12,152 research outputs found
Angry expressions strengthen the encoding and maintenance of face identity representations in visual working memory
This work was funded by a BBSRC grant (BB/G021538/2) to all authors.Peer reviewedPreprin
Competition between Pressure and Gravity Confinement in Lyman-Alpha Forest Observations
A break in the distribution function of Ly clouds (at a typical
redshift of ) has been reported by Petitjean et al. (1993). This feature
is what would be expected from a transition between pressure confinement and
gravity confinement (as predicted in Charlton, Salpeter, and Hogan (1993)). The
column density at which the feature occurs has been used to determine the
external confining pressure, , which could be
due to a hot, intergalactic medium. For models that provide a good fit to the
data, the contribution of the gas in clouds to is small. The specific
shape of the distribution function at the transition (predicted by models to
have a non-monotonic slope) can serve as a diagnostic of the distribution of
dark matter around Ly forest clouds, and the present data already
eliminate certain models.Comment: 10 pages plain TeX, 2 figures available upon request, submitted to
ApJ Letters, PSU-jc-
"Distracters" do not always distract : Visual working memory for angry faces is enhanced by incidental emotional words.
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Climate change : a response surface study of the effects of CO2 and temperature on the growth of French beans
The possible impact of global rises in atmospheric CO2 concentration and temperature on the growth and development of French beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) was examined using growth cabinets. Five CO2 concentrations of 350, 450, 550, 650 and 750 vpm and five temperatures of 14·5, 15·5, 16·5, 17·5 and 18·5°C were tested using a fractional factorial design comprising nine treatment combinations of the two factors. Plants were grown under constant irradiance, common atmospheric humidities (vpd 0·5 kPa) and non-limiting supplies of water and mineral nutrients. The plant growth response was modelled by fitting polynomial response function curves to the times to first flower opening, first bean set, 50% maturity and the number and yield of beans. The effects of temperature were large and positive for most of the measured variables, whereas the effects of CO2 were small and negative or non-existent. Increased temperature substantially reduced the time to flowering and the time from bean set to 50% maturity and increased the number and yield of mature beans whereas increased CO2 concentration had little effect on plant growth except that bean yield was very slightly reduced. There was no significant evidence of interaction between the CO2 concentration effects and the temperature effects.
The time to maturity and yield of mature beans was simulated for the 2020s (2010 to 2039) and the 2050s (2040 to 2069) using the fitted polynomial models and four climate change scenarios suggested by the UK Climate Impacts Programme. These simulations showed that, depending upon the assumed scenario, the 2020s yields could rise by 39–84% and time to maturity reduce by between 6 and 15 days whereas the 2050s yields could rise by 51–118% and time to maturity reduce by between 9 and 25 days
Recommended from our members
Differences in clinicopathologic variables between Borrelia C6 antigen seroreactive and Borrelia C6 seronegative glomerulopathy in dogs.
BackgroundRapidly progressive glomerulonephritis has been described in dogs that seroreact to Borrelia burgdorferi, but no studies have compared clinicopathologic differences in Lyme-seroreactive dogs with protein-losing nephropathy (PLN) versus dogs with Borrelia-seronegative PLN.Hypothesis/objectivesDogs with Borrelia C6 antigen-seroreactive PLN have distinct clinicopathologic findings when compared to dogs with Borrelia seronegative PLN.AnimalsForty dogs with PLN and Borrelia C6 antigen seroreactivity and 78 C6-seronegative temporally matched dogs with PLN.MethodsRetrospective prevalence case-control study. Clinical information was retrieved from records of dogs examined at the University of California, Davis, Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital. Histopathologic findings in renal tissue procured by biopsy or necropsy of dogs with PLN were reviewed.ResultsRetrievers and retriever mixes were overrepresented in seroreactive dogs (P < .001). Seroreactive dogs were more likely to have thrombocytopenia (P < .001), azotemia (P = .002), hyperphosphatemia (P < .001), anemia (P < .001), and neutrophilia (P = .003). Hematuria, glucosuria, and pyuria despite negative urine culture were more likely in seroreactive dogs (all P ≤ .002). Histopathologic findings were consistent with immune-complex glomerulonephritis in 16 of 16 case dogs and 7 of 23 control dogs (P = 006). Prevalence of polyarthritis was not different between groups (P = .17).Conclusions and clinical importanceC6 seroreactivity in dogs with PLN is associated with a clinicopathologically distinct syndrome when compared with other types of PLN. Early recognition of this syndrome has the potential to improve outcomes through specific aggressive and early treatment
