6,628 research outputs found
Response inhibition is linked to emotional devaluation: behavioural and electrophysiological evidence
To study links between the inhibition of motor responses and emotional evaluation, we combined electrophysiological measures of prefrontal response inhibition with behavioural measures of affective evaluation. Participants first performed a Go-Nogo task in response to Asian and Caucasian faces (with race determining their Go or Nogo status), followed by a trustworthiness rating for each face. Faces previously seen as Nogo stimuli were rated as less trustworthy than previous Go stimuli. To study links between the efficiency of response inhibition in the Go-Nogo task and subsequent emotional evaluations, the Nogo N2 component was quantified separately for faces that were later judged to be high versus low in trustworthiness. Nogo N2 amplitudes were larger in response to low-rated as compared to high-rated faces, demonstrating that trial-by-trial variations in the efficiency of response inhibition triggered by Nogo faces, as measured by the Nogo N2 component, co-vary with their subsequent affective evaluation. These results suggest close links between inhibitory processes in top-down motor control and emotional responses
Scalable desktop grid system
Desktop grids are easy to install on large number of personal computers, which is a prerequisite for the spread of grid technology. Current desktop grids connect all PCs into a flat hierarchy, that is, all computers to a central server. SZTAKI Desktop Grid starts from a standalone desktop grid, as a building block. It is extended to include clusters displaying as single powerful PCs, while using their local resource management system. Such building blocks support overtaking additional tasks from other desktop grids, enabling the set-up of a hierarchy. Desktop grids with different owners thus can share resources, although only in a hierarchical structure. This brings desktop grids closer to other grid technologies where sharing resources by several users is the most important feature
PACS photometer calibration block analysis
The absolute stability of the PACS bolometer response over the entire mission
lifetime without applying any corrections is about 0.5% (standard deviation) or
about 8% peak-to-peak. This fantastic stability allows us to calibrate all
scientific measurements by a fixed and time-independent response file, without
using any information from the PACS internal calibration sources. However, the
analysis of calibration block observations revealed clear correlations of the
internal source signals with the evaporator temperature and a signal drift
during the first half hour after the cooler recycling. These effects are small,
but can be seen in repeated measurements of standard stars. From our analysis
we established corrections for both effects which push the stability of the
PACS bolometer response to about 0.2% (stdev) or 2% in the blue, 3% in the
green and 5% in the red channel (peak-to-peak). After both corrections we still
see a correlation of the signals with PACS FPU temperatures, possibly caused by
parasitic heat influences via the Kevlar wires which connect the bolometers
with the PACS Focal Plane Unit. No aging effect or degradation of the
photometric system during the mission lifetime has been found.Comment: 15 pages, accepted for publication in Experimental Astronom
Nova Cygni 2001/2 = V2275 Cyg
We present an analysis of low- and medium resolution spectra of the very fast
nova, Nova Cygni 2001/2 (V2275 Cyg) obtained at nine epochs in August,
September and October, 2001. The expansion velocity from hydrogen Balmer lines
is found to be 2100 km/s, although early H-alpha profile showed a weak feature
at -3500 km/s, too. The overall appearance of the optical spectrum is dominated
by broad lines of H, He and N, therefore, the star belongs to the ``He/N''
subclass of novae defined by Williams (1992). Interstellar lines and bands, as
well as BV photometry taken from the literature yielded to a fairly high
reddening of E(B-V)=1.0+/-0.1 mag. The visual light curve was used to deduce
M_V by the maximum magnitude versus rate of decline relationship. The resulting
parameters are: t_0=2452141.4(+0.1)(-0.5), t_2=2.9+/-0.5 days, t_3=7+/-1 days,
M_V=-9.7+/-0.7 mag. Adopting these parameters, the star lies between 3 kpc and
8 kpc from the Sun.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Determination of aflatoxin M1 in milk samples by an OWLS-based immunosensor
An immunoreaction-based method was investigated for the detection of aflatoxin M1 (AFM1), which is the hydroxylated metabolite of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1). This mycotoxin may be found in milk and milk products obtained from livestock that have ingested contaminated feed. Quantitative analysis of AFM1 was carried out using indirect (competitive) immunoassay method, which can be used for low weight molecules. The real-time measurement was done with Optical Waveguide Lightmode Spectroscopy (OWLS) technique. After the optimization of the chemical and biochemical parameters (determination of the optimal concentration of the immobilized AFM1-protein conjugate, determination of the AFM1 antibody content of the samples, etc.) real samples were also examined. Three kinds of milk sample preparation methods (filtration, centrifugation, size exclusion centrifugation) and two dilution rates (100 and 200 fold) were compared. The presented competitive immunoassay method showed the best results when 100 fold diluted filtered or centrifuged milk samples were examined. The dynamic measuring ranges for AFM1 were 0.001–0.1 ng ml−1 and 0.0005–0.01 ng ml−1, respectively
Teleportation: from probability distributions to quantum states
The role of the off-diagonal density matrix elements of the entangled pair is
investigated in quantum teleportation of a qbit. The dependence between them
and the off-diagonal elements of the teleported density matrix is shown to be
linear. In this way the ideal quantum teleportation is related to an entirely
classical communication protocol: the one-time pad cypher. The latter can be
regarded as the classical counterpart of Bennett's quantum teleportation
scheme. The quantum-to-classical transition is demonstrated on the statistics
of a gedankenexperiment.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in J. Phys. A (Math.
Gen.
Ageing as a price of cooperation and complexity: Self-organization of complex systems causes the ageing of constituent networks
The analysis of network topology and dynamics is increasingly used for the description of the structure, function and evolution of complex systems. Here we summarize key aspects of the evolvability and robustness of the hierarchical network-set of macromolecules, cells, organisms, and ecosystems. Listing the costs and benefits of cooperation as a necessary behaviour to build this network hierarchy, we outline the major hypothesis of the paper: the emergence of hierarchical complexity needs cooperation leading to the ageing of the constituent networks. Local cooperation in a stable environment may lead to over-optimization developing an ‘always-old’ network, which ages slowly, and dies in an apoptosis-like process. Global cooperation by exploring a rapidly changing environment may cause an occasional over-perturbation exhausting system-resources, causing rapid degradation, ageing and death of an otherwise ‘forever-young’ network in a necrosis-like process. Giving a number of examples we explain how local and global cooperation can both evoke and help successful ageing. Finally, we show how various forms of cooperation and consequent ageing emerge as key elements in all major steps of evolution from the formation of protocells to the establishment of the globalized, modern human society. Thus, ageing emerges as a price of complexity, which is going hand-in-hand with cooperation enhancing each other in a successful community
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