155 research outputs found

    Center on Disability Studies eNewsletter, September 2022

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    Welcome to the September 2022 issue of the CDS eNewsletter. Special highlights in this issue include: Featured Artist Lynnell Mateaki RDS Seeks Manuscript Review Board Members Exhibitor Release #PacRim2023 Introducing Deaf in Government Partnership #PacRim2023 Call for Presentation Proposals #PacRim2023 Legislative Forum Dates | Hawaiʻi DD Council Hawaiʻi's Path to Employment First Seminar Recording Now Available 2022-2023 CDS Community Advisory Council Introduction Website Launch Project Hoʻokuʻi V: Kūlia i ka Nuʻu Fall Announcements with Project Hōkūlani eNewsletterSpecial eNewsletter highlights include: Featured Artist Lynnell Mateaki; RDS Seeks Disability Studies Call for Reviewers; Pac Rim Exhibitor Invitation; Pac Rim Call for Proposals; Hawaiʻi State Council on Developmental Disabilities Legislative Forums; Presentation Hawaiʻi's Path to Employment First with Patrick Gartside available; Introducing 2022-2023 Community Advisory Council; Project Hoʻokuʻi V: Kūlia i ka Nuʻu Website Launch; and Project Hōkūlani 2022 Summer eNewsletter Release, Hōkūlani Insider

    Sheldon Spectrum and the Plankton Paradox: Two Sides of the Same Coin : A trait-based plankton size-spectrum model

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    The Sheldon spectrum describes a remarkable regularity in aquatic ecosystems: the biomass density as a function of logarithmic body mass is approximately constant over many orders of magnitude. While size-spectrum models have explained this phenomenon for assemblages of multicellular organisms, this paper introduces a species-resolved size-spectrum model to explain the phenomenon in unicellular plankton. A Sheldon spectrum spanning the cell-size range of unicellular plankton necessarily consists of a large number of coexisting species covering a wide range of characteristic sizes. The coexistence of many phytoplankton species feeding on a small number of resources is known as the Paradox of the Plankton. Our model resolves the paradox by showing that coexistence is facilitated by the allometric scaling of four physiological rates. Two of the allometries have empirical support, the remaining two emerge from predator-prey interactions exactly when the abundances follow a Sheldon spectrum. Our plankton model is a scale-invariant trait-based size-spectrum model: it describes the abundance of phyto- and zooplankton cells as a function of both size and species trait (the maximal size before cell division). It incorporates growth due to resource consumption and predation on smaller cells, death due to predation, and a flexible cell division process. We give analytic solutions at steady state for both the within-species size distributions and the relative abundances across species

    Theoretical and experimental activities on opacities for a good interpretation of seismic stellar probes

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    Opacity calculations are basic ingredients of stellar modelling. They play a crucial role in the interpretation of acoustic modes detected by SoHO, COROT and KEPLER. In this review we present our activities on both theoretical and experimental sides. We show new calculations of opacity spectra and comparisons between eight groups who produce opacity spectra calculations in the domain where experiments are scheduled. Real differences are noticed with real astrophysical consequences when one extends helioseismology to cluster studies of different compositions. Two cases are considered presently: (1) the solar radiative zone and (2) the beta Cephei envelops. We describe how our experiments are performed and new preliminary results on nickel obtained in the campaign 2010 at LULI 2000 at Polytechnique.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, invited talk at SOHO2

    Amygdala Engagement in Response to Subthreshold Presentations of Anxious Face Stimuli in Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Preliminary Insights

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    Current theoretical models of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have proposed that impairments in the processing of social/emotional information may be linked to amygdala dysfunction. However, the extent to which amygdala functions are compromised in ASD has become a topic of debate in recent years. In a jittered functional magnetic resonance imaging study, sub-threshold presentations of anxious faces permitted an examination of amygdala recruitment in 12 high functioning adult males with ASD and 12 matched controls. We found heightened neural activation of the amygdala in both high functioning adults with ASD and matched controls. Neither the intensity nor the time-course of amygdala activation differed between the groups. However, the adults with ASD showed significantly lower levels of fusiform activation during the trials compared to controls. Our findings suggest that in ASD, the transmission of socially salient information along sub-cortical pathways is intact: and yet the signaling of this information to structures downstream may be impoverished, and the pathways that facilitate subsequent processing deficient

    Radiative properties of stellar plasmas and open challenges

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    The lifetime of solar-like stars, the envelope structure of more massive stars, and stellar acoustic frequencies largely depend on the radiative properties of the stellar plasma. Up to now, these complex quantities have been estimated only theoretically. The development of the powerful tools of helio- and astero- seismology has made it possible to gain insights on the interiors of stars. Consequently, increased emphasis is now placed on knowledge of the monochromatic opacity coefficients. Here we review how these radiative properties play a role, and where they are most important. We then concentrate specifically on the envelopes of β\beta Cephei variable stars. We discuss the dispersion of eight different theoretical estimates of the monochromatic opacity spectrum and the challenges we need to face to check these calculations experimentally.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, in press (conference HEDLA 2010

    Traitements séquentiels et tâches RSVP.

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    Measuring human cognition on-line with electrophysiological methods : The case of selective attention.

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    In P., Marien & J., Abutalebi (Eds.). Sous presse
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