1,252 research outputs found

    Sympatric song variant in mountain chickadees Poecile gambeli does not reduce aggression from black-capped chickadees Poecile atricapillus

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    When habitats overlap and species compete for resources, negative interactions frequently occur. Character displacement in the form of behavioural, social or morphological divergences between closely related species can act to reduce negative interactions and often arise in regions of geographic overlap. Mountain chickadees  Poecile gambeli have an altered song structure in regions of geographic overlap with the behaviourally dominant black capped chickadee Poecile atricapillus. Similar to European and Asian tits, altered song in mountain chickadees  may decrease aggression from black-capped chickadees. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a playback study in Prince George, BC, Canada, to examine how black-capped chickadees responded to the songs of mountain chickadees recorded in regions where the two species were either sympatric or allopatric. We used principal  component analysis (PCA) to collapse behavioural response variables into a single ‘approach’ variable and a single ‘vocalisation’ variable. We then used mixed-model analysis to determine whether there was a difference in approach or vocalisation response to the two types of mountain chickadee songs (allopatric  songs and variant sympatric songs). Black-capped chickadees responded with equal intensity to both types of mountain chickadee songs, suggesting that the variant mountain chickadee songs from regions of sympatry with black-capped chickadees do not reduce heterospecific aggression. To our knowledge, this is the only instance of a character shift unassociated with reduced aggression in the family Paridae and raises interesting questions about the selective pressures leading to the evolution of this song divergence

    Local phase measurements of light in a one-dimensional photonic crystal

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    For the first time the local optical phase evolution in and around a small, o­ne-dimensional photonic crystal has been visualized with a heterodyne interferometric photon scanning tunnelling microscope. The measurements show an exponential decay of the optical intensity inside the crystal, which consists of a periodic array of subwavelength air rods fabricated in a conventional ridge waveguide. In addition it is found that the introduction of the air rods has a counter- intuitive effect o­n the phase development inside the structure. The heterodyne detection scheme allows the detection of low- intensity scattered wanes. In the vicinity of the scattering air rods phase singularities are found with a topological charge of plus or minus o­n

    Amplitude and phase evolution of optical fields inside periodic photonic structures

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    Optical amplitude distributions of light inside periodic photonic structures are visualized with subwavelength resolution. In addition, using a phase-sensitive photon scanning tunneling microscope, we simultaneously map the phase evolution of light. Two different structures, which consist of a ridge wave-guide containing periodic arrays of nanometer scale features, are investigated. We determine the wavelength dependence of the exponential decay rate inside the periodic arrays. Furthermore, various interference patterns are observed, which we interpret as interference between light reflected by the substrate and light inside the waveguide. The phase information obtained reveals scattering phenomena around the periodic array, which gives rise to phase jumps and phase singularities. Locally around the air rods, we observe an unexpected change in effective refractive index, a possible indication for anomalous dispersion resulting from the periodicity of the array

    Preserving the Foundation of Liberty

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    Tungsten resonance integrals and Doppler coefficients Third quarterly report, Jan. - Mar. 1966

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    Reactivities, Doppler coefficients, and resonance integrals for tungsten isotope

    Compliance with guidelines is related to better local recurrence-free survival in ductal carcinoma in situ

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    The aim was to study the effect of compliance with guidelines on local recurrence (LR)-free survival in patients treated for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). From January 1992 to December 2003, 251 consecutive patients had been treated for DCIS in two hospitals in the North Netherlands. Every case in this two-hospital sample was reviewed in retrospect for its clinical and pathological parameters. It was determined whether treatment had been carried out according to clinical guidelines, and outcomes in follow-up were assessed. In addition, all patients treated for DCIS in this region (n=1389) were studied regarding clinical parameters, in order to determine whether the two-hospital sample was representative of the entire region. In the two-hospital sample, 31.4% (n=79) of the patients had not been treated according to the guidelines. Positive margins were associated with LR (hazard ratio (HR)=4.790, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.696–13.531). Breast-conserving surgery and deviation from the guidelines were independent predictors of LR (HR=7.842, 95% CI 2.126–28.926; HR=2.778, 95% CI 0.982–6.781, respectively). Although the guidelines changed over time, time was not a significant factor in predicting LRs (HR=1.254, 95% CI 0.272–5.776 for time period 1992–1995 and HR=1.976, 95% CI 0.526–7.421 for time period 1996–1999). Clinical guidelines for the treatment of patients with DCIS have been developed and updated from existing literature and best evidence. Compliance with the guidelines was an independent predictor of disease-free survival. These findings support the application of guidelines in the treatment of DCIS

