293 research outputs found
The jungle of methods for evaluating phenotypic and phylogenetic structure of communities
13 páginas, 4 figuras, 4 tablas.The way communities are assembled is an old ecological question currently experiencing renewed interest thanks to the recent advances in molecular biology and phylogenetics. The generality of these new methods has allowed us to understand the structure of communities of organisms from different kingdoms and at different scales. Concomitant with this growing interest, new methods, metrics, terms, and software have appeared that independently solve similar questions, but with different approaches. Here we provide a unifying framework on methods for community structure based on the relationships between four key concepts: phylogeny, phenotype, environment, and co-occurrence. The different approaches are based on different community representations of traits, the phylogenetic relationships of species in the community, or species occurrence along the environmental gradients. We finally provide insights on future directions of this emerging discipline.We thank María Clara Castellanos, Steve Kembel, Evan Weiher, and three anonymous referees for helpful comments and suggestions. This work has been developed under the framework of the Spanish projects VIRRA (CGL2009-12048/BOS) and VAMPIRO(CGL2008-05289-C02-01).Peer reviewe
Анализ методов ограничения водопритоков на месторождениях Западной Сибири
Объектом исследования являются добывающие скважины, на которых применяются технологии по ограничению водопритоков. Цель работы - оценить эффективность методов ограничения водопритоков на нефтяных месторождениях Западной Сибири.The object of the study are producing wells, which use technologies to limit water inflows. The aim of the work is to evaluate the effectiveness of methods for limiting water inflows in oil fields in Western Siberia
The five-boson dynamics
The Alt-Grassberger-Sandhas equations for the five-body problem are solved for the case of the driving two-body potentials limited to s-waves. The separable pole expansion method is employed to convert the equations into the effective quasi-two-body form. Numerical results are presented for five identical bosons. Accuracy of the separable expansion is investigated. It is shown that both in (1+4) and (2+3) fragmentation, the corresponding eigenvalues decrease rather rapidly, what, combined with the alternation of their signs, leads to rather good convergence of the results
Проектирование теплообменного аппарата подогрева гидроксида натрия
Объектом исследования является кожухотрубчатый теплообменник.
Цель работы – Разработка теплообменного аппарата подогрева гидроксида натрия. В ходе выполнения работы были произведены все необходимые расчеты для конструирования аппарата, определены его размеры и основные механические характеристики. Основные конструктивные, технологические и технико-эксплуатационные характеристики: Аппарат диаметром 600 мм, толщина стенки 8 мм, длина труб 3000 мм. Степень внедрения: подогрев гидроксида натрия. Область применения: химическая промышленность.The object of the study is a shell-and-tube heat exchanger. The purpose of the work is to develop a heat exchanger for heating sodium hydroxide. In the course of the work, all the necessary calculations were made for the design of the device, its dimensions and basic mechanical characteristics were determined. The main design, technological and technical-operational characteristics: The device with a diameter of 600 mm, wall thickness of 8 mm, pipe length of 3000 mm. Degree of introduction: heating of sodium hydroxide. Scope of application: chemical industry
Effects of ecstasy/polydrug use on memory for associative information
Rationale
Associative learning underpins behaviours that are fundamental to the everyday functioning of the individual. Evidence pointing to learning deficits in recreational drug users merits further examination.
Objectives
A word pair learning task was administered to examine associative learning processes in ecstasy/polydrug users.
Methods
After assignment to either single or divided attention conditions, 44 ecstasy/polydrug users and 48 non-users were presented with 80 word pairs at encoding. Following this, four types of stimuli were presented at the recognition phase: the words as originally paired (old pairs), previously presented words in different pairings (conjunction pairs), old words paired with new words, and pairs of new words (not presented previously). The task was to identify which of the stimuli were intact old pairs.
