1,034 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
A Talk on the Wild Side: The Direct and Indirect Impact of Speech Recognition on Learning Gains
Research in the learning sciences and mathematics education has suggested that ‘thinking aloud’ (verbalization) can be important for learning. In a technology-mediated learning environment, speech might also help to promote learning by enabling the system to infer the students’ cognitive and affective state so that they can be provided a
sequence of tasks and formative feedback, both of which are adapted to their needs. For these and associated reasons, we developed the iTalk2Learn platform that includes speech production and speech recognition for children learning about fractions. We investigated the impact of iTalk2Learn’s speech functionality in classrooms in the UK and Germany, with our results indicating that a speech-enabled learning environment has the potential to enhance student learning gains and engagement, both directly and indirectly
Lifting of the Landau level degeneracy in graphene devices in a tilted magnetic field
We report on transport and capacitance measurements of graphene devices in
magnetic fields up to 30 T. In both techniques, we observe the full splitting
of Landau levels and we employ tilted field experiments to address the origin
of the observed broken symmetry states. In the lowest energy level, the spin
degeneracy is removed at filling factors and we observe an enhanced
energy gap. In the higher levels, the valley degeneracy is removed at odd
filling factors while spin polarized states are formed at even . Although
the observation of odd filling factors in the higher levels points towards the
spontaneous origin of the splitting, we find that the main contribution to the
gap at , and is due to the Zeeman energy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Lineage specific recombination rates and microevolution in Listeria monocytogenes
Background: The bacterium Listeria monocytogenes is a saprotroph as well as an opportunistic human foodborne pathogen, which has previously been shown to consist of at least two widespread lineages (termed lineages I and II) and an uncommon lineage (lineage III). While some L. monocytogenes strains show evidence for considerable diversification by homologous recombination, our understanding of the contribution of recombination to L. monocytogenes evolution is still limited. We therefore used
STRUCTURE and ClonalFrame, two programs that model the effect of recombination, to make inferences about the population structure and different aspects of the recombination process in L. monocytogenes. Analyses were performed using sequences for seven loci (including the house-keeping genes gap, prs, purM and ribC, the stress response gene sigB, and the virulence genes actA and inlA) for 195 L. monocytogenes isolates.
Results: Sequence analyses with ClonalFrame and the Sawyer's test showed that recombination is more
prevalent in lineage II than lineage I and is most frequent in two house-keeping genes (ribC and purM) and the two virulence genes (actA and inlA). The relative occurrence of recombination versus point mutation is about six times higher in lineage II than in lineage I, which causes a higher genetic variability in lineage II. Unlike lineage I, lineage II represents a genetically heterogeneous population with a relatively high proportion (30% average) of genetic material imported from external sources. Phylograms, constructed with correcting for recombination, as well as Tajima's D data suggest that both lineages I and II have suffered a population bottleneck.
Conclusion: Our study shows that evolutionary lineages within a single bacterial species can differ
considerably in the relative contributions of recombination to genetic diversification. Accounting for recombination in phylogenetic studies is critical, and new evolutionary models that account for the possibility of changes in the rate of recombination would be required. While previous studies suggested that only L. monocytogenes lineage I has experienced a recent bottleneck, our analyses clearly show that lineage II experienced a bottleneck at about the same time, which was subsequently obscured by abundant
homologous recombination after the lineage II bottleneck. While lineage I and lineage II should be considered separate species from an evolutionary viewpoint, maintaining single species name may be warranted since both lineages cause the same type of human disease
Crossover between distinct mechanisms of microwave photoresistance in bilayer systems
We report on temperature-dependent magnetoresistance measurements in balanced
double quantum wells exposed to microwave irradiation for various frequencies.
We have found that the resistance oscillations are described by the
microwave-induced modification of electron distribution function limited by
inelastic scattering (inelastic mechanism), up to a temperature of T*~4 K. With
increasing temperature, a strong deviation of the oscillation amplitudes from
the behavior predicted by this mechanism is observed, presumably indicating a
crossover to another mechanism of microwave photoresistance, with similar
frequency dependence. Our analysis shows that this deviation cannot be fully
understood in terms of contribution from the mechanisms discussed in theory.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Magnetoresistance oscillations in multilayer systems - triple quantum wells
Magnetoresistance of two-dimensional electron systems with several occupied
subbands oscillates owing to periodic modulation of the probability of
intersubband transitions by the quantizing magnetic field. In addition to
previous investigations of these magneto-intersubband (MIS) oscillations in
two-subband systems, we report on both experimental and theoretical studies of
such a phenomenon in three-subband systems realized in triple quantum wells. We
show that the presence of more than two subbands leads to a qualitatively
different MIS oscillation picture, described as a superposition of several
oscillating contributions. Under a continuous microwave irradiation, the
magnetoresistance of triple-well systems exhibits an interference of MIS
oscillations and microwaveinduced resistance oscillations. The theory
explaining these phenomena is presented in the general form, valid for an
arbitrary number of subbands. A comparison of theory and experiment allows us
to extract temperature dependence of quantum lifetime of electrons and to
confirm the applicability of the inelastic mechanism of microwave
photoresistance for the description of magnetotransport in multilayer systems.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Field-induced insulating states in a graphene superlattice
We report on high-field magnetotransport (B up to 35 T) on a gated
superlattice based on single-layer graphene aligned on top of hexagonal boron
nitride. The large-period moir\'e modulation (15 nm) enables us to access the
Hofstadter spectrum in the vicinity of and above one flux quantum per
superlattice unit cell (Phi/Phi_0 = 1 at B = 22 T). We thereby reveal, in
addition to the spin-valley antiferromagnet at nu = 0, two insulating states
developing in positive and negative effective magnetic fields from the main nu
= 1 and nu = -2 quantum Hall states respectively. We investigate the field
dependence of the energy gaps associated with these insulating states, which we
quantify from the temperature-activated peak resistance. Referring to a simple
model of local Landau quantization of third generation Dirac fermions arising
at Phi/Phi_0 = 1, we describe the different microscopic origins of the
insulating states and experimentally determine the energy-momentum dispersion
of the emergent gapped Dirac quasi-particles
Transport and thermoelectric properties of the LaAlO/SrTiO interface
The transport and thermoelectric properties of the interface between
SrTiO and a 26-monolayer thick LaAlO-layer grown at high
oxygen-pressure have been investigated at temperatures from 4.2 K to 100 K and
in magnetic fields up to 18 T. For 4.2 K, two different electron-like
charge carriers originating from two electron channels which contribute to
transport are observed. We probe the contributions of a degenerate and a
non-degenerate band to the thermoelectric power and develop a consistent model
to describe the temperature dependence of the thermoelectric tensor. Anomalies
in the data point to an additional magnetic field dependent scattering.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Negative thermal expansion in the plateau state of a magnetically-frustrated spinel
We report on negative thermal expansion (NTE) in the high-field,
half-magnetization plateau phase of the frustrated magnetic insulator CdCr2O4.
Using dilatometry, we precisely map the phase diagram at fields of up to 30T,
and identify a strong NTE associated with the collinear half-magnetization
plateau for B > 27T. The resulting phase diagram is compared with a microscopic
theory for spin-lattice coupling, and the origin of the NTE is identified as a
large negative change in magnetization with temperature, coming from a
nearly-localised band of spin excitations in the plateau phase. These results
provide useful guidelines for the discovery of new NTE materials.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
- …