909 research outputs found
Massive Conformal Symmetry and Integrability for Feynman Integrals
In the context of planar holography, integrability plays an important role
for solving certain massless quantum field theories such as N=4 SYM theory. In
this letter we show that integrability also features in the building blocks of
massive quantum field theories. At one-loop order we prove that all massive
n-gon Feynman integrals in generic spacetime dimensions are invariant under a
massive Yangian symmetry. At two loops similar statements can be proven for
graphs built from two n-gons. At generic loop order we conjecture that all
graphs cut from regular tilings of the plane with massive propagators on the
boundary are invariant. We support this conjecture by a number of numerical
tests for higher loops and legs. The observed Yangian extends the bosonic part
of the massive dual conformal symmetry that was found a decade ago on the
Coulomb branch of N=4 SYM theory. By translating the Yangian level-one
generators from dual to original momentum space, we introduce a massive
generalization of momentum space conformal symmetry. Even for non-dual
conformal integrals this novel symmetry persists. The Yangian can thus be
understood as the closure of massive dual conformal symmetry and this new
massive momentum space conformal symmetry, which suggests an interpretation via
AdS/CFT. As an application of our findings, we bootstrap the hypergeometric
building blocks for examples of massive Feynman integrals.Comment: 6 pages, v2: typos corrected, clarifications added, v3: minor
improvements/corrections, title adapted to journal titl
Biased Recognition of Facial Affect in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder Reflects Clinical State
Cognitive theories of depression posit that perception is negatively biased in
depressive disorder. Previous studies have provided empirical evidence for
this notion, but left open the question whether the negative perceptual bias
reflects a stable trait or the current depressive state. Here we investigated
the stability of negatively biased perception over time. Emotion perception
was examined in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) and healthy
control participants in two experiments. In the first experiment subjective
biases in the recognition of facial emotional expressions were assessed.
Participants were presented with faces that were morphed between sad and
neutral and happy expressions and had to decide whether the face was sad or
happy. The second experiment assessed automatic emotion processing by
measuring the potency of emotional faces to gain access to awareness using
interocular suppression. A follow-up investigation using the same tests was
performed three months later. In the emotion recognition task, patients with
major depression showed a shift in the criterion for the differentiation
between sad and happy faces: In comparison to healthy controls, patients with
MDD required a greater intensity of the happy expression to recognize a face
as happy. After three months, this negative perceptual bias was reduced in
comparison to the control group. The reduction in negative perceptual bias
correlated with the reduction of depressive symptoms. In contrast to previous
work, we found no evidence for preferential access to awareness of sad vs.
happy faces. Taken together, our results indicate that MDD-related perceptual
biases in emotion recognition reflect the current clinical state rather than a
stable depressive trait
Ventricular tachycardia (VT) storm after cryoballoon-based pulmonary vein isolation
Objective: Unusual clinical course. Background: Following catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation, increased incidence of ventricular arrhythmia has been observed. We report a case of sustained ventricular arrhythmia in a patient who underwent cryoballoon-based pulmonary vein isolation for symptomatic persistent atrial fibrillation. Case Report: A 57-year-old patient with dilated cardiomyopathy underwent CB-based pulmonary vein isolation for symptomatic persistent AF. On the day following an uneventful procedure, the patient for the first time experienced a sustained ventricular tachycardia that exacerbated into VT storm. Each arrhythmia was terminated by the ICD that had been implanted for primary prevention. Antiarrhythmic treatment with amiodarone was initiated immediately. The patient remained free from sustained ventricular arrhythmia during follow-up. Conclusions: After pulmonary vein isolation, physicians should be vigilant for ventricular arrhythmia. The influence of atrial autonomic innervation on ventricular electrophysiology is largely unknown
Dierk Walter: Organisierte Gewalt in der europäischen Expansion. Gestalt und Logik des Imperialkrieges, Hamburg:: Hamburger Edition, HIS Verlag 2014, 414 S.
Intervention and the ordering of the modern world
I am lead editor of a special issue of the Review of International Studies, which is the house journal of the British International Studies Association. The special issue arose from a competitive process. I am scheduled to have two pieces in this issue.This introductory discussion establishes the notion of intervention as a ‘social practice’ and carves out the contextual and conceptual space for the special issue as a whole. The first move is to recontextualise intervention in terms of ‘modernity’ as distinct from the sovereign states system. This shift enables a better appreciation of the dynamic and evolutionary context that generates variation in the practice of intervention over time and space and which is more analytically sensitive to the economic and cultural (as well as Great Power) hierarchies that generate rationales for intervention. The second move is to reconceptualise intervention as a specific modality of coercion relatively well-suited to the regulation or mediation of conflict between territorially bounded political communities and transnational social forces. Third is to ‘historicise’ the practice of intervention through showing how it has changed in relation to a range of international orders’ that have defined the modern world and which are each characterised by a different notion of the relationship between social and territorial space. Fourth and finally is a brief consideration of the possibility of intervention’s demise as a social practice.ESRC funded seminar series, ‘Rethinking Intervention: Intervention in the Modern World’, grant reference RES-451-26-066
From Teamchef Arminius to Hermann Junior: glocalised discourse about a national foundation myth
If for much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the ‘Battle of the Teutoburg Forest’, fought in 9 CE between Roman armies and Germanic tribes, was predominantly a reference point for nationalist and chauvinist discourses in Germany, the first decade of the twenty-first century has seen attempts to link public remembrance with local/regional identities on the one hand and international/intercultural contact on the other. In the run up to and during the ‘anniversary year’ of 2009, German media, sports institutions and various other official institutions articulating tourist, economic and political interests attempted to create a new ‘glocalised’ version of the public memory of the Teutoburg battle. Combining methods of Cognitive Linguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis, the paper analyses the narrative and argumentative topoi employed in this re-orientation of public memory, with a special emphasis on hybrid, post-national identity-construction. Das zweitausendjährige Gedenkjahr der „Schlacht im Teutoburger Wald“ im Jahr 2009 bot eine günstige Gelegenheit, die bis in die zweite Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts dominante Tradition nationalistisch–chauvinistischer Deutungen des Sieges von germanischen Stämmen über drei römische Legionen zu korrigieren und zu überwinden. Der Aufsatz analysiert mit Hilfe diskurslinguistischer Methoden die Anstrengungen regionaler Institutionen und Medien, die nationale Vereinnahmung des historischen Gedenkens kritisch zu thematisieren sowie neue, zum eine lokal situierte, zum andern international orientierte Identifikationsangebote anzubieten. Die Analyse zeigt, dass solche „de-nationalisierten“ Identifikationsangebote zwar teilweise auch früher verwendet wurden, aber heutzutage rekontextualisiert und auf innovative Weise in den Vordergrund gestellt werden
Diagnose "Postheroisch": Rezension zu "Postheroische Helden: Ein Zeitbild" von Ulrich Bröckling
Ulrich Bröckling: Postheroische Helden - Ein Zeitbild. Berlin: Suhrkamp 2020. 978-3-518-58747-
- …
