26 research outputs found

    The Stone-Wales transformation: from fullerenes to graphite, from radiation damage to heat capacity

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    The Stone-Wales (SW) transformation, or carbon-bond rotation, has been fundamental to understanding fullerene growth and stability, and ab initio calculations show it to be a high-energy process. The nature and topology of the fullerene energy landscape shows how the Ih-C60 must be the final product, if SW transformations are fast enough, and various mechanisms for their catalysis have been proposed. We review SW transformations in fullerenes and then discuss the analogous transformation in graphite, where they form the Dienes defect, originally posited to be a transition state in the direct exchange of a bonded atom pair. On the basis of density functional theory calculations in the local density approximation, we propose that non-equilibrium concentrations of the Dienes defect arising from displacing radiation are rapidly healed by point defects and that equilibrium concentrations of Dienes defects are responsible for the divergent ultra-high-temperature heat capacity of graphite. This article is part of the themed issue Fullerenes: past, present and future, celebrating the 30th anniversary of Buckminster Fullerene

    Pragmatic financialisation: the role of the Japanese Post Office

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    The Japanese Post Office, one of the world’s largest financial institutions, was finally privatised in 2015, marking an appropriate time to examine financialisation in Japan. Literature on financialisation and changes in Japanese capitalism assumes convergence on Anglo-American capitalism with a diminishing of state power. The main argument of this paper is that financialisation is instead a more contingent process. This is put forth through an examination of how this process has been mediated by the Japanese state through the workings of the Japanese Post Office. The state has frequently shaped the direction of financialisation by intervening in the routing of household funds via the postal savings system in order to achieve its objectives in different circumstances, particularly evident in the protracted and contested nature of the post bank’s privatisation. Financialisation is thus not preordained; instead its path is hewn by crisis, catastrophe, demographics and the agency of domestic social actors

    ERP correlates of spatially incongruent object identification during scene viewing: contextual expectancy versus simultaneous processing

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    Object processing is affected by the gist of the scene within which it is embedded. Previous ERP research has suggested that manipulating the semantic congruency between an object and the surrounding scene affects the high level (semantic) representation of that object emerging after the presentation of the scene (Ganis and Kutas, 2003). In two ERP experiments, we investigated whether there would be a similar electrophysiological response when spatial congruency of an object in a scene was manipulated while the semantic congruency remained the same. Apart from the location of the object, all other object features were congruent with the scene (e.g., in a bedroom scene, either a painting or a cat appeared on the wall). In the first experiment, participants were shown a location cue and then a scene image for 300 ms, after which an object image appeared on the cued location for 300 ms. Spatially incongruent objects elicited a stronger centro-frontal N300–N400 effect in the 275–500 ms window relative to the spatially congruent objects. We also found early ERP effects, dominant on the left hemisphere electrodes. Strikingly, LORETA analysis revealed that these activations were mainly located in the superior and middle temporal gyrus of the right hemisphere. In the second experiment, we used a paradigm similar to Mudrik, Lamy, and Deouell (2010). The scene and the object were presented together for 300 ms after the location cue. This time, we did not observe either an early or the pronounced N300–N400 effect. In contrast to Experiment 1, LORETA analysis on the N400 time-window revealed that the generators of these weak ERP effects were mainly located in the temporal lobe of the left hemisphere. Our results suggest that, when the scene is presented before the object, top-down spatial encoding processes are initiated and the right superior temporal gyrus is activated, as previously suggested (Ellison, Schindler, Pattison, and Milner, 2004). Mismatch between the actual object features and the spatially driven top-down structural and functional features could lead to the early effect, and then to the N300–N400 effect. In contrast, when the scene is not presented before the object, the spatial encoding could not happen early and strong enough to initiate spatial object-integration effects. Our results indicate that spatial information is an early and essential part in scene–object integration, and it primes structural as well as semantic features of an object

    Disentangling the effects of spatial inconsistency of targets and distractors when searching in realistic scenes

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    Previous research has suggested that correctly placed objects facilitate eye guidance, but also that objects violating spatial associations within scenes may be prioritized for selection and subsequent inspection. We analyzed the respective eye guidance of spatial expectations and target template (precise picture or verbal label) in visual search, while taking into account any impact of object spatial inconsistency on extrafoveal or foveal processing. Moreover, we isolated search disruption due to misleading spatial expectations about the target from the influence of spatial inconsistency within the scene upon search behavior. Reliable spatial expectations and precise target template improved oculomotor efficiency across all search phases. Spatial inconsistency resulted in preferential saccadic selection when guidance by template was insufficient to ensure effective search from the outset and the misplaced object was bigger than the objects consistently placed in the same scene region. This prioritization emerged principally during early inspection of the region, but the inconsistent object also tended to be preferentially fixated overall across region viewing. These results suggest that objects are first selected covertly on the basis of their relative size and that subsequent overt selection is made considering object-context associations processed in extrafoveal vision. Once the object was fixated, inconsistency resulted in longer first fixation duration and longer total dwell time. As a whole, our findings indicate that observed impairment of oculomotor behavior when searching for an implausibly placed target is the combined product of disruption due to unreliable spatial expectations and prioritization of inconsistent objects before and during object fixation.</p

    How context information and target information guide the eyes from the first epoch of search in real-world scenes

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    This study investigated how the visual system utilizes context and task information during the different phases of a visual search task. The specificity of the target template (the picture or the name of the target) and the plausibility of target position in real-world scenes were manipulated orthogonally. Our findings showed that both target template information and guidance of spatial context are utilized to guide eye movements from the beginning of scene inspection. In both search initiation and subsequent scene scanning, the availability of a specific visual template was particularly useful when the spatial context of the scene was misleading and the availability of a reliable scene context facilitated search mainly when the template was abstract. Target verification was affected principally by the level of detail of target template, and was quicker in the case of a picture cue. The results indicate that the visual system can utilize target template guidance and context guidance flexibly from the beginning of scene inspection, depending upon the amount and the quality of the available information supplied by either of these high-level sources. This allows for optimization of oculomotor behavior throughout the different phases of search within a real-world scene

    Eye movements and visual encoding during scene perception

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    The amount of time viewers could process a scene during eye fixations was varied by a mask that appeared at a certain point in each eye fixation. The scene did not reappear until the viewer made an eye movement. The main finding in the studies was that in order to normally process a scene, viewers needed to see the scene for at least 150 ms during each eye fixation. This result is surprising because viewers can extract the gist of a scene from a brief 40- to 100-ms exposure. It also stands in marked contrast to reading, as readers need only to view the words in the text for 50 to 60 ms to read normally. Thus, although the same neural mechanisms control eye movements in scene perception and reading, the cognitive processes associated with each task drive processing in different ways

    Fertilizer technology and usage

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    Diallel analysis of flour protein content of some New Zealand wheats

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    Flour protein content is controlled by mainly additive effects as shown by the high narrow-sense heritability recorded in this study. This suggests good scope for early response to selection for this trait. Cultivars such as Hilgendorf, Kopara, and Oroua should be most useful for high protein selection. However, the detection of epistasis in one of the two seasons in the crosses involving Karamu emphasised the existence of genotype-environmental interaction for flour protein
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