8,844 research outputs found

    Prehension and perception of size in left visual neglect

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    Right hemisphere damaged patients with and without left visual neglect, and age-matched controls had objects of various sizes presented within left or right body hemispace. Subjects were asked to estimate the objects’ sizes or to reach out and grasp them, in order to assess visual size processing in perceptual-experiential and action-based contexts respectively. No impairments of size processing were detected in the prehension performance of the neglect patients but a generalised slowing of movement was observed, associated with an extended deceleration phase. Additionally both patient groups reached maximum grip aperture relatively later in the movement than did controls. For the estimation task it was predicted that the left visual neglect group would systematically underestimate the sizes of objects presented within left hemispace but no such abnormalities were observed. Possible reasons for this unexpected null finding are discussed

    In Vitro Analysis of Drought Stressed, Chopped Sunflower Heads as a Protein Supplement for Cattle Grazing Corn Crop Residues

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    The suitability of drought stressed, chopped sunflower heads as an energy and crude protein supplement to low quality forages was evaluated using in vitro fermentation techniques. Sources of supplemental crude protein used in comparisons were drought stressed, chopped sunflower heads, soybean meal, soybeans, and urea. These crude protein sources were added to cornstalks to produce substrates containing 6, 8, 10, 12, and 15% crude protein. Observed fermentable dry matter was higher than the estimated fermentable dry matters, indicating positive associative effects of crude protein level. Similar differences in observed and estimated fermentable dry matters occurred among soybean meal, soybean, and urea treatment means with the drought stressed, chopped sunflower treatment mean being more erratic and lower. Ether extract content of drought stressed, chopped sunflower heads may limit their use as a protein and energy supplement

    Implant Combinations and Reimplanting Strategies for Yearling Steers Fed High Concentrate Diets

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    Crossbred yearling steers were used to determine the relative efficacy of specific anabolic implant combinations and sequences on feedlot performance and carcass traits. Steers were fed a high concentrate finishing diet for 112 days. lmplanting was done on days 1 and 42 of the feeding period. lmplanting improved (P \u3c .05) average daily gain (ADG) 22% and feed efficiency 15%. Implant treatment generally increased dry matter intake. Lmplanting increased (P\u3c.05) the rib eye area of carcasses 6.5% and tended to cause a reduction in percentage choice carcasses. The percentage of abscessed implants ranged from \u3c 1 % to 10%, depending on the type of implant used even though implant needles were disinfected between each use

    Dynamic settling of particles in shear flows of shear-thinning fluids

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    Dynamic settling is the phenomenon whereby a relatively dense particle settles through a sheared flow of a non-Newtonian fluid at a speed that depends on the shear rate of the background flow. This means that due to the non-linear rheology, the settling velocity may vary spatially and temporally as the background shear rate of the suspending fluid varies, an effect which does not occur in Newtonian fluids. In this contribution, the consequences of this dependency are explored for a dilute suspension of particles released uniformly from a source in a sustained and externally-driven flow of shear-thinning fluid. It is shown theoretically that the concentration field does not remain uniform, but evolves downstream, allowing calculation of the runout length, settling times and distribution of the deposited particles. Flows with a velocity maximum are demonstrated to affect the concentration field very strongly as they develop a ‘kinematic barrier’ over which settling times are considerably lengthened. Flows with bidisperse suspensions are shown to produce deposits that vary non-monotonically in thickness and composition with distance downstream, an effect which is solely due to dynamic settling. Finally flows of viscoplastic fluids which exhibit yielded and unyielded regions may accentuate the role and effects of the kinematic barrier to settling

    Geodetic, teleseismic, and strong motion constraints on slip from recent southern Peru subduction zone earthquakes

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    We use seismic and geodetic data both jointly and separately to constrain coseismic slip from the 12 November 1996 M_w 7.7 and 23 June 2001 M_w 8.5 southern Peru subduction zone earthquakes, as well as two large aftershocks following the 2001 earthquake on 26 June and 7 July 2001. We use all available data in our inversions: GPS, interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) from the ERS-1, ERS-2, JERS, and RADARSAT-1 satellites, and seismic data from teleseismic and strong motion stations. Our two-dimensional slip models derived from only teleseismic body waves from South American subduction zone earthquakes with M_w > 7.5 do not reliably predict available geodetic data. In particular, we find significant differences in the distribution of slip for the 2001 earthquake from models that use only seismic (teleseismic and two strong motion stations) or geodetic (InSAR and GPS) data. The differences might be related to postseismic deformation or, more likely, the different sensitivities of the teleseismic and geodetic data to coseismic rupture properties. The earthquakes studied here follow the pattern of earthquake directivity along the coast of western South America, north of 5°S, earthquakes rupture to the north; south of about 12°S, directivity is southerly; and in between, earthquakes are bilateral. The predicted deformation at the Arequipa GPS station from the seismic-only slip model for the 7 July 2001 aftershock is not consistent with significant preseismic motion
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