192 research outputs found
The revised NEUROGES–ELAN system: An objective and reliable interdisciplinary analysis tool for nonverbal behavior and gesture
As visual media spread to all domains of public and scientific life, nonverbal behavior is taking its place as an important form of communication alongside the written and spoken word. An objective and reliable method of analysis for hand movement behavior and gesture is therefore currently required in various scientific disciplines, including psychology, medicine, linguistics, anthropology, sociology, and computer science. However, no adequate common methodological standards have been developed thus far. Many behavioral gesture-coding systems lack objectivity and reliability, and automated methods that register specific movement parameters often fail to show validity with regard to psychological and social functions. To address these deficits, we have combined two methods, an elaborated behavioral coding system and an annotation tool for video and audio data. The NEUROGES–ELAN system is an effective and user-friendly research tool for the analysis of hand movement behavior, including gesture, self-touch, shifts, and actions. Since its first publication in 2009 in Behavior Research Methods, the tool has been used in interdisciplinary research projects to analyze a total of 467 individuals from different cultures, including subjects with mental disease and brain damage. Partly on the basis of new insights from these studies, the system has been revised methodologically and conceptually. The article presents the revised version of the system, including a detailed study of reliability. The improved reproducibility of the revised version makes NEUROGES–ELAN a suitable system for basic empirical research into the relation between hand movement behavior and gesture and cognitive, emotional, and interactive processes and for the development of automated movement behavior recognition methods
Type I Superconductivity in YbSb2 Single Crystals
We present evidence of type I superconductivity in YbSb2 single crystals,
from DC and AC magnetization, heat capacity and resistivity measurements. The
critical temperature and critical field are determined to be 1.3 K
and 55 Oe. A small Ginzburg-Landau parameter \kappa = 0.05,
together with typical magnetization isotherms of type I superconductors, small
critical field values, a strong Differential Paramagnetic Effect (DPE) signal,
and a field-induced change from second to first order phase transition, confirm
the type I nature of the superconductivity in YbSb2. A possible second
superconducting state is observed in the radiofrequency (RF) susceptibility
measurements, with 0.41 K and 430 Oe.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
Avoided ferromagnetic quantum critical point: Unusual short-range ordered state in CeFePO
Cerium 4f electronic spin dynamics in single crystals of the heavy-fermion
system CeFePO is studied by means of ac-susceptibility, specific heat and
muon-spin relaxation (SR). Short-range static magnetism occurs below the
freezing temperature Tg ~ 0.7 K, which prevents the system from accessing the
putative ferromagnetic quantum critical point. In the SR, the
sample-averaged muon asymmetry function is dominated by strongly inhomogeneous
spin fluctuations below 10 K and exhibits a characteristic time-field scaling
relation expected from glassy spin dynamics, strongly evidencing cooperative
and critical spin fluctuations. The overall behavior can be ascribed neither to
canonical spin glasses nor other disorder-driven mechanisms.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letters, Link:
http://prl.aps.org/accepted/6207bYdaGef1483c419928305372ce2d4419eb96
Interplay between Kondo suppression and Lifshitz transitions in YbRhSi at high magnetic fields
We investigate the magnetic field dependent thermopower, thermal
conductivity, resistivity and Hall effect in the heavy fermion metal YbRh2Si2.
In contrast to reports on thermodynamic measurements, we find in total three
transitions at high fields, rather than a single one at 10 T. Using the Mott
formula together with renormalized band calculations, we identify Lifshitz
transitions as their origin. The predictions of the calculations show that all
experimental results rely on an interplay of a smooth suppression of the Kondo
effect and the spin splitting of the flat hybridized bands.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Evidence for a Kondo destroying quantum critical point in YbRh2Si2
The heavy-fermion metal YbRhSi is a weak antiferromagnet below
K. Application of a low magnetic field T () is sufficient to continuously suppress the antiferromagnetic (AF) order.
Below K, the Sommerfeld coefficient of the electronic specific
heat exhibits a logarithmic divergence. At K, (), while the electrical resistivity
(: residual resistivity). Upon
extrapolating finite- data of transport and thermodynamic quantities to , one observes (i) a vanishing of the "Fermi surface crossover" scale
, (ii) an abrupt jump of the initial Hall coefficient and
(iii) a violation of the Wiedemann Franz law at , the field-induced
quantum critical point (QCP). These observations are interpreted as evidence of
a critical destruction of the heavy quasiparticles, i.e., propagating Kondo
singlets, at the QCP of this material.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, SCES 201
Interplay between unconventional superconductivity and heavy-fermion quantum criticality: CeCuSi versus YbRhSi
In this paper the low-temperature properties of two isostructural canonical
heavy-fermion compounds are contrasted with regards to the interplay between
antiferromagnetic (AF) quantum criticality and superconductivity. For
CeCuSi, fully-gapped d-wave superconductivity forms in the vicinity of
an itinerant three-dimensional heavy-fermion spin-density-wave (SDW) quantum
critical point (QCP). Inelastic neutron scattering results highlight that both
quantum critical SDW fluctuations as well as Mott-type fluctuations of local
magnetic moments contribute to the formation of Cooper pairs in CeCuSi.
