180 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Exploring block construction and mental imagery: Evidence of atypical orientation discrimination in Williams syndrome
The visuo-spatial perceptual abilities of individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) were investigated in two experiments. Experiment 1 measured the ability of participants to discriminate between oblique and between nonoblique orientations. Individuals with WS showed a smaller effect of obliqueness in response time, when compared to controls matched for non-verbal mental age. Experiment 2 investigated the possibility that this deviant pattern of orientation discrimination accounts for the poor ability to perform mental rotation in WS (Farran et al., 2001). A size transformation task was employed, which shares the image transformation requirements of mental rotation, but not the orientation discrimination demands. Individuals with WS performed at the same level as controls. The results suggest a deviance at the perceptual level in WS, in processing orientation, which fractionates from the ability to mentally transform images
Calculation of the pion electromagnetic form factor from lattice QCD
We present a lattice calculation of the vector form factor of the pion for
two flavours of non-perturbatively O(a) improved Wilson fermions. For the
measurements we utilise the CLS ensembles which include various lattice
spacings and pion masses down to about 250 MeV. To obtain a fine momentum
resolution near zero momentum transfer (q^2) partially twisted boundary
conditions are employed using several twist angles. Due to the fine resolution
around q^2=0 we are able to determine the slope of the form factor and, in
turn, extract the charge radius of the pion without any model dependence. The
results for the form factor and the charge radius are then compared to chiral
perturbation theory and phenomenological models which are used to extrapolate
the results to the physical point.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, talk presented at Hadron 2011: 14th International
Conference on Hadron Spectroscopy, Munich, German
The pion vector form factor from lattice QCD and NNLO chiral perturbation theory
We present a comprehensive study of the electromagnetic form factor, the decay constant and the mass of the pion computed in lattice QCD with two degenerate O(a)-improved Wilson quarks at three different lattice spacings in the range 0.05-0.08fm and pion masses between 280 and 630MeV at mπ L ≥ 4. Using partially twisted boundary conditions and stochastic estimators, we obtain a dense set of precise data points for the form factor at very small momentum transfers, allowing for a model-independent extraction of the charge radius. Chiral Perturbation Theory (ChPT) augmented by terms which model lattice artefacts is then compared to the data. At next-to-leading order the effective theory fails to produce a consistent description of the full set of pion observables but describes the data well when only the decay constant and mass are considered. By contrast, using the next-to-next-to-leading order expressions to perform global fits result in a consistent description of all data. We obtain ⟨r2π⟩ = 0.481(33)(13)fm2 as our final result for the charge radius at the physical point. Our calculation also yields estimates for the pion decay constant in the chiral limit, Fπ/F = 1.080(16)(6), the quark condensate, Σ1/3MSbar (2GeV) = 261(13)(1)MeV and several low-energy constants of SU(2) ChPT
How different are the visual representations used for object recognition in middle childhood and adulthood?
Recent experimental studies have shown that development towards adult performance levels in configural processing in object recognition is delayed through middle childhood. Whilst partchanges to animal and artefact stimuli are processed with similar to adult levels of accuracy from 7 years of age, relative size changes to stimuli result in a significant decrease in relative performance for participants aged between 7 and 10. Two sets of computational experiments were run using the JIM3 artificial neural network with adult and 'immature' versions to simulate these results. One set progressively decreased the number of neurons involved in the representation of view-independent metric relations within multi-geon objects. A second set of computational experiments involved decreasing the number of neurons that represent view-dependent (nonrelational) object attributes in JIM3's Surface Map. The simulation results which show the best qualitative match to empirical data occurred when artificial neurons representing metric-precision relations were entirely eliminated. These results therefore provide further evidence for the late development of relational processing in object recognition and suggest that children in middle childhood may recognise objects without forming structural description representations
Stringing Spins and Spinning Strings
We apply recently developed integrable spin chain and dilatation operator
techniques in order to compute the planar one-loop anomalous dimensions for
certain operators containing a large number of scalar fields in N =4 Super
Yang-Mills. The first set of operators, belonging to the SO(6) representations
[J,L-2J,J], interpolate smoothly between the BMN case of two impurities (J=2)
and the extreme case where the number of impurities equals half the total
number of fields (J=L/2). The result for this particular [J,0,J] operator is
smaller than the anomalous dimension derived by Frolov and Tseytlin
[hep-th/0304255] for a semiclassical string configuration which is the dual of
a gauge invariant operator in the same representation. We then identify a
second set of operators which also belong to [J,L-2J,J] representations, but
which do not have a BMN limit. In this case the anomalous dimension of the
[J,0,J] operator does match the Frolov-Tseytlin prediction. We also show that
the fluctuation spectra for this [J,0,J] operator is consistent with the string
prediction.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figures, LaTex; v2 reference added, typos fixe
Association between the Perioperative Antioxidative Ability of Platelets and Early Post-Transplant Function of Kidney Allografts: A Pilot Study
BACKGROUND: Recent studies have demonstrated that the actions of platelets may unfavorably influence post-transplant function of organ allografts. In this study, the association between post-transplant graft function and the perioperative activity of platelet antioxidants was examined among kidney recipients divided into early (EGF), slow (SGF), and delayed graft function (DGF) groups. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione transferase (GST), glutathione peroxidase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P) were determined and levels of glutathione, oxidized glutathione, and isoprostane were measured in blood samples collected immediately before and during the first and fifth minutes of renal allograft reperfusion. Our results demonstrated a significant increase in isoprostane levels in all groups. Interestingly, in DGF patients, significantly lower levels of perioperative activity of catalase (p<0.02) and GST (p<0.02) were observed. Moreover, in our study, the activity of platelet antioxidants was associated with intensity of perioperative oxidative stress. For discriminating SGF/DGF from EGF, sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of platelet antioxidants were 81-91%, 50-58%, 32-37%, and 90-90.5%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: During renal transplantation, significant changes occur in the activity of platelet antioxidants. These changes seem to be associated with post-transplant graft function and can be potentially used to differentiate between EGF and SGF/DGF. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to reveal the potential protective role of platelets in the human transplantation setting
Loss of the coxsackie and adenovirus receptor contributes to gastric cancer progression
Loss of the coxsackie and adenovirus receptor (CAR) has previously been observed in gastric cancer. The role of CAR in gastric cancer pathobiology, however, is unclear. We therefore analysed CAR in 196 R0-resected gastric adenocarcinomas and non-cancerous gastric mucosa samples using immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence. Coxsackie and adenovirus receptor was found at the surface and foveolar epithelium of all non-neoplastic gastric mucosa samples (n=175), whereas only 56% of gastric cancer specimens showed CAR positivity (P<0.0001). Loss of CAR correlated significantly with decreased differentiation, increased infiltrative depths, presence of distant metastases, and was also associated with reduced carcinoma-specific survival. To clarify whether CAR impacts the tumorbiologic properties of gastric cancer, we subsequently determined the role of CAR in proliferation, migration, and invasion of gastric cancer cell lines by application of specific CAR siRNA or ectopic expression of a human full-length CAR cDNA. These experiments showed that RNAi-mediated CAR knock down resulted in increased proliferation, migration, and invasion of gastric cancer cell lines, whereas enforced ectopic CAR expression led to opposite effects. We conclude that the association of reduced presence of CAR in more severe disease states, together with our findings in gastric cancer cell lines, suggests that CAR functionally contributes to gastric cancer pathogenesis, showing features of a tumour suppressor
- …