1,687 research outputs found
Reporting dream experience : why (not) to be skeptical about dream reports
Are dreams subjective experiences during sleep? Is it like something to dream, or is it only like something to remember dreams after awakening? Specifically, can dream reports be trusted to reveal what it is like to dream, and should they count as evidence for saying that dreams are conscious experiences at all? The goal of this article is to investigate the relationship between dreaming, dream reporting and subjective experience during sleep. I discuss different variants of philosophical skepticism about dream reporting and argue that they all fail. Consequently, skeptical doubts about the trustworthiness of dream reports are misguided, and for systematic reasons. I suggest an alternative, anti-skeptical account of the trustworthiness of dream reports. On this view, dream reports, when gathered under ideal reporting conditions and according to the principle of temporal proximity, are trustworthy (or transparent) with respect to conscious experience during sleep. The transparency assumption has the status of a methodologically necessary default assumption and is theoretically justified because it provides the best explanation of dream reporting. At the same time, it inherits important insights from the discussed variants of skepticism about dream reporting, suggesting that the careful consideration of these skeptical arguments ultimately leads to a positive account of why and under which conditions dream reports can and should be trusted. In this way, moderate distrust can be fruitfully combined with anti-skepticism about dream reporting. Several perspectives for future dream research and for the comparative study of dreaming and waking experience are suggested
Optical spectroscopy of (La,Ca)14Cu24O41 spin ladders: comparison of experiment and theory
Transmission and reflectivity of La_x Ca_14-x Cu_24 O_41 two-leg spin-1/2
ladders were measured in the mid-infrared regime between 500 and 12000 1/cm.
This allows us to determine the optical conductivity sigma_1 directly and with
high sensitivity. Here we show data for x=4 and 5 with the electrical field
polarized parallel to the rungs (E||a) and to the legs (E||c). Three
characteristic peaks are identified as magnetic excitations by comparison with
two different theoretical calculations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to SCES 200
Progress toward a Soft X-ray Polarimeter
We are developing instrumentation for a telescope design capable of measuring
linear X-ray polarization over a broad-band using conventional spectroscopic
optics. Multilayer-coated mirrors are key to this approach, being used as Bragg
reflectors at the Brewster angle. By laterally grading the multilayer mirrors
and matching to the dispersion of a spectrometer, one may take advantage of
high multilayer reflectivities and achieve modulation factors over 50% over the
entire 0.2-0.8 keV band. We present progress on laboratory work to demonstrate
the capabilities of an existing laterally graded multilayer coated mirror pair.
We also present plans for a suborbital rocket experiment designed to detect a
polarization level of 12-17% for an active galactic nucleus in the 0.1-1.0 keV
band.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the SPIE,
volume 8861, on Optics for EUV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Astronom
Extending the Explanandum: A Commentary on Andy Clark
In this commentary, I suggest that the predictive processing framework (PP) might be applicable to areas beyond those identified by Clark. In particular, PP may be relevant for our understanding of perceptual content, consciousness, and for applied cognitive neuroscience. My main claim for each area is as follows:PP urges an organism-relative conception of perceptual content.Historical a priori accounts of the structure of perceptual experience converge with results from PP. There are a number of areas in which PP can find important practical applications, including education, public policy, and social interaction
Magnetic excitations in two-leg spin 1/2 ladders: experiment and theory
Magnetic excitations in two-leg S=1/2 ladders are studied both experimentally
and theoretically. Experimentally, we report on the reflectivity, the
transmission and the optical conductivity sigma(omega) of undoped La_x Ca_14-x
Cu_24 O_41 for x=4, 5, and 5.2. Using two different theoretical approaches
(Jordan-Wigner fermions and perturbation theory), we calculate the dispersion
of the elementary triplets, the optical conductivity and the momentum-resolved
spectral density of two-triplet excitations for 0.2 <=
J_parallel/J_perpendicular <= 1.2. We discuss phonon-assisted two-triplet
absorption, the existence of two-triplet bound states, the two-triplet
continuum, and the size of the exchange parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 7 eps figures, submitted to SNS 200
Visualization of lateral water transport pathways in soybean by a time of flight-secondary ion mass spectrometry cryo-system
Water movement between cells in a plant body is the basic phenomenon of plant solute transport; however, it has not been well documented due to limitations in observational techniques. This paper reports a visualization technique to observe water movement among plant cells in different tissues using a time of flight-secondary ion mass spectrometry (Tof-SIMS) cryo-system. The specific purpose of this study is to examine the route of water supply from xylem to stem tissues. The maximum resolution of Tof-SIMS imaging was 1.8 μm (defined as the three pixel step length), which allowed detection of water movement at the cellular level. Deuterium-labelled water was found in xylem vessels in the stem 2.5 min after the uptake of labelled water by soybean plants. The water moved from the xylem to the phloem, cambium, and cortex tissues within 30–60 min after water absorption. Deuterium ion counts in the phloem complex were slightly higher than those in the cortex and cambium tissue seen in enlarged images of stem cell tissue during high transpiration. However, deuterium ion counts in the phloem were lower than those in the cambium at night with no evaporative demand. These results indicate that the stem tissues do not receive water directly from the xylem, but rather from the phloem, during high evaporative demand. In contrast, xylem water would be directly supplied to the growing sink during the night without evaporative demand
Development of thermally formed glass optics for astronomical hard x-ray telescopes
The next major observational advance in hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray astrophysics will come with the implementation of telescopes capable of focusing 10-200 keV radiation. Focusing allows high signal-to-noise imaging and spectroscopic observations of many sources in this band for the first time. The recent development of depth-graded multilayer coatings has made the design of telescopes for this bandpass practical, however the ability to manufacture inexpensive substrates with appropriate surface quality and figure to achieve sub-arcminute performance has remained an elusive goal. In this paper, we report on new, thermally-formed glass micro-sheet optics capable of meeting the requirements of the next-generation of astronomical hard X-ray telescopes
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