309 research outputs found
An analysis of cosmological perturbations in hydrodynamical and field representations
Density fluctuations of fluids with negative pressure exhibit decreasing time
behaviour in the long wavelength limit, but are strongly unstable in the small
wavelength limit when a hydrodynamical approach is used. On the other hand, the
corresponding gravitational waves are well behaved. We verify that the
instabilities present in density fluctuations are due essentially to the
hydrodynamical representation; if we turn to a field representation that lead
to the same background behaviour, the instabilities are no more present. In the
long wavelength limit, both approachs give the same results. We show also that
this inequivalence between background and perturbative level is a feature of
negative pressure fluid. When the fluid has positive pressure, the
hydrodynamical representation leads to the same behaviour as the field
representation both at the background and perturbative levels.Comment: Latex file, 18 page
Bacteriological studies of blood, tissue fluid, lymph and lymph nodes in patients with acute dermatolymphangioadenitis (DLA) in course of ‘filarial’ lymphedema
Filarial lymphedema is complicated by frequent episodes of dermatolymphangioadenitis (DLA). Severe systemic
symptoms during attacks of DLA resemble those of septicemia. The question we asked was whether bacterial isolates
can be found in the peripheral blood of patients during the episodes of DLA. Out of 100 patients referred to us with
‘filarial’ lymphedema 14 displayed acute and five subacute symptoms of DLA. All were on admission blood
microfilariae negative but had a positive test in the past. Blood bacterial isolates were found in nine cases, four acute
(21%) and five subacute (26%). In 10 acute cases blood cultures were found negative. Six blood isolates belonged to
Bacilli, four to Cocci and one was Sarcina. To identify the sites of origin of bacterial dissemination, swabs taken from
the calf skin biopsy wounds and tissue fluid, lymph and lymph node specimens were cultured. Swabs from the calf
skin biopsy wound contained isolates in nine (47%) cases. They were Bacilli in nine, Cocci in three, Acinetobacter and
Erwinia in two cases. Tissue fluid was collected from 10 patients and contained Bacilli in four (40%) and
Staphylococci in three (30%). Lymph was drained in four patients and contained isolates in all samples (100%). They
were Staphylococcus epidermis, xylosus and aureus, Acinetobacter, Bacillus subtilis and Sarcina. Three lymph nodes
were biopsied and contained Staphylococcus chromogenes, xylosus, Enterococcus and Bacillus cereus. In six cases the
same phenotypically defined species of bacteria were found in blood and limb tissues or fluids. In the ‘control’ group of patients with lymphedema without acute or subacute changes all blood cultures were negative. Interestingly, swabs
from biopsy wound of these patients contained isolates in 80%, tissue fluid in 68%, lymph in 70% and lymph nodes
in 58% of cases. In healthy controls, tissue fluid did not contain bacteria, and lymph isolates were found only in 12%
of cases. This study demonstrates that patients with acute episodes of DLA reveal bacteriemia in a high percentage
of cases. Diversity of blood and tissue bacterial isolates in these patients points to a breakdown of the skin immune
barrier in lymphedema and subsequently indiscriminate bacterial colonization of deep tissues and spread to an blood
circulation. © 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
Children and older adults exhibit distinct sub-optimal cost-benefit functions when preparing to move their eyes and hands
"© 2015 Gonzalez et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited"Numerous activities require an individual to respond quickly to the correct stimulus. The provision of advance information allows response priming but heightened responses can cause errors (responding too early or reacting to the wrong stimulus). Thus, a balance is required between the online cognitive mechanisms (inhibitory and anticipatory) used to prepare and execute a motor response at the appropriate time. We investigated the use of advance information in 71 participants across four different age groups: (i) children, (ii) young adults, (iii) middle-aged adults, and (iv) older adults. We implemented 'cued' and 'non-cued' conditions to assess age-related changes in saccadic and touch responses to targets in three movement conditions: (a) Eyes only; (b) Hands only; (c) Eyes and Hand. Children made less saccade errors compared to young adults, but they also exhibited longer response times in cued versus non-cued conditions. In contrast, older adults showed faster responses in cued conditions but exhibited more errors. The results indicate that young adults (18 -25 years) achieve an optimal balance between anticipation and execution. In contrast, children show benefits (few errors) and costs (slow responses) of good inhibition when preparing a motor response based on advance information; whilst older adults show the benefits and costs associated with a prospective response strategy (i.e., good anticipation)
Reading educational reform with actor network theory: Fluid spaces, otherings, and ambivalences
In considering two extended examples of educational reform efforts, this discussion traces relations that become visible through analytic approaches associated with actor-network theory (ANT). The strategy here is to present multiple readings of the two examples. The first reading adopts an ANT approach to follow ways that all actors – human and non-human entities, including the entity that is taken to be ‘educational reform’ – are performed into being through the play of linkages among heterogeneous elements. Then, further readings focus not only on the material practices that become enacted and distributed, but also on the otherings that occur: the various fluid spaces and ambivalent belongings that create actor-network(s) but also escape them. For educational research, particularly in educational reform and policy, it is argued that ANT analyses are particularly useful to examine the complex enactments in these dynamics. That is, ANT can illuminate movements of ordering and disordering that occur through minute socio-material connections in educational interventions. ANT readings also can discern, within these attempts to order people and practices, the spaces of flux and instability that enable and protect alternate possibilities
Cosmological constraints from lensing statistics and supernovae on the cosmic equation of state
We investigate observational constraints from lensing statistics and high-z
type Ia supernovae on flat cosmological models with nonrelativistic matter and
an exotic fluid with equation of state, . We show that
agreement with both tests at the 68% confidence level is possible if the
parameter is low () and with lower values of corresponding to higher .
