9,800 research outputs found
No evidence of dark matter in the solar neighborhood
We measured the surface mass density of the Galactic disk at the solar
position, up to 4 kpc from the plane,by means of the kinematics of ~400 thick
disk stars. The results match the expectations for the visible mass only, and
no dark matter is detected in the volume under analysis. The current models of
dark matter halo are excluded with a significance higher than 5sigma, unless a
highly prolate halo is assumed, very atypical in cold dark matter simulations.
The resulting lack of dark matter at the solar position challenges the current
models.Comment: Proceeding of the first binational Sochias-AAA meeting, held in San
Juan, Argentin
The structures underlying soliton solutions in integrable hierarchies
We point out that a common feature of integrable hierarchies presenting
soliton solutions is the existence of some special ``vacuum solutions'' such
that the Lax operators evaluated on them, lie in some abelian subalgebra of the
associated Kac-Moody algebra. The soliton solutions are constructed out of
those ``vacuum solitons'' by the dressing transformation procedure.Comment: Talk given at the I Latin American Symposium on High Energy Physics,
I SILAFAE, Merida, Mexico, November/96, 5 pages, LaTeX, needs aipproc.tex,
aipproc.sty, aipproc.cls, available from
ftp://ftp.aip.org/ems/tex/macros/proceedings/6x9
Functional near-infrared spectroscopy in the neuropsychological assessment of spatial memory: A systematic review; 35123299
Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is a non-invasive optical imaging technique that employs near-infrared light to measure cortical brain oxygenation. The use of fNIRS has increased exponentially in recent years. Spatial memory is defined as the ability to learn and use spatial information. This neuropsychological process is constantly used in our daily lives and can be measured by fNIRS but no research has reviewed whether this technique can be useful in the neuropsychological assessment of spatial memory. This study aimed to review empirical work on the use of fNIRS in the neuropsychological assessment of human spatial memory. We used four databases: PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus and Web of Science, and a total of 18 articles were found to be eligible. Most of the articles assessed spatial or visuospatial working memory with a predominance in computer-based tasks, used fNIRS equipment of 16 channels and mainly measured the prefrontal cortex (PFC). The studies analysed found linear or quadratic relationships between working memory load and PFC activity, greater activation of PFC activity and worse behavioural results in healthy older people in comparison with healthy adults, and hyperactivation of PFC as a form of compensation in clinical samples. We conclude that fNIRS is compatible with the standard neuropsychological assessment of spatial memory, making it possible to complement behavioural results with data of cortical functional activity. © 202
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