1,942 research outputs found

    Is Avoiding an Aversive Outcome Rewarding? Neural Substrates of Avoidance Learning in the Human Brain

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    Avoidance learning poses a challenge for reinforcement-based theories of instrumental conditioning, because once an aversive outcome is successfully avoided an individual may no longer experience extrinsic reinforcement for their behavior. One possible account for this is to propose that avoiding an aversive outcome is in itself a reward, and thus avoidance behavior is positively reinforced on each trial when the aversive outcome is successfully avoided. In the present study we aimed to test this possibility by determining whether avoidance of an aversive outcome recruits the same neural circuitry as that elicited by a reward itself. We scanned 16 human participants with functional MRI while they performed an instrumental choice task, in which on each trial they chose from one of two actions in order to either win money or else avoid losing money. Neural activity in a region previously implicated in encoding stimulus reward value, the medial orbitofrontal cortex, was found to increase, not only following receipt of reward, but also following successful avoidance of an aversive outcome. This neural signal may itself act as an intrinsic reward, thereby serving to reinforce actions during instrumental avoidance

    Deep Chandra Monitoring Observations of NGC 4649: II. Wide-Field Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of the Globular Clusters

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    We present g and z photometry and size estimates for globular clusters (GCs) in the massive Virgo elliptical NGC 4649 (M60) using a five-pointing Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys mosaic. The metal-poor GCs show a monotonic negative metallicity gradient of (-0.43 +/- 0.10) dex per dex in radius over the full radial range of the data, out to ~ 24 kpc. There is evidence for substantial color substructure among the metal-rich GCs. The metal-poor GCs have typical sizes ~ 0.4 pc larger than the metal-rich GCs out to large galactocentric distances (~> 20 kpc), favoring an intrinsic explanation for the size difference rather than projection effects. There is no clear relation between half-light radius and galactocentric distance beyond ~ 15 kpc, suggesting that the sizes of GCs are not generically set by tidal limitation. Finally, we identify ~ 20 candidate ultra-compact dwarfs that extend down to surprisingly faint absolute magnitudes (M_z ~ -8.5), and may bridge the gap between this class and "extended clusters" in the Local Group. Three of the brighter candidates have published radial velocities and can be confirmed as bona fide ultra-compact dwarfs; follow-up spectroscopy will determine the nature of the remainder of the candidates.Comment: ApJ in press. For redacted long table 1, see: http://www.pa.msu.edu/~strader/4649/table.te

    How to return to subjectivity? Natorp, Husserl, and Lacan on the limits of reflection

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    This article discusses the recent call within contemporary phenomenology to return to subjectivity in response to certain limitations of naturalistic explanations of the mind. The meaning and feasibility of this call is elaborated by connecting it to a classical issue within the phenomenological tradition concerning the possibility of investigating the first-person perspective through reflection. We will discuss how this methodological question is respectively treated and reconfigured in the works of Natorp, Husserl, and Lacan. Finally, we will lay out some possible consequences of such a cross-reading for the conception of subjectivity and the concomitant effort to account for this dimension of first-person experience in response and in addition to its omission within the standard third-person perspective of psychological research

    Spatial and temporal characteristics of circumferential flow-function relations during acute myocardial ischemia in the conscious dog

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    In the anesthetized open-chest dog the ischemic area produced by coronary occlusion is surrounded by an area of nonischemic contractile dysfunction, identified as the functional border zone. To establish whether a similar functional border zone exists in the conscious animal during acute regional ischemia and to determine its spatial dimensions and temporal changes, we performed simultaneous two-dimensional echocardiography and radioactive microsphere studies in nine chronically instrumented dogs. We produced circumferential flow-function maps at 22.5-degree intervals over the full circumference of the left ventricle at the midpapillary muscle level during control conditions, 5 minutes after left circumflex occlusion, and 2.5 hours after left circumflex occlusion. After occlusion there was no change in left ventricular end-diastolic area, an increase in left ventricular end-systolic area (p p p p < 0.01) in the functional border zone, there was no difference in subendocardial blood flow between the functional border zone and the control nonischemic area. We conclude that a discrete functional border zone exists in the conscious dog during acute regional ischemia produced by circumflex coronary occlusion, which does not change during the early evolution of myocardial infarction. The functional border zone likely contributes to minor overestimation of infarct size in the early hours after myocardial infarction if extent of left ventricular dysfunction is used as an index of infarction in humans.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/27055/1/0000045.pd

    Absence of detectable xanthine oxidase in human myocardium

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    The enzyme xanthine oxidase has been implicated as a generator of toxic oxygen metabolites that contribute to ischemic injury. Because substantial species variability has been demonstrated and because there are minimal human data available, the relevance of xanthine oxidase to human heart damage has been in doubt. We report the absence of xanthine oxidase activity in nine human heart biopsy specimens obtained during cardiac surgery, and in two larger samples obtained during heart transplantation. A sensitive radiochemical assay was used to assess enzyme activity. Our findings imply that oxygen free radicals generated by xanthine oxidase are not relevent in terms of human myocardial injury.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/28034/1/0000473.pd

    On the character of states near the Fermi level in (Ga,Mn)As: impurity to valence band crossover

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    We discuss the character of states near the Fermi level in Mn doped GaAs, as revealed by a survey of dc transport and optical studies over a wide range of Mn concentrations. A thermally activated valence band contribution to dc transport, a mid-infrared peak at energy hbar omega approx 200 meV in the ac- conductivity, and the hot photoluminescence spectra indicate the presence of an impurity band in low doped (<<1% Mn) insulating GaAs:Mn materials. Consistent with the implications of this picture, both the impurity band ionization energy inferred from the dc transport and the position of the mid-infrared peak move to lower energies and the peak broadens with increasing Mn concentration. In metallic materials with > 2% doping, no traces of Mn-related activated contribution can be identified in dc-transport, suggesting that the impurity band has merged with the valence band. No discrepancies with this perception are found when analyzing optical measurements in the high-doped GaAs:Mn. A higher energy (hbar omega approx 250 meV) mid-infrared feature which appears in the metallic samples is associated with inter-valence band transitions. Its red-shift with increased doping can be interpreted as a consequence of increased screening which narrows the localized-state valence-band tails and weakens higher energy transition amplitudes. Our examination of the dc and ac transport characteristics of GaAs:Mn is accompanied by comparisons with its shallow acceptor counterparts, confirming the disordered valence band picture of high-doped metallic GaAs:Mn material.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figure
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