69 research outputs found

    Importance of spike timing in touch: an analogy with hearing?

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    Touch is often conceived as a spatial sense akin to vision. However, touch also involves the transduction and processing of signals that vary rapidly over time, inviting comparisons with hearing. In both sensory systems, first order afferents produce spiking responses that are temporally precise and the timing of their responses carries stimulus information. The precision and informativeness of spike timing in the two systems invites the possibility that both implement similar mechanisms to extract behaviorally relevant information from these precisely timed responses. Here, we explore the putative roles of spike timing in touch and hearing and discuss common mechanisms that may be involved in processing temporal spiking patterns

    State-building, war and violence : evidence from Latin America

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    In European history, war has played a major role in state‐building and the state monopoly on violence. But war is a very specific form of organized political violence, and it is decreasing on a global scale. Other patterns of armed violence now dominate, ones that seem to undermine state‐building, thus preventing the replication of European experiences. As a consequence, the main focus of the current state‐building debate is on fragility and a lack of violence control inside these states. Evidence from Latin American history shows that the specific patterns of the termination of both war and violence are more important than the specific patterns of their organization. Hence these patterns can be conceptualized as a critical juncture for state‐building. While military victories in war, the subordination of competing armed actors and the prosecution of perpetrators are conducive for state‐building, negotiated settlements, coexistence, and impunity produce instability due to competing patterns of authority, legitimacy, and social cohesion

    Social science and nuclear war

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    Supplementary Appendix and Replication Data for Krebs, Ronald R., and Roy Licklider, "United They Fall: Why the International Community Should Not Promote Military Integration after Civil War," <i>International Security</i>, Vol. 40, No. 3 (Winter 2015/16), pp. 93–138..

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    Data set for Krebs, Ronald R., and Roy Licklider, "United They Fall: Why the International Community Should Not Promote Military Integration after Civil War," International Security, Vol. 40, No. 3 (Winter 2015/16), pp. 93–138. These files include the article's supplementary appendix, with supporting data and replication files
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