Results
Ecstasy/ploydrug users produced significantly more false-positive responses overall compared to non-users. Increased long-term frequency of ecstasy use was positively associated with the propensity to produce false-positive responses. It was also associated with a more liberal signal detection theory decision criterion value. Measures of long term and recent cannabis use were also associated with these same word pair learning outcome measures. Conjunction word pairs, irrespective of drug use, generated the highest level of false-positive responses and significantly more false-positive responses were made in the divided attention condition compared to the single attention condition.
Conclusions
Overall, the results suggest that long-term ecstasy exposure may induce a deficit in associative learning and this may be in part a consequence of users adopting a more liberal decision criterion value
Emotional cues enhance the attentional effects on spatial and temporal resolution
In the present study, we demonstrated that the emotional significance of a spatial cue enhances the effect of covert attention on spatial and temporal resolution (i.e., our ability to discriminate small spatial details and fast temporal flicker). Our results indicated that fearful face cues, as compared with neutral face cues, enhanced the attentional benefits in spatial resolution but also enhanced the attentional deficits in temporal resolution. Furthermore, we observed that the overall magnitudes of individuals’ attentional effects correlated strongly with the magnitude of the emotion × attention interaction effect. Combined, these findings provide strong support for the idea that emotion enhances the strength of a cue’s attentional response
The effects of acute tryptophan depletion on costly information sampling: impulsivity or aversive processing?
RATIONALE: The neurotransmitter serotonin (5-HT) has been implicated in both aversive processing and impulsivity. Reconciling these accounts, recent studies have demonstrated that 5-HT is important for punishment-induced behavioural inhibition. These studies focused on situations where actions lead directly to punishments. However, decision-making often involves making tradeoffs between small 'local' costs and larger 'global' losses. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to distinguish whether 5-HT promotes avoidance of local losses, global losses, or both, in contrast to an overall effect on reflection impulsivity. We further examined the influence of individual differences in sub-clinical depression, anxiety and impulsivity on global and local loss avoidance. METHODS: Healthy volunteers (N = 21) underwent an acute tryptophan depletion procedure in a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design. We measured global and local loss avoidance in a decision-making task where subjects could sample information at a small cost to avoid making incorrect decisions, which resulted in large losses. RESULTS: Tryptophan depletion removed the suppressive effects of small local costs on information sampling behaviour. Sub-clinical depressive symptoms produced effects on information sampling similar to (but independent from) those of tryptophan depletion. Dispositional anxiety was related to global loss avoidance. However, trait impulsivity was unrelated to information sampling. CONCLUSIONS: The current findings are consistent with recent theoretical work that characterises 5-HT as pruning a tree of potential decisions, eliminating options expected to lead to aversive outcomes. Our results extend this account by proposing that 5-HT promotes reflexive avoidance of relatively immediate aversive outcomes, potentially at the expense of more globally construed future losses
Careers in ecstasy use: do ecstasy users cease of their own accord? Implications for intervention development
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Ecstasy (MDMA, 3, 4-methylenodioxymethamphetamine) use is widespread in the Netherlands, with a lifetime prevalence of 4.3%, and two-thirds of dance party visitors being ecstasy users. However, research into Dutch ecstasy use patterns is lacking. In addition, recent studies suggest that ecstasy users cease their use automatically, which implies that interventions would do better to better focus on the promotion of harm reduction strategies than on inducing cessation. The current study addresses this process of ecstasy cessation.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>32 participants from the Dutch dance scene were interviewed, and the results were systematically analysed using NVivo.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Most ecstasy users had started to use out of curiosity. During use, users applied a host of harm reduction strategies, albeit inconsistently and sometimes incorrectly. Most users appeared to cease ecstasy use automatically because of loss of interest or changing life circumstances (e.g. a new job or relationship).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>It appears that cessation of ecstasy use is largely determined by environmental variables and not by health concerns. This supports the idea that health promotion resources are better spent in trying to promote consistent and correct application of harm reduction practices than in trying to induce cessation.</p
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