244 research outputs found
Robustness and epistasis in mutation-selection models
We investigate the fitness advantage associated with the robustness of a
phenotype against deleterious mutations using deterministic mutation-selection
models of quasispecies type equipped with a mesa shaped fitness landscape. We
obtain analytic results for the robustness effect which become exact in the
limit of infinite sequence length. Thereby, we are able to clarify a seeming
contradiction between recent rigorous work and an earlier heuristic treatment
based on a mapping to a Schr\"odinger equation. We exploit the quantum
mechanical analogy to calculate a correction term for finite sequence lengths
and verify our analytic results by numerical studies. In addition, we
investigate the occurrence of an error threshold for a general class of
epistatic landscape and show that diminishing epistasis is a necessary but not
sufficient condition for error threshold behavior.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figure
Cognitive effects of high-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation: a systematic review
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was introduced as a non-invasive tool for the investigation of the motor cortex. The repetitive application (rTMS), causing longer lasting effects, was used to study the influence on a variety of cerebral functions. High-frequency (>1 Hz) rTMS is known to depolarize neurons under the stimulating coil and to indirectly affect areas being connected and related to emotion and behavior. Researchers found selective cognitive improvement after high-frequency (HF) stimulation specifically over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). This article provides a systematic review of HF-rTMS studies (1999–2009) stimulating over the prefrontal cortex of patients suffering from psychiatric/neurological diseases or healthy volunteers, where the effects on cognitive functions were measured. The cognitive effect was analyzed with regard to the impact of clinical status (patients/healthy volunteers) and stimulation type (verum/sham). RTMS at 10, 15 or 20 Hz, applied over the left DLPFC, within a range of 10–15 successive sessions and an individual motor threshold of 80–110%, is most likely to cause significant cognitive improvement. In comparison, patients tend to reach a greater improvement than healthy participants. Limitations concern the absence of healthy groups in clinical studies and partly the absence of sham groups. Thus, future investigations are needed to assess cognitive rTMS effects in different psychiatric disorders versus healthy subjects using an extended standardized neuropsychological test battery. Since the pathophysiological and neurobiological basis of cognitive improvement with rTMS remains unclear, additional studies including genetics, experimental neurophysiology and functional brain imaging are necessary to explore stimulation-related functional changes in the brain
Disorders of Consciousness
Disorders of Consciousness are a big challenge for the entire process of rehabilitation: assessment, diagnosis, pharmacological, and rehabilitation programs, including conventional treatments and the use of new technologies
Weaning in der neurologischen Frührehabilitation (NFR)
Weaning in neurological early rehabilitation represents an important participation goal that can be achieved in up to 90% of cases after an average of two to three weeks of weaning through a combination of intensive care and rehabilitative interventions. The weaning process should be based on a standardized weaning protocol, with which a gradual expansion of spontaneous breathing phases can be achieved. The German Society for Neurorehabilitation (DGNR) has taken the special features of prolonged weaning in NFR into account in a separate guideline.</jats:p
Botulinumtoxin Typ A in der Schmerztherapie - theoretische Grundlagen und praktische Anwendung
- …