We find that a conventional cosmological constant model with is the best fit model of the combined likelihood.Comment: 7 pages, 4 postscript figures, revtex, submitted to Phys. Rev.
New Constraints from High Redshift Supernovae and Lensing Statistics upon Scalar Field Cosmologies
We explore the implications of gravitationally lensed QSOs and high-redshift
SNe Ia observations for spatially flat cosmological models in which a
classically evolving scalar field currently dominates the energy density of the
Universe. We consider two representative scalar field potentials that give rise
to effective decaying (``quintessence'') models:
pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons () and an inverse
power-law potential (). We show that a
large region of parameter space is consistent with current data if . On the other hand, a higher lower bound for the matter density
parameter suggested by large-scale galaxy flows, ,
considerably reduces the allowed parameter space, forcing the scalar field
behavior to approach that of a cosmological constant.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, submitted to PR
A randomised controlled trial investigating motor skill training as a function of attentional focus in old age
BACKGROUND: Motor learning research has had little impact on clinical applications and rarely extended to research about how older adults learn motor skills. There is consistent evidence that motor skill performance and learning can be enhanced by giving learners instructions that direct their attention. The aim of this study was to test whether elderly individuals that receive an external focus instruction during training of dynamic balance skills would learn in a different manner compared to individuals that received an internal focus instruction. METHODS: This randomised trial included 26 older persons (81 +/- 6 years) that were training functional balance twice a week for the duration of 5 weeks. Learning outcomes were recorded after every training session. Weight shifting score and dynamic balance parameters (Biodex Balance System), components of the Extended Timed-Get-Up-and-Go test, five chair rises, and falls efficacy (FES-I) was assessed at baseline and post-intervention. RESULTS: Participation for training sessions was 94%. No differences between groups were found following 5 weeks of training for weight shifting score, dynamic balance index and dynamic balance time (p < 0.95, p = 0.16, p < 0.50), implying no learning differences between training groups. Extended Timed-Get-Up-and-Go components Sit-to-stand, p = .036; Gait initiation, p = .039; Slow down, stop, turnaround, and sit down, p = 0.011 and the Fes-I (p = 0.014) showed improvements for the total group, indicating that function improved compared to baseline. CONCLUSION: A 5-week balance training improved weight shifting scores and dynamic balance parameters as well as functional abilities. The observed improvements were independent from the type of attentional focus instructions. The findings provide support for the proposition of different motor learning principles in older adults compared to younger adults
Enhanced Visual Temporal Resolution in Autism Spectrum Disorders
Cognitive functions that rely on accurate sequencing of events, such as action planning and execution, verbal and nonverbal communication, and social interaction rely on well-tuned coding of temporal event-structure. Visual temporal event-structure coding was tested in 17 high-functioning adolescents and adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and mental- and chronological-age matched typically-developing (TD) individuals using a perceptual simultaneity paradigm. Visual simultaneity thresholds were lower in individuals with ASD compared to TD individuals, suggesting that autism may be characterised by increased parsing of temporal event-structure, with a decreased capability for integration over time. Lower perceptual simultaneity thresholds in ASD were also related to increased developmental communication difficulties. These results are linked to detail-focussed and local processing bias
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