7,226 research outputs found
Spherical harmonic decomposition applied to spatial-temporal analysis of human high-density EEG
We demonstrate an application of spherical harmonic decomposition to analysis
of the human electroencephalogram (EEG). We implement two methods and discuss
issues specific to analysis of hemispherical, irregularly sampled data.
Performance of the methods and spatial sampling requirements are quantified
using simulated data. The analysis is applied to experimental EEG data,
confirming earlier reports of an approximate frequency-wavenumber relationship
in some bands.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. E, uses APS RevTeX
style
Responses to Two Weight Training Protocols--One with Integrated High-Intensity Interval Training
Purpose: To examine the physiological effects (energy expenditure, oxygen consumption [VO2], heart rate [HR], blood lactate [BLa-], excess post-exercise oxygen consumption [EPOC]) and perception (rating of perceived exertion [RPE] and enjoyment) of the combination of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) exercise with conventional circuit weight training (CWT; nine consecutive exercises)(CWIT) compared to HIIT exercise with tri-set training (3 three-exercise mini-circuits)(TRIIT). Methods: Fourteen trained men completed two separate resistance exercise protocols. CWIT consisted of six HIIT bouts prior to three rounds of a nine exercise CWT protocol. TRIIT consisted of three rounds of three mini-circuits consisting of three exercises with the integration of three HIIT bouts between the first and second mini-circuits and second and third mini-circuits. Both protocols were matched for exercise load and time. VO2 was measured via indirect calorimetry, BLa- was measured via portable lactate analyzer, exertion was measured via Borg scale (6-20) and enjoyment was measured via Physical Activity Enjoyment Scale (PAES). Differences between CWIT and TRIIT protocols were analyzed as group means by using paired t-tests and as protocol by time using a 2 x 5 repeated measures ANOVA (SPSS v22.0). Results: Average values for CWIT and TRIIT were similar (p\u3e.05) for VO2, HR and RPE. Energy expenditure was significantly higher during the CWIT compared to the TRIIT protocol, as well as EPOC. BLa- was significantly higher at all post-exercise time points (immediate, 5 min, 10 min and 20 min post-exercise) following the CWIT compared to the TRIIT protocol. Both protocols were considered enjoyable according to the PAES. Conclusions: Performing HIIT prior to CWT elicits higher metabolic perturbation in comparison to the integration of HIIT with mini-circuits. CWIT also required greater energy requirements during and after the protocol compared to TRIIT. This may be useful for fitness trainers when determining how to implement HIIT into a CWT workout
The Micro Slit Gas Detector
We describe the first tests with a new proportional gas detector. Its
geometry consists in slits opened in a copper metallized kapton foil with 30
micron anode strips suspended in these openings. In this way the multiplication
process is similar to a standard MSGC. The fundamental difference is the
absence of an insulating substrate around the anode. Also the material budget
is significantly reduced, and the problems related to charging-up or
polarization are removed. Ageing properties of this detector are under study.Comment: 13 pages tex file, 10 figures ep
Black hole - D-brane correspondence: An example
We explore the connection between D-branes and black holes in one particular
case: a -brane compactified to four dimensions on . Using the
-brane boundary state description we show the equivalence with a double
extremal N=2 black hole solution of four dimensional supergravity.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX. Contribution by C. Nunez to the conference Quantum
Gravity in the Southern Cone, Bariloche 7-10 January 1998; to appear in the
proceeding
Model of Low-pass Filtering of Local Field Potentials in Brain Tissue
Local field potentials (LFPs) are routinely measured experimentally in brain
tissue, and exhibit strong low-pass frequency filtering properties, with high
frequencies (such as action potentials) being visible only at very short
distances (10~) from the recording electrode. Understanding
this filtering is crucial to relate LFP signals with neuronal activity, but not
much is known about the exact mechanisms underlying this low-pass filtering. In
this paper, we investigate a possible biophysical mechanism for the low-pass
filtering properties of LFPs. We investigate the propagation of electric fields
and its frequency dependence close to the current source, i.e. at length scales
in the order of average interneuronal distance. We take into account the
presence of a high density of cellular membranes around current sources, such
as glial cells. By considering them as passive cells, we show that under the
influence of the electric source field, they respond by polarisation, i.e.,
creation of an induced field. Because of the finite velocity of ionic charge
movement, this polarization will not be instantaneous. Consequently, the
induced electric field will be frequency-dependent, and much reduced for high
frequencies. Our model establishes that with respect to frequency attenuation
properties, this situation is analogous to an equivalent RC-circuit, or better
a system of coupled RC-circuits. We present a number of numerical simulations
of induced electric field for biologically realistic values of parameters, and
show this frequency filtering effect as well as the attenuation of
extracellular potentials with distance. We suggest that induced electric fields
in passive cells surrounding neurons is the physical origin of frequency
filtering properties of LFPs.Comment: 10 figs, revised tex file and revised fig
Absence of a structural transition up to 40 Gpa in MgB2 and the relevance of magnesium non-stoichiometry
We report measurements on MgB2 up to ~40GPa. Increasing pressure yields a
monotonous decrease of the lattice parameters and of the c/a ratio, but no
structural transition down to parameters smaller than those of AlB2. The
transition superconducting temperature also decreases with temperature in a
sample dependent way. The results are explained by an increase of the filling
of the 2D pxy bands with pressure, the Mg stoichiometry determining the
starting position of the Fermi level. Our measurements indicate that these hole
bands are the relevant ones for superconductivity.Comment: submitted March 9th 2001, PRB accepte
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