1,242 research outputs found
Fuzzy Approach to Conflict Analysis
Based on the concept of fuzzy sets and fuzzy relations, in this paper, a new approach is presented for modeling and analyzing conflicts. In analyzing conflicts, it is fundamental to evaluate feasible outcomes according to the preference of each player. A fuzzy preference matrix is first defined to evaluate preference relations between outcomes for each player. Several actions and reactions of players are investigated, and a new method of stability analysis is then proposed to derive the grades of membership of stability, instability and equilibrium. The new approach determines a different set of equilibria, depending on the fuzzy environment and the threshold
Successful Treatment with Clonazepam and Pramipexole of a Patient with Sleep-Related Eating Disorder Associated with Restless Legs Syndrome: A Case Report
Sleep-related eating disorder (SRED) is characterized by recurrent episodes of involuntary eating during sleep period and is often associated with restless legs syndrome (RLS). Although pharmacotherapy is recommended for SRED patients, no drug have shown promising effects so far. The patient, a 48-year-old Japanese housewife, first visited our clinic and complained about nighttime eating. She had a history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, sleep apnea syndrome, and depression. Insomnia appeared 10 years before the first visit and she often received hypnosedatives; at the same time, she developed nocturnal eating episodes. She had amnesia for these episodes, and she felt urge to move her legs while sleeping. The patient was diagnosed with SRED and RLS. Reduction in the doses of triazolam decreased her nighttime eating frequency, and her complete amnesia changed to vague recall of eating during night. Clonazepam 1.0 mg at bedtime decreased nocturnal eating frequency from 1 to 2 times per month, though sleepwalking remained. Administration of pramipexole 0.125 mg relieved all symptoms including SRED, RLS, and sleepwalking. This is the first paper to report that the combination of clonazepam and pramipexole therapy-reduced SRED episodes and RLS symptoms
Lesions of the nucleus accumbens core modulate development of matching behavior
BACKGROUND: The development of choice is a crucial determinant in the performance of appetitive responses. Given two options with different reinforcement rates, animals match their relative rate of responding to the relative rates of reinforcement (i.e., matching behavior). A previous study has shown that the nucleus accumbens core (AcbC) is involved in the performance of matching behavior in trained animals. However, the role of the AcbC in the acquisition of matching behavior has not been addressed. RESULTS: We conducted a series of experimental sessions to examine the role of the AcbC on the development of matching behavior. Instrumental responding was measured in rats with excitotoxic lesions of the AcbC. Rats were given two options that differed in the relative rate of reinforcement under concurrent variable-interval schedules. The locations of the more frequently reinforced option and the alternative option were randomly switched between sessions. Lesions of the AcbC accelerated the development of matching behavior compared to the sham-operated group. The AcbC-lesioned rats exhibited closer conformity to the matching law than shams when the options were in the same positions as in the previous session (the same condition), but not when the option locations had been switched (the different condition). The AcbC rats showed smaller probabilities of switching behavior between alternatives than shams. Post-reinforcement pausing was not affected by the AcbC lesion. Neither numbers of rewards obtained nor number of lever presses were different between the AcbC-lesioned rats and shams over session blocks. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the AcbC plays a regulatory role in the development of matching behavior through switching probabilities rather than perception of reward magnitude. The differential effect of AcbC lesions on the matching behavior between the same and different conditions suggests influence of the spontaneous recovery, that is, reversion to a previously reinforced choice at the beginning of the next session, on the development of matching behavior in the AcbC-lesioned rats
The universe out of a monopole in the laboratory?
To explore the possibility that an inflationary universe can be created out
of a stable particle in the laboratory, we consider the classical and quantum
dynamics of a magnetic monopole in the thin-shell approximation. Classically
there are three types of solutions: stable, collapsing and inflating monopoles.
We argue that the transition from a stable monopole to an inflating one could
occur either by collision with a domain wall or by quantum tunneling.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. D with changing title into "Is it possible to
create a universe out of a monopole in the laboratory?", text and figures
revised, 21 pages, 6 figure
Search for Near-Infrared Pulsation of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U 0142+61
We have searched for pulsation of the anomalous X-ray pulsar (AXP) 4U 0142+61
in the K' band ( m) using the fast-readout mode
of IRCS at the Subaru 8.2-m telescope. We found no significant signal at the
pulse frequency expected by the precise ephemeris obtained by the X-ray
monitoring observation with RXTE. Nonetheless, we obtained a best upper limit
of 17% (90% C.L.) for the root-mean-square pulse fraction in the K' band.
Combined with i' band pulsation (Dhillon et al. 2005), the slope of the pulsed
component () was constrained to (90%
C.L.) for an interstellar extinction of .Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in PAS
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