4,534 research outputs found
Photoacoustics Modelling using Amplitude Mode Expansion Method in a Multiscale T-cell Resonator
The photoacoustic (PA) effect consisting of the generation of an acoustic
signal based on the absorption of light has already demonstrated its potential
for various spectroscopic applications for both gaseous and solid samples. The
signal produced during photoacoustic spectroscopy (PAS) measurement is,
however, usually weak and needs to be amplified. This is achieved by using a
photoacoustic cell resonator where acoustic resonances are utilized to
significantly boost the signal. Therefore, a PA resonator has a significant
role in PAS measurement set-ups. When designing or optimizing a new PA
resonator, numerical methods are generally used to simulate the photoacoustic
signal generation. In this paper, the amplitude mode expansion (AME) method is
presented as a quick and accurate simulation tool. The method is used to
simulate the photoacoustic signal in a multi-scale T-cell resonator over a wide
frequency range. The AME method is based on eigenmode expansion and
introduction of losses by quality factors. The AME simulation results are
compared and analyzed against the results from the viscothermal method.
Reasonably good agreement is obtained between the two methods. However, small
frequency shifts in the resonances of the AME method are noted. The shifts are
attributed to the location of the dominant mode within the T-cell. The
viscothermal method is considered the most accurate method for simulating the
photoacoustic signal in small resonators. However, it is computationally very
demanding. The AME method provides a much faster simulation alternative. This
is particularly useful in the design and optimization of photoacoustic
resonators where numerical methods are preferred over experimental measurements
due to their speed and low cost.Comment: Comsol Conference 201
Individual Differences in Impulsivity Predict Anticipatory Eye Movements
Impulsivity is the tendency to act without forethought. It is a personality trait commonly used in the diagnosis of many psychiatric diseases. In clinical practice, impulsivity is estimated using written questionnaires. However, answers to questions might be subject to personal biases and misinterpretations. In order to alleviate this problem, eye movements could be used to study differences in decision processes related to impulsivity. Therefore, we investigated correlations between impulsivity scores obtained with a questionnaire in healthy subjects and characteristics of their anticipatory eye movements in a simple smooth pursuit task. Healthy subjects were asked to answer the UPPS questionnaire (Urgency Premeditation Perseverance and Sensation seeking Impulsive Behavior scale), which distinguishes four independent dimensions of impulsivity: Urgency, lack of Premeditation, lack of Perseverance, and Sensation seeking. The same subjects took part in an oculomotor task that consisted of pursuing a target that moved in a predictable direction. This task reliably evoked anticipatory saccades and smooth eye movements. We found that eye movement characteristics such as latency and velocity were significantly correlated with UPPS scores. The specific correlations between distinct UPPS factors and oculomotor anticipation parameters support the validity of the UPPS construct and corroborate neurobiological explanations for impulsivity. We suggest that the oculomotor approach of impulsivity put forth in the present study could help bridge the gap between psychiatry and physiology
Dung beetles use their dung ball as a mobile thermal refuge
At midday, surface temperatures in the desert often exceed 60°C. To be active at this time, animals need extraordinary behavioural or physiological adaptations. Desert ants, for instance, spend up to 75% of their foraging time cooling down on elevated thermal refuges such as grass stalks [1]. Ball-rolling dung beetles work under similar thermal conditions in South African savannahs. After landing at a fresh dung pile, a beetle quickly forms a dung ball and rolls it away in a straight line, head down, walking backwards [2]. Earlier studies have shown that some dung beetles maintain an elevated body temperature to gain a competitive advantage [3], [4] and [5], and that heat shunting may prevent overheating during flight [6] and [7]. However, we know little about the behavioural strategies beetles might employ to mitigate heat stress while rolling their dung balls. Using infrared thermography and behavioural experiments, we show here that dung beetles use their dung ball as a mobile thermal refuge onto which they climb to cool down while rolling across hot soil. We further demonstrate that the moist ball functions not only as a portable platform, but also as a heat sink, which effectively cools the beetle as it rolls or climbs onto it
Night sky orientation with diurnal and nocturnal eyes: dim-light adaptations are critical when the moon is out of sight
The visual systems of many animals feature energetically costly specializations to enable them to function in dim light. It is often unclear, however, how large the behavioural benefit of these specializations is, because a direct comparison in a behaviourally relevant task between closely related day- and night-active species is not usually possible. Here we compared the orientation performance of diurnal and nocturnal species of dung beetles, Scarabaeus (Kheper) lamarcki and Scarabaeus satyrus, respectively, attempting to roll dung balls along straight paths both during the day and at night. Using video tracking, we quantified the straightness of paths and the repeatability of roll bearings as beetles exited a flat arena in their natural habitat or under controlled conditions indoors. Both species oriented equally well when either the moon or an artificial point light source was available, but when the view of the moon was blocked and only wide-field cues such as the lunar polarization pattern or the stars were available for orientation, nocturnal beetles were oriented substantially better. We found no evidence that ball-rolling speed changed with light level, which suggests little or no temporal summation in the visual system. Finally, we found that both diurnal and nocturnal beetles tended to choose bearings that led them towards a bright light source, but away from a dim one. Our results show that even diurnal insects, at least those with superposition eyes, could orient by the light of the moon, but that dim-light adaptations are needed for precise orientation when the moon is not visible
Recommended from our members
Approximate solutions of the determinantal assignment problem and distance problems
The paper introduces the formulation of an exact algebrogeometric problem, the study of the Determinantal Assignment Problem (DAP) in the set up of design, where approximate solutions of the algebraic problem are sought. Integral part of the solution of the Approximate DAP is the computation of distance of a multivector from the Grassmann variety of a projective space. We examine the special case of the calculation of the minimum distance of a multivector in ∧2(ℝ5) from the Grassmann variety G 2(ℝ5). This problem is closely related to the problem of decomposing the multivector and finding its best decomposable approximation. We establish the existence of the best decomposition in a closed form and link the problem of distance to the decomposition of multivectors. The uniqueness of this decomposition is then examined and several new alternative decompositions are presented that solve our minimization problem based on the structure of the problem
Infant Rule Learning: Advantage Language, or Advantage Speech?
