1,772 research outputs found
Motion-stereo mechanisms sensitive to inter-ocular phase
AbstractWe measured depth from interocular delay (The Pulfrich effect) using a dynamic random-dot pattern, consisting of a spatially-random noise field, the individual elements of which were sinusoidally-modulated in luminance over time. When an interocular phase difference in the flicker was introduced the display appeared to rotate in depth around a vertical axis like a transparent textured cylinder. The threshold phase lag was in the region of 5–10° in different observers, which translated into a non-constant, decreasing interocular delay (ms) as the flicker frequency was increased. We conclude that phase, not delay, is the critical parameter in determining the detection of depth. Threshold signal/noise ratios were measured at different delays to determine the optimum phase difference, which was found to be in the region 60–90°. However, delays centred around 180° were less detectable than those around zero, ruling out a quadrature input to the stereo-motion mechanisms. We show that depth-from-phase is a natural consequence of paired monocularly motion-direction sensitive neurones. Complex energy-detecting neurones are not required to explain the findings
A lower bound on the eccentric connectivity index of a graph
AbstractIn pharmaceutical drug design, an important tool is the prediction of physicochemical, pharmacological and toxicological properties of compounds directly from their structure. In this regard, the Wiener index, first defined in 1947, has been widely researched, both for its chemical applications and mathematical properties. Many other indices have since been considered, and in 1997, Sharma, Goswami and Madan introduced the eccentric connectivity index, which has been identified to give a high degree of predictability. If G is a connected graph with vertex set V, then the eccentric connectivity index of G, ξC(G), is defined as ∑v∈Vdeg(v)ec(v), where deg(v) is the degree of vertex v and ec(v) is its eccentricity. Several authors have determined extremal graphs, for various classes of graphs, for this index. We show that a known tight lower bound on the eccentric connectivity index for a tree T, in terms of order and diameter, is also valid for a general graph G, of given order and diameter
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Synaesthetic colours do not camouflage form in visual search
One of the major issues in synaesthesia research is to identify the level of processing involved in the formation of the subjective colours experienced by synaesthetes: are they perceptual phenomena or are they due to memory and association learning? To address this question, we tested whether the colours reported by a group of grapheme-colour synaesthetes (previously studied in an functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment) influenced them in a visual search task. As well as using a condition where synaesthetic colours should have aided visual search, we introduced a condition where the colours experienced by synaesthetes would be expected to make them worse than controls. We found no evidence for differences between synaesthetes and normal controls, either when colours should have helped them or where they should have hindered. We conclude that the colours reported by our population of synaesthetes are not equivalent to perceptual signals, but arise at a cognitive level where they are unable to affect visual search
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Wastewater Effluent for Power Plant Cooling
Bureau of Engineering Research, Center for Research in Water Resources, Texas Electric ServiceCenter for Water and the Environmen
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Linking hypotheses underlying Class A and Class B methods
Class A psychophysical observations are based on the linking hypothesis that perceptually distinguishable stimuli must correspond to different brain events. Class B observations are related to the appearance of stimuli not their discriminability. There is no clear linking hypothesis underlying Class B observations, but they are necessary for studying the effects of context on appearance, including a large class of phenomena known as “illusions.” Class B observations are necessarily measures of observer bias (Fechner’s “constant error”) as opposed to Class A measures of sensitivity (Fechner’s “variable error”). It is therefore important that Class B observations distinguish between response biases, decisional biases, and perceptual biases. This review argues that the commonly used method of single stimuli fails to do this, and that multiple-alternative forced choice (mAFC) methods can do a better job, particularly if combined with a roving pedestal
Sealed containers in Z
Physical means of securing information, such as sealed envelopes and scratch cards, can be used to achieve cryptographic objectives. Reasoning about this has so far been informal.
We give a model of distinguishable sealed envelopes in Z, exploring design decisions and further analysis and development of such models
Systems Analysis in Forestry and Forest Industries
The purpose of this book is to present a variety of articles revealing the state of the art of applications of systems analysis techniques to problems of the forest sector. Such applications cover a vast range of issues in forestry and the forest industry. They include the dynamics of the forest ecosystem, optimal forest management, the roundwood market, forest industrial strategy, regional and national forest sector policy as well as international trade in forest products. Forest industrial applications at mill level, such as optimal paper trimming, cutting, and production scheduling, are however, excluded
Analysis of pooled genome sequences from Djallonke and Sahelian Sheep of Ghana reveals co-localisation of regions of reduced heterozygosity with candidate genes for disease resistance and adaptation to a tropical environment
Background:
The Djallonke sheep is well adapted to harsh environmental conditions, and is relatively resistant to Haemonchosis and resilient to animal trypanosomiasis. The larger Sahelian sheep, which cohabit the same region, is less well adapted to these disease challenges. Haemonchosis and Trypanosomiasis collectively cost the worldwide animal industry billions of dollars in production losses annually.
Results:
Here, we separately sequenced and then pooled according to breed the genomes from five unrelated individuals from each of the Djallonke and Sahelian sheep breeds (sourced from Ghana), at greater than 22-fold combined coverage for each breed. A total of approximately 404 million (97%) and 343 million (97%) sequence reads from the Djallonke and Sahelian breeds respectively, were successfully mapped to the sheep reference genome Oar v3.1. We identified approximately 11.1 million and 10.9 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the Djallonke and Sahelian breeds, with approximately 15 and 16% respectively of these not previously reported in sheep. Multiple regions of reduced heterozygosity were also found; 70 co-localised within genomic regions harbouring genes that mediate disease resistance, immune response and adaptation in sheep or cattle. Thirty- three of the regions of reduced heterozygosity co-localised with previously reported genes for resistance to haemonchosis and trypanosomiasis.
Conclusions:
Our analyses suggest that these regions of reduced heterozygosity may be signatures of selection for these economically important diseases
Maturation Trends Suggestive of Rapid Evolution Preceded the Collapse of Northern Cod
Northern cod, comprising populations of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) off southern Labrador and eastern Newfoundland, supported major fisheries for hundreds of years. But in the late 1980s and early 1990s, northern cod underwent one of the worst collapses in the history of fisheries. The Canadian government closed the directed fishing for northern cod in July 1992, but even after a decade-long offshore moratorium, population sizes remain historically low. Here we show that, up until the moratorium, the life history of northern cod continually shifted towards maturation at earlier ages and smaller sizes. Because confounding effects of mortality changes and growth-mediated phenotypic plasticity are accounted for in our analyses, this finding strongly suggests fisheries-induced evolution of maturation patterns in the direction predicted by theory. We propose that fisheries managers could use the method described here as a tool to provide warning signals about changes in life history before more overt evidence of population decline becomes manifest
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