Seafood Safety and Trade
Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, International Relations/Trade,
Forecasting Inflation: the Relevance of Higher Moments
We provide evidence that higher moments of the relative price distribution improve out-of-sample forecasts of inflation. Further, we show how theoretically consistent higher moments can be calculated by expanding the seminal work by Theil (1967). Results presented here are of direct relevance to monetary authorities, policy analysts and academic economistsrelative price distribution, higher moments, out-of-sample inflation forecasting
Pre-Columbian Tuberculosis: An Epidemiological Approach
In this study we have combined both biological and cultural data in the investigation of resorptive pathology in Woodland and Mississippian skeletal series from west-central Illinois. Information concerning the types of lesions and their distribution confirms the presence of a previously unknown disease in Mississippian populations. Adults and adolescents from Yokem and Schild Mississippian components clearly display cystic vertebral pathology, which in association with other peripheral osseous lesions distinguishes them from earlier groups. This idea is supported indirectly by evidence from both infants and children of the Schild sample
Short-Interval Cortical Inhibition and Intracortical Facilitation during Submaximal Voluntary Contractions Changes with Fatigue
This study determined whether short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) and intracortical facilitation (ICF) change during a sustained submaximal isometric contraction. On 2 days, 12 participants (6 men, 6 women) performed brief (7-s) elbow flexor contractions before and after a 10-min fatiguing contraction; all contractions were performed at the level of integrated electromyographic activity (EMG) which produced 25 % maximal unfatigued torque. During the brief 7-s and 10-min submaximal contractions, single (test) and paired (conditioning–test) transcranial magnetic stimuli were applied over the motor cortex (5 s apart) to elicit motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) in biceps brachii. SICI and ICF were elicited on separate days, with a conditioning–test interstimulus interval of 2.5 and 15 ms, respectively. On both days, integrated EMG remained constant while torque fell during the sustained contraction by ~51.5 % from control contractions, perceived effort increased threefold, and MVC declined by 21–22 %. For SICI, the conditioned MEP during control contractions (74.1 ± 2.5 % of unconditioned MEP) increased (less inhibition) during the sustained contraction (last 2.5 min: 86.0 ± 5.1 %; P \u3c 0.05). It remained elevated in recovery contractions at 2 min (82.0 ± 3.8 %; P \u3c 0.05) and returned toward control at 7-min recovery (76.3 ± 3.2 %). ICF during control contractions (conditioned MEP 129.7 ± 4.8 % of unconditioned MEP) decreased (less facilitation) during the sustained contraction (last 2.5 min: 107.6 ± 6.8 %; P \u3c 0.05) and recovered to 122.8 ± 4.3 % during contractions after 2 min of recovery. Both intracortical inhibitory and facilitatory circuits become less excitable with fatigue when assessed during voluntary activity, but their different time courses of recovery suggest different mechanisms for the fatigue-related changes of SICI and ICF
The Chemical and Ionization Conditions in Weak Mg II Absorbers
We present an analysis of the chemical and ionization conditions in a sample
of 100 weak Mg II absorbers identified in the VLT/UVES archive of quasar
spectra. Using a host of low ionization lines associated with each absorber in
this sample, and on the basis of ionization models, we infer that the
metallicity in a significant fraction of weak Mg II clouds is constrained to
values of solar or higher, if they are sub-Lyman limit systems. Based on the
observed constraints, we present a physical picture in which weak Mg II
absorbers are predominantly tracing two different astrophysical
processes/structures. A significant population of weak Mg II clouds, those in
which N(Fe II) is much less than N(Mg II), identified at both low (z ~ 1) and
high (z ~ 2) redshift, are potentially tracing gas in the extended halos of
galaxies, analogous to the Galactic high velocity clouds. These absorbers might
correspond to alpha-enhanced interstellar gas expelled from star-forming
galaxies, in correlated supernova events. On the other hand, N(FeII)
approximately equal to N(Mg II) clouds, which are prevalent only at lower
redshifts (z < 1.5), must be tracing Type Ia enriched gas in small, high
metallicity pockets in dwarf galaxies, tidal debris, or other intergalactic
structures.Comment: 35 pages (including tables & figures). Accepted for publication in
ApJ. A high resolution version of the paper is available at
"http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~anand/weakMgII.pdf
- …