<div><p>Infants appear to learn abstract rule-like regularities (e.g., <em>la la da</em> follows an AAB pattern) more easily from speech than from a variety of other auditory and visual stimuli (Marcus et al., 2007). We test if that facilitation reflects a specialization to learn from speech alone, or from modality-independent communicative stimuli more generally, by measuring 7.5-month-old infants’ ability to learn abstract rules from sign language-like gestures. Whereas infants appear to easily learn many different rules from speech, we found that with sign-like stimuli, and under circumstances comparable to those of Marcus et al. (1999), hearing infants were able to learn an ABB rule, but not an AAB rule. This is consistent with results of studies that demonstrate lower levels of infant rule learning from a variety of other non-speech stimuli, and we discuss implications for accounts of speech-facilitation.</p> </div
Molecular structure and free energy landscape for electron transport in the decahaem cytochrome MtrF
DOX-Vit D, a Novel Doxorubicin Delivery Approach, Inhibits Human Osteosarcoma Cell Proliferation by Inducing Apoptosis While Inhibiting Akt and mTOR Signaling Pathways
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Doxorubicin (DOX) is a very potent and effective anticancer agent. However, the effectiveness of DOX in osteosarcoma is usually limited by the acquired drug resistance. Recently, Vitamin D (Vit-D) was shown to suppress the growth of many human cancer cells. Taken together, we synthesized DOX-Vit D by conjugating Vit-D to DOX in order to increase the delivery of DOX into cancer cells and mitigate the chemoresistance associated with DOX. For this purpose, MG63 cells were treated with 10 µM DOX or DOX-Vit D for 24 h. Thereafter, MTT, real-time PCR and western blot analysis were used to determine cell proliferation, genes and proteins expression, respectively. Our results showed that DOX-Vit D, but not DOX, significantly elicited an apoptotic signal in MG63 cells as evidenced by induction of death receptor, Caspase-3 and BCLxs genes. Mechanistically, the DOX-Vit D-induced apoptogens were credited to the activation of p-JNK and p-p38 signaling pathway and the inhibition of proliferative proteins, p-Akt and p-mTOR. Our findings propose that DOX-Vit D suppressed the growth of MG63 cells by inducing apoptosis while inhibiting cell survival and proliferative signaling pathways. DOX-Vit D may serve as a novel drug delivery approach to potentiate the delivery of DOX into cancer cells.Canadian Institutes of Health Research [Grant 106665]U.S. National Cancer Institute [Grant R01CA173292
Recommended from our members
Chromatin establishes an immature version of neuronal protocadherin selection during the naive-to-primed conversion of pluripotent stem cells.
In the mammalian genome, the clustered protocadherin (cPCDH) locus provides a paradigm for stochastic gene expression with the potential to generate a unique cPCDH combination in every neuron. Here we report a chromatin-based mechanism that emerges during the transition from the naive to the primed states of cell pluripotency and reduces, by orders of magnitude, the combinatorial potential in the human cPCDH locus. This mechanism selectively increases the frequency of stochastic selection of a small subset of cPCDH genes after neuronal differentiation in monolayers, 10-month-old cortical organoids and engrafted cells in the spinal cords of rats. Signs of these frequent selections can be observed in the brain throughout fetal development and disappear after birth, except in conditions of delayed maturation such as Down's syndrome. We therefore propose that a pattern of limited cPCDH-gene expression diversity is maintained while human neurons still retain fetal-like levels of maturation
- …