1,142 research outputs found
Timing matters! The neural signature of intuitive judgments differs according to the way information is presented.
AbstractOne can conceive of intuition as the preliminary perception of coherence. Since this requires holistic perception, it is hypothesized that underlying processing strategies are dependent on the possibility to obtain all relevant information at once. The present study used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to investigate neural mechanisms underlying intuitive coherence perception when semantic concepts are presented all together (simultaneously) or one after the other (sequentially). With simultaneous presentation, absolute activation increases in the left OFC when participants recognize coherence. With sequential presentation activation increases in the right OFC when participants conclude that there is no common associate between the words presented. Behavioral performance was similar in the two experiments. These results demonstrate that the way information is revealed over time changes the processing of intuitive coherence perception. We propose that such changes must be taken into account to disentangle the neural and behavioral mechanisms underlying different accounts of intuition and related phenomena
Why you think Milan is larger than Modena: Neural correlates of the recognition heuristic
When ranking two alternatives by some criteria and only one of the alternatives is recognized, participants overwhelmingly adopt the strategy, termed the recognition heuristic (RH), of choosing the recognized alternative. Understanding the neural correlates underlying decisions that follow the RH could help determine whether people make judgments about the RH's applicability or simply choose the recognized alternative. We measured brain activity by using functional magnetic resonance imaging while participants indicated which of two cities they thought was larger (Experiment 1) or which city they recognized (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, increased activation was observed within the anterior frontomedian cortex (aFMC), precuneus, and retrosplenial cortex when participants followed the RH compared to when they did not. Experiment 2 revealed that RH decisional processes cannot be reduced to recognition memory processes. As the aFMC has previously been associated with self-referential judgments, we conclude that RH decisional processes involve an assessment about the applicability of the RH
Ge/SiGe parabolic quantum wells
Quantum wells with parabolic confining potentials allow the realization of semiconductor heterostructures mimicking the physical properties of a quantum harmonic oscillator. Here we report the attempt of attaining such parabolic quantum wells (PQWs) within the Ge/SiGe material platform. Multiple PQWs featuring different widths and composition have been epitaxially grown and characterized by means of high-resolution x-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy. The compositional profile is seen to deviate slightly from an ideal parabola, but the quantum confined states are almost equally spaced within the valence and conduction band as indicated by photoreflectance measurements and k . p modelling
Collisional relaxation of Feshbach molecules and three-body recombination in 87Rb Bose-Einstein condensates
We predict the resonance enhanced magnetic field dependence of atom-dimer
relaxation and three-body recombination rates in a Rb Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) close to 1007 G. Our exact treatments of three-particle
scattering explicitly include the dependence of the interactions on the atomic
Zeeman levels. The Feshbach resonance distorts the entire diatomic energy
spectrum causing interferences in both loss phenomena. Our two independent
experiments confirm the predicted recombination loss over a range of rate
constants that spans four orders of magnitude.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures (updated references
Controlling a magnetic Feshbach resonance with laser light
The capability to tune the strength of the elastic interparticle interaction
is crucial for many experiments with ultracold gases. Magnetic Feshbach
resonances are a tool widely used for this purpose, but future experiments
would benefit from additional flexibility such as spatial modulation of the
interaction strength on short length scales. Optical Feshbach resonances offer
this possibility in principle, but suffer from fast particle loss due to
light-induced inelastic collisions. Here we show that light near-resonant with
a molecular bound-to-bound transition can be used to shift the magnetic field
at which a magnetic Feshbach resonance occurs. This makes it possible to tune
the interaction strength with laser light and at the same time induce
considerably less loss than an optical Feshbach resonance would do
Effects of spatial dispersion in near-field radiative heat transfer between two parallel metallic surfaces
We study the heat transfer between two parallel metallic semi-infinite media
with a gap in the nanometer-scale range. We show that the near-field radiative
heat flux saturates at distances smaller than the metal skin depth when using a
local dielectric constant and investigate the origin of this effect. The effect
of non-local corrections is analysed using the Lindhard-Mermin and
Boltzmann-Mermin models. We find that local and non-local models yield the same
heat fluxes for gaps larger than 2 nm. Finally, we explain the saturation
observed in a recent experiment as a manifestation of the skin depth and show
that heat is mainly dissipated by eddy currents in metallic bodies.Comment: Version without figures (8 figures in the complete version
Angle-resolved photoemission and first-principles electronic structure of single-crystalline -uranium (001)
Continuing the photoemission study begun with the work of Opeil et al. [Phys.
Rev. B \textbf{73}, 165109 (2006)], in this paper we report results of an
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study performed on a
high-quality single-crystal -uranium at 173 K. The absence of
surface-reconstruction effects is verified using X-ray Laue and low-energy
electron diffraction (LEED) patterns. We compare the ARPES intensity map with
first-principles band structure calculations using a generalized gradient
approximation (GGA) and we find good correlations with the calculated
dispersion of the electronic bands
State-Insensitive Trapping of Alkaline-Earth Atoms in a Nanofiber-Based Optical Dipole Trap
Neutral atoms trapped in the evanescent optical potentials of nanotapered
optical fibers are a promising platform for developing quantum technologies and
exploring fundamental science, such as quantum networks and quantum
electrodynamics. Building on the successful advancements with trapped alkali
atoms, here we demonstrate a state-insensitive optical dipole trap for
strontium-88, an alkaline-earth atom, using the evanescent fields of a
nanotapered optical fiber. Leveraging the low laser-cooling temperatures of
K readily achievable with strontium, we demonstrate trapping in
record low trap depths corresponding to K. Further, employing a
double magic wavelength trapping scheme, we realize state-insensitive trapping
on the kilohertz-wide 5s^{2}\;^{1}\!S_{0}-5s5p\;^{3}\!P_{1,|m|=1} cooling
transition, which we verify by performing near-surface high-resolution
spectroscopy of the atomic transition. This allows us to experimentally find
and verify the state insensitivity of the trap nearby a theoretically predicted
magic wavelength of 435.827(25) nm. Given the non-magnetic ground state and low
collisional scattering length of strontium-88, this work also lays the
foundation for developing versatile and robust matter-wave atomtronic circuits
over nanophotonic waveguides.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
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