830 research outputs found
Artificial Intelligence as a Means to Moral Enhancement
This paper critically assesses the possibility of moral enhancement with ambient intelligence technologies and artiïŹcial intelligence presented in Savulescu and Maslen (2015). The main problem with their proposal is that it is not robust enough to play a normative role in usersâ behavior. A more promising approach, and the one presented in the paper, relies on an artiïŹ-cial moral reasoning engine, which is designed to present its users with moral arguments grounded in ïŹrst-order normative theories, such as Kantianism or utilitarianism, that reason-responsive people can be persuaded by. This proposal can play a normative role and it is also a more promising avenue towards moral enhancement. It is more promising because such a system can be designed to take advantage of the sometimes undue trust that people put in automated technologies. We could therefore expect a well-designed moral reasoner system to be able to persuade people that may not be persuaded by similar arguments from other people. So, all things considered, there is hope in artiïŹcial intelli-gence for moral enhancement, but not in artiïŹcial intelligence that relies solely on ambient intelligence technologies
Vorticity Banding During the Lamellar-to-Onion Transition in a Lyotropic Surfactant Solution in Shear Flow
We report on the rheology of a lamellar lyotropic surfactant solution
(SDS/dodecane/pentanol/water), and identify a discontinuous transition between
two shear thinning regimes which correspond to the low stress lamellar phase
and the more viscous shear induced multi-lamellar vesicle, or ``onion'' phase.
We study in detail the flow curve, stress as a function of shear rate, during
the transition region, and present evidence that the region consists of a shear
banded phase where the material has macroscopically separated into bands of
lamellae and onions stacked in the vorticity direction. We infer very slow and
irregular transformations from lamellae to onions as the stress is increased
through the two phase region, and identify distinct events consistent with the
nucleation of small fractions of onions that coexist with sheared lamellae.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Experimental infection of Foxes with European bat Lyssaviruses type-1 and 2
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Since 1954, there have been in excess of 800 cases of rabies as a result of European Bat <it>Lyssaviruses </it>types 1 and 2 (EBLV-1, EBLV-2) infection, mainly in Serotine and Myotis bats respectively. These viruses have rarely been reported to infect humans and terrestrial mammals, as the only exceptions are sheep in Denmark, a stone marten in Germany and a cat in France. The purpose of this study was to investigate the susceptibility of foxes to EBLVs using silver foxes (<it>Vulpes vulpes</it>) as a model.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our experimental studies have shown that the susceptibility of foxes to EBLVs is low by the intramuscular (IM) route, however, animals were sensitive to intracranial (IC) inoculation. Mortality was 100% for both EBLV-1 (~4.5 logs) and EBLV-2 (~3.0 logs) delivered by the IC route. Virus dissemination and inflammatory infiltrate in the brain were demonstrated but virus specific neutralising antibody (VNA) was limited (log(ED<sub>50</sub>) = 0.24â2.23 and 0.95â2.39 respectively for specific EBLV-1 and EBLV-2). Foxes were also susceptible, at a low level, to peripheral (IM) infection (~3.0 logs) with EBLV-1 but not EBLV-2. Three out of 21 (14.3%) foxes developed clinical signs between 14 and 24 days post-EBLV-1 infection. None of the animals given EBLV-2 developed clinical disease.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These data suggest that the chance of a EBLV spill-over from bat to fox is low, but with a greater probability for EBLV-1 than for EBLV-2 and that foxes seem to be able to clear the virus before it reaches the brain and cause a lethal infection.</p
Sensory supplementation system based on electrotactile tongue biofeedback of head position for balance control
The present study aimed at investigating the effects of an artificial head
position-based tongue-placed electrotactile biofeedback on postural control
during quiet standing under different somatosensory conditions from the support
surface. Eight young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible
with their eyes closed on two Firm and Foam support surface conditions executed
in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. In the Foam condition, a
6-cm thick foam support surface was placed under the subjects' feet to alter
the quality and/or quantity of somatosensory information at the plantar sole
and the ankle. The underlying principle of the biofeedback consisted of
providing supplementary information about the head orientation with respect to
gravitational vertical through electrical stimulation of the tongue. Centre of
foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Larger
CoP displacements were observed in the Foam than Firm conditions in the two
conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Interestingly, this destabilizing
effect was less accentuated in the Biofeedback than No-biofeedback condition.
In accordance with the sensory re-weighting hypothesis for balance control, the
present findings evidence that the availability of the central nervous system
to integrate an artificial head orientation information delivered through
electrical stimulation of the tongue to limit the postural perturbation induced
by alteration of somatosensory input from the support surface
Rabies Postexposure Prophylaxis, Marseille, France, 1994â2005
The administration of human rabies postexposure prophylaxis near Marseille (southern France) has changed since the eradication of terrestrial mammal rabies in 2001. Most injuries were associated with indigenous dogs; rabies vaccine was overprescribed. We suggest that the World Health Organization guidelines be adapted for countries free of terrestrial mammal rabies
Interpretation of hyperchromic nerve cells relative significance of the type of fixative used, of the osmolarity of the cytoplasm and the surrounding fluid in the production of cell shrinkage
No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/49986/1/901210110_ftp.pd
Evolution within a given virulence phenotype (pathotype) is driven by changes in aggressiveness: a case study of French wheat leaf rust populations
Plant pathogens are constantly evolving and adapting to their environment, including their host. Virulence alleles emerge, and then increase, and sometimes decrease in frequency within pathogen populations in response to the fluctuating selection pressures imposed by the deployment of resistance genes. In some cases, these strong selection pressures cannot fully explain the evolution observed in pathogen populations. A previous study on the French population of Puccinia triticina, the causal agent of wheat leaf rust, showed that two major pathotypes â groups of isolates with a particular combination of virulences â predominated but then declined over the 2005-2016 period. The relative dynamics and the domination of these two pathotypes â 166 317 0 and 106 314 0 â, relative to the other pathotypes present in the population at a low frequency although compatible, i.e. virulent on several varieties deployed, could not be explained solely by the frequency of Lr genes in the landscape. Within these two pathotypes, we identified two main genotypes that emerged in succession. We assessed three components of aggressiveness â infection efficiency, latency period and sporulation capacity â for 44 isolates representative of the four P. triticina pathotype-genotype combinations. We showed, for both pathotypes, that the more recent genotypes were more aggressive than the older ones. Our findings were highly consistent for the various components of aggressiveness for pathotype 166 317 0 grown on Michigan Amber â a ânaiveâ cultivar never grown in the landscape â or on Apache â a âneutralâ cultivar, which does not affect the pathotype frequency in the landscape and therefore was postulated to have no or minor selection effect on the population composition. For pathotype 106 314 0, the most recent genotype had a shorter latency period on several of the cultivars most frequently grown in the landscape, but not on âneutralâ and ânaiveâ cultivars. We conclude that the quantitative components of aggressiveness can be significant drivers of evolution in pathogen populations. A gain in aggressiveness stopped the decline in frequency of a pathotype, and subsequently allowed an increase in frequency of this pathotype in the pathogen population, providing evidence that adaptation to a changing varietal landscape not only affects virulence but can also lead to changes in aggressiveness
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