2,956 research outputs found

    Sense of Self in Baby Chimpanzees

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    Philippe Rochat and his colleague tentatively proposed that young infants' propensity to engage in self-perception and systematic exploration of the perceptual consequences of their own action plays and is probably at the origin of an early sense of self: the ecological self. Rochat and Hespos (1997) reported that neonates discriminate between external and self-stimulation. Neonate tended to display significantly more rooting responses (i.e., head turn towards the stimulation with mouth open and tonguing) following external compared to self-stimulation. Rochat et al. (1998) also reported that 2-month-olds showed clear sign of modulation of their oral activity on the pacifier as a function of analog versus non-analog condition. Rochat and his colleague concluded that these observations are interpreted as evidence of self-exploration and the emergence of a sense of self-agency by 2-month-olds. We tried to replicate these findings in infant chimpanzees. We observed rooting responses of three baby chimpanzees in two condition, self-stimulation and external stimulation. In external stimulation condition, the index finger of the experimenter or small stick touched one of the infant's cheeks. In self-stimulation condition, the experimenter took infant's hand and touched his or her cheek with their fingers. In Rochat and Hespos, they recorded and analyzed several measures such as state, head movement, mouth activity and so on. How ever, we analyzed only mouth activities tentatively. We found infant chimpanzees tended to show more rooting responses following external stimulation compared to self-stimulation as well as human infants. We also carried out sucking experiment with two baby chimpanzees. The experimenter held the pacifier and put the artificial nipple into the infant's mouth. A session started when the infant take the nipple inside the his or her mouth. Auditory stimulus, which was a complex tone comprised of six harmonics with equal intensity, was given to the chimpanzee according to the test condition during their sucking. There were four test conditions and each condition consisted with three types of feedback as follows: 1) silent baseline, contingent, and steady, 2) contingent baseline, 1-sec delay, and 3-sec delay, 3) contingent baseline, 6-sec delay, and 12-sec delay, 4) contingent baseline, 1/2 efficiency, and 1/4 efficiency. In test 1, one infant chimpanzee showed decrease of the minimum pressure of sucking in the contingent condition. In test 2, one subject showed shorter intervals of sucking in 3-sec delay condition. This seems to be similar to human infant's. We may be able to postulate ecological self in baby chimpanzees according to the self-exploration. In test 3 and 4, we did not obtain any effects of stimulus conditions. Results of these studies. These studies were conducted as the parts of the chimpanzee development project in Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, organized by Professor Tetsuro Matsuzawa

    Monochromatic Medical Radiography by Particle Bombardment II

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    開始ページ、終了ページ: 冊子体のページ付

    Status of Multi-Ring High-Resolution Positron Emission Tomograph System PT931

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    開始ページ、終了ページ: 冊子体のページ付

    Habitat evaluation for the endangered fish species Lefua echigonia in the Yagawa River, Japan

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    This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Ecohydraulics on 2019, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/24705357.2019.1614886[EN] Spring-fed streams in Tokyo are important habitats for various aquatic species, whereas urbanization as well as introduction of invasive species is threatening the sustainability of such aquatic ecosystems. This study applies the System for Environmental Flow Analysis (SEFA) in a small urban river in Tokyo to assess the dynamics of the suitable habitats for the endangered freshwater fish Lefua echigonia (Jordan and Richardson 1907). A set of Habitat Suitability Curves (HSCs) for water depth, velocity and substrate was developed to evaluate the suitable habitats. The habitat assessment indicated that the Area Weighted Suitability (AWS) reached the maximum at 0.02 m3/s, which is close to the base flow of the target river; a gradual decrease in AWS was observed for higher flows. The temporal distribution of AWS, during forty-one consecutive months, showed that, on average, the best habitat conditions for adult L. echigonia occur during the period between January and July, whereas the worst situation occurs during the period between August and December. This work presents information and tools for instream habitat analysis that should help managers to conserve this aquatic species and prioritize actions to further rehabilitate urban rivers, using L. echigonia as a case study.We thank Dr. Masaomi Kimura, Masato Kondo, Taichi Kasahara, and Akihiro Tanaka for their support in the field survey. This study was made in part with the support of the JSPS Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Grant number: 17H03886 and 17H04631) and the PROMOE grant for Marina de Miguel Gallo, funded by the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, between April and August 2018.De-Miguel-Gallo, M.; Martinez-Capel, F.; Muñoz Mas, R.; Aihara, S.; Matsuzawa, Y.; Fukuda, S. (2019). Habitat evaluation for the endangered fish species Lefua echigonia in the Yagawa River, Japan. Journal of Ecohydraulics. 4(2):147-157. https://doi.org/10.1080/24705357.2019.1614886S14715742Bovee KD, Lamb BL, Bartholow JM, Stalnaker CB, Taylor J, Henriksen J. 1998. Stream habitat analysis using the instream flow incremental methodology. U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division Information and Technology Report USGS/BRD-1998-0004. Fort Collins: U.S. Geological Survey.Bovee KD. 1986. Development and evaluation of habitat suitability criteria for use in the instream flow incremental methodology. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report, 86/7.Lambert TR. 1994. Evaluation of factors causing variability in habitat suitability criteria for Sierra Nevada trout. Environment, Health & Safety. Report 009.4-94.5. San Francisco: Pacific Gas and Electric Company.Martínez-Capel F. 2000. Preferencias de microhábitat de Barbus bocagei, Chondrostoma polylepis y Leuciscus pyrenaicus en la cuenca del río Tajo [PhD Dissertation]. Madrid: Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. (In Spanish)Matsuzawa Y, Aoki K, Fukuda S. 2017a. Critical swimming speed of Lefua echigonia in a laboratory open channel. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Irrigation Drainage and Reclamation Engineering (JSIDRE). ID: 4-30. Tokyo: Japanese Society of Irrigation Drainage and Reclamation Engineering.Matsuzawa Y, Ohira M, Fukuda S. 2017b. Microhabitat Modelling for an Endangered Freshwater Fish, Lefua Echigonia, in a Spring-Fed Urban Stream. E-Proceedings of the 37th IAHR World Congress. Kuala Lumpur: International Association for Hydro-environment Research and Engineering (IAHR).Poff NL. 2018. Beyond the natural flow regime? Broadening the hydro-ecological foundation to meet environmental flows challenges in a non-stationary world. Freshwater Biol. 63(8):1011–1021
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