    Scale-free random branching tree in supercritical phase

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    We study the size and the lifetime distributions of scale-free random branching tree in which kk branches are generated from a node at each time step with probability qkkγq_k\sim k^{-\gamma}. In particular, we focus on finite-size trees in a supercritical phase, where the mean branching number C=kkqkC=\sum_k k q_k is larger than 1. The tree-size distribution p(s)p(s) exhibits a crossover behavior when 2<γ<32 < \gamma < 3; A characteristic tree size scs_c exists such that for sscs \ll s_c, p(s)sγ/(γ1)p(s)\sim s^{-\gamma/(\gamma-1)} and for sscs \gg s_c, p(s)s3/2exp(s/sc)p(s)\sim s^{-3/2}\exp(-s/s_c), where scs_c scales as (C1)(γ1)/(γ2)\sim (C-1)^{-(\gamma-1)/(\gamma-2)}. For γ>3\gamma > 3, it follows the conventional mean-field solution, p(s)s3/2exp(s/sc)p(s)\sim s^{-3/2}\exp(-s/s_c) with sc(C1)2s_c\sim (C-1)^{-2}. The lifetime distribution is also derived. It behaves as (t)t(γ1)/(γ2)\ell(t)\sim t^{-(\gamma-1)/(\gamma-2)} for 2<γ<32 < \gamma < 3, and t2\sim t^{-2} for γ>3\gamma > 3 when branching step ttc(C1)1t \ll t_c \sim (C-1)^{-1}, and (t)exp(t/tc)\ell(t)\sim \exp(-t/t_c) for all γ>2\gamma > 2 when ttct \gg t_c. The analytic solutions are corroborated by numerical results.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure

    Split-belt walking:An experience that is hard to forget

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    BACKGROUND. The common paradigm to study the adaptability of human gait is split-belt walking. Short-term savings (minutes to days) of split-belt adaptation have been widely studied to gain knowledge in locomotor learning but reports on long-term savings are limited. Here, we studied whether after a prolonged inter-exposure interval (three weeks), the newly acquired locomotor pattern is subject to forgetting or that the pattern is saved in long-term locomotor memory. RESEARCH QUESTION. Can savings of adaptation to split-belt walking remain after a prolonged interexposure interval of three weeks? METHODS. Fourteen healthy adults participated in a single tenminute adaptation session to split-belt walking and five-minute washout to tied-belt walking. They received no training after the first exposure and returned to the laboratory exactly three weeks later for the second exposure. To identify the adaptation trends and quantify saving parameters we used Singular Spectrum Analysis, a non-parametric, data-driven approach. We identified trends in step length asymmetry and double support asymmetry, and calculated the adaptation volume (reduction in asymmetry over the course of adaptation), and the plateau time (time required for the trend to level off). RESULTS. At the second exposure after three weeks, we found substantial savings in adaptation for step length asymmetry volume (61.6% – 67.6% decrease) and plateau time (76.3% decrease). No differences were found during washout or in double support asymmetry. SIGNIFICANCE. This study shows that able-bodied individuals retain savings of split-belt adaptation over a three-week period, which indicates that only naïve split-belt walkers should be included in split-belt adaptation studies, as previous experience to split-belt walking will not be washed out, even after a prolonged period. In future research, these results can be compared with long-term savings in patient groups, to gain insight into factors underlying (un)successful gait training in rehabilitation
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