4,685 research outputs found
Irregular speech rate dissociates auditory cortical entrainment, evoked responses, and frontal alpha
The entrainment of slow rhythmic auditory cortical activity to the temporal regularities in speech is considered to be a central mechanism underlying auditory perception. Previous work has shown that entrainment is reduced when the quality of the acoustic input is degraded, but has also linked rhythmic activity at similar time scales to the encoding of temporal expectations. To understand these bottom-up and top-down contributions to rhythmic entrainment, we manipulated the temporal predictive structure of speech by parametrically altering the distribution of pauses between syllables or words, thereby rendering the local speech rate irregular while preserving intelligibility and the envelope fluctuations of the acoustic signal. Recording EEG activity in human participants, we found that this manipulation did not alter neural processes reflecting the encoding of individual sound transients, such as evoked potentials. However, the manipulation significantly reduced the fidelity of auditory delta (but not theta) band entrainment to the speech envelope. It also reduced left frontal alpha power and this alpha reduction was predictive of the reduced delta entrainment across participants. Our results show that rhythmic auditory entrainment in delta and theta bands reflect functionally distinct processes. Furthermore, they reveal that delta entrainment is under top-down control and likely reflects prefrontal processes that are sensitive to acoustical regularities rather than the bottom-up encoding of acoustic features
Addressing the Majorana vs. Dirac Question with Neutrino Decays
The Majorana versus Dirac nature of neutrinos remains an open question. This
is due, in part, to the fact that virtually all the experimentally accessible
neutrinos are ultra-relativistic. Noting that Majorana neutrinos can behave
quite differently from Dirac ones when they are non-relativistic, we show that,
at leading order, the angular distribution of the daughters in the decay of a
heavy neutrino into a lighter one and a self-conjugate boson is isotropic in
the parent's rest frame if the neutrinos are Majorana, independent of the
parent's polarization. If the neutrinos are Dirac fermions, this is, in
general, not the case. This result follows from CPT invariance and is
independent of the details of the physics responsible for the decay. We explore
the feasibility of using these angular distributions -- or, equivalently, the
energy distributions of the daughters in the laboratory frame -- in order to
address the Majorana versus Dirac nature of neutrinos if a fourth, heavier
neutrino mass eigenstate reveals itself in the current or next-generation of
high-energy colliders, intense meson facilities, or neutrino beam experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Analysis of slow (theta) oscillations as a potential temporal reference frame for information coding in sensory cortices
While sensory neurons carry behaviorally relevant information in responses that often extend over hundreds of milliseconds, the key units of neural information likely consist of much shorter and temporally precise spike patterns. The mechanisms and temporal reference frames by which sensory networks partition responses into these shorter units of information remain unknown. One hypothesis holds that slow oscillations provide a network-intrinsic reference to temporally partitioned spike trains without exploiting the millisecond-precise alignment of spikes to sensory stimuli. We tested this hypothesis on neural responses recorded in visual and auditory cortices of macaque monkeys in response to natural stimuli. Comparing different schemes for response partitioning revealed that theta band oscillations provide a temporal reference that permits extracting significantly more information than can be obtained from spike counts, and sometimes almost as much information as obtained by partitioning spike trains using precisely stimulus-locked time bins. We further tested the robustness of these partitioning schemes to temporal uncertainty in the decoding process and to noise in the sensory input. This revealed that partitioning using an oscillatory reference provides greater robustness than partitioning using precisely stimulus-locked time bins. Overall, these results provide a computational proof of concept for the hypothesis that slow rhythmic network activity may serve as internal reference frame for information coding in sensory cortices and they foster the notion that slow oscillations serve as key elements for the computations underlying perception
Additional time-dependent phase in the flavor-conversion formulas
In the framework of intermediate wave-packets for treating flavor
oscillations, we quantify the modifications which appear when we assume a
strictly peaked momentum distribution and consider the second-order corrections
in a power series expansion of the energy. By following a sequence of analytic
approximations, we point out that an extra time-dependent phase is merely the
residue of second-order corrections. Such phase effects are usually ignored in
the relativistic wave-packet treatment, but they do not vanish
non-relativistically and can introduce some small modifications to the
oscillation pattern even in the ultra-relativistic limit.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Flavor and chiral oscillations with Dirac wave packets
We report about recent results on Dirac wave packets in the treatment of
neutrino flavor oscillation where the initial localization of a spinor state
implies an interference between positive and negative energy components of
mass-eigenstate wave packets. A satisfactory description of fermionic particles
requires the use of the Dirac equation as evolution equation for the
mass-eigenstates. In this context, a new flavor conversion formula can be
obtained when the effects of chiral oscillation are taken into account. Our
study leads to the conclusion that the fermionic nature of the particles, where
chiral oscillations and the interference between positive and negative
frequency components of mass-eigenstate wave packets are implicitly assumed,
modifies the standard oscillation probability. Nevertheless, for
ultra-relativistic particles and sharply peaked momentum distributions, we can
analytically demonstrate that these modifications introduce correction factors
proportional to (m12/p0) square which are practically un-detectable by any
experimental analysisComment: 16 pages, 2 figure
How can we test seesaw experimentally?
