activates areas F5a and 45B, suggesting that these frontal areas may represent important downstream areas for object processing during grasping, but the role of area F5a and 45B in grasping is unknown. To assess their causal role in the frontal grasping network, we reversibly inactivated 45B, F5a, and F5p during visually guided grasping in macaque monkeys. First, we recorded single neuron activity in 45B, F5a, and F5p to identify sites with object responses during grasping. Then, we injected muscimol or saline to measure the grasping deficit induced by the temporary disruption of each of these three nodes in the grasping network. The inactivation of all three areas resulted in a significant increase in the grasping time in both animals, with the strongest effect observed in area F5p. These results not only confirm a clear involvement of F5p, but also indicate causal contributions of area F5a and 45B in visually guided object grasping
The causal role of three frontal cortical areas in grasping
Efficient object grasping requires the continuous control of arm and hand movements based on visual information. Previous studies have identified a network of parietal and frontal areas that is crucial for the visual control of prehension movements. Electrical microstimulation of 3D shape-selective clusters in AIP during fMRI activates areas F5a and 45B, suggesting that these frontal areas may represent important downstream areas for object processing during grasping, but the role of area F5a and 45B in grasping is unknown. To assess their causal role in the frontal grasping network, we reversibly inactivated 45B, F5a and F5p during visually-guided grasping in macaque monkeys. First, we recorded single neuron activity in 45B, F5a and F5p to identify sites with object responses during grasping. Then, we injected muscimol or saline to measure the grasping deficit induced by the temporary disruption of each of these three nodes in the grasping network. The inactivation of all three areas resulted in a significant increase in the grasping time in both animals, with the strongest effect observed in area F5p. These results not only confirm a clear involvement of F5p, but also indicate causal contributions of area F5a and 45B in visually-guided object grasping
Effect of viewing distance on object responses in macaque areas 45B, F5a and F5p
To perform real-world tasks like grasping, the primate brain has to process visual object information so that the grip aperture can be adjusted before contact with the object is made. Previous studies have demonstrated that the posterior subsector of the Anterior Intraparietal area (pAIP) is connected to frontal area 45B, and the anterior subsector of AIP (aAIP) to F5a (Premereur et al., 2015). However, the role of area 45B and F5a in visually-guided object grasping is poorly understood. Here, we investigated the role of area 45B, F5a and F5p in visually-guided grasping. If a neuronal response to an object during passive fixation represents the activation of a motor command related to the preshaping of the hand, such neurons should prefer objects presented within reachable distance. Conversely, neurons encoding a pure visual representation of an object should be less affected by viewing distance. Contrary to our expectations, we found that the majority of neurons in area 45B were object- and viewing distance selective, with a clear preference for the near viewing distance. Area F5a showed much weaker object selectivity compared to 45B, with a similar preference for objects presented at the Near position emerging mainly in the late epoch. Finally, F5p neurons were less object selective and frequently preferred objects presented at the Far position. Therefore, contrary to our expectations, neurons in area 45B - but not F5p neurons - prefer objects presented in peripersonal space
rPICARD: A CASA-based Calibration Pipeline for VLBI Data
Currently, HOPS and AIPS are the primary choices for the time-consuming
process of (millimeter) Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) data
calibration. However, for a full end-to-end pipeline, they either lack the
ability to perform easily scriptable incremental calibration or do not provide
full control over the workflow with the ability to manipulate and edit
calibration solutions directly. The Common Astronomy Software Application
(CASA) offers all these abilities, together with a secure development future
and an intuitive Python interface, which is very attractive for young radio
astronomers. Inspired by the recent addition of a global fringe-fitter, the
capability to convert FITS-IDI files to measurement sets, and amplitude
calibration routines based on ANTAB metadata, we have developed the the
CASA-based Radboud PIpeline for the Calibration of high Angular Resolution Data
(rPICARD). The pipeline will be able to handle data from multiple arrays: EHT,
GMVA, VLBA and the EVN in the first release. Polarization and phase-referencing
calibration are supported and a spectral line mode will be added in the future.
The large bandwidths of future radio observatories ask for a scalable reduction
software. Within CASA, a message passing interface (MPI) implementation is used
for parallelization, reducing the total time needed for processing. The most
significant gain is obtained for the time-consuming fringe-fitting task where
each scan be processed in parallel.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, EVN 2018 symposium proceeding
Comment on ``Critical Behavior in Disordered Quantum Systems Modified by Broken Time--Reversal Symmetry''
In a recent Letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 1003 (1998)] Hussein and Pato
employed the maximum entropy principle (MEP) in order to derive interpolating
ensembles between any pair of universality classes in random matrix theory.
They apply their formalism also to the transition from random matrix to Poisson
statistics of spectra that is observed for the case of the Anderson-type
metal-insulator transition. We point out the problems with the latter
procedure.Comment: 1 page in PS, to appear in PRL Sept. 2
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