In YbRhSi, superconductivity appears to be suppressed at
mK by AF order ( = 70 mK). Ultra-low temperature measurements reveal a
hybrid order between nuclear and 4f-electronic spins, which is dominated by the
Yb-derived nuclear spins, to develop at slightly above 2 mK. The hybrid
order turns out to strongly compete with the primary 4f-electronic order and to
push the material towards its QCP. Apparently, this paves the way for
heavy-fermion superconductivity to form at = 2 mK. Like the pressure -
induced QCP in CeRhIn, the magnetic field - induced one in YbRhSi
is of the local Kondo-destroying variety which corresponds to a Mott-type
transition at zero temperature. Therefore, these materials form the link
between the large family of about fifty low- unconventional heavy - fermion
superconductors and other families of unconventional superconductors with
higher s, notably the doped Mott insulators of the cuprates, organic
charge-transfer salts and some of the Fe-based superconductors. Our study
suggests that heavy-fermion superconductivity near an AF QCP is a robust
phenomenon.Comment: 30 pages, 7 Figures, Accepted for publication in Philosophical
Magazin
Quantum Tricritical Points in NbFe
Quantum critical points (QCPs) emerge when a 2nd order phase transition is
suppressed to zero temperature. In metals the quantum fluctuations at such a
QCP can give rise to new phases including unconventional superconductivity.
Whereas antiferromagnetic QCPs have been studied in considerable detail
ferromagnetic (FM) QCPs are much harder to access. In almost all metals FM QCPs
are avoided through either a change to 1st order transitions or through an
intervening spin-density-wave (SDW) phase. Here, we study the prototype of the
second case, NbFe. We demonstrate that the phase diagram can be modelled
using a two-order-parameter theory in which the putative FM QCP is buried
within a SDW phase. We establish the presence of quantum tricritical points
(QTCPs) at which both the uniform and finite susceptibility diverge. The
universal nature of our model suggests that such QTCPs arise naturally from the
interplay between SDW and FM order and exist generally near a buried FM QCP of
this type. Our results promote NbFe as the first example of a QTCP, which
has been proposed as a key concept in a range of narrow-band metals, including
the prominent heavy-fermion compound YbRhSi.Comment: 21 pages including S
Ferromagnetic Quantum Criticality in the Quasi-One-Dimensional Heavy Fermion Metal YbNi4P2
We present a new Kondo-lattice system, YbNi4P2, which is a clean
heavy-fermion metal with a severely reduced ferromagnetic ordering temperature
at T_C=0.17K, evidenced by distinct anomalies in susceptibility, specific-heat,
and resistivity measurements. The ferromagnetic nature of the transition, with
only a small ordered moment of ~0.05mu_B, is established by a diverging
susceptibility at T_C with huge absolute values in the ferromagnetically
ordered state, severely reduced by small magnetic fields. Furthermore, YbNi4P2
is a stoichiometric system with a quasi-one-dimensional crystal and electronic
structure and strong correlation effects which dominate the low temperature
properties. This is reflected by a stronger-than-logarithmically diverging
Sommerfeld coefficient and a linear-in-T resistivity above T_C which cannot be
explained by any current theoretical predictions. These exciting
characteristics are unique among all correlated electron systems and make this
an interesting material for further in-depth investigations.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of body psychotherapy in the treatment of negative symptoms of schizophrenia - a multi-centre randomised controlled trial
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
Channelling figurativity through narrative : the paranarrative in fiction and non-fiction
Contrary to wide-spread assumptions, metaphor in narrative is not a pre-established, extra-textual form appearing in different instances of discourse, but rather an event resulting from a strategic distribution of information in the narrative process. Hence, the appeal to conceptual cultural knowledge is to be considered as a consequence, and not as a prerequisite of metaphor interpretation. By means of the concept of the paranarrative, we highlight the rhetorical interconnectedness of metaphor with other figures of speech (such as metonymy) and we explore the narrative integration of diacritic forms of indirectness. In order to illustrate the terminology that can address these focal concerns, the paper discusses the relation between tropes and narrative, via selected examples from narrative texts (both fictional and non-fictional) written by Juli Zeh, Herta Müller, Jürgen Nieraad, and Siddhartha Mukherjee. As their common denominator, these examples channel through narrative figurative domains considered to be known intuitively to wit: personifications; iconic pars pro toto references to concentration camps; and metaphors for cancer in disease biographies
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