The seesaw mechanism for the small neutrino mass has been a popular paradigm,
yet it has been believed that there is no way to test it experimentally. We
present a conceivable outcome from future experiments that would convince us of
the seesaw mechanism. It would involve a variety of data from LHC, ILC,
cosmology, underground, and low-energy flavor violation experiments to
establish the case.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Microlensing Detections of Moons of Exoplanets
We investigate the characteristic of microlensing signals of Earth-like moons
orbiting ice-giant planets. From this, we find that non-negligible satellite
signals occur when the planet-moon separation is similar to or greater than the
Einstein radius of the planet. We find that the satellite signal does not
diminish with the increase of the planet-moon separation beyond the Einstein
radius of the planet unlike the planetary signal which vanishes when the planet
is located well beyond the Einstein radius of the star. We also find that the
satellite signal tends to have the same sign as that of the planetary signal.
These tendencies are caused by the lensing effect of the star on the moon in
addition to the effect of the planet. We determine the range of satellite
separations where the microlensing technique is optimized for the detections of
moons. By setting an upper limit as the angle-average of the projected Hill
radius and a lower limit as the half of the Einstein radius of the planet, we
find that the microlensing method would be sensitive to moons with projected
separations from the planet of for a Jupiter-mass planet, for a Saturn-mass planet, and for a Uranus-mass planet. We compare the
characteristics of the moons to be detected by the microlensing and transit
techniquesComment: 6pages, 6 figure
The Cost of Corporate Social Responsibility after a Catastrophe
Catastrophes increase pressure upon all firms within the industry. However, certain firms risk larger punishments after the event. I posit that firms with substantive corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives will lose more firm-value after a catastrophe because they will be expected to engage in costly self-regulation to lessen pressure on the industry. I also argue that due to strategic activist targeting, firms subject to greater past activism will lose more firm-value. I develop my hypotheses by combining theories on the reputation commons problem, the value of CSR, and social movements. Using an event-study, I examine the apparel industry after the collapse of Rana Plaza. Results indicate that firms with substantive CSR initiatives and firms subject to greater activism lost more firm-value after the collapse.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109753/1/1261_Kayser.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109753/4/1261_Kayser.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109753/5/1261_Kayser_May2015.pdfDescription of 1261_Kayser.pdf : updated cover page, Dec 2014 revisionDescription of 1261_Kayser_May2015.pdf : May 2015 revision (new title
Optical measurements of the droplet size distribution in the case of fuel atomization in swirl nozzles and planar airblast diffusers
The theoretical principles of optical methods for the determination of the particle sizes of sprays are considered and aspects of the experimental implementation of these principles are discussed. An experimental device for point-intensity measurements makes use of a helium-neon laser. The cross-sectional area of the laser beam is enlarged with the aid of a lens system to the size of the measurement cross-section. The intensity of the laser light scattered by the spray particles is measured as a function of light direction. Approaches which take into account the total energy of the diffractively scattered light are also discussed and an investigation is conducted regarding the measurement error sources. A description is presented of experimental results obtained in studies of a number of fuel nozzle sprays
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